2.9 KiB
pgweb
Web-based PostgreSQL database browser written in Go.
Overview
This is a web-based browser for PostgreSQL database server. Its written in Go and works on Mac OSX, Linux and Windows machines. Main idea behind using Go for the backend is to utilize language's ability for cross-compile source code for multiple platforms. This project is an attempt to create a very simple and portable application to work with PostgreSQL databases.
Features:
- Connect to local or remote server
- Browse tables and table rows
- Get table details: structure, size, indices, row count
- Execute SQL query and run analyze on it
- Export query results to CSV
- View query history
Installation
Please visit Github Releases to download a precompiled binary for your operating system.
Currently supported:
- Mac OSX 64bit
- Linux 32/64bit
- Windows 32/64bit
Supported PostgreSQL versions:
- 9.1
- 9.2
- 9.3
Older versions of PostgreSQL might also work but this project is not tested on 8.x branches.
Usage
Start server:
pgweb --host localhost --user myuser --db mydb
You can also specify a connection URI instead of individual flags:
pgweb --url postgres://user:password@host:port/database
It works great with Heroku Postgres if you need to troubleshoot production database or simply run a few queries.
Full CLI options:
Usage:
pgweb [OPTIONS]
Application Options:
-v, --version Print version
-d, --debug Enable debugging mode (false)
--url= Database connection string
--host= Server hostname or IP (localhost)
--port= Server port (5432)
--user= Database user (postgres)
--pass= Password for user
--db= Database name (postgres)
--ssl= SSL option (disable)
--bind= HTTP server host (localhost)
--listen= HTTP server listen port (8080)
--auth-user= HTTP basic auth user
--auth-pass= HTTP basic auth password
-s, --skip-open Skip browser open on start
Compile from source
Go 1.3+ is required. You can install Go with homebrew
:
brew install go
To compile source code run the following command:
make setup
make dev
This will produce pgweb
binary in the current directory.
There's also a task to compile binaries for other operating systems:
make build
Under the hood it uses gox. Compiled binaries
will be stored into ./bin
directory.
Contributors
- Dan Sosedoff - https://twitter.com/sosedoff
- Masha Safina - https://twitter.com/mashasafina
License
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2014 Dan Sosedoff, dan.sosedoff@gmail.com