On Fri, Jun 6, 2008 at 7:20 AM, Volkan YAZICI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Am I wrong or AGE() always gets directed to a sequential scan?
>
>  # BEGIN;
>  ] SET enable_seqscan TO off;
>  ] EXPLAIN ANALYZE
>  ] SELECT count(1)
>  ]   FROM incomingmessageslog
>  ]  WHERE AGE(time) < '1 year';
>  ] ROLLBACK;
>  BEGIN
>  SET
>                                                                 QUERY PLAN
>  
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>   Aggregate  (cost=100000528.33..100000528.34 rows=1 width=0) (actual 
> time=13.789..13.790 rows=1 loops=1)
>     ->  Seq Scan on incomingmessageslog  (cost=100000000.00..100000520.00 
> rows=3333 width=0) (actual time=13.783..13.783 rows=0 loops=1)
>           Filter: (age((('now'::text)::date)::timestamp without time zone, 
> "time") < '1 year'::interval)
>   Total runtime: 13.852 ms
>  (4 rows)
>
>  ROLLBACK
>
> As far as I know, AGE() can take advantage of a very simple equation for
> constant comparisons:
>
>  = AGE(field)              < constant_criteria
>  = AGE(field, constant_ts) < constant_criteria
>  = AGE(field)              < constant_criteria + constant_ts
>  = AGE(field)              < CONSTANT_CRITERIA
>
> How much does such a hack into optimizer cost? I don't know about its
> implications but I'll really appreciate such a functionality. At the
> moment, I'm trying replace every AGE() usage in my code and it really
> feels a PITA.

Yeah, age() isn't real performent in such situations.  I generally
stick to simpler date math like:

where timestampvalue < now() - interval '2 year'

which can use an index on timestampvalue

The problem with age is it's always compared to now, so there's always
gonna be some math.

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