Thread

Commits

  1. Repair issues with faulty generation of merge-append plans.

  2. Reduce "X = X" to "X IS NOT NULL", if it's easy to do so.

  1. BUG #15795: ERROR: could not find pathkey item to sort

    The Post Office <noreply@postgresql.org> — 2019-05-08T06:51:32Z

    The following bug has been logged on the website:
    
    Bug reference:      15795
    Logged by:          Suresh Kumar R
    Email address:      suresh.arsenal29@gmail.com
    PostgreSQL version: 10.3
    Operating system:   Ubuntu 16.04
    Description:        
    
    I have a table 'person' with properties _id, _actual_type_name and name when
    I tried the below query, I got an error saying 'could not find pathkey item
    to sort'.
    
    Here is query:
    SELECT  DISTINCT  A._id0 as _id0, A._actual_type_name0 as _actual_type_name0
     FROM  ( (   SELECT  DISTINCT _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as
    _actual_type_name0, name as name0  FROM  hello_world.person  ) union all  ( 
    SELECT  DISTINCT  _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as _actual_type_name0, name
    as name0  FROM  hello_world.person)) as A WHERE ( A.name0  =  A.name0 );
    
    
  2. Re: BUG #15795: ERROR: could not find pathkey item to sort

    David G. Johnston <david.g.johnston@gmail.com> — 2019-05-08T07:10:36Z

    On Tuesday, May 7, 2019, PG Bug reporting form <noreply@postgresql.org>
    wrote:
    
    > The following bug has been logged on the website:
    >
    > Bug reference:      15795
    > Logged by:          Suresh Kumar R
    > Email address:      suresh.arsenal29@gmail.com
    > PostgreSQL version: 10.3
    > Operating system:   Ubuntu 16.04
    > Description:
    >
    > I have a table 'person' with properties _id, _actual_type_name and name
    > when
    > I tried the below query, I got an error saying 'could not find pathkey item
    > to sort'.
    >
    >
    Upgrade to the latest release (10.7)
    
    David J.
    
  3. Re: BUG #15795: ERROR: could not find pathkey item to sort

    Suresh Kumar R <suresh.arsenal29@gmail.com> — 2019-05-08T07:18:16Z

    I tried in the latest 10.7 release too. I still get the same error.
    
    Suresh.
    
    On Wed, May 8, 2019 at 12:40 PM David G. Johnston <
    david.g.johnston@gmail.com> wrote:
    
    > On Tuesday, May 7, 2019, PG Bug reporting form <noreply@postgresql.org>
    > wrote:
    >
    >> The following bug has been logged on the website:
    >>
    >> Bug reference:      15795
    >> Logged by:          Suresh Kumar R
    >> Email address:      suresh.arsenal29@gmail.com
    >> PostgreSQL version: 10.3
    >> Operating system:   Ubuntu 16.04
    >> Description:
    >>
    >> I have a table 'person' with properties _id, _actual_type_name and name
    >> when
    >> I tried the below query, I got an error saying 'could not find pathkey
    >> item
    >> to sort'.
    >>
    >>
    > Upgrade to the latest release (10.7)
    >
    > David J.
    >
    
  4. Re: BUG #15795: ERROR: could not find pathkey item to sort

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-08T10:33:18Z

    PG Bug reporting form <noreply@postgresql.org> writes:
    > Here is query:
    > SELECT  DISTINCT  A._id0 as _id0, A._actual_type_name0 as _actual_type_name0
    >  FROM  ( (   SELECT  DISTINCT _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as
    > _actual_type_name0, name as name0  FROM  hello_world.person  ) union all  ( 
    > SELECT  DISTINCT  _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as _actual_type_name0, name
    > as name0  FROM  hello_world.person)) as A WHERE ( A.name0  =  A.name0 );
    
    It's politer to provide a self-contained test case, rather than expect us
    to reverse-engineer details that might be critical.
    
    For the archives, though, this isn't hard to reproduce:
    
    regression=# create table person(_id int, _actual_type_name text, name text);
    CREATE TABLE
    regression=# SELECT  DISTINCT  A._id0 as _id0, A._actual_type_name0 as _actual_type_name0
     FROM  ( (   SELECT  DISTINCT _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as
    _actual_type_name0, name as name0  FROM  person  ) union all  ( 
    SELECT  DISTINCT  _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as _actual_type_name0, name
    as name0  FROM  person)) as A WHERE ( A.name0  =  A.name0 );
    ERROR:  could not find pathkey item to sort
    
    Curiously, this only fails for me in 9.6 and 10, not earlier or later
    branches.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  5. Re: BUG #15795: ERROR: could not find pathkey item to sort

    Amit Langote <langote_amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2019-05-09T05:52:34Z

    On 2019/05/08 19:33, Tom Lane wrote:
    > For the archives, though, this isn't hard to reproduce:
    > 
    > regression=# create table person(_id int, _actual_type_name text, name text);
    > CREATE TABLE
    > regression=# SELECT  DISTINCT  A._id0 as _id0, A._actual_type_name0 as _actual_type_name0
    >  FROM  ( (   SELECT  DISTINCT _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as
    > _actual_type_name0, name as name0  FROM  person  ) union all  ( 
    > SELECT  DISTINCT  _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as _actual_type_name0, name
    > as name0  FROM  person)) as A WHERE ( A.name0  =  A.name0 );
    > ERROR:  could not find pathkey item to sort
    > 
    > Curiously, this only fails for me in 9.6 and 10, not earlier or later
    > branches.
    
