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Alastair Turner: PostgreSQL coffee break: version upgrade related reindexing - reasons
During FOSDEM I had a chance to join a presentation of the backup procedure that the engineers from GitLab followed to decrease the downtime during major upgrades. I highly recommend the talk, definitely worth watching!
Muhammad Aqeel: Semantic Caching in PostgreSQL: A Hands-On Guide to pg_semantic_cache
Your LLM application is probably answering the same question dozens of times a day. It just doesn't realize it because the words are different each time.
Daniel Westermann: PGConf.DE 2026 - The schedule for PGConf.DE 2026 is now live!
Discover the exciting lineup of PostgreSQL speakers and exciting topics that await you on the schedule for this year.
See you in Essen in April
Haki Benita: Row Locks With Joins Can Produce Surprising Results in PostgreSQL
Here's a database riddle: you have two tables with data connected by a foreign key. The foreign key field is set as not null and the constraint is valid and enforced. You execute a query that joins these two tables and you get no results! How is that possible? We thought it wasn't possible, but a recent incident revealed an edge case we never thought about.
In this article I show how under some circumstances row locks with joins can produce surprising results, and suggest ways to prevent it.
Cornelia Biacsics: Contributions for week 7, 2026
New podcast episode “Why it's fun to hack on Postgres performance“ with Tomas Vondra published on February 20 2026 by Claire Giordano and Aaron Wislang from the series “Talking Postgres”.
Hyderabad PostgreSQL User Group met on February 20, organized by Hari Kiran, Ameen Abbas and Rajesh Madiwale.
Speaker:
Jeremy Schneider: Openclaw is Spam, Like Any Other Automated Email
Open Source communities are trying to quickly adapt to the present rapid advances in technology. I would like to propose some clarity around something that should be common sense.
Automated emails are spam. They always have been. Openclaw (and whatever new thing surfaces this summer) is no different.
Lætitia AVROT: What Does INSERT 0 1 Actually Tell You?
Dan Langille: Upgrading PostgreSQL in place on FreeBSD
I’ve updated one of my PostgreSQL instances to PostgreSQL 18, it’s time to update the others. This time, I’m going to try pg_update. My usual approach is pg_dump and pg_restore.
As this is my first attempt doing this, I’m posting this mostly for future reference when I try this again. There will be another blog post when I try this again. Which should be soon. This paragraph will link to that post when it is available.
In this post:
Ruohang Feng: Is Oracle-Compatible PostgreSQL Actually Useful?
Hubert 'depesz' Lubaczewski: Waiting for PostgreSQL 19 – Allow log_min_messages to be set per process type
Hubert 'depesz' Lubaczewski: Waiting for PostgreSQL 19 – psql: Add %i prompt escape to indicate hot standby status.
Hubert 'depesz' Lubaczewski: Per-worker, and global, IO bandwidth in explain plans
Hamza Sajawal: Fixing ORM Slowness by 80% with Strategic PostgreSQL Indexing
Modern applications heavily rely on ORMs (Object-Relational Mappers) for rapid development. While ORMs accelerate development, they often generate queries that are not fully optimized for database performance. In such environments, database engineers have limited control over query structure, leaving indexing and database tuning as the primary performance optimization tools.
Tomas Vondra: The AI inversion
If you attended FOSDEM 2026, you probably noticed discussions on how AI impacts FOSS, mostly in detrimental ways. Two of the three keynotes in Janson mentioned this, and I assume other speakers mentioned the topic too. Moreover, it was a very popular topic in the “hallway track.” I myself chatted about it with multiple people, both from the Postgres community and outside of it. And the experience does not seem great …
Radim Marek: Inside PostgreSQL's 8KB Page
If you read previous post about buffers, you already know PostgreSQL might not necessarily care about your rows. You might be inserting a user profile, or retrieving payment details, but all that Postgres works with are blocks of data. 8KB blocks, to be precise. You want to retrieve one tiny row? PostgreSQL hauls an entire 8,192-byte page off the disk just to give it to you. You update a single boolean flag? Same thing. The 8KB page is THE atomic unit of I/O.
Dave Page: Building Ask Ellie: A RAG Chatbot Powered by pgEdge
If you've visited the pgEdge documentation site recently, you may have noticed a small elephant icon in the bottom right corner of the page. That's Ask Ellie; our AI-powered documentation assistant, built to help users find answers to their questions about pgEdge products quickly and naturally.
Robert Haas: Hacking Workshop for March 2026
For next month's hacking workshop, I'm scheduling 2 or 3 discussions of Tomas Vondra's talk, Performance Archaeology, given at 2024.PGConf.EU. If you're interested in joining us, please sign up using this form and I will send you an invite to one of the sessions. Thanks as always to Tomas for agreeing to attend the sessions.
Read more »Jan Wieremjewicz: PostgreSQL minor release postponed in Q1’ 2026
In case you are awaiting the February PostgreSQL Community minor update released on plan on February 12 we want to make sure that our users and customers are up to date and aware of what to expect.
This scheduled PostgreSQL release was delivered by the PostgreSQL Community on time and came carrying 5 CVE fixes and over 65 bugs bug fixes.
Dave Page: Lessons Learned Writing an MCP Server for PostgreSQL
Over the past few months or so, we've been building the pgEdge Postgres MCP Server, an open source tool that lets LLMs talk directly to PostgreSQL databases through the Model Context Protocol. It supports Claude, GPT, local models via Ollama, and pretty much any MCP-compatible client you can throw at it.

