wget -qO- https://dl.packager.io/srv/pghero/pghero/key | sudo apt-key add -
sudo wget -O /etc/apt/sources.list.d/pghero.list \
https://dl.packager.io/srv/pghero/pghero/master/installer/ubuntu/$(. /etc/os-release && echo $VERSION_ID).repo
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get -y install pghero
Supports Ubuntu 20.04 (Focal), 18.04 (Bionic), and 16.04 (Xenial)
sudo apt-get -y install apt-transport-https
wget -qO- https://dl.packager.io/srv/pghero/pghero/key | sudo apt-key add -
sudo wget -O /etc/apt/sources.list.d/pghero.list \
https://dl.packager.io/srv/pghero/pghero/master/installer/debian/$(. /etc/os-release && echo $VERSION_ID).repo
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get -y install pghero
Supports Debian 10 (Buster), 9 (Stretch), and 8 (Jesse)
sudo wget -O /etc/yum.repos.d/pghero.repo \
https://dl.packager.io/srv/pghero/pghero/master/installer/el/$(. /etc/os-release && echo $VERSION_ID).repo
sudo yum -y install pghero
Supports CentOS / RHEL 8 and 7
sudo wget -O /etc/zypp/repos.d/pghero.repo \
https://dl.packager.io/srv/pghero/pghero/master/installer/sles/12.repo
sudo zypper install pghero
Supports SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12
Add your database. Use URL-encoding for any special characters in the username or password.
sudo pghero config:set DATABASE_URL=postgres://user:password@hostname:5432/dbname
Start the server
sudo pghero config:set PORT=3001
sudo pghero config:set RAILS_LOG_TO_STDOUT=disabled
sudo pghero scale web=1
Confirm it’s running with:
curl -v http://localhost:3001/
To open to the outside world, add a proxy. Here’s how to do it with Nginx on Ubuntu.
sudo apt-get install -y nginx
cat | sudo tee /etc/nginx/sites-available/default <<EOF
server {
listen 80;
server_name "";
location / {
proxy_pass http://localhost:3001;
}
}
EOF
sudo service nginx restart
To run under a subpath, also set:
sudo pghero config:set RAILS_RELATIVE_URL_ROOT=my-path
Add basic authentication with:
sudo pghero config:set PGHERO_USERNAME=link
sudo pghero config:set PGHERO_PASSWORD=hyrule
Or use a reverse proxy like OAuth2 Proxy, Amazon’s ALB Authentication, or Google’s Identity-Aware Proxy.
sudo service pghero status
sudo service pghero start
sudo service pghero stop
sudo service pghero restart
View logs
sudo pghero logs
Query stats can be enabled from the dashboard. If you run into issues, view the guide.
To track query stats over time, create a table to store them.
CREATE TABLE "pghero_query_stats" (
"id" bigserial primary key,
"database" text,
"user" text,
"query" text,
"query_hash" bigint,
"total_time" float,
"calls" bigint,
"captured_at" timestamp
);
CREATE INDEX ON "pghero_query_stats" ("database", "captured_at");
This table can be in the current database or another database. If another database, run:
sudo pghero config:set PGHERO_STATS_DATABASE_URL=...
Schedule the task below to run every 5 minutes.
sudo pghero run rake pghero:capture_query_stats
After this, a time range slider will appear on the Queries tab.
The query stats table can grow large over time. Remove old stats with:
sudo pghero run rake pghero:clean_query_stats
To track space stats over time, create a table to store them.
CREATE TABLE "pghero_space_stats" (
"id" bigserial primary key,
"database" text,
"schema" text,
"relation" text,
"size" bigint,
"captured_at" timestamp
);
CREATE INDEX ON "pghero_space_stats" ("database", "captured_at");
Schedule the task below to run once a day.
sudo pghero run rake pghero:capture_space_stats
CPU usage, IOPS, and other stats are available for:
Heroku and Digital Ocean do not currently have an API for database metrics.
Add these variables to your environment:
sudo pghero config:set AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=my-access-key
sudo pghero config:set AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=my-secret
sudo pghero config:set AWS_REGION=us-east-1
sudo pghero config:set PGHERO_DB_INSTANCE_IDENTIFIER=my-instance
This requires the following IAM policy:
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "cloudwatch:GetMetricStatistics",
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
Add these variables to your environment:
sudo pghero config:set GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS=path/to/credentials.json
sudo pghero config:set PGHERO_GCP_DATABASE_ID=my-project:my-instance
This requires the Monitoring Viewer role.
Get your credentials and add these variables to your environment:
AZURE_TENANT_ID=...
AZURE_CLIENT_ID=...
AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET=...
AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_ID=...
Finally, set your database resource URI:
PGHERO_AZURE_RESOURCE_ID=/subscriptions/<subscription-id>/resourceGroups/<resource-group>/providers/Microsoft.DBforPostgreSQL/servers/<database-id>
This requires the Monitoring Reader role.
Create a pghero.yml
with:
databases:
primary:
url: postgres://...
replica:
url: postgres://...
More information about connection parameters
And run:
cat pghero.yml | sudo pghero run sh -c "cat > config/pghero.yml"
sudo service pghero restart
If multiple databases are in the same instance and use historical query stats, PgHero should be configured to capture them together.
databases:
primary:
url: ...
other:
url: ...
capture_query_stats: primary
We recommend setting up a dedicated user for PgHero.
Minimum time for long running queries
sudo pghero config:set PGHERO_LONG_RUNNING_QUERY_SEC=60 # default
Minimum average time for slow queries
sudo pghero config:set PGHERO_SLOW_QUERY_MS=20 # default
Minimum calls for slow queries
sudo pghero config:set PGHERO_SLOW_QUERY_CALLS=100 # default
Minimum connections for high connections warning
sudo pghero config:set PGHERO_TOTAL_CONNECTIONS_THRESHOLD=500 # default
Statement timeout for explain
sudo pghero config:set PGHERO_EXPLAIN_TIMEOUT_SEC=10 # default
Ubuntu and Debian
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install --only-upgrade pghero
sudo service pghero restart
CentOS and RHEL
sudo yum update
sudo yum install pghero
sudo service pghero restart
SUSE
sudo zypper update pghero
sudo service pghero restart
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