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Workbook |
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http://devcenter.heroku.com |
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ISBN 978-1-4276-4968-3 |
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50020 |
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Last updated: August 30, 2011 | © Copyright 2000-2011 salesforce.com, inc. All rights |
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reserved. Salesforce.com is a registered trademark of salesforce.com, inc., as are other names |
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and marks. Other marks appearing herein may be trademarks of their respective owners. |
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9 |
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781427 |
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649683 |
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Table of Contents |
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About the Heroku Postgres Workbook! |
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2 |
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Tutorial #1: Provisioning and Accessing a Database! |
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3 |
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Prerequisites! |
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3 |
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Step 1: Provision a Database! |
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3 |
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Step 2: Import Data into Your Database! |
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3 |
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Step 3: Query and Access the Database! |
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4 |
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Tutorial #2: Managing Your Database! |
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6 |
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Step 1: Monitor Database Activity! |
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6 |
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Step 2: Create a Snapshot of Your Database! |
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7 |
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Summary! |
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7 |
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Tutorial #3: Using pgAdmin with Your Database! |
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8 |
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Prerequisites! |
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8 |
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Step 1: Connect pgAdmin to Your Database! |
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8 |
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Step 2: Explore the Schema! |
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9 |
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Step 3: Query Data from Your Database! |
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9 |
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Step 4: Export Data to a CSV File! |
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10 |
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Summary! |
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10 |
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Tutorial #5: Using Web Applications with Your Database! |
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11 |
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Prerequisites! |
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11 |
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Step 1: Create and configure a Ruby on Rails application! |
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11 |
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Step 2: Create a model, view, and controller! |
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12 |
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Summary! |
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12 |
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Tutorial #6: Using Microsoft Excel with Your Database! |
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13 |
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Prerequisites! |
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13 |
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Step 1: Install and Set Up the Postgres ODBC Driver! |
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13 |
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Step 2: Connect Your Database to Excel! |
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13 |
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Step 3: Query Data to Microsoft Excel! |
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13 |
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Summary! |
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14 |
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Next Steps! |
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15 |
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About the Heroku Postgres Workbook |
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Heroku Postgres provides a managed SQL database as a service for storing and retrieving business and application |
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data. This service provides you with the power of a relational database without the management burden of |
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monitoring and maintaining it. The service is based on PostgreSQL " a powerful, stable, and well-tested open source |
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database project. This workbook provides an introduction to working with the database service provided by Heroku. |
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The goal is to get you set up with Heroku Postgres so you can provision, manage, and work with the database |
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service. Upon successful completion of this workbook, you will have provisioned a database and will know how to |
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interact with the data using psql, pgAdmin, a local client application, and Microsoft Excel. |
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2 |
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Tutorial #1: Provisioning and Accessing a Database |
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In this tutorial, you will create and verify an account with Heroku Postgres and then learn how to provision a |
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database on the Heroku platform. After the database is created, instructions are provided for locating the information |
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you will need to access or connect to the database. |
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Please note that provisioning a database with Heroku Postgres will incur fees because it is a paid service (though not |
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if you are trying the workbook in the Dreamforce lab). Although the database plan prices are quoted in monthly |
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terms, you are only billed for the time during which the database is provisioned. For example, if you create a |
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database for this workbook and throw it away shortly thereafter, you will only be charged for the time the database is |
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running. |
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Prerequisites |
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Working on a lab computer: |
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If you’re using a Dreamforce lab machine, please use the following credentials in order to skip account |
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creation and avoid incurring charges. |
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demo@heroku.com |
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Username: ! |
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cl0ud |
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Password: ! |
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Working on your own computer: |
