PGAdapter is a proxy that translates the PostgreSQL wire-protocol into the equivalent for Spanner databases that use the PostgreSQL interface. It enables you to use standard PostgreSQL drivers and tools with Cloud Spanner and is designed for the lowest possible latency.
Note: JVM-based applications can add PGAdapter as a compile-time dependency and run the proxy in the same process as the main application. See samples/java/jdbc for a small sample application that shows how to do this.
PGAdapter can be used with the following drivers and clients:
psql
: Versions 11, 12, 13 and 14 are supported. See psql support for more details.IntelliJ
,DataGrip
and otherJetBrains
IDEs. See Connect Cloud Spanner PostgreSQL to JetBrains for more details.JDBC
: Versions 42.x and higher are supported. See JDBC support for more details.pgx
: Version 4.15 and higher are supported. See pgx support for more details.psycopg2
: Version 2.9.3 and higher are supported. See psycopg2 for more details.psycopg3
: Version 3.1.x and higher are supported. See psycopg3 support for more details.connectorx
: Version 0.3.3 and higher have experimental support. See connectorx sample for more details.node-postgres
: Version 8.8.0 and higher are supported. See node-postgres support for more details.npgsql
: Version 6.0.x and higher have experimental support. See npgsql support for more details.PDO_PGSQL
: The PHP PDO driver has experimental support. See PHP PDO for more details.postgres_fdw
: The PostgreSQL foreign data wrapper has experimental support. See Foreign Data Wrapper sample for more details.
PGAdapter can be used with the following frameworks and tools:
Hibernate
: Version 5.3.20.Final and higher are supported. See hibernate support for more details.Spring Data JPA
: Spring Data JPA in combination with Hibernate is also supported. See the Spring Data JPA Sample Application for a full example.Liquibase
: Version 4.12.0 and higher are supported. See Liquibase support for more details. See also this directory for a sample application usingLiquibase
.gorm
: Version 1.23.8 and higher are supported. See gorm support for more details. See also this directory for a sample application usinggorm
.SQLAlchemy 2.x
: Version 2.0.1 and higher are supported. See also this directory for a sample application usingSQLAlchemy 2.x
.SQLAlchemy 1.x
: Version 1.4.45 and higher has experimental support. It is recommended to useSQLAlchemy 2.x
instead ofSQLAlchemy 1.4.x
for the best possible performance. See also this directory for a sample application usingSQLAlchemy 1.x
.pgbench
can be used with PGAdapter, but with some limitations. See pgbench.md for more details.Ruby ActiveRecord
: Version 7.x has experimental support and with limitations. Please read the instructions in PGAdapter - Ruby ActiveRecord Connection Options carefully for how to set up ActiveRecord to work with PGAdapter.Knex.js
query builder can be used with PGAdapter. See Knex.js sample application for a sample application.Sequelize.js
ORM can be used with PGAdapter. See Sequelize.js sample application for a sample application.
See Frequently Asked Questions for answers to frequently asked questions.
See Latency Comparisons for benchmark comparisons between using PostgreSQL drivers with PGAdapter and using native Cloud Spanner drivers and client libraries.
See OpenTelemetry in PGAdapter for how to use OpenTelemetry
to collect
and export traces to Google Cloud Trace.
PGAdapter can be started both as a Docker container, a standalone process as well as an in-process server (the latter is only supported for Java and other JVM-based applications).
- See running PGAdapter using Docker for more examples for running PGAdapter in Docker.
- See running PGAdapter as a sidecar proxy for how to run PGAdapter as a sidecar proxy in a Kubernetes cluster.
Replace the project, instance and database names and the credentials file in the example below to run PGAdapter from a pre-built Docker image.
docker pull gcr.io/cloud-spanner-pg-adapter/pgadapter
docker run \
-d -p 5432:5432 \
-v /path/to/credentials.json:/credentials.json:ro \
gcr.io/cloud-spanner-pg-adapter/pgadapter \
-p my-project -i my-instance -d my-database \
-c /credentials.json -x
The -x
argument turns off the requirement that all TCP connections must come from localhost.
This is required when running PGAdapter in a Docker container.
See Options for an explanation of all further options.
