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Product typeBook
Published inOct 2020
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781838985288
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
Luca Ferrari
Luca Ferrari
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Luca Ferrari

Luca Ferrari has been passionate about computer science since the Commodore 64 era, and today holds a master's degree (with honors) and a Ph.D. from the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia. He has written several research papers, technical articles, and book chapters. In 2011, he was named an Adjunct Professor by Nipissing University. An avid Unix user, he is a strong advocate of open source, and in his free time, he collaborates with a few projects. He met PostgreSQL back in release 7.3; he was a founder and former president of the Italian PostgreSQL Community (ITPUG). He also talks regularly at technical conferences and events and delivers professional training.
Read more about Luca Ferrari

Enrico Pirozzi
Enrico Pirozzi
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Enrico Pirozzi

Enrico Pirozzi, EnterpriseDB certified on implementation management and tuning, with a master's in computer science, has been a PostgreSQL DBA since 2003. Based in Italy, he has been providing database advice to clients in industries such as manufacturing and web development for 10 years. He has been training others on PostgreSQL since 2008. Dedicated to open source technology since early in his career, he is a cofounder of the PostgreSQL Italian mailing list, PostgreSQL-it, and of the PostgreSQL Italian community site, PSQL
Read more about Enrico Pirozzi

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Exploring declarative partitioning

In this section, we will talk about declarative partitioning. It is available in PostgreSQL starting from version 10, but it is best in version 12 in terms of features and performance. We will now look at an example of partitioning by range and an example of partitioning by list.

List partitioning

In the first example of declarative partitioning, we will use the same example as we looked at when we introduced partitioning using inheritance. We will see that things become much simpler using the declarative partitioning method:

  1. First of all, let's drop the parent table and its child tables that we made previously:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS part_tags cascade;
  1. Now let's recreate the same tables using the declarative method. First, we must define our parent table:
CREATE TABLE part_tags (
pk INTEGER NOT NULL DEFAULT nextval('part_tags_pk_seq') ,
level INTEGER NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
tag VARCHAR (255) NOT NULL,
primary key (pk,level)
)
PARTITION...
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Learn PostgreSQL
Published in: Oct 2020Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781838985288

Authors (2)

author image
Luca Ferrari

Luca Ferrari has been passionate about computer science since the Commodore 64 era, and today holds a master's degree (with honors) and a Ph.D. from the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia. He has written several research papers, technical articles, and book chapters. In 2011, he was named an Adjunct Professor by Nipissing University. An avid Unix user, he is a strong advocate of open source, and in his free time, he collaborates with a few projects. He met PostgreSQL back in release 7.3; he was a founder and former president of the Italian PostgreSQL Community (ITPUG). He also talks regularly at technical conferences and events and delivers professional training.
Read more about Luca Ferrari

author image
Enrico Pirozzi

Enrico Pirozzi, EnterpriseDB certified on implementation management and tuning, with a master's in computer science, has been a PostgreSQL DBA since 2003. Based in Italy, he has been providing database advice to clients in industries such as manufacturing and web development for 10 years. He has been training others on PostgreSQL since 2008. Dedicated to open source technology since early in his career, he is a cofounder of the PostgreSQL Italian mailing list, PostgreSQL-it, and of the PostgreSQL Italian community site, PSQL
Read more about Enrico Pirozzi