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  1. Fix memory leak in indexUnchanged hint mechanism.

  2. Fix pull_varnos' miscomputation of relids set for a PlaceHolderVar.

  1. When Update balloons memory

    Klaudie Willis <klaudie.willis@protonmail.com> — 2021-12-07T09:15:57Z

    About the system:
    Ubuntu 20.04, 64GB ram, 16GB shared buffer, 500 MB working mem, Postgresql 14.1
    
    Core issue:
    The following statement below, when not divided up into chunks, but run across all 800M rows, did trigger an OOM-kill from the OS.
    I have looked into it by kernel logs as well as postgresql logs. The postgresql just says it was killed, and the OS killed it due to the fact that all mem including swap was exhausted.
    Looking at TOP while updating, I can see the RSS column of a single postgresql process (the connection I assume), just grow and grow until it chokes the system.
    
    Statement:
    Update table alfa
    set x = beta.x
    from beta where beta.id=alpha.id and x <> beta.x
    
    alpha is a wide table (40 columns), partitioned into 5 equally partitions by year. Total row count 800M rows
    beta is a 10 column 40M rows table.
    the updated field x is non-indexed varchar; the id fields are indexed.
    there are no triggers
    
    I am well aware that huge updates have general issues, like locking the table etc, and it is perhaps discouraged. And I did solve it by batching it in 1M and 1M rows.
    However, my curiosity still remains of what is really happening here. Why do Postgresql run out of memory? Exactly what is it storing in that memory? I am aware of the work_mem danger, but that is not what is happening here. I can replicate this with 32MB work mem as well; This is a low connection database.
    Any help is appreciated.
    
    Klaudie
    
    track_activity_query_size = 4096
    synchronous_commit = off
    full_page_writes = off
    #wal_compression = on
    wal_level = minimal
    max_wal_senders = 0
    
    log_min_duration_statement = 1000
    idle_in_transaction_session_timeout = '300s' # in milliseconds, 0 is disabled
    tcp_keepalives_idle = '300s'
    max_connections = 50
    shared_buffers = 16GB
    effective_cache_size = 48GB
    maintenance_work_mem = 2GB
    checkpoint_completion_target = 0.9
    min_wal_size = 4GB
    max_wal_size = 16GB
    #wal_buffers = 16MB
    default_statistics_target = 1000
    random_page_cost = 1.1
    effective_io_concurrency = 200
    work_mem = 1000MB
    max_worker_processes = 8
    max_parallel_workers = 8
    max_parallel_workers_per_gather = 4
    max_parallel_maintenance_workers = 4
    cpu_tuple_cost = 0.03
  2. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Francisco Olarte <folarte@peoplecall.com> — 2021-12-07T12:40:58Z

    This has no solution for the issue but...
    
    On Tue, 7 Dec 2021 at 10:16, Klaudie Willis
    <Klaudie.Willis@protonmail.com> wrote:
    > Ubuntu 20.04, 64GB ram, 16GB shared buffer, 500 MB working mem, Postgresql 14.1
    ...
    > shared_buffers = 16GB
    > effective_cache_size = 48GB
    ... You are not going to have total ram - shared buffers in the cache,
    os, postgres, work mem, other processess and all sort of different
    things eat ram. I would suggest looking at free/top/whatever too size
    this ( it should not OOM, just distort pg estimates ).
    
    Francisco Olarte.
    
    
    
    
  3. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-12-07T14:57:53Z

    Klaudie Willis <Klaudie.Willis@protonmail.com> writes:
    > The following statement below, when not divided up into chunks, but run across all 800M rows, did trigger an OOM-kill from the OS.
    
    An UPDATE should only result in memory bloat if it's queuing trigger
    events to be processed at end-of-statement.  You claim there are
    no triggers, but are you sure? (what about foreign keys?)
    
    Otherwise, it seems possible that you've identified a memory leak,
    but there's not enough detail here to investigate.  Can you create
    a reproducible test case?
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  4. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Klaudie Willis <klaudie.willis@protonmail.com> — 2021-12-13T23:07:50Z

    Thanks for the insight!
    
