Difference between revisions of "PostgreSQL/From MySQL"
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| '''MySQL''' || '''PostgreSQL''' || '''Supported by both?''' | | '''MySQL''' || '''PostgreSQL''' || '''Supported by both?''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | LIMIT | + | | LIMIT ''offset'', ''count'' || LIMIT ''count'' OFFSET ''offset'' || Yes |
|- | |- | ||
| BOOLEAN <br /> INT <br /> INT(''n'') <br /> INTEGER(''n'') <br /> TINYINT <br /> TINYINT(''n'') <br /> TINYINTEGER <br /> TINYINTEGER(''n'') <br /> MEDIUMINT <br /> MEDIUMINT(''n'') <br /> MEDIUMINTEGER <br /> MEDIUMINTEGER(''n'') <br /> SMALLINT <br /> SMALLINT(''n'') <br /> SMALLINTEGER <br /> SMALLINTEGER(''n'') || INTEGER || Yes<sup>(1)</sup> | | BOOLEAN <br /> INT <br /> INT(''n'') <br /> INTEGER(''n'') <br /> TINYINT <br /> TINYINT(''n'') <br /> TINYINTEGER <br /> TINYINTEGER(''n'') <br /> MEDIUMINT <br /> MEDIUMINT(''n'') <br /> MEDIUMINTEGER <br /> MEDIUMINTEGER(''n'') <br /> SMALLINT <br /> SMALLINT(''n'') <br /> SMALLINTEGER <br /> SMALLINTEGER(''n'') || INTEGER || Yes<sup>(1)</sup> |
Revision as of 15:11, 7 February 2008
The following table shows how to get around some MySQL-specific non SQL-92 syntax.
MySQL | PostgreSQL | Supported by both? |
LIMIT offset, count | LIMIT count OFFSET offset | Yes |
BOOLEAN INT INT(n) INTEGER(n) TINYINT TINYINT(n) TINYINTEGER TINYINTEGER(n) MEDIUMINT MEDIUMINT(n) MEDIUMINTEGER MEDIUMINTEGER(n) SMALLINT SMALLINT(n) SMALLINTEGER SMALLINTEGER(n) |
INTEGER | Yes(1) |
BOOLEAN | INTEGER CHECK (column IN ('0', '1')) | No |
INTEGER UNSIGNED | INTEGER CHECK (column > -1) | No |
INTEGER SIGNED | INTEGER | Yes |
INTEGER AUTO_INCREMENT | SERIAL PRIMARY KEY | No(2) |
VARCHAR(n) CHAR(n) LONGTEXT BLOB LONGBLOB |
TEXT | Yes(3) |
DATETIME DATETIME NOT NULL DEFAULT '0000-00-00 00:00:00' |
TIMESTAMP TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW() |
No |
'0000-00-00 00:00:00' | NOW() | No |
CHARACTER SET UTF8 COLLATE UTF8_BIN | No(4) | |
column SET('value1', 'value2') | column TEXT CHECK (column IN ('value1', 'value2')) | No(5) |
<columndef> COMMENT comment | COMMENT ON COLUMN column IS 'comment' | No |
[UNIQUE] KEY indexname (column1, column2) | CREATE [UNIQUE] INDEX indexname ON tablename (column1, column2) | Yes |
Notes
- PostgreSQL has INT2 (SMALLINT), INT4 (INTEGER) and INT8 (BIGINT), but use INTEGER unless you want ones > 231 in which case use BIGINT.
- The SERIAL type is an auto-incrementing INTEGER sequence (implicitly created at CREATE TABLE time), maintained externally from the table (akin to an index). Autoincrementing integers suck in distributed scenarios, consider a UUID or composite key instead.
- PostgreSQL couldn't care less, and stores them all as varying text anyway. Insisting on a length won't make it faster or use less disk space.
- Create your database with UTF8 encoding.
- As of 8.3 one can now go
CREATE TYPE type AS ENUM ('value1', 'value2')
column type
Useful magic MySQL incantation:
mysqldump fez_svn_empty -v -n --compatible=ansi,postgresql --complete-insert=TRUE --extended-insert=FALSE --compact --default-character-set=UTF8 -r fez_svn_empty.sql
For now, remove all KEY and FULLTEXT KEY declarations from the above sql file
Importing rows from a MySQL dump that uses INTEGER AUTO_INCREMENT for primary keys into a new PostgreSQL database using SERIAL primary keys is problematic. Options include:
- reset the PostgreSQL sequences to start from MAX(idcolumn) + 1.
SELECT MAX(idcolumn) + 1 AS startvalue
CREATE SEQUENCE newsequence INCREMENT BY 1 MINVALUE 1 NO MAXVALUE START WITH startvalue CACHE 1 NO CYCLE
ALTER TABLE table ALTER COLUMN idcolumn SET DEFAULT NEXTVAL('newsequence') - edit the dump to remove idcolumn values from the INSERT statements (highly tedious and probably not easily scriptable)