Book Image

Learn PostgreSQL - Second Edition

By : Luca Ferrari, Enrico Pirozzi
1 (2)
Book Image

Learn PostgreSQL - Second Edition

1 (2)
By: Luca Ferrari, Enrico Pirozzi

Overview of this book

The latest edition of this PostgreSQL book will help you to start using PostgreSQL from absolute scratch, helping you to quickly understand the internal workings of the database. With a structured approach and practical examples, go on a journey that covers the basics, from SQL statements and how to run server-side programs, to configuring, managing, securing, and optimizing database performance. This new edition will not only help you get to grips with all the recent changes within the PostgreSQL ecosystem but will also dig deeper into concepts like partitioning and replication with a fresh set of examples. The book is also equipped with Docker images for each chapter which makes the learning experience faster and easier. Starting with the absolute basics of databases, the book sails through to advanced concepts like window functions, logging, auditing, extending the database, configuration, partitioning, and replication. It will also help you seamlessly migrate your existing database system to PostgreSQL and contains a dedicated chapter on disaster recovery. Each chapter ends with practice questions to test your learning at regular intervals. By the end of this book, you will be able to install, configure, manage, and develop applications against a PostgreSQL database.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
20
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Index

Verify your knowledge

  • What is the difference between logging and auditing?

    Logging is a way to track certain activities that happen within the cluster, without any particular regard to the “target” of such an activity. On the other hand, auditing is a way to log and track specific activities that happen on specific targets. For example, logging can track “every slow query” without any regard to the table the query is run against, while auditing can track “every modification to table xyz.” See the Implementing auditing section for more details.

  • What is pgBadger?

    pgBadger is an external command that can inspect the PostgreSQL textual logs and build a dashboard with the cluster activity. See the Extracting information from logs – pgBadger section for more details.

  • How can the database administrator decide where to send PostgreSQL logs?

    PostgreSQL provides a set of logging configuration...