Claude Agent Skill · by Wshobson

Postgresql Table Design

PostgreSQL Table Design provides guidance on schema design best practices for PostgreSQL databases, covering primary keys, normalization, data types, indexing s

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---name: postgresql-table-designdescription: Use this skill when designing or reviewing a PostgreSQL-specific schema. Covers best-practices, data types, indexing, constraints, performance patterns, and advanced features--- # PostgreSQL Table Design ## Core Rules - Define a **PRIMARY KEY** for reference tables (users, orders, etc.). Not always needed for time-series/event/log data. When used, prefer `BIGINT GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY`; use `UUID` only when global uniqueness/opacity is needed.- **Normalize first (to 3NF)** to eliminate data redundancy and update anomalies; denormalize **only** for measured, high-ROI reads where join performance is proven problematic. Premature denormalization creates maintenance burden.- Add **NOT NULL** everywhere it’s semantically required; use **DEFAULT**s for common values.- Create **indexes for access paths you actually query**: PK/unique (auto), **FK columns (manual!)**, frequent filters/sorts, and join keys.- Prefer **TIMESTAMPTZ** for event time; **NUMERIC** for money; **TEXT** for strings; **BIGINT** for integer values, **DOUBLE PRECISION** for floats (or `NUMERIC` for exact decimal arithmetic). ## PostgreSQL “Gotchas” - **Identifiers**: unquoted → lowercased. Avoid quoted/mixed-case names. Convention: use `snake_case` for table/column names.- **Unique + NULLs**: UNIQUE allows multiple NULLs. Use `UNIQUE (...) NULLS NOT DISTINCT` (PG15+) to restrict to one NULL.- **FK indexes**: PostgreSQL **does not** auto-index FK columns. Add them.- **No silent coercions**: length/precision overflows error out (no truncation). Example: inserting 999 into `NUMERIC(2,0)` fails with error, unlike some databases that silently truncate or round.- **Sequences/identity have gaps** (normal; don't "fix"). Rollbacks, crashes, and concurrent transactions create gaps in ID sequences (1, 2, 5, 6...). This is expected behavior—don't try to make IDs consecutive.- **Heap storage**: no clustered PK by default (unlike SQL Server/MySQL InnoDB); `CLUSTER` is one-off reorganization, not maintained on subsequent inserts. Row order on disk is insertion order unless explicitly clustered.- **MVCC**: updates/deletes leave dead tuples; vacuum handles them—design to avoid hot wide-row churn. ## Data Types - **IDs**: `BIGINT GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY` preferred (`GENERATED BY DEFAULT` also fine); `UUID` when merging/federating/used in a distributed system or for opaque IDs. Generate with `uuidv7()` (preferred if using PG18+) or `gen_random_uuid()` (if using an older PG version).- **Integers**: prefer `BIGINT` unless storage space is critical; `INTEGER` for smaller ranges; avoid `SMALLINT` unless constrained.- **Floats**: prefer `DOUBLE PRECISION` over `REAL` unless storage space is critical. Use `NUMERIC` for exact decimal arithmetic.- **Strings**: prefer `TEXT`; if length limits needed, use `CHECK (LENGTH(col) <= n)` instead of `VARCHAR(n)`; avoid `CHAR(n)`. Use `BYTEA` for binary data. Large strings/binary (>2KB default threshold) automatically stored in TOAST with compression. TOAST storage: `PLAIN` (no TOAST), `EXTENDED` (compress + out-of-line), `EXTERNAL` (out-of-line, no compress), `MAIN` (compress, keep in-line if possible). Default `EXTENDED` usually optimal. Control with `ALTER TABLE tbl ALTER COLUMN col SET STORAGE strategy` and `ALTER TABLE tbl SET (toast_tuple_target = 4096)` for threshold. Case-insensitive: for locale/accent handling use non-deterministic collations; for plain ASCII use expression indexes on `LOWER(col)` (preferred unless column needs case-insensitive PK/FK/UNIQUE) or `CITEXT`.- **Money**: `NUMERIC(p,s)` (never float).- **Time**: `TIMESTAMPTZ` for timestamps; `DATE` for date-only; `INTERVAL` for durations. Avoid `TIMESTAMP` (without timezone). Use `now()` for transaction start time, `clock_timestamp()` for current wall-clock time.