ParadeDB is an Elasticsearch alternative built on Postgres. We’re modernizing the features of Elasticsearch’s product suite, starting with real-time search and analytics.
Roadmap
- Search
- Full-text search with BM25 with pg_search
- Dense and sparse vector search with pgvector
- Distributed search
- Analytics
- Fast analytics over data lakes (i.e. S3) and table formats (i.e. Iceberg) with pg_analytics
- Column-oriented Postgres table access method
For a detailed roadmap, see the ParadeDB Roadmap for 2024 – 2025.
Get Started
To get started, please visit our documentation.
Deploying ParadeDB
ParadeDB and its extensions can be deployed in one of two ways:
- Docker image based on Postgres (see deployment instructions)
- Kubernetes Helm chart based on CloudNativePG (see deployment instructions)
For more information, including enterprise features and support, please contact us by email.
Extensions
You can find prebuilt binaries for the ParadeDB Postgres extensions on Debian 12, Ubuntu 22.04 and 24.04, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 and 9, and macOS 14 (Sonoma) and 15 (Sequoia) for Postgres 14, 15, 16 and 17 in the GitHub Releases.
ParadeDB supports all versions supported by the PostgreSQL Global Development Group, which includes PostgreSQL 13+, and you can compile the extensions for other versions of Postgres by following the instructions in the respective extension’s README.
Docker Image
To quickly get a ParadeDB instance up and running, simply pull and run the latest Docker image:
docker run --name paradedb -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password paradedb/paradedb
This will start a ParadeDB instance with default user postgres
and password password
. You can then connect to the database using psql
:
docker exec -it paradedb psql -U postgres
For more information click here.