    I have recreated the problem on a different machine and installation where I was more free to experiment to isolate what causes this.
    So, it seems like the index is central cog here:
    > create index ind1 on alpha ((deltatime::date));
    where "alpha" is a partition tableset partitioned by (deltatime::date)
    The general and simple updates like:
    > update alphatable set gamma=gamma || "#postfix#"
    makes the process memory balloon to the point of OOM.
    
    If I remove the ind1 index on "deltatime::date", and just add another one on a random column, the problem disappears.  So it seems like the index on the partition key is relevant.
    Additional info, alphatable is a 200M evenly distributed row across the partitions, and I haven't tried to see if the ::date casting is relevant for the problem. No there are no triggers here; I can't vouch for what the system creates behind my back though.
    
    Is this a feature or a bug?
    
    --
    Klaudie
    
    Sent with ProtonMail Secure Email.
    
    ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
    
    On Tuesday, December 7th, 2021 at 15:57, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    
    > Klaudie Willis Klaudie.Willis@protonmail.com writes:
    >
    > > The following statement below, when not divided up into chunks, but run across all 800M rows, did trigger an OOM-kill from the OS.
    >
    > An UPDATE should only result in memory bloat if it's queuing trigger
    >
    > events to be processed at end-of-statement. You claim there are
    >
    > no triggers, but are you sure? (what about foreign keys?)
    >
    > Otherwise, it seems possible that you've identified a memory leak,
    >
    > but there's not enough detail here to investigate. Can you create
    >
    > a reproducible test case?
    >
    > regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  5. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-12-13T23:17:31Z

    Klaudie Willis <Klaudie.Willis@protonmail.com> writes:
    > So, it seems like the index is central cog here:
    >> create index ind1 on alpha ((deltatime::date));
    > where "alpha" is a partition tableset partitioned by (deltatime::date)
    > The general and simple updates like:
    >> update alphatable set gamma=gamma || "#postfix#"
    > makes the process memory balloon to the point of OOM.
    
    That seems like a bug, but please supply a self-contained test case
    rather than expecting other people to reverse-engineer one.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  6. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Klaudie Willis <klaudie.willis@protonmail.com> — 2021-12-14T08:16:08Z

    Hi,
    
    Turns out the base case is simpler than I thought. Not involving partitions at all
    
    CREATE TABLE public.part_main (
        txid bigint,
        actiondate timestamp without time zone NOT NULL
    );
    
    insert into part_main
    select x, '2019-06-01'::timestamp + x%365 * interval '1 day'
    from generate_series(1, 30 * 1E6) as x;
    
    CREATE INDEX partindx ON public.part_main USING btree ((actiondate)::date);  -- mem bug?
    -- CREATE INDEX partindx ON public.part_main USING btree (actiondate); -- no bug
    -- mem runaway follows
    update part_main set txid = txid + 1;
    
    Hope you can replicate it.
    
    best regards
    Klaudie
    
    ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
    
    On Tuesday, December 14th, 2021 at 12:17 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    
    > Klaudie Willis Klaudie.Willis@protonmail.com writes:
    >
    > > So, it seems like the index is central cog here:
    > >
    > > > create index ind1 on alpha ((deltatime::date));
    > > >
    > > > where "alpha" is a partition tableset partitioned by (deltatime::date)
    > > >
    > > > The general and simple updates like:
    > > >
    > > > update alphatable set gamma=gamma || "#postfix#"
    > > >
    > > > makes the process memory balloon to the point of OOM.
    >
    > That seems like a bug, but please supply a self-contained test case
    >
    > rather than expecting other people to reverse-engineer one.
    >
    > regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  7. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Vincent Veyron <vv.lists@wanadoo.fr> — 2021-12-14T15:58:35Z

    On Tue, 14 Dec 2021 08:16:08 +0000
    Klaudie Willis <Klaudie.Willis@protonmail.com> wrote:
    
    > CREATE INDEX partindx ON public.part_main USING btree ((actiondate)::date);  -- mem bug?
    