We also publish a distroless Docker image for
PGAdapter under the tag gcr.io/cloud-spanner-pg-adapter/pgadapter-distroless
. This Docker image
runs PGAdapter as a non-root user.
docker pull gcr.io/cloud-spanner-pg-adapter/pgadapter-distroless
docker run \
-d -p 5432:5432 \
-v /path/to/credentials.json:/credentials.json:ro \
gcr.io/cloud-spanner-pg-adapter/pgadapter-distroless \
-p my-project -i my-instance -d my-database \
-c /credentials.json -x
A pre-built jar and all dependencies can be downloaded from https://storage.googleapis.com/pgadapter-jar-releases/pgadapter.tar.gz
wget https://storage.googleapis.com/pgadapter-jar-releases/pgadapter.tar.gz \
&& tar -xzvf pgadapter.tar.gz
java -jar pgadapter.jar -p my-project -i my-instance -d my-database
Use the -s
option to specify a different local port than the default 5432 if you already have
PostgreSQL running on your local system.
You can also download a specific version of the jar. Example (replace v0.41.0
with the version you want to download):
VERSION=v0.41.0
wget https://storage.googleapis.com/pgadapter-jar-releases/pgadapter-${VERSION}.tar.gz \
&& tar -xzvf pgadapter-${VERSION}.tar.gz
java -jar pgadapter.jar -p my-project -i my-instance -d my-database
See Options for an explanation of all further options.
- Build a jar file and assemble all dependencies by running
mvn package -P assembly
- Execute (the binaries are in the target/pgadapter folder)
cd target/pgadapter
java -jar pgadapter.jar -p my-project -i my-instance -d my-database
See Options for an explanation of all further options.
This option is only available for Java/JVM-based applications.
- Add
google-cloud-spanner-pgadapter
as a dependency to your project by adding this to yourpom.xml
file:
<!-- [START pgadapter_dependency] -->
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.cloud</groupId>
<artifactId>google-cloud-spanner-pgadapter</artifactId>
<version>0.41.0</version>
</dependency>
<!-- [END pgadapter_dependency] -->
- Build a server using the
com.google.cloud.spanner.pgadapter.ProxyServer
class:
class PGProxyRunner {
public static void main(String[] args) {
OptionsMetadata.Builder builder =
OptionsMetadata.newBuilder()
.setProject("my-project")
.setInstance("my-instance")
.setDatabase("my-database")
.setCredentialsFile("/path/to/credentials.json")
// Start PGAdapter on any available port.
.setPort(0);
ProxyServer server = new ProxyServer(builder.build());
server.startServer();
server.awaitRunning();
}
}
See samples/java/jdbc for a small sample application that adds PGAdapter as a compile-time dependency and runs it together with the main application.
A pre-built Docker image that contains both PGAdapter and the Spanner Emulator can be started with these commands:
docker pull gcr.io/cloud-spanner-pg-adapter/pgadapter-emulator
docker run \
-d -p 5432:5432 \
gcr.io/cloud-spanner-pg-adapter/pgadapter-emulator
sleep 2
psql -h localhost -p 5432 -d test-database
This Docker container configures PGAdapter to connect to a Cloud Spanner Emulator running inside the same container. You do not need to first create a Spanner instance or database on the Emulator before connecting to them. Instead, the instance and database are automatically created on the Emulator when you connect to PGAdapter.
See this document for more information on how to connect PGAdapter to the Cloud Spanner Emulator.
Connecting to the Cloud Spanner Emulator is supported with:
- PGAdapter version 0.26.0 and higher.
- Cloud Spanner Emulator 1.5.12 and higher.
The following list contains the most frequently used startup options for PGAdapter.
-p <projectname>
* The project name where the Spanner database(s) is/are running. If omitted, all connection
requests must use a fully qualified database name in the format
'projects/my-project/instances/my-instance/databases/my-database'.
-i <instanceid>
* The instance ID where the Spanner database(s) is/are running. If omitted, all connection
requests must use a fully qualified database name in the format
'projects/my-project/instances/my-instance/databases/my-database'.
-d <databasename>
* The default Spanner database name to connect to. This is only required if you want PGAdapter to
ignore the database that is given in the connection request from the client and to always
connect to this database.
* If set, any database given in a connection request will be ignored. \c commands in psql will not
change the underlying database that PGAdapter is connected to.
* If not set, the database to connect to must be included in any connection request. \c commands
in psql will change the underlying database that PGAdapter connects to.
-c <credentialspath>
* This argument should not be used in combination with -a (authentication mode).
