Database

pg_net: Async Networking


pg_net enables PostgreSQL to make asynchronous HTTP/HTTPS requests in SQL. It differs from the http extension in that it is asynchronous by default. This makes it useful in blocking functions (like triggers).

It eliminates the need for servers to continuously poll for database changes and instead allows the database to proactively notify external resources about significant events.

Enable the extension

  1. Go to the Database page in the Dashboard.
  2. Click on Extensions in the sidebar.
  3. Search for "pg_net" and enable the extension.

http_get

Creates an HTTP GET request returning the request's ID. HTTP requests are not started until the transaction is committed.

Signature


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net.http_get(
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-- url for the request
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url text,
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-- key/value pairs to be url encoded and appended to the `url`
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params jsonb default '{}'::jsonb,
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-- key/values to be included in request headers
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headers jsonb default '{}'::jsonb,
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-- the maximum number of milliseconds the request may take before being canceled
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timeout_milliseconds int default 2000
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)
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-- request_id reference
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returns bigint
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strict
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volatile
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parallel safe
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language plpgsql

Usage


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select
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net.http_get('https://news.ycombinator.com')
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as request_id;
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request_id
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----------
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1
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(1 row)

http_post

Creates an HTTP POST request with a JSON body, returning the request's ID. HTTP requests are not started until the transaction is committed.

The body's character set encoding matches the database's server_encoding setting.

Signature


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net.http_post(
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-- url for the request
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url text,
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-- body of the POST request
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body jsonb default '{}'::jsonb,
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-- key/value pairs to be url encoded and appended to the `url`
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params jsonb default '{}'::jsonb,
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-- key/values to be included in request headers
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headers jsonb default '{"Content-Type": "application/json"}'::jsonb,
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-- the maximum number of milliseconds the request may take before being canceled
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timeout_milliseconds int default 2000
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)
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-- request_id reference
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returns bigint
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volatile
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parallel safe
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language plpgsql

Usage


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select
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net.http_post(
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url:='https://httpbin.org/post',
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body:='{"hello": "world"}'::jsonb
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) as request_id;
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request_id
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----------
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1
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(1 row)

http_delete

Creates an HTTP DELETE request, returning the request's ID. HTTP requests are not started until the transaction is committed.

Signature


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net.http_delete(
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-- url for the request
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url text,
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-- key/value pairs to be url encoded and appended to the `url`
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params jsonb default '{}'::jsonb,
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-- key/values to be included in request headers
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headers jsonb default '{}'::jsonb,
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-- the maximum number of milliseconds the request may take before being canceled
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timeout_milliseconds int default 2000
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)
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-- request_id reference
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returns bigint
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strict
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volatile
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parallel safe
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language plpgsql
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security definer

Usage


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select
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net.http_delete(
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'https://dummy.restapiexample.com/api/v1/delete/2'
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) as request_id;
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----------
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1
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(1 row)

Analyzing responses

Waiting requests are stored in the net.http_request_queue table. Upon execution, they are deleted.


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CREATE UNLOGGED TABLE
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net.http_request_queue (
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id bigint NOT NULL DEFAULT nextval('net.http_request_queue_id_seq'::regclass),
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method text NOT NULL,
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url text NOT NULL,
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headers jsonb NOT NULL,
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body bytea NULL,
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timeout_milliseconds integer NOT NULL
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)

Once a response is returned, by default, it is stored for 6 hours in the net._http_response table.


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CREATE UNLOGGED TABLE
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net._http_response (
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id bigint NULL,
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status_code integer NULL,
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content_type text NULL,
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headers jsonb NULL,
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content text NULL,
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timed_out boolean NULL,
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error_msg text NULL,
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created timestamp with time zone NOT NULL DEFAULT now()
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)

The responses can be observed with the following query:


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select * from net._http_response;

The data can also be observed in the net schema with the Supabase Dashboard's SQL Editor

Debugging requests

Inspecting request data

The Postman Echo API returns a response with the same body and content as the request. It can be used to inspect the data being sent.

Sending a post request to the echo API


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select
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net.http_post(
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url := 'https://postman-echo.com/post',
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body := '{"key1": "value", "key2": 5}'::jsonb
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) as request_id;

Inspecting the echo API response content to ensure it contains the right body


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select
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"content"
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from net._http_response
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where id = <request_id>
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-- returns information about the request
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-- including the body sent: {"key": "value", "key": 5}

Alternatively, by wrapping a request in a database function, sent row data can be logged or returned for inspection and debugging.


