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PostgreSQL 9 High Availability Cookbook

You're reading from   PostgreSQL 9 High Availability Cookbook Over 100 recipes to design and implement a highly available server with the advanced features of PostgreSQL.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849516969
Length 398 pages
Edition 1st 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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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hardware Planning FREE CHAPTER 2. Handling and Avoiding Downtime 3. Pooling Resources 4. Troubleshooting 5. Monitoring 6. Replication 7. Replication Management Tools 8. Advanced Stack 9. Cluster Control 10. Data Distribution Index

Introduction

Abstraction can protect a database from even the busiest platform. At the time of writing this book, applications and web services often involve hundreds of servers. If we follow a simple and naïve development cycle where applications have direct access to the database, each of these servers may require dozens of connections per program, even with a small server pool that can result in hundreds or thousands of direct connections to the database. Is this what we want? Consider the scenario illustrated in the following diagram:

Introduction

We need a way to avoid overwhelming the database with the needs of too many clients. As we suggested in the previous chapter, a PostgreSQL server experiences its best performance when the amount of active connections is less than three times the available CPU count. With a thousand incoming client connections, we will need hundreds of CPU cores to satisfy the formula.

Every incoming connection requires resources such as memory for query calculations...

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