Re: Adding New Column with default value. - Mailing list pgsql-admin
From | Ron Johnson |
---|---|
Subject | Re: Adding New Column with default value. |
Date | |
Msg-id | CANzqJaBdQ5CsvXzDNWd19-auoLyMT0V7UHjKvXd8Bp4T0oeNZg@mail.gmail.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: Adding New Column with default value. (Ed Sabol <edwardjsabol@gmail.com>) |
List | pgsql-admin |
On Mon, Apr 28, 2025 at 9:13 PM Ed Sabol <edwardjsabol@gmail.com> wrote:
On Apr 28, 2025, at 1:24 PM, Gambhir Singh <gambhir.singh05@gmail.com> wrote:
> Row Count - 50 Billion
I've never dealt with a table that huge personally, but my concern would be that ALTER TABLE will lock the table for a very long time. Is this in a production environment with active usage of this table? Just SELECTs or are we talking UPDATEs and INSERTs as well? If so, you might need to do something more complicated than just ALTER TABLE.
If you have enough disk space in the storage area for this database to have two identical copies of this 50 billion row table (with indexes!), you could make a copy of the table and either ALTER that copy or add the new column at the same time as making the copy and then, in a single transaction, rename the two tables to swap them. If you do it this way, the new table will replace the old table seamlessly without interrupting usage of the table. Somewhere in there, you might need to re-sync the two tables to make sure any rows that got inserted or updated while you were making the copy are incorporated into the new version of the table as well.
Just some initial thoughts on how I would accomplish this and things I would consider when deciding how to do it.
COPY TO of that table, and then COPY FROM into a new table would let OP experiment. Since it's 50Bn rows, COPY TO of a quarter of the rows is probably adequate.
Hopefully this bolding comes through:
"When a column is added with
ADD COLUMN
and a non-volatile DEFAULT
is specified, the default is evaluated at the time of the statement and the result stored in the table's metadata. That value will be used for the column for all existing rows. If no DEFAULT
is specified, NULL is used. In neither case is a rewrite of the table required."According to https://www.postgresql.org/docs/17/sql-altertable.html, "Adding a
CHECK
or NOT NULL
constraint requires scanning the table to verify that existing rows meet the constraint, but does not require a table rewrite."That's probably pretty fast, even if an exclusive lock is required.
Thus, I'd probably try this on the table copy:
ALTER TABLE foo ADD COLUMN bar BIGINT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0;
UPDATE foo SET bar = 0 WHERE pk between 0*1000+0 AND 0*1000+9999;
UPDATE foo SET bar = 0 WHERE pk between 1*1000+0 AND 1*1000+9999;
UPDATE foo SET bar = 0 WHERE pk between 2*1000+0 AND 2*1000+9999;
etc.
The UPDATE statement would be in a bash loop, with the 0, 1, 2, 3... a variable.
I'd also stick an occasional VACUUM in the bash script.
Death to <Redacted>, and butter sauce.
Don't boil me, I'm still alive.
<Redacted> lobster!
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