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create or replace function debugging_example (row_id int)
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returns jsonb as $$
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declare
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-- Store payload data
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row_data_var jsonb;
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begin
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-- Retrieve row data and convert to JSON
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select to_jsonb("<example_table>".*) into row_data_var
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from "<example_table>"
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where "<example_table>".id = row_id;
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-- Initiate HTTP POST request to URL
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perform
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net.http_post(
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url := 'https://postman-echo.com/post',
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-- Use row data as payload
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body := row_data_var
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) as request_id;
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-- Optionally Log row data or other data for inspection in Supabase Dashboard's Postgres Logs
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raise log 'Logging an entire row as JSON (%)', row_data_var;
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-- return row data to inspect
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return row_data_var;
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-- Handle exceptions here if needed
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exception
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when others then
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raise exception 'An error occurred: %', SQLERRM;
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end;
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$$ language plpgsql;
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-- calling function
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select debugging_example(<row_id>);

Inspecting failed requests

Finds all failed requests


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select
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*
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from net._http_response
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where "status_code" >= 400 or "error_msg" is not null
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order by "created" desc;

Configuration

The extension is configured to reliably execute up to 200 requests per second. The response messages are stored for only 6 hours to prevent needless buildup. The default behavior can be modified by rewriting config variables.

Get current settings


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select
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"name",
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"setting"
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from pg_settings
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where "name" like 'pg_net%';

Alter settings

Change variables:


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alter role "postgres" set pg_net.ttl to '24 hours';
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alter role "postgres" set pg_net.batch_size to 500;

Then reload the settings and restart the pg_net background worker with:


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select net.worker_restart();

Examples

Invoke a Supabase Edge Function

Make a POST request to a Supabase Edge Function with auth header and JSON body payload:


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select
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net.http_post(
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url:='https://project-ref.supabase.co/functions/v1/function-name',
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headers:='{"Content-Type": "application/json", "Authorization": "Bearer <YOUR_ANON_KEY>"}'::jsonb,
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body:='{"name": "pg_net"}'::jsonb
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) as request_id;

Call an endpoint every minute with pg_cron

The pg_cron extension enables PostgreSQL to become its own cron server. With it you can schedule regular calls with up to a minute precision to endpoints.


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select cron.schedule(
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'cron-job-name',
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'* * * * *', -- Executes every minute (cron syntax)
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$$
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-- SQL query
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select "net"."http_post"(
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-- URL of Edge function
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url:='https://project-ref.supabase.co/functions/v1/function-name',
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headers:='{"Authorization": "Bearer <YOUR_ANON_KEY>"}'::jsonb,
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body:='{"name": "pg_net"}'::jsonb
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) as "request_id";
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$$
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);

Execute pg_net in a trigger

Make a call to an external endpoint when a trigger event occurs.


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-- function called by trigger
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create or replace function <function_name>()
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returns trigger
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language plpgSQL
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as $$
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begin
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-- calls pg_net function net.http_post
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-- sends request to postman API
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perform "net"."http_post"(
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'https://postman-echo.com/post'::text,
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jsonb_build_object(
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'old_row', to_jsonb(old.*),
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'new_row', to_jsonb(new.*)
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),
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headers:='{"Content-Type": "application/json"}'::jsonb
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) as request_id;
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return new;
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END $$;
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-- trigger for table update
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create trigger <trigger_name>
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after update on <table_name>
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for each row
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execute function <function_name>();

Send multiple table rows in one request


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with "selected_table_rows" as (
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select
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-- Converts all the rows into a JSONB array
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jsonb_agg(to_jsonb(<table_name>.*)) as JSON_payload
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from <table_name>
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-- good practice to LIMIT the max amount of rows
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)
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select
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net.http_post(
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url := 'https://postman-echo.com/post'::text,
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body := JSON_payload
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) AS request_id
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FROM "selected_table_rows";

More examples can be seen on the Extension's GitHub page

Limitations

  • To improve speed and performance, the requests and responses are stored in unlogged tables, which are not preserved during a crash or unclean shutdown.
  • By default, response data is saved for only 6 hours
  • Can only make POST requests with JSON data. No other data formats are supported
  • Intended to handle at most 200 requests per second. Increasing the rate can introduce instability
  • Does not have support for PATCH/PUT requests
  • Can only work with one database at a time. It defaults to the postgres database.

Resources