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Diffstat (limited to 'proposals')
-rw-r--r-- | proposals/2020_sql_size_reduction.md | 16 |
1 files changed, 16 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/proposals/2020_sql_size_reduction.md b/proposals/2020_sql_size_reduction.md index f421e455..2fa39873 100644 --- a/proposals/2020_sql_size_reduction.md +++ b/proposals/2020_sql_size_reduction.md @@ -52,6 +52,8 @@ Other growth is expected to be much smaller, let's say a few GB of disk. This works out to a bit over 600 GByte total disk size. +NOTE: math was wrong? 470 + 80 + 100 -> 650 GByte, call it 700 GByte + ## Idea: finish `ext_id` migration and drop columns+index from `release_rev` @@ -172,3 +174,17 @@ would drop ~20% of data size and ~20% of index size. Would it make more sense to use {ident, editgroup} as the primary key and UNIQ, then have a separate index on `editgroup`? On the assumption that `editgroup` cardinality is much smaller, thus the index disk usage would be smaller. + +## Idea: use binary for hashes + +We currently store file hashes (SHA-1, SHA-256, MD5) and abstracts/`ref_blobs` +keys as TEXT in lower-case hex encoding. Using binary instead could be as much +as a 50% size savings for both column and index storage. The difference becomes +more apparent when all files have all hashes populated. + +base32 encoded strings would be smaller (but non-negligable) savings. + +This change has a reasonable migration path, is entirely internal to postgres +and fatcatd, and would be no change to API schema. Postgres also allows `hex` +encoding on `bytea` data type, which can make reading/debugging reasonable. + |