MOT SQL Coverage and Limitations
MOT design enables almost complete coverage of SQL and future feature sets. For example, standard Postgres SQL is mostly supported, as well common database features, such as stored procedures and user defined functions.
The following describes the various types of SQL coverages and limitations –
Unsupported Features
The following features are not supported by MOT –
- Isolation – SERIALIZABLE isolation is not supported.
- Query Native Compilation (JIT) – Limited SQL coverage.
- LOCAL memory is limited to 1 GB. A transaction can only change data of less than 1 GB.
- Capacity (Data+Index) is limited to available memory.
- No full-text search index.
- Do not support Logical copy.
- SAVEPOINT – not supported.
In addition, the following are detailed lists of various general limitations of MOT tables, MOT indexes, Query and DML syntax and the features and limitations of Query Native Compilation.
MOT Table Limitations
The following lists the functionality limitations of MOT tables –
Partitioning
AES encryption, row-level access control, dynamic data masking
Stream operations
User-defined types
Sub-transactions – supported only in the context of statement blocks inside stored procedures with the following limitation: MOT cannot recover from a Sub-Transaction containing operations other then SELECT, only read-only rollback is allowed. In such case, the parent transaction is aborted.
DML triggers
DDL triggers
Collations other than “C” or “POSIX”
Unsupported Table DDLs
CREATE FOREIGN table LIKE - Limited support, LIKE can any table (MOT and Heap tables), but without any options, data or indexes.
Create table as select
Partition by range
Create table with no-logging clause
DEFERRABLE primary key
Reindex
Tablespace
Create schema with subcommands
Unsupported Data Types
- UUID
- User-Defined Type (UDF)
- Array data type
- NVARCHAR2(n)
- Clob
- Name
- Blob
- Raw
- Path
- Circle
- Reltime
- Bit varying(10)
- Tsvector
- Tsquery
- JSON
- Box
- Text
- Line
- Point
- LSEG
- POLYGON
- INET
- CIDR
- MACADDR
- Smalldatetime
- BYTEA
- Bit
- Varbit
- OID
- Money
- Any unlimited varchar/character varying
- HSTORE
- XML
- Int16
- Abstime
- Tsrange
- Tstzrange
- Int8range
- Int4range
- Numrange
- Daterange
- HLL
UnsupportedIndex DDLs and Index
Create index on decimal/numeric
Create index on nullable columns
Create index, index per table > 9
Create index on key size > 256
The key size includes the column size in bytes + a column additional size, which is an overhead required to maintain the index. The below table lists the column additional size for different column types.
Additionally, in case of non-unique indexes an extra 8 bytes is required.
Thus, the following pseudo code calculates the key size:
keySize =0; for each (column in index){ keySize += (columnSize + columnAddSize); } if (index is non_unique) { keySize += 8; }
Types that are not specified in above table, the column additional size is zero (for instance timestamp).
Unsupported DMLs
- Merge into
- Lock table
- Copy from table
- Upsert
Unsupported JIT features (Native Compilation and Execution)
- JIT SP (Stored Procedures Compilation) – available to SPs accessing only MOT tables.
- The query refers to more than two tables
- The query has any one of the following attributes –
- Aggregation on non-primitive types
- Window functions
- Sub-query sub-links
- Distinct-ON modifier (distinct clause is from DISTINCT ON)
- Recursive (WITH RECURSIVE was specified)
- Modifying CTE (has INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE in WITH)
In addition, the following clauses disqualify a query from lite execution –
- Returning list
- Group By clause
- Grouping sets
- Having clause
- Windows clause
- Distinct clause
- Sort clause that does not conform to native index order - is supported, however all sort columns must be present in the SELECT.
- Set operations
- Constraint dependencies