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Re: Moving data from one set of tables to another?


  • From: Howard Eglowstein <howard(at)yankeescientific(dot)com>
  • To: Sean Davis <sdavis2(at)mail(dot)nih(dot)gov>
  • Cc: pgsql-novice(at)postgresql(dot)org
  • Subject: Re: Moving data from one set of tables to another?
  • Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2008 19:28:54 -0400
  • Message-id: <48D2E436.2050309@yankeescientific.com> <text/plain>

What confuses me is that I need to do the one select with all three tables and then do three inserts, no? The results is that the 150 fields I get back from the select have to be split into 3 groups of 50 fields each and then written into three tables.

What you're suggesting is that there is some statement which could do the select and the three inserts at once?

Howard

Sean Davis wrote:
You might want to look at insert into ... select ...

You should be able to do this with 1 query per new table (+ the
deletes, obviously).  For a few thousand records, I would expect that
the entire process might take a few seconds.

Sean

On Thu, Sep 18, 2008 at 6:39 PM, Howard Eglowstein
<howard(at)yankeescientific(dot)com> wrote:
Somewhat empty, yes. The single set of 'data_' tables contains 3 years worth
of data. I want to move 2 years worth out into the 'new_' tables. When I'm
done, there will still be 1 year's worth of data left in the original table.

Howard

Carol Walter wrote:
What do you want for your end product?  Are the old tables empty after you
put the data into the new tables?

Carol

On Sep 18, 2008, at 3:02 PM, Howard Eglowstein wrote:

I have three tables called 'data_a', 'data_b' and 'data_c' which each
have 50 columns. One of the columns in each is 'id' and is used to keep
track of which data in data_b and data_c corresponds to a row in data_a.  If
I want to get all of the data in all 150 fields for this month (for
example), I can get it with:

select * from (data_a, data_b, data_c) where data_a.id=data_b.id AND
data_a.id = data_c.id AND timestamp >= '2008-09-01 00:00:00' and timestamp
<= '2008-09-30 23:59:59'


What I need to do is execute this search which might return several
thousand rows and write the same structure into 'new_a', 'new_b' and
'new_c'. What i'm doing now in a C program is executing the search above.
Then I execute:

INSERT INTO data_a (timestamp, field1, field2 ...[imagine 50 of them])
VALUES ('2008-09-01 00:00:00', 'ABC', 'DEF', ...);
Get the ID that was assigned to this row since 'id' is a serial field and
the number is assigned sequentially. Say it comes back as '1'.
INSERT INTO data_b (id, field1, field2 ...[imagine 50 of them]) VALUES
('1', 'ABC', 'DEF', ...);
INSERT INTO data_c (id, field1, field2 ...[imagine 50 of them]) VALUES
('1', 'ABC', 'DEF', ...);

That moves a copy of the three rows of data form the three tables into
the three separate new tables.
From the original group of tables, the id for these rows was, let's say,
'1234'. Then I execute:

DELETE FROM data_a where id='1234';
DELETE FROM data_b where id='1234';
DELETE FROM data_c where id='1234';

That deletes the old data.

This works fine and gives me exactly what I wanted, but is there a better
way? This is 7 SQL calls and it takes about 3 seconds per moved record on
our Linux box.

Any thoughts or suggestions would be appreciated.

Thanks,

Howard

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