    Nope, syntax error
    
    ERROR:  syntax error at or near "::"
    LINE 1: ...indx_1 ON public.part_main USING btree ((actiondate)::date);
                                                                   ^
    
    
    > -- CREATE INDEX partindx ON public.part_main USING btree (actiondate); -- no bug
    > -- mem runaway follows
    > update part_main set txid = txid + 1;
    > 
    > Hope you can replicate it.
    > 
    
    Can't replicate on my Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 520  @ 2.40GHz with 2Go of RAM
    
    time psql -c 'update part_main set txid = txid + 1' vv
    UPDATE 31000000
    
    real	24m39.594s
    user	0m0.121s
    sys	0m0.036s
    
    -- 
                                            Bien à vous, Vincent Veyron
    
    https://marica.fr
    Gestion des contentieux juridiques, des contrats et des sinistres d'assurance
    
    
    
    
  8. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-12-14T15:58:55Z

    [ redirecting to pgsql-bugs ]
    
    Klaudie Willis <Klaudie.Willis@protonmail.com> writes:
    > Turns out the base case is simpler than I thought. Not involving partitions at all
    
    > CREATE TABLE public.part_main (
    >     txid bigint,
    >     actiondate timestamp without time zone NOT NULL
    > );
    
    > insert into part_main
    > select x, '2019-06-01'::timestamp + x%365 * interval '1 day'
    > from generate_series(1, 30 * 1E6) as x;
    
    > CREATE INDEX partindx ON public.part_main USING btree ((actiondate)::date);  -- mem bug?
    > -- mem runaway follows
    > update part_main set txid = txid + 1;
    
    ITYM "((actiondate::date))", but yeah, this leaks memory like there's
    no tomorrow.  I traced it to 9dc718bdf (Pass down "logically unchanged
    index" hint), which has added a function index_unchanged_by_update()
    that (a) looks fairly expensive, (b) leaks a copy of every expression
    tree it examines, and (c) is invoked over again for each row, even
    though AFAICS the answer shouldn't change across rows.  This seems very
    poorly thought through.  Peter?
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    PS: personally I would have used pull_varnos() instead of reinventing
    that wheel.  But in any case the real problem is repeated invocation.
    
    
    
    
  9. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Klaudie Willis <klaudie.willis@protonmail.com> — 2021-12-14T16:16:05Z

    So sorry about that;
    I'll repost it here, corrected, for others to use who wants to exhaust their memory:
    
    --PG-14.1
    
    CREATE TABLE public.part_main (
        txid bigint,
        actiondate timestamp without time zone NOT NULL
    );
    
    insert into part_main
    select x, '2019-06-01'::timestamp + x%365 * interval '1 day'
    from generate_series(1, 30 * 1E6) as x;
    
    CREATE INDEX partindx ON public.part_main USING btree ((actiondate::date));  -- mem bug?
    -- CREATE INDEX partindx ON public.part_main USING btree (actiondate); -- no bug
    -- mem runaway follows
    update part_main set txid = txid + 1;
    
    Klaudie
    
    ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
    
    On Tuesday, December 14th, 2021 at 16:58, Vincent Veyron <vv.lists@wanadoo.fr> wrote:
    
