On 14 Feb 2011, at 9:38, Alessandro Candini wrote:

> I performed tests with a query returning more or less 100000 records and 
> using my C module I obtain the following results (every test performed 
> cleaning cache before):
> - single db: 9.555 sec
> - splitted in 4: 5.496 sec

Is that a single query on that one DB compared to 4 queries on 4 DB's? How does 
a single DB with 4 parallel queries perform? I'd expect that to win from 4 
DB's, due to the overhead those extra DB instances are generating.
I do suppose you tried tuning that DB before you started making things 
complicated?

> So I think this can be a good approach...
> I have already read this
> 
> http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/interactive/xfunc-c.html

Did you read all the way to section 35.9.10? That explains how to create SRF's 
like yours, including examples. If the step from simple functions to SRF's is 
too large for you, create a few sample-functions to learn how the intermediary 
steps work. We can't upload the info to your brain, after all - you'll have to 
do the learning part by yourself.

> I posted it in my previous thread. But it is not clear to me how to embed my 
> C function into postgresql.
> I mean, I know how to compile and insert it into postgresql, I've already 
> done it for simple function which return a boolean, for example.
> But it is not clear to me how to do this if I want as return a complete 
> table, or set of rows...
> Can you give me a minimalistic example?

I'm not aware of any difference between adding a function returning a scalar 
vs. one that returns a set. You have to create a wrapper function to your 
library so that PG knows about your function, but apart from the return types 
(BOOLEAN vs. SETOF something), that declaration is exactly the same.

> By the way, my goal is to perform a SELECT query in the smallest time 
> possible.
> For that reason an SQL function is not good beacuse slower than a C 
> function...

I have no idea what you're referring to, since you're top-posting, but I never 
suggested to use SQL functions. I just pointed out that the document you linked 
was about SQL functions instead of C functions, in the assumption that was what 
was causing your confusion. You didn't explain what you were confused about 
after all, I had to guess.

>> On 10 Feb 2011, at 9:01, Alessandro Candini wrote:
>> 
>>> I have installed 4 different instances of postgresql-9.0.2 on the same 
>>> machine, on ports 5433, 5434, 5435, 5436.
>> I do hope you intend to put those databases on different machines 
>> eventually, or some such? Otherwise you probably didn't gain anything by 
>> splitting your database up like that - you've just reduced the available 
>> resources on that single machine.
>> 
>>> Why I have to do something tricky like this is long too explain...
>> It would help to know what you're trying to achieve by splitting your 
>> database up like this. We don't need the full story, just a summary is fine; 
>> Maybe this is some experimental setup that's more related to multi-threading 
>> than to the actual database design? Maybe management smoked something 
>> outlandish and put you up with this? Maybe this is a macroscopic attempt to 
>> table partitioning?
>> 
>>> Then I have developed a C function using libpq which creates 4 threads, 
>>> each one which query a 1/4 of the db. After that I merge the results in one 
>>> single response.
>>> 
>>> My function works fine, but I need to include it inside a postgresql 
>>> instance in order to launch it as a normal SQL query (SELECT myfunc(...);).
>>> I have read the documentation here 
>>> http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/static/xfunc-sql.html#XFUNC-SQL-FUNCTIONS-RETURNING-SET,
>>>  but I'm pretty confuse and I don't know if this is the right way to 
>>> accomplish my goal.
>> What are you confused about? That's a chapter about set-returning functions 
>> written in SQL - perhaps you're looking for information about set-returning 
>> functions from an external library like yours? Perhaps you're looking for: 
>> http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/interactive/xfunc-c.html
>> 
>> You say you don't know if this is the right way to accomplish your goal - 
>> which is...?
>> 
>>> Have you got any ideas or suggestions?
>> 
>> As others have suggested, you should probably have a look at 
>> table-partitioning, possibly in combination with tablespaces if you want to 
>> divide your database among multiple disks/filesystems. Putting them in 
>> different servers on the same hardware is probably not going to be a very 
>> good solution. As you've already found out, it makes querying the data silly 
>> difficult. But, we don't know the reason you're doing that of course.
>> 
>> Alban Hertroys
>> 
>> --
>> If you can't see the forest for the trees,
>> cut the trees and you'll see there is no forest.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Alessandro Candini
> 
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> http://www.meeo.it
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--
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