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Wikipedia

PostgreSQL

PostgreSQL (/ˈpstɡrɛs ˌkjuː ˈɛl/, POHST-gres kyoo el),[12][13] also known as Postgres, is a free and open-source relational database management system (RDBMS) emphasizing extensibility and SQL compliance. PostgreSQL features transactions with atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability (ACID) properties, automatically updatable views, materialized views, triggers, foreign keys, and stored procedures.[14] It is supported on all major operating systems, including Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, macOS, and Windows, and handles a range of workloads from single machines to data warehouses or web services with many concurrent users.

PostgreSQL
The World's Most Advanced Open Source Relational Database[1]
Developer(s)PostgreSQL Global Development Group[2]
Initial release8 July 1996;
27 years ago
 (1996-07-08)[3]
Stable release
16.3[4]  / 9 May 2024; 25 days ago (9 May 2024)
Preview release
17 Beta 1 / 23 May 2024;
11 days ago
 (2024-05-23)[5]
Repository
  • git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git
Written inC
TypeRDBMS
LicensePostgreSQL License (free and open-source, permissive)[6][7][8]
Websitewww.postgresql.org 
PostgreSQL License[6]
PublisherPostgreSQL Global Development Group
Regents of the University of California
Debian FSG compatibleYes[9][10]
FSF approvedYes[11]
OSI approvedYes[8]
GPL compatibleYes
CopyleftNo
Linking from code with a different licenceYes
Websitepostgresql.org/about/licence

The PostgreSQL Global Development Group focuses only on developing a database engine and closely related components. This core is, technically, what comprises PostgreSQL itself, but there is an extensive developer community and ecosystem that provides other important feature sets that might, traditionally, be provided by a proprietary software vendor. These include special-purpose database engine features, like those needed to support a geospatial[15] or temporal[16] database or features which emulate other database products.[17][18][19][20] Also available from third parties are a wide variety of user and machine interface features, such as graphical user interfaces[21][22][23] or load balancing and high availability toolsets.[24] The large third-party PostgreSQL support network of people, companies, products, and projects, even though not part of The PostgreSQL Development Group, are essential to the PostgreSQL database engine's adoption and use and make up the PostgreSQL ecosystem writ large.[25]

PostgreSQL was originally named POSTGRES, referring to its origins as a successor to the Ingres database developed at the University of California, Berkeley.[26][27] In 1996, the project was renamed PostgreSQL to reflect its support for SQL. After a review in 2007, the development team decided to keep the name PostgreSQL and the alias Postgres.[28]

History edit

PostgreSQL evolved from the Ingres project at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1982, the leader of the Ingres team, Michael Stonebraker, left Berkeley to make a proprietary version of Ingres.[26] He returned to Berkeley in 1985, and began a post-Ingres project to address the problems with contemporary database systems that had become increasingly clear during the early 1980s. He won the Turing Award in 2014 for these and other projects,[29] and techniques pioneered in them.

The new project, POSTGRES, aimed to add the fewest features needed to completely support data types.[30] These features included the ability to define types and to fully describe relationships – something used widely, but maintained entirely by the user. In POSTGRES, the database understood relationships, and could retrieve information in related tables in a natural way using rules. POSTGRES used many of the ideas of Ingres, but not its code.[31]

Starting in 1986, published papers described the basis of the system, and a prototype version was shown at the 1988 ACM SIGMOD Conference. The team released version 1 to a small number of users in June 1989, followed by version 2 with a re-written rules system in June 1990. Version 3, released in 1991, again re-wrote the rules system, and added support for multiple storage managers[32] and an improved query engine. By 1993, the number of users began to overwhelm the project with requests for support and features. After releasing version 4.2[33] on June 30, 1994 – primarily a cleanup – the project ended. Berkeley released POSTGRES under an MIT License variant, which enabled other developers to use the code for any use. At the time, POSTGRES used an Ingres-influenced POSTQUEL query language interpreter, which could be interactively used with a console application named monitor.

In 1994, Berkeley graduate students Andrew Yu and Jolly Chen replaced the POSTQUEL query language interpreter with one for the SQL query language, creating Postgres95. The monitor console was also replaced by psql. Yu and Chen announced the first version (0.01) to beta testers on May 5, 1995. Version 1.0 of Postgres95 was announced on September 5, 1995, with a more liberal license that enabled the software to be freely modifiable.

On July 8, 1996, Marc Fournier at Hub.org Networking Services provided the first non-university development server for the open-source development effort.[3] With the participation of Bruce Momjian and Vadim B. Mikheev, work began to stabilize the code inherited from Berkeley.

In 1996, the project was renamed to PostgreSQL to reflect its support for SQL. The online presence at the website PostgreSQL.org began on October 22, 1996.[34] The first PostgreSQL release formed version 6.0 on January 29, 1997. Since then developers and volunteers around the world have maintained the software as The PostgreSQL Global Development Group.[2]

The project continues to make releases available under its free and open-source software PostgreSQL License. Code comes from contributions from proprietary vendors, support companies, and open-source programmers.

Multiversion concurrency control (MVCC) edit

PostgreSQL manages concurrency through multiversion concurrency control (MVCC), which gives each transaction a "snapshot" of the database, allowing changes to be made without affecting other transactions. This largely eliminates the need for read locks, and ensures the database maintains ACID principles. PostgreSQL offers four levels of transaction isolation: Read Uncommitted, Read Committed, Repeatable Read and Serializable. Because PostgreSQL is immune to dirty reads, requesting a Read Uncommitted transaction isolation level provides read committed instead. PostgreSQL supports full serializability via the serializable snapshot isolation (SSI) method.[35] The PostreSQL MVCC implementation is prone to performance issues that require tuning when under a heavy write load which updates existing rows.[36]

Storage and replication edit

Replication edit

PostgreSQL includes built-in binary replication based on shipping the changes (write-ahead logs (WAL)) to replica nodes asynchronously, with the ability to run read-only queries against these replicated nodes. This allows splitting read traffic among multiple nodes efficiently. Earlier replication software that allowed similar read scaling normally relied on adding replication triggers to the master, increasing load.

PostgreSQL includes built-in synchronous replication[37] that ensures that, for each write transaction, the master waits until at least one replica node has written the data to its transaction log. Unlike other database systems, the durability of a transaction (whether it is asynchronous or synchronous) can be specified per-database, per-user, per-session or even per-transaction. This can be useful for workloads that do not require such guarantees, and may not be wanted for all data as it slows down performance due to the requirement of the confirmation of the transaction reaching the synchronous standby.

Standby servers can be synchronous or asynchronous. Synchronous standby servers can be specified in the configuration which determines which servers are candidates for synchronous replication. The first in the list that is actively streaming will be used as the current synchronous server. When this fails, the system fails over to the next in line.

Synchronous multi-master replication is not included in the PostgreSQL core. Postgres-XC which is based on PostgreSQL provides scalable synchronous multi-master replication.[38] It is licensed under the same license as PostgreSQL. A related project is called Postgres-XL. Postgres-R is yet another fork.[39] Bidirectional replication (BDR) is an asynchronous multi-master replication system for PostgreSQL.[40]

Tools such as repmgr make managing replication clusters easier.

Several asynchronous trigger-based replication packages are available. These remain useful even after introduction of the expanded core abilities, for situations where binary replication of a full database cluster is inappropriate:

Indexes edit

PostgreSQL includes built-in support for regular B-tree and hash table indexes, and four index access methods: generalized search trees (GiST), generalized inverted indexes (GIN), Space-Partitioned GiST (SP-GiST)[42] and Block Range Indexes (BRIN). In addition, user-defined index methods can be created, although this is quite an involved process. Indexes in PostgreSQL also support the following features:

  • Expression indexes can be created with an index of the result of an expression or function, instead of simply the value of a column.
  • Partial indexes, which only index part of a table, can be created by adding a WHERE clause to the end of the CREATE INDEX statement. This allows a smaller index to be created.
  • The planner is able to use multiple indexes together to satisfy complex queries, using temporary in-memory bitmap index operations (useful for data warehouse applications for joining a large fact table to smaller dimension tables such as those arranged in a star schema).
  • k-nearest neighbors (k-NN) indexing (also referred to KNN-GiST[43]) provides efficient searching of "closest values" to that specified, useful to finding similar words, or close objects or locations with geospatial data. This is achieved without exhaustive matching of values.
  • Index-only scans often allow the system to fetch data from indexes without ever having to access the main table.
  • Block Range Indexes (BRIN).

Schemas edit

PostgreSQL schemas are namespaces, allowing objects of the same kind and name to co-exist in a single database. They are not to be confused with a database schema -- the abstract, structural, organizational specification which defines how every table's data relates to data within other tables. All PostgreSQL database objects, except for a few global objects such as roles and tablespaces, exist within a schema. They cannot be nested, schemas cannot contain schemas. The permission system controls access to schemas and their content. By default, newly created databases have only a single schema called public but other schemas can be added and the public schema isn't mandatory.

A search_path setting determines the order in which PostgreSQL checks schemas for unqualified objects (those without a prefixed schema). By default, it is set to $user, public ($user refers to the currently connected database user). This default can be set on a database or role level, but as it is a session parameter, it can be freely changed (even multiple times) during a client session, affecting that session only.

Non-existent schemas, or other schemas not accessible to the logged-in user, that are listed in search_path are silently skipped during object lookup.

New objects are created in whichever valid schema (one that can be accessed) appears first in the search_path.

Data types edit

A wide variety of native data types are supported, including:

In addition, users can create their own data types which can usually be made fully indexable via PostgreSQL's indexing infrastructures – GiST, GIN, SP-GiST. Examples of these include the geographic information system (GIS) data types from the PostGIS project for PostgreSQL.

There is also a data type called a domain, which is the same as any other data type but with optional constraints defined by the creator of that domain. This means any data entered into a column using the domain will have to conform to whichever constraints were defined as part of the domain.

A data type that represents a range of data can be used which are called range types. These can be discrete ranges (e.g. all integer values 1 to 10) or continuous ranges (e.g., any time between 10:00 am and 11:00 am). The built-in range types available include ranges of integers, big integers, decimal numbers, time stamps (with and without time zone) and dates.

Custom range types can be created to make new types of ranges available, such as IP address ranges using the inet type as a base, or float ranges using the float data type as a base. Range types support inclusive and exclusive range boundaries using the [] and () characters respectively. (e.g., [4,9) represents all integers starting from and including 4 up to but not including 9.) Range types are also compatible with existing operators used to check for overlap, containment, right of etc.

User-defined objects edit

New types of almost all objects inside the database can be created, including:

  • Casts
  • Conversions
  • Data types
  • Data domains
  • Functions, including aggregate functions and window functions
  • Indexes including custom indexes for custom types
  • Operators (existing ones can be overloaded)
  • Procedural languages

Inheritance edit

Tables can be set to inherit their characteristics from a parent table. Data in child tables will appear to exist in the parent tables, unless data is selected from the parent table using the ONLY keyword, i.e. SELECT * FROM ONLY parent_table;. Adding a column in the parent table will cause that column to appear in the child table.

Inheritance can be used to implement table partitioning, using either triggers or rules to direct inserts to the parent table into the proper child tables.

This feature is not fully supported. In particular, table constraints are not currently inheritable. All check constraints and not-null constraints on a parent table are automatically inherited by its children. Other types of constraints (unique, primary key, and foreign key constraints) are not inherited.

