How can I restructure a table of points with repeating lengthy text ids?
I have a dataset that looks like this:
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,82,49.226215,9.23175,244,1531840519
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,86,49.22584,9.229898,260,1531840525
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,82,49.225726,9.22834,263,1531840530
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,84,49.456019,11.026769,123,1531840479
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,82,49.455454,11.02813,122,1531840484
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,75,49.454935,11.029419,121,1531840489
Multiple tracks of cars of a car-sharing service. The first entry is a random ID that marks one rental. (I guess something like hash(user, car, RNG) ). Every row consists of
ID
,speed
,lat
,lng
,orientation
(deg),epoch
...but the ID
column takes up at least half of the storage. (Don't ask me why this format was chosen).
I want to keep the IDs
, but I'm not sure how to do it. (In PostgreSQL with Django)
My idea is to use one table that only contains the ID
strings and the second table that contains all the other information and a foreign key on the first table.
I just wonder if there is already a feature for this problem directly within PostgreSQL as I can imagine that multiple repetitions of a string in a column is a common problem.
Update:
I worked my way through the full data set, and found only 439252 unique ID Strings.
BigInt + @@@ + uuid: Thanks for pointing that out, however, I will not be able to exploit it as the string-format is not fixed throughout the whole data dump. (I had a manual look at the first thousand or so entries and they use it, but when I tried to implement the approach, I found other formats also.)
postgresql database-design
|
show 6 more comments
I have a dataset that looks like this:
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,82,49.226215,9.23175,244,1531840519
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,86,49.22584,9.229898,260,1531840525
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,82,49.225726,9.22834,263,1531840530
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,84,49.456019,11.026769,123,1531840479
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,82,49.455454,11.02813,122,1531840484
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,75,49.454935,11.029419,121,1531840489
Multiple tracks of cars of a car-sharing service. The first entry is a random ID that marks one rental. (I guess something like hash(user, car, RNG) ). Every row consists of
ID
,speed
,lat
,lng
,orientation
(deg),epoch
...but the ID
column takes up at least half of the storage. (Don't ask me why this format was chosen).
I want to keep the IDs
, but I'm not sure how to do it. (In PostgreSQL with Django)
My idea is to use one table that only contains the ID
strings and the second table that contains all the other information and a foreign key on the first table.
I just wonder if there is already a feature for this problem directly within PostgreSQL as I can imagine that multiple repetitions of a string in a column is a common problem.
Update:
I worked my way through the full data set, and found only 439252 unique ID Strings.
BigInt + @@@ + uuid: Thanks for pointing that out, however, I will not be able to exploit it as the string-format is not fixed throughout the whole data dump. (I had a manual look at the first thousand or so entries and they use it, but when I tried to implement the approach, I found other formats also.)
postgresql database-design
2
How much storage are we talking about that it requires action?
– mustaccio
Nov 28 at 17:53
2
What's the point? You'll need more space and more work to maintain both tables.
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:02
1
One table for Id's+Surrogate Key + Index, Current table + New PK. Is there a chance to change current Id's by some serial field?
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:21
2
@McNets but wouldn't storing that ID only once, and the ID being something like an integer, reduce storage? Then you are only storing that long ID 1 time vs 3 times, like in the example above.
– Anthony Genovese
Nov 28 at 18:24
1
But you still have these ID's in one table >>> same disk space, plus additional space for the new key. And keep in mind you'll need 2 reads or 2 writes to select/insert that table. You would save space if you had more than one table
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:31
|
show 6 more comments
I have a dataset that looks like this:
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,82,49.226215,9.23175,244,1531840519
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,86,49.22584,9.229898,260,1531840525
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,82,49.225726,9.22834,263,1531840530
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,84,49.456019,11.026769,123,1531840479
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,82,49.455454,11.02813,122,1531840484
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,75,49.454935,11.029419,121,1531840489
Multiple tracks of cars of a car-sharing service. The first entry is a random ID that marks one rental. (I guess something like hash(user, car, RNG) ). Every row consists of
ID
,speed
,lat
,lng
,orientation
(deg),epoch
...but the ID
column takes up at least half of the storage. (Don't ask me why this format was chosen).
I want to keep the IDs
, but I'm not sure how to do it. (In PostgreSQL with Django)
My idea is to use one table that only contains the ID
strings and the second table that contains all the other information and a foreign key on the first table.
