On 11/12/2015 02:21 PM, Doiron, Daniel wrote:
I’m troubleshooting a schema and found this:
Indexes:
"pk_patient_diagnoses" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
"index_4341548" UNIQUE, btree (id)
"idx_patient_diagnoses_deleted" btree (deleted)
"idx_patient_diagnoses_diagnosis_type_id" btree (diagnosis_type_id)
"idx_patient_diagnoses_icd10" btree (icd10)
"idx_patient_diagnoses_icd9" btree (diagnosis_code)
"idx_patient_diagnoses_is_unknown" btree (is_unknown)
"idx_patient_diagnoses_modified" btree (modified)
"idx_patient_diagnoses_patient_id" btree (patient_id)
"idx_patient_diagnoses_uuid" btree (uuid)
"index_325532921" btree (modified)
"index_4345603" btree (deleted)
"index_4349516" btree (diagnosis_type_id)
"index_4353417" btree (icd10)
"index_4384754" btree (diagnosis_code)
"index_4418849" btree (is_unknown)
"index_4424101" btree (patient_id)
"index_4428458" btree (uuid)
My questions is whether these “index_*” indexes could have been created
by postgresql or whether I have an errant developer using some kinda
third-party tool?
This is definitely a third party tool. The only time an index will be
implicitly created is:
1. You set a column as the PRIMARY KEY
2. You set a column UNIQUE
Lastly, postgresql would never use such a ridiculous naming scheme.
JD
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