Since PipelineDB runs as an extension to PostreSQL, begin by installing PostgreSQL.
Note
PipelineDB currently supports PostgreSQL versions 10.1, 10.2, 10.3, 10.4, 10.5, and 11.0 on 64-bit architectures.
Once you have PostgreSQL installed on your system, you just need to install the PipelineDB binaries and then create the PipelineDB extension within your PostgreSQL database. You can install binaries from our apt or yum repositories or you can download packages from our release archives and install them directly.
First, add our apt repository to your system (inspect apt.sh):
curl -s http://download.pipelinedb.com/apt.sh | sudo bash
Now simply install the latest PipelineDB package:
# PostgreSQL 10 sudo apt-get install pipelinedb-postgresql-10 # PostgreSQL 11 sudo apt-get install pipelinedb-postgresql-11
Add our yum repository to your system (inspect yum.sh):
curl -s http://download.pipelinedb.com/yum.sh | sudo bash
Install the latest PipelineDB package:
# PostgreSQL 10 sudo yum install pipelinedb-postgresql-10 # PostgreSQL 11 sudo yum install pipelinedb-postgresql-11
Note
apt and yum repositories only need to be added to your system a single time. Once you’ve added them, you don’t need to run these scripts again. You need only run the installation commands to get new versions of PipelineDB.
You may also download binary packages from our release archives and install them directly.
To install the PipelineDB RPM package, run:
sudo rpm -ivh pipelinedb-postgresql-<pg version>_<pipelindb version>.rpm
To install the PipelineDB Debian package, run:
sudo dpkg -i pipelinedb-postgresql-<pg version>_<pipelindb version>.deb
In order for PipelineDB to run, the shared_preload_libraries
configuration parameter must be set in postgresql.conf
, which can be found underneath your data directory. It’s also a good idea to set max_worker_processes
to something reasonably high to give PipelineDB worker processes plenty of capacity:
# At the bottom of <data directory>/postgresql.conf shared_preload_libraries = 'pipelinedb' max_worker_processes = 128
To run the PostgreSQL server in the background, use the pg_ctl
driver and point it to your newly initialized data directory:
pg_ctl -D <data directory> -l postgresql.log start
To connect to a running server using the default database, use PostgreSQL’s standard client, psql, which can be used to create the PipelineDB extension:
psql -c "CREATE EXTENSION pipelinedb"
Once the PipelineDB extension has been created, you’re ready to start using PipelineDB!
You can check out the Quickstart section to start streaming data into PipelineDB right now.
By default, PostgreSQL is not configured to allow incoming connections from remote hosts. To enable incoming connections, first set the following line in postgresql.conf
:
listen_addresses = '*'
And in pg_hba.conf
, add a line such as the following to allow incoming connections:
host all all <ip address>/<subnet> md5
For example, to allow incoming connections from any host:
host all all 0.0.0.0/0 md5
PipelineDB is available as a Docker image, making it very easy to run on platforms that don’t currently have official packages. The PipelineDB extension will automatically be created upon database initialization, so Creating the PipelineDB Extension is is not necessary with the Docker image.
You can run a PipelineDB Docker container via docker run
:
docker run pipelinedb/pipelinedb-postgresql-{postgresql version}
The PipelineDB Docker image uses the PostgreSQL image as its parent, so all configuration and customization can be done via the interface that the PostgreSQL image provides.
Now you’re ready to put PipelineDB to work! Check out the Continuous Views or Quickstartsections to get started.
Since there is no standard PostgreSQL installation location on macOS/OSX, we provide a generic tarball package for these platforms from which you may install the PipelineDB binaries against an existing PostgreSQL installation.
After downloading the latest release tarball from our release archives, you just need to run the simple install.sh
script:
$ tar -xvf pipelinedb-postgresql-<pg version>-<pipelinedb version>.osx.tar.gz $ cd pipelinedb-postgresql-<pg version>-<pipelinedb version> $ sudo ./install.sh PipelineDB installation complete.
From here you may proceed by Creating the PipelineDB Extension.