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February 03 – 05 , 2016

PgConf.Russia 2016

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Talks

Talks archive

PgConf.Russia 2016
  • Mikhail Tyurin
    Mikhail Tyurin Avito

    My experience of working with PostgreSQL has provided clear understanding of its main advantages, making us choose and recommend choosing it.
    1. Beginning
    2. Documentation
    3. Community
    4.1 Transactional DDL
    4.2 WAL and True Physical Replication
    4.3 Transactional Snapshot and True Logical Replication and PGQ
    4.4 Exciting extensibility
    5. Success

  • Andres  Freund
    Andres Freund Citus Data

    Postgresql's buffer manager has parts where it's showing its age. We'll discuss how it currently works, what problems there are, and what attempts are in progress to rectify its weaknesses.

    • Lookups in the buffer cache are expensive
    • The buffer mapping table is organized as a hash table, which makes efficient implementations of prefetching, write coalescing, dropping of cache contents hard
    • Relation extension scales badly
    • Cache replacement is inefficient
    • Cache replacement replaces the wrong buffers

  • Konstantin Knignik
    Konstantin Knignik PostgresPro

    Enterprises 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.

  • Peter  van Hardenberg
    Peter van Hardenberg Heroku

    Heroku Postgres is a cloud database service and the largest provider of PostgreSQL as a service anywhere. We operate more than 1,000,000 PostgreSQL databases with a team of about 10 people. We may be the most efficient DBAs in history, with approximately 100,000 databases per person on our team! This talk will introduce the opportunity and challenges of building and operating a cloud database service, as well as discussing the strategies we use to build, operate, and scale this product and team for the last six years now. We will include details about * a brief introduction to the service to provide context * strategies to design and build such a data service * operational war stories like how to recover from losing thousands of servers at once, * common challenges users have with Postgres * and a basic overview of the technical architecture

    This is a complementary talk to Will Leinweber's talk, which will go into much more depth on the architecture of the software we have written.

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