packages/pglite-socket/README.md
A socket implementation for PGlite enabling remote connections. This package is a simple wrapper around the net module to allow PGlite to be used as a PostgreSQL server.
There are two main components to this package:
PGLiteSocketServer - A TCP server that allows PostgreSQL clients to connect to a PGlite database instance.PGLiteSocketHandler - A low-level handler for a single socket connection to PGlite. This class handles the raw protocol communication between a socket and PGlite, and can be used to create a custom server.The package also includes a CLI for quickly starting a PGlite socket server.
Note: Although PGlite is a single-connection database, it is possible to open and use multiple simultaneous connections with pglite-server. This is achieved through a multiplexer implemented in the server (see the parameter -m, --max-connections). This is different from a normal Postgres installation, so not all use cases are guaranteed to work.
npm install @electric-sql/pglite-socket
# or
yarn add @electric-sql/pglite-socket
# or
pnpm add @electric-sql/pglite-socket
import { PGlite } from '@electric-sql/pglite'
import { PGLiteSocketServer } from '@electric-sql/pglite-socket'
// Create a PGlite instance
const db = await PGlite.create()
// Create and start a socket server
const server = new PGLiteSocketServer({
db,
port: 5432,
host: '127.0.0.1',
})
await server.start()
console.log('Server started on 127.0.0.1:5432')
// Handle graceful shutdown
process.on('SIGINT', async () => {
await server.stop()
await db.close()
console.log('Server stopped and database closed')
process.exit(0)
})
Creates a TCP server that allows PostgreSQL clients to connect to a PGlite database instance.
db: PGlite - The PGlite database instanceport?: number - The port to listen on (default: 5432). Use port 0 to let the OS assign an available porthost?: string - The host to bind to (default: 127.0.0.1)path?: string - Unix socket path to bind to (takes precedence over host:port)inspect?: boolean - Print the incoming and outgoing data to the console (default: false)start(): Promise<void> - Start the socket serverstop(): Promise<void> - Stop the socket serverlistening - Emitted when the server starts listeningconnection - Emitted when a client connectserror - Emitted when an error occursclose - Emitted when the server is closedLow-level handler for a single socket connection to PGlite. This class handles the raw protocol communication between a socket and PGlite.
db: PGlite - The PGlite database instancecloseOnDetach?: boolean - Whether to close the socket when detached (default: false)inspect?: boolean - Print the incoming and outgoing data to the console in hex and ascii (default: false)attach(socket: Socket): Promise<PGLiteSocketHandler> - Attach a socket to this handlerdetach(close?: boolean): PGLiteSocketHandler - Detach the current socket from this handlerisAttached: boolean - Check if a socket is currently attacheddata - Emitted when data is processed through the handlererror - Emitted when an error occursclose - Emitted when the socket is closedimport { PGlite } from '@electric-sql/pglite'
import { PGLiteSocketHandler } from '@electric-sql/pglite-socket'
import { createServer, Socket } from 'net'
// Create a PGlite instance
const db = await PGlite.create()
// Create a handler
const handler = new PGLiteSocketHandler({
db,
closeOnDetach: true,
inspect: false,
})
// Create a server that uses the handler
const server = createServer(async (socket: Socket) => {
try {
await handler.attach(socket)
console.log('Client connected')
} catch (err) {
console.error('Error attaching socket', err)
socket.end()
}
})
server.listen(5432, '127.0.0.1')
See the examples directory for more usage examples.
This package provides a command-line interface for quickly starting a PGlite socket server.
# Install globally
npm install -g @electric-sql/pglite-socket
# Start a server with default settings (in-memory database, port 5432)
pglite-server
# Start a server with custom options
pglite-server --db=/path/to/database --port=5433 --host=0.0.0.0 --debug=1
# Using short options
pglite-server -d /path/to/database -p 5433 -h 0.0.0.0 -v 1
# Show help
pglite-server --help
-d, --db=PATH - Database path (default: memory://)-p, --port=PORT - Port to listen on (default: 5432). Use 0 to let the OS assign an available port-h, --host=HOST - Host to bind to (default: 127.0.0.1)-u, --path=UNIX - Unix socket to bind to (takes precedence over host:port)-v, --debug=LEVEL - Debug level 0-5 (default: 0)-e, --extensions=LIST - Comma-separated list of extensions to load (e.g., vector,pgcrypto)-r, --run=COMMAND - Command to run after server starts--include-database-url - Include DATABASE_URL in subprocess environment--shutdown-timeout=MS - Timeout for graceful subprocess shutdown in ms (default: 5000)-m, --max-connections=N - Maximum concurrent connections (default is no concurrency: 1)The --run option is particularly useful for development workflows where you want to use PGlite as a drop-in replacement for PostgreSQL. This allows you to wrap your development server and automatically provide it with a DATABASE_URL pointing to your PGlite instance.
# Start your Next.js dev server with PGlite
pglite-server --run "npm run dev" --include-database-url
# Start a Node.js app with PGlite
pglite-server --db=./dev-db --run "node server.js" --include-database-url
# Start multiple services (using a process manager like concurrently)
pglite-server --run "npx concurrently 'npm run dev' 'npm run worker'" --include-database-url
When using --run with --include-database-url, the subprocess will receive a DATABASE_URL environment variable with the correct connection string for your PGlite server. This enables seamless integration with applications that expect a PostgreSQL connection string.
You can add the CLI to your package.json scripts for convenient execution:
{
"scripts": {
"db:start": "pglite-server --db=./data/mydb --port=5433",
"db:dev": "pglite-server --db=memory:// --debug=1",
"dev": "pglite-server --db=./dev-db --run 'npm run start:dev' --include-database-url",
"dev:clean": "pglite-server --run 'npm run start:dev' --include-database-url"
}
}
Then run with:
npm run dev # Start with persistent database
npm run dev:clean # Start with in-memory database
For better performance in local development, you can use Unix sockets instead of TCP:
# Start server on a Unix socket
pglite-server --path=/tmp/pglite.sock --run "npm run dev" --include-database-url
# The DATABASE_URL will be: postgresql://postgres:postgres@/postgres?host=/tmp
Once the server is running, you can connect to it using any PostgreSQL client:
PGSSLMODE=disable psql -h localhost -p 5432 -d template1
// Using node-postgres
import pg from 'pg'
const client = new pg.Client({
host: 'localhost',
port: 5432,
database: 'template1'
})
await client.connect()
// Using postgres.js
import postgres from 'postgres'
const sql = postgres({
host: 'localhost',
port: 5432,
database: 'template1'
})
// Using environment variable (when using --include-database-url)
const sql = postgres(process.env.DATABASE_URL)
--db=memory://) is fastest but data won't persist after the server is stopped.--db=./data/mydb).--debug=1 or higher), additional protocol information will be displayed in the console.0.0.0.0 with --host=0.0.0.0.psql, set env var PGSSLMODE=disable.--run, the server will automatically shut down if the subprocess exits with a non-zero code.--shutdown-timeout to adjust how long to wait for graceful subprocess termination (default: 5 seconds).--max-connections=10 to allow up to 10 concurrent connections (default: 1, no concurrent connections).Apache 2.0