Ravi Krishna schrieb am 10.07.2018 um 16:08:
> 
> We recently did a test on COPY and found that on large tables (47 million 
> rows , 20GB of raw data) the 
> difference in COPY with 16 indexes and COPY without any index is 1:14. That 
> is, COPY is 14 times slower 
> when data is ingested with all indexes as opposed to COPY first without index 
> and then create all index.
> 
> I googled for earlier posting on this and it looks like this has been asked 
> before too.  
> 
> This is what I am thinking to do:
> 
> 1 - Extract index definition and save it as a SQL somewhere, either a file or 
> a table.
> 2 - Drop all indexes.
> 3 - Ingest data via COPY
> 4 - Recreate all indexes saved in (1).
> 
> Is there a generic sql or script or tool to accomplish (1).

You can do this with a script like this:

-- First store the definitions of all the indexes in a table:

create table index_backup 
as
select *
from pg_indexes
where schemaname = 'public'
  and tablename = 'the_table';

-- now drop all the indexes:
do
$$
declare
  l_rec record;
begin
  for l_rec in select schemaname, indexname from index_backup
  loop
    execute format('drop index %I.%I', l_rec.schemaname, l_rec.indexname);
  end loop;
end;
$$

-- now insert the data

...

-- and restore all indexes

do
$$
declare
  l_rec record;
begin
  for l_rec in select indexdef from index_backup
  loop
     execute l_rec.indexdef;
  end loop;
end;
$$


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