I just wonder if there is already a feature for this problem directly within PostgreSQL as I can imagine that multiple repetitions of a string in a column is a common problem.
Update:
I worked my way through the full data set, and found only 439252 unique ID Strings.
BigInt + @@@ + uuid: Thanks for pointing that out, however, I will not be able to exploit it as the string-format is not fixed throughout the whole data dump. (I had a manual look at the first thousand or so entries and they use it, but when I tried to implement the approach, I found other formats also.)
postgresql database-design
I have a dataset that looks like this:
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,82,49.226215,9.23175,244,1531840519
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,86,49.22584,9.229898,260,1531840525
4cd1c79bf6a87692@@@b6aa5eeb-8a83-433f-a0ea-6c72708abc1d,82,49.225726,9.22834,263,1531840530
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,84,49.456019,11.026769,123,1531840479
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,82,49.455454,11.02813,122,1531840484
ff9d6b955f214ff0@@@599e1d04-7fc4-4ce4-8c92-22e9d7ac6596,75,49.454935,11.029419,121,1531840489
Multiple tracks of cars of a car-sharing service. The first entry is a random ID that marks one rental. (I guess something like hash(user, car, RNG) ). Every row consists of
ID
,speed
,lat
,lng
,orientation
(deg),epoch
...but the ID
column takes up at least half of the storage. (Don't ask me why this format was chosen).
I want to keep the IDs
, but I'm not sure how to do it. (In PostgreSQL with Django)
My idea is to use one table that only contains the ID
strings and the second table that contains all the other information and a foreign key on the first table.
I just wonder if there is already a feature for this problem directly within PostgreSQL as I can imagine that multiple repetitions of a string in a column is a common problem.
Update:
I worked my way through the full data set, and found only 439252 unique ID Strings.
BigInt + @@@ + uuid: Thanks for pointing that out, however, I will not be able to exploit it as the string-format is not fixed throughout the whole data dump. (I had a manual look at the first thousand or so entries and they use it, but when I tried to implement the approach, I found other formats also.)
postgresql database-design
postgresql database-design
edited Nov 29 at 10:39
asked Nov 28 at 17:31
FooTheBar
1163
1163
2
How much storage are we talking about that it requires action?
– mustaccio
Nov 28 at 17:53
2
What's the point? You'll need more space and more work to maintain both tables.
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:02
1
One table for Id's+Surrogate Key + Index, Current table + New PK. Is there a chance to change current Id's by some serial field?
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:21
2
@McNets but wouldn't storing that ID only once, and the ID being something like an integer, reduce storage? Then you are only storing that long ID 1 time vs 3 times, like in the example above.
– Anthony Genovese
Nov 28 at 18:24
1
But you still have these ID's in one table >>> same disk space, plus additional space for the new key. And keep in mind you'll need 2 reads or 2 writes to select/insert that table. You would save space if you had more than one table
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:31
|
show 6 more comments
2
How much storage are we talking about that it requires action?
– mustaccio
Nov 28 at 17:53
2
What's the point? You'll need more space and more work to maintain both tables.
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:02
1
One table for Id's+Surrogate Key + Index, Current table + New PK. Is there a chance to change current Id's by some serial field?
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:21
2
@McNets but wouldn't storing that ID only once, and the ID being something like an integer, reduce storage? Then you are only storing that long ID 1 time vs 3 times, like in the example above.
– Anthony Genovese
Nov 28 at 18:24
1
But you still have these ID's in one table >>> same disk space, plus additional space for the new key. And keep in mind you'll need 2 reads or 2 writes to select/insert that table. You would save space if you had more than one table
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:31
2
2
How much storage are we talking about that it requires action?
– mustaccio
Nov 28 at 17:53
How much storage are we talking about that it requires action?
– mustaccio
Nov 28 at 17:53
2
2
What's the point? You'll need more space and more work to maintain both tables.
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:02
What's the point? You'll need more space and more work to maintain both tables.
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:02
1
1
One table for Id's+Surrogate Key + Index, Current table + New PK. Is there a chance to change current Id's by some serial field?
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:21
One table for Id's+Surrogate Key + Index, Current table + New PK. Is there a chance to change current Id's by some serial field?
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:21
2
2
@McNets but wouldn't storing that ID only once, and the ID being something like an integer, reduce storage? Then you are only storing that long ID 1 time vs 3 times, like in the example above.
