Awesome
Skor
New and improved version of Skor is now part of Hasura GraphQL Engine
A few months ago, we built the open source GraphQL Engine that gives you instant GraphQL APIs over any Postgres database. We have added all of Skor's existing features and even more to make it production ready:
-
Reliable: We capture every relevant action on the database as an event, even when Hasura is down! The events are delivered to your webhook as soon as possible with an atleast-once guarantee.
-
Scalable: What more, it even scales horizontally. If you are processing millions of events, just add more instances of GraphQL engine.
-
Use with Serverless: If you are using Skor, then avoid the pain of managing your webhook by moving to Serverless infrastructure. Check out these blog posts to get started
Use Hasura GraphQL Engine for production use cases
skor
is a utility for Postgres which calls a webhook with row changes as JSON whenever an INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE event occurs on a particular table.
You can drop the docker image next to your Postgres database instance and configure a webhook that will be called.
It works using a pg_notify
trigger function and a tiny C program skor
that listens to the notifications and calls the configured webhook with a JSON payload.
When to use
- When you want to trigger an action in an external application when a table row is modified.
- When you want a lightweight notification system for changes in the database.
- When you want to send the changes to a message queue such as AMQP, Kafka etc.
How it works
A PostgreSQL stored procedure is set up as a trigger on the required table(s). This trigger uses PostgreSQL's LISTEN and NOTIFY to publish change events as JSON to a notification channel. Skor
watches this channel for messages and when a message is received, it makes an HTTP POST call to the webhook with the JSON payload. The webhook can then decide to take an action on this.
Caveats
- Events are only captured when skor is running.
- If a call to the webhook fails, it is not retried.
Getting started
1) Set up the triggers:
We need to setup triggers on the tables that we we are interested in. Create a triggers.json
file (see sample.triggers.json) with the required tables and events.
Note: This command requires python3
.
$ ./gen-triggers.py triggers.json | psql -h localhost -p 5432 -U postgres -d postgres --single-transaction --
2) Run Skor:
Run the skor Docker image (that has the skor
binary baked in):
$ docker run \
-e DBNAME="postgres" \
-e PGUSER="postgres" \
-e PGPASS="''" \
-e PGHOST="localhost" \
-e PGPORT=5432 \
-e WEBHOOKURL="http://localhost:5000/" \
--net host \
-it hasura/skor:v0.1.1
Make sure you use the appropriate database parameters and webhook URL above.
Examples
INSERT
Query:
INSERT INTO test_table(name) VALUES ('abc1');
JSON webhook payload:
{"data": {"id": 1, "name": "abc1"}, "table": "test_table", "op": "INSERT"}
UPDATE
Query:
UPDATE test_table SET name = 'pqr1' WHERE id = 1;
JSON webhook payload:
{"data": {"id": 1, "name": "pqr1"}, "table": "test_table", "op": "UPDATE"}
DELETE
Query:
DELETE FROM test_table WHERE id = 1;
JSON webhook payload:
{"data": {"id": 1, "name": "pqr1"}, "table": "test_table", "op": "DELETE"}
Uninstalling
To remove the skor related functions and triggers that were added to Postgres, run this in psql:
DO $$DECLARE r record;
BEGIN
FOR r IN SELECT routine_schema, routine_name FROM information_schema.routines
WHERE routine_name LIKE 'notify_skor%'
LOOP
EXECUTE 'DROP FUNCTION ' || quote_ident(r.routine_schema) || '.' || quote_ident(r.routine_name) || ' CASCADE';
END LOOP;
END$$;
Deploying Skor on Hasura
The pre-built Docker image with the skor
binary is available at hasura/skor
and can be deployed as a microservice with the sample k8s.yaml
in this repo.
The webhook can be another microservice that exposes an endpoint.
To learn more on deploying microservices on Hasura you may check out the documentation.
Build Skor:
Requirements:
- PostgreSQL 9+
gcc
- libcurl (
libcurl4-openssl-dev
) - libppq (
libpq-dev
)
Build:
$ make
Run:
$ ./build/skor 'host=localhost port=5432 dbname=postgres user=postgres password=' http://localhost:5000
Test
- Install the requirements specified in
tests/requirements.txt
- The tests assume that you have a local postgres instance at
localhost:5432
and a database calledskor_test
which can be accessed by anadmin
user. - Run skor on this database with the webhook url set to
http://localhost:5000
- run
run_tests.sh
script in thetests
directory.
Contributing
Contributions are welcome!
Please check out the contributing guide to learn about setting up the development environment and building the project. Also look at the issues page and help us in improving Skor!