No
2015-08-12 19:10:04.541966+02 by Dan Lyke 2 comments
No: "Will we ever have more than 2^32 rows in that database table?". Yes: "Is there any good reason to *not* use 64 bit row IDs?"
2015-08-12 19:10:04.541966+02 by Dan Lyke 2 comments
No: "Will we ever have more than 2^32 rows in that database table?". Yes: "Is there any good reason to *not* use 64 bit row IDs?"
[ related topics: Databases Furniture ]
comments in descending chronological order (reverse):
#Comment Re: No made: 2015-08-17 20:29:00.38282+02 by: Dan Lyke
Yep. At some point someone used a MySQL MEDIUMINT for a table that... well... and we're having conversations about whether we'll ever hit 4 billion rows and I'm saying "we may not, but there are outside scenarios where in 15 years we might, disk space is cheap, why are we having this discussion?"
#Comment Re: No made: 2015-08-14 19:01:34.565284+02 by: meuon
My default is a bigint for any row id, unless I am sure that the table will not get more than 10 rows.
bigint: 8 bytes. max value, if "signed" ranges from 0 to: 18446744073709551615
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