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PostgreSQL 12 High Availability Cookbook

PostgreSQL 12 High Availability Cookbook

By : Shaun Thomas
4.5 (2)
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PostgreSQL 12 High Availability Cookbook

PostgreSQL 12 High Availability Cookbook

4.5 (2)
By: Shaun Thomas

Overview of this book

Databases are nothing without the data they store. In the event of an outage or technical catastrophe, immediate recovery is essential. This updated edition ensures that you will learn the important concepts related to node architecture design, as well as techniques such as using repmgr for failover automation. From cluster layout and hardware selection to software stacks and horizontal scalability, this PostgreSQL cookbook will help you build a PostgreSQL cluster that will survive crashes, resist data corruption, and grow smoothly with customer demand. You’ll start by understanding how to plan a PostgreSQL database architecture that is resistant to outages and scalable, as it is the scaffolding on which everything rests. With the bedrock established, you'll cover the topics that PostgreSQL database administrators need to know to manage a highly available cluster. This includes configuration, troubleshooting, monitoring and alerting, backups through proxies, failover automation, and other considerations that are essential for a healthy PostgreSQL cluster. Later, you’ll learn to use multi-master replication to maximize server availability. Later chapters will guide you through managing major version upgrades without downtime. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned how to build an efficient and adaptive PostgreSQL 12 database cluster.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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Setting up Slony

While there are a few logical asynchronous replication systems for PostgreSQL, Slony-I (Slony, in short) was the first to gain wide adoption. Why would we use Slony when PostgreSQL already has physical and logical replication? PostgreSQL versions prior to 10 could only copy the entire installation.

The only option for those systems is to copy every database, schema, table, and user at the binary level. In effect, streaming replication creates perfect clones of PostgreSQL servers. So what happens if we want to upgrade from one of these antiquated versions to something more modern without shutting down PostgreSQL itself? Sometimes this requires tooling designed back when those versions were more predominant.

Slony accomplishes exactly that goal. It is designed to copy tables only, capturing changes on a provider server and sending them to one or more subscribers...

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