Inheritance provides a way to map the features of generalization hierarchies depicted in entity relationship diagrams (ERDs) directly into the PostgreSQL database.

Other storage features edit

  • Referential integrity constraints including foreign key constraints, column constraints, and row checks
  • Binary and textual large-object storage
  • Tablespaces
  • Per-column collation
  • Online backup
  • Point-in-time recovery, implemented using write-ahead logging
  • In-place upgrades with pg_upgrade for less downtime

Control and connectivity edit

Foreign data wrappers edit

PostgreSQL can link to other systems to retrieve data via foreign data wrappers (FDWs).[46] These can take the form of any data source, such as a file system, another relational database management system (RDBMS), or a web service. This means that regular database queries can use these data sources like regular tables, and even join multiple data-sources together.

Interfaces edit

PostgreSQL supports a binary communication protocol that allows applications to connect to the database server. The protocol is versioned (currently 3.0, as of PostgreSQL 7.4) and has a detailed specification.[47]

The official client implementation of this communication protocol is a C API, libpq.[48] In addition, the officially supported ECPG tool allows SQL commands to be embedded in C code.[49] Both are part of the standard PostgreSQL distribution.[50]

Third-party libraries for connecting to PostgreSQL are available for many programming languages, including C++,[51] Java,[52] Julia,[53][54][55] Python,[56] Node.js,[57] Go,[58] and Rust.[59]

Procedural languages edit

Procedural languages allow developers to extend the database with custom subroutines (functions), often called stored procedures. These functions can be used to build database triggers (functions invoked on modification of certain data) and custom data types and aggregate functions.[60] Procedural languages can also be invoked without defining a function, using a DO command at SQL level.[61]

Languages are divided into two groups: Procedures written in safe languages are sandboxed and can be safely created and used by any user. Procedures written in unsafe languages can only be created by superusers, because they allow bypassing a database's security restrictions, but can also access sources external to the database. Some languages like Perl provide both safe and unsafe versions.

PostgreSQL has built-in support for three procedural languages:

  • Plain SQL (safe). Simpler SQL functions can get expanded inline into the calling (SQL) query, which saves function call overhead and allows the query optimizer to "see inside" the function.
  • Procedural Language/PostgreSQL (PL/pgSQL) (safe), which resembles Oracle's Procedural Language for SQL (PL/SQL) procedural language and SQL/Persistent Stored Modules (SQL/PSM).
  • C (unsafe), which allows loading one or more custom shared library into the database. Functions written in C offer the best performance, but bugs in code can crash and potentially corrupt the database. Most built-in functions are written in C.

In addition, PostgreSQL allows procedural languages to be loaded into the database through extensions. Three language extensions are included with PostgreSQL to support Perl, Tcl, and Python. For Python, the current Python 3 is used, and the discontinued Python 2 is no longer supported as of PostgreSQL 15. Both were supported previously, defaulting to Python 2, while old and new versions couldn't be used in the same session.[62] External projects provide support for many other languages,[63] including PL/Java, JavaScript (PL/V8), PL/Julia,[55] PL/R,[64] PL/Ruby, and others.

Triggers edit

Triggers are events triggered by the action of SQL data manipulation language (DML) statements. For example, an INSERT statement might activate a trigger that checks if the values of the statement are valid. Most triggers are only activated by either INSERT or UPDATE statements.

Triggers are fully supported and can be attached to tables. Triggers can be per-column and conditional, in that UPDATE triggers can target specific columns of a table, and triggers can be told to execute under a set of conditions as specified in the trigger's WHERE clause. Triggers can be attached to views by using the INSTEAD OF condition. Multiple triggers are fired in alphabetical order. In addition to calling functions written in the native PL/pgSQL, triggers can also invoke functions written in other languages like PL/Python or PL/Perl.

Asynchronous notifications edit

PostgreSQL provides an asynchronous messaging system that is accessed through the NOTIFY, LISTEN and UNLISTEN commands. A session can issue a NOTIFY command, along with the user-specified channel and an optional payload, to mark a particular event occurring. Other sessions are able to detect these events by issuing a LISTEN command, which can listen to a particular channel. This functionality can be used for a wide variety of purposes, such as letting other sessions know when a table has updated or for separate applications to detect when a particular action has been performed. Such a system prevents the need for continuous polling by applications to see if anything has yet changed, and reducing unnecessary overhead. Notifications are fully transactional, in that messages are not sent until the transaction they were sent from is committed. This eliminates the problem of messages being sent for an action being performed which is then rolled back.

Many connectors for PostgreSQL provide support for this notification system (including libpq, JDBC, Npgsql, psycopg and node.js) so it can be used by external applications.

PostgreSQL can act as an effective, persistent "pub/sub" server or job server by combining LISTEN with FOR UPDATE SKIP LOCKED.[65][66][67]

Rules edit

Rules allow the "query tree" of an incoming query to be rewritten; they are an, automatically invoked, macro language for SQL. "Query Re-Write Rules" are attached to a table/class and "Re-Write" the incoming DML (select, insert, update, and/or delete) into one or more queries that either replace the original DML statement or execute in addition to it. Query Re-Write occurs after DML statement parsing and before query planning.

The functionality rules provide was, in almost every way, later duplicated with the introduction of newer types of triggers. The use of triggers is usually preferred over rules as it is easier to reason about trigger behavior and interactions than when equivalent rules are used.

Other querying features edit

  • Transactions
  • Full-text search
  • Views
    • Materialized views[68]
    • Updateable views[69]
    • Recursive views[70]
  • Inner, outer (full, left, and right), and cross joins
  • Sub-selects
    • Correlated sub-queries[71]
  • Regular expressions[72]
  • Common table expressions and writable common table expressions
  • Encrypted connections via Transport Layer Security (TLS); current versions do not use vulnerable SSL, even with that configuration option[73]
  • Domains
  • Savepoints
  • Two-phase commit
  • The Oversized-Attribute Storage Technique (TOAST) is used to transparently store large table attributes (such as big MIME attachments or XML messages) in a separate area, with automatic compression.
  • Embedded SQL is implemented using preprocessor. SQL code is first written embedded into C code. Then code is run through ECPG preprocessor, which replaces SQL with calls to code library. Then code can be compiled using a C compiler. Embedding works also with C++ but it does not recognize all C++ constructs.

Concurrency model edit

PostgreSQL server is process-based (not threaded), and uses one operating system process per database session. Multiple sessions are automatically spread across all available CPUs by the operating system. Many types of queries can also be parallelized across multiple background worker processes, taking advantage of multiple CPUs or cores.[74] Client applications can use threads and create multiple database connections from each thread.[75]

Security edit

PostgreSQL manages its internal security on a per-role basis. A role is generally regarded to be a user (a role that can log in), or a group (a role of which other roles are members). Permissions can be granted or revoked on any object down to the column level, and can allow or prevent the visibility/creation/alteration/deletion of objects at the database, schema, table, and row levels.

PostgreSQL's SECURITY LABEL feature (extension to SQL standards), allows for additional security; with a bundled loadable module that supports label-based mandatory access control (MAC) based on Security-Enhanced Linux (SELinux) security policy.[76][77]

PostgreSQL natively supports a broad number of external authentication mechanisms, including:

The GSSAPI, SSPI, Kerberos, peer, ident and certificate methods can also use a specified "map" file that lists which users matched by that authentication system are allowed to connect as a specific database user.

These methods are specified in the cluster's host-based authentication configuration file (pg_hba.conf), which determines what connections are allowed. This allows control over which user can connect to which database, where they can connect from (IP address, IP address range, domain socket), which authentication system will be enforced, and whether the connection must use Transport Layer Security (TLS).

Standards compliance edit

PostgreSQL claims high, but not complete, conformance with the latest SQL standard ("as of the version 15 release in October 2022, PostgreSQL conforms to at least 170 of the 179 mandatory features for SQL:2016 Core conformance", and no other databases fully conformed to it[79]). One exception is the handling of unquoted identifiers like table or column names. In PostgreSQL they are folded, internally, to lower case characters[80] whereas the standard says that unquoted identifiers should be folded to upper case. Thus, Foo should be equivalent to FOO not foo according to the standard. Other shortcomings concern the absence of temporal tables allowing automatic logging of row versions during transactions with the possibility of browsing in time (FOR SYSTEM TIME predicate),[citation needed] although relatively SQL compliant third-party extensions are available.[16]

Benchmarks and performance edit

Many informal performance studies of PostgreSQL have been done.[81] Performance improvements aimed at improving scalability began heavily with version 8.1. Simple benchmarks between version 8.0 and version 8.4 showed that the latter was more than ten times faster on read-only workloads and at least 7.5 times faster on both read and write workloads.[82]

The first industry-standard and peer-validated benchmark was completed in June 2007, using the Sun Java System Application Server (proprietary version of GlassFish) 9.0 Platform Edition, UltraSPARC T1-based Sun Fire server and PostgreSQL 8.2.[83] This result of 778.14 SPECjAppServer2004 JOPS@Standard compares favourably with the 874 JOPS@Standard with Oracle 10 on an Itanium-based HP-UX system.[81]

In August 2007, Sun submitted an improved benchmark score of 813.73 SPECjAppServer2004 JOPS@Standard. With the system under test at a reduced price, the price/performance improved from $84.98/JOPS to $70.57/JOPS.[84]

The default configuration of PostgreSQL uses only a small amount of dedicated memory for performance-critical purposes such as caching database blocks and sorting. This limitation is primarily because older operating systems required kernel changes to allow allocating large blocks of shared memory.[85] PostgreSQL.org provides advice on basic recommended performance practice in a wiki.[86]

In April 2012, Robert Haas of EnterpriseDB demonstrated PostgreSQL 9.2's linear CPU scalability using a server with 64 cores.[87]

Matloob Khushi performed benchmarking between PostgreSQL 9.0 and MySQL 5.6.15 for their ability to process genomic data. In his performance analysis he found that PostgreSQL extracts overlapping genomic regions eight times faster than MySQL using two datasets of 80,000 each forming random human DNA regions. Insertion and data uploads in PostgreSQL were also better, although general searching ability of both databases was almost equivalent.[88]

Platforms edit

PostgreSQL is available for the following operating systems: Linux (all recent distributions), 64-bit ARM and x86-64 installers available and tested for macOS (OS X)[89] version 10.12 and newer, Windows (with installers available and tested for 64-bit Windows Server 2019 and 2016; some older PostgreSQL versions were tested back to Windows 2012 R2[90]), FreeBSD, OpenBSD,[91] NetBSD, and these without official (though unofficial likely available) binary executables, Solaris,[92] AIX, and HP-UX.[93] Most other (modern) Unix-like systems do also work.

