Re: [PERFORM] How to interpret this explain analyse?
Joost Kraaijeveld wrote: Hi all, A question on how to read and interpret the explain analyse statement (and what to do) I have a query SELECT A.ordernummer, B.klantnummer FROM orders A LEFT OUTER JOIN klt_alg B ON A.Klantnummer=B.Klantnummer ORDER BY A.klantnummer; Both tables have an btree index on klantnummer (int4, the column the join is on). I have vacuumed and analyzed both tables. The explain analyse is: Indexes not necessarily useful here since you're fetching all rows in A and presumably much of B Sort Hash Left Join Seq Scan on orders a Hash Seq Scan on klt_alg b I've trimmed the above from your explain output. It's sequentially scanning b and using a hash to join to a before sorting the results. Questions: - Hash Left Join (cost=41557.43..110069.51 rows=1100836 width=12) (actual time=21263.858..42845.158 rows=1104380 loops=1) 0. What exactly are the numbers in cost=41557.43..110069.51 ( I assume for the other questions that 41557.43 is the estimated MS the query will take, what are the others)? The cost numbers represent effort rather than time. They're only really useful in that you can compare one part of the query to another. There are two numbers because the first shows startup, the second final time. So - the outer parts of the query will have increasing startup values since the inner parts will have to do their work first. The actual time is measured in ms, but remember to multiply it by the loops value. Oh, and actually measuring the time slows the query down too. 1. I assume that (cost=41557.43..110069.51 rows=1100836 width=12) is the estimated cost and (actual time=21263.858..42845.158 rows=1104380 loops=1) the actual cost. Is the difference acceptable? 2. If not, what can I do about it? The key thing to look for here is the number of rows. If PG expects say 100 rows but there are instead 10,000 then it may choose the wrong plan. In this case the estimate is 1,100,836 and the actual is 1,104,380 - very close. -- Richard Huxton Archonet Ltd ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faq
Re: [PERFORM] How to interpret this explain analyse?
Richard Huxton dev@archonet.com writes: Joost Kraaijeveld wrote: 2. If not, what can I do about it? The key thing to look for here is the number of rows. If PG expects say 100 rows but there are instead 10,000 then it may choose the wrong plan. In this case the estimate is 1,100,836 and the actual is 1,104,380 - very close. On the surface this looks like a reasonable plan choice. If you like you can try the other two basic types of join plan by turning off enable_hashjoin, which will likely drive the planner to use a merge join, and then also turn off enable_mergejoin to get a nested loop (or if it thinks nested loop is second best, turn off enable_nestloop to see the behavior with a merge join). What's important in comparing different plan alternatives is the ratios of estimated costs to actual elapsed times. If the planner is doing its job well, those ratios should be similar across all the alternatives (which implies of course that the cheapest-estimate plan is also the cheapest in reality). If not, it may be appropriate to fool with the planner's cost estimate parameters to try to line up estimates and reality a bit better. See http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.0/static/performance-tips.html for more detail. regards, tom lane ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 7: don't forget to increase your free space map settings
Re: [PERFORM] How to interpret this explain analyse?
Hi Tom, Tom Lane schreef: On the surface this looks like a reasonable plan choice. If you like you can try the other two basic types of join plan by turning off enable_hashjoin, which will likely drive the planner to use a merge join, and then also turn off enable_mergejoin to get a nested loop (or if it thinks nested loop is second best, turn off enable_nestloop to see the behavior with a merge join). The problem is that the query logically requests all records ( as in select * from a join) from the database but actually displays (in practise) in 97% of the time the first 1000 records and at most the first 50.000 records 99.99% of the time by scrolling (using page down) in the gui and an occasional jump to record through something called a locator) (both percentages tested!). If I do the same query with a limit 60.000 or if I do a set enable_seqscan = off the query returns in 0.3 secs. Otherwise it lasts for 20 secs (which is too much for the user to wait for, given the circumstances). I cannot change the query (it is geneated by a tool called Clarion) but it something like (from the psqlodbc_xxx.log): ... declare SQL_CUR01 cursor for SELECT A.ordernummer, B.klantnummer FROM orders A LEFT OUTER JOIN klt_alg B ON A.Klantnummer=B.Klantnummer ORDER BY A.klantnummer; fetch 100 in SQL_CUR01; ... PostgreSQL does the planning (and than executes accordingly) to the query and not the fetch 100. Changing the query with a limit whatever prohibits scrolling after the size of the resultset. If Postgres should delay the planning of the actual query untill the fetch it could choose the quick solution. Another solution would be to advise PostgreSQL which index etc (whatever etc means ;-)) to use ( as in the mailing from Silke Trissl in the performance list on 09-02-05). What's important in comparing different plan alternatives is the ratios of estimated costs to actual elapsed times. If the planner is doing its job well, those ratios should be similar across all the alternatives (which implies of course that the cheapest-estimate plan is also the cheapest in reality). If not, it may be appropriate to fool with the planner's cost estimate parameters to try to line up estimates and reality a bit better. I I really do a select * and display the result, the planner is right (tested with set enable_seqscan = off and set enable_seqscan = on). Groeten, Joost Kraaijeveld Askesis B.V. Molukkenstraat 14 6524NB Nijmegen tel: 024-3888063 / 06-51855277 fax: 024-3608416 e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] web: www.askesis.nl ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 7: don't forget to increase your free space map settings
Re: [PERFORM] How to interpret this explain analyse?
Joost Kraaijeveld [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: I cannot change the query (it is geneated by a tool called Clarion) but it something like (from the psqlodbc_xxx.log): ... declare SQL_CUR01 cursor for SELECT A.ordernummer, B.klantnummer FROM orders A LEFT OUTER JOIN klt_alg B ON A.Klantnummer=B.Klantnummer ORDER BY A.klantnummer; fetch 100 in SQL_CUR01; ... Well, the planner does put some emphasis on startup time when dealing with a DECLARE CURSOR plan; the problem you face is just that that correction isn't large enough. (From memory, I think it optimizes on the assumption that 10% of the estimated rows will actually be fetched; you evidently want a setting of 1% or even less.) We once talked about setting up a GUC variable to control the percentage of a cursor that is estimated to be fetched: http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2000-10/msg01108.php It never got done but that seems like the most reasonable solution to me. regards, tom lane ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faq