Crates.io | rust-pgdatadiff-client |
lib.rs | rust-pgdatadiff-client |
version | 0.1.13 |
source | src |
created_at | 2024-03-14 13:40:35.767401 |
updated_at | 2024-06-07 14:34:08.176568 |
description | Rust client for comparing two PostgreSQL databases |
homepage | https://github.com/pavlospt/rust-pgdatadiff |
repository | https://github.com/pavlospt/rust-pgdatadiff |
max_upload_size | |
id | 1173402 |
size | 104,945 |
rust-pgdatadiff
is a re-write of the Python version of pgdatadiff
It is schema aware right from the get-go, as when we had to use the original
pgdatadiff
we ended up having different schemas that we needed to perform checks on.
It runs DB operations in a parallel fashion,
making it at least 3x faster in comparison to the original pgdatadiff
which performs the checks sequentially.
It is written in Rust, which means that it is memory safe and has a very low overhead.
It provides both a library and a client, which means that you can use it as a standalone tool and in your own projects.
The benchmarks below are based on DBs with 5 tables and 1M rows each. The results are as follows:
In case you want to use this as a client you can install it through cargo
:
Client supports two features that allow you to choose between Clap
or Inquire
for running it.
cargo install rust-pgdatadiff-client --features with-clap
cargo install rust-pgdatadiff-client //or with `--features with-inquire`
In case you want to use this as a library you can add it to your Cargo.toml
:
cargo add rust-pgdatadiff
or
[dependencies]
rust-pgdatadiff = "0.1"
Usage: rust-pgdatadiff-client diff [OPTIONS] <FIRST_DB> <SECOND_DB>
Arguments:
<FIRST_DB> postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5438/example
<SECOND_DB> postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5439/example
Options:
--only-tables Only compare data, exclude sequences
--only-sequences Only compare sequences, exclude data
--only-count Do a quick test based on counts alone
--chunk-size <CHUNK_SIZE> The chunk size when comparing data [default: 10000]
--start-position <START_POSITION> The start position for the comparison [default: 0]
--max-connections <MAX_CONNECTIONS> Max connections for Postgres pool [default: 100]
-i, --include-tables [<INCLUDE_TABLES>...] Tables included in the comparison
-e, --exclude-tables [<EXCLUDE_TABLES>...] Tables excluded from the comparison
--schema-name <SCHEMA_NAME> Schema name [default: public]
-h, --help Print help
-V, --version Print version
rust-pgdatadiff-client
use rust_pgdatadiff::diff::diff_ops::Differ;
use rust_pgdatadiff::diff::diff_payload::DiffPayload;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<()> {
let first_db = "postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5438/example";
let second_db = "postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5439/example";
let payload = DiffPayload::new(
first_db.to_owned(),
second_db.to_owned(),
false, //only-tables
false, //only-sequences
false, //only-count
10_000, //chunk-size
0, //start-position
100, //max-connections
vec!["table1", "table2"], //include-tables (mutually exclusive with exclude-tables)
vec!["table3", "table4"], //exclude-tables (mutually exclusive with include-tables)
"public", //schema
);
let diff_result = Differ::diff_dbs(payload).await;
// Handle `diff_result` in any way it fits your use case
Ok(())
}
You can spin up two databases already prefilled with data through Docker Compose.
docker compose up --build
Prefilled databases include a considerable amount of data + rows, so you can run benchmarks against them to check the performance of it. You can modify a few of the generated data in order to see it in action.
You can find an example of using it as a library in the examples
directory.
Run the example with the following command, after Docker Compose has started:
cargo run --example example_diff diff \
"postgresql://localhost:5438?dbname=example&user=postgres&password=postgres" \
"postgresql://localhost:5439?dbname=example&user=postgres&password=postgres"
You can also enable Rust related logs by exporting the following:
export RUST_LOG=rust_pgdatadiff=info
Switching from info
to debug
will give you more detailed logs. Also since we are utilizing
sqlx
under the hood, you can enable sqlx
logs by exporting the following:
export RUST_LOG=rust_pgdatadiff=info,sqlx=debug