On Tue, May 19, 2020 at 6:40 AM Tom Lane <tgl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Tory M Blue <tmblue@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
> The command i'm using is
> ALTER TABLE tablename SET WITHOUT OIDS;
> Would a drop column oid be better?
Unfortunately, you're kind of stuck. OIDs are not like regular columns
(at least before v12) --- they are integrated into the tuple header in
a hackish way, and so there's no way to get rid of them without a table
rewrite.
regards, tom lane
Poop :) kind of figured that, so it's just painful.
But I guess if it's doing a table rewrite, is there any configuration params I could boost to help it? Shared_buffers, give it more, work mem, maintenance mem, temp buffers anything you can think of?
There's an alternative if this is a "transaction table" (named, in this example, FOO) which never gets updated (only inserted into and selected from).
Create a new, partitioned, oid-free copy of the table (named NEW_FOO) that's populated with most of the records (all except the most recent). When ready to cut over, you'd stop the applications, copy over the most current records from FOO to NEW_FOO and then rename FOO to OLD_FOO and FOO to OLD_FOO.
Then you can drop OLD_FOO.
--
Angular momentum makes the world go 'round.
Angular momentum makes the world go 'round.