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node-postgres via a WebSocket TCP proxy from neon.tech

Package Exports

  • @neondatabase/serverless
  • @neondatabase/serverless/index.js

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (@neondatabase/serverless) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

@neondatabase/serverless [BETA]

This package from Neon shims the node-postgres pg library to work on edge runtimes such as Cloudflare Workers — places where TCP sockets are not available — via a WebSocket proxy.

Note: this package also works in web browsers, but in most cases it's not appropriate to publicly deploy that way, since it would reveal your Postgres credentials.

How to use it

Where you'd otherwise install pg and @types/pg, instead run npm install @neondatabase/serverless.

Then use it the same way you'd use pg. For example, make your Neon database connection string available in env.DATABASE_URL, then:

import { Client } from '@neondatabase/serverless';

async function whatsTheTimeMrPostgres() {
  const client = new Client(env.DATABASE_URL);
  await client.connect();
  const { rows: [{ now }] } = await client.query('select now();');
  await client.end();
  return now;
}

Run your own WebSocket proxy

The package comes configured to connect to Neon's WebSocket proxy, which will then allow onward connections only to Neon databases.

But you can run your own copy of the WebSocket proxy, and configure it to allow onward connections to your own Postgres instances.

First, you'll need to set up the proxy itself somewhere public-facing (or on localhost for development). See https://github.com/neondatabase/wsproxy for the Go code and instructions.

Then you'll need to set two options on this package — wsProxy and rootCerts — by importing the neonConfig object. For example:

import { Client, neonConfig } from '@neondatabase/serverless';

neonConfig.wsProxy = 'my-wsproxy.example.com';

neonConfig.rootCerts = `
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
MIIFazCCA1OgAwIBAgIRAIIQz7DSQONZRGPgu2OCiwAwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQELBQAw
...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
`;

async function whatsTheTimeMrPostgres() {
  const client = new Client(env.DATABASE_URL);
  await client.connect();
  const { rows: [{ now }] } = await client.query('select now();');
  await client.end();
  return now;
}

wsProxy

The wsProxy setting should point to the WebSocket proxy you just set up. Usually that will just be a URL host string, but if you want to run different proxies depending on the database host (e.g. to match regions) you can also pass a function with the signature (dbHost: string) => string. For example:

neonConfig.wsProxy = (dbHost) => 
  /[.]eu[.]db[.]example[.]com$/.test(dbHost) ? 
    'my-wsproxy.eu.example.com' : 
      'my-wsproxy.us.example.com';

rootCerts

We bundle our own TLS implementation, which needs to know what root (certificate authority) certificates to trust. The default value of rootCerts is the ISRG Root X1 certificate, which is appropriate for servers secured with Let’s Encrypt certificates.

If you're using any other certificate authority to secure Postgres connections, provide the root certificate(s) in PEM format to the rootCerts option.

TLS version

Please note that the library requires your Postgres installation to support TLS 1.3.

Orientation

The code is at https://github.com/neondatabase/serverless. Most of it is in shims/net/index.ts. Alongside that file, tls.js and tls.wasm come from https://github.com/jawj/cloudflare-pg-client (where we patch deno-postgres for a similar purpose, and compile WolfSSL with emscripten along the way).

  • To update the npm package, run ./export.sh, then cd dist/npm and npm publish.

  • To run or deploy the test app on Cloudflare, create a .dev.vars file containing DATABASE_URL=postgres://connection_string, run npx wrangler dev --local or npx wrangler publish.

  • To run the test app in a browser, create a .dev.vars file, run ./build.sh, start a local server at the repo root, and visit http://localhost:8080/dist/deploy/ (replacing the port number as appropriate).