- **Booleans**: `BOOLEAN` with `NOT NULL` constraint unless tri-state values are required.- **Enums**: `CREATE TYPE ... AS ENUM` for small, stable sets (e.g. US states, days of week). For business-logic-driven and evolving values (e.g. order statuses) → use TEXT (or INT) + CHECK or lookup table.- **Arrays**: `TEXT[]`, `INTEGER[]`, etc. Use for ordered lists where you query elements. Index with **GIN** for containment (`@>`, `<@`) and overlap (`&&`) queries. Access: `arr[1]` (1-indexed), `arr[1:3]` (slicing). Good for tags, categories; avoid for relations—use junction tables instead. Literal syntax: `'{val1,val2}'` or `ARRAY[val1,val2]`.- **Range types**: `daterange`, `numrange`, `tstzrange` for intervals. Support overlap (`&&`), containment (`@>`), operators. Index with **GiST**. Good for scheduling, versioning, numeric ranges. Pick a bounds scheme and use it consistently; prefer `[)` (inclusive/exclusive) by default.- **Network types**: `INET` for IP addresses, `CIDR` for network ranges, `MACADDR` for MAC addresses. Support network operators (`<<`, `>>`, `&&`).- **Geometric types**: `POINT`, `LINE`, `POLYGON`, `CIRCLE` for 2D spatial data. Index with **GiST**. Consider **PostGIS** for advanced spatial features.- **Text search**: `TSVECTOR` for full-text search documents, `TSQUERY` for search queries. Index `tsvector` with **GIN**. Always specify language: `to_tsvector('english', col)` and `to_tsquery('english', 'query')`. Never use single-argument versions. This applies to both index expressions and queries.- **Domain types**: `CREATE DOMAIN email AS TEXT CHECK (VALUE ~ '^[^@]+@[^@]+$')` for reusable custom types with validation. Enforces constraints across tables.- **Composite types**: `CREATE TYPE address AS (street TEXT, city TEXT, zip TEXT)` for structured data within columns. Access with `(col).field` syntax.- **JSONB**: preferred over JSON; index with **GIN**. Use only for optional/semi-structured attrs. ONLY use JSON if the original ordering of the contents MUST be preserved.- **Vector types**: `vector` type by `pgvector` for vector similarity search for embeddings. ### Do not use the following data types - DO NOT use `timestamp` (without time zone); DO use `timestamptz` instead.- DO NOT use `char(n)` or `varchar(n)`; DO use `text` instead.- DO NOT use `money` type; DO use `numeric` instead.- DO NOT use `timetz` type; DO use `timestamptz` instead.- DO NOT use `timestamptz(0)` or any other precision specification; DO use `timestamptz` instead- DO NOT use `serial` type; DO use `generated always as identity` instead. ## Table Types - **Regular**: default; fully durable, logged.- **TEMPORARY**: session-scoped, auto-dropped, not logged. Faster for scratch work.- **UNLOGGED**: persistent but not crash-safe. Faster writes; good for caches/staging. ## Row-Level Security Enable with `ALTER TABLE tbl ENABLE ROW LEVEL SECURITY`. Create policies: `CREATE POLICY user_access ON orders FOR SELECT TO app_users USING (user_id = current_user_id())`. Built-in user-based access control at the row level. ## Constraints - **PK**: implicit UNIQUE + NOT NULL; creates a B-tree index.- **FK**: specify `ON DELETE/UPDATE` action (`CASCADE`, `RESTRICT`, `SET NULL`, `SET DEFAULT`). Add explicit index on referencing column—speeds up joins and prevents locking issues on parent deletes/updates. Use `DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED` for circular FK dependencies checked at transaction end.- **UNIQUE**: creates a B-tree index; allows multiple NULLs unless `NULLS NOT DISTINCT` (PG15+). Standard behavior: `(1, NULL)` and `(1, NULL)` are allowed. With `NULLS NOT DISTINCT`: only one `(1, NULL)` allowed. Prefer `NULLS NOT DISTINCT` unless you specifically need duplicate NULLs.- **CHECK**: row-local constraints; NULL values pass the check (three-valued logic). Example: `CHECK (price > 0)` allows NULL prices. Combine with `NOT NULL` to enforce: `price NUMERIC NOT NULL CHECK (price > 0)`.