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Heroku user accounts are used to access both Heroku Postgres (http://postgres.heroku.com) and the Heroku |
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runtime platform (http://www.heroku.com). If you already have a verified account with Heroku, then you |
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can skip straight to Step 1. |
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1. Open your browser, and then go to the Heroku Postgres Signup page (http://postgres.heroku.com/ |
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signup). |
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2. On the Sign Up screen, select the Create a Heroku Account tab. |
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3. Type your email address, create a password, complete the remainder of the form, and then click |
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Register. |
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4. Enter your billing information to verify your account. |
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Step 1: Provision a Database |
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The Heroku Postgres database plans differ based upon the size of their hot data set. Queries made from hot data are |
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100-1000x faster than from the full data set. Ideally, high performance applications such as web apps should have |
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99% or more of their queries be served from hot data. The Heroku Postgres databases are self-optimizing—they |
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automatically place frequently accessed data in the hot data set. |
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1. Open your browser, log in to http://postgres.heroku.com if you’re not already logged in, and then click on “Your |
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DBs”. |
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2. Click on the “+” in the Your Databases header. |
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3. Select the Ronin plan, and then click Create Database. |
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4. When prompted, click OK to confirm. After the new database is created, it is listed in Your DBs. |
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You now have an active database that is ready for data. |
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Step 2: Import Data into Your Database |
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You can now restore existing data to your database. For this tutorial, and others in this workbook, we will import a |
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sample dataset using the standard pg_restore utility that is installed with PostgreSQL. |
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1. If you’re using a lab machine, the example schema is already downloaded and available in ~/employees.dump. If |
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you’re on your home machine, use the terminal or command line to download it: |
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3 |
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curl -o employees.dump https://heroku-data.s3.amazonaws.com/employees.dump |
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2. Open your browser and go to http://postgres.heroku.com/databases. |
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3. Select your database from the list. |
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4. On the Database Summary page under Connection Settings, use the drop down menu to select PG_Restore. |
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5. Copy the connection string. |
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6. Paste the connection string into your terminal, replacing [YOUR_DATA_FILE] with the full path to |
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employees.dump. The command should look something like this: |
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PGPASSWORD=foo pg_restore --verbose --clean --no-acl --no-owner -h 1.2.3.4 -U bar -d baz ~/employees.dump |
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You now have populated your database with data. |
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Step 3: Query and Access the Database |
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To access the database from a web app or your local computer, you will need the database’s credentials which |
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consist of the hostname, database name, username, and password. You can also use this information to configure a |
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connection with an application or web server. The service has connection strings for many popular application |
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frameworks pre-configured - you simply choose the framework that you are connecting and copy and paste the |
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generated string. This is how you generated the correct connection string for pg_restore in Step 2. |
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In this step you will use the PostgreSQL interactive terminal, psql, to connect to the database, and issue a query. |
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1. Open your browser, go to http://postgres.heroku.com/databases, and then log in if necessary. |
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2. Select your database from the list. |
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3. On the Database Summary page on Connection Settings you will find the username, password, host and port for |
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your database. |
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Note: The password is hidden by default for security purposes. To reveal it, click the Show link next to |
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Password. |
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4 |
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4. Choose Connection Settings > PSQL. Copy the connection string and paste it into your terminal. |
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5. At the psql prompt, query your database by entering: |
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select * from employees limit 5; |
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psql will issue the query on your database, and display the results: |
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$ psql "dbname=d789 host=1.2.3.4 user=u123 password=p456 sslmode=require" |
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d789=> select * from employees limit 5; |
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id | birth_date | first_name | last_name | gender | hire_date |
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-------+------------+------------+-----------+--------+------------ |
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10001 | 1953-09-02 | Georgi | Facello | M | 1986-06-26 |
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10002 | 1964-06-02 | Bezalel | Simmel | F | 1985-11-21 |
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10003 | 1959-12-03 | Parto | Bamford | M | 1986-08-28 |
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10004 | 1954-05-01 | Chirstian | Koblick | M | 1986-12-01 |
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Summary |
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In this tutorial, you created a Heroku account and then learned how to provision a database, locate the information |
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needed to connect to the database, and restored data to it. In the next tutorial, you will learn how to manage the |
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database you just created. |
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5 |
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Tutorial #2: Managing Your Database |
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In this tutorial, you will learn about the different ways you can interact with and manage your database on the |
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Database Summary page. |
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Step 1: Monitor Database Activity |
