Hi Peter,
Thanks for answer.
Just to clarify, they are disabled during initial sync only or are always
disabled on subscriber side?
Are all triggers disabled during initial sync or just foreign keys?
How can I know that initial sync completed for all tables? Is it checking when
pg_subscription
On Mon, 6 Dec 2021 at 18:48, Phil Endecott
wrote:
>
> - I have a raw data table, indexed on a timestamp column, to which
> new data is regularly being added.
>
> - I have a set of views that produce hourly/daily/monthly summaries
> of this data. Querying these views is slow, so I'd like to mak
It did indeed work as expected.
Took the query down from over 18 hours to 20 minutes, so a huge win!
Paul
On Thu, Dec 2, 2021 at 11:34 PM David G. Johnston <
david.g.johns...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thursday, December 2, 2021, Paul van der Linden <
> paul.doskabou...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
On 06.12.21 15:50, Avi Weinberg wrote:
Does it mean that populating each table is done in a single
transaction? If so, when I have tables with foreign keys between them,
is it guaranteed that logical replication will populates the tables in
the proper order so the foreign key will be enforced?
On 12/6/21 22:16, Laurenz Albe wrote:
An ugly alternative is to use "ORDER BY id + 0", which prevents PostgreSQL
from using the index.
That was actually the earliest form of Oracle hints. I remember doing
exactly that in Oracle 5.1.22 on VAX/VMS.
--
Mladen Gogala
Database Consultant
Tel: (34
On Mon, 2021-12-06 at 19:22 +0100, Pavel Stehule wrote:
> po 6. 12. 2021 v 18:21 odesílatel Francisco Olarte
> napsal:
> > On Mon, 6 Dec 2021 at 18:03, Alan Hodgson wrote:
> > > # explain SELECT "shipment_import_records".* FROM
> > > "shipment_import_records" WHERE
> > > "shipment_import_reco
On 12/6/21 11:02 AM, Alan Hodgson wrote:
On Mon, 2021-12-06 at 10:19 -0700, Rob Sargent wrote:
To be clear, is it the devs or the ORM that's adding the ORDER and the
LIMIT? I'm betting on devs. Do they need the smallest id (first
occurrance?) or do they need data common to all 5096 entries (N
po 6. 12. 2021 v 18:21 odesílatel Francisco Olarte
napsal:
> On Mon, 6 Dec 2021 at 18:03, Alan Hodgson
> wrote:
> ...
> > The table has nearly 29 million records. 5069 of them match
> shipment_import_id = 5090609. There is an index on shipment_import_id,
> which the planner happily uses without
On 12/6/21 10:02, Alan Hodgson wrote:
On Mon, 2021-12-06 at 10:19 -0700, Rob Sargent wrote:
To be clear, is it the devs or the ORM that's adding the ORDER and the
LIMIT? I'm betting on devs. Do they need the smallest id (first
occurrance?) or do they need data common to all 5096 entries (Name
On Mon, 2021-12-06 at 10:19 -0700, Rob Sargent wrote:
> To be clear, is it the devs or the ORM that's adding the ORDER and
> the
> LIMIT? I'm betting on devs. Do they need the smallest id (first
> occurrance?) or do they need data common to all 5096 entries
> (Name?) and
> any record will do?
On Mon, 2021-12-06 at 18:20 +0100, Francisco Olarte wrote:
>
> Can you post an explain analyze? To me it seems like the planner
> thinks shipment_import_id is randomly distributed and the table is
> well correlated with it's PK, so scanning it for the first id
> should
> be fast.
#explain anal
Dear Tom,
Thank you so much for sharing the information.
Regards,
M. Sonai Muthu Raja
Managed Delivery Services - DBA Support
Landline - 044 66235600, Extn - 1176
Mobile - +91 9003132734
From: Tom Lane
Sent: Friday, December 3, 2021 3:51 AM
To: Sonai
Thanks a lot, completely forgot that one!
Gonna test that tomorrow...
On Thu, Dec 2, 2021 at 11:34 PM David G. Johnston <
david.g.johns...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thursday, December 2, 2021, Paul van der Linden <
> paul.doskabou...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> when switching to postgres 14 (fr
On Mon, 2021-12-06 at 10:18 -0700, Michael Lewis wrote:
> What is your default_statistics_target and how accurate is that
> estimate of 5668 rows? What is random_page_cost set to by the way?
>
>
>
default_statistics_target = 1000
random_page_cost = 2.0 (it's on AWS on a 9000 iops gp2 volume)
P
On Mon, 6 Dec 2021 at 18:03, Alan Hodgson wrote:
...
> The table has nearly 29 million records. 5069 of them match
> shipment_import_id = 5090609. There is an index on shipment_import_id, which
> the planner happily uses without the LIMIT specifically. Yet with it the
> query planner will alway
On 12/6/21 10:03 AM, Alan Hodgson wrote:
I keep running into problems like these:
Devs are using an ORM. It really likes to produce queries like:
SELECT "shipment_import_records".* FROM "shipment_import_records"
WHERE shipment_import_records"."shipment_import_id" = 5090609 ORDER BY
"shipment_
What is your default_statistics_target and how accurate is that estimate of
5668 rows? What is random_page_cost set to by the way?
More importantly, what is the better plan that you'd like the planner to
use with your existing indexes? It would seem logical to me to scan for the
matching shipment_
I keep running into problems like these:
Devs are using an ORM. It really likes to produce queries like:
SELECT "shipment_import_records".* FROM "shipment_import_records"
WHERE shipment_import_records"."shipment_import_id" = 5090609 ORDER
BY "shipment_import_records"."id" ASC LIMIT 1;
I don't kn
Hi all,
I understood that during logical replication initial sync tables are copied in
full using some type of "copy command".
Does it mean that populating each table is done in a single transaction? If
so, when I have tables with foreign keys between them, is it guaranteed that
logical replic
On 5. Dec 2021, at 21:32, Daniel Frey wrote:
>
>> On 5. Dec 2021, at 17:01, Tom Lane wrote:
>>
>> Daniel Frey writes:
>>> With all that said, I think that PostgreSQL/libpq should have a clear,
>>> documented way to get rid of a connection that is guaranteed to not hang.
>>> It has something
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