Skip to content

Vector Types

We have seen vector type in the previous section. In this section, we will show other vector types.

bvector binary vector

The bvector type is a binary vector type in pgvecto.rs. It represents a binary vector, which is a vector where each component can take on two possible values, typically 0 and 1.

Here's an example of creating a table with a bvector column and inserting values:

sql
CREATE TABLE items (
  id bigserial PRIMARY KEY,
  embedding bvector(3) NOT NULL
);

INSERT INTO items (embedding) VALUES ('[1,0,1]'), ('[0,1,0]');

We support three operators to calculate the distance between two bvector values.

  • <-> (bvector_l2_ops): squared Euclidean distance, defined as . The Hamming distance is equivalent to the squared Euclidean distance for binary vectors.
  • <#> (bvector_dot_ops): negative dot product, defined as .
  • <=> (bvector_cos_ops): cosine distance, defined as .
  • <~> (bvector_jaccard_ops): Jaccard distance, defined as .

Index can be created on bvector type as well.

sql
CREATE INDEX your_index_name ON items USING vectors (embedding bvector_l2_ops);

SELECT * FROM items ORDER BY embedding <-> '[1,0,1]' LIMIT 5;

Data constructor

There is a binarize constructor to build bvector from vector:

sql
SELECT binarize(ARRAY[-2, -1, 0, 1, 2]::real[]::vector);;
-- [0, 0, 0, 1, 1]

Performance

The bvector type is optimized for storage and performance. It uses a bit-packed representation to store the binary vector. The distance calculation is also optimized for binary vectors.

Here are some performance benchmarks for the bvector type. We use the dbpedia-entities-openai3-text-embedding-3-large-3072-1M dataset for the benchmark. The VM is n2-standard-8 (8 vCPUs, 32 GB memory) on Google Cloud.

We upsert 1M binary vectors into the table and then run a KNN query for each embedding. It only takes about 600MB memory to index 1M binary vectors, while the vector type takes about 18GB memory to index the same number of vectors.

bvector

We can see that the bvector's accuracy is not as good as the vector type, but it exceeds 95% if we adopt adaptive retrieval.

svector sparse vector

Unlike dense vectors, sparse vectors are very high-dimensional but contain few non-zero values.

Typically, sparse vectors can be created from:

  • Word co-occurrence matrices
  • Term frequency-inverse document frequency (TF-IDF) vectors
  • User-item interaction matrices
  • Network adjacency matrices

Sparse vectors in pgvecto.rs are called svector.

TIP

svector is 32-bit float, 16-bit float sparse vector is not supported yet.

Here's an example of creating a table with a svector column and inserting values:

sql
CREATE TABLE items (
  id bigserial PRIMARY KEY,
  embedding svector(10) NOT NULL
);

INSERT INTO items (embedding) VALUES ('[0.1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0]'), ('[0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0.5]');

We support three operators to calculate the distance between two svector values.

  • <-> (svector_l2_ops): squared Euclidean distance, defined as .
  • <#> (svector_dot_ops): negative dot product, defined as .
  • <=> (svector_cos_ops): cosine distance, defined as .

Index can be created on svector type as well.

sql
CREATE INDEX your_index_name ON items USING vectors (embedding svector_l2_ops);

SELECT * FROM items ORDER BY embedding <-> '[0.3,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0]' LIMIT 1;

Data constructor

There is an index and value constructor to build arbitrary svector:

sql
SELECT to_svector(5, '{0,4}', '{0.3,0.5}');
-- [0.3, 0, 0, 0, 0.5]

vecf16 half-precision vector

Stored as a half-precision number format, vecf16 takes advantage of the 16-bit float, which uses half the memory and bandwidth compared to vector. It is often faster than the regular vector datatype, but may lose some precision.

Here's an example of creating a table with a vecf16 column and inserting values:

sql
CREATE TABLE items (
  id bigserial PRIMARY KEY,
  embedding vecf16(3) NOT NULL
);

INSERT INTO items (embedding) VALUES ('[0.1, 0.2, 0]'), ('[0, 0.1, 0.2]');

We support three operators to calculate the distance between two vecf16 values.

  • <-> (vecf16_l2_ops): squared Euclidean distance, defined as .
  • <#> (vecf16_dot_ops): negative dot product, defined as .
  • <=> (vecf16_cos_ops): cosine distance, defined as .

Index can be created on vecf16 type as well.

sql
CREATE INDEX your_index_name ON items USING vectors (embedding vecf16_l2_ops);

SELECT * FROM items ORDER BY embedding <-> '[0.3,0.2,0.1]' LIMIT 1;

Vector type cast

For vector types, these casts are guaranteed:

  • From REAL[] to vector
  • From vector to other vector types

TIP

Type casts between other vector types must be passed by vector.

This diagram shows the conversion between different data types, where the types connected by arrows can be cast to each other:

uml diagram

Among them, ARRAY and REAL[] are native types of postgreSQL, others are types defined by pgvecto.rs.