On 2015-02-22 10:33:16 +0000, Andrew Gierth wrote: > This is, if I'm understanding the planner logic right, physical-tlist > optimization; it's faster for a table scan to simply return the whole > row (copying nothing, just pointing to the on-disk tuple) and let > hashagg pick out the columns it needs, rather than for the scan to run a > projection step just to select specific columns. > > If there's a Sort step, this isn't done because Sort neither evaluates > its input nor projects new tuples on its output, it simply accepts the > tuples it receives and returns them with the same structure. So now it's > important to have the node providing input to the Sort projecting out > only the minimum required set of columns. > > Why it's slower on the wider table... that's less obvious.
It's likely to just be tuple deforming. I've not tried it but I'd bet you'll see slot_deform* very high in the profile. For the narrow table only two attributes need to be extracted, for the wider one everything up to a11 will get extracted. I've wondered before if we shouldn't use the caching via slot->tts_values so freely - if you only use a couple values from a wide tuple the current implementation really sucks if those few aren't at the beginning of the tuple. Greetings, Andres Freund -- Andres Freund http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers