Book Image

PostgreSQL 13 Cookbook

By : Vallarapu Naga Avinash Kumar
Book Image

PostgreSQL 13 Cookbook

By: Vallarapu Naga Avinash Kumar

Overview of this book

PostgreSQL has become the most advanced open source database on the market. This book follows a step-by-step approach, guiding you effectively in deploying PostgreSQL in production environments. The book starts with an introduction to PostgreSQL and its architecture. You’ll cover common and not-so-common challenges faced while designing and managing the database. Next, the book focuses on backup and recovery strategies to ensure your database is steady and achieves optimal performance. Throughout the book, you’ll address key challenges such as maintaining reliability, data integrity, a fault-tolerant environment, a robust feature set, extensibility, consistency, and authentication. Moving ahead, you’ll learn how to manage a PostgreSQL cluster and explore replication features for high availability. Later chapters will assist you in building a secure PostgreSQL server, along with covering recipes for encrypting data in motion and data at rest. Finally, you’ll not only discover how to tune your database for optimal performance but also understand ways to monitor and manage maintenance activities, before learning how to perform PostgreSQL upgrades during downtime. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-versed with the essential PostgreSQL 13 features to build enterprise relational databases.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
12
About Packt

Technical requirements

The following recipes will require that you have at least two database servers with internet connectivity for the purpose of testing. The commands that will be discussed in these recipes should work on the CentOS/Red Hat/OEL and Ubuntu/Debian family of operating systems. All the recipes in this chapter will be using the following hostnames and corresponding IP addresses. We need to replace the appropriate hostname and IP address that matches our PostgreSQL cluster:

pg1 192.168.10.1 (Primary or Master)
pg2 192.168.10.1 (Standby or Replica)
pg3 192.168.10.1 (Second Standby in some recipes)

Additionally, it's recommended that the hostnames and their IPs are set in the /etc/hosts file as the root user:

echo "192.168.10.1 pg1" >> /etc/hosts
echo "192.168.10.2 pg2" >> /etc/hosts
echo "192.168.10.3 pg3" >> /etc/hosts

Let's get started!