Re: Statistics Import and Export
Jeff Davis <pgsql@j-davis.com>
Commits
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the thread's linked commits as JSON, with link sources.
API reference →
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Change pg_dump default for statistics export.
- 34eb2a80d5a3 18.0 landed
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pg_dump: Adjust reltuples from 0 to -1 for dumps of older versions.
- 5d6eac80cdce 18.0 landed
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vacuumdb: Don't skip empty relations in --missing-stats-only mode.
- 987910502420 18.0 cited
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pg_dump: Fix query for gathering attribute stats on older versions.
- f0d0083f52f9 18.0 landed
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Prevent redeclaration of typedef TocEntry.
- 8ec0aaeae094 18.0 cited
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Remove unused function parameters in pg_backup_archiver.c.
- ff3a7f0b6860 18.0 landed
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pg_dump: Retrieve attribute statistics in batches.
- 9c02e3a986da 18.0 landed
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pg_dump: Reduce memory usage of dumps with statistics.
- 7d5c83b4e90c 18.0 landed
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Skip second WriteToc() call for custom-format dumps without data.
- e3cc039a7d93 18.0 landed
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Add relallfrozen to pg_dump statistics.
- 4694aedf63bf 18.0 landed
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Matview statistics depend on matview data.
- a0a4601765b8 18.0 cited
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Add pg_dump --with-{schema|data|statistics} options.
- bde2fb797aae 18.0 landed
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Stats: use schemaname/relname instead of regclass.
- 650ab8aaf195 18.0 landed
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CREATE INDEX: do update index stats if autovacuum=off.
- 29d6808edebb 18.0 landed
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Don't convert to and from floats in pg_dump.
- 1852aea3f526 18.0 landed
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CREATE INDEX: don't update table stats if autovacuum=off.
- d611f8b1587b 18.0 landed
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Organize and deduplicate statistics import tests.
- 1d33de9d6837 18.0 landed
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Address stats export review comments.
- f9f4b43b8dc0 18.0 landed
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Address stats import review comments.
- 298944e8d802 18.0 landed
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Add relallfrozen to pg_class
- 99f8f3fbbc8f 18.0 cited
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Fix pg_strtof() to not crash on NULL endptr.
- ebe919e95336 13.21 landed
- d69c781084f5 17.5 landed
- c7303f01c574 15.13 landed
- 76fbb38ef69c 14.18 landed
- 5c64ece8aaf3 16.9 landed
- 00d61a08c5fa 18.0 landed
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Use attnum to identify index columns in pg_restore_attribute_stats().
- 40e27d04b4f6 18.0 landed
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pg_dump: prepare attribute stats query.
- 6ee3b91bad26 18.0 landed
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Avoid unnecessary relation stats query in pg_dump.
- 8f427187db78 18.0 landed
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Remove redundant pg_set_*_stats() variants.
- a5cbdeb98af9 18.0 landed
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Do not use in-place updates for statistics import.
- f3dae2ae5856 18.0 landed
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Fix confusion about data type of pg_class.relpages and relallvisible.
- 9de2cc455eb9 18.0 landed
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Documentation fixups for dumping statistics.
- cb45dc3afb05 18.0 landed
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Trial fix for old cross-version upgrades.
- ab84d0ff806d 18.0 landed
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Transfer statistics during pg_upgrade.
- 1fd1bd871012 18.0 landed
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Lock table in ShareUpdateExclusive when importing index stats.
- 9f12da78d953 18.0 landed
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Use in-place updates for pg_restore_relation_stats().
- a43567483c61 18.0 landed
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Improve error message for replication of generated columns.
- 8fcd80258bcf 18.0 cited
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pg_dump: Add dumpSchema and dumpData derivative flags.
- 96a81c1be929 18.0 landed
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Disallow modifying statistics on system columns.
- 869ee4f10eca 18.0 landed
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Add missing CommandCounterIncrement() in stats import functions.
- f22e436bff77 18.0 landed
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Add functions pg_restore_relation_stats(), pg_restore_attribute_stats().
- d32d1463995c 18.0 landed
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Documentation fixup.
- 07d00692c8da 18.0 landed
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Add functions pg_set_attribute_stats() and pg_clear_attribute_stats().
- ce207d2a7901 18.0 landed
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Change pg_*_relation_stats() functions to return type to void.
- dbe6bd4343d8 18.0 landed
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Disable autovacuum for tables in stats import tests.
- 779972e534c0 18.0 landed
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Allow pg_set_relation_stats() to set relpages to -1.
- b391d882ff38 18.0 landed
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Fixup for pg_set_relation_stats().
- 35a015a60045 18.0 landed
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Create functions pg_set_relation_stats, pg_clear_relation_stats.
- e839c8ecc935 18.0 landed
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Add memory/disk usage for Window aggregate nodes in EXPLAIN.
- 95d6e9af07d2 18.0 cited
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Improve performance of dumpSequenceData().
- bd15b7db489d 18.0 cited
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Add INJECTION_POINT_CACHED() to run injection points directly from cache
- a0a5869a8598 18.0 cited
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Improve performance of binary_upgrade_set_pg_class_oids().
- 2329cad1b93f 18.0 cited
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Improve assertion in mdwritev()
- f04d1c1db011 17.0 cited
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CREATE INDEX: do not update stats during binary upgrade.
- 71b66171d045 17.0 landed
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Redefine pg_class.reltuples to be -1 before the first VACUUM or ANALYZE.
- 3d351d916b20 14.0 cited
On Thu, 2024-03-21 at 03:27 -0400, Corey Huinker wrote:
>
> They can, but part of what I wanted to show was that the values that
> aren't directly passed in as parameters (staopN, stacollN) get set to
> the correct values, and those values aren't guaranteed to match
> across databases, hence testing them in the regression test rather
> than in a TAP test. I'd still like to be able to test that.
OK, that's fine.
> > The function signature for pg_set_attribute_stats could be more
> > friendly
...
> 1. We'd have to compare the stats provided against the stats that are
> already there, make that list in-memory, and then re-order what
> remains
> 2. There would be no way to un-set statistics of a given stakind,
> unless we added an "actually set it null" boolean for each parameter
> that can be null.
> 3. I tried that with the JSON formats, it made the code even messier
> than it already was.
How about just some defaults then? Many of them have a reasonable
default, like NULL or an empty array. Some are parallel arrays and
either both should be specified or neither (e.g.
most_common_vals+most_common_freqs), but you can check for that.
> > Why are you calling checkCanModifyRelation() twice?
>
> Once for the relation itself, and once for pg_statistic.
Nobody has the privileges to modify pg_statistic except superuser,
right? I thought the point of a privilege check is that users could
modify statistics for their own tables, or the tables they maintain.
>
> I can see making it void and returning an error for everything that
> we currently return false for, but if we do that, then a statement
> with one pg_set_relation_stats, and N pg_set_attribute_stats (which
> we lump together in one command for the locking benefits and atomic
> transaction) would fail entirely if one of the set_attributes named a
> column that we had dropped. It's up for debate whether that's the
> right behavior or not.
I'd probably make the dropped column a WARNING with a message like
"skipping dropped column whatever". Regardless, have some kind of
explanatory comment.
>
> I pulled most of the hardcoded values from pg_stats itself. The
> sample set is trivially small, and the values inserted were in-order-
> ish. So maybe that's why.
In my simple test, most_common_freqs is descending:
CREATE TABLE a(i int);
INSERT INTO a VALUES(1);
INSERT INTO a VALUES(2);
INSERT INTO a VALUES(2);
INSERT INTO a VALUES(3);
INSERT INTO a VALUES(3);
INSERT INTO a VALUES(3);
INSERT INTO a VALUES(4);
INSERT INTO a VALUES(4);
INSERT INTO a VALUES(4);
INSERT INTO a VALUES(4);
ANALYZE a;
SELECT most_common_vals, most_common_freqs
FROM pg_stats WHERE tablename='a';
most_common_vals | most_common_freqs
------------------+-------------------
{4,3,2} | {0.4,0.3,0.2}
(1 row)
Can you show an example where it's not?
>
> Maybe we could have the functions restricted to a role or roles:
>
> 1. pg_write_all_stats (can modify stats on ANY table)
> 2. pg_write_own_stats (can modify stats on tables owned by user)
If we go that route, we are giving up on the ability for users to
restore stats on their own tables. Let's just be careful about
validating data to mitigate this risk.
Regards,
Jeff Davis