Josh Berkus wrote:
There are basically 2 major parts for materialized views:
A) Planner: Getting the query planner to swap in the MatView for part of
a query automatically for query plan portions which the MatView supports;
B) Maintenance: maintaining the MatView data according to the programmed
scheme (synch, asynch, periodic).

I'm run more into problems where it's perfectly fine to specify using the materialized view directly in the query, but keeping that view up to date usefully was the real problem. The whole idea of getting a MV used automatically is valuable, but far down the roadmap as I see it.

Not everyone would agree of course, and your description does suggest a better way to organize a high-level summary though; here's a first cut:

1) Creation of materalized view
Current state: using "CREATE TABLE AS" or similar mechanism, maintain manually Optimal: "CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW" grammar, metadata to store MV data, dump/reload support

2) Updating materialized views
Current state: periodically create new snapshots, or maintain using triggers Optimal: Built-in refresh via multiple strategies, with minimal locking as to improve concurrent access

3) Using materialized views in the planner
Current state:  specify the manually created MV in queries that can use it
Optimal: Automatically accelerate queries that could be satisfied by substituting available MVs

With (1) being what I think is the only GSoC sized subset here.

I'm not saying someone can't jump right into (3), using the current implementations for (1) and (2) that are floating around out there. I just think it would end up wasting a fair amount of work on prototypes that don't work quite the same way as the eventual fully integrated version. You certainly can start working on (3) without a fully fleshed out implementation of (2), I don't know that it makes sense to work on before (1) though.

--
Greg Smith  2ndQuadrant US  Baltimore, MD
PostgreSQL Training, Services and Support
g...@2ndquadrant.com   www.2ndQuadrant.us


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