Hi all, I think that global indexes could be useful sometimes. That is why Oracle implements them. Just to mention two benefits that could be required by a lot of people: - Global uniqueness which shouldn't be in conflict with partitioning - Performance! Well, when index is on a column which is not the partitioning key. A global index would be better for performance... Nevertheless, this doesn't go without any price and you have described this very well. That is why Oracle invalidates global indexes when some partitioning maintenance operations are achieved. These indexes have to be rebuilt. But, anyway, such operations could be done "concurrently" or "online"... Michel SALAIS -----Message d'origine----- De : David Rowley <dgrowleyml@xxxxxxxxx> Envoyé : lundi 12 juillet 2021 02:57 À : Nagaraj Raj <nagaraj.sf@xxxxxxxxx> Cc : Christophe Pettus <xof@xxxxxxxxxxxx>; pgsql-performance@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Objet : Re: Partition column should be part of PK On Mon, 12 Jul 2021 at 12:37, Nagaraj Raj <nagaraj.sf@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > personally, I feel this design is very bad compared to other DB servers. I'm not sure exactly what you're referring to here as you didn't quote it, but my guess is you mean our lack of global index support. Generally, there's not all that much consensus in the community that this would be a good feature to have. Why do people want to use partitioning? Many people do it so that they can quickly remove data that's no longer required with a simple DETACH operation. This is metadata only and is generally very fast. Another set of people partition as their tables are very large and they become much easier to manage when broken down into parts. There's also a group of people who do it for the improved data locality. Unfortunately, if we had a global index feature then that requires building a single index over all partitions. DETACH is no longer a metadata-only operation as we must somehow invalidate or remove tuples that belong to the detached partition. The group of people who partitioned to get away from very large tables now have a very large index. Maybe the only group to get off lightly here are the data locality group. They'll still have the same data locality on the heap. So in short, many of the benefits of partitioning disappear when you have a global index. So, why did you partition your data in the first place? If you feel like you wouldn't mind having a large global index over all partitions then maybe you're better off just using a non-partitioned table to store this data. David