- **EXCLUDE**: prevents overlapping values using operators. `EXCLUDE USING gist (room_id WITH =, booking_period WITH &&)` prevents double-booking rooms. Requires appropriate index type (often GiST). ## Indexing - **B-tree**: default for equality/range queries (`=`, `<`, `>`, `BETWEEN`, `ORDER BY`)- **Composite**: order matters—index used if equality on leftmost prefix (`WHERE a = ? AND b > ?` uses index on `(a,b)`, but `WHERE b = ?` does not). Put most selective/frequently filtered columns first.- **Covering**: `CREATE INDEX ON tbl (id) INCLUDE (name, email)` - includes non-key columns for index-only scans without visiting table.- **Partial**: for hot subsets (`WHERE status = 'active'` → `CREATE INDEX ON tbl (user_id) WHERE status = 'active'`). Any query with `status = 'active'` can use this index.- **Expression**: for computed search keys (`CREATE INDEX ON tbl (LOWER(email))`). Expression must match exactly in WHERE clause: `WHERE LOWER(email) = 'user@example.com'`.- **GIN**: JSONB containment/existence, arrays (`@>`, `?`), full-text search (`@@`)- **GiST**: ranges, geometry, exclusion constraints- **BRIN**: very large, naturally ordered data (time-series)—minimal storage overhead. Effective when row order on disk correlates with indexed column (insertion order or after `CLUSTER`). ## Partitioning - Use for very large tables (>100M rows) where queries consistently filter on partition key (often time/date).- Alternate use: use for tables where data maintenance tasks dictates e.g. data pruned or bulk replaced periodically- **RANGE**: common for time-series (`PARTITION BY RANGE (created_at)`). Create partitions: `CREATE TABLE logs_2024_01 PARTITION OF logs FOR VALUES FROM ('2024-01-01') TO ('2024-02-01')`. **TimescaleDB** automates time-based or ID-based partitioning with retention policies and compression.- **LIST**: for discrete values (`PARTITION BY LIST (region)`). Example: `FOR VALUES IN ('us-east', 'us-west')`.- **HASH**: for even distribution when no natural key (`PARTITION BY HASH (user_id)`). Creates N partitions with modulus.- **Constraint exclusion**: requires `CHECK` constraints on partitions for query planner to prune. Auto-created for declarative partitioning (PG10+).- Prefer declarative partitioning or hypertables. Do NOT use table inheritance.- **Limitations**: no global UNIQUE constraints—include partition key in PK/UNIQUE. FKs from partitioned tables not supported; use triggers. ## Special Considerations ### Update-Heavy Tables - **Separate hot/cold columns**—put frequently updated columns in separate table to minimize bloat.- **Use `fillfactor=90`** to leave space for HOT updates that avoid index maintenance.- **Avoid updating indexed columns**—prevents beneficial HOT updates.- **Partition by update patterns**—separate frequently updated rows in a different partition from stable data. ### Insert-Heavy Workloads - **Minimize indexes**—only create what you query; every index slows inserts.- **Use `COPY` or multi-row `INSERT`** instead of single-row inserts.- **UNLOGGED tables** for rebuildable staging data—much faster writes.- **Defer index creation** for bulk loads—>drop index, load data, recreate indexes.- **Partition by time/hash** to distribute load. **TimescaleDB** automates partitioning and compression of insert-heavy data.- **Use a natural key for primary key** such as a (timestamp, device_id) if enforcing global uniqueness is important many insert-heavy tables don't need a primary key at all.- If you do need a surrogate key, **Prefer `BIGINT GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY` over `UUID`**. ### Upsert-Friendly Design - **Requires UNIQUE index** on conflict target columns—`ON CONFLICT (col1, col2)` needs exact matching unique index (partial indexes don't work).- **Use `EXCLUDED.column`** to reference would-be-inserted values; only update columns that actually changed to reduce write overhead.- **`DO NOTHING` faster** than `DO UPDATE` when no actual update needed. ### Safe Schema Evolution - **Transactional DDL**: most DDL operations can run in transactions and be rolled back—`BEGIN; ALTER TABLE...; ROLLBACK;` for safe testing.- **Concurrent index creation**: `CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY` avoids blocking writes but can't run in transactions.