Re: Proposal: partition pruning by secondary attributes

2018-02-09 Thread Alvaro Herrera
Ildar Musin wrote:

> But if we filter the table by 'id' then planner has no other way but to
> append every partition to the plan.
> 
> EXPLAIN (COSTS OFF) SELECT * FROM events WHERE id = 123;
>  Append
>->  Seq Scan on events_0
>  Filter: (id = 123)
>->  Seq Scan on events_1
>  Filter: (id = 123)
>->  Seq Scan on events_2
>  Filter: (id = 123)

I think it should be possible to prune at runtime based on a brin index.
As Andres says this means we cannot prune at plan time, and you still
need to open the relations and indexes to perform pruning, but the
contention problem is solved.

A pretty crazy related idea is to allow BRIN indexes to be global -- so
you create a brin index on the partitioned table in such a way that it
doesn't cascade to create local indexes, but instead a single index
represents the whole hierarchy.  This requires a lot of other changes,
but seems to match your design.

-- 
Álvaro Herrerahttps://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services



Re: Proposal: partition pruning by secondary attributes

2018-02-09 Thread Ildar Musin



On 08.02.2018 21:01, Andres Freund wrote:

On 2018-02-08 14:48:34 -0300, Alvaro Herrera wrote:

Ildar Musin wrote:


The idea is to store min and max values of secondary attributes
(like 'id' in the example above) for each partition somewhere in
catalog and use it for partition pruning along with partitioning
key. You can think of it as somewhat like BRIN index but for
partitions.


What is the problem with having a BRIN index?


Building plans to scan the individual partitions, lock them, open
the relevant files, etc is often going to be significantly more
expensive than pruning at plan time.

But there also seems to be a number of fairly nasty locking issues
with this proposal, leaving the amount of required code aside.



Sorry, I probably didn't describe it right. I wasn't talking about using
brin index for partition pruning or something like that, just used it as
a reference to the idea. I'll try to explain it in more detailed way.

Let's say we have a table to store some events, which is partitioned by
timestamp column:

CREATE TABLE events (
id serial,
dt timestamp,
...
) PARTITION BY RANGE (dt);

In some cases it is queried by 'dt' column and partition pruning is
working fine because 'dt' is a partitioning key:

EXPLAIN (COSTS OFF) SELECT ... FROM events WHERE dt >= '2018-01-01' AND
dt < '2018-02-01';
 Append
   ->  Seq Scan on events_0
 Filter: ((dt >= '2018-01-01 00:00:00'::timestamp without time
zone) AND (dt < '2018-02-01 00:00:00'::timestamp without time zone))

But if we filter the table by 'id' then planner has no other way but to
append every partition to the plan.

EXPLAIN (COSTS OFF) SELECT * FROM events WHERE id = 123;
 Append
   ->  Seq Scan on events_0
 Filter: (id = 123)
   ->  Seq Scan on events_1
 Filter: (id = 123)
   ->  Seq Scan on events_2
 Filter: (id = 123)

We can see though that values of 'dt' and 'id' both monotonically
increase over time and so we can potentially use 'id' column to do
partition pruning at plan time too. To do so we need to store min and
max values of 'id' column per partition somewhere in catalog and use
them to decide which partition should be added to the plan by matching
them to the query restrictions.

Each time table is updated we must check whether new value exceeds
stored min/max values and update those too if needed. This raises few
issues. One of them as Ashutosh Bapat mentioned is the need to change
catalog very often which could result in high catalog contention. I
can't think of comprehensive solution for this problem. But for
numerical and datetime types we could shift min or max bounds with
margin so that not every update will result in catalog change. The other
one is the need to change min/max of partition if rows were removed
which is less evil since we can postpone it and do it later (during
autovacuum for instance).

A new command for ALTER TABLE should also be introduced to specify the
column or expression which is not a partition key but can be used for
partition pruning as described above. This command would scan each
partition, gather min/max values and store them into catalog.

What do you think?

--
Ildar Musin
i.mu...@postgrespro.ru



Re: Proposal: partition pruning by secondary attributes

2018-02-08 Thread Ashutosh Bapat
On Thu, Feb 8, 2018 at 4:51 PM, Ildar Musin  wrote:
>
> The idea is to store min and max values of secondary attributes (like
> 'id' in the example above) for each partition somewhere in catalog and
> use it for partition pruning along with partitioning key.

Every insertion and update of secondary attribute will touch catalog
and update if required. That will increase the contention on catalog.

-- 
Best Wishes,
Ashutosh Bapat
EnterpriseDB Corporation
The Postgres Database Company



Re: Proposal: partition pruning by secondary attributes

2018-02-08 Thread Andres Freund
On 2018-02-08 14:48:34 -0300, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
> Ildar Musin wrote:
> 
> > The idea is to store min and max values of secondary attributes (like
> > 'id' in the example above) for each partition somewhere in catalog and
> > use it for partition pruning along with partitioning key. You can think
> > of it as somewhat like BRIN index but for partitions.
> 
> What is the problem with having a BRIN index?

Building plans to scan the individual partitions, lock them, open the
relevant files, etc is often going to be significantly more expensive
than pruning at plan time.

But there also seems to be a number of fairly nasty locking issues with
this proposal, leaving the amount of required code aside.

Greetings,

Andres Freund



Re: Proposal: partition pruning by secondary attributes

2018-02-08 Thread Alvaro Herrera
Ildar Musin wrote:

> The idea is to store min and max values of secondary attributes (like
> 'id' in the example above) for each partition somewhere in catalog and
> use it for partition pruning along with partitioning key. You can think
> of it as somewhat like BRIN index but for partitions.

What is the problem with having a BRIN index?

-- 
Álvaro Herrerahttps://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services