Sammlung von Newsfeeds
Gülçin Yıldırım Jelínek: From DBA to DB Agents
Laurenz Albe: Partitioned table statistics
© Laurenz Albe 2025
I recently helped a customer with a slow query. Eventually, an ANALYZE on a partitioned table was enough to fix the problem. This came as a surprise for the customer, since autovacuum was enabled. So I decided to write an article on how PostgreSQL collects partitioned table statistics and how they affect PostgreSQL's estimates.
Regina Obe: PostGIS 3.6.0
The PostGIS Team is pleased to release PostGIS 3.6.0! Best Served with PostgreSQL 18 Beta3 and recently released GEOS 3.14.0.
This version requires PostgreSQL 12 - 18beta3, GEOS 3.8 or higher, and Proj 6.1+. To take advantage of all features, GEOS 3.14+ is needed. To take advantage of all SFCGAL features, SFCGAL 2.2.0+ is needed.
Jeremy Schneider: Run Jepsen against CloudNativePG to see sync replication prevent data loss
Are you in the Pacific Northwest?
warda bibi: The Hidden Bottleneck in PostgreSQL Restores and its Solution
In July 2025, during the PG19-1 CommitFest, I reviewed a patch targeting the lack of parallelism when adding foreign keys in pg_restore. Around the same time, I was helping a client with a large production migration where pg_restore dragged on for more than 24 hours and crashed multiple times.
In this blog, I will talk about the technical limitations in PostgreSQL, the proposed fix, and a practical workaround for surviving large restores.
BackgroundThere are two main types of backups in PostgreSQL:
Jan Wieremjewicz: pg_tde can now encrypt your WAL on PROD!
Just recently, we announced the production-ready release of pg_tde, bringing open source Transparent Data Encryption (TDE) to PostgreSQL. Now, I may have spoiled the fun a little with the title, but take a look at the word puzzle below—can you guess the announcement? Bear with me… and my sense of humor, which might be a bit too dry for some :)
Mankirat Singh: Maza and Baza: A Tale of GSoC'25 ABI Compliance Checker project
ahmed gouda: GSoC'25 at PostgreSQL: Work and Results
In the previous post, I discussed GSoC, my road to acceptance at PostgreSQL, and my project deliverables.
Today, I will share my experience with the PostgreSQL community, and the work I did.
Postgres Community BondingThe first phase of GSoC is community bonding, where the mentee gets to know the community of his organization.
ahmed gouda: GSoC'25 at PostgreSQL: Work and Results
In the previous post, I discussed GSoC, my road to acceptance at PostgreSQL, and my project deliverables.
Today, I will share my experience with the PostgreSQL community, and the work I did.
Postgres Community BondingThe first phase of GSoC is community bonding, where the mentee gets to know the community of his organization.
Gülçin Yıldırım Jelínek: PGConf.EU Community Events Day: CfPs closing soon
Floor Drees: Contributions for the weeks 32 - 35 (2025-08-04 - 2025-08-28)
Clearly it's summer time in the Northern Hemisphere and we haven't been as punctual with our recognition posts! We'll resume to a more regular schedule, promised!
On Aug, 28 Peter Zaitsev and Emma Saroyan organised PG Armenia x Percona University.
Speakers: * Peter Zaitsev * Andrey Borodin * Emma Saroyan * Konstantin Trushin * Dmitrii Kochetov * Alexey Palazhchenko * Alex Demidoff * Eugene Klimov * Kim Saroyan * Alexander Zaitsev * Aya Guseinova * Piotr Kalmukhyan
Hubert 'depesz' Lubaczewski: Who logged to system from multiple countries in 2 hours?
Ahsan Hadi: Highlights of PostgreSQL 18
The PostgreSQL development group released the second Beta version of PostgreSQL 18 in July; the GA version is expected later in 2025 (around the September/October timeframe). The PostgreSQL development group and its community is very dedicated and ensures several minor releases during the year and major releases every year.
Tomas Vondra: Using JWT to establish a trusted context for RLS
Row-level security (RLS) is a great feature. It allows restricting access to rows by applying filters defined by a policy. It’s a tool useful for cases when the data set can’t be split into separate databases.
Ian Barwick: PgPedia Week, 2025-08-24
Regina Obe: PostGIS 3.6.0rc2
The PostGIS Team is pleased to release PostGIS 3.6.0rc2! Best Served with PostgreSQL 18 Beta3 and recently released GEOS 3.14.0.
This version requires PostgreSQL 12 - 18beta3, GEOS 3.8 or higher, and Proj 6.1+. To take advantage of all features, GEOS 3.14+ is needed. To take advantage of all SFCGAL features, SFCGAL 2.2.0+ is needed.
Ian Barwick: PgPedia Week, 2025-08-17
The middle of August tends to be a quieter time in the PostgreSQL development cycle, so there's not much in the way of new developmentst to report.
This week's main item of interest is the quarterly release of PostgreSQL minor version updates.
PostgreSQL 19 changes this weekPostgreSQL 19 beta3 was released this week.
semab tariq: Cold, Warm, and Hot Standby in PostgreSQL: Key Differences
When working with customers, a common question we get is: “Which standby type is best for our HA needs?” Before answering, we ensure they fully understand the concepts behind each standby type and provide the necessary guidance
A standby server is essentially a copy of your primary database that can take over if the primary fails.
There are different types of standby setups, each with its own use cases, pros, and cons. In this blog, we will discuss the three types: Cold Standby, Warm Standby, and Hot Standby.
Ian Barwick: PgPedia Week, 2025-08-10
Regina Obe: Learning PostgreSQL from AI and JSON exploration: Part 2
This is the second part of the series I started on Learning PostgreSQL from AI and JSON exploration: Part 1. For this 2nd part, I decided to try gpt-oss the 14GB model which was just released in the past week. My first impression, "When will this ai shut up about its thinking process?".