PostgreSQL can be expected to work on any of the following instruction set architectures (and operating systems): 64-bit x86-64 and 32-bit x86 on Windows XP (or later) and other operating systems; these are supported on other than Windows: 64-bit ARM[94] and the older 32-bit ARM, including older such as ARMv6 in Raspberry Pi[95]), z/Architecture, S/390, PowerPC (incl. 64-bit Power ISA), SPARC (also 64-bit), IA-64 Itanium (HP-UX), MIPS and PA-RISC. It was also known to work on some other platforms (while not been tested on for years, i.e. for latest versions).[96]

Database administration edit

Open source front-ends and tools for administering PostgreSQL include:

psql
The primary front-end for PostgreSQL is the psql command-line program, which can be used to enter SQL queries directly, or execute them from a file. In addition, psql provides a number of meta-commands and various shell-like features to facilitate writing scripts and automating a wide variety of tasks; for example tab completion of object names and SQL syntax.
pgAdmin
The pgAdmin package is a free and open-source graphical user interface (GUI) administration tool for PostgreSQL, which is supported on many computer platforms.[97] The program is available in more than a dozen languages. The first prototype, named pgManager, was written for PostgreSQL 6.3.2 from 1998, and rewritten and released as pgAdmin under the GNU General Public License (GPL) in later months. The second incarnation (named pgAdmin II) was a complete rewrite, first released on January 16, 2002. The third version, pgAdmin III, was originally released under the Artistic License and then released under the same license as PostgreSQL. Unlike prior versions that were written in Visual Basic, pgAdmin III is written in C++, using the wxWidgets[98] framework allowing it to run on most common operating systems. The query tool includes a scripting language called pgScript for supporting admin and development tasks. In December 2014, Dave Page, the pgAdmin project founder and primary developer,[99] announced that with the shift towards web-based models, work has begun on pgAdmin 4 with the aim to facilitate cloud deployments.[100] In 2016, pgAdmin 4 was released. The pgAdmin 4 backend was written in Python, using Flask and the Qt framework.[101]
phpPgAdmin
phpPgAdmin is a web-based administration tool for PostgreSQL written in PHP and based on the popular phpMyAdmin interface originally written for MySQL administration.[102]
PostgreSQL Studio
PostgreSQL Studio allows users to perform essential PostgreSQL database development tasks from a web-based console. PostgreSQL Studio allows users to work with cloud databases without the need to open firewalls.[103]
TeamPostgreSQL
AJAX/JavaScript-driven web interface for PostgreSQL. Allows browsing, maintaining and creating data and database objects via a web browser. The interface offers tabbed SQL editor with autocompletion, row editing widgets, click-through foreign key navigation between rows and tables, favorites management for commonly used scripts, among other features. Supports SSH for both the web interface and the database connections. Installers are available for Windows, Macintosh, and Linux, and a simple cross-platform archive that runs from a script.[104]
LibreOffice, OpenOffice.org
LibreOffice and OpenOffice.org Base can be used as a front-end for PostgreSQL.[105][106]
pgBadger
The pgBadger PostgreSQL log analyzer generates detailed reports from a PostgreSQL log file.[107]
pgDevOps
pgDevOps is a suite of web tools to install & manage multiple PostgreSQL versions, extensions, and community components, develop SQL queries, monitor running databases and find performance problems.[108]
Adminer
Adminer is a simple web-based administration tool for PostgreSQL and others, written in PHP.
pgBackRest
pgBackRest is a backup and restore tool for PostgreSQL that provides support for full, differential, and incremental backups.[109]
pgaudit
pgaudit is a PostgreSQL extension that provides detailed session and/or object audit logging via the standard logging facility provided by PostgreSQL.[110]
WAL-E
WAL-E is a backup and restore tool for PostgreSQL that provides support for physical (WAL-based) backups, written in Python.[111]

A number of companies offer proprietary tools for PostgreSQL. They often consist of a universal core that is adapted for various specific database products. These tools mostly share the administration features with the open source tools but offer improvements in data modeling, importing, exporting or reporting.

Notable users edit

Notable organizations and products that use PostgreSQL as the primary database include:

Service implementations edit

Some notable vendors offer PostgreSQL as software as a service:

  • Heroku, a platform as a service provider, has supported PostgreSQL since the start in 2007.[137] They offer value-add features like full database roll-back (ability to restore a database from any specified time),[138] which is based on WAL-E, open-source software developed by Heroku.[139]
  • In January 2012, EnterpriseDB released a cloud version of both PostgreSQL and their own proprietary Postgres Plus Advanced Server with automated provisioning for failover, replication, load-balancing, and scaling. It runs on Amazon Web Services.[140] Since 2015, Postgres Advanced Server has been offered as ApsaraDB for PPAS, a relational database as a service on Alibaba Cloud.[141]
  • VMware has offered vFabric Postgres (also termed vPostgres[142]) for private clouds on VMware vSphere since May 2012.[143] The company announced End of Availability (EOA) of the product in 2014.[144]
  • In November 2013, Amazon Web Services announced the addition of PostgreSQL to their Relational Database Service offering.[145][146]
  • In November 2016, Amazon Web Services announced the addition of PostgreSQL compatibility to their cloud-native Amazon Aurora managed database offering.[147]
  • In May 2017, Microsoft Azure announced Azure Databases for PostgreSQL.[148]
  • In May 2019, Alibaba Cloud announced PolarDB for PostgreSQL.[149]
  • Jelastic Multicloud Platform as a Service has provided container-based PostgreSQL support since 2011. It also offers automated asynchronous master-slave replication of PostgreSQL.[150]
  • In June 2019, IBM Cloud announced IBM Cloud Hyper Protect DBaaS for PostgreSQL.[151]
  • In September 2020, Crunchy Data announced Crunchy Bridge.[152]
  • In June 2022, Neon.tech announced Neon Serverless Postgres.[153]

Release history edit

Release history
Release First release Latest minor version Latest release End of
life[154]
Milestones
6.0 1997-01-29 First formal release of PostgreSQL, unique indexes, pg_dumpall utility, ident authentication
6.1 1997-06-08 Old version, no longer maintained: 6.1.1 1997-07-22 Multicolumn indexes, sequences, money data type, GEQO (GEnetic Query Optimizer)
6.2 1997-10-02 Old version, no longer maintained: 6.2.1 1997-10-17 JDBC interface, triggers, server programming interface, constraints
6.3 1998-03-01 Old version, no longer maintained: 6.3.2 1998-04-07 2003-03-01 SQL-92 subselect ability, PL/pgTCL
6.4 1998-10-30 Old version, no longer maintained: 6.4.2 1998-12-20 2003-10-30 VIEWs (then only read-only) and RULEs, PL/pgSQL
6.5 1999-06-09 Old version, no longer maintained: 6.5.3 1999-10-13 2004-06-09 MVCC, temporary tables, more SQL statement support (CASE, INTERSECT, and EXCEPT)
7.0 2000-05-08 Old version, no longer maintained: 7.0.3 2000-11-11 2004-05-08 Foreign keys, SQL-92 syntax for joins
7.1 2001-04-13 Old version, no longer maintained: 7.1.3 2001-08-15 2006-04-13 Write-ahead log, outer joins
7.2 2002-02-04 Old version, no longer maintained: 7.2.8 2005-05-09 2007-02-04 PL/Python, OIDs no longer required, internationalization of messages
7.3 2002-11-27 Old version, no longer maintained: 7.3.21 2008-01-07 2007-11-27 Schema, table function, prepared query[155]
7.4 2003-11-17 Old version, no longer maintained: 7.4.30 2010-10-04 2010-10-01 Optimization on JOINs and data warehouse functions[156]
8.0 2005-01-19 Old version, no longer maintained: 8.0.26 2010-10-04 2010-10-01 Native server on Microsoft Windows, savepoints, tablespaces, point-in-time recovery[157]
8.1 2005-11-08 Old version, no longer maintained: 8.1.23 2010-12-16 2010-11-08 Performance optimization, two-phase commit, table partitioning, index bitmap scan, shared row locking, roles
8.2 2006-12-05 Old version, no longer maintained: 8.2.23 2011-12-05 2011-12-05 Performance optimization, online index builds, advisory locks, warm standby[158]
8.3 2008-02-04 Old version, no longer maintained: 8.3.23 2013-02-07 2013-02-07 Heap-only tuples, full text search,[159] SQL/XML, ENUM types, UUID types
8.4 2009-07-01 Old version, no longer maintained: 8.4.22 2014-07-24 2014-07-24 Window functions, column-level permissions, parallel database restore, per-database collation, common table expressions and recursive queries[160]
9.0 2010-09-20 Old version, no longer maintained: 9.0.23 2015-10-08 2015-10-08 Built-in binary streaming replication, hot standby, in-place upgrade ability, 64-bit Windows[161]
9.1 2011-09-12 Old version, no longer maintained: 9.1.24 2016-10-27 2016-10-27 Synchronous replication, per-column collations, unlogged tables, serializable snapshot isolation, writeable common table expressions, SELinux integration, extensions, foreign tables[162]
9.2 2012-09-10[163] Old version, no longer maintained: 9.2.24 2017-11-09 2017-11-09 Cascading streaming replication, index-only scans, native JSON support, improved lock management, range types, pg_receivexlog tool, space-partitioned GiST indexes
9.3 2013-09-09 Old version, no longer maintained: 9.3.25 2018-11-08 2018-11-08 Custom background workers, data checksums, dedicated JSON operators, LATERAL JOIN, faster pg_dump, new pg_isready server monitoring tool, trigger features, view features, writeable foreign tables, materialized views, replication improvements
9.4 2014-12-18 Old version, no longer maintained: 9.4.26 2020-02-13 2020-02-13 JSONB data type, ALTER SYSTEM statement for changing config values, ability to refresh materialized views without blocking reads, dynamic registration/start/stop of background worker processes, Logical Decoding API, GiN index improvements, Linux huge page support, database cache reloading via pg_prewarm, reintroducing Hstore as the column type of choice for document-style data.[164]
9.5 2016-01-07 Old version, no longer maintained: 9.5.25 2021-02-11 2021-02-11 UPSERT, row level security, TABLESAMPLE, CUBE/ROLLUP, GROUPING SETS, and new BRIN index[165]
9.6 2016-09-29 Old version, no longer maintained: 9.6.24 2021-11-11 2021-11-11 Parallel query support, PostgreSQL foreign data wrapper (FDW) improvements with sort/join pushdown, multiple synchronous standbys, faster vacuuming of large table
10 2017-10-05 Old version, no longer maintained: 10.23 2022-11-10 2022-11-10 Logical replication,[166] declarative table partitioning, improved query parallelism
11 2018-10-18 Old version, no longer maintained: 11.22 2023-11-09 2023-11-09 Increased robustness and performance for partitioning, transactions supported in stored procedures, enhanced abilities for query parallelism, just-in-time (JIT) compiling for expressions[167][168]
12 2019-10-03 Older version, yet still maintained: 12.19 2024-05-09 2024-11-14 Improvements to query performance and space utilization; SQL/JSON path expression support; generated columns; improvements to internationalization, and authentication; new pluggable table storage interface.[169]
13 2020-09-24 Older version, yet still maintained: 13.15 2024-05-09 2025-11-13 Space savings and performance gains from de-duplication of B-tree index entries, improved performance for queries that use aggregates or partitioned tables, better query planning when using extended statistics, parallelized vacuuming of indexes, incremental sorting[170][171]
14 2021-09-30 Older version, yet still maintained: 14.12 2024-05-09 2026-11-12 Added SQL-standard SEARCH and CYCLE clauses for common table expressions, allow DISTINCT to be added to GROUP BY[172][173]
15 2022-10-13 Older version, yet still maintained: 15.7 2024-05-09 2027-11-11 Implements SQL-standard MERGE statement. PL/Python now only supports current Python 3, and plpythonu now means Python 3, no longer the discontinued Python 2.
16 2023-09-14 Current stable version: 16.3 2024-05-09 2028-11-09 Improvements to logical replication, pg_stat_io view (for I/O metrics)[174]
17 Future release: 17.0 2024-05-23
Legend:
Old version
Older version, still maintained
Latest version
Latest preview version
Future release

