On Tue, Nov 18, 2008 at 11:09 AM, Pietro Tedesco
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> We have an instance of PostgreSQL on Windows 2003 with some application
> and our customer have asked for solution
> 24x7 without human intervention for problem on the hardware/software
> primary instance.
> Actualy there
There are a couple of solutions probably.
First off, search pgfoundry for possibilities, look into clustering and
replication.
A little more insight would make it easier to answer your question:
Determine what you exactly want, what kind of uptime at what expense.
How should it be made available (
There are a couple of solutions probably.
First off, search pgfoundry for possibilities, look into clustering and
replication.
A little more insight would make it easier to answer your question:
Determine what you exactly want, what kind of uptime at what expense.
How should it be made available (
On 18 nov 2008, at 17.09, Pietro Tedesco
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
We have an instance of PostgreSQL on Windows 2003 with some
application
and our customer have asked for solution
24x7 without human intervention for problem on the hardware/software
primary instance.
Actualy there is a so
We have an instance of PostgreSQL on Windows 2003 with some application
and our customer have asked for solution
24x7 without human intervention for problem on the hardware/software
primary instance.
Actualy there is a solution with standby.
Is there a product of High Availability for PostgreSQL on