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Christophe Pettus: SQL/PGQ in PostgreSQL 19: Graph Queries Without the Graph Database
Cornelia Biacsics: Contributions for week 21, 2026
On May 26 2026, the Bratislava PostgreSQL Meetup came together, organized by Pavlo Golub and Meego Smith. Mayur B. and Devrim Gündüz delivered a presentation.
About 90 attendees showed up for the NYC Postgres meetup that took place May 27 with Gleb Otochkin speaking.
Organizers:
Wim Bertels: PGConf.be 2026
The shared presentations are online, as are a couple of recordings and turtle-loading have-a-cup-of-tea locally stored photos.
Christophe Pettus: All Your GUCs in a Row: constraint_exclusion
Christophe Pettus: All Your GUCs in a Row: config_file
Christophe Pettus: All Your GUCs in a Row: compute_query_id
Christophe Pettus: Open-Source TDE for PostgreSQL: What pg_tde Is, and Whether You Need It
Shaun Thomas: Looking Forward to Postgres 19: The New REPACK Command
Postgres has had a thorn in its paw for a very long time regarding table size. Every modified tuple leaves an old version in the heap for use by older transactions. While locates these old tuples, it only marks them as reusable rather than returning the space to the OS. Tables only ever grow larger in Postgres.Maybe Postgres 19 can fix that for us.
Floor Drees: PGConf.dev 2026: Our team’s sessions, working groups, and key takeaways
Last week, we attended the annual PGConf.dev as a Gold-level sponsor. While most PostgreSQL conferences usually attract users and DBAs, this event draws a strong mix of contributors and community members alike, making it a unique opportunity to get proposals and patches reviewed and to connect across the broader Postgres ecosystem.
Christophe Pettus: All Your GUCs in a Row: commit_timestamp_buffers
Stefan Fercot: Memories from PGConf.dev 2026
Thanks to the organising team, I had the chance to attend PGConf.dev last week in Vancouver, Canada. And luckily, I wasn’t alone there — Valeria could join as well!
This year’s edition was particularly special: we celebrated 30 years of open source PostgreSQL together! Many activities revolved around the anniversary, including a special celebration-themed conference t-shirt, stickers, commemorative posters, and more.
Christophe Pettus: Twenty Years, Three CVEs, One AI
Vibhor Kumar: Postgres as an Execution Environment for AI: Failure Modes, Hooks, and the ORBIT Framework
A field report from PGConf Dev 2026 — and a working framework for everyone who has to keep AI workloads running in production.
It’s 3:47 AM. The Pager Goes Off.A production AI batch job is stuck. Sixty thousand rows are locked. Your application performance is degrading. The post-mortem the next morning will be filed under “unknown cause.”
warda bibi: Automating PostgreSQL Index Tuning Using AI
If you have a slow query, one of the obvious moves is to add an index. So you look at the WHERE clause, pick a column, run CREATE INDEX, and test again. Sometimes it helps, often it doesn’t. And now you have an index sitting there, not helping reads, but slowing down every write, because INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE all have to maintain it. And it gets worse as your system grows.
Christophe Pettus: All Your GUCs in a Row: commit_delay and commit_siblings
Christophe Pettus: REPACK CONCURRENTLY: pg_squeeze Gets a Promotion
Payal Singh: Postgres War Stories Part 1: Postgres outages that aren't Postgres bugs
This series is aimed at recounting, explaining, and cataloging issues pertaining to Postgres in large-scale production environments that affected a wide section of users and clients. The idea occured to me when discussing one specific issue (covered in a later part in this series) that was my first experience dealing with such issues on a wide scale (multiple clients and clusters affected). This specific part focuses on issues that were caused not by Postgres itself, but by the tools, OS, and ecosystems that Postgres relies on.
Elizabeth Garrett Christensen: Graph Queries in Postgres with Apache AGE
The Iceberg tables look like normal Postgres tables. You create them with USING iceberg and they're backed by Parquet on S3:
Postgres engines now have access to more data than ever. With extensions like pg_lake, you can connect Postgres to gobs of files in object storage like csv, json, Apache Parquet™ and Apache Iceberg™.

