Neon is a serverless open-source alternative to AWS Aurora Postgres. It separates storage and compute and substitutes the PostgreSQL storage layer by redistributing data across a cluster of nodes.
Try the Neon Free Tier to create a serverless Postgres instance. Then connect to it with your preferred Postgres client (psql, dbeaver, etc) or use the online SQL Editor. See Connect from any application for connection instructions.
Alternatively, compile and run the project locally.
A Neon installation consists of compute nodes and the Neon storage engine. Compute nodes are stateless PostgreSQL nodes backed by the Neon storage engine.
The Neon storage engine consists of two major components:
- Pageserver: Scalable storage backend for the compute nodes.
- Safekeepers: The safekeepers form a redundant WAL service that received WAL from the compute node, and stores it durably until it has been processed by the pageserver and uploaded to cloud storage.
See developer documentation in SUMMARY.md for more information.
- Install build dependencies and other applicable packages
- On Ubuntu or Debian, this set of packages should be sufficient to build the code:
apt install build-essential libtool libreadline-dev zlib1g-dev flex bison libseccomp-dev \
libssl-dev clang pkg-config libpq-dev cmake postgresql-client protobuf-compiler \
libcurl4-openssl-dev openssl python3-poetry lsof libicu-dev
- On Fedora, these packages are needed:
dnf install flex bison readline-devel zlib-devel openssl-devel \
libseccomp-devel perl clang cmake postgresql postgresql-contrib protobuf-compiler \
protobuf-devel libcurl-devel openssl poetry lsof libicu-devel libpq-devel python3-devel \
libffi-devel
- On Arch based systems, these packages are needed:
pacman -S base-devel readline zlib libseccomp openssl clang \
postgresql-libs cmake postgresql protobuf curl lsof
Building Neon requires 3.15+ version of protoc
(protobuf-compiler). If your distribution provides an older version, you can install a newer version from here.
# recommended approach from https://www.rust-lang.org/tools/install
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
- Install XCode and dependencies
xcode-select --install
brew install protobuf openssl flex bison icu4c pkg-config
# add openssl to PATH, required for ed25519 keys generation in neon_local
echo 'export PATH="$(brew --prefix openssl)/bin:$PATH"' >> ~/.zshrc
# recommended approach from https://www.rust-lang.org/tools/install
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
- Install PostgreSQL Client
# from https://stackoverflow.com/questions/44654216/correct-way-to-install-psql-without-full-postgres-on-macos
brew install libpq
brew link --force libpq
The project uses rust toolchain file to define the version it's built with in CI for testing and local builds.
This file is automatically picked up by rustup
that installs (if absent) and uses the toolchain version pinned in the file.
rustup users who want to build with another toolchain can use the rustup override
command to set a specific toolchain for the project's directory.
non-rustup users most probably are not getting the same toolchain automatically from the file, so are responsible to manually verify that their toolchain matches the version in the file. Newer rustc versions most probably will work fine, yet older ones might not be supported due to some new features used by the project or the crates.
- Build neon and patched postgres
# Note: The path to the neon sources can not contain a space.
git clone --recursive https://github.com/neondatabase/neon.git
cd neon
# The preferred and default is to make a debug build. This will create a
# demonstrably slower build than a release build. For a release build,
# use "BUILD_TYPE=release make -j`nproc` -s"
# Remove -s for the verbose build log
make -j`nproc` -s
- Build neon and patched postgres
# Note: The path to the neon sources can not contain a space.
git clone --recursive https://github.com/neondatabase/neon.git
cd neon
# The preferred and default is to make a debug build. This will create a
# demonstrably slower build than a release build. For a release build,
# use "BUILD_TYPE=release make -j`sysctl -n hw.logicalcpu` -s"
# Remove -s for the verbose build log
make -j`sysctl -n hw.logicalcpu` -s
To run the psql
client, install the postgresql-client
package or modify PATH
and LD_LIBRARY_PATH
to include pg_install/bin
and pg_install/lib
, respectively.
To run the integration tests or Python scripts (not required to use the code), install
Python (3.9 or higher), and install the python3 packages using ./scripts/pysync
(requires poetry>=1.3) in the project directory.
- Start pageserver and postgres on top of it (should be called from repo root):
# Create repository in .neon with proper paths to binaries and data
# Later that would be responsibility of a package install script
> cargo neon init
Initializing pageserver node 1 at '127.0.0.1:64000' in ".neon"
# start pageserver, safekeeper, and broker for their intercommunication
> cargo neon start
Starting neon broker at 127.0.0.1:50051.
storage_broker started, pid: 2918372
Starting pageserver node 1 at '127.0.0.1:64000' in ".neon".
pageserver started, pid: 2918386
Starting safekeeper at '127.0.0.1:5454' in '.neon/safekeepers/sk1'.
safekeeper 1 started, pid: 2918437
# create initial tenant and use it as a default for every future neon_local invocation
> cargo neon tenant create --set-default
tenant 9ef87a5bf0d92544f6fafeeb3239695c successfully created on the pageserver
Created an initial timeline 'de200bd42b49cc1814412c7e592dd6e9' at Lsn 0/16B5A50 for tenant: 9ef87a5bf0d92544f6fafeeb3239695c
Setting tenant 9ef87a5bf0d92544f6fafeeb3239695c as a default one
# create postgres compute node
> cargo neon endpoint create main
# start postgres compute node
> cargo neon endpoint start main
Starting new endpoint main (PostgreSQL v14) on timeline de200bd42b49cc1814412c7e592dd6e9 ...
