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@electric-sql/pglite
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PGlite is a WASM Postgres build packaged into a TypeScript client library that enables you to run Postgres in the browser, Node.js and Bun, with no need to install any other dependencies. It is only 3.7mb gzipped.
PGlite - the WASM build of Postgres from ElectricSQL.
Build reactive, realtime, local-first apps directly on Postgres.
PGlite is a WASM Postgres build packaged into a TypeScript client library that enables you to run Postgres in the browser, Node.js and Bun, with no need to install any other dependencies. It is only 3mb gzipped and has support for many Postgres extensions, including pgvector.
import { PGlite } from "@electric-sql/pglite";
const db = new PGlite();
await db.query("select 'Hello world' as message;");
// -> { rows: [ { message: "Hello world" } ] }
It can be used as an ephemeral in-memory database, or with persistence either to the file system (Node/Bun) or indexedDB (Browser).
Unlike previous "Postgres in the browser" projects, PGlite does not use a Linux virtual machine - it is simply Postgres in WASM.
For full documentation and user guides see pglite.dev.
It can be installed and imported using your usual package manager:
import { PGlite } from "@electric-sql/pglite";
or using a CDN such as JSDeliver:
import { PGlite } from "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@electric-sql/pglite/dist/index.js";
Then for an in-memory Postgres:
const db = new PGlite()
await db.query("select 'Hello world' as message;")
// -> { rows: [ { message: "Hello world" } ] }
or to persist the database to indexedDB:
const db = new PGlite("idb://my-pgdata");
Install into your project:
npm install @electric-sql/pglite
To use the in-memory Postgres:
import { PGlite } from "@electric-sql/pglite";
const db = new PGlite();
await db.query("select 'Hello world' as message;");
// -> { rows: [ { message: "Hello world" } ] }
or to persist to the filesystem:
const db = new PGlite("./path/to/pgdata");
PostgreSQL typically operates using a process forking model; whenever a client initiates a connection, a new process is forked to manage that connection. However, programs compiled with Emscripten - a C to WebAssembly (WASM) compiler - cannot fork new processes, and operates strictly in a single-process mode. As a result, PostgreSQL cannot be directly compiled to WASM for conventional operation.
Fortunately, PostgreSQL includes a "single user mode" primarily intended for command-line usage during bootstrapping and recovery procedures. Building upon this capability, PGlite introduces a input/output pathway that facilitates interaction with PostgreSQL when it is compiled to WASM within a JavaScript environment.
You will need pnpm installed, and a recent version of Node.js (v20 and above).
You will also need the Postgres WASM build files, which you download from a comment under the most recently merged PR, labeled as interim build files, and place them under packages/pglite/release
. These are necessary to build PGlite and the dependent workspace projects. We plan to enable a local build in the future to streamline this step.
Once the requirements are met, you can install dependencies and build the workspace projects:
pnpm install
pnpm build
This will build all packages in the correct order based on their dependency relationships. You can now develop any individual package using the build
and test
scripts, as well as the stylecheck
and typecheck
scripts to ensure style and type validity.
When ready to open a PR, run the following command at the root of the repository:
pnpm changeset
And follow the instructions to create an appropriate changeset. Please ensure any contributions that touch code are accompanied by a changeset.
PGlite builds on the work of Stas Kelvich of Neon in this Postgres fork.
PGlite is dual-licensed under the terms of the Apache License 2.0 and the PostgreSQL License, you can choose which you prefer.
Changes to the Postgres source are licensed under the PostgreSQL License.
FAQs
PGlite is a WASM Postgres build packaged into a TypeScript client library that enables you to run Postgres in the browser, Node.js and Bun, with no need to install any other dependencies. It is only 3.7mb gzipped.
The npm package @electric-sql/pglite receives a total of 260,558 weekly downloads. As such, @electric-sql/pglite popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @electric-sql/pglite demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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