– Anthony Genovese
Nov 28 at 18:24
@McNets but wouldn't storing that ID only once, and the ID being something like an integer, reduce storage? Then you are only storing that long ID 1 time vs 3 times, like in the example above.
– Anthony Genovese
Nov 28 at 18:24
1
1
But you still have these ID's in one table >>> same disk space, plus additional space for the new key. And keep in mind you'll need 2 reads or 2 writes to select/insert that table. You would save space if you had more than one table
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:31
But you still have these ID's in one table >>> same disk space, plus additional space for the new key. And keep in mind you'll need 2 reads or 2 writes to select/insert that table. You would save space if you had more than one table
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:31
|
show 6 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
First, you shouldn't use those IDs in the database. To start off they're clearly a compound ID, with
- bigint (hex encoded)
- uuid
The @@@
is a text-token. That means right off the bat you can make your table substantially smaller very easy.
ALTER TABLE foo
ADD COLUMN id_uuid uuid,
ADD COLUMN id_num bigint;
Now you need to populate it. (essentially we make sure you have 16 characters, prepend an x
and then cast it to a bigint
by proxy of ::bit(64)
)
UPDATE foo
SET id_num =
(
'x'
|| lpad(
(regexp_match(id, '(.*?)@'))[0]
, 16
, '0'
)
)::bit(64)::bigint,
id_uuid = (regexp_match(id, '.*@(.*)$'))[1]::uuid;
After this you could drop the original text id column. That's what you should do when you commit to a direction.
Now you have two id columns, but one of them is 16 bytes, the other is 8 bytes. compared to one text column that is 55 bytes (plus varlena overhead which is like 6 byts for you).
What you really want to do though is rewrite the table with these two columns at the start because that'll impact physical layout and make a big difference. Google for PostgreSQL Tetris for the reasons there..
At the point that you have two ids, and you can start to understand the data, the questions emerge.
- Are both ids necessary, can I drop one and will it make it make difference
- If they're both neccessary, can I store both of them as external vendor ids in a table and assign my own simplier int4 ids?
Depending on the answers to those questions you may want to structure some triggers so on insertion something (like a function you create) takes a text argument, decodes it into a composite type of (uuid,int) and assigns them to the new columns in one pass.
Moreover, you have another massive question here. This is a spatial problem. You have GPS coordinates. If you're talking about billion of rows, you may consider using a table like this until the routes are complete, and then migrating to a GIS solution with LINESTRINGS
and PostGIS. Then you can map the routes in the database, and find what roads were traveled, how many miles the routes were, and place them on a map (or do other fancy goodness). The GIS solution makes the points columnar and gives you the ability to index them too.
You may want a consultant.
add a comment |
I have around around 1.4Billion (1449000000) datapoints. So in uncompressed csv it's around 120GB.
At this scale, and given that an average track has 50 or more points, it's probably worth a shot. While storage itself is cheap these days, you're also improving physical I/O and buffer pool efficiency, squeezing more records into every page.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
First, you shouldn't use those IDs in the database. To start off they're clearly a compound ID, with
- bigint (hex encoded)
- uuid
The @@@
is a text-token. That means right off the bat you can make your table substantially smaller very easy.
ALTER TABLE foo
ADD COLUMN id_uuid uuid,
ADD COLUMN id_num bigint;
Now you need to populate it. (essentially we make sure you have 16 characters, prepend an x
and then cast it to a bigint
by proxy of ::bit(64)
)
UPDATE foo
SET id_num =
(
'x'
|| lpad(
(regexp_match(id, '(.*?)@'))[0]
, 16
, '0'
)
)::bit(64)::bigint,
id_uuid = (regexp_match(id, '.*@(.*)$'))[1]::uuid;
After this you could drop the original text id column. That's what you should do when you commit to a direction.
Now you have two id columns, but one of them is 16 bytes, the other is 8 bytes. compared to one text column that is 55 bytes (plus varlena overhead which is like 6 byts for you).
What you really want to do though is rewrite the table with these two columns at the start because that'll impact physical layout and make a big difference. Google for PostgreSQL Tetris for the reasons there..
At the point that you have two ids, and you can start to understand the data, the questions emerge.
- Are both ids necessary, can I drop one and will it make it make difference
- If they're both neccessary, can I store both of them as external vendor ids in a table and assign my own simplier int4 ids?