    > On Tue, 14 Dec 2021 08:16:08 +0000
    >
    > Klaudie Willis Klaudie.Willis@protonmail.com wrote:
    >
    > > CREATE INDEX partindx ON public.part_main USING btree ((actiondate)::date); -- mem bug?
    >
    > Nope, syntax error
    >
    > ERROR: syntax error at or near "::"
    >
    > LINE 1: ...indx_1 ON public.part_main USING btree ((actiondate)::date);
    >
    > ^
    >
    > > -- CREATE INDEX partindx ON public.part_main USING btree (actiondate); -- no bug
    > >
    > > -- mem runaway follows
    > >
    > > update part_main set txid = txid + 1;
    > >
    > > Hope you can replicate it.
    >
    > Can't replicate on my Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 520 @ 2.40GHz with 2Go of RAM
    >
    > time psql -c 'update part_main set txid = txid + 1' vv
    >
    > UPDATE 31000000
    >
    > real 24m39.594s
    >
    > user 0m0.121s
    >
    > sys 0m0.036s
    >
    > --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    >
    >                                         Bien à vous, Vincent Veyron
    >
    >
    > https://marica.fr
    >
    > Gestion des contentieux juridiques, des contrats et des sinistres d'assurance
    
    
    
    
  10. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-12-14T16:18:07Z

    Klaudie Willis <Klaudie.Willis@protonmail.com> writes:
    > I'll repost it here, corrected, for others to use who wants to exhaust their memory:
    > --PG-14.1
    
    This leak is new in v14, possibly that's why Vincent didn't reproduce it.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  11. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Vincent Veyron <vv.lists@wanadoo.fr> — 2021-12-14T18:41:45Z

    On Tue, 14 Dec 2021 11:18:07 -0500
    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > 
    > This leak is new in v14, possibly that's why Vincent didn't reproduce it.
    
    Indeed, I'm on v11
    
    
    
    
    
    -- 
                                            Bien à vous, Vincent Veyron
    
    https://marica.fr
    Gestion des contentieux juridiques, des contrats et des sinistres d'assurance
    
    
    
    
  12. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2021-12-14T19:21:54Z

    On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 7:58 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > ITYM "((actiondate::date))", but yeah, this leaks memory like there's
    > no tomorrow.  I traced it to 9dc718bdf (Pass down "logically unchanged
    > index" hint), which has added a function index_unchanged_by_update()
    > that (a) looks fairly expensive, (b) leaks a copy of every expression
    > tree it examines, and (c) is invoked over again for each row, even
    > though AFAICS the answer shouldn't change across rows.  This seems very
    > poorly thought through.  Peter?
    
    Ugh, what a howler. Clearly I am at fault here. Apologies.
    
    Are you sure that it would really be worth the trouble of caching our
    answer? It's not clear that that has only minimal maintenance burden.
    I have always suspected that index_unchanged_by_update() was at least
    slightly over-engineered.
    
    The fact is that most individual aminsert() calls that get the hint
    will never actually apply it in any way. In practice the hint is only
    relevant when there isn't enough space on an nbtree leaf page to fit
    the incoming item. Even then, it won't be used when there are LP_DEAD
    bits set on the leaf page -- we prefer to perform a conventional index
    deletion over a bottom-up index deletion. And so there is a fair
    practical argument to be made in favor of assuming that we should give
    the hint in cases where we can't rule it out inexpensively. Of course
    that assumes that there will be no other use for the hint in the
    future. I'm not making this argument myself, but it does seem like a
    factor worth considering.
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
    
  13. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-12-14T19:33:47Z

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> writes:
    > Are you sure that it would really be worth the trouble of caching our
    > answer? It's not clear that that has only minimal maintenance burden.
    
    I'd be inclined to do so if we can find a suitable place to put it.
    But wouldn't a field in IndexInfo serve?  Letting the field default
    to "not optimizable" would cover most cases.
    
    > The fact is that most individual aminsert() calls that get the hint
    > will never actually apply it in any way.
    
    Yeah, you could make an argument that just not trying to optimize when
    there are index expressions would be fine for this --- and we may have
    to fix it that way in v14, because I'm not sure whether adding a field
    in IndexInfo would be safe ABI-wise.  But ISTM that the overhead of
    index_unchanged_by_update is a bit more than I care to pay per row
    even when it's only considering plain index columns.  I'm generally
    allergic to useless per-row computations, especially when they're
    being added by an alleged performance improvement.
    
    Another thing we ought to check into is the extent to which this
    is duplicative of the setup calculations for HOT updates --- I seem
    to recall that there's already roughly-similar logic somewhere else.
    
