Pgedge Goes Open Source
Key topics
PgEdge, a company offering a PostgreSQL-based database solution, has gone open source under the PostgreSQL license, sparking discussion about its reliability, potential competition with hyperscalers, and comparison to similar technologies.
Snapshot generated from the HN discussion
Discussion Activity
Active discussionFirst comment
3h
Peak period
19
Day 1
Avg / period
6.2
Based on 31 loaded comments
Key moments
- 01Story posted
Sep 11, 2025 at 4:01 AM EDT
4 months ago
Step 01 - 02First comment
Sep 11, 2025 at 7:28 AM EDT
3h after posting
Step 02 - 03Peak activity
19 comments in Day 1
Hottest window of the conversation
Step 03 - 04Latest activity
Sep 20, 2025 at 5:34 AM EDT
4 months ago
Step 04
Generating AI Summary...
Analyzing up to 500 comments to identify key contributors and discussion patterns
Want the full context?
Jump to the original sources
Read the primary article or dive into the live Hacker News thread when you're ready.
To configure passwordless sudo, open the /etc/sudoers file, and add a line of the form: %username ALL = (ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
And the same user should have a password less SSH access with private key ...
And of course it doesn't help the tedium of reading HN that there's 5 very vocal commentators who want to the world to know that "OSI doesn't own the definition of open source", even though when asked will define open source as "can be commercially restricted".
Had to look elsewhere as well...
More thoughts on why we feel that's important here: https://www.pgedge.com/blog/considering-distributed-postgres...
and the Buyer's Guide (https://www.pgedge.com/landing-pages/distributed-postgresql-...) referenced within does list more technical details and comparisons between us and YugabyteDB / CockroachDB.
Citus focuses on scaling Postgres via sharding, typically with a single write node and many read replicas. It’s great for high-throughput, analytical workloads. pgEdge, by contrast, is built for geo-distributed, multi-master Postgres — all nodes are writable, with built-in conflict resolution. It prioritizes low latency, availability, and data locality over pure scale-out. So the goals are pretty different.
I assume given there are two Vitess for Postgres being worked on now they have decided to open source it?
> pgEdge emerged in late 2024 as a serverless distributed Postgres managed cloud service, delivering low latency and high availability in three minutes or less. The pgEdge Platform (for on-premises distributed PostgreSQL) as well as pgEdge Cloud (for deploying in the cloud) was largely inspired by the original capabilities of the pgLogical extension.
https://www.pgedge.com/blog/navigating-distributed-postgresq...