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Postgres node#

Use the Postgres node to automate work in Postgres, and integrate Postgres with other applications. n8n has built-in support for a wide range of Postgres features, including executing queries, as well as inserting and updating rows in a database.

On this page, you'll find a list of operations the Postgres node supports and links to more resources.

Credentials

Refer to Postgres credentials for guidance on setting up authentication.

Operations#

Delete#

Use this operation to delete an entire table or rows in a table.

Enter these parameters:

  • Credential to connect with: Create or select an existing Postgres credential.
  • Operation: Select Delete.
  • Schema: Choose the schema that contains the table you want to work on. Select From list to choose the schema from the dropdown list or By Name to enter the schema name.
  • Table: Choose the table that you want to work on. Select From list to choose the table from the dropdown list or By Name to enter the table name.
  • Command: The deletion action to take:
    • Truncate: Removes the table's data but preserves the table's structure.
      • Restart Sequences: Whether to reset auto increment columns to their initial values as part of the Truncate process.
    • Delete: Delete the rows that match the "Select Rows" condition. If you don't select anything, Postgres deletes all rows.
      • Select Rows: Define a Column, Operator, and Value to match rows on.
      • Combine Conditions: How to combine the conditions in "Select Rows". AND requires all conditions to be true, while OR requires at least one condition to be true.
    • Drop: Deletes the table's data and structure permanently.

Delete options#

  • Cascade: Whether to also drop all objects that depend on the table, like views and sequences. Available if using Truncate or Drop commands.
  • Connection Timeout: The number of seconds to try to connect to the database.
  • Delay Closing Idle Connection: The number of seconds to wait before considering idle connections eligible for closing.
  • Query Batching: The way to send queries to the database:
    • Single Query: A single query for all incoming items.
    • Independently: Execute one query per incoming item of the execution.
    • Transaction: Execute all queries in a transaction. If a failure occurs, Postgres rolls back all changes.
  • Output Large-Format Numbers As: The format to output NUMERIC and BIGINT columns as:
    • Numbers: Use this for standard numbers.
    • Text: Use this if you expect numbers longer than 16 digits. Without this, numbers may be incorrect.

Execute Query#

Use this operation to execute an SQL query.

Enter these parameters:

Execute Query options#

  • Connection Timeout: The number of seconds to try to connect to the database.
  • Delay Closing Idle Connection: The number of seconds to wait before considering idle connections eligible for closing.
  • Query Batching: The way to send queries to the database:
    • Single Query: A single query for all incoming items.
    • Independently: Execute one query per incoming item of the execution.
    • Transaction: Execute all queries in a transaction. If a failure occurs, Postgres rolls back all changes.
  • Query Parameters: A comma-separated list of values that you want to use as query parameters.
  • Output Large-Format Numbers As: The format to output NUMERIC and BIGINT columns as:
    • Numbers: Use this for standard numbers.
    • Text: Use this if you expect numbers longer than 16 digits. Without this, numbers may be incorrect.
  • Replace Empty Strings with NULL: Whether to replace empty strings with NULL in input. This may be useful when working with data exported from spreadsheet software.

Insert#

Use this operation to insert rows in a table.

Enter these parameters:

  • Credential to connect with: Create or select an existing Postgres credential.
  • Operation: Select Insert.
  • Schema: Choose the schema that contains the table you want to work on. Select From list to choose the schema from the dropdown list or By Name to enter the schema name.
  • Table: Choose the table that you want to work on. Select From list to choose the table from the dropdown list or By Name to enter the table name.
  • Mapping Column Mode: How to map column names to incoming data:
    • Map Each Column Manually: Select the values to use for each column.
    • Map Automatically: Automatically map incoming data to matching column names in Postgres. The incoming data field names must match the column names in Postgres for this to work. If necessary, consider using the edit fields (set) node before this node to adjust the format as needed.

Insert options#

  • Connection Timeout: The number of seconds to try to connect to the database.
  • Delay Closing Idle Connection: The number of seconds to wait before considering idle connections eligible for closing.
  • Query Batching: The way to send queries to the database:
    • Single Query: A single query for all incoming items.
    • Independently: Execute one query per incoming item of the execution.
    • Transaction: Execute all queries in a transaction. If a failure occurs, Postgres rolls back all changes.
  • Output Columns: Choose which columns to output. You can select from a list of available columns or specify IDs using expressions.
  • Output Large-Format Numbers As: The format to output NUMERIC and BIGINT columns as:
    • Numbers: Use this for standard numbers.
    • Text: Use this if you expect numbers longer than 16 digits. Without this, numbers may be incorrect.
  • Skip on Conflict: Whether to skip the row if the insert violates a unique or exclusion constraint instead of throwing an error.
  • Replace Empty Strings with NULL: Whether to replace empty strings with NULL in input. This may be useful when working with data exported from spreadsheet software.

Insert or Update#

Use this operation to insert or update rows in a table.

Enter these parameters:

  • Credential to connect with: Create or select an existing Postgres credential.
  • Operation: Select Insert or Update.
  • Schema: Choose the schema that contains the table you want to work on. Select From list to choose the schema from the dropdown list or By Name to enter the schema name.
  • Table: Choose the table that you want to work on. Select From list to choose the table from the dropdown list or By Name to enter the table name.
  • Mapping Column Mode: How to map column names to incoming data:
    • Map Each Column Manually: Select the values to use for each column.
    • Map Automatically: Automatically map incoming data to matching column names in Postgres. The incoming data field names must match the column names in Postgres for this to work. If necessary, consider using the edit fields (set) node before this node to adjust the format as needed.