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Official website  , and wiki
  • A Software Catalog of related projects and products
  • The official Main Source Code Repository (for browsing), and the Developer FAQ
  • The official Reference for PostgreSQL Documentation Authors
  • All official PostgreSQL Source Code Repositories
  • PostgreSQL at Curlie
  • PostgreSQL on GitHub

postgresql, juː, pohst, gres, kyoo, also, known, postgres, free, open, source, relational, database, management, system, rdbms, emphasizing, extensibility, compliance, features, transactions, with, atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability, acid, propertie. PostgreSQL ˈ p oʊ s t ɡ r ɛ s ˌ k juː ˈ ɛ l POHST gres kyoo el 12 13 also known as Postgres is a free and open source relational database management system RDBMS emphasizing extensibility and SQL compliance PostgreSQL features transactions with atomicity consistency isolation durability ACID properties automatically updatable views materialized views triggers foreign keys and stored procedures 14 It is supported on all major operating systems including Linux FreeBSD OpenBSD macOS and Windows and handles a range of workloads from single machines to data warehouses or web services with many concurrent users PostgreSQLThe World s Most Advanced Open Source Relational Database 1 Developer s PostgreSQL Global Development Group 2 Initial release8 July 1996 27 years ago 1996 07 08 3 Stable release16 3 4 9 May 2024 25 days ago 9 May 2024 Preview release17 Beta 1 23 May 2024 11 days ago 2024 05 23 5 Repositorygit wbr postgresql wbr org wbr gitweb wbr p postgresql wbr gitWritten inCTypeRDBMSLicensePostgreSQL License free and open source permissive 6 7 8 Websitewww wbr postgresql wbr org PostgreSQL License 6 PublisherPostgreSQL Global Development GroupRegents of the University of CaliforniaDebian FSG compatibleYes 9 10 FSF approvedYes 11 OSI approvedYes 8 GPL compatibleYesCopyleftNoLinking from code with a different licenceYesWebsitepostgresql wbr org wbr about wbr licence The PostgreSQL Global Development Group focuses only on developing a database engine and closely related components This core is technically what comprises PostgreSQL itself but there is an extensive developer community and ecosystem that provides other important feature sets that might traditionally be provided by a proprietary software vendor These include special purpose database engine features like those needed to support a geospatial 15 or temporal 16 database or features which emulate other database products 17 18 19 20 Also available from third parties are a wide variety of user and machine interface features such as graphical user interfaces 21 22 23 or load balancing and high availability toolsets 24 The large third party PostgreSQL support network of people companies products and projects even though not part of The PostgreSQL Development Group are essential to the PostgreSQL database engine s adoption and use and make up the PostgreSQL ecosystem writ large 25 PostgreSQL was originally named POSTGRES referring to its origins as a successor to the Ingres database developed at the University of California Berkeley 26 27 In 1996 the project was renamed PostgreSQL to reflect its support for SQL After a review in 2007 the development team decided to keep the name PostgreSQL and the alias Postgres 28 Contents 1 History 2 Multiversion concurrency control MVCC 3 Storage and replication 3 1 Replication 3 2 Indexes 3 3 Schemas 3 4 Data types 3 5 User defined objects 3 6 Inheritance 3 7 Other storage features 4 Control and connectivity 4 1 Foreign data wrappers 4 2 Interfaces 4 3 Procedural languages 4 4 Triggers 4 5 Asynchronous notifications 4 6 Rules 4 7 Other querying features 4 8 Concurrency model 5 Security 6 Standards compliance 7 Benchmarks and performance 8 Platforms 9 Database administration 10 Notable users 11 Service implementations 12 Release history 13 See also 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksHistory editPostgreSQL evolved from the Ingres project at the University of California Berkeley In 1982 the leader of the Ingres team Michael Stonebraker left Berkeley to make a proprietary version of Ingres 26 He returned to Berkeley in 1985 and began a post Ingres project to address the problems with contemporary database systems that had become increasingly clear during the early 1980s He won the Turing Award in 2014 for these and other projects 29 and techniques pioneered in them The new project POSTGRES aimed to add the fewest features needed to completely support data types 30 These features included the ability to define types and to fully describe relationships something used widely but maintained entirely by the user In POSTGRES the database understood relationships and could retrieve information in related tables in a natural way using rules POSTGRES used many of the ideas of Ingres but not its code 31 Starting in 1986 published papers described the basis of the system and a prototype version was shown at the 1988 ACM SIGMOD Conference The team released version 1 to a small number of users in June 1989 followed by version 2 with a re written rules system in June 1990 Version 3 released in 1991 again re wrote the rules system and added support for multiple storage managers 32 and an improved query engine By 1993 the number of users began to overwhelm the project with requests for support and features After releasing version 4 2 33 on June 30 1994 primarily a cleanup the project ended Berkeley released POSTGRES under an MIT License variant which enabled other developers to use the code for any use At the time POSTGRES used an Ingres influenced POSTQUEL query language interpreter which could be interactively used with a console application named monitor In 1994 Berkeley graduate students Andrew Yu and Jolly Chen replaced the POSTQUEL query language interpreter with one for the SQL query language creating Postgres95 The monitor console was also replaced by psql Yu and Chen announced the first version 0 01 to beta testers on May 5 1995 Version 1 0 of Postgres95 was announced on September 5 1995 with a more liberal license that enabled the software to be freely modifiable On July 8 1996 Marc Fournier at Hub org Networking Services provided the first non university development server for the open source development effort 3 With the participation of Bruce Momjian and Vadim B Mikheev work began to stabilize the code inherited from Berkeley In 1996 the project was renamed to PostgreSQL to reflect its support for SQL The online presence at the website PostgreSQL org began on October 22 1996 34 The first PostgreSQL release formed version 6 0 on January 29 1997 Since then developers and volunteers around the world have maintained the software as The PostgreSQL Global Development Group 2 The project continues to make releases available under its free and open source software PostgreSQL License Code comes from contributions from proprietary vendors support companies and open source programmers Multiversion concurrency control MVCC editPostgreSQL manages concurrency through multiversion concurrency control MVCC which gives each transaction a snapshot of the database allowing changes to be made without affecting other transactions This largely eliminates the need for read locks and ensures the database maintains ACID principles PostgreSQL offers four levels of transaction isolation Read Uncommitted Read Committed Repeatable Read and Serializable Because PostgreSQL is immune to dirty reads requesting a Read Uncommitted transaction isolation level provides read committed instead PostgreSQL supports full serializability via the serializable snapshot isolation SSI method 35 The PostreSQL MVCC implementation is prone to performance issues that require tuning when under a heavy write load which updates existing rows 36 Storage and replication editReplication edit PostgreSQL includes built in binary replication based on shipping the changes write ahead logs WAL to replica nodes asynchronously with the ability to run read only queries against these replicated nodes This allows splitting read traffic among multiple nodes efficiently Earlier replication software that allowed similar read scaling normally relied on adding replication triggers to the master increasing load PostgreSQL includes built in synchronous replication 37 that ensures that for each write transaction the master waits until at least one replica node has written the data to its transaction log Unlike other database systems the durability of a transaction whether it is asynchronous or synchronous can be specified per database per user per session or even per transaction This can be useful for workloads that do not require such guarantees and may not be wanted for all data as it slows down performance due to the requirement of the confirmation of the transaction reaching the synchronous standby Standby servers can be synchronous or asynchronous Synchronous standby servers can be specified in the configuration which determines which servers are candidates for synchronous replication The first in the list that is actively streaming will be used as the current synchronous server When this fails the system fails over to the next in line Synchronous multi master replication is not included in the PostgreSQL core Postgres XC which is based on PostgreSQL provides scalable synchronous multi master replication 38 It is licensed under the same license as PostgreSQL A related project is called Postgres XL Postgres R is yet another fork 39 Bidirectional replication BDR is an asynchronous multi master replication system for PostgreSQL 40 Tools such as repmgr make managing replication clusters easier Several asynchronous trigger based replication packages are available These remain useful even after introduction of the expanded core abilities for situations where binary replication of a full database cluster is inappropriate Slony I Londiste part of SkyTools developed by Skype Bucardo multi master replication developed by Backcountry com 41 SymmetricDS multi master multi tier replication Indexes edit PostgreSQL includes built in support for regular B tree and hash table indexes and four index access methods generalized search trees GiST generalized inverted indexes GIN Space Partitioned GiST SP GiST 42 and Block Range Indexes BRIN In addition user defined index methods can be created although this is quite an involved process Indexes in PostgreSQL also support the following features Expression indexes can be created with an index of the result of an expression or function instead of simply the value of a column Partial indexes which only index part of a table can be created by adding a WHERE clause to the end of the CREATE INDEX statement This allows a smaller index to be created The planner is able to use multiple indexes together to satisfy complex queries using temporary in memory bitmap index operations useful for data warehouse applications for joining a large fact table to smaller dimension tables such as those arranged in a star schema k nearest neighbors k NN indexing also referred to KNN GiST 43 provides efficient searching of closest values to that specified useful to finding similar words or close objects or locations with geospatial data This is achieved without exhaustive matching of values Index only scans often allow the system to fetch data from indexes without ever having to access the main table Block Range Indexes BRIN Schemas edit PostgreSQL schemas are namespaces allowing objects of the same kind and name to co exist in a single database They are not to be confused with a database schema the abstract structural organizational specification which defines how every table s data relates to data within other tables All PostgreSQL database objects except for a few global objects such as roles and tablespaces exist within a schema They cannot be nested schemas cannot contain schemas The permission system controls access to schemas and their content By default newly created databases have only a single schema called public but other schemas can be added and the public schema isn t mandatory A search path setting determines the order in which PostgreSQL checks schemas for unqualified objects those without a prefixed schema By default it is set to user public user refers to the currently connected database user This default can be set on a database or role level but as it is a session parameter it can be freely changed even multiple times during a client session affecting that session only Non existent schemas or other schemas not accessible to the logged in user that are listed in search path are silently skipped during object lookup New objects are created in whichever valid schema one that can be accessed appears first in