On 5 June 2015 at 18:07, deavid <deavidsed...@gmail.com> wrote: > There are several use cases where I see useful an index, but adding it > will slow too much inserts and updates. > For example, when we have 10 million rows on a table, and it's a table > which has frequent updates, we need several index to speed up selects, but > then we'll slow down updates a lot, specially when we have 10 or more > indexes. > Other cases involve indexes for text search, which are used only for user > search and aren't that important, so we want to have them, but we don't > want the overload they put whenever we write on the table. > I know different approaches that already solve some of those problems in > some ways (table partitioning, partial indexes, etc), but i don't feel they > are the solution to every problem of this kind. > > Some people already asked for "delayed write" indexes, but the idea gets > discarded because the index could get out of sync, so it can omit results > and this is unacceptable. But i think maybe that could be fixed in several > ways and we can have a fast and reliable index (but maybe not so fast on > selects). >
This is exactly the use case and mechanism for BRIN indexes. -- Simon Riggs http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ <http://www.2ndquadrant.com/> PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services