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Pgbadger Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to pgbadger
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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SFTPGo
Fully featured and highly configurable SFTP server with optional HTTP/S, FTP/S and WebDAV support - S3, Google Cloud Storage, Azure Blob
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wg-easy
Discontinued The easiest way to run WireGuard VPN + Web-based Admin UI. [Moved to: https://github.com/wg-easy/wg-easy] (by WeeJeWel)
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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Paperless-ng
Discontinued A supercharged version of paperless: scan, index and archive all your physical documents
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postgresqltuner
Simple script to analyse your PostgreSQL database configuration, and give tuning advice
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pgbadger reviews and mentions
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Site down due hosted on digitalocean
It might also help to use pgbadger or something similar to process your postgres logs and see whether some event is aligned with your outages.
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SQL: 2023 Has Been Released
Interestingly, when a place does get to the point where the single instance has capacity issues (after upgrading to EPYC and lots of flash drives) then other non-obvious stuff shows up too.
For example, at one place just over a year ago they were well into this territory. One of weird problems for them was with pgBadger's memory usage (https://github.com/darold/pgbadger). That's written in perl, which doesn't seem to go garbage collection well. So even on a reporting node with a few hundred GB's of ram, it could take more than 24 hours to do a "monthly" reporting run.
There wasn't a solution in place at the time I left, so they're probably still having the issue... ;)
- Moving from Oracle to Postgres, what should I know?
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What are the top 3 most useful things that you have hosted over the years?
First of all I used a profiler (pgbadger and netdata) to figure out where the lags were coming from. I then tried the usual stuff (increasing shared_buffers, max_wal_size, min_wal_size from their ultra low defaults), but the biggest performance gain came from moving the database from eMMC to a mechanical hard drive :-D
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Best way to find queries that might benefit from indexes.
Look into PgBadger (a log parser/analyser): https://github.com/darold/pgbadger
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www.saashub.com | 26 Apr 2024
Stats
darold/pgbadger is an open source project licensed under PostgreSQL License which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of pgbadger is Perl.
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