On 2009-12-01, Rüdiger Sörensen <r.soerensen@xxxxxxx> wrote: > dear all, > > I am building a database that will be really huge and grow rapidly. It > holds data from satellite observations. Data is imported via a java > application. The import is organized via files, that are parsed by the > application; each file hods the data of one orbit of the satellite. > One of the tables will grow by about 40,000 rows per orbit, there are > roughly 13 orbits a day. The import of one day (13 orbits) into the > database takes 10 minutes at the moment. I will have to import data back > to the year 2000 or even older. > I think that there will be a performance issue when the table under > question grows, so I partitioned it using a timestamp column and one > child table per quarter. Unfortunately, the import of 13 orbits now > takes 1 hour instead of 10 minutes as before. I can live with that, if > the import time will not grow sigificantly as the table grows further. > > anybody with comments/advice? > > tia, > Ruediger. Re the apparent performance penalty for your imports... If you implemented partitions with ON INSERT rules, maybe you could "turn on & off" inserts into particular partitions as necessary, i.e. create a RULE while importing a particular range of timestamps, then remove that rule when you won't be inserting more data for that partition? -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general