The main things provided by this crate are some macros that help with writing Postgres extensions in Rust.
The objective (not all these are yet implemented):
- Automatic type conversions, see
PgDatum
andTryFromPgDatum
toInto<PgDatum>
pg_magic
macro for declaring libraries as Postgres extensionspg_extern
attribute for wrapping Rust functions in Postgres C style definitions- panic handlers for conversion into Postgres errors
- allocator that uses Postgres
palloc
allocator andpfree
- tbd integrate postgres error logs with
log
- tbd support all Datum types
- tbd support table like returns and manipulation
- tbd generators for the psql scripts to load functions
This project uses cargo-make
for automation. While not necessary, it does help with a lot of the build tasks, so is recommended. This can be installed with cargo install cargo-make
.
Once installed, it will install Postgres into the target
directory for testing. There are profiles for each supported Postgres version, v10
, v11
, and v12
. The specific minor version used is in
To run all tests with all features, for example, run:
> cargo make all-features -p v12 # if -p is left off, then the default is v12
If using cargo-make
then the environment variable PG_DIR
can be used to specify the location of the Postgres install.
First install Postgres. The build should be able to find the directory for the Postgres server headers, it uses the pg_config --includedir-server
to attempt to find the directory. If it is unsuccessful then this environment variable is required:
PG_INCLUDE_PATH=[/path/to/postgres]/include/server # e.g. /usr/local/pgsql/include/server
For the dynamic library to compile, your project should also have .cargo/config
file with content:
[target.'cfg(unix)']
rustflags = "-C link-arg=-undefineddynamic_lookup"
[target.'cfg(windows)']
rustflags = "-C link-arg=/FORCE"
This informs the linker that some of the symbols for Postgres won't be available until runtime on the dynamic library load.
Standard tests can be run with the normal cargo test
, but the integration tests are a little more involved. They require a connection to an actual Postgres DB. These instructions were performed on macOS. Create a DB in Postgres to be use. In this example a DB was created in the /usr/local/var/posgres
path, with the name postgres
. When using cargo-make
all the automation of starting, installing and setting up the DB is handled for you:
Test all features:
> cargo make all-features
Test default features:
> cargo make default-features
Test no-default-features:
> cargo make no-default-features
Testing against different versions; v10
, v11
, v12
are valid:
> cargo make all-features -p v10
To run the test must know the DB name to use, the DB must be running, and then the tests can be run:
export POSTGRES_TEST_DB=postgres
pg_ctl -D /usr/local/var/postgres start
cargo test
TBD
For live discussions beyond this repository, please see this Discord.