the search path Data types edit A wide variety of native data types are supported including Boolean Arbitrary precision numerics Character text varchar char Binary Date time timestamp time with without time zone date interval Money Enum Bit strings Text search type Composite HStore an extension enabled key value store within PostgreSQL 44 Arrays variable length and can be of any data type including text and composite types up to 1 GB in total storage size Geometric primitives IPv4 and IPv6 addresses Classless Inter Domain Routing CIDR blocks and MAC addresses XML supporting XPath queries Universally unique identifier UUID JavaScript Object Notation JSON and a faster binary JSONB not the same as BSON 45 In addition users can create their own data types which can usually be made fully indexable via PostgreSQL s indexing infrastructures GiST GIN SP GiST Examples of these include the geographic information system GIS data types from the PostGIS project for PostgreSQL There is also a data type called a domain which is the same as any other data type but with optional constraints defined by the creator of that domain This means any data entered into a column using the domain will have to conform to whichever constraints were defined as part of the domain A data type that represents a range of data can be used which are called range types These can be discrete ranges e g all integer values 1 to 10 or continuous ranges e g any time between 10 00 am and 11 00 am The built in range types available include ranges of integers big integers decimal numbers time stamps with and without time zone and dates Custom range types can be created to make new types of ranges available such as IP address ranges using the inet type as a base or float ranges using the float data type as a base Range types support inclusive and exclusive range boundaries using the and characters respectively e g 4 9 represents all integers starting from and including 4 up to but not including 9 Range types are also compatible with existing operators used to check for overlap containment right of etc User defined objects edit New types of almost all objects inside the database can be created including Casts Conversions Data types Data domains Functions including aggregate functions and window functions Indexes including custom indexes for custom types Operators existing ones can be overloaded Procedural languages Inheritance edit Tables can be set to inherit their characteristics from a parent table Data in child tables will appear to exist in the parent tables unless data is selected from the parent table using the ONLY keyword i e span class k SELECT span span class w span span class o span span class w span span class k FROM span span class w span span class k ONLY span span class w span span class n parent table span span class p span Adding a column in the parent table will cause that column to appear in the child table Inheritance can be used to implement table partitioning using either triggers or rules to direct inserts to the parent table into the proper child tables This feature is not fully supported In particular table constraints are not currently inheritable All check constraints and not null constraints on a parent table are automatically inherited by its children Other types of constraints unique primary key and foreign key constraints are not inherited Inheritance provides a way to map the features of generalization hierarchies depicted in entity relationship diagrams ERDs directly into the PostgreSQL database Other storage features edit Referential integrity constraints including foreign key constraints column constraints and row checks Binary and textual large object storage Tablespaces Per column collation Online backup Point in time recovery implemented using write ahead logging In place upgrades with pg upgrade for less downtimeControl and connectivity editForeign data wrappers edit PostgreSQL can link to other systems to retrieve data via foreign data wrappers FDWs 46 These can take the form of any data source such as a file system another relational database management system RDBMS or a web service This means that regular database queries can use these data sources like regular tables and even join multiple data sources together Interfaces edit PostgreSQL supports a binary communication protocol that allows applications to connect to the database server The protocol is versioned currently 3 0 as of PostgreSQL 7 4 and has a detailed specification 47 The official client implementation of this communication protocol is a C API libpq 48 In addition the officially supported ECPG tool allows SQL commands to be embedded in C code 49 Both are part of the standard PostgreSQL distribution 50 Third party libraries for connecting to PostgreSQL are available for many programming languages including C 51 Java 52 Julia 53 54 55 Python 56 Node js 57 Go 58 and Rust 59 Procedural languages edit Procedural languages allow developers to extend the database with custom subroutines functions often called stored procedures These functions can be used to build database triggers functions invoked on modification of certain data and custom data types and aggregate functions 60 Procedural languages can also be invoked without defining a function using a DO command at SQL level 61 Languages are divided into two groups Procedures written in safe languages are sandboxed and can be safely created and used by any user Procedures written in unsafe languages can only be created by superusers because they allow bypassing a database s security restrictions but can also access sources external to the database Some languages like Perl provide both safe and unsafe versions PostgreSQL has built in support for three procedural languages Plain SQL safe Simpler SQL functions can get expanded inline into the calling SQL query which saves function call overhead and allows the query optimizer to see inside the function Procedural Language PostgreSQL PL pgSQL safe which resembles Oracle s Procedural Language for SQL PL SQL procedural language and SQL Persistent Stored Modules SQL PSM C unsafe which allows loading one or more custom shared library into the database Functions written in C offer the best performance but bugs in code can crash and potentially corrupt the database Most built in functions are written in C In addition PostgreSQL allows procedural languages to be loaded into the database through extensions Three language extensions are included with PostgreSQL to support Perl Tcl and Python For Python the current Python 3 is used and the discontinued Python 2 is no longer supported as of PostgreSQL 15 Both were supported previously defaulting to Python 2 while old and new versions couldn t be used in the same session 62 External projects provide support for many other languages 63 including PL Java JavaScript PL V8 PL Julia 55 PL R 64 PL Ruby and others Triggers edit Triggers are events triggered by the action of SQL data manipulation language DML statements For example an INSERT statement might activate a trigger that checks if the values of the statement are valid Most triggers are only activated by either INSERT or UPDATE statements Triggers are fully supported and can be attached to tables Triggers can be per column and conditional in that UPDATE triggers can target specific columns of a table and triggers can be told to execute under a set of conditions as specified in the trigger s WHERE clause Triggers can be attached to views by using the INSTEAD OF condition Multiple triggers are fired in alphabetical order In addition to calling functions written in the native PL pgSQL triggers can also invoke functions written in other languages like PL Python or PL Perl Asynchronous notifications edit PostgreSQL provides an asynchronous messaging system that is accessed through the NOTIFY LISTEN and UNLISTEN commands A session can issue a NOTIFY command along with the user specified channel and an optional payload to mark a particular event occurring Other sessions are able to detect these events by issuing a LISTEN command which can listen to a particular channel This functionality can be used for a wide variety of purposes such as letting other sessions know when a table has updated or for separate applications to detect when a particular action has been performed Such a system prevents the need for continuous polling by applications to see if anything has yet changed and reducing unnecessary overhead Notifications are fully transactional in that messages are not sent until the transaction they were sent from is committed This eliminates the problem of messages being sent for an action being performed which is then rolled back Many connectors for PostgreSQL provide support for this notification system including libpq JDBC Npgsql psycopg and node js so it can be used by external applications PostgreSQL can act as an effective persistent pub sub server or job server by combining LISTEN with FOR UPDATE SKIP LOCKED 65 66 67 Rules edit Rules allow the query tree of an incoming query to be rewritten they are an automatically invoked macro language for SQL Query Re Write Rules are attached to a table class and Re Write the incoming DML select insert update and or delete into one or more queries that either replace the original DML statement or execute in addition to it Query Re Write occurs after DML statement parsing and before query planning The functionality rules provide was in almost every way later duplicated with the introduction of newer types of triggers The use of triggers is usually preferred over rules as it is easier to reason about trigger behavior and interactions than when equivalent rules are used Other querying features edit Transactions Full text search Views Materialized views 68 Updateable views 69 Recursive views 70 Inner outer full left and right and cross joins Sub selects Correlated sub queries 71 Regular expressions 72 Common table expressions and writable common table expressions Encrypted connections via Transport Layer Security TLS current versions do not use vulnerable SSL even with that configuration option 73 Domains Savepoints Two phase commit The Oversized Attribute Storage Technique TOAST is used to transparently store large table attributes such as big MIME attachments or XML messages in a separate area with automatic compression Embedded SQL is implemented using preprocessor SQL code is first written embedded into C code Then code is run through ECPG preprocessor which replaces SQL with calls to code library Then code can be compiled using a C compiler Embedding works also with C but it does not recognize all C constructs Concurrency model edit PostgreSQL server is process based not threaded and uses one operating system process per database session Multiple sessions are automatically spread across all available CPUs by the operating system Many types of queries can also be parallelized across multiple background worker processes taking advantage of multiple CPUs or cores 74 Client applications can use threads and create multiple database connections from each thread 75 Security editPostgreSQL manages its internal security on a per role basis A role is generally regarded to be a user a role that can log in or a group a role of which other roles are members Permissions can be granted or revoked on any object down to the column level and can allow or prevent the visibility creation alteration deletion of objects at the database schema table and row levels PostgreSQL s SECURITY LABEL feature extension to SQL standards allows for additional security with a bundled loadable module that supports label based mandatory access control MAC based on Security Enhanced Linux SELinux security policy 76 77 PostgreSQL natively supports a broad number of external authentication mechanisms including Password either SCRAM SHA 256 78 MD5 or plain text Generic Security Services Application Program Interface GSSAPI Security Support Provider Interface SSPI Kerberos ident maps O S user name as provided by an ident server to database user name Peer maps local user name to database user name Lightweight Directory Access Protocol LDAP Active Directory AD RADIUS Certificate Pluggable authentication module PAM The GSSAPI SSPI Kerberos peer ident and certificate methods can also use a specified map file that lists which users matched by that authentication system are allowed to connect as a specific database user These methods are specified in the cluster s host based authentication configuration file pg hba conf which determines what connections are allowed This allows control over which user can connect to which database where they can connect from IP address IP address range domain socket which authentication system will be enforced and whether the connection must use