- Boot Sequin
- Connect to a sample playground database
- Configure a Redis stream to receive database changes
- See your changes flow in real-time
This guide is for Redis Streams which use
XADD to build a stream. If you are want to use Redis key/values, see our Redis String quickstart.Boot Redis
If you don’t already have Redis running, start Redis with Docker:
If you’re using another Redis instance, be sure you’re using Redis 5.0+ (required for streams).
Run Sequin
The easiest way to get started with Sequin is with our Docker Compose file. This file starts a Postgres database, Redis instance, and Sequin server.
Create directory and start services
- Download sequin-docker-compose.zip.
- Unzip the file.
- Navigate to the unzipped directory and start the services:
Alternative: Download with curl
Alternative: Download with curl
Alternative: Clone the repository
Alternative: Clone the repository
Login
The Docker Compose file automatically configures Sequin with an admin user and a playground database.Let’s log in to the Sequin web console:
Open the web console
After starting the Docker Compose services, open the Sequin web console at http://localhost:7376:

View the playground database
To get you started quickly, Sequin’s Docker Compose file creates a logical database called
sequin_playground with a sample dataset in the public.products table.Let’s take a look:Select playground database
Click on the pre-configured 
sequin-playground database:
The database “Health” should be green.
Create a Redis Stream Sink
With the playground database connected, you can create a sink. This sink will send changes to the
products table to your Redis stream:Note "Source" configuration
In the “Source” card, note that the 
sequin-playground database is selected and all schemas and tables are included. Leave these defaults:
Setup a backfill
In the 
Inital backfill card, select the public.products table to initate a backfill when the sink is created.
Configure "Redis Configuration"
In the “Redis Configuration” card, enter your Redis connection details.
- Host: If running locally with Docker, use
host.docker.internal - Port: The port Redis is listening on (default: 6379)
- Username: Required if Redis authentication is enabled
- Password: Required if Redis authentication is enabled
- Stream Key: The Redis stream to write to (e.g.,
products-stream) - Database: The Redis database number (default: 0)
- TLS: Toggle on if your Redis instance requires TLS

Test the connection
At the bottom of the form, click the “Test Connection” button. If you provided proper credentials, it should succeed.
Sequin can connect to your Redis instance.
See changes flow to your Redis stream
On the new sink’s overview page, you should see the “Health” status turn green, indicating data is flowing to your Redis stream.Let’s confirm messages are flowing:
Messages tab
Click the “Messages” tab. You’ll see a list of the recently delivered messages:

Sequin indicates it backfilled the
products table to your Redis stream.View in Redis CLI
Connect to your Redis instance using the Redis CLI and read from the stream:You should see the messages that were sent from Sequin. These are
read events from the initial backfill of the products table.Messages are flowing from Sequin to your Redis stream.
Make some changes
Let’s make some changes to the In Redis CLI, read the latest messages from the stream:You should see a message corresponding to the inserted row.Feel free to try other changes:
Each change will appear in your Redis stream within a few seconds.
products table and see them flow to your stream.In your terminal, run the following command to insert a new row into the products table:Update a product's price
Update a product's price
Change a product's name
Change a product's name
Delete a product
Delete a product
Great work!
- Set up a complete Postgres change data capture pipeline
- Loaded existing data through a backfill
- Made changes to the
productstable - Verified changes are flowing to your Redis stream

