Thread
Commits
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Split out code into new getKeyJsonValueFromContainer()
- 1a2983231d90 13.0 landed
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Optimize get_jsonb_path_all avoiding an iterator
- dbb9aeda9959 13.0 landed
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Refactor code into new JsonbValueAsText, and use it more
- abb014a63106 13.0 landed
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Optimization of some jsonb functions
Nikita Glukhov <n.gluhov@postgrespro.ru> — 2019-02-22T00:05:33Z
Attached set of patches with some jsonb optimizations that were made during comparison of performance of ordinal jsonb operators and jsonpath operators. 1. Optimize JsonbExtractScalar(): It is better to use getIthJsonbValueFromContainer(cont, 0) instead of JsonIterator to get 0th element of raw-scalar pseudoarray. JsonbExtractScalar() is used in jsonb casts, so they speed up a bit. 2. Optimize operator #>>, jsonb_each_text(), jsonb_array_elements_text(): These functions have direct conversion (JsonbValue => text) only for jbvString scalars, but indirect conversion of other types of scalars (JsonbValue => jsonb => text) is obviously too slow. Extracted common subroutine JsonbValueAsText() and used in all suitable places. 3. Optimize JsonbContainer type recognition in get_jsonb_path_all(): Fetching of the first token from JsonbIterator is replaced with lightweight JsonbContainerIsXxx() macros. 4. Extract findJsonbKeyInObject(): Extracted findJsonbKeyInObject() from findJsonbValueFromContainer(), which is slightly easier to use (key string and its length is passed instead of filled string JsonbValue). 5. Optimize resulting value allocation in findJsonbValueFromContainer() and getIthJsonbValueFromContainer(): Added ability to pass stack-allocated JsonbValue that will be filled with the result of operation instead of returning unconditionally palloc()ated JsonbValue. Patches #4 and #5 are mostly refactorings, but they can give small speedup (up to 5% for upcoming jsonpath operators) due to elimination of unnecessary palloc()s. The whole interface of findJsonbValueFromContainer() with JB_OBJECT and JB_ARRAY flags always seemed a bit strange to me, so I think it is worth to have separate functions for searching keys in objects and elements in arrays. Performance tests: - Test data for {"x": {"y": {"z": i}}}: CREATE TABLE t AS SELECT jsonb_build_object('x', jsonb_build_object('y', jsonb_build_object('z', i))) js FROM generate_series(1, 3000000) i; - Sample query: EXPLAIN (ANALYZE) SELECT js -> 'x' -> 'y' -> 'z' FROM t; - Results: | execution time, ms query | master | optimized ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- {"x": {"y": {"z": i}}} js #> '{x,y,z}' | 1148.632 | 1005.578 -10% js #>> '{x,y,z}' | 1520.160 | 849.991 -40% (js #> '{x,y,z}')::numeric | 1310.881 | 1067.752 -20% (js #>> '{x,y,z}')::numeric | 1757.179 | 1109.495 -30% js -> 'x' -> 'y' -> 'z' | 1030.211 | 977.267 js -> 'x' -> 'y' ->> 'z' | 887.101 | 838.745 (js -> 'x' -> 'y' -> 'z')::numeric | 1184.086 | 1050.462 (js -> 'x' -> 'y' -> 'z')::int4 | 1279.315 | 1133.032 (js -> 'x' -> 'y' ->> 'z')::numeric | 1134.003 | 1100.047 (js -> 'x' -> 'y' ->> 'z')::int4 | 1077.216 | 991.995 js ? 'x' | 523.111 | 495.387 js ?| '{x,y,z}' | 612.880 | 607.455 js ?& '{x,y,z}' | 674.786 | 643.987 js -> 'x' -> 'y' ? 'z' | 712.623 | 698.588 js @> '{"x": {"y": {"z": 1}}}' | 1154.926 | 1149.069 jsonpath: js @@ '$.x.y.z == 123' | 973,444 | 912,08 -5% {"x": i, "y": i, "z": i} jsonb_each(js) | 2281.577 | 2262.660 jsonb_each_text(js) | 2603.539 | 2112.200 -20% [i, i, i] jsonb_array_elements(js) | 1255.210 | 1205.939 jsonb_array_elements(js)::numeric | 1662.550 | 1576.227 -5% jsonb_array_elements_text(js) | 1555.021 | 1067.031 -30% js @> '1' | 798.858 | 768.664 -4% js <@ '[1,2,3]' | 820.795 | 785.086 -5% js <@ '[0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]' | 1214.170 | 1165.289 -5% As it can be seen, #> operators are always slower than equivalent series of ->. I think it is caused by array deconstruction in "jsonb #> text[]". -- Nikita Glukhov Postgres Professional: http://www.postgrespro.com The Russian Postgres Company -
Re: Optimization of some jsonb functions
David Steele <david@pgmasters.net> — 2019-03-05T10:24:23Z
On 2/22/19 2:05 AM, Nikita Glukhov wrote: > Attached set of patches with some jsonb optimizations that were made during > comparison of performance of ordinal jsonb operators and jsonpath operators. This patch was submitted just before the last commitfest for PG12 and seems to have potential for breakage. I have updated the target to PG13. Regards, -- -David david@pgmasters.net
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Re: Optimization of some jsonb functions
Andrew Dunstan <andrew.dunstan@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-03-06T19:50:57Z
On 3/5/19 5:24 AM, David Steele wrote: > On 2/22/19 2:05 AM, Nikita Glukhov wrote: >> Attached set of patches with some jsonb optimizations that were made >> during >> comparison of performance of ordinal jsonb operators and jsonpath >> operators. > > This patch was submitted just before the last commitfest for PG12 and > seems to have potential for breakage. > > I have updated the target to PG13. > > I think that's overly cautious. The first one I looked at, to optimize JsonbExtractScalar, is very small, self-contained, and I think low risk. I haven't looked at the others in detail, but I think at least some part of this is reasonably committable. I'll try to look at the others fairly shortly. cheers andrew -- Andrew Dunstan https://www.2ndQuadrant.com PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