Depending on the answers to those questions you may want to structure some triggers so on insertion something (like a function you create) takes a text argument, decodes it into a composite type of (uuid,int) and assigns them to the new columns in one pass.
Moreover, you have another massive question here. This is a spatial problem. You have GPS coordinates. If you're talking about billion of rows, you may consider using a table like this until the routes are complete, and then migrating to a GIS solution with LINESTRINGS
and PostGIS. Then you can map the routes in the database, and find what roads were traveled, how many miles the routes were, and place them on a map (or do other fancy goodness). The GIS solution makes the points columnar and gives you the ability to index them too.
You may want a consultant.
add a comment |
First, you shouldn't use those IDs in the database. To start off they're clearly a compound ID, with
- bigint (hex encoded)
- uuid
The @@@
is a text-token. That means right off the bat you can make your table substantially smaller very easy.
ALTER TABLE foo
ADD COLUMN id_uuid uuid,
ADD COLUMN id_num bigint;
Now you need to populate it. (essentially we make sure you have 16 characters, prepend an x
and then cast it to a bigint
by proxy of ::bit(64)
)
UPDATE foo
SET id_num =
(
'x'
|| lpad(
(regexp_match(id, '(.*?)@'))[0]
, 16
, '0'
)
)::bit(64)::bigint,
id_uuid = (regexp_match(id, '.*@(.*)$'))[1]::uuid;
After this you could drop the original text id column. That's what you should do when you commit to a direction.
Now you have two id columns, but one of them is 16 bytes, the other is 8 bytes. compared to one text column that is 55 bytes (plus varlena overhead which is like 6 byts for you).
What you really want to do though is rewrite the table with these two columns at the start because that'll impact physical layout and make a big difference. Google for PostgreSQL Tetris for the reasons there..
At the point that you have two ids, and you can start to understand the data, the questions emerge.
- Are both ids necessary, can I drop one and will it make it make difference
- If they're both neccessary, can I store both of them as external vendor ids in a table and assign my own simplier int4 ids?
Depending on the answers to those questions you may want to structure some triggers so on insertion something (like a function you create) takes a text argument, decodes it into a composite type of (uuid,int) and assigns them to the new columns in one pass.
Moreover, you have another massive question here. This is a spatial problem. You have GPS coordinates. If you're talking about billion of rows, you may consider using a table like this until the routes are complete, and then migrating to a GIS solution with LINESTRINGS
and PostGIS. Then you can map the routes in the database, and find what roads were traveled, how many miles the routes were, and place them on a map (or do other fancy goodness). The GIS solution makes the points columnar and gives you the ability to index them too.
You may want a consultant.
add a comment |
First, you shouldn't use those IDs in the database. To start off they're clearly a compound ID, with
- bigint (hex encoded)
- uuid
The @@@
is a text-token. That means right off the bat you can make your table substantially smaller very easy.
ALTER TABLE foo
ADD COLUMN id_uuid uuid,
ADD COLUMN id_num bigint;
Now you need to populate it. (essentially we make sure you have 16 characters, prepend an x
and then cast it to a bigint
by proxy of ::bit(64)
)
UPDATE foo
SET id_num =
(
'x'
|| lpad(
(regexp_match(id, '(.*?)@'))[0]
, 16
, '0'
)
)::bit(64)::bigint,
id_uuid = (regexp_match(id, '.*@(.*)$'))[1]::uuid;
After this you could drop the original text id column. That's what you should do when you commit to a direction.
Now you have two id columns, but one of them is 16 bytes, the other is 8 bytes. compared to one text column that is 55 bytes (plus varlena overhead which is like 6 byts for you).
What you really want to do though is rewrite the table with these two columns at the start because that'll impact physical layout and make a big difference. Google for PostgreSQL Tetris for the reasons there..
At the point that you have two ids, and you can start to understand the data, the questions emerge.
- Are both ids necessary, can I drop one and will it make it make difference
- If they're both neccessary, can I store both of them as external vendor ids in a table and assign my own simplier int4 ids?
Depending on the answers to those questions you may want to structure some triggers so on insertion something (like a function you create) takes a text argument, decodes it into a composite type of (uuid,int) and assigns them to the new columns in one pass.
Moreover, you have another massive question here. This is a spatial problem. You have GPS coordinates. If you're talking about billion of rows, you may consider using a table like this until the routes are complete, and then migrating to a GIS solution with LINESTRINGS
and PostGIS. Then you can map the routes in the database, and find what roads were traveled, how many miles the routes were, and place them on a map (or do other fancy goodness). The GIS solution makes the points columnar and gives you the ability to index them too.
You may want a consultant.
First, you shouldn't use those IDs in the database. To start off they're clearly a compound ID, with
- bigint (hex encoded)
- uuid
The @@@
is a text-token. That means right off the bat you can make your table substantially smaller very easy.
ALTER TABLE foo
ADD COLUMN id_uuid uuid,
ADD COLUMN id_num bigint;
Now you need to populate it. (essentially we make sure you have 16 characters, prepend an x
and then cast it to a bigint
by proxy of ::bit(64)
)
UPDATE foo
SET id_num =
(
'x'
|| lpad(
(regexp_match(id, '(.*?)@'))[0]
, 16
, '0'
)
)::bit(64)::bigint,
id_uuid = (regexp_match(id, '.*@(.*)$'))[1]::uuid;
After this you could drop the original text id column. That's what you should do when you commit to a direction.
Now you have two id columns, but one of them is 16 bytes, the other is 8 bytes. compared to one text column that is 55 bytes (plus varlena overhead which is like 6 byts for you).
What you really want to do though is rewrite the table with these two columns at the start because that'll impact physical layout and make a big difference. Google for PostgreSQL Tetris for the reasons there..
At the point that you have two ids, and you can start to understand the data, the questions emerge.
- Are both ids necessary, can I drop one and will it make it make difference
- If they're both neccessary, can I store both of them as external vendor ids in a table and assign my own simplier int4 ids?
Depending on the answers to those questions you may want to structure some triggers so on insertion something (like a function you create) takes a text argument, decodes it into a composite type of (uuid,int) and assigns them to the new columns in one pass.
Moreover, you have another massive question here. This is a spatial problem. You have GPS coordinates. If you're talking about billion of rows, you may consider using a table like this until the routes are complete, and then migrating to a GIS solution with LINESTRINGS
and PostGIS. Then you can map the routes in the database, and find what roads were traveled, how many miles the routes were, and place them on a map (or do other fancy goodness). The GIS solution makes the points columnar and gives you the ability to index them too.
You may want a consultant.
edited Nov 28 at 21:43
answered Nov 28 at 21:30
Evan Carroll
30.8k865201
30.8k865201
add a comment |
add a comment |
I have around around 1.4Billion (1449000000) datapoints. So in uncompressed csv it's around 120GB.
At this scale, and given that an average track has 50 or more points, it's probably worth a shot. While storage itself is cheap these days, you're also improving physical I/O and buffer pool efficiency, squeezing more records into every page.
add a comment |
I have around around 1.4Billion (1449000000) datapoints. So in uncompressed csv it's around 120GB.
At this scale, and given that an average track has 50 or more points, it's probably worth a shot. While storage itself is cheap these days, you're also improving physical I/O and buffer pool efficiency, squeezing more records into every page.
add a comment |
I have around around 1.4Billion (1449000000) datapoints. So in uncompressed csv it's around 120GB.
At this scale, and given that an average track has 50 or more points, it's probably worth a shot. While storage itself is cheap these days, you're also improving physical I/O and buffer pool efficiency, squeezing more records into every page.
I have around around 1.4Billion (1449000000) datapoints. So in uncompressed csv it's around 120GB.
At this scale, and given that an average track has 50 or more points, it's probably worth a shot. While storage itself is cheap these days, you're also improving physical I/O and buffer pool efficiency, squeezing more records into every page.
answered Nov 28 at 19:27
mustaccio
8,95172136
8,95172136
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add a comment |
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2
How much storage are we talking about that it requires action?
– mustaccio
Nov 28 at 17:53
2
What's the point? You'll need more space and more work to maintain both tables.
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:02
1
One table for Id's+Surrogate Key + Index, Current table + New PK. Is there a chance to change current Id's by some serial field?
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:21
2
@McNets but wouldn't storing that ID only once, and the ID being something like an integer, reduce storage? Then you are only storing that long ID 1 time vs 3 times, like in the example above.
– Anthony Genovese
Nov 28 at 18:24
1
But you still have these ID's in one table >>> same disk space, plus additional space for the new key. And keep in mind you'll need 2 reads or 2 writes to select/insert that table. You would save space if you had more than one table
– McNets
Nov 28 at 18:31