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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
  • Дмитрий Дорофеев
    Дмитрий Дорофеев

    In this talk, I will challenge architectural stereotypes about the impossibility of communication with external systems directly from a DBMS. PostgreSQL offers vast communication capabilities; you just need to know which extensions to use.

    And when extensions aren't enough, you can create your own. For the Luxms BI project, we needed communication with NATS, so we developed our own extension in Rust. I’ll share the GitHub link and my experience of developing PostgreSQL extensions in Rust during this talk.

  • Иван Чувашов
    Иван Чувашов DBA

    t’s well known that pg_upgrade is the go-to tool for fast PostgreSQL upgrades. However, even with this tool, there are cases where the upgrade process takes far longer than expected.

    In our case, upgrading a PostgreSQL database with 350,000 tables meant either waiting 3.5 hours or finding a better approach. By digging into the pg_upgrade source code, we discovered a way to speed up the process significantly. In this talk, we’ll share how we did it.

  • Ekaterina Sokolova
    Ekaterina Sokolova PostgresPro

    So much has been said about PostgreSQL as the result of its program code. But Postgres is not just code. It’s the people who create it, develop it, and... leave a piece of themselves through comments.

    What stories can we uncover from the comments in PostgreSQL’s code? We’ll discover what the most popular word is, which comments have been in the code since the very first public commit, how the style of communication has evolved with the product, and how we can see the human side behind the lines of code and comments.

  • Дмитрий Ремизов
    Дмитрий Ремизов ГНИВЦ

    This talk explores the challenges we encountered — and solved — while migrating massive databases from Oracle to PostgreSQL.

    One of the most complex aspects of this process was rebuilding foreign keys (FKs). To overcome these challenges, we had to dive deep into the internal workings of FK creation and validation.

    Key topics include:

    Does ALTER TABLE ... ADD CONSTRAINT ... FOREIGN KEY have an execution plan?

    Can an ordinary user influence this process?

    What locks are applied during FK creation and validation?

    Also, we’ll introduce a first-principles method for investigating performance issues, applying it to a real-world FK creation bottleneck.

All talks

Informational