Preface
This book is the official documentation of
PostgreSQL. It has been written by the
PostgreSQL developers and other
volunteers in parallel to the development of the
PostgreSQL software. It describes all
the functionality that the current version of
PostgreSQL officially supports.
To make the large amount of information about
PostgreSQL manageable, this book has been
organized in several parts. Each part is targeted at a different
class of users, or at users in different stages of their
PostgreSQL experience:
is an informal introduction for new users.
documents the SQL query
language environment, including data types and functions, as well
as user-level performance tuning. Every
PostgreSQL user should read this.
describes the installation and
administration of the server. Everyone who runs a
PostgreSQL server, be it for private
use or for others, should read this part.
describes the programming
interfaces for PostgreSQL client
programs.
contains information for
advanced users about the extensibility capabilities of the
server. Topics include user-defined data types and
functions.
contains reference information about
SQL commands, client and server programs. This part supports
the other parts with structured information sorted by command or
program.
contains assorted information that might be of
use to PostgreSQL developers.
What Is PostgreSQL?
PostgreSQL is an object-relational
database management system (ORDBMS) based on
POSTGRES, Version 4.2,
developed at the University of California at Berkeley Computer Science
Department. POSTGRES pioneered many concepts that only became
available in some commercial database systems much later.
PostgreSQL is an open-source descendant
of this original Berkeley code. It supports a large part of the SQL
standard and offers many modern features:
complex queries
foreign keys
triggers
updatable views
transactional integrity
multiversion concurrency control
Also, PostgreSQL can be extended by the
user in many ways, for example by adding new
data types
functions
operators
aggregate functions
index methods
procedural languages
And because of the liberal license,
PostgreSQL can be used, modified, and
distributed by anyone free of charge for any purpose, be it
private, commercial, or academic.
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