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PostgreSQL 16 Administration Cookbook

You're reading from   PostgreSQL 16 Administration Cookbook Solve real-world Database Administration challenges with 180+ practical recipes and best practices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835460580
Length 636 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (5):
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Boriss Mejías Boriss Mejías
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Boriss Mejías
Jimmy Angelakos Jimmy Angelakos
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Jimmy Angelakos
Simon Riggs Simon Riggs
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Simon Riggs
Gianni Ciolli Gianni Ciolli
Author Profile Icon Gianni Ciolli
Gianni Ciolli
Vibhor Kumar Vibhor Kumar
Author Profile Icon Vibhor Kumar
Vibhor Kumar
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. First Steps FREE CHAPTER 2. Exploring the Database 3. Server Configuration 4. Server Control 5. Tables and Data 6. Security 7. Database Administration 8. Monitoring and Diagnosis 9. Regular Maintenance 10. Performance and Concurrency 11. Backup and Recovery 12. Replication and Upgrades 13. Other Books You May Enjoy
14. Index

Dealing with large tables with table partitioning

When we say that PostgreSQL supports table partitioning, we mean the division of a table into distinct independent tables. You want to do this because it makes large tables easier to manage, but also for performance reasons.

Postgres has had partitioning since version 8.1, and that was known as inheritance-based partitioning, which was complex and came with some serious limitations. Since version 10, declarative partitioning has become available, which lets you specify a partitioning method, the partitioning key, and the partition boundaries simply by creating tables through DDL.

How to do it…

Let’s create an example partitioned table. We want to partition our large table of transactions by their timestamp:

CREATE TABLE transactions (
tstamp TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE PRIMARY KEY
,amount NUMERIC
)
PARTITION BY RANGE (tstamp);

Great, that’s the base table created; however, it has no partitions...

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