    And, not to be too picky, but does this cope with the case where
    an indexed column is changed by a BEFORE trigger, not by the
    query proper?
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  14. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2021-12-14T23:17:16Z

    On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 11:33 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > I'd be inclined to do so if we can find a suitable place to put it.
    > But wouldn't a field in IndexInfo serve?  Letting the field default
    > to "not optimizable" would cover most cases.
    
    I'll come up with a patch for that soon.
    
    > Yeah, you could make an argument that just not trying to optimize when
    > there are index expressions would be fine for this --- and we may have
    > to fix it that way in v14, because I'm not sure whether adding a field
    > in IndexInfo would be safe ABI-wise.  But ISTM that the overhead of
    > index_unchanged_by_update is a bit more than I care to pay per row
    > even when it's only considering plain index columns.  I'm generally
    > allergic to useless per-row computations, especially when they're
    > being added by an alleged performance improvement.
    
    I am tempted to broach the idea of always giving the hint in the case
    of a non-HOT update, actually. But that's probably too weird to
    countenance when you take a broader, API-level view of things. (So
    I'll skip the explanation of why I think that might be reasonable from
    the point of view of the nbtree code.)
    
    > Another thing we ought to check into is the extent to which this
    > is duplicative of the setup calculations for HOT updates --- I seem
    > to recall that there's already roughly-similar logic somewhere else.
    
    That's handled fairly directly, on the heapam side. At the top of
    heap_update(), with some relcache infrastructure. Unlike
    heap_update(), index_unchanged_by_update() cares about which specific
    indexes have "logically modified" attributes. We already know for sure
    that the update can't have been a HOT UPDATE when
    index_unchanged_by_update() is reached, of course.
    
    > And, not to be too picky, but does this cope with the case where
    > an indexed column is changed by a BEFORE trigger, not by the
    > query proper?
    
    No. It's much better to err in the direction of giving the hint,
    rather than not giving the hint. In order for us to make the category
    of error that seems like it might actually be a problem (not giving
    the hint when we should), the BEFORE trigger would have to "undo" an
    explicit change to an updated column.
    
    We also want to give the hint when a partial index is subject to lots
    of non-HOT updates, when successive updates make the predicate flip
    between matching and not matching. That was shown to be particularly
    valuable (with a workload that has such an index). So the fact that we
    don't handle predicates is intentional, even though the justification
    for that relies on an implementation deficiency in HOT, that might be
    fixed some day.
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
    
  15. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-12-14T23:28:52Z

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> writes:
    > On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 11:33 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >> And, not to be too picky, but does this cope with the case where
    >> an indexed column is changed by a BEFORE trigger, not by the
    >> query proper?
    
    > No. It's much better to err in the direction of giving the hint,
    > rather than not giving the hint. In order for us to make the category
    > of error that seems like it might actually be a problem (not giving
    > the hint when we should), the BEFORE trigger would have to "undo" an
    > explicit change to an updated column.
    
    Uh ... it seems that you are writing as though "giving the hint"
    means saying that the column value changed.  That seems quite
    confusingly backwards to me, as that is/ought to be the expected
    assumption.  Maybe you should invert the flag state while you
    are at it.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  16. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2021-12-15T00:02:23Z

    On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 3:28 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > Uh ... it seems that you are writing as though "giving the hint"
    > means saying that the column value changed.  That seems quite
    > confusingly backwards to me, as that is/ought to be the expected
    > assumption.
    
    That's not what I meant. When I say "give the hint", I mean pass
    "indexUnchanged = true" to aminsert(). This is interpreted within
    btinsert() as "the incoming index tuple is a duplicate of at least one
    index, so perform a bottom-up index deletion pass if and when the
    alternative is splitting the leaf page". In practice the hint always
    has to be treated as a noisy signal about what might work, as a
    strategy of last resort, with costs that are imposed on non-HOT
    updaters.
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
    
  17. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2021-12-22T21:38:27Z

    On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 3:17 PM Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> wrote:
    > I'll come up with a patch for that soon.
    
