Thanks, Neil.

Hubert Fröhlich wrote:

Those days, we had PostgreSQL 7.1 and 7.2, and we had to be careful oids approaching 2^32 (2.14 billion)

Now, we have 8.0. What does the situation look like?


With the default settings, there is exactly the same risk of OID wraparound as in earlier releases. However, you can set the "default_with_oids" configuration parameter to false to significantly reduce OID consumption, to the point that you probably won't need to worry about it. It will mean that tables will not have OIDs by default, so you should specify WITH OIDS when creating tables that need OIDs if necessary (although think twice before doing this, as there are only a few good reasons to use OIDs in user tables).

What good reasons to use OIDs in user tables are still left? * For speeding up some special types of queries?

--
Mit freundlichen Grüßen / With kind regards

Hubert Fröhlich

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Dr.-Ing. Hubert Fröhlich                        
Bezirksfinanzdirektion München                  
Alexandrastr. 3, D-80538 München, GERMANY
Tel. :+49 (0)89 / 2190 - 2980
Fax  :+49 (0)89 / 2190 - 2997
hubert dot froehlich at bvv dot bayern dot de

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