On 11/21/19 6:51 AM, Laurenz Albe wrote:
On Thu, 2019-11-21 at 06:55 -0500, stan wrote:
You can use tablespaces in PostgreSQL, which are directories on a different file system, to put your data elsewhere. But that has very limited use-cases, and normally you don't create a tablespace. About isolation: - The different databases in a cluster are physically located in the same tablespace, but they are logically strictly separated. You cannot connect to one database and access another database from there.
dblink(https://www.postgresql.org/docs/11/dblink.html) and FDW(https://www.postgresql.org/docs/11/sql-createforeigntable.html) would beg to differ.
- There can be several schemas in a database.
There are several schemas in a database. In a new database: test=# \dnS List of schemas Name | Owner --------------------+---------- information_schema | postgres pg_catalog | postgres pg_temp_1 | postgres pg_toast | postgres pg_toast_temp_1 | postgres public | postgres
You can access a table in a schema if you have the required privilege on both the schema and the table. This is entirely independent of physical storage, which is provided by tablespaces. Tables from different databases can be located in the same tablespace and vice versa. Think of "database" and "schema" as a logical separation in SQL. You cannot backup and restore an individual tablespace, only the whole cluster. Yours, Laurenz Albe
-- Adrian Klaver adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx