Web-based PostgreSQL database browser written in Go.
Pgweb is a web-based database browser for PostgreSQL, written in Go and works on OSX, Linux and Windows machines. Main idea behind using Go for backend development is to utilize ability of the compiler to produce zero-dependency binaries for multiple platforms. Pgweb was created as an attempt to build very simple and portable application to work with local or remote PostgreSQL databases.
- Cross-platform support OSX/Linux/Windows 32/64-bit
- Simple installation (distributed as a single binary)
- Zero dependencies
- Works with PostgreSQL 9.1+
- SSH Connections
- Multiple database sessions
- Simple database browser
- Execute and analyze custom SQL queries
- Table and query data export to CSV/JSON/XML
- Query history
- Server bookmarks
Visit WIKI for more details
Visit https://pgweb-demo.herokuapp.com to see pgweb in action.
Precompiled binaries for supported operating systems are available.
Start server:
pgweb
You can also provide connection flags:
pgweb --host localhost --user myuser --db mydb
Connection URL scheme is also supported:
pgweb --url postgres://user:password@host:port/database?sslmode=[mode]
To enable multiple database sessions in pgweb, start the server with:
pgweb --sessions
Or set environment variable:
SESSIONS=1 pgweb
Before running tests, make sure you have PostgreSQL server running on localhost:5432
interface. Also, you must have postgres
user that could create new databases
in your local environment. Pgweb server should not be running at the same time.
Execute test suite:
make test
If you're using Docker locally, you might also run pgweb test suite against all supported PostgreSQL version with a single command:
make test-all
- Fork this repository
- Create a new feature branch for a new functionality or bugfix
- Commit your changes
- Execute test suite
- Push your code and open a new pull request
- Use issues for any questions
- Check wiki for extra documentation
- Dan Sosedoff
- dan.sosedoff@gmail.com
- http://twitter.com/sosedoff
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2014-2016 Dan Sosedoff, dan.sosedoff@gmail.com