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plpgsql: optimize "SELECT simple-expression INTO var".
- ce8d5fe0e280 19 (unreleased) landed
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slow SELECT expr INTO var in plpgsql
Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> — 2026-01-31T06:52:10Z
Hi I found a article https://medium.com/google-cloud/postgresql-performance-the-context-switch-trap-that-slows-down-t-sql-migrations-7b8c6f518fd8 It compare T-SQL and PLpgSQL performance on some simple benchmark do $$ declare x int; begin for i in 1..10000000 loop x := 0; end loop; end $$; do $$ declare x int; begin for i in 1..10000000 loop select 0 into x; end loop; end $$; SELECT expr INTO var is syntax used on old sybase and mssql systems. The positive result in this article is fact, so Postgres in all tests are very well comparable. More - the assignment is really fast and significantly faster than on MSSQL. I remember the old discussion about this issue, and I thought that the performance of SELECT INTO and assignment should be almost the same. I repeated these tests on pg 9.4, 11 and master (asserts are disabled) with interesting results release, assign time, select into time 9.4, 2900 ms, 20800 ms 11, 2041 ms, 16243 ms master, 534ms, 15438 ms Originally, I used gcc with O0, and master is really slow without O2 optimization 9.4, 2600 ms, 20800 ms --<< 9.4 is faster with O0 11, 2177 ms, 19128 ms master, 1395 ms, 70060 ms -- << master is very slow with O0 Using SELECT expr INTO var is plpgsql's antipattern. plpgsql_check can detect it now. But it will still be nice if there will not be too big a difference like now. I didn't check the code yet, and I have no idea if there are some possibilities on how to execute this case better. Regards Pavel tested on Fedora 43
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Re: slow SELECT expr INTO var in plpgsql
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2026-01-31T20:58:34Z
Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> writes: > I remember the old discussion about this issue, and I thought that the > performance of SELECT INTO and assignment should be almost the same. I > repeated these tests on pg 9.4, 11 and master (asserts are disabled) with > interesting results > release, assign time, select into time > 9.4, 2900 ms, 20800 ms > 11, 2041 ms, 16243 ms > master, 534ms, 15438 ms Yeah, we've sweated a good deal about optimizing plpgsql assignment, but SELECT INTO is always done the hard way. I experimented a little bit with converting simple-expression SELECT INTO into an assignment, as attached. It does reclaim nearly all of the performance difference: for me, these two test cases now take about 276 vs 337 ms. However, I'm concerned about the side-effects of substituting this other code path; there's a lot of potential minor differences in behavior. Two that you can see in the regression test changes are: * SELECT INTO is tracked by pg_stat_statements, assignments aren't. * The context report for an error can be different, because _SPI_error_callback() doesn't get used. We could probably eliminate the context-report difference by setting up a custom error context callback in this new code path, but the difference in pg_stat_statements output would be hard to mask. There may be other discrepancies as well, such as variations in error message wording. Probably no one would notice such details if it had been like that all along, but would they complain about a change? I dunno. regards, tom lane
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Re: slow SELECT expr INTO var in plpgsql
Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> — 2026-02-01T05:09:25Z
so 31. 1. 2026 v 21:58 odesílatel Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> napsal: > Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> writes: > > I remember the old discussion about this issue, and I thought that the > > performance of SELECT INTO and assignment should be almost the same. I > > repeated these tests on pg 9.4, 11 and master (asserts are disabled) with > > interesting results > > > release, assign time, select into time > > 9.4, 2900 ms, 20800 ms > > 11, 2041 ms, 16243 ms > > master, 534ms, 15438 ms > > Yeah, we've sweated a good deal about optimizing plpgsql assignment, > but SELECT INTO is always done the hard way. > > I experimented a little bit with converting simple-expression > SELECT INTO into an assignment, as attached. It does reclaim > nearly all of the performance difference: for me, these two > test cases now take about 276 vs 337 ms. However, I'm concerned > about the side-effects of substituting this other code path; > there's a lot of potential minor differences in behavior. > Two that you can see in the regression test changes are: > > * SELECT INTO is tracked by pg_stat_statements, assignments aren't. > > * The context report for an error can be different, because > _SPI_error_callback() doesn't get used. > > We could probably eliminate the context-report