    It seems that I've run out of time to do this before traveling to see
    family over the holidays. I'll return to this early in the new year,
    still well in time to get a fix into 14.2.
    
    Thanks
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
    
  18. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2022-01-11T19:45:19Z

    On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 11:33 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > I'd be inclined to do so if we can find a suitable place to put it.
    > But wouldn't a field in IndexInfo serve?  Letting the field default
    > to "not optimizable" would cover most cases.
    
    Attached draft HEAD-only bugfix adds two new bool fields to IndexInfo.
    The first bool indicates if we've already done the required work for
    this IndexInfo. The second field is used as a cache (if the cache is
    set the first bool is 'true'). These two fields fit in existing
    alignment padding, so the marginal space overhead is zero.
    
    I'll probably need to greatly simplify the code for backpatch, to
    avoid an ABI break. Seems fine to teach index_unchanged_by_update to
    return "true" unconditionally, given how the IndexUnchanged hint is
    currently applied.
    
    I haven't made the code use pull_varnos(), which you suggested back in
    December. It looks like it would be tricky to do that from the
    executor, since pull_varnos() has a PlannerInfo* argument. That has
    been the case since your commit 55dc86eca7 from January 2021, "Fix
    pull_varnos' miscomputation of relids set for a PlaceHolderVar".
    Please advise.
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
  19. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2022-01-11T19:54:28Z

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> writes:
    > I haven't made the code use pull_varnos(), which you suggested back in
    > December. It looks like it would be tricky to do that from the
    > executor, since pull_varnos() has a PlannerInfo* argument. That has
    > been the case since your commit 55dc86eca7 from January 2021, "Fix
    > pull_varnos' miscomputation of relids set for a PlaceHolderVar".
    > Please advise.
    
    Pass NULL for that, per 6867f963e:
    
    https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git;a=commitdiff;h=6867f963e#patch2
    
    We'd have to back-patch that bit, but I don't see any problem
    with doing so.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
    
  20. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2022-01-11T19:59:12Z

    On Tue, Jan 11, 2022 at 11:54 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > Pass NULL for that, per 6867f963e:
    >
    > https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git;a=commitdiff;h=6867f963e#patch2
    
    Will look into that.
    
    > We'd have to back-patch that bit, but I don't see any problem
    > with doing so.
    
    But the back-patch fix will make index_unchanged_by_update return true
    unconditionally (to avoid an ABI break). It won't actually do anything
    with Vars, which, as I said, seems okay given the current way in which
    we apply the hint.
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
    
  21. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2022-01-11T21:15:34Z

    On Tue, Jan 11, 2022 at 11:59 AM Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> wrote:
    > On Tue, Jan 11, 2022 at 11:54 AM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > > Pass NULL for that, per 6867f963e:
    > >
    > > https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git;a=commitdiff;h=6867f963e#patch2
    >
    > Will look into that.
    
    Took a look. Not sure that using pull_varnos would represent an
    improvement, though. Do you feel strongly about it?
    
    The current approach has the advantage of allowing
    index_expression_changed_walker to directly apply an
    FirstLowInvalidHeapAttributeNumber offset to each Var's varattno. We
    can't just use bms_overlap to check for overlap between the bms
    returned by pull_varnos and our updatedColumns bms. It would be
    possible to transform the bms returned by pull_varnos to compensate,
    of course, but that seems rather awkward
    
    -- 
    Peter Geoghegan
    
    
    
    
  22. Re: When Update balloons memory

    Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2022-01-12T23:44:53Z

    On Tue, Jan 11, 2022 at 1:15 PM Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> wrote:
    > Took a look. Not sure that using pull_varnos would represent an
    > improvement, though. Do you feel strongly about it?
    
    Pushed a fix just now. No need to block on adding the cache/basic fix,
    I think, since the pull_varnos thing is really a separate question.
    
    Thanks
    --
    Peter Geoghegan