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PostgREST serves a fully RESTful API from any existing PostgreSQL
database. It provides a cleaner, more standards-compliant, faster
API than you are likely to write from scratch.
Sponsors
Big thanks to our sponsors! You can join them by supporting PostgREST on Patreon.
TLDR; subsecond response times for up to 2000 requests/sec on Heroku
free tier. If you're used to servers written in interpreted languages,
prepare to be pleasantly surprised by PostgREST performance.
Three factors contribute to the speed. First the server is written
in Haskell using the
Warp
HTTP server (aka a compiled language with lightweight threads).
Next it delegates as much calculation as possible to the database
including
Serializing JSON responses directly in SQL
Data validation
Authorization
Combined row counting and retrieval
Data post in single command (returning *)
Finally it uses the database efficiently with the
Hasql library
by
Keeping a pool of db connections
Using the PostgreSQL binary protocol
Being stateless to allow horizontal scaling
Security
PostgREST handles
authentication (via JSON Web
Tokens) and delegates authorization to the role information defined in
the database. This ensures there is a single declarative source of truth
for security. When dealing with the database the server assumes the
identity of the currently authenticated user, and for the duration of
the connection cannot do anything the user themselves couldn't. Other
forms of authentication can be built on top of the JWT primitive. See
the docs for more information.
Versioning
A robust long-lived API needs the freedom to exist in multiple
versions. PostgREST does versioning through database schemas. This
allows you to expose tables and views without making the app brittle.
Underlying tables can be superseded and hidden behind public facing
views.
Self-documentation
PostgREST uses the OpenAPI standard to
generate up-to-date documentation for APIs. You can use a tool like
Swagger-UI to render
interactive documentation for demo requests against the live API server.
This project uses HTTP to communicate other metadata as well. For
instance the number of rows returned by an endpoint is reported by -
and limited with - range headers. More about
that.
Data Integrity
Rather than relying on an Object Relational Mapper and custom
imperative coding, this system requires you put declarative constraints
directly into your database. Hence no application can corrupt your
data (including your API server).
The PostgREST exposes HTTP interface with safeguards to prevent
surprises, such as enforcing idempotent PUT requests.