Sammlung von Newsfeeds
Regina Obe: Replacing pgAgent with pg_timetable: Part 1
pgAgent has been my go to scheduling solution for quite some time. Sadly in 6 months it will be completely retired and the pgAgent UI in pgAdmin will be gone. The main reasons I liked pgAgent were:
Christophe Pettus: All Your GUCs in a Row: effective_cache_size
Andrei Lepikhov: Optimising Polymorphic Associations in PostgreSQL
Recently, I looked into how common polymorphic associations actually are in relational databases — a performance-hostile pattern built around a discriminated foreign key that ORMs (Rails, Django, Hibernate), CRM platforms (Salesforce), and 1C generate automatically.
Christophe Pettus: All Your GUCs in a Row: dynamic_shared_memory_type
Shaun Thomas: Looking Forward to Postgres 19: Logically Sequenced
Logical replication has been an integral part of Postgres since version 10 released in 2017. It's a very convenient system for synchronizing one or more tables from one running Postgres cluster to another, and the community has embraced it almost without reservation. It's a great feature we've all come to rely on.For all that, it has never been a flawless panacea. Perhaps the most glaring and conspicuous omission in Postgres logical replication is that of sequences.
Christophe Pettus: All Your GUCs in a Row: dynamic_library_path
Lætitia AVROT: It's Not Magic, It's Method
Stefanie Janine Stölting: pgsql_tweaks Version 1.0.4 Released
- pgsql_tweaks is a bundle of functions and views for PostgreSQL
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Antony Pegg: Introducing ColdFront: Seamlessly Uniting OLTP, Analytics and AI Workloads on PostgreSQL
Our team is excited to announce pgEdge ColdFront v1.0.0-beta1: open-source, transparent data tiering for PostgreSQL that unites OLTP, analytics and AI workloads, with no application code changes required. The headline feature: a fully writable cold tier. Jimmy Angelakos is the lead engineer, and it’s available on GitHub and pgEdge Enterprise Postgres.Moving aging data off primary PostgreSQL storage is economically obvious.
Christophe Pettus: All Your GUCs in a Row: default_transaction_isolation and default_transaction_read_only
Antony Pegg: Your AI App Works on Postgres. Now Make It Production-Ready Without Starting Over
Every AI application built on PostgreSQL hits the same inflection point. You've got pgvector installed, embeddings in a table, a similarity search query that returns surprisingly good results. The prototype works and your team is excited. Someone asks "when can we ship this?" and you suddenly realize that the distance between "it works on my laptop" and "it works in production across three regions" is a lot larger than you thought.The usual answer is to re-platform. Swap Postgres for a purpose-built vector database for the AI parts. Add a separate search service.
Christophe Pettus: All Your GUCs in a Row: default_transaction_deferrable
The only scalable delete is DROP TABLE
#653 — June 17, 2026
Postgres Weekly
Scaling Postgres to 226k TPS: A Christmas Day Retrospective — A meaty post-mortem and tactical walkthrough of how a digital photo-frame company went from having its Postgres deployment crash out during the 2024 holiday season to handling 2025 without a hitch.
Andrew Atkinson
Qiaosheng Liu: Releasing pg_ducklake v1.0
Noémi Ványi: pgstream v1.1.0: Steps towards turning it into a service
Andrew Atkinson: Scaling Rails at Aura Frames: Splitting to 8 Primary DBs and Reaching #1 in the App Store
Ruby on Rails has helped make it possible to scale out the database layer, meeting the demands of millions of Aura Frames customers enjoying their digital photo frames.
In late 2025, the team added additional primary databases to expand capacity for peak write and read load ahead of Christmas Day, the busiest day of the year for the company. Rails manages queries and schema changes for each primary database within the same codebase, and now with the additional capacity of many primary databases.
Andrew Atkinson: From Christmas Outage to #1 App Store Ranking: An Aura Frames Postgres Scaling Retrospective
On Christmas Day 2024, Postgres infrastructure powering the Aura Frames API had problems under peak load, being unavailable for three hours and disrupting the experience for new customers. The team knew it would need improvements to handle the surge for Christmas 2025 and beyond.
One year later, much of the resource intensive data access was reworked, the Postgres infrastructure was upsized, and this approach not only survived, but thrived, providing reliable service through the holiday season.
Payal Singh: Postgres War Stories Part 2: multixact wraparound, TOAST corruption, and torn pages
Part 1 was about failures that start one layer below Postgres: the kernel, glibc, the page allocator. This post is about the worse class, where the failure is inside Postgres itself. The logs are clean. Recovery never runs. And a query either returns the wrong answer or drops rows that are still sitting on disk.
Christopher Winslett: British Columbia, Time Zones, and Postgres
On March 8, 2026, British Columbia moved their clocks to a year-round Pacific Daylight Savings Time. In March, they did the spring forward one hour with their clocks to UTC-7, but they won't fall back to UTC-8 in November. Going forward, the UTC offset for America/Vancouver timezone is permanently UTC-7.

