Thread

Commits

  1. Adjust overly strict Assert

  2. Speed up finding EquivalenceClasses for a given set of rels

  3. Speed up match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() when there are many ECs.

  1. Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-12-20T17:44:17Z

    In connection with David Rowley's proposal to change bitmapset.c to use
    64-bit words, I dug out an old test case I had for a complex-to-plan query
    (attached).  Andres Freund posted this to the lists perhaps ten years ago,
    though I can't locate the original posting right now.
    
    I was distressed to discover via perf that 69% of the runtime of this
    test now goes into match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col().  That seems
    clearly unacceptable.  There aren't an unreasonable number of foreign key
    constraints in the underlying schema --- mostly one per table, and there's
    only one table with as many as 3.  However, poking around in the planner
    data structures, it turns out there are:
    
    888 base relations
    
    1005 EquivalenceClasses
    
    167815 fkey_list entries initially
    
    690 fkey_list entries after match_foreign_keys_to_quals trims them
    
    So the reason match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col is so dominant in the
    runtime is it's invoked 167815 times and has to scan a thousand
    EquivalenceClasses (unsuccessfully) on most of those calls.
    
    How did the fkey_list get that big?  I think the issue is that the
    query touches the same tables many many times (888 baserels, but
    there are only 20 distinct tables in the schema) and we get an
    O(N^2) growth in the apparent number of FKs.
    
    Clearly, we ought to rethink that data structure.  I'm not sure
    offhand how to make it better, but this is pretty awful.
    
    Perhaps there'd also be some use in having better indexing for
    the EquivalenceClass list, but again I'm not sure what that'd
    look like.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  2. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2018-12-21T20:28:53Z

    On Fri, 21 Dec 2018 at 06:44, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > I was distressed to discover via perf that 69% of the runtime of this
    > test now goes into match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col().  That seems
    > clearly unacceptable.
    
    Agreed. That's pretty terrible.
    
    I looked at this a bit and see that
    match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() is missing any smarts to skip
    equivalence classes that don't have ec_relids bits for both rels. With
    that added the run-time is reduced pretty dramatically.
    
    I've only tested with a debug build as of now, but I get:
    
    Unpatched:
    
    $ pgbench -n -T 60 -f query.sql postgres
    latency average = 18411.604 ms
    
    Patched:
    latency average = 8748.177 ms
    
    Going by my profiler this drops match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col()
    down to just 10% of total planner time for this query. The new
    bms_is_member() call is pretty hot inside that function though.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  3. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2018-12-21T21:53:46Z

    On Sat, 22 Dec 2018 at 09:28, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > Going by my profiler this drops match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col()
    > down to just 10% of total planner time for this query. The new
    > bms_is_member() call is pretty hot inside that function though.
    
    I should have said 28% instead of 10%. 10% is the time spent
    exclusively just in that function (not in a function called by that
    function). The bms_is_member() call I mention above is about 20% of
    the total time, which likely includes some other call sites too.
    
    Back in [1], I mentioned that I'd like to start moving away from our
    linked list based implementation of List and start using an array
    based version instead. If we had this we could easily further improve
    this code fkey matching code to not even look near equivalence classes
    that don't contain members for the relations in question with a design
    something like:
    
    1. Make PlannerInfo->eq_classes an array list instead of an array,
    this will significantly improve the performance of list_nth().
    2. Have a Bitmapset per relation that indexes which items in
    eq_classes have ec_members for the given relation.
    3. In match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() perform a bms_overlap() on
    the eq_classes index bitmapsets for the relations at either side of
    the foreign key then perform a bms_next_member() type loop over the
    result of that in order to skip over the eq_classes items that can't
    match.
    
    Since match_foreign_keys_to_quals() calls
    match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() once for each item in
    PlannerInfo->fkey_list (167815 items in this case) and again for each
    foreign key column in those keys, then this should significantly
    reduce the effort required since we make a pass over *every*
    equivalence  class each time match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() gets
    called.
    
    This array list implementation is something I did want to get one for
    PG12. The height of the bar to do this is pretty high given what was
    mentioned in [2].
    