- **Volatile defaults cause rewrites**: adding `NOT NULL` columns with volatile defaults (e.g., `now()`, `gen_random_uuid()`) rewrites entire table. Non-volatile defaults are fast.- **Drop constraints before columns**: `ALTER TABLE DROP CONSTRAINT` then `DROP COLUMN` to avoid dependency issues.- **Function signature changes**: `CREATE OR REPLACE` with different arguments creates overloads, not replacements. DROP old version if no overload desired. ## Generated Columns - `... GENERATED ALWAYS AS (<expr>) STORED` for computed, indexable fields. PG18+ adds `VIRTUAL` columns (computed on read, not stored). ## Extensions - **`pgcrypto`**: `crypt()` for password hashing.- **`uuid-ossp`**: alternative UUID functions; prefer `pgcrypto` for new projects.- **`pg_trgm`**: fuzzy text search with `%` operator, `similarity()` function. Index with GIN for `LIKE '%pattern%'` acceleration.- **`citext`**: case-insensitive text type. Prefer expression indexes on `LOWER(col)` unless you need case-insensitive constraints.- **`btree_gin`/`btree_gist`**: enable mixed-type indexes (e.g., GIN index on both JSONB and text columns).- **`hstore`**: key-value pairs; mostly superseded by JSONB but useful for simple string mappings.- **`timescaledb`**: essential for time-series—automated partitioning, retention, compression, continuous aggregates.- **`postgis`**: comprehensive geospatial support beyond basic geometric types—essential for location-based applications.- **`pgvector`**: vector similarity search for embeddings.- **`pgaudit`**: audit logging for all database activity. ## JSONB Guidance - Prefer `JSONB` with **GIN** index.- Default: `CREATE INDEX ON tbl USING GIN (jsonb_col);` → accelerates:  - **Containment** `jsonb_col @> '{"k":"v"}'`  - **Key existence** `jsonb_col ? 'k'`, **any/all keys** `?\|`, `?&`  - **Path containment** on nested docs  - **Disjunction** `jsonb_col @> ANY(ARRAY['{"status":"active"}', '{"status":"pending"}'])`- Heavy `@>` workloads: consider opclass `jsonb_path_ops` for smaller/faster containment-only indexes:  - `CREATE INDEX ON tbl USING GIN (jsonb_col jsonb_path_ops);`  - **Trade-off**: loses support for key existence (`?`, `?|`, `?&`) queries—only supports containment (`@>`)- Equality/range on a specific scalar field: extract and index with B-tree (generated column or expression):  - `ALTER TABLE tbl ADD COLUMN price INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS ((jsonb_col->>'price')::INT) STORED;`  - `CREATE INDEX ON tbl (price);`  - Prefer queries like `WHERE price BETWEEN 100 AND 500` (uses B-tree) over `WHERE (jsonb_col->>'price')::INT BETWEEN 100 AND 500` without index.- Arrays inside JSONB: use GIN + `@>` for containment (e.g., tags). Consider `jsonb_path_ops` if only doing containment.- Keep core relations in tables; use JSONB for optional/variable attributes.- Use constraints to limit allowed JSONB values in a column e.g. `config JSONB NOT NULL CHECK(jsonb_typeof(config) = 'object')` ## Examples ### Users ```sqlCREATE TABLE users (  user_id BIGINT GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY,  email TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,  name TEXT NOT NULL,  created_at TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL DEFAULT now());CREATE UNIQUE INDEX ON users (LOWER(email));CREATE INDEX ON users (created_at);``` ### Orders ```sqlCREATE TABLE orders (  order_id BIGINT GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY,  user_id BIGINT NOT NULL REFERENCES users(user_id),  status TEXT NOT NULL DEFAULT 'PENDING' CHECK (status IN ('PENDING','PAID','CANCELED')),  total NUMERIC(10,2) NOT NULL CHECK (total > 0),  created_at TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL DEFAULT now());CREATE INDEX ON orders (user_id);CREATE INDEX ON orders (created_at);``` ### JSONB ```sqlCREATE TABLE profiles (  user_id BIGINT PRIMARY KEY REFERENCES users(user_id),  attrs JSONB NOT NULL DEFAULT '{}',  theme TEXT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (attrs->>'theme') STORED);CREATE INDEX profiles_attrs_gin ON profiles USING GIN (attrs);```