PostgreSQL Compatibility

On this page Carat arrow pointing down
Warning:
As of May 12, 2021, CockroachDB v19.2 is no longer supported. For more details, refer to the Release Support Policy.

CockroachDB supports the PostgreSQL wire protocol and the majority of its syntax. This means that your existing applications can often be migrated to CockroachDB without changing application code.

CockroachDB is compatible with PostgreSQL 9.5 and works with majority of PostgreSQL database tools such as Dbeaver, Intellij, pgdump and so on. Consult this link for a full list of supported third-party database tools. CockroachDB also works with most PostgreSQL drivers and ORMs.

However, CockroachDB does not support some of the PostgreSQL features or behaves differently from PostgreSQL because these features cannot be easily implemented in a distributed system. This page documents the known list of differences between PostgreSQL and CockroachDB for identical input. That is, a SQL statement of the type listed here will behave differently than in PostgreSQL. Porting an existing application to CockroachDB will require changing these expressions.

Note:
This document currently only covers unsupported SQL and how to rewrite SQL expressions. It does not discuss strategies for porting applications that use SQL features CockroachDB does not currently support, such as the ENUM type.

Unsupported Features

  • Stored procedures and functions
  • Triggers
  • Events
  • User-defined functions
  • User-defined schemas
  • FULLTEXT functions and indexes
  • GEOSPATIAL functions and indexes
  • Drop primary key
  • XML Functions
  • Savepoints
  • Column-level privileges
  • CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE syntax
  • XA syntax

Features that differ from PostgreSQL

Note, some of these differences below only apply to rare inputs, and so no change will be needed, even if the listed feature is being used. In these cases, it is safe to ignore the porting instructions.

Overflow of float

In PostgreSQL, the float type returns an error when it overflows or an expression would return Infinity:

postgres=# select 1e300::float * 1e10::float;
ERROR:  value out of range: overflow
postgres=#  select pow(0::float, -1::float);
ERROR:  zero raised to a negative power is undefined

In CockroachDB, these expressions instead return Infinity:

icon/buttons/copy
SELECT 1e300::float * 1e10::float;
+----------------------------+
| 1e300::FLOAT * 1e10::FLOAT |
+----------------------------+
| +Inf                       |
+----------------------------+
icon/buttons/copy
SELECT pow(0::float, -1::float);
+---------------------------+
| pow(0::FLOAT, - 1::FLOAT) |
+---------------------------+
| +Inf                      |
+---------------------------+

Precedence of unary ~

In PostgreSQL, the unary ~ (bitwise not) operator has a low precedence. For example, the following query is parsed as ~ (1 + 2) because ~ has a lower precedence than +:

icon/buttons/copy
SELECT ~1 + 2

In CockroachDB, unary ~ has the same (high) precedence as unary -, so the above expression will be parsed as (~1) + 2.

Porting instructions: Manually add parentheses around expressions that depend on the PostgreSQL behavior.

Precedence of bitwise operators

In PostgreSQL, the operators | (bitwise OR), # (bitwise XOR), and & (bitwise AND) all have the same precedence.

In CockroachDB, the precedence from highest to lowest is: &, #, |.

Porting instructions: Manually add parentheses around expressions that depend on the PostgreSQL behavior.

Integer division

In PostgreSQL, division of integers results in an integer. For example, the following query returns 1, since the 1 / 2 is truncated to 0:

icon/buttons/copy
SELECT 1 + 1 / 2

In CockroachDB, integer division results in a decimal. CockroachDB instead provides the // operator to perform floor division.

Porting instructions: Change / to // in integer division where the result must be an integer.

Shift argument modulo

In PostgreSQL, the shift operators (<<, >>) sometimes modulo their second argument to the bit size of the underlying type. For example, the following query results in a 1 because the int type is 32 bits, and 32 % 32 is 0, so this is the equivalent of 1 << 0:

icon/buttons/copy
SELECT 1::int << 32

In CockroachDB, no such modulo is performed.

Porting instructions: Manually add a modulo to the second argument. Also note that CockroachDB's INT type is always 64 bits. For example:

icon/buttons/copy
SELECT 1::int << (x % 64)

Locking and FOR UPDATE

New in v19.2: Because CockroachDB only supports SERIALIZABLE isolation, locking is not required to order concurrent transactions relative to each other. The FOR UPDATE locking clause is supported in selection queries for database migration compatibility only. As a no-op clause, FOR UPDATE does not provide stronger, PostgreSQL-compatible locking guarantees for uses unrelated to performance, such as applications that require locks to protect data from concurrent access altogether.

CockroachDB uses a lightweight latch to serialize access to common keys across concurrent transactions. As CockroachDB does not allow serializable anomalies, transactions may experience deadlocks or read/write contention. This is expected during concurrency on the same keys. These can be addressed with either automatic retries or client-side intervention techniques.

Schema namespaces

For compatibility with PostgreSQL, CockroachDB supports a three-level structure for names: databases, schemas, and objects.

However, in CockroachDB versions < v20.2, user-defined schemas are not supported, and the only schema available for stored objects is the preloaded public schema. As a result, CockroachDB effectively supports a two-level storage structure: databases and objects. To provide a multi-level structure for stored objects, we recommend using database namespaces in the same way as schema namespaces are used in PostgreSQL.

For more details, see Name Resolution.

SQL Compatibility

Click the following link to find a full list of CockroachDB supported SQL Features.


Yes No
On this page

Yes No