mengpg@xxxxxxxxx (Marcus Engene) writes: > Greg Stark wrote: >> Alexander Scholz <alexander.scholz1@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >>>Hi, thank you for your answer. >>> >>>Regarding the performance flow when trying to find out how many records are >>>currently being stored in the table, I don't see how an index should help... >>>Nevertheless we've created an unique index on "ID" but SELECT count("ID") from >>>"XYZ" still takes 35 seconds*. (ID is the primary key basing on a sequence, >>>select count(*) isn't faster.) >>> >>>So - what kind of indexing would speed this up then? >> No form of indexing can speed this up. To answer the server has to >> look at >> every record and count up how many of them should be included in your result. > > Why couldn't it be possible to count # of items in an index? > The density of the information (items/inode|block|whatever it's called > in btrees) is likely to be much higher giving less disk i/o. > > I'm sorry if this has been discussed recently. The index does not contain tuple visibility information, and so is *useless* for the purpose. It does not contain the useful information you evidently imagine it does. This question is asked steadily, frequently. -- output = ("cbbrowne" "@" "ntlug.org") http://www3.sympatico.ca/cbbrowne/ Rules of the Evil Overlord #32. "I will not fly into a rage and kill a messenger who brings me bad news just to illustrate how evil I really am. Good messengers are hard to come by." <http://www.eviloverlord.com/>