PgConf.Russia 2019
PGConf.Russia is a leading Russian PostgreSQL international conference, annually taking together more than 500 PostgreSQL professionals from Russia and other countries — core and software developers, DBAs and IT-managers. The 3-day program includes training workshops presented by leading PostgreSQL experts, more than 40 talks, panel discussions and a lightning talk session.
Thems
- PostgreSQL at the cutting edge of technology: big data, internet of things, blockchain
- New features in PostgreSQL and around: PostgreSQL ecosystem development
- PostgreSQL in business software applications: system architecture, migration issues and operating experience
- Integration of PostgreSQL to 1C, GIS and other software application systems.
Talks
Talks archive
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Alexander Korotkov PostgresProPostgreSQL 12 Feature Freeze is scheduled for April 2019, which didn't come yet. But general shapes of upcoming release are already visible. In this talk I'll consider patches already committed to PostgreSQL 12 as well as patches, which would be committed very likely. I'll talk with special passion about SQL/JSON, Merge, pluggable table access methods and zheap.
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Pavel Molyavin 2GISThe dark age for PostgreSQL started at 2GIS after transitioning to the microservice architecture. Every team tried to cook database on their own — by installing instances, juggling versions, trying to code deployments with numerous tools or using manual operations. It was the right time to develop a “silver bullet” — a common set of tools to solve all the problems at once. We created our own cluster solution based on well-known PostgreSQL, repmgr, pgbouncer and Barman. Despite of the complexity of our final solution, we developed a repeatable flexible deployment to accelerate postgresql cluster deployment and management. Also we deployed the our own cluster to consolidate all databases. It helped to eliminate team efforts for database management and focus on their main goals. Failover works, we tried it :-)
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Andrey Borodin YandexI'm going to talk about emerging technologies in the area of general purpose RDBMS indexing. I will describe different approaches suitable for different workloads. We will discuss ideas from academic researches and corresponding industrial response from developers, communities, and companies. There will be the short live-coding session on creating DIY index in PostgreSQL.
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Alexey Fadeev SibedgeMany DBMS specialists do not like these three letters - ORM because they have repeatedly seen the enormous queries ORM-generated for simplest operations. However practice shows that the origin of the problem is not ORM itself but rather those developers who are not able to use ORM properly. In this report I will tell you the basic principles of how to write code for ORM which generates "good" queries and also show you "bad" code samples and what you get out of them. The main idea is we have to think in SQL-style when writing the code, and so to learn to foresee what kind of query will be generated. But even having mastered that you must always check the output SQL for complex queries. I will show an example when a slight change in ORM-logic increases the volume of output SQL by dozens of times(!). I will tell you about additional tools and tricks. Namely - disabling tracking, INCLUDE construction, alternative syntax for JOIN, how to get more data using a smaller number of queries, how to effectively write queries with grouping, and what do we need mappings for. I will not bypass the cases when it is not possible to effectively solve the problem by means of ORM (for example, queries with recursion). In addition to SELECT requests, there are some Batch-Update/Delete tools that allow you to update and delete data using ORM tools without downloading data to the client side. We'll also talk on how to force the ORM to insert large volumes of data quickly via Multi-Insert and COPY. I will also discuss how ORM supports PostgreSQL-specific data types i.g. arrays, hstore and jsonb. But does it make sense to use ORM at all, since there is so much to learn? Sure it does. There are advantages of using ORM, and we will discuss them as well. All examples are based on Entity Framework technology for .Net Core and .Net Framework in C#. There are some subtle differences in ORM usage in Hibernate/NHibernate, but the basic principles remain the same, so the report will be useful for developers using various technologies.
Photos
Photo archive