Hi~ everyone. Here I have a table with more than 40 million pieces of data, when I use COUNT, GROUP BY or ORDER BY to query this table, it will take about 4 seconds to give a result. How can I reduce the query time?
@WhatsThePoint From what I understand, checking fields individually doesn't work the same way as checking "row values" behind the curtain
I've always been doing where t1.a > t2.a and t1.b > t2.b which would guarantee that t1 comes after t2. However, conceptually it's not the same to say that the "id is greater than ... and the date is greater than ...", than saying "this row is ordered after the other"
the DevOps engineer and I have scripts created for giving people the ability to backup and restore databases on a secure system (yeah I know just having a DevOps engineer isn't devops - the company isn't doing devops, just thinks it is). We want to create a web page or ui so that the people can click buttons, spin things up and destroy them themselves and leave us out of it
Dev won't give us resources for a js developer for it so we may have to do it ourselves
non techincal but easiest way to say it - Make devs part of the ops team, make ops team write code, all with the goal of reducing bottlenecks, improving/increasing delivery, getting value out there
there's more definitions out there, I'd encourage you read them
I have yet to find a single concrete defition of what a DevOps team does.
From what I get it's just the usual dev stack profile, there are very few companies I've been at where devs don't implicitly participate in deployments and such.
DevOps is a set of software development practices that combines software development (Dev) and information technology operations (Ops) to shorten the systems development life cycle while delivering features, fixes, and updates frequently in close alignment with business objectives
What it says is that it merges the dev and IT departments, i.e. what I've been doing all my life.
I develop, I test, I commit, I build RC, I deploy, I run FAT, I run SAT, I write docs.
Maybe it's because I've never worked in a company where someone else handles the process of deploying infrastructure and such, it was always me and my hairy balls on the stove.
also I don't think you can be DevOps "by yourself" @HéctorÁlvarez - you need to get all teams involved. So Devs feel the pain of deployments - if they write code that breaks something, they're on call to feel the pain of what it does and have to fix it. They learn to make sure to not write code that breaks stuff.
But I've always worked in such teams. It's inherently part of my job to do all that stuff. We even had a tip jar, every time someone committed something that ended up being a compilation error had to put 3€ in the tip jar and at the end of the year we'd buy some food with the money.
Then again, we didn't have a deployment team, we deployed ourselves
I've got a Postgres query which returns an identifier column if there are duplicate records: select node_identifier from table as e group by e.node_identifier HAVING count(*) > 1;
Can I use the returned node_identifier vector from the above query to filter my main table? I.e. return all records if its node_identifer is contained in the return of the above query?
im pretty new to some advanced sql stuff, but in normal programming languages (java, c#, javascript, etc) a catch which throws the caught stuff is not really a catch at all
the only thing I could think about is that it throws something different than what it catches