2015-04-13 10:43 GMT+02:00 Albe Laurenz <laurenz.a...@wien.gv.at>:

> Michael Cheung wrote:
> > I have many similar database to store data for every customer.
> > Structure of database is almost the same.
> > As I use same application to control all these data, so I can only use
> > one database user to connect to these database.
> > And I have no needs to query table for different customer together.
> >
> > I wonder which I should use, different shema or different database to
> store data?
> >
> > I 'd like to know the advantage and disadvantage for using schema or
> database.
>
> In addition to what others have said:
>
> If you use multiple schemas within one database, the danger is greater that
> data are written to or read from the wrong schema if your application has
> a bug
> ans does not make sure to always set search_path or qualify every access
> with a
> schema name.
>
> With multiple databases you are guaranteed not to access data from a
> different
> database.
>
> The main downside that I see to multiple databases is the overhead: each of
> the databases will have its own pg_catalog tables.
>

It can be advantage - if your schema is pretty complex - thousands
procedures, tables, then separate pg_catalog can be better - there are
issues with pg_dump, pg_restore.

So it depends on catalog size and complexity.

Regards

Pavel




>
> Yours,
> Laurenz Albe
>
> --
> Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org)
> To make changes to your subscription:
> http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general
>

Reply via email to