Release date: 2018-09-17
This release is based on Postgres Pro Enterprise 9.6.10.1 and provides the following bug fixes and improvements:
Implemented the following changes in pgbench:
pgbench now supports compound commands.
You can now limit the time allotted for transaction retries
using the --latency-limit option. If this
option is used together with --max-tries set
to zero, transactions can be retried as many times as
--latency-limit permits.
The reported TPS and the number of processed transactions now exclude skipped and failed transactions.
Updated pg_pathman module to
version 1.4.14 to improve stability.
Fixed pgpro_upgrade script for Red Hat Enterprise Linux
and SUSE systems so that it can be launched using a relative path.
Depending on your current installation, the upgrade procedure will differ.
To migrate from vanilla PostgreSQL 9.6.x or Postgres Pro, make sure you have installed its latest minor version and then perform a dump/restore using pg_dumpall.
To upgrade from a Postgres Pro Enterprise version
based on the same PostgreSQL major release,
a dump/restore is not required.
It is usually enough to install the new version into the same installation directory.
Once the new binaries are installed, the pgpro_upgrade
script is run automatically to check whether additional setup is required
and complete the upgrade.
When upgrading from versions 9.6.8.2 or lower, you have to rebuild indexes
that used mchar or mvarchar types.
When upgrading from versions 9.6.2.1 or lower, you have to rebuild
GiST indexes built over columns of the intarray type.
When upgrading from version 9.6.1.2 on RPM-based
Linux distributions, make sure to move the data directory from
pgsql to the pgproee
directory before running the pgpro_upgrade script.
For some Linux distributions, you may be prompted to run pgpro_upgrade manually.
In this case, you must stop the postgres service.
The script must be run on behalf of the user owning the database
(typically postgres) and PGDATA environment variable should be
set to the directory where database resides. Running pgpro_upgrade
as root will result in an error.
This step is not required when upgrading from version 9.6.4.1 or higher.