BemiDB is a Postgres read replica optimized for analytics. It consists of a single binary that seamlessly connects to a Postgres database, replicates the data in a compressed columnar format, and allows you to run complex queries using its Postgres-compatible analytical query engine.
- Highlights
- Use cases
- Quickstart
- Configuration
- Architecture
- Benchmark
- Data type mapping
- Future roadmap
- Alternatives
- Development
- License
- Performance: runs analytical queries up to 2000x faster than Postgres.
- Single Binary: consists of a single binary that can be run on any machine.
- Postgres Replication: automatically syncs data from Postgres databases.
- Compressed Data: uses an open columnar format for tables with 4x compression.
- Scalable Storage: storage is separated from compute and can natively work on S3.
- Query Engine: embeds a query engine optimized for analytical workloads.
- Postgres-Compatible: integrates with any services and tools in the Postgres ecosystem.
- Open-Source: released under an OSI-approved license.
- Run complex analytical queries like it's your Postgres database. Without worrying about performance impact and indexing.
- Simplify your data stack down to a single binary. No complex setup, no data movement, no CDC, no ETL, no DW.
- Integrate with Postgres-compatible tools and services. Query and visualize data with BI tools, notebooks, and ORMs.
- Have all data automatically synced into your data lakehouse. Using Iceberg tables with Parquet data on object storage.
Install BemiDB:
curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/BemiHQ/BemiDB/refs/heads/main/scripts/install.sh | bash
Sync data from a Postgres database:
./bemidb --pg-database-url postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/dbname sync
Run BemiDB database:
./bemidb start
Run Postgres queries on top of the BemiDB database:
# List all tables
psql postgres://localhost:54321/bemidb -c "SELECT * FROM information_schema.tables"
# Query a table
psql postgres://localhost:54321/bemidb -c "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM [table_name]"
By default, BemiDB stores data on the local disk.
Here is an example of running BemiDB with default settings and storing data in a local iceberg
directory:
./bemidb \
--port 54321 \
--database bemidb \
--user= \ # Allow any credentials
--password= \
--storage-type LOCAL \
--storage-path ./iceberg \ # $PWD/iceberg/*
--init-sql ./init.sql \
--log-level INFO \
start
To run BemiDB with environment variables:
# Default settings
export BEMIDB_PORT=54321
export BEMIDB_DATABASE=bemidb
export BEMIDB_USER=
export BEMIDB_PASSWORD=
export BEMIDB_STORAGE_TYPE=LOCAL
export BEMIDB_STORAGE_PATH=./iceberg
export BEMIDB_INIT_SQL=./init.sql
export BEMIDB_LOG_LEVEL=INFO
./bemidb start
BemiDB natively supports S3 storage. You can specify the S3 settings using the following flags:
./bemidb \
--port 54321 \
--database bemidb \
--storage-type S3 \
--storage-path iceberg \ # s3://[AWS_S3_BUCKET]/iceberg/*
--aws-region [AWS_REGION] \
--aws-s3-bucket [AWS_S3_BUCKET] \
--aws-access-key-id [AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID] \
--aws-secret-access-key [AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY] \
start
To run BemiDB with environment variables:
export BEMIDB_PORT=54321
export BEMIDB_DATABASE=bemidb
export BEMIDB_STORAGE_TYPE=S3
export BEMIDB_STORAGE_PATH=iceberg
export AWS_REGION=[AWS_REGION]
export AWS_S3_BUCKET=[AWS_S3_BUCKET]
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=[AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID]
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=[AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY]
./bemidb start
CLI arguments take precedence over environment variables. I.e. you can override the environment variables with CLI arguments.
Here is the minimal IAM policy required for BemiDB to work with S3:
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "VisualEditor0",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:DeleteObject"
],
"Resource": [
"arn:aws:s3:::[AWS_S3_BUCKET]",
"arn:aws:s3:::[AWS_S3_BUCKET]/*"
]
}
]
}
Sync data periodically from a Postgres database:
./bemidb \
--pg-sync-interval 1h \
--pg-database-url postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/dbname \
sync
Alternatively, you can set the interval using environment variables:
export PG_SYNC_INTERVAL=1h
export PG_DATABASE_URL=postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/dbname
./bemidb sync
Note that incremental real-time replication is not supported yet (WIP). Please see the Future roadmap.
BemiDB supports syncing data from multiple Postgres databases into the same BemiDB database by allowing prefixing schemas.
For example, if two Postgres databases db1
and db2
contain public
schemas, you can prefix them as follows:
./bemidb \
--pg-schema-prefix db1_ \ # or PG_SCHEMA_PREFIX=db1_ using an env variable
--pg-database-url postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/db1 \
sync
./bemidb \
--pg-schema-prefix db2_ \ # or PG_SCHEMA_PREFIX=db2_ using an env variable
--pg-database-url postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/db2 \
sync
Then you can query and join tables from both Postgres databases in the same BemiDB database:
./bemidb start
psql postgres://localhost:54321/bemidb -c "SELECT * FROM db1_public.[TABLE] JOIN db2_public.[TABLE] ON ..."
BemiDB consists of the following main components:
- Database Server: implements the Postgres protocol to enable Postgres compatibility.
- Query Engine: embeds the DuckDB query engine to run analytical queries.
- Storage Layer: uses the Iceberg table format to store data in columnar compressed Parquet files.
- Postgres Connector: connects to a Postgres databases to sync tables' schema and data.
BemiDB is optimized for analytical workloads and can run complex queries up to 2000x faster than Postgres.
