David Rowley <david.row...@2ndquadrant.com> writes: > [ v4-0001-Add-documentation-section-appendix-detailing-some.patch ]
A few nitpicky gripes on this - * I don't like inserting this as Appendix B, because that means renumbering appendixes that have had their same names for a *long* time; for instance the release notes have been Appendix E since we adopted the modern division of the docs in 7.4. So I'd put it below anything that's commonly-referenced. Maybe just before "Acronyms"? * I think I'd make the title "PostgreSQL Limitations", as it applies to the product not any one database. * The repetition of "Maximum" in each table row seems rather pointless; couldn't we just drop that word? * Items such as "relations per database" are surely not unlimited; that's bounded at 4G by the number of distinct OIDs. (In practice you'd get unhappy well before that, though I suppose that's true for many of these.) * Rows per table is also definitely finite if you are documenting pages per relation as finite. But it'd be worth pointing out that partitioning provides a way to surmount that. * Many of these values are affected by BLCKSZ. How much effort shall we spend on documenting that? * Max ID length is 63 bytes not characters. * Don't think I'd bother with mentioning INCLUDE columns in the "maximum indexed columns" entry. Also, maybe call that "maximum columns per index"; as phrased, it could be misunderstood to mean that only 32 columns can be used in all indexes put together. * Ordering of the table entries seems a bit random. > The only other thing that sprung to my mind was the maximum tables per > query. This is currently limited to 64999, not including double > counting partitioned tables and inheritance parents, but I kinda think > of we feel the need to document it, then we might as well just raise > the limit. Can't get excited about documenting that one ... although as things stand, it implies a limit on the number of partitions you can use that's way lower than the claimed 256M. > It seems a bit arbitrarily set at the moment. I don't see > any reason it couldn't be higher. It's evidently intended to make sure varnos can fit in uint16. Whether there's anyplace that's actually doing so, rather than storing them as ints, I dunno. regards, tom lane