On Thu, Sep 1, 2011 at 12:45 AM, Shane Hathaway <sh...@hathawaymix.org> wrote: > On 08/31/2011 05:11 PM, Darryl Dixon - Winterhouse Consulting wrote: >>> Just had a quick query from my friendly local DBA; he wanted to know why >>> --clear was using DELETE rather than TRUNCATE; his comments were along the >>> lines of: >>> * TRUNCATE creates no UNDO >>> * TRUNCATE cleans out the indexes nicer >>> >>> Is there any real downside or gotcha I should be aware of to following >>> this suggestion in this instance? >> >> To be clear: >> >> This is RelStorage 1.5.0 running against Oracle RAC 10g. >> >> I tried changing the line in question (relstorage/adapters/schema.py line >> 895) to "TRUNCATE TABLE %s" % table, and the following error is generated: >> ORA-02266: unique/primary keys in table referenced by enabled foreign keys >> >> So I guess without a bunch of work it will not be possible. > > Is clearing the database a common operation that should be tuned for > performance? That part of the code is optimized for safety and > readability, not performance.
Replying late, but coming back to this case, I figured it is worth mentioning what I do to work around this (that deleting is slow even on a modest database): I drop the database and re-create. This is quick -- 20 seconds of manual work versus 20+ minutes of waiting for a delete to finish (PostgreSQL); I am pretty sure I will soon just wrap zodbconvert in a shell script (templated in my buildout) -- this avoids the whole truncate versus delete debate (and I can just keep my blob directory intact on the destination). Sean _______________________________________________ For more information about ZODB, see http://zodb.org/ ZODB-Dev mailing list - ZODB-Dev@zope.org https://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zodb-dev