On 8/9/2025 11:47, Ashutosh Bapat wrote:
On Mon, Sep 8, 2025 at 4:01 AM Vivek Gadge <vvkgadg...@gmail.com> wrote:
Looking forward to your guidance.

Thank you


Can you please describe how the query performance is affected because
of the order in which partitions are scanned?
I guess they mentioned that the Postgres optimiser doesn't care about the order of Append's subplans. It is a little sad in some cases. The most critical case is when we have a limitation on the number of tuples returned. In this case, the optimiser could consider the following strategies:
1. Prefer scanning local partitions to foreign ones.
2. Pick first partitions with less startup costs and 'high probability' to obtain all necessary tuples from a minimum set of partitions.

Postgres arranges clauses inside a long expression according to evaluation cost (see order_qual_clauses). So, why not do similar stuff for subplans?

Also, I wonder if it would make sense to shuffle partitions a little and let backends scan partitions one-by-one in different orders just to reduce any sort of contention in case the queries don't fit the partitioning expression.

--
regards, Andrei Lepikhov


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