Postrelease
Talks
Talks archive
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Will Leinweber HerokuIn addition to providing a general purpose web platform, Heroku has a large, supporting Postgres service. Over the years, we've learned a lot about running Postgres at scale.
In this talk, we'll cover:- why Postgres is attractive to run as a cloud service
- how to provision, manage, and monitor a Postgres fleet
- tradeoffs needed to make Postgres work in this environment
- automating failure recovery
- and more
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Konstantin Knignik PostgresProEnterprises need enterprise-level databases. The existing Postgres clustering solutions are not supported by the community. Postgres needs a community-supported cluster solution. There have been multiple attempts like Postgres-XC/XL, but they are still being developed separately and have low chance to be accepted by the community. Other solutions, like pg_shard, plproxy, FDW-based, etc. lack the notion of global transactions. We developed a Distributed Transaction Manager (DTM) as a Postgres extension to achieve global consistency over a number of Postgres instances. To demonstrate the capabilities of the DTM we present examples of distributed transaction processing using pg_shard and postgres_fdw. We hope that the proposed approach will be included into Postgres 9.6. This will make the development of the clustering solutions easier for all interested parties.
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Heikki Linnakangas Pivotal LtdPostgreSQL includes several index types: GiST, SP-GiST, GIN, and of course, the regular B-tree. DBAs are familiar with using each of these for specific use cases, GIN for full-text search, GiST for geometrical data, and so on, but how do they work internally? What makes them suitable for the cases they're typically used for?
In this presentation, I will walk through the internal structure of each of these index types, explaining what strengths and weaknesses each one of them have.
Photos
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