Re: How Many Partitions are Good Performing - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Andrew Staller
Subject Re: How Many Partitions are Good Performing
Date
Msg-id CAEsM1FtrDwBBvYjgorN_54Uhe+mqyMSG7xKxcERP79yXBjgQLQ@mail.gmail.com
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In response to Re: How Many Partitions are Good Performing  ("Rakesh Kumar" <rakeshkumar464@mail.com>)
Responses RE: How Many Partitions are Good Performing
Re: How Many Partitions are Good Performing
List pgsql-general
This is the blog post that Rakesh referenced: 
https://blog.timescale.com/time-series-data-postgresql-10-vs-timescaledb-816ee808bac5

Please note, this analysis is done in the context of working with time-series data, where 1000s of chunks is not uncommon because of the append-mostly nature of the workload. 

On Mon, Jan 8, 2018 at 6:54 PM, Rakesh Kumar <rakeshkumar464@mail.com> wrote:

 You should have read carefully what I wrote.  1000 is not an upper limit.  1000 partition is the number after which performance starts dropping .

There is a blog in www.timescale.com which also highlights the same.

Sent: Monday, January 08, 2018 at 6:20 PM
From: "Kumar, Virendra" <Virendra.Kumar@guycarp.com>
To: "pgsql-general@postgresql.org" <pgsql-general@postgresql.org>
Subject: How Many Partitions are Good Performing

Can somebody tell us how many partitions are good number without impacting the performance. We are hearing around a thousand, is that a limit. Do we have plan to increase the number of partitions for a table. We would appreciate if somebody can help us with this?
 
Regards,
Virendra
 
 
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