Re: Does it matters the column order in indexes and constraints
От | Richard Huxton |
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Тема | Re: Does it matters the column order in indexes and constraints |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 45A61F18.1030306@archonet.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Does it matters the column order in indexes and constraints creation? (Arnau <arnaulist@andromeiberica.com>) |
Список | pgsql-performance |
Arnau wrote: > Hi all, > > I've got a doubt about how to create an index and a primary key. Lets > say I have the following table: > The country_id column can have maybe 100 - 250 different values. > The customer_id column can have as much several hundred values (less > than 1000). > The telephone is where all will be different. > > So my doubt is, in terms of performance makes any difference the order > of the primary key fields? The same in the index definition? I have > checked the postgresql documentation I haven't been able to find > anything about. Well, it makes no *logical* difference, but clearly the index will have a different shape depending on how you create it. If you regularly write queries that select by country but not by customer, then use (country_id,customer_id). A more likely scenario is that you will access via customer, which in any case is more selective. However, since both colums reference other tables you might want to make sure the "secondary" column has its own index if you do lots of updating on the target FK table. But, the more indexes you have the slower updates will be on this table, since you'll need to keep the indexes up-to-date too. I find it's easier to spot where to put indexes during testing. It's easy to add indexes where they're never used. HTH -- Richard Huxton Archonet Ltd
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