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Lætitia AVROT: Postgres performance regression: are we there yet?

15. April 2026 - 2:00
Every year, PostgreSQL gets faster. Researchers benchmarking the optimizer from version 8 through 16 found an average 15% performance improvement per major release. That’s a decade of consistent, measurable progress. The project has been doing this since 1996. So when a headline claimed Linux 7.0 just halved PostgreSQL throughput, DBAs, Sys Admins, and DevOps started panicking (in particular, those working with Ubuntu 26.04 LTS which plan to ship Linux kernel 7.

Vibhor Kumar: AI-Ready PostgreSQL 18 Is Out: Why AI Applications Win or Lose at the Seams

15. April 2026 - 1:29

Most AI projects do not fail because the model is weak. They fail because the seams around the model break under real-world constraints such as data truth, governance, and production reality.

Andreas Scherbaum: PGConf India 2026 - Review

15. April 2026 - 0:00
This was my first time attending PGConf.India. That is a conference I wanted to visit for quite a while, heard good things about the it, but never had a chance before. During past years it overlapped with another conference I’m attending in Germany - but this year it worked out! Overall this is the 9th Indian PostgreSQL Conference, with no signs of slowing down. Stage at PGConf India 2026 The conference is well attended, and very vibrant.

Gabriele Bartolini: Owning the pipe: physical replication, cloud neutrality, and the escape from DBaaS lock-in

14. April 2026 - 2:32

This article examines how managed database services deliberately suppress access to the physical replication stream, turning operational convenience into permanent lock-in. It makes the case for a cloud-neutral stack — PostgreSQL, Kubernetes, and CloudNativePG — as the only architecture that returns full operational sovereignty to the organisation that owns the data.

Ming Ying: ParadeDB is Officially on Railway

14. April 2026 - 2:00
Deploy ParadeDB on Railway with one click. Full-text search, vector search, and hybrid search over Postgres — now available on your favorite cloud platform.

David Wheeler: pg_clickhouse 0.2.0

14. April 2026 - 0:22

In response to a generous corpus of real-world user feedback, we’ve been hard at work the past week adding a slew of updates to pg_clickhouse, the query interface for ClickHouse from Postgres. As usual, we focused on improving pushdown, especially for various date and time, array, and regular expression functions.

Cornelia Biacsics: Contributions for week 14, 2026

13. April 2026 - 10:19

The Toulouse PostgreSQL User Group met on April 7, 2026 organized by

  • Geoffrey Coulaud
  • Xavier SIMON
  • Jean-Christophe Arnu

Speakers:

Richard Yen: Understanding PostgreSQL Wait Events

13. April 2026 - 10:00
Introduction

One of the most useful debugging tools in modern PostgreSQL is the wait event system. When a query slows down or a database becomes CPU bound, a natural question is: “What are sessions actually waiting on?” Postgres exposes this information through the pg_stat_activity view via two columns:

wait_event_type wait_event

These fields reveal what the backend process is blocked on at a given moment. Among the different wait types, one category tends to cause confusion:

Jeremy Schneider: Zero autovacuum_cost_delay, Write Storms, and You

13. April 2026 - 7:10

A few days ago, Shaun Thomas published an article over on the pgEdge blog called [Checkpoints, Write Storms, and You]. Sadly a lot of corporate blogs don’t have comment functionality anymore.

Ruohang Feng: 504 Extensions: Expand the PostgreSQL Landscape

13. April 2026 - 2:00
One GitHub issue turned into an extension sprint. 32 new additions, 504 in total, say a lot about where PostgreSQL is headed.

Vibhor Kumar: column_encrypt v4.0: A Simpler, Safer Model for Column-Level Encryption in PostgreSQL

12. April 2026 - 22:47

There is a point in every security tool’s life where adding one more feature is less important than removing one more obstacle.

That is what makes column_encrypt v4.0 interesting.

Lukas Fittl: Waiting for Postgres 19: Reduced timing overhead for EXPLAIN ANALYZE with RDTSC

11. April 2026 - 14:00
In today’s E121 of “5mins of Postgres” we're talking about the upcoming Postgres 19 release, and how a change in the Postgres instrumentation handling reduces overhead of timing measurements in EXPLAIN ANALYZE using the RDTSC instruction, and why this will allow turning on for more workloads. We dive into the recently committed change that I (Lukas) authored together with Andres Freund and David Geier. See the full transcript with examples below. Share this episode: Click here to share this…

Shaun Thomas: Checkpoints, Write Storms, and You

10. April 2026 - 8:06

Every database has to reconcile two uncomfortable truths: memory is fast but volatile, and disk is slow but durable. Postgres handles this tension through its Write-Ahead Log (WAL), which records every change before it happens. But the WAL can't grow forever. At some point, Postgres needs to flush all those accumulated dirty pages to disk and declare a clean starting point. That process is called a checkpoint, and when it goes wrong, it can bring throughput to its knees.

Hubert 'depesz' Lubaczewski: Waiting for PostgreSQL 19 – new pg_get_*_ddl() functions

9. April 2026 - 18:37
On 5th of April 2026, Andrew Dunstan committed patch: Add pg_get_database_ddl() function   Add a new SQL-callable function that returns the DDL statements needed to recreate a database. It takes a regdatabase argument and an optional VARIADIC text argument for options that are specified as alternating name/value pairs. The following options are supported: pretty (boolean) … Continue reading "Waiting for PostgreSQL 19 – new pg_get_*_ddl() functions"

warda bibi: The 1 GB Limit That Breaks pg_prewarm at Scale

9. April 2026 - 8:56

Recently, we encountered a production incident where PostgreSQL 16.8 became unstable, preventing the application from establishing database connections. The same behavior was independently reproduced in a separate test environment, ruling out infrastructure and configuration issues. Further investigation identified the pg_prewarm extension as the source of the problem.

Jim Mlodgenski: pgcollection 2.0: Integer Keys, Range Deletes, and Oracle Parity

9. April 2026 - 2:01

In my first post about pgcollection, I introduced the collection type to address the challenge of migrating Oracle associative arrays keyed by strings to PostgreSQL. For integer-keyed associative arrays, I noted that native PostgreSQL arrays work well enough for simple cases. That holds true until the keys are sparse.

Consider this Oracle pattern:

Vibhor Kumar: AI at the Edge, Truth in Postgres

8. April 2026 - 21:54


A practical blueprint for secure, private, high-performance AI systems

Cornelia Biacsics: Contributions for week 13, 2026

7. April 2026 - 10:58

The Prague PostgreSQL Meetup met on March 30, 2026, organized by Gulcin Yildirim Jelinek and Mayur B.

Speakers:

  • Radim Marek
  • Mayur B.

Community Blog Posts:

Community Videos:

Ahsan Hadi: Using the pgEdge MCP Server with a Distributed PostgreSQL Cluster

7. April 2026 - 8:36

I recently wrapped up my blog series covering the exciting new features in PostgreSQL 18 — from Asynchronous I/O and Skip Scan to the powerful RETURNING clause enhancements.

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