Re: maximum number of rows in table - what about oid limits?
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
From: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
To: "Josh Berkus" <josh@agliodbs.com>
Cc: pgsql-sql@postgresql.org
Date: 2001-06-07T02:13:11Z
Lists: pgsql-general
"Josh Berkus" <josh@agliodbs.com> writes: > Given this, why bother with system-generated OIDs on user rows at all? > Why not simply reserve the OIDs for the system tables? An option to not generate OIDs unless requested (on a table-by-table basis) has been discussed. It seems like a fine near-term solution to me. 8-byte OIDs are a longer-term solution, because they'll break a lot of things (including clients...) >> This is certainly not ideal, but it's not nearly as big a problem as >> transaction ID wraparound. You can live with it, whereas right now >> xact ID wraparound is catastrophic. That we gotta work on, soon. > Nothing like reassuring us commercial DB users, Tom. :-P > Can you describe what you're talking about? It's in the archives: after 4G transactions, your database curls up and dies. When your pg_log starts to approach 1Gbyte (2 bits per transaction) you'd better plan on dump/initdb/reload. regards, tom lane