"Luke Lonergan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Consider that a popular commercial database, running on a 6-disk RAID5 with > one filesystem, performs external sorting 4 times faster (1/4 of the time) > than Postgres using a two pass sort. There is no special optimization of > the I/O path involved, it's simply a matter of using a modern external > sorting approach (no tapes).
I think this argumentation hinges on some irrational aversion to the word "tape". Given adequate work_mem, the CVS-tip behavior is exactly what you propose already (at least for the cases where we don't need random access to the sort result). AFAICS the only result of removing the support for multipass merge is that the code would fail, rather than run slowly, if it didn't have adequate work_mem for a particular problem. Somehow I don't see that as an improvement. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org