Starting postgres at 'postgresql://cloud_admin@127.0.0.1:55432/postgres'
# check list of running postgres instances
> cargo neon endpoint list
ENDPOINT ADDRESS TIMELINE BRANCH NAME LSN STATUS
main 127.0.0.1:55432 de200bd42b49cc1814412c7e592dd6e9 main 0/16B5BA8 running
- Now, it is possible to connect to postgres and run some queries:
> psql -p 55432 -h 127.0.0.1 -U cloud_admin postgres
postgres=# CREATE TABLE t(key int primary key, value text);
CREATE TABLE
postgres=# insert into t values(1,1);
INSERT 0 1
postgres=# select * from t;
key | value
-----+-------
1 | 1
(1 row)
- And create branches and run postgres on them:
# create branch named migration_check
> cargo neon timeline branch --branch-name migration_check
Created timeline 'b3b863fa45fa9e57e615f9f2d944e601' at Lsn 0/16F9A00 for tenant: 9ef87a5bf0d92544f6fafeeb3239695c. Ancestor timeline: 'main'
# check branches tree
> cargo neon timeline list
(L) main [de200bd42b49cc1814412c7e592dd6e9]
(L) ┗━ @0/16F9A00: migration_check [b3b863fa45fa9e57e615f9f2d944e601]
# create postgres on that branch
> cargo neon endpoint create migration_check --branch-name migration_check
# start postgres on that branch
> cargo neon endpoint start migration_check
Starting new endpoint migration_check (PostgreSQL v14) on timeline b3b863fa45fa9e57e615f9f2d944e601 ...
Starting postgres at 'postgresql://cloud_admin@127.0.0.1:55434/postgres'
# check the new list of running postgres instances
> cargo neon endpoint list
ENDPOINT ADDRESS TIMELINE BRANCH NAME LSN STATUS
main 127.0.0.1:55432 de200bd42b49cc1814412c7e592dd6e9 main 0/16F9A38 running
migration_check 127.0.0.1:55434 b3b863fa45fa9e57e615f9f2d944e601 migration_check 0/16F9A70 running
# this new postgres instance will have all the data from 'main' postgres,
# but all modifications would not affect data in original postgres
> psql -p 55434 -h 127.0.0.1 -U cloud_admin postgres
postgres=# select * from t;
key | value
-----+-------
1 | 1
(1 row)
postgres=# insert into t values(2,2);
INSERT 0 1
# check that the new change doesn't affect the 'main' postgres
> psql -p 55432 -h 127.0.0.1 -U cloud_admin postgres
postgres=# select * from t;
key | value
-----+-------
1 | 1
(1 row)
- If you want to run tests afterwards (see below), you must stop all the running pageserver, safekeeper, and postgres instances you have just started. You can terminate them all with one command:
> cargo neon stop
Ensure your dependencies are installed as described here.
git clone --recursive https://github.com/neondatabase/neon.git
CARGO_BUILD_FLAGS="--features=testing" make
./scripts/pytest
By default, this runs both debug and release modes, and all supported postgres versions. When testing locally, it is convenient to run just one set of permutations, like this:
DEFAULT_PG_VERSION=15 BUILD_TYPE=release ./scripts/pytest
You may find yourself in need of flamegraphs for software in this repository.
You can use flamegraph-rs
or the original flamegraph.pl
. Your choice!
Important
If you're using lld
or mold
, you need the --no-rosegment
linker argument.
It's a general thing with Rust / lld / mold, not specific to this repository.
See this PR for further instructions.
docs Contains a top-level overview of all available markdown documentation.
- sourcetree.md contains overview of source tree layout.
To view your rustdoc
documentation in a browser, try running cargo doc --no-deps --open
See also README files in some source directories, and rustdoc
style documentation comments.
Other resources:
- SELECT 'Hello, World': Blog post by Nikita Shamgunov on the high level architecture
- Architecture decisions in Neon: Blog post by Heikki Linnakangas
- Neon: Serverless PostgreSQL!: Presentation on storage system by Heikki Linnakangas in the CMU Database Group seminar series
Due to Neon's very close relation with PostgreSQL internals, numerous specific terms are used. The same applies to certain spelling: i.e. we use MB to denote 1024 * 1024 bytes, while MiB would be technically more correct, it's inconsistent with what PostgreSQL code and its documentation use.
To get more familiar with this aspect, refer to:
- Neon glossary
- PostgreSQL glossary
- Other PostgreSQL documentation and sources (Neon fork sources can be found here)
- Read CONTRIBUTING.md to learn about project code style and practices.
- To get familiar with a source tree layout, use sourcetree.md.
- To learn more about PostgreSQL internals, check http://www.interdb.jp/pg/index.html