Druid is an open-source analytics data store designed for real-time exploratory queries on large-scale data sets (100’s of Billions entries, 100’s TB data). Druid provides for cost-effective and always-on realtime data ingestion and arbitrary data exploration.
-**Designed for Analytics** - Druid is built for exploratory analytics for OLAP workflows. It supports a variety of filters, aggregators and query types and provides a framework for plugging in new functionality. Users have leveraged Druid’s infrastructure to develop features such as top K queries and histograms.
-**Interactive Queries** - Druid’s low-latency data ingestion architecture allows events to be queried milliseconds after they are created. Druid’s query latency is optimized by reading and scanning only exactly what is needed. Aggregate and filter on data without sitting around waiting for results.
-**Highly Available** - Druid is used to back SaaS implementations that need to be up all the time. Your data is still available and queryable during system updates. Scale up or down without data loss.
-**Scalable** - Existing Druid deployments handle billions of events and terabytes of data per day. Druid is designed to be petabyte scale.
Druid was originally created to resolve query latency issues seen with trying to use Hadoop to power an interactive service. It's especially useful if you are summarizing your data sets and then querying the summarizations. Put your summarizations into Druid and get quick queryability out of a system that you can be confident will scale up as your data volumes increase. Deployments have scaled up to 2TB of data per hour at peak ingested and aggregated in real-time.
Druid is a system that you can set up in your organization next to Hadoop. It provides the ability to access your data in an interactive slice-and-dice fashion. It trades off some query flexibility and takes over the storage format in order to provide the speed.
We have more details about the general design of the system and why you might want to use it in our [White Paper](http://static.druid.io/docs/druid.pdf) or in our [Design](Design.html) doc.
The data store world is vast, confusing and constantly in flux. This page is meant to help potential evaluators decide whether Druid is a good fit for the problem one needs to solve. If anything about it is incorrect please provide that feedback on the mailing list or via some other means so we can fix it.