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February 03 – 05 , 2016

PgConf.Russia 2016

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  • 60 talks
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Talks

Talks archive

PgConf.Russia 2016
  • Алексей Лесовский
    Алексей Лесовский PostgreSQL Consulting LLC
  • Will Leinweber
    Will Leinweber Heroku

    In 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

  • Magnus  Hagander
    Magnus Hagander PostgreSQL Global Development Group

    Unlike most other databases, PostgreSQL is developed by a community, and not by a company or even a foundation. Those who have been members of this community for a long time generally consider this a strength, but it can often be confusing to outsiders who are more used to dealing with traditional organization. For those who are not already on the inside, this talk will give an introduction to how the PostgreSQL community works and how the different parties interact, as well as how this has evolved over the years.

  • Alvaro Hernandez
    Alvaro Hernandez 8Kdata

    Java is the most used programming language in the world. Yet how is it supported in PostgreSQL? What are the gotchas and the best practices? Now that Java is evolving significantly, how will PostgreSQL follow?

    Despite Java's age, language is stronger than ever. It's the de facto programming language in the enterprise world. And since Java 8, it is having a come back in the startup and open source world. PostgreSQL is accessed more from Java than any other interface but, how's Java supported in PostgreSQL?

    This talk will analyze how it has been in the past, but more importantly how can you use it and what can you do today. JDBC drivers, best practices, pl/java and other less frequently used tools will be presented and discussed.

    And then we will look into the future, to see what is currently under development. Like Phoebe, a new Java Reactive Driver for PostgreSQL that targets clusters, pipelined queries and non-JDBC interface for fully asynchronous operation. And also what needs to be done in areas like server-side Java, to bring Java to a fully advanced first-level language within PostgreSQL.

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