>Shridhar Daithankar > > Recently, I ran a huge update on an Integer column affecting 100 million > > rows in my database. What happened was my disk space increased in size > and > > my IO load was very high. It appears that MVCC wants to rewrite each row > > (each row was about 5kB due to a bytea column). In addition, VACUUM > needs > > to run to recover space eating up even more IO bandwidth. > > I am sure people have answered the approach you have suggested so let me > suggest a workaround for your problem. > > You could run following in a transaction. > > - begin > - Create another table with exact same structure > - write a procedure that reads from input table and updates the value in > between > - drop the original table > - rename new table to old one > - commit > - analyze new table > > Except for increased disk space, this approach has all the good things > postgresql offers. Especially using transactable DDLs it is huge benefit. > You > certainly do save on vacuum. > > If the entire table is updated then you can almost certainly get things > done > faster this way.
I second this approach. Space usage similar, time faster. For a procedure, you can use an Insert Select with a Case statement instead of the UPDATE step. This type of approach is in use in many other DBMS. I would vote strongly (how is that possible?) against doing anything at all to MVCC. It works, it's brilliant and doesn't fall foul of anybody else's patent rights. It would be very hard to re-write anything as good and the time spent would double other requirements. MySQL has multiple storage managers and that must slow them down enormously trying to test or even fine tune things. Best Regards, Simon Riggs ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly