Hi Csaba,
Because I have a where clause limiting which records I'm deleting.
I'm deleting old info from a database, so I'm doing:
DELETE FROM sessions WHERE EXISTS (SELECT sessiontime FROM sessions
WHERE sessiontime < (timenow-7days) LIMIT 100)
(timenow-7days is evaluated in PHP and made an int).
So every time the page gets hit, I'm deleting up to 100 records that are
older than 7 days..
Csaba Nagy wrote:
> Hi Chris,
>
> Just a thought: if you have to clear the table anyway, wouldn't it work
> for you to use truncate ? That should be faster than delete.
>
> HTH,
> Csaba.
>
> On Thu, 2005-04-07 at 04:11, Chris Smith wrote:
>
>>I don't care about the order in my particular case, just that I have to
>>clear the table.
>>
>>I'll try the subquery and see how I go :)
>>
>>Thanks!
>>
>>Neil Conway wrote:
>>
>>>Chris Smith wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>I'm trying to use a limit clause with delete, but it doesn't work at
>>>>the moment
>>>
>>>
>>>It isn't in the SQL standard, and it would have undefined behavior: the
>>>sort order of a result set without ORDER BY is unspecified, so you would
>>>have no way to predict which rows DELETE would remove.
>>>
>>>
>>>>delete from table where x='1' limit 1000;
>>>
>>>
>>>You could use a subquery to achieve this:
>>>
>>>DELETE FROM table WHERE x IN
>>> (SELECT x FROM table ... ORDER BY ... LIMIT ...);
>>>
>>>-Neil
>>>
>>>---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
>>>TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command
>>> (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to majordomo@postgresql.org)
>>>
>
>
>
--
Regards,
Chris Smith
Unit 2, 3 National Street, Rozelle, NSW 2039 Australia
Ph: +61 2 9555 5570
Fx: +61 2 9555 5571
email: info@interspire.com
web: http://www.interspire.com