I want to delete rows on one my tables that are more than 7 days old. What is the best way to do this? to make a cron job that runs every night or does PostgreSQL have built in features for doing something like this?
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1Is there a timestamp in the row?– Clodoaldo NetoAug 12, 2013 at 12:57
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the rows do have timestamp– AryaAug 12, 2013 at 12:58
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Why delete the data, why not just query around it? And if you run the job nightly, you'll have data almost eight days old just before the job runs - why not run hourly, or every minute?– JoshAug 12, 2013 at 13:25
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@Josh I could query around it, but the data will not be used anymore and it would just size to my database and it would make backups, restores take longer. I was going to run nightly since I'm not aware of how much of a performance drop my server will have while doing the deletes.– AryaAug 12, 2013 at 13:45
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4Consider adding partitions to the table in question (manual) if the table is big. It will allow you to delete old records very quick and avoid table bloat.– Ihor RomanchenkoAug 12, 2013 at 14:17
3 Answers
PostgreSQL does not currently have a built-in cron-like functionality, so I'd use the system's cron to run a suitable delete statement. If you already have a btree index on the timestamp column, you might as well run the delete much more frequently than nightly, taking out small chunks at a time. If you don't have the index, then running it nightly during off-peak times would be better.
If these don't have the performance you need, you could try partitioning. But I'd do that as a last resort, not a first resort.
The easiest way (for me) to schedule a DB job is to create a cron job, that executes a SQL script using psql
.
Here
you can read about psql
. Use -f
or -c
to pass the SQL commands to psql
.
Also it might be easier to write a PL/pgSQL function, that does your job and call it from psql
with SELECT my_function();