Neues vom PostgreSQL Planet
Ashutosh Bapat: Professional karma
In the very early days of my career, an incident made me realise that perfoming my job irresponsibily will affect me adversely, not because it will affect my position adversely, but because it can affect my life otherwise also. I was part a team that produced a software used by a financial institution where I held my account. A bug in the software caused a failure which made several accounts, including my bank account, inaccessible! Fortunately I wasn't the one who introduced that bug and neither was other software engineer working on the product.
Shane Borden: More Obscure Things That Make It Go “Vacuum” in PostgreSQL
I previously blogged about ensuring that the “ON CONFLICT” directive is used in order to avoid vacuum from having to do additional work. I also later demonstrated the characteristics of how the use of the MERGE statement will accomplish the same thing.
Shaun Thomas: Using Patroni to Build a Highly Available Postgres Cluster—Part 2: Postgres and Patroni
Welcome to Part two of our series about building a High Availability Postgres cluster using Patroni! Part one focused entirely on establishing the DCS using etcd, providing the critical layer that Patroni uses to store metadata and guarantee its leadership token uniqueness across the cluster.With this solid foundation, it's now time to build the next layer in our stack: Patroni itself.
Deepak Mahto: PGConf India 2026: PostgreSQL Query Tuning: A Foundation Every Database Developer Should Build
Most PostgreSQL tuning advice that folks chase is quick fixes but not on understanding what made planners choose an path or join over others optimal path. !
Tuning should not start with Analyze on tables involved in the Query but with intend what is causing the issue and why planner is not self sufficient to choose the optimal path.
Most fixes we search for SQL tuning are around,
Richard Yen: Debugging RDS Proxy Pinning: How a Hidden JIT Toggle Created Thousands of Pinned Connections
When using AWS RDS Proxy, the goal is to achieve connection multiplexing – many client connections share a much smaller pool of backend PostgreSQL connections, givng more resources per connection and keeping query execution running smoothly.
However, if the proxy detects that a session has changed internal state in a way it cannot safely track, it pins the client connection to a specific backend connection. Once pinned, that connection can never be multiplexed again. This was the case with a recent database I worked on.
gabrielle roth: SCaLE23x
Bruce Momjian: The MySQL Shadow
For much of Postgres's history, it has lived in the shadow of other relational systems, and for a time even in the shadow of NoSQL systems. Those shadows have faded, but it is helpful to reflect on this outcome.
Vibhor Kumar: Beyond Features: What a PostgreSQL Strategy Discussion Taught Me About Calm, Modern Platforms
Last December, I was part of a long enterprise discussion centered on PostgreSQL.
On paper, it looked familiar: a new major release, high availability and scale, Aurora migration, monitoring, operational tooling, and the growing conversation around AI-assisted operations.
The usual ingredients were all there.
Floor Drees: The Future of Postgres on the agenda: EDB’s PGConf.dev Preview
Lætitia AVROT: work_mem: it's a trap!
Lukas Fittl: The Dilemma of the ‘AI DBA’
Virender Singla: The Part of PostgreSQL We Discuss the Most — 2
In the Part 1, we explored the general concepts of MVCC and the implications of storing data snapshots either out-of-place or within heap storage, we can now map these methodologies to specific database engines.
Virender Singla: The Part of PostgreSQL We Discuss the Most — 1
Early in my PostgreSQL journey, I often sensed that a conversation between two Postgres professionals inevitably revolves around vacuuming. That lighthearted observation still remains relevant, as my LinkedIn feeds are often filled with discussions around vacuuming and comparing PostgreSQL’s Multi-Version Concurrency Control (MVCC) implementation to other engines like Oracle or MySQL.
Floor Drees: Shaping SQL in São Paulo
Andrew Dunstan: Validating the shape of your JSON data
One of the great things about PostgreSQL's jsonb type is the flexibility it gives you — you can store whatever structure you need without defining columns up front. But that flexibility comes with a trade-off: there's nothing stopping bad data from getting in. You can slap a CHECK constraint on a jsonb column, but writing validation logic in SQL or PL/pgSQL for anything beyond the trivial gets ugly fast.
Dave Page: AI Features in pgAdmin: The AI Chat Agent
This is the second in a series of three blog posts covering the new AI functionality in pgAdmin 4. In the first post, I covered LLM configuration and the AI-powered analysis reports.
Yuwei Xiao: Introducing pg_duckpipe: Real-Time CDC for Your Lakehouse
Umair Shahid: Thinking of PostgreSQL High Availability as Layers
High availability for PostgreSQL is often treated as a single, big, dramatic decision: “Are we doing HA or not?”
That framing pushes teams into two extremes:
Seiten
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- …
- nächste Seite ›
- letzte Seite »

