Re: Feature suggestions (long)

Martijn van Oosterhout <kleptog@svana.org>

From: Martijn van Oosterhout <kleptog@svana.org>
To: Don Baccus <dhogaza@pacifier.com>
Cc: Matthew Kirkwood <matthew@hairy.beasts.org>, Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@dcc.uchile.cl>, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>, pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Date: 2003-05-18T01:31:54Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
On Sat, May 17, 2003 at 04:04:11AM -0700, Don Baccus wrote:
> On Saturday 17 May 2003 10:51 am, Matthew Kirkwood wrote:
> > On Sat, 17 May 2003, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
> > > > > I'm going suggest a feature like what Oracle calls "partitions" and
> > > > > later on something with indexes. The idea is to generate some
> > > > > discussion to see if they are worthy of being added to the TODO list.
> > > >
> > > > Why bother?
> > >
> > > Maybe one can put different partitions in different tablespaces?
> >
> > One can.  The tablespace a partition is in can even be
> > offline if Oracle can prove that a query doesn't require
> > that partition.
> 
> People use this feature for warehousing old data that they don't want to purge 
> from the database.   For very large databases (of course that definition 
> changes with each new generation of computer) this can greatly improve the 
> performance of queries on the active portion of the data.

Or can't delete (eg. financial records). The reason I'm looking at it is for
queries where you want a report depending on all the data for 2002. Since
this data is mixed in with all the data for upto 7 previous years, it's too
big for a index scan but doing a seq. scan across the whole table is
very expensive.

What this buys you is being able to seq. scan over portions of a table,
rather than the whole table. Currently we manage this manually by moving
tuples around after the fact.

Hmm, no comments on the UNIQUE-index-over-multiple-tables. I would have
thought that would've been the more interesting one.

Have a nice weekend.
-- 
Martijn van Oosterhout   <kleptog@svana.org>   http://svana.org/kleptog/
> "the West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or
> religion but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence.
> Westerners often forget this fact, non-Westerners never do."
>   - Samuel P. Huntington