Book Image

PostgreSQL 9 Admin Cookbook

By : Simon Riggs, Hannu Krosing
Book Image

PostgreSQL 9 Admin Cookbook

By: Simon Riggs, Hannu Krosing

Overview of this book

<p>PostgreSQL is a powerful, open source object-relational database system. An enterprise database, PostgreSQL includes features such as Multi-Version Concurrency Control (MVCC), point-in-time recovery, tablespaces, asynchronous replication, nested transactions (savepoints), online/hot backups, a sophisticated query planner/optimizer, and write-ahead logging for fault tolerance. PostgreSQL 9 Admin cookbook covers everything a database administrator needs to protect, manage and run a healthy and efficient PostgreSQL 9.0 database.</p> <p>PostgreSQL 9 Admin Cookbook describes key aspects of the PostgreSQL open source database system. The book covers everything a sysadmin or DBA needs to protect, manage, and run a healthy and efficient PostgreSQL 9 database. This hands-on guide will assist developers working on live databases, supporting web or enterprise software applications using Java, Python, Ruby, or .Net from any development framework. It's easy to manage your database when you've got PostgreSQL 9 Admin Cookbook to hand.</p> <p>PostgreSQL is fast becoming one of the world's most popular server databases with an enviable reputation for performance, stability, and an enormous range of advanced features. PostgreSQL is one of the oldest open source projects, completely free to use and developed by a very diverse worldwide community. Most of all, It Just Works!</p> <p>PostgreSQL 9 Admin Cookbook offers the information you need to manage your live production databases on PostgreSQL. The book contains insights direct from the main author of the PostgreSQL replication and recovery features, and the database architect of the most successful startup using PostgreSQL, Skype.</p> <p>This practical guide gives quick answers to common questions and problems, building on the authors' experience as trainers, users, and core developers of the PostgreSQL database server.</p> <p>Each technical aspect is broken down into short recipes that demonstrate solutions with working code then explain why and how that works. The book is intended to be a desk reference for both new users and technical experts.</p> <p>The book covers all the latest features in PostgreSQL 9. Soon you will be running a smooth database with ease!</p>
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
PostgreSQL 9 Administration Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

Choosing good names for database objects


The easiest way to help other people understand a database is to make sure that all the objects have a meaningful name.

What makes a meaningful name?

How to do it...

  • The name follows the existing standards and practices in place. Inventing new standards isn't helpful; enforcing existing ones is.

  • The name clearly describes the role or table contents.

  • For major tables use short, powerful names.

  • For lookup tables, name them after the table to which they are linked, such as account_status.

  • For associative or linked tables, use all of the names of the major tables to which they relate, such as customer_account.

  • Make sure that the name is clearly distinct from other similar names.

  • Use consistent abbreviations.

  • Use underscores. Case is not preserved by default, so using camelCase names, such as customerAccount, as used in Java will just leave them unreadable. See recipe on handling objects with quoted names..

  • Use consistent plurals, or not.

  • Use suffixes to identify...