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Learn PostgreSQL

You're reading from  Learn PostgreSQL

Product type Book
Published in Oct 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838985288
Pages 650 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Authors (2):
Luca Ferrari Luca Ferrari
Profile icon Luca Ferrari
Enrico Pirozzi Enrico Pirozzi
Profile icon Enrico Pirozzi
View More author details

Table of Contents (27) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started
2. Introduction to PostgreSQL 3. Getting to Know Your Cluster 4. Managing Users and Connections 5. Section 2: Interacting with the Database
6. Basic Statements 7. Advanced Statements 8. Window Functions 9. Server-Side Programming 10. Triggers and Rules 11. Partitioning 12. Section 3: Administering the Cluster
13. Users, Roles, and Database Security 14. Transactions, MVCC, WALs, and Checkpoints 15. Extending the Database - the Extension Ecosystem 16. Indexes and Performance Optimization 17. Logging and Auditing 18. Backup and Restore 19. Configuration and Monitoring 20. Section 4: Replication
21. Physical Replication 22. Logical Replication 23. Section 5: The PostegreSQL Ecosystem
24. Useful Tools and Extensions 25. Toward PostgreSQL 13 26. Other Books You May Enjoy

An example of query tuning

In the previous section, you have learned how to use EXPLAIN to understand how PostgreSQL is going to execute a query; it is now time to use EXPLAIN in action to tune some slow queries and improve performance.

This section will show you some basic concepts of the day-to-day usage of EXPLAIN as a powerful tool to determine where and how to instrument PostgreSQL in doing faster data access. Of course, query tuning is a very complex subject and often requires repeated trial-based optimization, so the aim of this section is not to provide you with true knowledge about query tuning but rather a basic understanding of how to improve your own database and queries.

Sometimes, tuning a query involves simply rewriting it a way that is more comfortable – or better, more comprehensible –to PostgreSQL, but most often, that means using an appropriate index to speed up access to the underlying data.

Let's start with a simple example: we want to extract all...

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