Hi, We did a benchmark comparing a Key-Value-Pairs stored as EAV db schema versus hstore. The results are promising in favor of hstore but there are some question which remain.
1. Obviously the '@>' has to be used in order to let use the GiST index. Why is the '->' operator not supported by GiST ('->' is actually mentioned in all examples of the doc.)? 2. Currently the hstore elements are stored in order as they are coming from the insert statement / constructor. Why are the elements not ordered i.e. why is the hstore not cached in all hstore functions (like hstore_fetchval etc.)? 3. In the source code 'hstore_io.c' one finds the following enigmatic note: "... very large hstore values can't be output. this could be fixed, but many other data types probably have the same issue." What is the max. length of a hstore (i.e. the max. length of the sum of all elements in text representation)? 4. Last, I don't fully understand the following note in the hstore doc. (http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/interactive/hstore.html ): > Notice that the old names are reversed from the convention > formerly followed by the core geometric data types! Why names? Why not rather 'operators' or 'functions'? What does this "reversed from the convention" mean concretely? Yours, Stefan P.S. I already tried to ask these questions to postgres-performance and to the hstore authors without success... -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers