Christopher Browne wrote: >>I'm also claiming that a true count for any active table is >>meaningless and am *not* suggesting that effort be spent on trying >>to produce such a true count. > > > That's a pretty big assumption that would in fact be WRONG.
Please reread the message from Bruno and reconcile the above statement with his assertion (which I believe) that there is *no* single true count for an active table. [I'm defining 'active' as currently undergoing insert/copy/delete/update actions]. > We have managers interested in counting the number of objects we have > around (As a domain registry, what objects would you imagine those > might be :-)), and they're keen on possibly even being able to > reconcile those counts from day to day based on transaction activity. If Bruno is correct, then they need to do this reconcilation from within a single transaction (the same one that does the COUNT(*)) - or else they are working on an 'inactive' table [one not currently accepting changes]. If neither condition holds, then isn't the result they are using from COUNT(*) currently is *already* an approximation? > Leaping into some sort of vague guesstimation would destroy the > ability to do any kind of analysis of activity, and I daresay enrage > them. No doubt! Let's hope the above conditions hold. > There may be times that a really rough guess can suffice; there are > other times when exactness is absolutely vital. But, as others have said, COUNT(*) does not return a true count for a table, but rather just a true count for the *current transaction*. So COUNT(*)'s from different simultaneous transactions may very well produce different values. > Creating a "fast but WRONG COUNT(*)" which prevented getting the exact > answer that the present implementation provides would be a severe > misfeature. Agreed - note that I did not suggest replacing the current COUNT(*) with an inexact version, but wanted (and now have) a quick way to get a reasonable approximation of the current table size. -- Steve Wampler -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] The gods that smiled on your birth are now laughing out loud. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org