I have a couple of million rows in a postgresql table. I have up to 20 proceeses writing to that table (a few hundred inserts/updates per second) and I have a few processes reading from it at the same time (once a while a big select). This results in many failures (Stream Closed, Input/Ouput Error) on both sides, reading and writing.
I now think about splitting that table into multiple tables. I would split by "type" of object, which is basically a field that has only 20 possible values that are kind of equally distributed.
The question is, should I use multiple tables, multiple schemas or multiple databases to guarantee a non blocking access to the data. Or maybe I should use a completly different setup. Another database maybe? Maybe HTable?
The integrity of the data is not that important. It has to be there in the end but I do not really need an Isolation Level or Transactions. I just need a fast system that can write and read from multiple processes without performance impact and that allows to make queries based on field values.
Right now I use JDBC with Isolation Level TRANSACTION_READ_UNCOMMITTED and a connection per process.
UPDATE:
The schema looks as follows:
CREATE TABLE rev
(
id integer NOT NULL,
source text,
date timestamp with time zone,
title text,
summary text,
md5sum text,
author text,
content text,
CONSTRAINT rev_id_pk PRIMARY KEY (id),
CONSTRAINT md5sum_un UNIQUE (md5sum)
)
CREATE TABLE resp
(
id integer NOT NULL,
source text,
date timestamp with time zone,
title text,
summary text,
md5sum text,
author text,
content text,
CONSTRAINT resp_id_pk PRIMARY KEY (id),
CONSTRAINT md5sum_un UNIQUE (md5sum)
)
And I have a few indexes on some of the fields.
A sample query looks like:
SELECT * FROM rev LEFT JOIN resp ON rev.id = resp.parent_id WHERE rev.date > ? LIMIT 1000 OFFSET ?
The resp
table is much smaller, but it too gets updates and is queried in the joins.