Postgres
on
histre
amaan-ngp
Manage client connections on server side.
#postgres #p #databases
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Clivern/Peanut: 🐺 Deploy Databases and Services Easily for Development and Testing Pipelines.
github.com
Deploy databases and Services easily for development and testing pipelines.
#databases #kafka #postgres #p
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Continuous AWS IAM Security Best Practices | CloudQuery
www.cloudquery.io
Continious AWS IAM Security Practices
#security #aws #p #postgres
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post-luxembourg/pgflux: Python script to send PostgreSQL monitoring telemetry to InfluxDB
github.com
Sending PostgreSQL Database metrics to InfluxDB.
#monitoring #postgres #influxdb
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Infrastructure security in Amazon RDS - Amazon Relational Database Service
docs.aws.amazon.com
Infrastructure security in Amazon RDS
#databases #security #postgres
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Highlights
As a managed service, Amazon RDS is protected by the AWS global network security procedures that are described in the Amazon Web Services: Overview of security processes whitepaper. You use AWS published API calls to access Amazon RDS through the network. Clients must support Transport Layer Security (TLS) 1.0. We recommend TLS 1.2 or later. Clients must also support cipher suites with perfect forward secrecy (PFS) such as Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman (DHE) or Elliptic Curve Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman (ECDHE). Most modern systems such as Java 7 and later support these modes. Additionally, requests must be signed by using an access key ID and a secret access key that is associated with an IAM principal. Or you can use the AWS Security Token Service (AWS STS) to generate temporary security credentials to sign requests.
Setting SSL/TLS protocol versions with PostgreSQL 12 - 2ndQuadrant | PostgreSQL
www.2ndquadrant.com
So which TLS version is a good one? #security
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Highlights
Note that all OpenSSL versions that support TLS 1.1 also support TLS 1.2, so setting the minimum version to TLS 1.2 instead of TLS 1.1 would have no practical drawback for users of OpenSSL, as far as I can tell. There are PostgreSQL clients that don’t use OpenSSL, such as the JDBC driver, but it seems unlikely that the version of the Java stack you use would not support at least TLS 1.2 at this point. It is probably too early to require TLS 1.3. The protocol itself and the required OpenSSL release are only about a year old, and so you probably won’t find them in most operating installations that are currently in use.
Terraforming RDS — Part 3. Our struggles with parameter groups | by Muffy Barkocy | tech-at-instacart
tech.instacart.com
Terraforming RDS — Part 3
If you were administering your own PostgreSQL instance, you would set these values in various ways:
- In the server configuration file,
postgresql.conf
- On the command line when starting the server
- In the database directly, using SQL to set values
Using AWS RDS, you don’t have access to the configuration file or the server startup command so AWS provides the “parameter group” resource to configure your RDS instance on startup.
#databases #postgres
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Highlights
dynamic and static parameters Notice the “Apply type” column in the screenshot above. If the value in this column is “dynamic” then the value can be set or updated while the server is running. If it is “static” then the server must be restarted for the parameter to take effect. Since a parameter group is a separate resource from the RDS instance, you can update a static parameter value in the parameter group without restarting the server; AWS will store the change to be applied later.
Terraforming RDS — Part 2. Using modules with RDS | by Muffy Barkocy | tech-at-instacart
tech.instacart.com
Terraforming RDS — Part 2
#databases #postgres
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tech.instacart.com
Terraforming RDS — Part 1
#databases #postgres
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