Vikas Sharma writes:
> The architects and developers have perception that the latest release
> always will have bugs and others might be using in production. They feel
> 11.2 will be better bet than 11.4.
Your architects are apparently completely unfamiliar with Postgres.
Tell them to read
https:
Vikas Sharma schrieb am 31.07.2019 um 17:57:
The architects and developers have perception that the latest release
always will have bugs and others might be using in production. They
feel 11.2 will be better bet than 11.4.
You should always use the latest minor version, so 11.4 is preferred ov
On Wed, Jul 31, 2019 at 8:58 AM Vikas Sharma wrote:
> The architects and developers have perception that the latest release
> always will have bugs and others might be using in production. They feel
> 11.2 will be better bet than 11.4.
>
Beginning with version 10 the second position in the versi
On 7/31/19 9:57 AM, Vikas Sharma wrote:
The architects and developers have perception that the latest release
always will have bugs and others might be using in production. They
feel 11.2 will be better bet than 11.4.
Except of course for the bugs fixed in .3 and .4.
The architects and developers have perception that the latest release
always will have bugs and others might be using in production. They feel
11.2 will be better bet than 11.4.
On Wed, Jul 31, 2019, 16:24 Luca Ferrari wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 31, 2019 at 4:55 PM Vikas Sharma wrote:
> > Should I
On Wed, Jul 31, 2019 at 4:55 PM Vikas Sharma wrote:
> Should I go for 10.9 or 11.2? The architects are suggesting 11.2
Moving fom 9.5 requires in any case a major version upgrade, therefore
I would go for the latest one, 11.4.
Are there any particular needs that feed your doubts about the version
Hi All,
We are using postgres 9.5.9 in streaming replication with repmgr. The
project is now considering to update postgreSQL instances to latest
versions.
I am looking for which version to upgrade to. I can see the current version
in postgres 11 is 11.4, and 10.9 in 10.
How to decide on which