    [1] https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAKJS1f_2SnXhPVa6eWjzy2O9A%3Docwgd0Cj-LQeWpGtrWqbUSDA%40mail.gmail.com
    [2] https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/21592.1509632225%40sss.pgh.pa.us
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  4. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2018-12-23T20:38:54Z

    On Sat, 22 Dec 2018 at 10:53, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > Back in [1], I mentioned that I'd like to start moving away from our
    > linked list based implementation of List and start using an array
    > based version instead. If we had this we could easily further improve
    > this code fkey matching code to not even look near equivalence classes
    > that don't contain members for the relations in question with a design
    > something like:
    >
    > 1. Make PlannerInfo->eq_classes an array list instead of an array,
    > this will significantly improve the performance of list_nth().
    > 2. Have a Bitmapset per relation that indexes which items in
    > eq_classes have ec_members for the given relation.
    > 3. In match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() perform a bms_overlap() on
    > the eq_classes index bitmapsets for the relations at either side of
    > the foreign key then perform a bms_next_member() type loop over the
    > result of that in order to skip over the eq_classes items that can't
    > match.
    
    Using the above idea, but rather than going to the trouble of storing
    PlannerInfo->eq_classes as an array type list, if we build the array
    on the fly inside match_foreign_keys_to_quals(), then build a
    Bitmapset type index to mark which of the eclasses contains members
    for each relation, then I can get the run-time for the function down
    to just 0.89%.  Looking at other functions appearing high on the
    profile I also see; have_relevant_eclass_joinclause() (14%),
    generate_join_implied_equalities_for_ecs() (23%).
    
    I think if we seriously want to improve planning performance when
    there are many stored equivalence classes, then we need to have
    indexing along the lines of what I've outlined above.
    
    I've attached the patch I used to test this idea.  It might be
    possible to develop this into something committable, perhaps if we
    invent a new function in equivclass.c that builds the index into a
    single struct and we pass a pointer to that down to the functions that
    require the index.  Such a function could also optionally skip
    indexing eclasses such as ones with ec_has_volatile or ec_has_const
    when the use case for the index requires ignoring such eclasses.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  5. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2018-12-24T12:07:15Z

    On Mon, 24 Dec 2018 at 09:38, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > Using the above idea, but rather than going to the trouble of storing
    > PlannerInfo->eq_classes as an array type list, if we build the array
    > on the fly inside match_foreign_keys_to_quals(), then build a
    > Bitmapset type index to mark which of the eclasses contains members
    > for each relation, then I can get the run-time for the function down
    > to just 0.89%.  Looking at other functions appearing high on the
    > profile I also see; have_relevant_eclass_joinclause() (14%),
    > generate_join_implied_equalities_for_ecs() (23%).
    
    I've now expanded the proof of concept patch to use this indexing
    technique for have_relevant_eclass_joinclause() and
    generate_join_implied_equalities_for_ecs().  With Tom's test from
    up-thread, I get:
    
    Master:
    latency average = 14125.374 ms
    
    Patched:
    latency average = 2417.164 ms
    
    There are some other cases, such as
    generate_implied_equalities_for_column(), that are possibly also
    indexable, but in that case, we cannot use ec_relids to help build the
    index since it does not keep track of other member relation
    equivalence class members. That function is appearing at about 3.3% of
    total plan time with the patched version of the code, so there's still
    some small gains to be had there. The performance of
    has_relevant_eclass_joinclause() could likely also be improved from
    this indexing. According to my profiling, it's currently still about
    2.6% of total planning time with the patched version.
    
    I've attached the updated (rough) proof of concept patch.  I ended up
    stuffing the equivalence class index structure into PlannerInfo so
    that it would be available in all the places it was required, but
    build just once higher up the call stack. I don't believe this is the
    correct solution for a finished patch, but I didn't really have any
    better ideas and this seemed good enough to demonstrate what the
    performance could look like.
    
    Other ideas I have to further improve the performance of this query
    would be to move the fkey_list out of PlannerInfo and instead include
    a per-relation list inside RelOptInfo. This would allow
    get_foreign_key_join_selectivity() to just look at foreign keys that
    are relevant to the given relations rather than having to skip all
    foreign keys that are not. This function is still accounting for about
    5.5% of the total planning time for this query.  I imagine it wouldn't
    hurt match_foreign_keys_to_quals() too much to have it loop over each
    RelOptInfo and look at the foreign keys defined on each of those.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  6. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> — 2018-12-25T00:46:51Z