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Re: Optimization of some jsonb functions
David Steele <david@pgmasters.net> — 2019-03-07T12:23:53Z
Hi Andrew, On 3/6/19 9:50 PM, Andrew Dunstan wrote: > > On 3/5/19 5:24 AM, David Steele wrote: >> On 2/22/19 2:05 AM, Nikita Glukhov wrote: >>> Attached set of patches with some jsonb optimizations that were made >>> during >>> comparison of performance of ordinal jsonb operators and jsonpath >>> operators. >> >> This patch was submitted just before the last commitfest for PG12 and >> seems to have potential for breakage. >> >> I have updated the target to PG13. >> >> > > I think that's overly cautious. The first one I looked at, to optimize > JsonbExtractScalar, is very small, self-contained, and I think low risk. > I haven't looked at the others in detail, but I think at least some part > of this is reasonably committable. > > > I'll try to look at the others fairly shortly. If you decide all or part of this can be committed then feel free to update the target version. Regards, -- -David david@pgmasters.net
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Re: Optimization of some jsonb functions
Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com> — 2019-07-01T10:50:35Z
> >> On 2/22/19 2:05 AM, Nikita Glukhov wrote: > >>> Attached set of patches with some jsonb optimizations that were made > >>> during > >>> comparison of performance of ordinal jsonb operators and jsonpath > >>> operators. Hi Nikita, This doesn't apply -- to attract reviewers, could we please have a rebase? Thanks, -- Thomas Munro https://enterprisedb.com
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Re: Optimization of some jsonb functions
Joe Nelson <joe@begriffs.com> — 2019-07-26T19:34:22Z
Thomas Munro wrote: > This doesn't apply -- to attract reviewers, could we please have a rebase? To help the review go forward, I have rebased the patch on 27cd521e6e. It passes `make check` for me, but that's as far as I've verified the correctness. I squashed the changes into a single patch, sorry if that makes it harder to review than the original set of five patch files... -- Joe Nelson https://begriffs.com
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Re: Optimization of some jsonb functions
Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-09-18T22:18:13Z
On 2019-Jul-26, Joe Nelson wrote: > Thomas Munro wrote: > > This doesn't apply -- to attract reviewers, could we please have a rebase? > > To help the review go forward, I have rebased the patch on 27cd521e6e. > It passes `make check` for me, but that's as far as I've verified the > correctness. > > I squashed the changes into a single patch, sorry if that makes it > harder to review than the original set of five patch files... Well, I think that was useless, so I rebased again -- attached. (Thanks, git-imerge). -- Álvaro Herrera https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
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Re: Optimization of some jsonb functions
Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-09-19T03:09:06Z
On 2019-Sep-18, Alvaro Herrera wrote: > Well, I think that was useless, so I rebased again -- attached. ... which is how you find out that 0001 as an independent patch is not really a valid one, since it depends on an API change that does not happen until 0005. -- Álvaro Herrera https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
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Re: Optimization of some jsonb functions
Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-09-19T03:47:15Z
On 2019-Sep-19, Alvaro Herrera wrote: > On 2019-Sep-18, Alvaro Herrera wrote: > > > Well, I think that was useless, so I rebased again -- attached. > > ... which is how you find out that 0001 as an independent patch is not > really a valid one, since it depends on an API change that does not > happen until 0005. ... and there were other compilation problems too, presumably fixed silently by Joe in his rebase, but which I fixed again for this series which now seems more credible. I tested compile and regression tests after each patch, it all works locally. -- Álvaro Herrera https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
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Re: Optimization of some jsonb functions
Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-09-21T00:09:31Z
I pushed the first few parts. The attached is a rebased copy of the last remaining piece. However, I didn't quite understand what this was doing, so I refrained from pushing. I think there are two patches here: one that adapts the API of findJsonbValueFromContainer and getIthJsonbValueFromContainer to take the output result pointer as an argument, allowing to save palloc cycles just like the newly added getKeyJsonValueFromContainer(); and the other changes JsonbDeepContains so that it uses a new function (which is a function with a weird API that would be extracted from findJsonbValueFromContainer). Also, the current patch just passes NULL into the routines from jsonpath_exec.c but I think it would be useful to pass pointers into stack-allocated result structs instead, at least in getJsonPathVariable. Since the majority of this patchset got pushed, I'll leave this for Nikita to handle for the next commitfest if he wants to, and mark this CF entry as committed. Thanks! -- Álvaro Herrera https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services