> this seems
> like a dead waste of effort :-(. The work to put the data into the main
> database isn't lessened at all; you've just added extra work to manage
> the buffer database.
True from the view point of the server, but not from the throughput in the
client session (client viewpoint). The client will have a blazingly fast
session with the buffer database. I'm assuming the buffer database table
size is zero or very small. Constraints will be a problem if there are
PKs, FKs that need satisfied on the server that are not adequately testable
in the buffer. Might not be a problem if the full table fits on the RAM
disk, but you still have to worry about two clients inserting the same PK.
Rick
Tom Lane
<tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> To: jellej@pacbell.net
Sent by: cc: pgsql-performance@postgresql.org
pgsql-performance-owner@pos Subject: Re: [PERFORM] Questions about 2 databases.
tgresql.org
03/11/2005 03:33 PM
jelle <jellej@pacbell.net> writes:
> 1) on a single 7.4.6 postgres instance does each database have it own WAL
> file or is that shared? Is it the same on 8.0.x?
Shared.
> 2) what's the high performance way of moving 200 rows between similar
> tables on different databases? Does it matter if the databases are
> on the same or seperate postgres instances?
COPY would be my recommendation. For a no-programming-effort solution
you could just pipe the output of pg_dump --data-only -t mytable
into psql. Not sure if it's worth developing a custom application to
replace that.
> My web app does lots of inserts that aren't read until a session is
> complete. The plan is to put the heavy insert session onto a ramdisk
based
> pg-db and transfer the relevant data to the master pg-db upon session
> completion. Currently running 7.4.6.
Unless you have a large proportion of sessions that are abandoned and
hence never need be transferred to the main database at all, this seems
like a dead waste of effort :-(. The work to put the data into the main
database isn't lessened at all; you've just added extra work to manage
the buffer database.
regards, tom lane
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TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your
joining column's datatypes do not match