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PGConf.Russia 2025

PGConf.Russia is the largest PostgreSQL conference in Russia and the CIS. The event offers technical sessions, hands-on demos of new DBMS features, master classes, networking opportunities, and knowledge exchange with top PostgreSQL community experts. Each year, hundreds of professionals participate, including DBAs, database architects, developers, QA engineers, and IT managers.

Agenda highlights

  • Latest news and updates from the PostgreSQL global community

  • Monitoring, high availability, and security

  • Streamlined migration from Oracle, Microsoft SQL Server, and other systems

  • Query optimization

  • Scalability, sharding and partitioning

  • AI applications in DBMS

  • PostgreSQL compatibility with other software

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

Talks

Talks archive

PGConf.Russia 2025
  • Евгений Бредня
    Евгений Бредня PostgresPro

    In this talk, we will discuss what character encodings and collations are. I will explain the issues that can arise from sorting (COLLATION) in databases and show how these problems can be addressed using the COLLATION PROVIDER = ICU feature in PostgreSQL.

  • Christopher Travers
    Christopher Travers

    Where I used to work, we had pushed ElasticSearch to its breaking point. We needed an even more scalable replacement for a write-heavy, read-seldom workload. So we built one on PostgreSQL. Now, many of us are building the successor as an open source project. 

    This talk goes over the design of Bagger (named after the giant mining machines), which can manage logs into tens or hundreds of petabytes. More than just a review of the architecture, this talk focuses on the whys and the tradeoffs made in the design. 

    The talk is intended both to showcase how programmable and powerful PostgreSQL is, but also illustrate the fundamental tradeoffs which must be faced when pushing any technology into the big data space.

  • Игорь Мельников
    Игорь Мельников

    In any business-critical system, there comes a need to modify table structures — whether it's adding new columns with expressions based on other columns or converting a non-partitioned table into a partitioned one.

    Using standard PostgreSQL tools for large table reorganization often results in significant downtime, as tables become unavailable for writes — and sometimes even for reads — during the process.

    In this talk, I’ll introduce dbms_redefinition, a custom-built extension that brings functionality similar to Oracle’s DBMS_REDEFINITION package to PostgreSQL. This solution minimizes downtime to near zero when applying schema changes in production. 

    Unlike pg_repack, which does not support structural modifications, dbms_redefinition is useful for all PostgreSQL users, even beyond Oracle migrations.

    I’ll share a real-world use case, discuss future development plans, and explore new features in the pipeline.

  • Андрей Черняков
    Андрей Черняков UIS, CoMagic

    Making changes to tables under production load is always a complex task. For example, when you need to change a column type (e.g., from int to bigint or from timestamp to timestamptz), or move a table to a different tablespace without losing any changes that occur during the data migration.

    What if you have hundreds of such tables? With pg-transparent-alter-table, this is no longer a problem. These tasks can be solved with a single simple command:
    $ pg_tat -h 0.0.0.0 -d mydb -c "alter table mytable alter column id bigint"

    Key features include:

    • You can specify any number of alter table commands at once.
    • You can modify partitioned tables, supporting both the old inheritance-based partitioning and new declarative partitioning, including multi-level partitioning.
    • You can interrupt the process at any stage and continue later without losing progress from previous stages.
    • You can change your mind at any time, stop the execution, run "pg_tat --clean," and revert to the original state.
    • Custom commands for changing column order.
    • PostgreSQL version support: 11-17.

    After more than 5 years of existence (previously called transparent-alter-type), the project has become a reliable tool actively used in production. I would like to share my experience and discuss its capabilities.

All talks

Informational