pgreplay
neon
pgreplay | neon | |
---|---|---|
2 | 124 | |
205 | 12,327 | |
- | 3.5% | |
4.2 | 9.9 | |
7 months ago | 6 days ago | |
C | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
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.
pgreplay
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Versioning data in Postgres? Testing a Git like approach
pgreplay parses not the WAL Write Ahead Log but the log file: https://github.com/laurenz/pgreplay
From "A PostgreSQL Docker container that automatically upgrades your database" (2023) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36748041 :
pgkit wraps Postgres PITR backup and recovery:
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Real Application Testing on 🚀YugabyteDB with 🐘pgreplay
This blog was just to verify that it works with YugabyteDB. Check pgreplay documentation for more, all works the same in YugabyteDB. If you want to capture a workload from connections on multiple database nodes, each one will have their logfile. You can merge them. The Session ID (the 6th field in the csvlog built from start time and backend pid will probably not collide with another one, but you can make it unique by concatenating a node number if you want). The replay connects to one node, but though a HA proxy the connections can be distributed to multiple ones. All depends on what you want to capture and wh you want to replay. Capturing from PostgreSQL and replaying to YugabyteDB is also a good way to check that all works the same without performance regressions.
neon
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How to ditch Neon
If you're reading this you probably got a really steep bill from Neon after finding yourself on their "Scale" plan. If you do want to stay with Neon but avoid surprise bills then go to the Plans page and choose what you actually want.
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Serverless Postgres with Neon - My first impression
Such is the case with Neon, a serverless Postgres service, that went generally available on April 15. Congrats Nikita Shamgunov and team on the launch. When I saw the announcement, I knew I had to try it out for myself and report back with my findings.
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Neon Is Generally Available: Serverless Postgres
I want to use this as a chance to bring attention to a GitHub issue that I think would help reduce friction for Neon:
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/4989
If the Neon driver were to allow us to easily pass in a localhost connection, the development and test experience would be easier. Perhaps Neon could swap to something like this internally: https://github.com/porsager/postgres.
Having run a local dev environment connected to Neon and tests connected to Neon got in our way of adoption. We'd prefer to develop and run tests against a regular Postgres localhost database.
To the PMs of Neon, put yourself in the shoes of a new developer thinking of giving Neon a try. What changes will I have to make to my code and my development workflow?
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11 Planetscale alternatives with free tiers
Neon is an open source and cloud-native serverless database platform that focuses on simplicity and ease of use. It supports Postgres databases and offers built-in features like bottomless storage, autoscaling, and branching.
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Breaking the Myth: Scalable, Multi-Region, Low-Latency App Exists And Will Not Cost You A Kidney.
For MySQL, we've got PlanetScale, and for PostgreSQL, there's Neon.
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Ask HN: Freelance website builders/maintainers, what's in your 2024 toolkit?
8. https://neon.tech/As you might know not one tool fits all, I still have strong preferences for the following. It helps me get going faster and get things done right first time and helps in ease of maintenance.
Language: Typescript.
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Why PlanetScale broke our trust in database startups
Migrated away when they removed the free tier, ended up using https://neon.tech/
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Parsing the Postgres protocol – logging executed statements
Cool! At Neon[0], I work full time on our custom postgres proxy[1]. It's a very nice protocol to work with, although our usecase is quite a bit more complex compared to the ideas presented in the post.
Neon databases scale to zero, so the proxy needs to spin up databases on the fly. The proxy doesn't do that but it knows if the databases is running and asks our control plane to schedule it if it isn't. It's a fun service to maintain.
The biggest pain is error handling. Postgres is really bad for error messages and codes. The only available code we can use is usually protocol violation...
[0]: https://neon.tech/
- Neon: Serverless Postgres
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No More Free Tier on PlanetScale, Here Are Free Alternatives
Neon - PostgreSQL