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You can monitor whether your database is available and also identify query activity that needs to be further |
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optimized. |
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1. Open your browser, go to http://postgres.heroku.com/databases, and then log in if necessary. |
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2. Select your database. |
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3. Do any of the following: |
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• Verify the database status in Statistics > Status. Every 20 seconds health checks are performed on the |
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database to ensure that it is functioning properly. If these health checks fail, our on-call operations team is |
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paged to investigate and repair if necessary. |
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• Review slow queries in the Logs section. Any query that takes longer than 10 milliseconds is listed in this |
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section, and is a candidate for optimization through the use of indexes. |
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To learn more about indexes, review the PostgreSQL documentation on creating indexes (http://www.postgresql.org/ |
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docs/9.0/static/sql-createindex.html). |
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6 |
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Step 2: Create a Snapshot of Your Database |
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A snapshot is a copy of your database at a specific point in time. Snapshots can be used to export your data to a |
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server or your local computer, or to archive data for compliance and record keeping purposes. By default, a daily |
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snapshot is automatically created for your database and stored for one month. You can capture additional snapshots |
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on demand. |
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1. Open your browser, go to http://postgres.heroku.com/databases, and then log in if necessary. |
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2. Select your database. |
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3. On the Database Summary page next to Snapshots, click the plus button (+) to capture a backup. |
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4. When prompted, click OK to confirm. |
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5. After the backup is complete, click the Download link next to the database you want to transfer to your local |
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computer. |
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If you ever want to restore the backup you downloaded to a local database, execute the following command |
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(substitute “myuser”, “mydb”, “snapshot_file” with your local username, database name, and snapshot file name): |
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pg_restore --verbose --clean --no-acl --no-owner -U <myuser> -d <mydb> <snapshot_file>.dump |
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Summary |
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In this tutorial, you learned about the different ways you can manage and interact with your database on the |
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Database Summary page, as well as how to create snapshots of your database. In the next tutorial, you will learn |
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how to work with your database using pgAdmin. |
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7 |
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Tutorial #3: Using pgAdmin with Your Database |
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pgAdmin is a powerful desktop application that enables you to work with your PostgreSQL database. With |
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pgAdmin, you can interactively query the database, browse the schema, insert data, and easily export data in a |
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variety of formats. It is free, open source software that is available on Windows, Mac, and Posix platforms. |
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Prerequisites |
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Working on your own computer: |
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You must install pgAdmin (http://www.pgadmin.org/download/). |
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Working on a lab computer: |
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pgAdmin is already installed. You can access it from the dock. |
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Step 1: Connect pgAdmin to Your Database |
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Open the pgAdmin application on your local computer |
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1. Open the pgAdmin application on your local computer. |
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. Open the pgAdmin application on your local computer. |
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Go to File > Add Server to configure the connection to your database |
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2. Go to File > Add Server to configure the connection to your database. |
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In the “Add Server” dialog, do the following: |
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3. |
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a. Enter a name for the database. For example, you can name the database “Heroku Postgres”. |
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b. Enter the host, username and password. As a reminder, you can retrieve these from the Connection |
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Settings panel on the Database Summary page (http://postgres.heroku.com/databases/<your_db_name>). |
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c. Type the default values for port and maintenance db as 5432 and postgres, respectively. |
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d. On the SSL tab, set SSL to required. |
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4. Click OK. After the connection is created, the database is listed in pgAdmin’s object browser pane. |
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8 |
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Step 2: Explore the Schema |
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1. |
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In the pgAdmin object browser pane, navigate to Server Groups > Servers > Heroku Postgres > Databases > |
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[YOUR_DATABASE_NAME] > Schemas > Public > Tables > Employees, and then do any of the following: |
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• View the SQL definition for the employees datable the the SQL pane. |
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• Right-click on Employees > View Data > View Top 100 Rows to view a sampling of the data. |
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• Explore other pieces of the schema. |
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Step 3: Query Data from Your Database |
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1. |
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In the pgAdmin Object Browser pane, select Server Groups > Servers > Heroku Postgres > Databases > |
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[YOUR_DATABASE_NAME]. |
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2. Click the SQL button in the toolbar to launch the query window. |
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3. Enter a query into the SQL Editor. For example to view the all of the department managers ordered by their |
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tenure: |
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SELECT |
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from_date, |
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to_date, |
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to_date - from_date as duration, |