* This is only required if you have not already set up default credentials on the system where you
are running PGAdapter. See https://cloud.google.com/spanner/docs/getting-started/set-up#set_up_authentication_and_authorization
for more information on setting up authentication for Cloud Spanner.
* The full path for the file containing the service account credentials in JSON format.
* Do remember to grant the service account sufficient credentials to access the database. See
https://cloud.google.com/docs/authentication/production for more information.
-s <port>
* The inbound port for the proxy. Defaults to 5432. Choose a different port if you already have
PostgreSQL running on your local system.
-dir <socket-file-directory>
* This proxy's domain socket directory. Defaults to '/tmp'.
Note: Some distributions of PostgreSQL and psql use '/var/run/postgresql' as the
default directory for Unix domain socket file names. When connecting to PGAdapter
using psql from one of these distributions, you either need to use 'psql -h /tmp'
or change the default Unix domain socket directory used by PGAdapter to '/var/run/postgresql'.
-ddl <ddl-transaction-mode>
* Determines the behavior of the proxy when DDL statements are executed in transactions.
See DDL options for more information.
-a
* Turns on authentication for the proxy server. Clients are then requested
to supply a username and password during a connection request.
* The username and password must contain one of the following:
1. The password field must contain the JSON payload of a credentials file, for example from a service account key file. The username will be ignored in this case.
2. The password field must contain the private key from a service account key file. The username must contain the email address of the corresponding service account.
* Note that SSL is not supported for the connection between the client and
PGAdapter. The proxy should therefore only be used within a private network.
The connection between PGAdapter and Cloud Spanner is always secured with SSL.
-x
* PGAdapter by default only allows TCP connections from localhost or Unix Domain Socket connections.
Use the -x switch to turn off the localhost check. This is required when running PGAdapter in a
Docker container, as the connections from the host machine will not be seen as a connection from
localhost in the container.
--allow_shutdown_command
* Enables the use of the custom SQL command `SHUTDOWN [SMART | FAST | IMMEDIATE]`. This command can
be used to shut down PGAdapter by just sending it a SQL statement. This option should only be enabled
when PGAdapter runs in a trusted environment, for example as a side-car container. The default
shutdown mode is `FAST`, which terminates all existing connections and then shuts down PGAdapter.
Use shutdown mode `SMART` to instruct PGAdapter to wait until all existing connections have been
terminated by the client before shutting down. See also https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/server-shutdown.html
for more information about shutdown modes.
* Note that `SHUTDOWN [SMART | FAST | IMMEDIATE]` only works on PGAdapter. This command is not
supported by PostgreSQL.
- See command line arguments for a list of all supported arguments.
- See connection options for all connection options.
- See Authentication Options for more details on the
-a
command line argument and other authentication options. - See DDL Options for more details for the
-ddl
command line argument.
This example starts PGAdapter and instructs it to always connect to the same database using a fixed set of credentials:
java -jar pgadapter.jar \
-p <project-id> -i <instance-id> -d <database-id> \
-c <path to credentials file> -s 5432
psql -h localhost
The psql -d
command line argument will be ignored. The psql \c
meta-command will have no effect.
This example starts PGAdapter and requires the client to supply both credentials and a fully qualified database name. This allows a single instance of PGAdapter to serve connections to any Cloud Spanner database.
java -jar pgadapter.jar -a
# The credentials file must be a valid Google Cloud credentials file, such as a
# service account key file or a user credentials file.
# Note that you must enclose the database name in quotes as it contains slashes.
PGPASSWORD=$(cat /path/to/credentials.json) psql -h /tmp \
-d "projects/my-project/instances/my-instance/databases/my-database"
The psql \c
meta-command can be used to switch to a different database.
Google Cloud Spanner PGAdapter is a simple, MITM, forward, non-transparent proxy, which translates the PostgreSQL wire-protocol into the Cloud Spanner equivalent. It can only be used with Cloud Spanner databases that use the PostgreSQL interface. By running this proxy locally, any PostgreSQL client (including the SQL command-line client PSQL) should function seamlessly by simply pointing its outbound port to this proxy's inbound port. The proxy does not support all parts of the PostgreSQL wire-protocol. See Limitations for a list of current limitations.
In addition to translation, this proxy also concerns itself with authentication and to some extent, connection pooling. Translation for the most part is simply a transformation of the PostgreSQL wire protocol except for some cases concerning PSQL, wherein the query itself is translated.