Transport Layer Security TLS Standards compliance editPostgreSQL claims high but not complete conformance with the latest SQL standard as of the version 15 release in October 2022 PostgreSQL conforms to at least 170 of the 179 mandatory features for SQL 2016 Core conformance and no other databases fully conformed to it 79 One exception is the handling of unquoted identifiers like table or column names In PostgreSQL they are folded internally to lower case characters 80 whereas the standard says that unquoted identifiers should be folded to upper case Thus Foo should be equivalent to FOO not foo according to the standard Other shortcomings concern the absence of temporal tables allowing automatic logging of row versions during transactions with the possibility of browsing in time FOR SYSTEM TIME predicate citation needed although relatively SQL compliant third party extensions are available 16 Benchmarks and performance editThis section needs to be updated The reason given is Performance information based on soft and hardware of 9 years ago is basically useless Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information Last update 2015 06 01 April 2024 Many informal performance studies of PostgreSQL have been done 81 Performance improvements aimed at improving scalability began heavily with version 8 1 Simple benchmarks between version 8 0 and version 8 4 showed that the latter was more than ten times faster on read only workloads and at least 7 5 times faster on both read and write workloads 82 The first industry standard and peer validated benchmark was completed in June 2007 using the Sun Java System Application Server proprietary version of GlassFish 9 0 Platform Edition UltraSPARC T1 based Sun Fire server and PostgreSQL 8 2 83 This result of 778 14 SPECjAppServer2004 JOPS Standard compares favourably with the 874 JOPS Standard with Oracle 10 on an Itanium based HP UX system 81 In August 2007 Sun submitted an improved benchmark score of 813 73 SPECjAppServer2004 JOPS Standard With the system under test at a reduced price the price performance improved from 84 98 JOPS to 70 57 JOPS 84 The default configuration of PostgreSQL uses only a small amount of dedicated memory for performance critical purposes such as caching database blocks and sorting This limitation is primarily because older operating systems required kernel changes to allow allocating large blocks of shared memory 85 PostgreSQL org provides advice on basic recommended performance practice in a wiki 86 In April 2012 Robert Haas of EnterpriseDB demonstrated PostgreSQL 9 2 s linear CPU scalability using a server with 64 cores 87 Matloob Khushi performed benchmarking between PostgreSQL 9 0 and MySQL 5 6 15 for their ability to process genomic data In his performance analysis he found that PostgreSQL extracts overlapping genomic regions eight times faster than MySQL using two datasets of 80 000 each forming random human DNA regions Insertion and data uploads in PostgreSQL were also better although general searching ability of both databases was almost equivalent 88 Platforms editPostgreSQL is available for the following operating systems Linux all recent distributions 64 bit ARM and x86 64 installers available and tested for macOS OS X 89 version 10 12 and newer Windows with installers available and tested for 64 bit Windows Server 2019 and 2016 some older PostgreSQL versions were tested back to Windows 2012 R2 90 FreeBSD OpenBSD 91 NetBSD and these without official though unofficial likely available binary executables Solaris 92 AIX and HP UX 93 Most other modern Unix like systems do also work PostgreSQL can be expected to work on any of the following instruction set architectures and operating systems 64 bit x86 64 and 32 bit x86 on Windows XP or later and other operating systems these are supported on other than Windows 64 bit ARM 94 and the older 32 bit ARM including older such as ARMv6 in Raspberry Pi 95 z Architecture S 390 PowerPC incl 64 bit Power ISA SPARC also 64 bit IA 64 Itanium HP UX MIPS and PA RISC It was also known to work on some other platforms while not been tested on for years i e for latest versions 96 Database administration editSee also Comparison of database administration tools Open source front ends and tools for administering PostgreSQL include psql The primary front end for PostgreSQL is the psql command line program which can be used to enter SQL queries directly or execute them from a file In addition psql provides a number of meta commands and various shell like features to facilitate writing scripts and automating a wide variety of tasks for example tab completion of object names and SQL syntax pgAdmin The pgAdmin package is a free and open source graphical user interface GUI administration tool for PostgreSQL which is supported on many computer platforms 97 The program is available in more than a dozen languages The first prototype named pgManager was written for PostgreSQL 6 3 2 from 1998 and rewritten and released as pgAdmin under the GNU General Public License GPL in later months The second incarnation named pgAdmin II was a complete rewrite first released on January 16 2002 The third version pgAdmin III was originally released under the Artistic License and then released under the same license as PostgreSQL Unlike prior versions that were written in Visual Basic pgAdmin III is written in C using the wxWidgets 98 framework allowing it to run on most common operating systems The query tool includes a scripting language called pgScript for supporting admin and development tasks In December 2014 Dave Page the pgAdmin project founder and primary developer 99 announced that with the shift towards web based models work has begun on pgAdmin 4 with the aim to facilitate cloud deployments 100 In 2016 pgAdmin 4 was released The pgAdmin 4 backend was written in Python using Flask and the Qt framework 101 phpPgAdmin phpPgAdmin is a web based administration tool for PostgreSQL written in PHP and based on the popular phpMyAdmin interface originally written for MySQL administration 102 PostgreSQL Studio PostgreSQL Studio allows users to perform essential PostgreSQL database development tasks from a web based console PostgreSQL Studio allows users to work with cloud databases without the need to open firewalls 103 TeamPostgreSQL AJAX JavaScript driven web interface for PostgreSQL Allows browsing maintaining and creating data and database objects via a web browser The interface offers tabbed SQL editor with autocompletion row editing widgets click through foreign key navigation between rows and tables favorites management for commonly used scripts among other features Supports SSH for both the web interface and the database connections Installers are available for Windows Macintosh and Linux and a simple cross platform archive that runs from a script 104 LibreOffice OpenOffice org LibreOffice and OpenOffice org Base can be used as a front end for PostgreSQL 105 106 pgBadger The pgBadger PostgreSQL log analyzer generates detailed reports from a PostgreSQL log file 107 pgDevOps pgDevOps is a suite of web tools to install amp manage multiple PostgreSQL versions extensions and community components develop SQL queries monitor running databases and find performance problems 108 Adminer Adminer is a simple web based administration tool for PostgreSQL and others written in PHP pgBackRest pgBackRest is a backup and restore tool for PostgreSQL that provides support for full differential and incremental backups 109 pgaudit pgaudit is a PostgreSQL extension that provides detailed session and or object audit logging via the standard logging facility provided by PostgreSQL 110 WAL E WAL E is a backup and restore tool for PostgreSQL that provides support for physical WAL based backups written in Python 111 A number of companies offer proprietary tools for PostgreSQL They often consist of a universal core that is adapted for various specific database products These tools mostly share the administration features with the open source tools but offer improvements in data modeling importing exporting or reporting Notable users editNotable organizations and products that use PostgreSQL as the primary database include Microsoft used for a petabyte scale Release Quality View RQV analytics dashboard which tracks quality of Windows updates analyzing 20K types of metrics from over 800M Windows devices 112 In 2009 the social networking website Myspace used Aster Data Systems s nCluster database for data warehousing which was built on unmodified PostgreSQL 113 114 Geni com uses PostgreSQL for their main genealogy database 115 OpenStreetMap a collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world 116 Afilias domain registries for org info and others 117 118 Sony Online multiplayer online games 119 BASF shopping platform for their agribusiness portal 120 Reddit social news website 121 Skype VoIP application central business databases 122 Sun xVM Sun s virtualization and datacenter automation suite 123 MusicBrainz open online music encyclopedia 124 The International Space Station to collect telemetry data in orbit and replicate it to the ground 125 MyYearbook social networking site 126 Instagram a mobile photo sharing service 127 Disqus an online discussion and commenting service 128 TripAdvisor travel information website of mostly user generated content 129 Yandex a Russian internet company switched its Yandex Mail service from Oracle to Postgres 130 Amazon Redshift part of AWS a columnar online analytical processing OLAP system based on ParAccel s Postgres modifications National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration s NOAA National Weather Service NWS Interactive Forecast Preparation System IFPS a system that integrates data from the NEXRAD weather radars surface and hydrology systems to build detailed localized forecast models 118 131 United Kingdom s national weather service Met Office has begun swapping Oracle for PostgreSQL in a strategy to deploy more open source technology 131 132 WhitePages com had been using Oracle and MySQL but when it came to moving its core directories in house it turned to PostgreSQL Because WhitePages com needs to combine large sets of data from multiple sources PostgreSQL s ability to load and index data at high rates was a key to its decision to use PostgreSQL 118 FlightAware a flight tracking website 133 Grofers an online grocery delivery service 134 The Guardian migrated from MongoDB to PostgreSQL in 2018 135 YugabyteDB implements the PostgreSQL query layer as its default SQL mode OpenAI uses PostgreSQL as part of its primary API service 136 Service implementations editSome notable vendors offer PostgreSQL as software as a service Heroku a platform as a service provider has supported PostgreSQL since the start in 2007 137 They offer value add features like full database roll back ability to restore a database from any specified time 138 which is based on WAL E open source software developed by Heroku 139 In January 2012 EnterpriseDB released a cloud version of both PostgreSQL and their own proprietary Postgres Plus Advanced Server with automated provisioning for failover replication load balancing and scaling It runs on Amazon Web Services 140 Since 2015 Postgres Advanced Server has been offered as ApsaraDB for PPAS a relational database as a service on Alibaba Cloud 141 VMware has offered vFabric Postgres also termed vPostgres 142 for private clouds on VMware vSphere since May 2012 143 The company announced End of Availability EOA of the product in 2014 144 In November 2013 Amazon Web Services announced the addition of PostgreSQL to their Relational Database Service offering 145 146 In November 2016 Amazon Web Services announced the addition of PostgreSQL compatibility to their cloud native Amazon Aurora managed database offering 147 In May 2017 Microsoft Azure announced Azure Databases for PostgreSQL 148 In May 2019 Alibaba Cloud announced PolarDB for PostgreSQL 149 Jelastic Multicloud Platform as a Service has provided container based PostgreSQL support since 2011 It also offers automated asynchronous master slave replication of PostgreSQL 150 In June 2019 IBM Cloud announced IBM Cloud Hyper Protect DBaaS for PostgreSQL 151 In September 2020 Crunchy Data announced Crunchy Bridge 152 In June 2022 Neon tech announced Neon Serverless Postgres 153 Release history editRelease history Release First release Latest minor version Latest release End oflife 154 Milestones 6 0 1997 01 29 First formal release of PostgreSQL unique indexes pg dumpall utility ident authentication 6 1 1997 06 08 Old version no longer maintained 6 1 1 1997 07 22 Multicolumn indexes sequences money data type GEQO GEnetic Query Optimizer 6 2 1997 10 02 Old version no longer maintained 6 2 1 1997 10 17 JDBC interface triggers