    On 12/24/18 1:07 PM, David Rowley wrote:
    > On Mon, 24 Dec 2018 at 09:38, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >> Using the above idea, but rather than going to the trouble of storing
    >> PlannerInfo->eq_classes as an array type list, if we build the array
    >> on the fly inside match_foreign_keys_to_quals(), then build a
    >> Bitmapset type index to mark which of the eclasses contains members
    >> for each relation, then I can get the run-time for the function down
    >> to just 0.89%.  Looking at other functions appearing high on the
    >> profile I also see; have_relevant_eclass_joinclause() (14%),
    >> generate_join_implied_equalities_for_ecs() (23%).
    > 
    > I've now expanded the proof of concept patch to use this indexing
    > technique for have_relevant_eclass_joinclause() and
    > generate_join_implied_equalities_for_ecs().  With Tom's test from
    > up-thread, I get:
    > 
    > Master:
    > latency average = 14125.374 ms
    > 
    > Patched:
    > latency average = 2417.164 ms
    > 
    
    Yes, I can confirm these measurements. On my machine, timing on master
    is about 10530ms, with v1 of the patch it drops to 2600ms and v2 pushes
    it down to 1610ms.
    
    I however observe failures on 4 regression test suites - inherit,
    equivclass, partition_join and partition_prune (diff attached). That's a
    bit surprising, because AFAICS the patch merely optimizes the execution
    and should not change the planning otherwise (all the failures seem to
    be a query plan changing in some way). I'm not sure if the plans are
    correct or better than the old ones.
    
    The other thing is that we probably should not use a single test case to
    measure the optimization - I doubt it can improve less extreme queries,
    but maybe we should verify it does not regress them?
    
    With the patch attached, bms_overlap gets quite high in the profiles. I
    think one reason for that is that all bitmap operations (not just
    bms_overlap) always start the loop at 0. For the upper boundary is
    usually determined as Min() of the lengths, but we don't do that for
    lower boundary because we don't track that. The bitmaps for eclasses are
    likely sparse, so this is quite painful. Attaches is a simple patch that
    adds tracking of "minword" and uses it in various bms_ methods to skip
    initial part of the loop. On my machine this reduces the timings by
    roughly 5% (from 1610 to 1530 ms).
    
    
    regards
    
    -- 
    Tomas Vondra                  http://www.2ndQuadrant.com
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
  7. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2018-12-25T02:48:30Z

    On Tue, 25 Dec 2018 at 13:46, Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > I however observe failures on 4 regression test suites - inherit,
    > equivclass, partition_join and partition_prune (diff attached). That's a
    > bit surprising, because AFAICS the patch merely optimizes the execution
    > and should not change the planning otherwise (all the failures seem to
    > be a query plan changing in some way). I'm not sure if the plans are
    > correct or better than the old ones.
    
    Seems I didn't run the tests after doing a last-minute move of the
    create_eclass_index() call in make_one_rel(). I'd previously had it
    just below set_base_rel_pathlists(), which meant that the index didn't
    exist in some cases so it would fall back on the original code.  It
    appears the use case call from set_base_rel_pathlists() require
    is_child eclass members to be indexed too, but these were not in v1 or
    v2 since ec_relids does not record child rel members.
    
    It seems simple enough to fix this just by adding ec_allrelids and
    setting it for all members rather than just non-children members.
    This also allows me to add the two additional cases to allow
    generate_implied_equalities_for_column() and
    has_relevant_eclass_joinclause() to also make use of the eclass index.
    This further reduces the total planning time for the query on my
    machine to 2304 ms.
    
    > The other thing is that we probably should not use a single test case to
    > measure the optimization - I doubt it can improve less extreme queries,
    > but maybe we should verify it does not regress them?
    
    Agreed. That still needs to be verified.  Although I'm yet unsure what
    sort of form we could use this idea in.  I wonder if it's fine to
    create this eclass index on the fly, or if it's something we should
    keep maintained all the time.  The problem I saw with keeping it all
    the time is down to eq_classes being a List and list_nth() is slow,
    which means the bms_next_member() loops I've added would perform
    poorly when compiled with a linked list lookup.
    
    > With the patch attached, bms_overlap gets quite high in the profiles. I
    > think one reason for that is that all bitmap operations (not just
    > bms_overlap) always start the loop at 0. For the upper boundary is
    > usually determined as Min() of the lengths, but we don't do that for
    > lower boundary because we don't track that. The bitmaps for eclasses are
    > likely sparse, so this is quite painful. Attaches is a simple patch that
    > adds tracking of "minword" and uses it in various bms_ methods to skip
    > initial part of the loop. On my machine this reduces the timings by
    > roughly 5% (from 1610 to 1530 ms).
    