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employees.first_name || ' ' || employees.last_name as name, |
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departments.name |
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FROM |
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department_managers, |
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departments, |
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employees |
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WHERE |
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department_id= departments.id AND |
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employee_id = employees.id |
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ORDER BY |
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duration DESC; |
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Select Query > Execute (or F5) from the menu to view the query results. |
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4. |
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(Optional) Select Query > Explain (or F7) to see how the query optimizer executes the query. |
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9 |
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Step 4: Export Data to a CSV File |
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at y |
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1. Follow the steps in Task 3 to create a query for the data that you |
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you |
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want to export. |
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2. Select File > Export. |
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3. |
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In the Export Data to File dialog, do the following: |
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• Select comma for the column separator. |
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• Type a name for the export file. |
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4. Click OK to export the data. |
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Summary |
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your Postgres database. In the next tutorial, you will |
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In this tutorial, you learned how to use pgAdmin to work with your Postgres database. In the next tutorial, you will |
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learn how to connect to your database from a local application. |
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10 |
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Tutorial #5: Using Web Applications with Your |
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Database |
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In this tutorial, you will learn how to build a web application running on your local machine to access your Heroku |
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Postgres database. We use Ruby on Rails here, though the same principles apply no matter which local language |
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and platform you use. |
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Prerequisites |
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Working on your own computer: |
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You must install Ruby, RubyGems, and Ruby on Rails. See http://rubyonrails.org/download for download |
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and installation instructions. |
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Working on a lab computer: |
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! |
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Ruby and Rails and all of its dependencies are already installed. |
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Step 1: Create and configure a Ruby on Rails application |
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1. Using the terminal or command line, create a new rails application: |
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rails new employees -d postgresql !! |
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! |
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! |
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2. Open the rails project in your preferred text editor. To use TextMate for example: |
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mate employees!! |
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! |
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! |
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! |
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! |
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! |
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3. Retrieve the database connection string by opening a browser to http://postgres.heroku.com/databases, select |
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your database, and clicking Connection Settings > Active Record. Copy the connection string. |
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4. Open the config/databases.yml file in your text editor. |
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5. Under the development section, paste the connection string. It should look like the following: |
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development: |
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adapter: postgresql |
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encoding: unicode |
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pool: 5 |
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database: d123 |
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username: u456 |
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password: p789 |
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host: 1.2.3.4 |
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port: 5432 |
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6. To test that the configuration is correct, have rails open a database connection. From your terminal, change |
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directory to your rails application and use the rails dbconsole command: |
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11 |
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~/employees rails dbconsole |
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psql (9.0.4) |
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SSL connection (cipher: DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA, bits: 256) |
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Type "help" for help. |
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doyiqqhjmn6bu8=> select * from employees limit 5; |
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id | birth_date | first_name | last_name | gender | hire_date |
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-------+------------+------------+-----------+--------+------------ |
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10001 | 1953-09-02 | Georgi | Facello | M | 1986-06-26 |
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10002 | 1964-06-02 | Bezalel | Simmel | F | 1985-11-21 |
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10003 | 1959-12-03 | Parto | Bamford | M | 1986-08-28 |
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10004 | 1954-05-01 | Chirstian | Koblick | M | 1986-12-01 |
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10005 | 1955-01-21 | Kyoichi | Maliniak | M | 1989-09-12 |
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(5 rows) |
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Step 2: Create a model, view, and controller |
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1. |
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2. Rails contains a built-in scaffold generator that will automatically generate a model, controller, and views for |
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In your terminal, navigate to your rails application directory. |
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CRUD operations (create, read, update, and delete) on a database table. To generate a scaffold for the |
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employees table, execute the following: |
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rails g scaffold Employee first_name:string last_name:string gender:string hire_date:date |