On the TPC-H benchmark with 22 sequential queries, BemiDB outperforms Postgres by a significant margin:
- Scale factor: 0.1
- BemiDB unindexed: 2.3s π
- Postgres unindexed: 1h23m13s π (2,170x slower)
- Postgres indexed: 1.5s π (99.97% bottleneck reduction)
- Scale factor: 1.0
- BemiDB unindexed: 25.6s π
- Postgres unindexed: β π (infinitely slower)
- Postgres indexed: 1h34m40s π (220x slower)
See the benchmark directory for more details.
Primitive data types are mapped as follows:
PostgreSQL | Parquet | Iceberg |
---|---|---|
bool |
BOOLEAN |
boolean |
bpchar , varchar , text |
BYTE_ARRAY (UTF8 ) |
string |
int2 , int4 |
INT32 |
int |
int8 |
INT64 |
long |
xid |
INT32 (UINT_32 ) |
int |
xid8 |
INT64 (UINT_64 ) |
long |
float4 , float8 |
FLOAT |
float |
numeric |
FIXED_LEN_BYTE_ARRAY (DECIMAL ) |
decimal(P, S) |
date |
INT32 (DATE ) |
date |
time , timetz |
INT64 (TIME_MICROS / TIME_MILLIS ) |
time |
timestamp |
INT64 (TIMESTAMP_MICROS / TIMESTAMP_MILLIS ) |
timestamp / timestamp_ns |
timestamptz |
INT64 (TIMESTAMP_MICROS / TIMESTAMP_MILLIS ) |
timestamptz / timestamptz_ns |
uuid |
FIXED_LEN_BYTE_ARRAY |
uuid |
bytea |
BYTE_ARRAY (UTF8 ) |
binary |
interval |
BYTE_ARRAY (UTF8 ) |
string |
point , line , lseg , box , path , polygon , circle |
BYTE_ARRAY (UTF8 ) |
string |
cidr , inet , macaddr , macaddr8 |
BYTE_ARRAY (UTF8 ) |
string |
tsvector , ltree , pg_snapshot |
BYTE_ARRAY (UTF8 ) |
string |
json , jsonb |
BYTE_ARRAY (UTF8 ) |
string (JSON logical type) |
_* (array) |
LIST * |
list |
* (user-defined type) |
BYTE_ARRAY (UTF8 ) |
string |
Note that Postgres json
and jsonb
types are implemented as JSON logical types and stored as strings (Parquet and Iceberg don't support unstructured data types).
You can query JSON columns using standard operators, for example:
SELECT * FROM [TABLE] WHERE [JSON_COLUMN]->>'[JSON_KEY]' = '[JSON_VALUE]';
- Incremental data synchronization into Iceberg tables.
- Support for parent partitioned tables.
- Real-time replication from Postgres using CDC.
- Direct Postgres-compatible write operations.
- Iceberg table compaction and partitioning.
- Cache layer for frequently accessed data.
- Materialized views.
- Support for custom S3-compatible endpoints.
PostgreSQL pros:
- It is the most loved general-purpose transactional (OLTP) database π
- Capable of running analytical queries at small scale
PostgreSQL cons:
- Slow for analytical (OLAP) queries on medium and large datasets
- Requires creating indexes for specific analytical queries, which impacts the "write" performance for transactional queries
- Materialized views as a "cache" require manual maintenance and become increasingly slow to refresh as the data grows
- Further tuning may not be possible if executing various ad-hoc analytical queries
PostgreSQL extensions pros:
- There is a wide range of extensions available in the PostgreSQL ecosystem
- Open-source community driven
PostgreSQL extensions cons:
- Performance overhead when running analytical queries affecting transactional queries
- Limited support for installable extensions in managed PostgreSQL services (for example, AWS Aurora allowlist)
- Increased PostgreSQL maintenance complexity when upgrading versions
- Require manual data syncing and schema mapping if data is stored in a different format
Main types of extensions for analytics:
- Foreign data wrapper extensions (parquet_fdw, parquet_s3_fdw, etc.)
- Pros: allow querying external data sources like columnar Parquet files directly from PostgreSQL
- Cons: use not optimized for analytics query engines
- OLAP query engine extensions (pg_duckdb, pg_analytics, etc.)
- Pros: integrate an analytical query engine directly into PostgreSQL
- Cons: cumbersome to use (creating foreign tables, calling custom functions), data layer is not integrated and optimized
DuckDB pros:
- Designed for OLAP use cases
- Easy to run with a single binary
DuckDB cons:
- Limited support in the data ecosystem like notebooks, BI tools, etc.
- Requires manual data syncing and schema mapping for best performance
- Limited features compared to a full-fledged database: no support for writing into Iceberg tables, reading from Iceberg according to the spec, etc.
Real-time OLAP databases pros:
- High-performance optimized for real-time analytics
Real-time OLAP databases cons:
- Require expertise to set up and manage distributed systems
- Limitations on data mutability
- Steeper learning curve
- Require manual data syncing and schema mapping
Big data query engines pros:
- Distributed SQL query engines for big data analytics
Big data query engines cons:
- Complex to set up and manage a distributed query engine (ZooKeeper, JVM, etc.)
- Don't have a storage layer themselves
- Require manual data syncing and schema mapping
Proprietary solutions pros:
- Fully managed cloud data warehouses and lakehouses optimized for OLAP
Proprietary solutions cons:
- Can be expensive compared to other alternatives
- Vendor lock-in and limited control over the data
- Require separate systems for data syncing and schema mapping
We develop BemiDB using Devbox to ensure a consistent development environment without relying on Docker.
To start developing BemiDB and run tests, follow these steps:
cp .env.sample .env
make install
make test
To run BemiDB locally, use the following command:
make up
To sync data from a Postgres database, use the following command:
make sync
Distributed under the terms of the AGPL-3.0 License. If you need to modify and distribute the code, please release it to contribute back to the open-source community.