PL/pgSQL is as *internal* as for example PL/Tcl. The two are actually pretty similar and I would expect them to perform similar, if one knows what and how he does.

PL/pgSQL is an external shared object, loaded on call of the first func per backend. Same for PL/Tcl.

PL/pgSQL takes pg_proc.prosrc and compiles all control structures (if, else, loop) into a form of bytecode. Query strings are left alone until the statements are actually executed. Tcl has a similar concept of bytecode compilation.

PL/pgSQL turns all expressions and SQL statements into prepared SPI plans. It short-circuits simple expressions by directly calling the node execution, so it works with PostgreSQL's native types and operators. Here is the big difference, PL/Tcl turns all datums into their external string representations and then does the Tcl dual-ported-object munging and math. However, if used right it also offers prepared SPI plans.

If the implementation of functionality results in widely similar code, I would expect PL/pgSQL and PL/Tcl to perform similar. However, doing the prepared SPI stuff in Tcl is a bit of work. OTOH doing extensive string processing in PL/pgSQL is a nightmare. That difference should drive the decision which language to use when.


Jan


On 10/26/2005 5:48 AM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:

On Wed, 26 Oct 2005, Michael Fuhr wrote:

On Wed, Oct 26, 2005 at 12:58:13AM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Does anyone know of, or have, any comparisions of the overhead going with
something like pl/perl or pl/php vs using pl/pgsql?

Benchmark results will probably depend on the type of processing
you're doing.  I'd expect PL/pgSQL to be faster at database operations
like looping through query results, and other languages to be faster
at non-database operations like text munging and number crunching,
depending on the particular language's strengths.

[Does quick test.]

Whale oil beef hooked.  PL/pgSQL just outran PL/Perl when I expected
the latter to win.  Hang on, let me play with it until it comes back
with the results I want....

'k, let's repharase the questions :)

Overall, I'd expect pl/pgsql to have less overhead, since its "built into" the server ... in the case of something like pl/php or pl/perl, assuming that I don't use any external modules, is it just as 'built in', or am I effectively calling an external interpreter each time I run that function?

For instance, if there wasn't something like to_char() (thanks for pointing that one out), then i could write a simple pl/perl function that 'simulated it', but itself did no db queries just a simple:

RETURN sprintf("%04d", intval);

Don't know if that made much more sense ... ?


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