Re: Partition with check constraint with "like"

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sorry, forgot to attach the test cases.
Postgres 13 | db<>fiddle




On Friday, May 21, 2021, 03:59:18 PM PDT, Nagaraj Raj <nagaraj.sf@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:


Hi, 

This is also not working,


create table mytable_z partition of mytable for values from ('Z') to ('[')
partition by range(id);


ERROR: empty range bound specified for partition "mytable_z" DETAIL: Specified lower bound ('Z') is greater than or equal to upper bound ('['). SQL state: 42P17


DB running on version PostgreSQL 11.6, compiled by Visual C++ build 1800, 64-bit

On Friday, May 21, 2021, 02:00:38 PM PDT, Michel SALAIS <msalais@xxxxxxx> wrote:


Hi

I don’t  discuss here the choice itself but this is not correct:

create table mytable_z of mytable  for values from ('Z') to ('Z[');

 

It should be

create table mytable_z of mytable  for values from ('Z') to ('[')

 

Michel SALAIS

 

De : Nagaraj Raj <nagaraj.sf@xxxxxxxxx>
Envoyé : vendredi 21 mai 2021 18:39
À : David Rowley <dgrowleyml@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc : Justin Pryzby <pryzby@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>; Pgsql-performance <pgsql-performance@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Objet : Re: Partition with check constraint with "like"

 

Hi David,

 

Hi,

 

I am trying to create partitions on the table which have around 2BIL records and users will always look for the "name", its not possible to create a partition with a list, so we are trying to create a partition-based first letter of the name column. name column has a combination of alpha numeric values.

 

 

 

> postgres=# select chr(ascii('z')+1) ;
> chr
> -----
> {
> (1 row)

 

I tried as below, I'm able to create a partition table for 'Z', but it's not identifying partition table. 

 

 

postgres=# select chr(ascii('Z')+1) ;
chr
-----
[
(1 row)

 

create table mytable_z of mytable  for values from ('Z') to ('Z[');

CREATE TABLE 

 

insert into mytable  values(4,'ZAR83NB');

 

ERROR: no partition of relation "mytable" found for row DETAIL: Partition key of the failing row contains (name) = (ZAR83NB). SQL state: 23514

 

 

 

 

 

On Friday, May 21, 2021, 01:24:13 AM PDT, David Rowley <dgrowleyml@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

 

 

On Fri, 21 May 2021 at 19:02, Nagaraj Raj <nagaraj.sf@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> then what would be the range of Z
> FROM (Z) to (?) ;

postgres=# select chr(ascii('z')+1) ;
chr
-----
{
(1 row)


> same way for 9

postgres=# select chr(ascii('9')+1) ;
chr
-----
:
(1 row)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII

You can also use MINVALUE and MAXVALUE to mean unbounded at either end
of the range.

But is there a particular need that you want to partition this way? It
seems like it might be a bit painful to maintain, especially if you're
not limiting yourself to ASCII or ANSI characters.

You might want to consider HASH partitioning if you're just looking
for a way to keep your tables and indexes to a more manageable size.
You've not really mentioned your use case here, so it's hard to give
any advice.

There are more details about partitioning in
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/ddl-partitioning.html



David


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