Hey
 
i've also tried to implement a database versioning using JSON to log changes in 
tables. Here it is: https://github.com/fxku/audit
I've got two versioning tables, one storing information about all transactions 
that happened and one where i put the JSON logs of row changes of each table. 
I'm only logging old values and not complete rows.
 
Then I got a function that recreates a database state at a given time into a 
separate schema - either to VIEWs, MVIEWs or TABLES. This database state could 
then be indexed in order to work with it. You can also reset the production 
state to the recreated past state.
 
Unfortunately I've got no time to further work on it at the moment + I have not 
done tests with many changes in the database so I can't say if the recreation 
process scales well. On downside I've realised is that using the json_agg 
function has limits when I've got binary data. It gets too long. So I'm really 
looking forward using JSONB.

There are more plans in my mind. By having a Transaction_Log table it should be 
possible to revert only certain transactions. I'm also thinking of parallel 
versioning, e.g. different users are all working with their version of the 
database and commit their changes to the production state. As I've got a unique 
history ID for each table and each row, I should be able to map the affected 
records.

Have a look and tell me what you think of it.

Cheers
Felix
 

Gesendet: Montag, 29. September 2014 um 04:00 Uhr
Von: "Abelard Hoffman" <abelardhoff...@gmail.com>
An: "pgsql-general@postgresql.org" <pgsql-general@postgresql.org>
Betreff: [GENERAL] table versioning approach (not auditing)

Hi. I need to maintain a record of all changes to certain tables so assist in 
viewing history and reverting changes when necessary (customer service makes an 
incorrect edit, etc.).
 
I have studied these two audit trigger examples:
https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Audit_trigger
https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Audit_trigger_91plus
 
I've also read about two other approaches to versioning:
1. maintain all versions in one table, with a flag to indicate which is the 
current version
2. have a separate versions table for each real table, and insert into the 
associated version table whenever an update or insert is done.
 
My current implementation is based on the wiki trigger examples, using a single 
table, and a json column to record the row changes (rather than hstore). What I 
like about that, in particular, is I can have a "global," chronological view of 
all versioned changes very easily.
 
But there are two types of queries I need to run.
1. Find all changes made by a specific user
2. Find all changes related to a specific record
 
#1 is simple to do. The versioning table has a user_id column of who made the 
change, so I can query on that.
 
#2 is more difficult. I may want to fetch all changes to a group of tables that 
are all related by foreign keys (e.g., find all changes to "user" record 849, 
along with any changes to their "articles," "photos," etc.). All of the data is 
in the json column, of course, but it seems like a pain to try and build a 
query on the json column that can fetch all those relationships (and if I mess 
it up, I probably won't generate any errors, since the json is so free-form).
 
So my question is, do you think using the json approach is wrong for this case? 
Does it seem better to have separate versioning tables associated with each 
real table? Or another approach?
 
Thanks
 
 


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