pgaudit
tds_fdw
pgaudit | tds_fdw | |
---|---|---|
5 | 1 | |
1,187 | 347 | |
1.4% | 0.9% | |
5.0 | 5.6 | |
5 days ago | 3 months ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
pgaudit
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Show HN: I built this Postgres logger for you guys to check out
I think pgAudit it still the best and it's not a major issue. You can try my PR that fixes this issue https://github.com/pgaudit/pgaudit/pull/219 it should work and it should handle the other types of SELECT's that need update permissions but are not actually updating anything https://pglocks.org/?pglock=RowShareLock
- PgAudit: Open-Source PostgreSQL Audit Logging
- Auditing CREATE/DROP DATABASE
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How Postgres Audit Tables Saved Us from Taking Down Production
You can use pgaudit, it's an extension that let's you audit DDL/DML statements. It's a great auditing mechanism. I use it on all our prod postgres instances, but have only "DML" enabled, because of the potential performance overhead
https://github.com/pgaudit/pgaudit
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Auditing PostgreSQL Using pgAudit
pgAudit, with all its capabilities, simplifies the process of auditing by generating the audit trail log. Though there are a few caveats, like logging of renamed objects under the same name, it is still a robust tool that provides the required functionality. However, the audit information written in logs may not be just ideal for the auditing process - the auditing process is even better when those logs can be converted to a database schema, and audit data can be loaded to the database so you can easily query the information. This is where the PostgreSQL Audit Log Analyzer (pgAudit Analyze) is helpful. For more information, refer to the github pages of pgAudit and pgAudit Analyze.
tds_fdw
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Babelfish: the Elephant in the Room?
Or, you could use a foreign data wrapper: https://github.com/tds-fdw/tds_fdw
What are some alternatives?
pgaudit_analyze - PostgreSQL Audit Analyzer
plpgsql_check - plpgsql_check is a linter tool (does source code static analyze) for the PostgreSQL language plpgsql (the native language for PostgreSQL store procedures).
psycopg2 - PostgreSQL database adapter for the Python programming language
pg_auto_failover - Postgres extension and service for automated failover and high-availability
debezium - Change data capture for a variety of databases. Please log issues at https://issues.redhat.com/browse/DBZ.
orafce - The "orafce" project implements in Postgres some of the functions from the Oracle database that are missing (or behaving differently).Those functions were verified on Oracle 10g, and the module is useful for production work.
temporal_tables - Temporal Tables PostgreSQL Extension
orioledb - OrioleDB β building a modern cloud-native storage engine (... and solving some PostgreSQL wicked problems) Β πΊπ¦
sqlite-wf - Simple visual ETL tool
firebird_fdw - A PostgreSQL foreign data wrapper (FDW) for Firebird - latest version 1.3.1 (2023-06-22)
pg_similarity - set of functions and operators for executing similarity queries