On Wed, 2 Oct 2002, Raymond Chui wrote: > I have some tables with huge data. > The tables have column timestamp and float. > I am try to keep up to 6 day of data values. > What I do is execute SQL below from crontab (UNIX to > schedule commands). > > BEGIN; > DELETE FROM table_1 WHERE column_time < ('now'::timestamp - '6 > days'::interval); > ..... > DELETE FROM table_n WHERE column_time < ('now'::timestamp - '6 > days'::interval); > COMMIT; > > > Everything is running fine, except take long time to finish. > Because some tables stored values from 50,000 to 100,000 rows > Some deletion need to deleted up to 45,000 rows. > > So I am thinking just delete the rows by their row number or row ID, > like > > DELETE FROM a_table WHERE row_id < 45000; > > I know there is row_id in Oracle. > Is there row_id for a table in Postgres?
Not really of that sort IIRC Oracle's row_id definition, although you could probably fake something with a sequence. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/users-lounge/docs/faq.html