Re: Selecting random row
Arguile <arguile@lucentstudios.com>
From: Arguile <arguile@lucentstudios.com>
To: Michal Taborsky <michal@taborsky.cz>
Cc: pgsql-general@postgresql.org
Date: 2002-08-02T13:26:28Z
Lists: pgsql-general
On Fri, 2002-08-02 at 08:38, Michal Taborsky wrote: > I am facing a performance problem with selecting a random row from a table. > I do it like this: > > SELECT * FROM table ORDER BY random() LIMIT 1 > > But it seems that the random() function is quite slow and backend apparently > evaluates the function for all rows (which is logical). On a table with few > thousand rows it takes seconds. Does anybody know a better solution to > selecting one (or more) random rows from a table ? This isn't tested but I'd imagine it would work faster. SELECT * FROM table WHERE id = (SELECT id FROM table ORDER BY random() LIMIT 1); You still generate a random number for every record but only pull the PKs into mem (and the one selected record) instead of the entire table. >From what I understand of the internals this should be quicker. Other options include keeping a lookup table with a sequential (no breaks) key so you can use some PL language to generate a number in that range. If your key is almost sequential anyways adding an error check - to make sure the record exists and if not try again - might be easier.