Insert or Update options#

  • Connection Timeout: The number of seconds to try to connect to the database.
  • Delay Closing Idle Connection: The number of seconds to wait before considering idle connections eligible for closing.
  • Query Batching: The way to send queries to the database:
    • Single Query: A single query for all incoming items.
    • Independently: Execute one query per incoming item of the execution.
    • Transaction: Execute all queries in a transaction. If a failure occurs, Postgres rolls back all changes.
  • Output Columns: Choose which columns to output. You can select from a list of available columns or specify IDs using expressions.
  • Output Large-Format Numbers As: The format to output NUMERIC and BIGINT columns as:
    • Numbers: Use this for standard numbers.
    • Text: Use this if you expect numbers longer than 16 digits. Without this, numbers may be incorrect.
  • Replace Empty Strings with NULL: Whether to replace empty strings with NULL in input. This may be useful when working with data exported from spreadsheet software.

Select#

Use this operation to select rows in a table.

Enter these parameters:

  • Credential to connect with: Create or select an existing Postgres credential.
  • Operation: Select Select.
  • Schema: Choose the schema that contains the table you want to work on. Select From list to choose the schema from the dropdown list or By Name to enter the schema name.
  • Table: Choose the table that you want to work on. Select From list to choose the table from the dropdown list or By Name to enter the table name.
  • Return All: Whether to return all results or only up to a given limit.
  • Limit: The maximum number of items to return when Return All is disabled.
  • Select Rows: Set the conditions to select rows. Define a Column, Operator, and Value to match rows on. If you don't select anything, Postgres selects all rows.
  • Combine Conditions: How to combine the conditions in Select Rows. AND requires all conditions to be true, while OR requires at least one condition to be true.
  • Sort: Choose how to sort the selected rows. Choose a Column from a list or by ID and a sort Direction.

Select options#

  • Connection Timeout: The number of seconds to try to connect to the database.
  • Delay Closing Idle Connection: The number of seconds to wait before considering idle connections eligible for closing.
  • Query Batching: The way to send queries to the database:
    • Single Query: A single query for all incoming items.
    • Independently: Execute one query per incoming item of the execution.
    • Transaction: Execute all queries in a transaction. If a failure occurs, Postgres rolls back all changes.
  • Output Columns: Choose which columns to output. You can select from a list of available columns or specify IDs using expressions.
  • Output Large-Format Numbers As: The format to output NUMERIC and BIGINT columns as:
    • Numbers: Use this for standard numbers.
    • Text: Use this if you expect numbers longer than 16 digits. Without this, numbers may be incorrect.

Update#

Use this operation to update rows in a table.

Enter these parameters:

  • Credential to connect with: Create or select an existing Postgres credential.
  • Operation: Select Update.
  • Schema: Choose the schema that contains the table you want to work on. Select From list to choose the schema from the dropdown list or By Name to enter the schema name.
  • Table: Choose the table that you want to work on. Select From list to choose the table from the dropdown list or By Name to enter the table name.
  • Mapping Column Mode: How to map column names to incoming data:
    • Map Each Column Manually: Select the values to use for each column.
    • Map Automatically: Automatically map incoming data to matching column names in Postgres. The incoming data field names must match the column names in Postgres for this to work. If necessary, consider using the edit fields (set) node before this node to adjust the format as needed.

Update options#

  • Connection Timeout: The number of seconds to try to connect to the database.
  • Delay Closing Idle Connection: The number of seconds to wait before considering idle connections eligible for closing.
  • Query Batching: The way to send queries to the database:
    • Single Query: A single query for all incoming items.
    • Independently: Execute one query per incoming item of the execution.
    • Transaction: Execute all queries in a transaction. If a failure occurs, Postgres rolls back all changes.
  • Output Columns: Choose which columns to output. You can select from a list of available columns or specify IDs using expressions.
  • Output Large-Format Numbers As: The format to output NUMERIC and BIGINT columns as:
    • Numbers: Use this for standard numbers.
    • Text: Use this if you expect numbers longer than 16 digits. Without this, numbers may be incorrect.
  • Replace Empty Strings with NULL: Whether to replace empty strings with NULL in input. This may be useful when working with data exported from spreadsheet software.

Templates and examples#

Sync new data between two apps

by n8n Team

View template details
πŸ€– Advanced Slackbot with n8n

by Mutasem

View template details
ETL pipeline for text processing

by Lorena

View template details
Browse Postgres integration templates, or search all templates

n8n provides a trigger node for Postgres. You can find the trigger node docs here.

Use query parameters#

When creating a query to run on a Postgres database, you can use the Query Parameters field in the Options section to load data into the query. n8n sanitizes data in query parameters, which prevents SQL injection.

For example, you want to find a person by their email address. Given the following input data:

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[
    {
        "email": "alex@example.com",
        "name": "Alex",
        "age": 21 
    },
    {
        "email": "jamie@example.com",
        "name": "Jamie",
        "age": 33 
    }
]

You can write a query like:

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SELECT * FROM $1:name WHERE email = $2;

Then in Query Parameters, provide the field values to use. You can provide fixed values or expressions. For this example, use expressions so the node can pull the email address from each input item in turn:

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// users is an example table name
users, {{ $json.email }} 

Common issues#

For common questions or issues and suggested solutions, refer to Common issues.