On 9/13/07, Patrice Castet <pcastet@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I wonder if clustering a table improves perfs somehow ? As I understand it, clustering will help cases where you are fetching data in the same sequence as the clustering order, because adjacent rows will be located in adjacent pages on disk; this is because hard drives perform superbly with sequential reads, much less so with random access. For example, given a table foo (v integer) populated with a sequence of integers [1, 2, 3, 4, ..., n], where the column v has an index, and the table is clustered on that index, a query such as "select v from foo order by v" will read the data sequentially from disk, since the data will already be in the correct order. On the other hand, a query such as "select v from foo order by random()" will not be able to exploit the clustering. In other words, clustering is only useful insofar as your access patterns follow the clustering order. Alexander. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org