On Wed, Mar 16, 2011 at 12:19 PM, Daniele Varrazzo
<daniele.varra...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm writing a variable size custom datatype in C. The variable part is
> an array of unsigned long, and it needs to be aligned. I further need
> to store a few flags, for which a single byte would be more than
> enough (I would actually need just a single bit, but I'd probably keep
> some bits to store a data version too).
>
> Using a struct like
>
>    {
>        char vl_len_[4];         /* varlena header */
>        unsigned char flags;
>        unsigned long data[1];
>    }
>
> 3 bytes are always wasted in padding as offsetof(data) is 8.
>
> I may complicate fetching a little bit and store the flags at the end
> of the data, so that the total size would be 5 + data instead of 8 +
> data, and access them with some pointers arithmetic.
>
> In terms of disk space, does it worth the hassle or (as I suspect)
> would this effort be wasted by on-disk alignment of the data in the
> rows?

question: if you are storing just flags and bytes, why not use a bytea
and store the flags out of line?

merlin

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