Karel Břinda wrote:
Hi,
I have a question about PgSQL. I am working at some project and I want
to have few tables with special properties:
There would be many rows and these would be changed every day for many
times. I want to be able to get know how did the row looked in given
time (f.e. 2 day ago, 6 minutes ago, 2nd Sept. 2002,...). Nevertheless
it should work with diffs (f.e. if I had a row with 100MB string and I
changed only 2 chars it should not require on disk 200MB but only 100MB
+ few (kilo)Bytes).
100MB of text in each row?? is each row a copy of the english dictionary?
My thoughts are to have a table that records the changes, something
along the lines of a timestamp of the change with substring start and
end positions of the change with the before and after text that has
changed that can be used to 'replay' the changes.
When you want to rewind to a certain time you find all entries after the
given time and undo the changes to get back to where it was.
Is there any possibility how to solve it? I have heard that I can do it
with triggers (but the worst thing is how to implement diffs) but I hope
that there is any other (easier) way.
Triggers are the most reliable way to implement this, I would think that
pl/perl may be the fastest way to implement it as a trigger.
Basically you would need to compare before and after as the record was
saved - doing that with 100MB of data will make saving changes somewhat
slower.
What sort of client is updating this data?
I would think that the client could keep track of changes as they are
typed and save this info with the updated data thus removing the time to
compare the before and after data at the DB end.
--
Shane Ambler
pgSQL@xxxxxxxxxx
Get Sheeky @ http://Sheeky.Biz
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