Server Deployment - pgAdmin 4 3.2 documentation
pgAdmin may be deployed as a web application by configuring the app to run in server mode and then deploying it either behind a webserver running as a reverse proxy, or using the WSGI interface.
The following instructions demonstrate how pgAdmin may be run as a WSGI
application under
Apache
HTTP
, using
mod_wsgi
.
See also
For detailed instructions on building and configuring pgAdmin from scratch, please see the README file in the top level directory of the source code. For convenience, you can find the latest version of the file here , but be aware that this may differ from the version included with the source code for a specific version of pgAdmin.
Requirements ¶
Important : Some components of pgAdmin require the ability to maintain affinity between client sessions and a specific database connection (for example, the Query Tool in which the user might run a BEGIN command followed by a number of DML SQL statements, and then a COMMIT). pgAdmin has been designed with built-in connection management to handle this, however it requires that only a single Python process is used because it is not easily possible to maintain affinity between a client session and one of multiple WSGI worker processes.
On Windows systems, the Apache HTTP server uses a single process, multi-threaded
architecture. WSGI applications run in
embedded
mode, which means that only
a single process will be present on this platform in all cases.
On Unix systems, the Apache HTTP server typically uses a multi-process, single
threaded architecture (this is dependent on the
MPM
that is chosen at
compile time). If
embedded
mode is chosen for the WSGI application, then
there will be one Python environment for each Apache process, each with it’s own
connection manager which will lead to loss of connection affinity. Therefore
one should use
mod_wsgi
’s
daemon
mode, configured to use a single
process. This will launch a single instance of the WSGI application which is
utilised by all the Apache worker processes.
Whilst it is true that this is a potential performance bottleneck, in reality pgAdmin is not a web application that’s ever likely to see heavy traffic unlike a busy website, so in practice should not be an issue.
Future versions of pgAdmin may introduce a shared connection manager process to overcome this limitation, however that is a significant amount of work for little practical gain.
Configuration ¶
In order to configure pgAdmin to run in server mode, it may be necessary to configure the Python code to run in multi-user mode, and then to configure the web server to find and execute the code.
Note that there are multiple configuration files that are read at startup by pgAdmin. These are as follows:
-
config.py
: This is the main configuration file, and should not be modified. It can be used as a reference for configuration settings, that may be overridden in one of the following files. -
config_distro.py
: This file is read afterconfig.py
and is intended for packagers to change any settings that are required for their pgAdmin distribution. This may typically include certain paths and file locations. -
config_local.py
: This file is read afterconfig_distro.py
and is intended for end users to change any default or packaging specific settings that they may wish to adjust to meet local preferences or standards.
Python ¶
From pgAdmin 4 v2 onwards, server mode is the default configuration. If running under the desktop runtime, this is overridden automatically. There should typically be no need to modify the configuration simply to enable server mode to work, however it may be desirable to adjust some of the paths used.
In order to configure the Python code, follow these steps:
-
Create a
config_local.py
file alongside the existingconfig.py
file. -
Edit
config_local.py
and add the following settings. In most cases, the default file locations should be appropriate:NOTE: You must ensure the directories specified are writeable by the user that the web server processes will be running as, e.g. apache or www-data.
LOG_FILE = '/var/log/pgadmin4/pgadmin4.log' SQLITE_PATH = '/var/lib/pgadmin4/pgadmin4.db' SESSION_DB_PATH = '/var/lib/pgadmin4/sessions' STORAGE_DIR = '/var/lib/pgadmin4/storage'
-
Run the following command to create the configuration database:
# python setup.py
-
Change the ownership of the configuration database to the user that the web server processes will run as, for example, assuming that the web server runs as user www-data in group www-data, and that the SQLite path is
/var/lib/pgadmin4/pgadmin4.db
:# chown www-data:www-data /var/lib/pgadmin4/pgadmin4.db
Apache HTTPD Configuration (Windows) ¶
Once Apache HTTP has been configured to support
mod_wsgi
, the pgAdmin
application may be configured similarly to the example below:
*>
ServerName pgadmin.example.com
WSGIScriptAlias / "C:\Program Files\pgAdmin4\web\pgAdmin4.wsgi"
"C:\Program Files\pgAdmin4\web">
Order deny,allow
Allow from all
Now open the file
C:\Program
Files\pgAdmin4\web\pgAdmin4.wsgi
with your favorite editor and add the code
below which will activate Python virtual environment when Apache server runs.
activate_this = 'C:\Program Files\pgAdmin4\venv\Scripts\activate_this.py'
execfile(activate_this, dict(__file__=activate_this))
Note:
The changes made in
pgAdmin4.wsgi
file will revert when pgAdmin4 is either upgraded or downgraded.
Apache HTTPD Configuration (Linux/Unix) ¶
Once Apache HTTP has been configured to support
mod_wsgi
, the pgAdmin
application may be configured similarly to the example below:
*>
ServerName pgadmin.example.com
WSGIDaemonProcess pgadmin processes=1 threads=25 python-home=/path/to/python/virtualenv
WSGIScriptAlias / /opt/pgAdmin4/web/pgAdmin4.wsgi
/opt/pgAdmin4/web>
WSGIProcessGroup pgadmin
WSGIApplicationGroup %{GLOBAL}
Order deny,allow
Allow from all
Note: If you’re using Apache HTTPD 2.4 or later, replace the lines:
Order deny,allow
Allow from all
with:
Require all granted
Adjust as needed to suit your access control requirements.