    Here are my findings after debugging this on 9.5, 9.6, 10, and 11:
    
    As you also said, the problem only seems to occur in 9.6 and 10.  It does
    because the MergeAppend path created for UNION ALL subquery in the outer
    query's FROM contains one pathkey item too many in its pathkeys field.
    That's because each of its child subpaths has pathkeys (_id,
    _actual_type_name, name), whereas the outer query only wants (_id,
    _actual_type_name).  I hoped that convert_subquery_pathkeys() called
    during child subquery's path creation would've taken the unnecessary
    "name" out because the outer query doesn't need it, but it didn't.  It
    fails to do so because the subquery's pathkey "name" is being matched
    successfully to an outer EC installed due to the outer query's WHERE
    (A.name0 = A.name0); that's via the following code in
    convert_subquery_pathkeys():
    
                    outer_ec =
                        get_eclass_for_sort_expr(root,
                                                 outer_expr,
    
    I checked if and how convert_subquery_pathkeys() determines which of the
    subquery's pathkeys are useful to the outer query and there does exist a
    scoring system to evaluate the usefulness of subquery's pathkeys to outer
    query, but I didn't fully understand it.  In any case, the main problem
    seems to be that convert_subquery_pathkeys() can't keep "name" from
    appearing in the output pathkeys that it produces.  Based on that premise,
    I added the following code to convert_subquery_pathkeys():
    
    +
    +		if (retvallen == outer_query_keys)
    +			 break;
    
    which seems to fix the issue.  Alternatively, maybe we can apply
    truncate_useless_pathkeys() to the result of convert_subquery_pathkeys().
    
    The problem doesn't manifest with 9.5 or 11 (even HEAD for that matter),
    because a sort-based path is not chosen in their case for unique-fying
    (UNION ALL uses Append, not MergeAppend on cost grounds), so there's no
    attempt to look for "pathkey item to sort" to begin with.
    
    In 11's (and HEAD's) case, even if MergeAppend had won in terms of
    costing, the problem wouldn't occur at least for this query, because
    "name" doesn't appear in the outer query's ECs due to the following commit:
    
      commit 8ec5429e2f422f4d570d4909507db0d4ca83bbac
      Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
      Date:   Sun Oct 8 12:23:32 2017 -0400
    
          Reduce "X = X" to "X IS NOT NULL", if it's easy to do so.
    
    However it's easy to tweak the query such that "name" *will* end up in
    outer query's ECs as follows:
    
    SELECT  DISTINCT  A._id0 as _id0, A._actual_type_name0 as _actual_type_name0
     FROM  ( (   SELECT  DISTINCT _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as
    _actual_type_name0, name as name0  FROM  person  ) union all  (
    SELECT  DISTINCT  _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as _actual_type_name0, name
    as name0  FROM  person)) as A INNER JOIN person A1 ON ( A.name0  =  A1.name );
    
    Now, A.name0 and A1.name in the join condition do form a an EC, which does
    trick convert_subquery_pathkeys() into accepting the child subqueries'
    "name" key.
    
    IOW, if the "fix" I mentioned above is correct, it will have to applied to
    all the branches, because this seems to be a fundamental problem with
    convert_subquery_pathkeys().
    
    Thoughts?
    
    Thanks,
    Amit
    
    
    
    
    
  6. Re: BUG #15795: ERROR: could not find pathkey item to sort

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-09T16:06:18Z

    Amit Langote <Langote_Amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> writes:
    > On 2019/05/08 19:33, Tom Lane wrote:
    >> For the archives, though, this isn't hard to reproduce:
    >> 
    >> regression=# create table person(_id int, _actual_type_name text, name text);
    >> CREATE TABLE
    >> regression=# SELECT  DISTINCT  A._id0 as _id0, A._actual_type_name0 as _actual_type_name0
    >> FROM  ( (   SELECT  DISTINCT _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as
    >> _actual_type_name0, name as name0  FROM  person  ) union all  ( 
    >> SELECT  DISTINCT  _id as _id0, _actual_type_name as _actual_type_name0, name
    >> as name0  FROM  person)) as A WHERE ( A.name0  =  A.name0 );
    >> ERROR:  could not find pathkey item to sort
    >> 
    >> Curiously, this only fails for me in 9.6 and 10, not earlier or later
    >> branches.
    