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3. The employees table has over 300,000 rows. The default rails scaffold will attempt to list all of these rows in a |
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single page request, which will take far too long to load. To fix this problem, limit the list view to show only |
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100 records. In your editor, open app/controllers/employees_controller.rb and edit line 5 to limit the number of |
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rows retrieved on the employee index view, from All, to 100: |
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@employees = Employee.limit(100) |
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4. Start the rails application server on your computer by typing rails s into your terminal. |
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5. Open your browser window to http://localhost:3000/employees. You can now browse, insert, or delete |
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information into the employees table. |
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Summary |
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In this tutorial, you learned how to create a Ruby on Rails application that works with your Heroku Postgres |
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database. |
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12 |
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Tutorial #6: Using Microsoft Excel with Your Database |
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In this tutorial, you will learn how to connect your database to Microsoft Excel and then query data directly to a |
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workbook. In Excel, you can quickly and easily create reports that stay up-to-date with the live data in your |
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database. |
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Prerequisites |
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Working on your own computer: |
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This tutorial will only work with Microsoft Windows. Instructions are provided for Microsoft Excel 2010; |
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however, older versions of Excel may still work but the interface will be slightly different. |
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Working on a lab computer: |
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! |
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The machines don’t have Microsoft Windows installed - so you won’t be able to do this tutorial. Sorry! |
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Step 1: Install and Set Up the Postgres ODBC Driver |
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1. Download the latest version of the MSI Postgres ODBC driver (http://www.postgresql.org/ftp/odbc/versions/ |
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msi/). Depending on your version of Windows, select either the 32-bit or 64-bit version of the driver (if in |
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doubt, choose the 32-bit version). |
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2. Run the psqlodbc installer program from your download location. |
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Step 2: Connect Your Database to Excel |
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3. Open Microsoft Excel and create a new workbook. |
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4. Select Data Tab > From Other Sources > From Microsoft Query. |
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5. Choose New Data Source and then click OK. |
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6. Type a name for your data source (for example, “Heroku Postgres”) and then choose PostgreSQL Unicode as |
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the driver. |
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7. Click Connect. |
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8. When prompted, type the database credentials. As a reminder, the Hostname, Username, and Password is |
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located under Connection Settings on the Database Summary page (http://postgres.heroku.com/databases/ |
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<your_db_name>). |
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9. Click OK. |
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Step 3: Query Data to Microsoft Excel |
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1. Select Data Tab > From Other Sources > From Microsoft Query. |
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2. Choose the data source you created and then click OK. |
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Note: You may be prompted to re-enter your username and password. |
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3. Click the SQL button in the toolbar and enter the following query: |
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13 |
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SELECT |
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departments.name, |
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avg(salary) |
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FROM |
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salaries, |
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employees, |
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departments, |
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department_employees |
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WHERE |
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salaries.to_date is null AND |
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department_employees.to_date is null AND |
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salaries.employee_id = employees.id AND |
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department_employees.employee_id = employees.id AND |
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department_employees.department_id = departments.id |
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GROUP BY |
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departments.name |
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; |
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4. Click File > Return Data to Microsoft Excel. |
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5. Select a location for the data to be returned to in your workbook |
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If you need to update the data, simply right click any portion of your queried data and select Refresh. |
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After the data is in Microsoft Excel, you can create a graph, chart, or pivot table just as you would from any other |
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values in a workbook. |
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Summary |
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In this tutorial, you learned how to connect your database to Microsoft Excel and then query data to a workbook |
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where you can quickly and easily create reports that stay up-to-date with the live data in your database. |
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14 |
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Next Steps |
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Congratulations on completing the workbook! You are now familiar with managing and working with a database |
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that you provisioned from Heroku Postgres. Not only can you interact with your database using pgAdmin, but you |
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also learned how to connect to it from Microsoft Excel and web application frameworks like Ruby on Rails. |
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To continue exploring: |
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• Visit http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/static/index.html to learn about the fantastic features and capabilities of |
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PostgreSQL. |
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• Visit http://www.heroku.com to learn about how you can run a full application stack in the cloud. |
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