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PostgreSQL 12 High Availability Cookbook

You're reading from   PostgreSQL 12 High Availability Cookbook Over 100 recipes to design a highly available server with the advanced features of PostgreSQL 12

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838984854
Length 734 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Shaun Thomas Shaun Thomas
Author Profile Icon Shaun Thomas
Shaun Thomas
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Architectural Considerations 2. Hardware Planning FREE CHAPTER 3. Minimizing Downtime 4. Proxy and Pooling Resources 5. Troubleshooting 6. Monitoring 7. PostgreSQL Replication 8. Backup Management 9. High Availability with repmgr 10. High Availability with Patroni 11. Low-Level Server Mirroring 12. High Availability via Pacemaker 13. High Availability with Multi-Master Replication 14. Data Distribution 15. Zero-downtime Upgrades 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Checking the pg_stat_statements view

We mentioned in another recipe that logging every query on a highly available database that handles high volumes of query traffic is undesirable. DBAs often solve this problem by only logging slow queries, by setting log_min_duration_statement to a reasonable number of milliseconds in postgresql.conf. Later, only queries that cross this threshold are logged, along with binding parameters if the query was a prepared statement.

We strongly encourage this practice, as it is invaluable for catching outlying queries that could benefit from optimization. Unfortunately, faster queries are still invisible to us. Worse, queries that execute often probably have their data sources cached in memory, so it's unlikely that they contribute to I/O. The database could be executing an inefficient or redundant query thousands of times per second, and besides...

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