The Source Code Repository
The PostgreSQL source code is stored and managed
using the Git version control system. A public
mirror of the master repository is available; it is updated within a minute
of any change to the master repository.
Our wiki, ,
has some discussion on working with Git.
Note that building PostgreSQL from the source
repository requires reasonably up-to-date versions of bison,
flex, and Perl.
These tools are not needed to build from a distribution tarball, because
the files generated with these tools are included in the tarball.
Other tool requirements
are the same as shown in .
Getting the Source via Git
With Git you will make a copy of the entire code repository
on your local machine, so you will have access to all history and branches
offline. This is the fastest and most flexible way to develop or test
patches.
Git
You will need an installed version of Git, which you can
get from . Many systems already
have a recent version of Git installed by default, or
available in their package distribution system.
To begin using the Git repository, make a clone of the official mirror:
git clone https://git.postgresql.org/git/postgresql.git
This will copy the full repository to your local machine, so it may take
a while to complete, especially if you have a slow Internet connection.
The files will be placed in a new subdirectory postgresql of
your current directory.
The Git mirror can also be reached via the Git protocol. Just change the URL
prefix to git, as in:
git clone git://git.postgresql.org/git/postgresql.git
Whenever you want to get the latest updates in the system, cd
into the repository, and run:
git fetch
Git can do a lot more things than just fetch the source. For
more information, consult the Git man pages, or see the
website at .