From: | Thomas Kellerer <spam_eater(at)gmx(dot)net> |
---|---|
To: | pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: pg_dump and --inserts / --column-inserts |
Date: | 2010-07-16 20:26:23 |
Message-ID: | i1qf9c$o2t$1@dough.gmane.org |
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Lists: | pgsql-general |
Tom Lane wrote on 16.07.2010 18:40:
> Thomas Kellerer<spam_eater(at)gmx(dot)net> writes:
>> the explanation of the --inserts option of pg_dumps states that
>
>> "The --column-inserts option is safe against column order changes, though even slower."
>
>> The way I read this is, that
>> INSERT INTO table (column, ...) VALUES ...
>> is slower than
>> INSERT INTO table VALUES ...
>
>> Is that really true?
>
> I believe so, though I've not measured by how much.
>
>> Why would explicitely stating the columns be slower than relying on implicit column ordering?
>
> Well, first off, the volume of pg_dump'd data gets a lot larger due to
> all the extra text. If your column values aren't textually wide, you
> could easily be looking at 2x the space. That costs in I/O and network
> transmission.
Of course
> In the second place, it does take time to parse those
> column names and look them up in the catalog. Not much, but it'll add
> up since it's done over again for every row.
Hmm.
For years I have been advocating to always use fully qualified column lists in INSERTs (for clarity and stability)
And now I learn it's slower when I do so :(
Thomas
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