    > ... In any case, the main problem
    > seems to be that convert_subquery_pathkeys() can't keep "name" from
    > appearing in the output pathkeys that it produces.  Based on that premise,
    > I added the following code to convert_subquery_pathkeys():
    
    > +
    > +		if (retvallen == outer_query_keys)
    > +			 break;
    
    That's just a kluge.
    
    > which seems to fix the issue.  Alternatively, maybe we can apply
    > truncate_useless_pathkeys() to the result of convert_subquery_pathkeys().
    
    Yeah, I thought about that too.  The comment on convert_subquery_pathkeys
    that says truncate_useless_pathkeys would do nothing is wrong.  However,
    if you apply truncate_useless_pathkeys to the results, you'll find that
    some of the regression test query plans change, and not for the better.
    I'm thinking of changing that comment to read like
    
     * We intentionally don't do truncate_useless_pathkeys() here, because there
     * are situations where seeing the raw ordering of the subquery is helpful.
     * For example, if it returns ORDER BY x DESC, that may prompt us to
     * construct a mergejoin using DESC order rather than ASC order; but the
     * right_merge_direction heuristic would have us throw the knowledge away.
    
    Anyway, yes, the basic issue is that convert_subquery_pathkeys is
    returning pathkeys that are outside the norm for the outer query,
    and some places are falling over because of that.  I've found at
    least two bugs that I believe are present in multiple branches,
    although I'm having difficulty in constructing branch-independent
    tests for them, because the bugs interact with each other and with
    other changes that we've made.
    
    First off, the reported problem can be reproduced with an existing
    regression-test table, eg
    
    regression=# select distinct q1 from (select distinct * from int8_tbl union all select distinct * from int8_tbl) ss where (q2 = q2);
    ERROR:  could not find pathkey item to sort
    
    The reason that this doesn't fail in >= v11 is that we do not build
    an EquivalenceClass for q2 in the outer query, so that there's nothing
    for convert_subquery_pathkeys to match it to.  And that happens because
    the q2 = q2 clause is converted to "q2 is not null".  In <= v10, that
    clause is left alone and since it's a mergejoinable operator we end
    up assigning ECs to each side.  (Conceivably, since it's not actually
    a join clause, we don't need to do that, but I'm hesitant to muck with
    that; it would only be a band-aid over the true problem anyhow.)
    
    Anyway, what's happening in v10 is
    
    1. convert_subquery_pathkeys sees that the subpath is sorted by q1, q2,
    and it successfully generates a 2-element pathkeys list representing
    that in the outer query, which it can do because (a) q2 is in the
    subpath tlist and (b) there is an EC in the outer query for q2.
    The other UNION ALL arm has an identical path, too.
    
    2. When we come to build a MergeAppend path for the UNION ALL, we
    label it with the common pathkeys list of the two inputs, i.e.
    q1, q2, although the outer query really only cares about sort-by-q1.
    
    3. When we come to build a plan for the MergeAppend, we need to
    locate the sort columns in the outputs of its child SubqueryScan
    plans ... and q2 is not there.  Ooops.
    
    Now, how is that happening given that convert_subquery_pathkeys
    is specifically checking that the column is emitted by the subquery?
    The reason is that *it's checking the wrong thing*.  It's looking
    at what the native output of the subquery is, not at what the
    SubqueryScan that we're going to stack atop it will produce.
    And in this case, because q2 is not required by the outer query
    (once we've pushed the WHERE clause down to or below the subquery
    scan), q2 is not in the reltarget list for the subquery RTE, so
    it's not going to be emitted by the SubqueryScan.
    
    I haven't decided what to do about this.  The minimally invasive
    fix would be to teach convert_subquery_pathkeys that it can't emit
    anything not listed in rel->reltarget.  That seems like it might
    lose useful information, though perhaps the consequences are minimal
    given how hard it is to hit this bug.  Better would be to add
    entries to the reltarget for useful sort columns --- but I think
    it's likely too late to do so here.  (We may have already generated
    some paths using the existing reltarget contents.)
    
    Anyway, we're not out of the woods by any means.  Wondering whether
    the issue couldn't be reproduced in >= v11 by doing something that
    wouldn't be reduced to an IS NOT NULL, I stumbled across this in HEAD:
    
    regression=# select distinct q1 from (select distinct * from int8_tbl union all select distinct * from int8_tbl) ss where (-q1 = q2);
    psql: server closed the connection unexpectedly
    
    That's hitting this assertion:
    
    TRAP: FailedAssertion("!(list_length(dest_tlist) == list_length(src_tlist))", File: "tlist.c", Line: 345)
    
    Investigation shows that in this case, we successfully generate
    a Plan, but the final apply_tlist_labeling step fails, because
    create_merge_append_plan has blithely ignored the CP_EXACT_TLIST
    flag and stuck on extra resjunk columns.  That seems like a pretty
    clear violation of createplan.c's internal expectations, so I made
    a patch that teaches that function to stick on a filtering Result
    if it added extra columns in violation of a flag demanding that it
    not do so.  As of HEAD, create_append_plan has similar logic so I
    made the same change there, although I have not found a way to reach
    that bug today.  (See patch attached.)
    
