Book Image

Mastering PostgreSQL 9.6

By : Hans-Jürgen Schönig
Book Image

Mastering PostgreSQL 9.6

By: Hans-Jürgen Schönig

Overview of this book

PostgreSQL is an open source database used for handling large datasets (Big Data) and as a JSON document database. It also has applications in the software and web domains. This book will enable you to build better PostgreSQL applications and administer databases more efficiently. We begin by explaining the advanced database design concepts in PostgreSQL 9.6, along with indexing and query optimization. You will also see how to work with event triggers and perform concurrent transactions and table partitioning, along with exploring SQL and server tuning. We will walk you through implementing advanced administrative tasks such as server maintenance and monitoring, replication, recovery and high availability, and much more. You will understand the common and not-so-common troubleshooting problems and how you can overcome them. By the end of this book, you will have an expert-level command of the advanced database functionalities and will be able to implement advanced administrative tasks with PostgreSQL.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
PostgreSQL Overview

Making Sense of Backups and Replication

In the previous chapter of this book, you learned a lot about the backup and recovery, which is essential for administration. So far, only logical backups have been covered; I am about to change that in this chapter.

This chapter is all about PostgreSQL's transaction log and what you can do with it to improve your setup and to make things more secure.

The following things will be covered:

  • What the transaction log does and why it is needed
  • Performing point-in-time-recovery
  • Setting up streaming replication
  • Replication conflicts
  • Monitoring replication
  • Synchronous versus asynchronous replication
  • Understanding timelines

At the end of the chapter, you will be able to set up transaction log archiving and replication. Keep this in mind: this chapter can never be a comprehensive guide to replication; it is only a short introduction. Full coverage of replication would require...