Scott Marlowe wrote:I stand corrected. That's right. But under a database you create your explicit schemas, to organize tables which constitute your separate data, where all of the schemas belonging to a database instance, can share resources without conflicting with one another.On Wed, 2006-03-08 at 14:19, Louis Gonzales wrote:Paul, When you say "multiple identical schemas" are they all separate explicit schemas? Or are they all under a general 'public' schema. >From my understanding, when you create a new db instance, it's under the public level schema by default unless you create an explicit schema and subsequently a db instance - or several - therein, effectively establishing sibling db instances belonging to a single schema, I know at least that data in the form of table access is allowed across the siblings. I'd also assume that this would be the case for triggers and functions that could be identified or defined at the 'root' levelUmmm. In PostgreSQL schemas are contained within databases, not the other way around. It's cluster contains databases contains schemas contains objects (tables, sequences, indexes, et. al.)---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: explain analyze is your friend I apologize for giving the inaccurate description of database to schema relationship. |
begin:vcard fn:louis n:gonzales;louis email;internet:[EMAIL PROTECTED] tel;home:248.943.0144 tel;cell:248.943.0144 x-mozilla-html:TRUE version:2.1 end:vcard
---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: don't forget to increase your free space map settings