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PostgreSQL for Data Architects

You're reading from   PostgreSQL for Data Architects Discover how to design, develop, and maintain your database application effectively with PostgreSQL

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783288601
Length 272 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jayadevan M Jayadevan M
Author Profile Icon Jayadevan M
Jayadevan M
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing PostgreSQL FREE CHAPTER 2. Server Architecture 3. PostgreSQL – Object Hierarchy and Roles 4. Working with Transactions 5. Data Modeling with SQL Power Architect 6. Client Tools 7. SQL Tuning 8. Server Tuning 9. Tools to Move Data in and out of PostgreSQL 10. Scaling, Replication, and Backup and Recovery 11. PostgreSQL – Troubleshooting 12. PostgreSQL – Extras Index

Understanding the shared buffer

When there are thousands of users trying to read/write data to many different tables, reading from the directories/files (which we saw getting created when we installed PostgreSQL and created a database with a couple of tables) will result in a miserably non-scalable system. The reads and writes will result in searching for many files, opening these files, using fseek() for specific data records, locking, editing, and unlocking. To make this a lot more scalable and faster, the concept of shared buffers (memory area) is introduced. Now, the backend processes are no longer reading from the files and writing to the files, but dealing with buffers or RAM, with significant improvement in performance. The amount of memory to be allocated is decided by the shared_buffers parameter in postgresql.conf. This fixed-size block of shared memory is allocated when the server is started.

It's not this memory chunk alone that is responsible for improving the response...

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