Antonio Sergio de Mello e Souza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I need to perform a tree traversal on a big table (millions of rows). > To avoid recursive queries, one for each non-leaf node, this table has, > in addition to its 70 columns, a VARCHAR(30000) column that is used > exclusively to sort the rows with the required order. The actual content > length in that column is expected to be, on average, much less than the > declared limit and the text will be composed of digits and letters only.
Are there any entries that will actually approach 30000 chars? > Please, are there any restrictions about using such a wide column to > order a table? No. > Can an index on that column help? btree indexes can't cope with index entries wider than 1/3 page, so you'd probably find that building a btree index fails, if there really are 30k-wide entries in the column. This limit is squishy because the entries can be TOAST-compressed, but you're not likely to get 12:1 compression. You could improve matters by increasing BLXKSZ to 32K, however; then you'd only need 3:1 compression, which might work depending on how repetitive the column data is. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: subscribe and unsubscribe commands go to [EMAIL PROTECTED]