server programming interface constraints 6 3 1998 03 01 Old version no longer maintained 6 3 2 1998 04 07 2003 03 01 SQL 92 subselect ability PL pgTCL 6 4 1998 10 30 Old version no longer maintained 6 4 2 1998 12 20 2003 10 30 VIEWs then only read only and RULEs PL pgSQL 6 5 1999 06 09 Old version no longer maintained 6 5 3 1999 10 13 2004 06 09 MVCC temporary tables more SQL statement support CASE INTERSECT and EXCEPT 7 0 2000 05 08 Old version no longer maintained 7 0 3 2000 11 11 2004 05 08 Foreign keys SQL 92 syntax for joins 7 1 2001 04 13 Old version no longer maintained 7 1 3 2001 08 15 2006 04 13 Write ahead log outer joins 7 2 2002 02 04 Old version no longer maintained 7 2 8 2005 05 09 2007 02 04 PL Python OIDs no longer required internationalization of messages 7 3 2002 11 27 Old version no longer maintained 7 3 21 2008 01 07 2007 11 27 Schema table function prepared query 155 7 4 2003 11 17 Old version no longer maintained 7 4 30 2010 10 04 2010 10 01 Optimization on JOINs and data warehouse functions 156 8 0 2005 01 19 Old version no longer maintained 8 0 26 2010 10 04 2010 10 01 Native server on Microsoft Windows savepoints tablespaces point in time recovery 157 8 1 2005 11 08 Old version no longer maintained 8 1 23 2010 12 16 2010 11 08 Performance optimization two phase commit table partitioning index bitmap scan shared row locking roles 8 2 2006 12 05 Old version no longer maintained 8 2 23 2011 12 05 2011 12 05 Performance optimization online index builds advisory locks warm standby 158 8 3 2008 02 04 Old version no longer maintained 8 3 23 2013 02 07 2013 02 07 Heap only tuples full text search 159 SQL XML ENUM types UUID types 8 4 2009 07 01 Old version no longer maintained 8 4 22 2014 07 24 2014 07 24 Window functions column level permissions parallel database restore per database collation common table expressions and recursive queries 160 9 0 2010 09 20 Old version no longer maintained 9 0 23 2015 10 08 2015 10 08 Built in binary streaming replication hot standby in place upgrade ability 64 bit Windows 161 9 1 2011 09 12 Old version no longer maintained 9 1 24 2016 10 27 2016 10 27 Synchronous replication per column collations unlogged tables serializable snapshot isolation writeable common table expressions SELinux integration extensions foreign tables 162 9 2 2012 09 10 163 Old version no longer maintained 9 2 24 2017 11 09 2017 11 09 Cascading streaming replication index only scans native JSON support improved lock management range types pg receivexlog tool space partitioned GiST indexes 9 3 2013 09 09 Old version no longer maintained 9 3 25 2018 11 08 2018 11 08 Custom background workers data checksums dedicated JSON operators LATERAL JOIN faster pg dump new pg isready server monitoring tool trigger features view features writeable foreign tables materialized views replication improvements 9 4 2014 12 18 Old version no longer maintained 9 4 26 2020 02 13 2020 02 13 JSONB data type ALTER SYSTEM statement for changing config values ability to refresh materialized views without blocking reads dynamic registration start stop of background worker processes Logical Decoding API GiN index improvements Linux huge page support database cache reloading via pg prewarm reintroducing Hstore as the column type of choice for document style data 164 9 5 2016 01 07 Old version no longer maintained 9 5 25 2021 02 11 2021 02 11 UPSERT row level security TABLESAMPLE CUBE ROLLUP GROUPING SETS and new BRIN index 165 9 6 2016 09 29 Old version no longer maintained 9 6 24 2021 11 11 2021 11 11 Parallel query support PostgreSQL foreign data wrapper FDW improvements with sort join pushdown multiple synchronous standbys faster vacuuming of large table 10 2017 10 05 Old version no longer maintained 10 23 2022 11 10 2022 11 10 Logical replication 166 declarative table partitioning improved query parallelism 11 2018 10 18 Old version no longer maintained 11 22 2023 11 09 2023 11 09 Increased robustness and performance for partitioning transactions supported in stored procedures enhanced abilities for query parallelism just in time JIT compiling for expressions 167 168 12 2019 10 03 Older version yet still maintained 12 19 2024 05 09 2024 11 14 Improvements to query performance and space utilization SQL JSON path expression support generated columns improvements to internationalization and authentication new pluggable table storage interface 169 13 2020 09 24 Older version yet still maintained 13 15 2024 05 09 2025 11 13 Space savings and performance gains from de duplication of B tree index entries improved performance for queries that use aggregates or partitioned tables better query planning when using extended statistics parallelized vacuuming of indexes incremental sorting 170 171 14 2021 09 30 Older version yet still maintained 14 12 2024 05 09 2026 11 12 Added SQL standard SEARCH and CYCLE clauses for common table expressions allow DISTINCT to be added to GROUP BY 172 173 15 2022 10 13 Older version yet still maintained 15 7 2024 05 09 2027 11 11 Implements SQL standard MERGE statement PL Python now only supports current Python 3 and plpythonu now means Python 3 no longer the discontinued Python 2 16 2023 09 14 Current stable version 16 3 2024 05 09 2028 11 09 Improvements to logical replication pg stat io view for I O metrics 174 17 Future release 17 0 2024 05 23 Legend Old versionOlder version still maintainedLatest versionLatest preview versionFuture releaseSee also edit nbsp Free and open source software portal Comparison of relational database management systems Database scalability List of databases using MVCC LLVM llvmjit is the JIT engine used by PostgreSQL References edit PostgreSQL Retrieved September 21 2019 PostgreSQL The World s Most Advanced Open Source Relational Database a b Contributor Profiles PostgreSQL Global Development Group Retrieved March 14 2017 a b Happy Birthday PostgreSQL PostgreSQL Global Development Group July 8 2008 PostgreSQL 16 3 15 7 14 12 13 15 and 12 19 Released May 9 2024 PostgreSQL 17 Beta 1 Released PostgreSQL The PostgreSQL Global Development Group May 23 2024 Retrieved May 24 2024 a b License PostgreSQL Global Development Group Retrieved September 20 2010 PostgreSQL licence approved by OSI Crynwr February 18 2010 Archived from the original on August 8 2016 Retrieved February 18 2010 a b OSI PostgreSQL Licence Open Source Initiative February 20 2010 Retrieved February 20 2010 Debian Details of package postgresql in sid packages debian org Retrieved January 25 2021 Licensing Main FedoraProject PostgreSQL fsf org FAQ What is PostgreSQL How is it pronounced What is Postgres PostgreSQL Wiki PostgreSQL community Retrieved October 2 2021 Audio sample 5 6k MP3 What is PostgreSQL PostgreSQL 9 3 0 Documentation PostgreSQL Global Development Group Retrieved September 20 2013 PostGIS postgis net December 18 2023 Retrieved December 18 2023 PostGIS extends the capabilities of the PostgreSQL relational database by adding support for storing indexing and querying geospatial data a b Temporal Extensions PostgreSQL Wiki December 18 2023 Retrieved December 18 2023 Postgres can be extended to become a Temporal Database Such databases track the history of database content over time automatically retaining said history and allowing it to be altered and queried Orafce Oracle s compatibility functions and packages GitHub com December 17 2023 Retrieved December 18 2023 Functions and operators that emulate a subset of functions and packages from the Oracle RDBMS pg dbms job GitHub com November 8 2023 Retrieved December 18 2023 PostgreSQL extension to schedules and manages jobs in a job queue similar to Oracle DBMS JOB package WiltonDB WiltonDB 2023 Retrieved December 18 2023 WiltonDB is packaged for Windows It strives to be usable as a drop in replacement to Microsoft SQL Server Babelfish for PostgreSQL babelfishpg org Retrieved December 18 2023 Babelfish for PostgreSQL provides the capability for PostgreSQL to understand queries from applications written for Microsoft SQL Server PostgreSQL Clients wiki postgresql org October 18 2023 Retrieved December 18 2023 This page is a partial list of interactive SQL clients GUI or otherwise that you can type SQL in to and get results from them Design Tools wiki postgresql org October 23 2023 Retrieved December 18 2023 Tools to help with designing a schema via creating Entity Relationship diagrams and similar Most are GUI Community Guide to PostgreSQL GUI Tools wiki postgresql org December 1 2023 Retrieved December 18 2023 This page is a list of miscellaneous utilities that work with Postgres ex data loaders comparators etc Replication Clustering and Connection Pooling wiki postgresql org July 13 2020 Retrieved December 18 2023 There are many approaches available to scale PostgreSQL beyond running on a single server There is no one size fits all This is recognized by the liberal permission to use the PostgreSQL name as approved for fair use when not confusing people about a legal relationship with the actual PostgreSQL project when used in support of PostgreSQL subject to the PostgreSQL Trademark Policy Trademark Policy PostgreSQL org December 8 2020 Retrieved December 17 2023 We will try to work with you to permit uses of the PostgreSQL name that support the PostgreSQL project and our Community a b Stonebraker M Rowe L A May 1986 The design of POSTGRES PDF Proc 1986 ACM SIGMOD Conference on Management of Data Washington DC Retrieved December 17 2011 PostgreSQL History PostgreSQL Global Development Group Archived from the original on March 26 2017 Retrieved August 27 2016 Project name statement from the core team archives postgresql org November 16 2007 Retrieved November 16 2007 Michael Stonebraker A M Turing Award Winner amturing acm org Retrieved March 20 2018 Techniques pioneered in Postgres were widely implemented Stonebraker is the only Turing award winner to have engaged in serial entrepreneurship on anything like this scale giving him a distinctive perspective on the academic world Stonebraker M Rowe L A The POSTGRES data model PDF Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Very Large Data Bases Brighton England Morgan Kaufmann Publishers pp 83 96 ISBN 0 934613 46 X Pavel Stehule June 9 2012 Historie projektu PostgreSQL in Czech A Brief History of PostgreSQL Version 3 appeared in 1991 and added support for multiple storage managers an improved query executor and a rewritten rule system postgresql org The PostgreSQL Global Development Group Retrieved on March 18 2020 University POSTGRES Version 4 2 July 26 1999 Page Dave April 7 2015 Re 20th anniversary of PostgreSQL pgsql advocacy Mailing list Retrieved April 9 2015 Dan R K Ports Kevin Grittner 2012 Serializable Snapshot Isolation in PostgreSQL PDF Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment 5 12 1850 1861 arXiv 1208 4179 Bibcode 2012arXiv1208 4179P doi 10 14778 2367502 2367523 S2CID 16006111 Bohan Zhang Andy Pavlo 2023 The part of PostgreSQL we hate the most OtterTune blog PostgreSQL 9 1 with synchronous replication news H Online Postgres XC project page website Postgres XC Archived from the original on July 1 2012 Postgres R a database replication system for PostgreSQL Postgres Global Development Group Archived from the original on March 29 2010 Retrieved August 27 2016 Postgres BDR 2ndQuadrant Ltd Retrieved August 27 2016 Marit Fischer November 10 2007 Backcountry com finally gives something back to the open source community Press release Backcountry com Archived from the original on December 26 2010 Bartunov O Sigaev T May 2011 SP GiST a new indexing framework for PostgreSQL PDF PGCon 2011 Ottawa Canada Retrieved January 31 2016 Bartunov O Sigaev T May 2010 K nearest neighbour search for PostgreSQL PDF PGCon 2010 Ottawa Canada Retrieved January 31 2016 PostgreSQL the NoSQL Database Linux Journal www linuxjournal com Geoghegan Peter March 23 2014 What I think of jsonb Obe Regina Hsu Leo S 2012 10 Replication and External Data PostgreSQL Up and Running 1 ed Sebastopol CA O Reilly Media Inc p 129 ISBN 978 1 4493 2633 3 Retrieved October 17 2016 Foreign Data Wrappers FDW are mechanisms of querying external datasources PostgreSQL 9 1 introduced this SQL MED standards compliant feature Frontend Backend Protocol postgresql org November 9 2023 Retrieved December 17 2023 This document describes version 3 0 of the protocol implemented in PostgreSQL 7 4 and later libpq postgresql org November 9 2023 Retrieved December 17 2023 Embedded SQL in C postgresql org November 9 2023 Retrieved December 17 2023 Client Interfaces postgresql org November 9 2023 Retrieved December 17 2023 libpqxx Retrieved April 4 2020 PostgreSQL JDBC Driver Retrieved April 4 2020 ANN PostgresORM jl Object Relational Mapping for PostgreSQL JuliaLang June 30 2021 Retrieved August 26 2021 GitHub invenia LibPQ jl A