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Learn PostgreSQL

You're reading from   Learn PostgreSQL Use, manage, and build secure and scalable databases with PostgreSQL 16

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837635641
Length 744 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Luca Ferrari Luca Ferrari
Author Profile Icon Luca Ferrari
Luca Ferrari
Enrico Pirozzi Enrico Pirozzi
Author Profile Icon Enrico Pirozzi
Enrico Pirozzi
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to PostgreSQL 2. Getting to Know Your Cluster FREE CHAPTER 3. Managing Users and Connections 4. Basic Statements 5. Advanced Statements 6. Window Functions 7. Server-Side Programming 8. Triggers and Rules 9. Partitioning 10. Users, Roles, and Database Security 11. Transactions, MVCC, WALs, and Checkpoints 12. Extending the Database – the Extension Ecosystem 13. Query Tuning, Indexes, and Performance Optimization 14. Logging and Auditing 15. Backup and Restore 16. Configuration and Monitoring 17. Physical Replication 18. Logical Replication 19. Useful Tools and Extensions 20. Other Books You May Enjoy
21. Index

Transaction isolation levels

In a concurrent database system, you could encounter three different problems:

  • Dirty reads: A dirty read happens when the database allows a transaction to see work-in-progress data from other not-yet-finished transactions. In other words, data that has not been consolidated is visible to other transactions. No production-ready database allows that, and PostgreSQL is no exception: you are assured your transaction will only perceive data that has been consolidated, and in order to be consolidated, the transactions that created such data must be complete.
  • Unrepeatable reads: An unrepeatable read happens when the same query, within the same transaction, executed multiple times, perceives a different set of data. This essentially means that the data has changed between two sequential executions of the same query in the same transaction. PostgreSQL does not allow this kind of problem by means of snapshots: every transaction can perceive the...
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