Re: [HACKERS] sorting big tables :(

Michael Richards <miker@scifair.acadiau.ca>

From: Michael Richards <miker@scifair.acadiau.ca>
To: Bruce Momjian <maillist@candle.pha.pa.us>
Cc: pgsql-hackers@postgreSQL.org
Date: 1998-05-20T00:02:38Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
On Sun, 17 May 1998, Bruce Momjian wrote:

> > > > I have a big table. 40M rows.
> > > > On the disk, it's size is:
> > > >  2,090,369,024 bytes. So 2 gigs. On a 9 gig drive I can't sort this table.
> > > > How should one decide based on table size how much room is needed?
> 
> Tape sort is a standard Knuth sorting.  It basically sorts in pieces,
> and merges.  If you don't do this, the accessing around gets very poor
> as you page fault all over the file, and the cache becomes useless.
Right. I wasn't reading the right chapter. Internal sorting is much
different than external sorts. Internal suggests the use of a Quicksort
algorithim.
Marc and I discussed over lunch. If I did a select * into, would it not
make more sense to sort the results into the resulting table rather than
into pieces and then copy into a table? From my limited knowlege, I think
this should save 8/7 N the space.
In this issue, I think there must be a lot more overhead than necessary.
The table consists of only
int4, int4, int2
I read 10 bytes / row of actual data here.
Instead, 40M/2gigs is about
50 bytes / record
What is there other than oid (4? bytes)

-Mike