    With that patch, we successfully build a plan, but it looks a bit odd:
    
     Unique
       ->  Result
             ->  Merge Append
                   Sort Key: "*SELECT* 1".q1, ((- "*SELECT* 1".q1))
                   ->  Subquery Scan on "*SELECT* 1"
                         ->  Unique
                               ->  Sort
                                     Sort Key: i81.q1, i81.q2
                                     ->  Seq Scan on int8_tbl i81
                                           Filter: ((- q1) = q2)
                   ->  Subquery Scan on "*SELECT* 2"
                         ->  Unique
                               ->  Sort
                                     Sort Key: i82.q1, i82.q2
                                     ->  Seq Scan on int8_tbl i82
                                           Filter: ((- q1) = q2)
    
    What's happening there is that the outer query has an EC containing
    { -q1, q2 }, and convert_subquery_pathkeys successfully matches the q2
    pathkey to that EC.  Then, when prepare_sort_from_pathkeys tries to
    find a sort column for that EC, it still doesn't find q2 in the
    SubqueryScan output --- but it does find q1, so it can make an
    expression matching the other EC entry instead of failing.
    
    This is kind of grotty, of course.  It'd be nicer if the outer
    MergeAppend only considered as many sort columns as we actually
    semantically need.  But I'm not sure of a good way to arrange that.
    
    Another thing that I've not quite got to the bottom of is how come the
    MergeAppend path is getting stuck with CP_EXACT_TLIST responsibility in
    the first place.  Generally, since we know MergeAppend can't project,
    there'd be a ProjectionPath on top of it.  Usually there is, which is
    how come this bug has escaped detection this long --- so maybe there's
    another bug that we really ought to be using a ProjectionPath but are
    not, in some particular circumstance?  Not that I think it would be okay
    for create_merge_append_plan to just ignore the flag.
    
    Anyway, because there are so many different things that can mask these
    bugs, getting good test cases for them might be hopeless.  In the
    attached I have
    
    select distinct q1 from
      (select distinct * from int8_tbl i81
       union all
       select distinct * from int8_tbl i82) ss
    where q2 = q2;
    
    which exposes the reltarget-vs-subplan-tlist issue, but only in 9.6
    and 10, though it surely exists in other branches including HEAD, and
    
    select distinct q1 from
      (select distinct * from int8_tbl i81
       union all
       select distinct * from int8_tbl i82) ss
    where -q1 = q2;
    
    which exposes create_merge_append_plan's misfeasance, but only in
    11 and HEAD, though it surely exists at least as far back as v10.
    Getting more robust test cases would be nice -- any ideas?
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  7. Re: BUG #15795: ERROR: could not find pathkey item to sort

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-05-09T19:24:20Z

    I wrote:
    > Now, how is that happening given that convert_subquery_pathkeys
    > is specifically checking that the column is emitted by the subquery?
    > The reason is that *it's checking the wrong thing*.  It's looking
    > at what the native output of the subquery is, not at what the
    > SubqueryScan that we're going to stack atop it will produce.
    > ...
    > I haven't decided what to do about this.  The minimally invasive
    > fix would be to teach convert_subquery_pathkeys that it can't emit
    > anything not listed in rel->reltarget.  That seems like it might
    > lose useful information, though perhaps the consequences are minimal
    > given how hard it is to hit this bug.
    
    I concluded that that should be a reasonable fix.  The outer query
    doesn't really have any use for sort keys that are not relevant to
    either mergejoins or sorting/grouping, and in either of those cases
    the sort keys would have been seen to be needed above the scan level
    so they'd be included in the reltarget list.
    
    Hence, attached is a draft patch for that part against v10.  (I started
    there since we don't have a test case to show this bug in HEAD.)
    I realized that the existing tests for !resjunk are just a half-baked
    version of "is the column available in the outer query", so I folded
    those into the improved checks.
    
    Notice that with this in place, we don't get the funny extra
    sort key in the MergeAppend, since convert_subquery_pathkeys doesn't
    try to create that pathkey.  That's good for plan quality I guess
    but it means that we have no live test case for the bug in
    create_merge_append_plan --- which is still a bug nonetheless.
    
    Anyway, I plan to go ahead with applying the combination of these
    fixes.  If we find better test cases we can add them later, but
    right now I'm not that hopeful about that.
    
    			regards, tom lane