Tom Lane wrote: >and I'm still pretty worried about the longevity of any knob we put in >here. But we might not have a lot of choice.
>It would be fairly easy, I think, to add some reloption fields that >would let these parameters be controlled on a per-table level. >Per-column would be much more painful; do we really need that? +1 Per table sounds fine for now. Per column would be nice, but can be worked around if absolutely necessary by splitting tables. To avoid having to add another parameter later, I *would* suggest to use something like: ALTER TABLE mytable SET COMPRESSIONLEVEL = 9; Where it can range from 0 (= no compression), to 9 (= maximum compression). The current algorithm could then either be as simplistic as to kick in anytime COMPRESSIONLEVEL>=1, and not to compress when COMPRESSIONLEVEL==0. More advanced algorithms and decisions can be implemented later. Obviously the algorithm should ideally use the one-dimensional knob to more or less deliver IO-bound (de)compression at level one, and CPU-bound (de)compression at level nine. This kind of one-dimensional knob is well understood by many compression tools and libraries and users, so it'd make sense to provide something similar to the DBA. -- Sincerely, Stephen R. van den Berg. Expect the unexpected! -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers