On 4/14/15 10:56 AM, dgabriel wrote:
David G Johnston wrote
Well, that is half right anyway. UNLOGGED tables obey checkpoints just
like any other table. The missing feature is an option to leaved restored
the last checkpoint. Instead, not knowing whether there were changes
since the last checkpoint, the system truncated the relation.
What use case is there for a behavior that the last checkpoint data is
left on the relation upon restarting - not knowing whether it was possible
the other data could have been written subsequent?
If is possible to restore the table at last checkpoint state that will be
more than enough. I don't care about the changes since last checkpoint, I am
willing to lose those changes. There are use cases where is acceptable to
lose some data, for example in a cache system, it is not a big issue if we
lose some cached data.
It is not. Unless you ensure that data is written to WAL (on disk)
BEFORE it is written to the data pages, you will probably have
corruption after a crash, and have no way to prevent or possibly even
detect the corruption.
--
Jim Nasby, Data Architect, Blue Treble Consulting
Data in Trouble? Get it in Treble! http://BlueTreble.com
--
Sent via pgsql-performance mailing list (pgsql-performance@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-performance