Postgres
DEV INSTALL
- use mh to install postgres and libpqxx to /usr/local
mh-install-postgres
- set up a linux user named "postgres"
# On gentoo: sudo useradd postgres # On ubuntu: sudo adduser postgres # Put the password in private
- set up a data folder where postgres will put all its data and its log
# Standardize on [/home/m/development/postgres], but always consider symlinking to a large/redundant location. # Here, we are choosing to use a larger RAID drive. # WARNING NTFS will not let you chown a folder (you'd have to mount the whole thing as the target owner). # So on viper, I had to use the tiny primary drive directly, no symlink to ~m/bigdata. Fuck off. mkdir /spiceflow/softraid/development/postgres cd ~/development && ln -s /spiceflow/softraid/development/postgres postgres sudo chown -R postgres:postgres postgres /spiceflow/softraid/development/postgres sudo chmod g+x /spiceflow/softraid/development # and any other parent that is missing this bit, so postgres user can cd to its folder # We must init the data folder as a postgres "database cluster" su postgres -c '/usr/local/bin/initdb -D /home/m/development/postgres/data'
START SERVER
Use mh-start-postgres to start postgres (if the server is not already running):
mh-start-postgres
ADD A USER + DB
Use mh-add-postgres-db to add a user (aka role) and matching database. The user only has access to that db (best practice). This will prompt for pw.
mh-add-postgres-db [name] # Add name+pw to private
NOSQL via JSON
BASICS
GORGEOUS POSTGRES JSON QUERY! inject blobs of JSON, then you can crack open the json inside a cell!
CREATE TABLE stocks ( id integer NOT NULL, board_id integer NOT NULL, data jsonb ); INSERT INTO stocks VALUES (1, 1, '{"symbol": "GOOG", "tags": ["hot", "trending"], "owned": true}');
# returns count of data that HAS the field ingredients SELECT count(*) FROM stocks WHERE data ? 'ingredients';
# ->> will return the property as integer or text (the parsed form of the attribute). SELECT * FROM stocks WHERE data->>'owned' = 'true'; # if data.owned == true
# -> will return the attribute as a JSON object SELECT jsonb_array_elements_text(data->'tags') as tag FROM stocks WHERE id = 1; # returns the actual tag values, eg: tag -------------- Improvements Office (2 rows)
PARTIAL UPDATE
INSERT INTO mytable(id, json) VALUES ('1', '{"name":"homey","set":{"some_prop": 99}}'); UPDATE SET json = jsonb_set(mytable.json, array['set','some_prop'], '88', true) where json->>'name' = 'homey';
UPSERTS
Upsert example, from SO:
INSERT INTO live_data(rec_id, control_data) VALUES ('1', '{"set":{"some_prop": 99}}'); INSERT INTO live_data(rec_id, control_data) VALUES ('1', '{"set":{"some_prop": 88}}') ON CONFLICT (rec_id) DO UPDATE SET control_data = jsonb_set(live_data.control_data, array['set','some_prop'], '88', true) RETURNING *;
INDEXING
# NEXT: EXPLORE INDEXING! https://blog.codeship.com/unleash-the-power-of-storing-json-in-postgres/