Simple query mode and extended query mode are supported, and any data type
supported by Spanner is also supported. Cloud Spanner databases created with
PostgreSQL dialect do not support all pg_catalog
tables.
Though the majority of functionality inherent in most PostgreSQL clients are included out of the box, the following items are not supported:
- SSL
- COPY <table_name> FROM <filename | PROGRAM program>
See COPY FROM STDIN for more information on the COPY operations that are supported.
Only the following psql
meta-commands are supported:
\d <table>
\dt <table>
\dn <table>
\di <table>
\l
Other psql
meta-commands are not supported.
PGAdapter has the following known limitations at this moment:
- Only password authentication using
the
password
method is supported. All other authentication methods are not supported. - The COPY protocol only supports COPY TO|FROM STDOUT|STDIN [BINARY]. COPY TO|FROM <FILE|PROGRAM> is not supported. See COPY for more information.
- DDL transactions are not supported. PGAdapter allows DDL statements in implicit transactions, and executes SQL strings that contain multiple DDL statements as a single DDL batch on Cloud Spanner. See DDL transaction options for more information.
PGAdapter uses java.util.logging
for logging.
PGAdapter by default configures java.util.logging
to do the following:
- Log messages of level WARNING and higher are logged to
stderr
. - Log messages of level INFO are logged to
stdout
. - Log messages of higher levels than INFO are not logged.
You can supply your own logging configuration with the -Djava.util.logging.config.file
System property. See the next section for an example.
The default log configuration described in this section was introduced in version 0.33.0 of
PGAdapter. Prior to that, PGAdapter used the default java.util.logging
configuration, which
logs everything to stderr
.
You can disable the default PGAdapter log configuration and go back to the standard
java.util.logging
configuration by starting PGAdapter with the command line argument
-legacy_logging
.
Create a logging.properties
file to configure logging messages.
See the following example for an example to get fine-grained logging.
handlers=java.util.logging.ConsoleHandler,java.util.logging.FileHandler
com.google.cloud.spanner.pgadapter.level=FINEST
java.util.logging.ConsoleHandler.level=FINEST
java.util.logging.FileHandler.level=INFO
java.util.logging.FileHandler.pattern=%h/log/pgadapter-%u.log
java.util.logging.FileHandler.append=false
io.grpc.internal.level = WARNING
java.util.logging.SimpleFormatter.format=[%1$tY-%1$tm-%1$td %1$tH:%1$tM:%1$tS.%1$tL] [%4$s] (%2$s): %5$s%6$s%n
java.util.logging.FileHandler.formatter=java.util.logging.SimpleFormatter
Start PGAdapter with -Djava.util.logging.config.file=logging.properties
when running PGAdapter
as a jar.
You can configure PGAdapter to log to a file on your local system when running it in Docker by following these steps.
- Create a
logging.properties
on your local system like this:
handlers=java.util.logging.FileHandler
java.util.logging.FileHandler.level=INFO
java.util.logging.FileHandler.pattern=/home/pgadapter/log/pgadapter.log
java.util.logging.FileHandler.append=true
io.grpc.internal.level = WARNING
java.util.logging.SimpleFormatter.format=[%1$tY-%1$tm-%1$td %1$tH:%1$tM:%1$tS.%1$tL] [%4$s] (%2$s): %5$s%6$s%n
java.util.logging.FileHandler.formatter=java.util.logging.SimpleFormatter
- Start the PGAdapter Docker container with these options:
export GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS=/path/to/credentials.json
export LOGGING_PROPERTIES=/full/path/to/logging.properties
docker run \
-d -p 5432:5432 \
-v ${GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS}:${GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS}:ro \
-v ${LOGGING_PROPERTIES}:${LOGGING_PROPERTIES}:ro \
-v /home/my-user-name/log:/home/pgadapter/log \
-e GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS \
gcr.io/cloud-spanner-pg-adapter/pgadapter \
-Djava.util.logging.config.file=${LOGGING_PROPERTIES} \
-p my-project -i my-instance -d my-database \
-x
The directory /home/my-user-name/log
will be created automatically and the log file will be
placed in this directory.
We are not currently accepting external code contributions to this project. Please feel free to file feature requests using GitHub's issue tracker or using the existing Cloud Spanner support channels.