Re: Postgres performance comments from a MySQL user
От | Ian Barwick |
---|---|
Тема | Re: Postgres performance comments from a MySQL user |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 200306121649.45859.barwick@gmx.net обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Postgres performance comments from a MySQL user (Ron Johnson <ron.l.johnson@cox.net>) |
Список | pgsql-general |
On Thursday 12 June 2003 15:50, Ron Johnson wrote: > On Thu, 2003-06-12 at 08:05, Martin Marques wrote: > > On Mié 11 Jun 2003 12:29, Jonathan Bartlett wrote: > > > 3) If your point was to move to a relational database, then you should > > > choose Postgres. MySQL, although it's SQL, hardly qualifies as > > > relational > > > > MySQL doesn't have relations at all, unless you put the InnoDB module, > > which stamps down performance. > > > > An example I tried to do on a MySQL without InnoDB was: > > > > CREATE TABLE testing ( > > id INT, > > word VARCHAR(20) REFERENCES other_table("word") > > ); > > > > (knowing that other_table exists (I prefiously created it) and has word > > as a VARCHAR(20) field). > > > > An error is what I got. > > A table *is* a relation. You seem to be referring to foreign keys. > Maybe MySQL has a different syntax? It accepts syntax like this: CREATE TABLE exmpl6 ( id INT, blah TEXT, INDEX(id), CONSTRAINT id_fkey FOREIGN KEY (id) REFERENCES exmpl5(id) ON DELETE NO ACTION ); but ignores it silently if you omit the "type=innodb" after the table definition (at least in 3.23.x versions). (When developing for MySQL I have a list of gotchas which I attach to the monitor, saves me many happy afternoons of headscratching ;-) Ian Barwick barwick@gmx.net
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