On Fri, Sep 26, 2008 at 5:03 PM, John Huttley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Andrew,
> There are two problems.
> The first is the that if there is a table with a index and an update is
> performed on a non indexed field,
> the index is still re indexed.

I assume you mean updated, not reindexed, as reindexed has a different
meaning as regards postgresql.  Also, this is no longer true as of
version 8.3.  If you're updating non-indexed fields a lot and you're
not running 8.3 you are doing yourself a huge disservice.

>this is part of the trade-offs of MVCC.

was...  was a part of the trade-offs.

> We should reasonably expect that the total amount of IO will go up, over a
> non-indexed table.
>
> The second thing is that the disk IO throughput goes way down.
>
> This is not an issue with MVCC, as such, except that it exposes the effect
> of a write to an indexed field.

It's really an effect of parallel updates / writes / accesses, and is
always an issue for a database running on a poor storage subsystem.  A
db with a two drive mirror set is always going to be at a disadvantage
to one running on a dozen or so drives in a RAID-10

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