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February 04 – 06 , 2019

PgConf.Russia 2019

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.
  • more than
    0 participants
  • 0 speakers
  • 0
    minutes of conversation
  • 63 talks
  • offline
    format

Talks

Talks archive

PgConf.Russia 2019
  • Alexander Korotkov
    Alexander Korotkov PostgresPro

    It's so good when database behaves predictable. When the performance is lacking, you just add CPU cores, terabytes of RAM and millions of IOPS, and everything becomes good again. But it's rather unpleasant, when server have plenty of free resources, while database is still running slow. And it's especially sad if stress testing detects no problems, while real life workload of the same volume makes your database hang.

    In this talk I will consider bottlenecks of PostgreSQL, which we met in our practice, and which causes sad behavior described above. I'll also explain what can be done at user level in order to evade these bottlenecks, and what developers are planning to do in order to eliminate those bottlenecks. I'm also planning give some recipes of stress testing, which could have to evade surprises in production.

  • Dmitry Yuhtimovsky
    Dmitry Yuhtimovsky Gilev.ru

    Magic tricks followed by exposure (1C+PG):

    • Focus number one. How to convince the accounting department to buy a new server.
    • Focus number two. How to show that MS SQL is faster than PostgreSQL.
    • Focus number three. How to show that PostgreSQL is faster than MS SQL Server.

  • Jignesh Shah
    Jignesh Shah Amazon Web Services

    In this session we will deep dive into the exciting features of Amazon RDS for PostgreSQL, including new versions of PostgreSQL releases, new extensions, larger instances. We will also show benchmarks of new RDS instance types, and their value proposition. We will also look at how high availability and read scaling works on RDS PostgreSQL. We will also explore lessons we have learned managing a large fleet of PostgreSQL instances, including important tunables and possible gotchas around pg_upgrade.

  • Pavel Trukhanov
    Pavel Trukhanov okmeter.io

    Brendan Gregg’s USE (Utilization, Saturation, Errors) method for monitoring is quite known. There’s also Tom Wilkie’s RED (Rate, Errors, Durations) method, which is suggested to be better suited to monitor services than USE. I want to talk about how we employ these methodologies when we develop our Postgres monitoring in okmeter.io.

All talks

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