Hi Tim,

Off the top of my head, from somewhat left field, using filesystems to manage 
this sort of effect.

Would "real" tables in a tablespace defined on a ramdisk meet this need? So the 
functionality/accessibility of a 
physical table is provided, along with the performance of a filesystem actually 
residing in memory. Presumeably viable if you have the memory to spare & know 
the size of the temp tables won't exceed this.

You could also mount a tablespace on a physical disk with a filesystem which 
has delayed/deferred writes to disk, so that if it is created & deleted quickly 
enough, it is never actually written to disk, but just generally sits in the 
cache. 


Cheers,

Brent Wood


>>> Bill Moran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 06/06/08 8:01 AM >>>
In response to Tim Tassonis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> 
> Bill Moran wrote:
> > In response to Tim Tassonis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > 
> >>
> >> Now, with apache/php in a mpm environment, I have no guarantee that a 
> >> user will get the same postgresql session for a subsequent request, thus 
> >> he will not see the temporary table.
> >>
> >> Is there a way to create temporary tables in another way, so they are 
> >> visible between sessions, or do I need to create real tables for my 
> >> purpose? And is the perfomance penalty big for real tables, as they have 
> >> been written to disk/read from disk?
> > 
> > Build a framework that creates the tables in a special schema, and then
> > can access them through any session.  Use some method to generate unique
> > table names and store the names in the HTTP session.  Create some sort
> > of garbage collection routines that removes tables when they're no longer
> > needed.
> > 
> > The details of exactly how you pull this off are going to depend heavily
> > on the rest of your application architecture.
> > 
> 
> What you describe is what I referred to as "create real tables". I've 
> done that and it works, but I wondered if there's something similar 
> built in postgres apart from classical temporary tables.

Not that I'm aware of.

If you keep the mailing list in the CC, others can answer as well.

-- 
Bill Moran
Collaborative Fusion Inc.
http://people.collaborativefusion.com/~wmoran/

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Phone: 412-422-3463x4023

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