Julia wrapper for libpq GitHub Retrieved August 26 2021 a b PL Julia extension minimal JuliaLang March 8 2020 Retrieved August 26 2021 PostgreSQL Python Psycopg initd org node postgres Retrieved April 4 2020 SQL database drivers Go wiki golang org Retrieved June 22 2015 Rust Postgres Retrieved April 4 2020 Server Programming PostgreSQL documentation Retrieved May 19 2019 DO PostgreSQL documentation Retrieved May 19 2019 PL Python Python Procedural Language PostgreSQL documentation Retrieved October 23 2022 Procedural Languages postgresql org March 31 2016 Retrieved April 7 2016 postgres plr plr June 17 2021 via GitHub Chartier Colin November 8 2019 System design hack Postgres is a great pub sub amp job server LayerCI blog Retrieved November 24 2019 Release 9 5 postgresql org February 11 2021 Ringer Craig April 13 2016 What is SKIP LOCKED for in PostgreSQL 9 5 2nd Quadrant Retrieved November 24 2019 Add a materialized view relations March 4 2013 Retrieved March 4 2013 Support automatically updatable views December 8 2012 Retrieved December 8 2012 Add CREATE RECURSIVE VIEW syntax February 1 2013 Retrieved February 28 2013 Momjian Bruce 2001 Subqueries PostgreSQL Introduction and Concepts Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 70331 9 Archived from the original on August 9 2010 Retrieved September 25 2010 Bernier Robert February 2 2006 Using Regular Expressions in PostgreSQL O Reilly Media Retrieved September 25 2010 A few short notes about PostgreSQL and POODLE hagander net Berkus Josh June 2 2016 PostgreSQL 9 6 Beta and PGCon 2016 LWN net FAQ PostgreSQL wiki wiki postgresql org Retrieved April 13 2017 SEPostgreSQL Documentation PostgreSQL wiki wiki postgresql org NB SQL 9 3 SELinux Wiki selinuxproject org PostgreSQL 10 Documentation Appendix E Release Notes August 12 2021 PostgreSQL About www postgresql org Retrieved August 26 2021 Case sensitivity of identifiers PostgreSQL Global Development Group November 11 2021 a b Berkus Josh July 6 2007 PostgreSQL publishes first real benchmark Archived from the original on July 12 2007 Retrieved July 10 2007 Vilmos Gyorgy September 29 2009 PostgreSQL history Retrieved August 28 2010 SPECjAppServer2004 Result SPEC July 6 2007 Retrieved July 10 2007 SPECjAppServer2004 Result SPEC July 4 2007 Retrieved September 1 2007 Managing Kernel Resources PostgreSQL Manual PostgreSQL org Retrieved November 12 2011 Greg Smith October 15 2010 PostgreSQL 9 0 High Performance Packt Publishing ISBN 978 1 84951 030 1 Robert Haas April 3 2012 Did I Say 32 Cores How about 64 Retrieved April 8 2012 Khushi Matloob June 2015 Benchmarking database performance for genomic data J Cell Biochem 116 6 877 83 arXiv 2008 06835 doi 10 1002 jcb 25049 PMID 25560631 S2CID 27458866 Mac OS X packages The PostgreSQL Global Development Group Retrieved August 27 2016 PostgreSQL Windows installers www postgresql org Retrieved August 26 2021 postgresql client 10 5p1 PostgreSQL RDBMS client OpenBSD ports October 4 2018 Retrieved October 10 2018 Installing and Configuring PostgreSQL Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Service for PostgreSQL Guide docs oracle com Retrieved February 4 2023 HP UX Porting and Archive Centre postgresql 12 4 hpux connect org uk Retrieved February 4 2023 AArch64 planning BoF at DebConf debian org Souza Rubens June 17 2015 Step 5 update Installing PostgreSQL on my Raspberry Pi 1 and 2 Raspberry PG Retrieved August 27 2016 Supported Platforms PostgreSQL Global Development Group Retrieved April 6 2012 pgAdmin PostgreSQL administration and management tools website Retrieved November 12 2011 Debian Details of package pgadmin3 in jessie Retrieved March 10 2017 pgAdmin Development Team pgadmin org Retrieved June 22 2015 Dave Page December 7 2014 The story of pgAdmin Dave s Postgres Blog pgsnake blogspot co uk Retrieved December 7 2014 pgAdmin 4 README GitHub Retrieved August 15 2018 phpPgAdmin Project April 25 2008 About phpPgAdmin Retrieved April 25 2008 PostgreSQL Studio October 9 2013 About PostgreSQL Studio Archived from the original on October 7 2013 Retrieved October 9 2013 TeamPostgreSQL website October 3 2013 Retrieved October 3 2013 oooforum org January 10 2010 Back Ends for OpenOffice Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved January 5 2011 libreoffice org October 14 2012 Base features Archived from the original on January 7 2012 Retrieved October 14 2012 Greg Smith Robert Treat amp Christopher Browne Tuning your PostgreSQL server Wiki PostgreSQL org Retrieved November 12 2011 pgDevOps BigSQL org Archived from the original on April 1 2017 Retrieved May 4 2017 pgbackrest pgbackrest GitHub November 21 2021 pgaudit pgaudit GitHub November 21 2021 wal e wal e June 24 2021 via GitHub Claire Giordano October 31 2019 Architecting petabyte scale analytics by scaling out Postgres on Azure with the Citus extension Blog Microsoft Tech Community Emmanuel Cecchet May 21 2009 Building PetaByte Warehouses with Unmodified PostgreSQL PDF PGCon 2009 Retrieved November 12 2011 MySpace com scales analytics for all their friends PDF case study Aster Data June 15 2010 Archived PDF from the original on November 14 2010 Retrieved November 12 2011 Last Weekend s Outage Blog Geni August 1 2011 Database Wiki OpenStreetMap PostgreSQL affiliates ORG domain Australia Computer World August 24 2023 a b c W Jason Gilmore R H Treat 2006 Beginning PHP and PostgreSQL 8 From Novice to Professional Apress ISBN 978 1 43020 136 6 Retrieved August 30 2017 Sony Online opts for open source database over Oracle Computer World A Web Commerce Group Case Study on PostgreSQL PDF 1 2 ed PostgreSQL Architecture Overview Reddit software wiki Reddit March 27 2014 Retrieved November 25 2014 Pihlak Martin PostgreSQL Skype PDF wiki postgresql org Retrieved January 16 2019 How Much Are You Paying For Your Database Sun Microsystems blog 2007 Archived from the original on March 7 2009 Retrieved December 14 2007 Database MusicBrainz MusicBrainz Wiki Retrieved February 5 2011 Duncavage Daniel P July 13 2010 NASA needs Postgres Nagios help Roy Gavin M 2010 PostgreSQL at myYearbook com talk USA East PostgreSQL Conference Archived from the original on July 27 2011 Keeping Instagram up with over a million new users in twelve hours Instagram engineering tumblr com May 17 2011 Retrieved July 7 2012 Postgres at Disqus Retrieved May 24 2013 Kelly Matthew March 27 2015 At the Heart of a Giant Postgres at TripAdvisor PGConf US 2015 Archived from the original on July 23 2015 Retrieved July 23 2015 Presentation video Yandex Mail s successful migration from Oracle to Postgres pdf Hacker News news ycombinator com Retrieved September 28 2016 a b S Riggs G Ciolli H Krosing G Bartolini 2015 PostgreSQL 9 Administration Cookbook Second Edition Packt ISBN 978 1 84951 906 9 Retrieved September 5 2017 Met Office swaps Oracle for PostgreSQL computerweekly com June 17 2014 Retrieved September 5 2017 Open Source Software FlightAware Retrieved November 22 2017 Ansible at Grofers Part 2 Managing PostgreSQL Lambda The Grofers Engineering Blog February 28 2017 Retrieved September 5 2018 McMahon Philip Chiorean Maria Livia Coleman Susie Askoolum Akash November 30 2018 Digital Blog Bye bye Mongo Hello Postgres The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Elevated Errors on API and ChatGPT Retrieved December 2 2023 Alex Williams April 1 2013 Heroku Forces Customer Upgrade To Fix Critical PostgreSQL Security Hole TechCrunch Barb Darrow November 11 2013 Heroku gussies up Postgres with database roll back and proactive alerts GigaOM Craig Kerstiens September 26 2013 WAL E and Continuous Protection with Heroku Postgres Heroku blog EnterpriseDB Offers Up Postgres Plus Cloud Database Techweekeurope co uk January 27 2012 Retrieved July 7 2012 Alibaba Cloud Expands Technical Partnership with EnterpriseDB Milestone Partners September 26 2018 Retrieved June 9 2020 O Doherty Paul Asselin Stephane 2014 3 VMware Workspace Architecture VMware Horizon Suite Building End User Services VMware Press Technology Upper Saddle River NJ VMware Press p 65 ISBN 978 0 13 347910 2 Retrieved September 19 2016 In addition to the open source version of PostgreSQL VMware offers vFabric Postgres or vPostgres vPostgres is a PostgreSQL virtual appliance that has been tuned for virtual environments Al Sargent May 15 2012 Introducing VMware vFabric Suite 5 1 Automated Deployment New Components and Open Source Support VMware blogs VMware vFabric Suite EOA PDF September 1 2014 Retrieved December 17 2023 Jeff November 14 2013 Amazon RDS for PostgreSQL Now Available Amazon Web Services Blog Alex Williams November 14 2013 PostgreSQL Now Available On Amazon s Relational Database Service TechCrunch Amazon Aurora Update PostgreSQL Compatibility AWS Blog November 30 2016 Retrieved December 1 2016 Announcing Azure Database for PostgreSQL Azure Blog May 10 2017 Retrieved June 19 2019 Aliyun PolarDB released major updates to support one click migration of databases such as Oracle to the cloud Develop Paper July 6 2019 Asynchronous Master Slave Replication of PostgreSQL Databases in One Click DZone Retrieved May 26 2017 IBM Cloud Hyper Protect DBaaS for PostgreSQL documentation cloud ibm com Retrieved June 24 2020 Crunchy Data Continues PostgreSQL Support with the Release of Crunchy Bridge September 18 2020 SELECT Hello World Serverless Postgres built for the cloud June 15 2022 Versioning policy PostgreSQL Global Development Group Retrieved October 4 2018 Vaas Lisa December 2 2002 Databases Target Enterprises eWeek Retrieved October 29 2016 Krill Paul November 20 2003 PostgreSQL boosts open source database InfoWorld Retrieved October 21 2016 Krill Paul January 19 2005 PostgreSQL open source database boasts Windows boost InfoWorld Retrieved November 2 2016 Weiss Todd R December 5 2006 Version 8 2 of open source PostgreSQL DB released Computerworld Retrieved October 17 2016 Gilbertson Scott February 5 2008 PostgreSQL 8 3 Open Source Database Promises Blazing Speed Wired Retrieved October 17 2016 Huber Mathias July 2 2009 PostgreSQL 8 4 Proves Feature Rich Linux Magazine Retrieved October 17 2016 Brockmeier Joe September 30 2010 Five Enterprise Features in PostgreSQL 9 Linux com Linux Foundation Retrieved February 6 2017 Timothy Prickett Morgan September 12 2011 PostgreSQL revs to 9 1 aims for enterprise The Register Retrieved February 6 2017 PostgreSQL PostgreSQL 9 2 released www postgresql org September 10 2012 Reintroducing Hstore for PostgreSQL InfoQ Richard Chirgwin January 7 2016 Say oops UPSERT your head PostgreSQL version 9 5 has landed The Register Retrieved October 17 2016 PostgreSQL Documentation 10 Chapter 31 Logical Replication www postgresql org August 12 2021 PostgreSQL 11 Released October 18 2018 Retrieved October 18 2018 PostgreSQLRelease Notes Retrieved October 18 2018 PostgreSQL PostgreSQL 12 Released Postgresql News October 3 2019 PostgreSQL 13 Release Notes www postgresql org August 12 2021 PostgreSQL 13 Released www postgresql org September 24 2020 PostgreSQL 14 Release Notes www postgresql org November 11 2021 PostgreSQL 14 Released www postgresql org September 30 2021 PostgreSQL 16 Released September 14 2023 Further reading editObe Regina Hsu Leo July 8 2012 PostgreSQL Up and Running O Reilly ISBN 978 1 4493 2633 3 Krosing Hannu Roybal Kirk June 15 2013 PostgreSQL Server Programming second ed Packt Publishing ISBN 978 1 84951 698 3 Riggs Simon Krosing Hannu October 27 2010 PostgreSQL 9 Administration Cookbook second ed Packt Publishing ISBN 978 1 84951 028 8 Smith Greg October 15 2010 PostgreSQL 9 High Performance Packt Publishing ISBN 978 1 84951 030 1 Gilmore W Jason Treat Robert February 27 2006 Beginning PHP and PostgreSQL 8 From Novice to Professional Apress p 896 ISBN 1 59059 547 5 Archived from the original on July 8 2009 Retrieved April 28 2009 Douglas Korry August 5 2005 PostgreSQL second ed Sams p 1032 ISBN 0 672 32756 2 Matthew Neil Stones Richard April 6 2005 Beginning Databases with PostgreSQL second ed Apress p 664 ISBN 1 59059 478 9 Archived from the original on April 9 2009 Retrieved April 28 2009 Worsley John C Drake Joshua D January 2002 Practical PostgreSQL O Reilly Media pp 636 ISBN 1 56592 846 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to PostgreSQL nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of PostgreSQL Official website nbsp and wiki A Software Catalog of related projects and products The official Main Source Code Repository for browsing and the Developer FAQ The official Reference for PostgreSQL Documentation Authors All official PostgreSQL Source Code Repositories PostgreSQL at Curlie PostgreSQL on GitHub Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title PostgreSQL amp oldid 1226187421 pgAdmin, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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