Book Image

PostgreSQL High Performance Cookbook

By : Chitij Chauhan, Dinesh Kumar
Book Image

PostgreSQL High Performance Cookbook

By: Chitij Chauhan, Dinesh Kumar

Overview of this book

PostgreSQL is one of the most powerful and easy to use database management systems. It has strong support from the community and is being actively developed with a new release every year. PostgreSQL supports the most advanced features included in SQL standards. It also provides NoSQL capabilities and very rich data types and extensions. All of this makes PostgreSQL a very attractive solution in software systems. If you run a database, you want it to perform well and you want to be able to secure it. As the world’s most advanced open source database, PostgreSQL has unique built-in ways to achieve these goals. This book will show you a multitude of ways to enhance your database’s performance and give you insights into measuring and optimizing a PostgreSQL database to achieve better performance. This book is your one-stop guide to elevate your PostgreSQL knowledge to the next level. First, you’ll get familiarized with essential developer/administrator concepts such as load balancing, connection pooling, and distributing connections to multiple nodes. Next, you will explore memory optimization techniques before exploring the security controls offered by PostgreSQL. Then, you will move on to the essential database/server monitoring and replication strategies with PostgreSQL. Finally, you will learn about query processing algorithms.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
PostgreSQL High Performance Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Configuring pgpool and testing the setup


In this recipe, we are going to configure pgpool and show how to make connections using pgpool.

Getting ready

Before running pgpool if you are downloading from the tarball source then the pgpool software needs to be built and compiled. These steps are shown in the first recipe of this chapter.

How to do it...

We are going to follow these steps to configure pgpool and run the setup:

  1. After pgpool is installed as shown in the first recipe of this chapter, the next step is to copy the configuration files from the sample directory with some default settings, which will be later edited as per our requirements:

            cd /etc/pgpool/ 
            cp pgpool.conf.sample-stream pgpool.conf 
            cp pcp.conf.sample etc/pcp.conf  
    
    
  2. The next step is to define a username and password in the pcp.conf file, which is an authentication file for pgpool. Basically, to use PCP commands user authentication is required. This mechanism is different from PostgreSQL...