so you suggest not to create the tablespace and associate with the database, right? What's about the owner? Still postgres or create user owner? From Oracle we have 4 schemas for cidr database.
CREATE DATABASE "CIDR"
WITH
OWNER = postgres --> or new users????
ENCODING = 'UTF8'
LC_COLLATE = 'en_US.UTF-8'
LC_CTYPE = 'en_US.UTF-8'
TABLESPACE = pg_default
CONNECTION LIMIT = -1;
thank you.
Bach-Nga
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No one in this world is pure and perfect. If you avoid people for their mistakes you will be alone. So judge less, love and forgive more.
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On Tuesday, January 15, 2019 2:26 AM, Thomas Kellerer <spam_eater@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Pepe TD Vo schrieb am 14.01.2019 um 16:24:
> From oracle databases, I have few tablespaces and users created for
> that particular database. How could I do the same for postgres?
The question is: what was the reason to use tablespaces in Oracle?
Most of the time I see an Oracle installation with a tablespace per user, it's to manage space more easily.
As Postgres does not store data in one huge file, this is not really relevant here.
As soon as a table is dropped, the space is released from the filesystem.
So just create the users and let them use the default tablespace, unless you used the tablespaces
to distribute the I/O load to different disks.
Thomas
> From oracle databases, I have few tablespaces and users created for
> that particular database. How could I do the same for postgres?
The question is: what was the reason to use tablespaces in Oracle?
Most of the time I see an Oracle installation with a tablespace per user, it's to manage space more easily.
As Postgres does not store data in one huge file, this is not really relevant here.
As soon as a table is dropped, the space is released from the filesystem.
So just create the users and let them use the default tablespace, unless you used the tablespaces
to distribute the I/O load to different disks.
Thomas