I am sorry for the late reply, when I disabled the hash join command "enable_hashjoin=off" in the postgresql.conf file, it was not working. But I when I used the command "set enable_hashjoin=off" command in the back end. It worked. I am not able to understand why it did not get disabled when I changed it in the postgresql file. ᐧ
On Fri, Feb 13, 2015 at 2:34 AM, Jim Nasby <[email protected]> wrote: > On 2/10/15 9:29 AM, Tom Lane wrote: > >> Ravi Kiran <[email protected]> writes: >> >>> yes sir, I did try the pg_ctl reload command, but its still using the >>> hash >>> join algorithm and not the nested loop algorithm. I even restarted the >>> server, even then its still using the hash join algorithm >>> >> >> Does "show enable_hashjoin" say it's off? If not, I think you must've >> fat-fingered the postgresql.conf change somehow. >> > > For future reference, posts like this belong on pgsql-performance. > > The other possibility is that the query estimates are so high that the > setting doesn't matter. When you set any of the enable_* settings to off, > all that really happens is the planner adds a cost of 10M to those nodes > when it's planning. Normally that's enough to toss those plans out, but in > extreme cases the cost estimates will still come up with the un-desired > plan. > > Can you post EXPLAIN ANALYZE output with the setting on and off? Or at > least plain EXLPAIN output. > -- > Jim Nasby, Data Architect, Blue Treble Consulting > Data in Trouble? Get it in Treble! http://BlueTreble.com >