difference by setting > up a custom error context callback in this new code path, but the > difference in pg_stat_statements output would be hard to mask. > There may be other discrepancies as well, such as variations in > error message wording. > > Probably no one would notice such details if it had been like that > all along, but would they complain about a change? I dunno. > This patch looks well. I can confirm massive speedup. I don't remember any report related to change of implementation of assign statement before, and I think it can be similar with this patch. In this specific case, I think so users suppose SELECT INTO is translated to assignment by default. And there are a lot of documents on the net that describe the transformation of the assignment statement to SELECT - so I think there is some grey zone where optimization can do some magic. More - the statistics for function execution can be covered by track_functions. Regards Pavel > > regards, tom lane > >
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Re: slow SELECT expr INTO var in plpgsql
Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> — 2026-03-10T07:58:59Z
Hi ne 1. 2. 2026 v 6:09 odesílatel Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> napsal: > > > so 31. 1. 2026 v 21:58 odesílatel Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> napsal: > >> Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> writes: >> > I remember the old discussion about this issue, and I thought that the >> > performance of SELECT INTO and assignment should be almost the same. I >> > repeated these tests on pg 9.4, 11 and master (asserts are disabled) >> with >> > interesting results >> >> > release, assign time, select into time >> > 9.4, 2900 ms, 20800 ms >> > 11, 2041 ms, 16243 ms >> > master, 534ms, 15438 ms >> >> Yeah, we've sweated a good deal about optimizing plpgsql assignment, >> but SELECT INTO is always done the hard way. >> >> I experimented a little bit with converting simple-expression >> SELECT INTO into an assignment, as attached. It does reclaim >> nearly all of the performance difference: for me, these two >> test cases now take about 276 vs 337 ms. However, I'm concerned >> about the side-effects of substituting this other code path; >> there's a lot of potential minor differences in behavior. >> Two that you can see in the regression test changes are: >> >> * SELECT INTO is tracked by pg_stat_statements, assignments aren't. >> >> * The context report for an error can be different, because >> _SPI_error_callback() doesn't get used. >> >> We could probably eliminate the context-report difference by setting >> up a custom error context callback in this new code path, but the >> difference in pg_stat_statements output would be hard to mask. >> There may be other discrepancies as well, such as variations in >> error message wording. >> >> Probably no one would notice such details if it had been like that >> all along, but would they complain about a change? I dunno. >> > > This patch looks well. I can confirm massive speedup. > > I don't remember any report related to change of implementation of assign > statement before, and I think it can be similar with this patch. > > In this specific case, I think so users suppose SELECT INTO is translated > to assignment by default. And there are a lot of documents on the net that > describe the transformation of the assignment statement to SELECT - so I > think there is some grey zone where optimization can do some magic. More - > the statistics for function execution can be covered by track_functions. > Do you plan to push this patch? Unfortunately there is not any discussion about side effects. I wrote a version with dedicated error context callback, so there will be differences only in pg_stat_statements. It is true, so this should be hard to mask. Maybe this difference can be just documented - like "`SELECT expr INTO variable` can be optimized and executed by a direct expression executor, and then this query will not be visible in pg_stat_statement." Regards Pavel > Regards > > Pavel > > > >> >> regards, tom lane >> >>
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Re: slow SELECT expr INTO var in plpgsql
Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> — 2026-03-10T08:02:02Z
Hi I am sorry, wrong patch Regards Pavel
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Re: slow SELECT expr INTO var in plpgsql
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2026-03-20T22:33:08Z
Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> writes: >> so 31. 1. 2026 v 21:58 odesílatel Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> napsal: >>> I experimented a little bit with converting simple-expression >>> SELECT INTO into an assignment, as attached. It does reclaim >>> nearly all of the performance difference: for me, these two >>> test cases now take about 276 vs 337 ms. However, I'm concerned >>> about the side-effects of substituting this other code path; >>> there's a lot of potential minor differences in behavior. >>> Two that you can see in the regression test changes are: >>> >>> * SELECT INTO is tracked by pg_stat_statements, assignments aren't. >>> >>> * The context report for an error can be different, because >>> _SPI_error_callback() doesn't get used. >>> >>> We could probably eliminate the context-report difference by setting >>> up a custom error context callback in this new code path, but the >>> difference in pg_stat_statements output would be hard to mask. >>> There may be other discrepancies as well, such as variations in >>> error message wording. > Do you plan to push this patch? Unfortunately there is not any discussion > about side effects. Yeah, general radio silence out there. After thinking about it for awhile, I've decided to go ahead with the patch. It'll be easy enough to revert if people are unhappy. > I wrote a version with dedicated error context callback, Thanks for doing that. I found though that it wasn't quite enough, because the existing code path applies _SPI_error_callback() during evaluation of the expression but not during assignment to the target variable. So for example, errors during type conversion to match the target variable don't get a context line claiming they happened during evaluation of the expression, which seems correct to me. I was able to fix it by not using exec_assign_expr() but instead copying that code in-line, so that we can pop the error context stack at the right point. (See added tests in the committed patch, ce8d5fe0e2802158b65699aeae1551d489948167.) > ... so there will be > differences only in pg_stat_statements. It is true, so this should be hard > to mask. Maybe this difference can be just documented - like "`SELECT expr > INTO variable` can be optimized and executed by a direct expression > executor, and then this query will not be visible in pg_stat_statement." We don't document that "var := expression" isn't captured, so I don't think this needs to be either. Possibly Bruce will pick up the change as a release-note item. regards, tom lane
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Re: slow SELECT expr INTO var in plpgsql
Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> — 2026-03-21T05:10:52Z
pá 20. 3. 2026 v 23:33 odesílatel Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> napsal: > Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> writes: > >> so 31. 1. 2026 v 21:58 odesílatel Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> napsal: > >>> I experimented a little bit with converting simple-expression > >>> SELECT INTO into an assignment, as attached. It does reclaim > >>> nearly all of the performance difference: for me, these two > >>> test cases now take about 276 vs 337 ms. However, I'm concerned > >>> about the side-effects of substituting this other code path; > >>> there's a lot of potential minor differences in behavior. > >>> Two that you can see in the regression test changes are: > >>> > >>> * SELECT INTO is tracked by pg_stat_statements, assignments aren't. > >>> > >>> * The context report for an error can be different, because > >>> _SPI_error_callback() doesn't get used. > >>> > >>> We could probably eliminate the context-report difference by setting > >>> up a custom error context callback in this new code path, but the > >>> difference in pg_stat_statements output would be hard to mask. > >>> There may be other discrepancies as well, such as variations in > >>> error message wording. > > > Do you plan to push this patch? Unfortunately there is not any discussion > > about side effects. > > Yeah, general radio silence out there. After thinking about it for > awhile, I've decided to go ahead with the patch. It'll be easy enough > to revert if people are unhappy. > > > I wrote a version with dedicated error context callback, > > Thanks for doing that. I found though that it wasn't quite enough, > because the existing code path applies _SPI_error_callback() during > evaluation of the expression but not during assignment to the target > variable. So for example, errors during type conversion to match > the target variable don't get a context line claiming they happened > during evaluation of the expression, which seems correct to me. > I was able to fix it by not using exec_assign_expr() but instead > copying that code in-line, so that we can pop the error context stack > at the right point. (See added tests in the committed patch, > ce8d5fe0e2802158b65699aeae1551d489948167.) > > > ... so there will be > > differences only in pg_stat_statements. It is true, so this should be > hard > > to mask. Maybe this difference can be just documented - like "`SELECT > expr > > INTO variable` can be optimized and executed by a direct expression > > executor, and then this query will not be visible in pg_stat_statement." > > We don't document that "var := expression" isn't captured, so I don't > think this needs to be either. Possibly Bruce will pick up the change > as a release-note item. > Thank you very much Regards Pavel > > regards, tom lane >