    Seems like an interesting idea, although for the most part, Bitmapsets
    are small and this adds some overhead to all use cases.  I doubt it is
    worth the trouble for bms_is_member(), since that does not need to
    perform a loop over each bitmapword.  It looks like most of the
    bms_overlap() usages are caused by functions like
    have_join_order_restriction(), join_is_legal(),
    check_outerjoin_delay() and add_paths_to_joinrel(), all of which are
    performing a loop over the join_info_list. Perhaps that could be
    indexed a similar way to the eq_classes List. I'd imagine there's
    about another 20-30% of performance to squeeze out of this by doing
    that, plus a bit more by making the fkey_list per RelOptInfo.
    
    Attached is v3 of the hacked up proof of concept performance demo patch.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  8. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> — 2018-12-25T20:50:35Z

    On 12/25/18 3:48 AM, David Rowley wrote:
    > On Tue, 25 Dec 2018 at 13:46, Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >> I however observe failures on 4 regression test suites - inherit,
    >> equivclass, partition_join and partition_prune (diff attached). That's a
    >> bit surprising, because AFAICS the patch merely optimizes the execution
    >> and should not change the planning otherwise (all the failures seem to
    >> be a query plan changing in some way). I'm not sure if the plans are
    >> correct or better than the old ones.
    > 
    > Seems I didn't run the tests after doing a last-minute move of the
    > create_eclass_index() call in make_one_rel(). I'd previously had it
    > just below set_base_rel_pathlists(), which meant that the index didn't
    > exist in some cases so it would fall back on the original code.  It
    > appears the use case call from set_base_rel_pathlists() require
    > is_child eclass members to be indexed too, but these were not in v1 or
    > v2 since ec_relids does not record child rel members.
    > 
    > It seems simple enough to fix this just by adding ec_allrelids and
    > setting it for all members rather than just non-children members.
    > This also allows me to add the two additional cases to allow
    > generate_implied_equalities_for_column() and
    > has_relevant_eclass_joinclause() to also make use of the eclass index.
    > This further reduces the total planning time for the query on my
    > machine to 2304 ms.
    > 
    
    OK, that makes sense.
    
    >> The other thing is that we probably should not use a single test case to
    >> measure the optimization - I doubt it can improve less extreme queries,
    >> but maybe we should verify it does not regress them?
    > 
    > Agreed. That still needs to be verified.  Although I'm yet unsure what
    > sort of form we could use this idea in.  I wonder if it's fine to
    > create this eclass index on the fly, or if it's something we should
    > keep maintained all the time.  The problem I saw with keeping it all
    > the time is down to eq_classes being a List and list_nth() is slow,
    > which means the bms_next_member() loops I've added would perform
    > poorly when compiled with a linked list lookup.
    > 
    
    Yeah, good questions. I think the simplest thing we could do is building
    them on the first access - that would at least ensure we don't build the
    index without accessing it at least once.
    
    Of course, it might still be faster to do the check directly, for small
    numbers of eclasses / fkeys and rels. Perhaps there's some sort of
    heuristics deciding when to build the indexes, but that seems like an
    overkill at this point.
    
    What I propose is constructing a "minimal" simple query invoking this
    code (something like two rels with a join on a foreign key) and measure
    impact on that. That seems like a fairly realistic use case.
    
    ALso, I wonder what is te goal here - how much do we need to redude the
    duration to be happy? Initially I'd say "on par with the state before
    the FK patch" but I guess we're already optimizing beyond that point.
    What was the timing before adding the FK stuff?
    
    >> With the patch attached, bms_overlap gets quite high in the profiles. I
    >> think one reason for that is that all bitmap operations (not just
    >> bms_overlap) always start the loop at 0. For the upper boundary is
    >> usually determined as Min() of the lengths, but we don't do that for
    >> lower boundary because we don't track that. The bitmaps for eclasses are
    >> likely sparse, so this is quite painful. Attaches is a simple patch that
    >> adds tracking of "minword" and uses it in various bms_ methods to skip
    >> initial part of the loop. On my machine this reduces the timings by
    >> roughly 5% (from 1610 to 1530 ms).
    > 
    > Seems like an interesting idea, although for the most part, Bitmapsets
    > are small and this adds some overhead to all use cases.  I doubt it is
    > worth the trouble for bms_is_member(), since that does not need to
    > perform a loop over each bitmapword.
    
    Perhaps. The bitmapsets are generally small in number of members, but
    the values may be actually quite high in some cases (I don't have any
    exact statistics, though).
    
    You're right it adds a bit of overhead, but I'd expect that to be
    outweighted by the reduction of cache misses. But 5% is fairly close to
    noise.
    
    > It looks like most of the bms_overlap() usages are caused by
    > functions like have_join_order_restriction(), join_is_legal(), 
    > check_outerjoin_delay() and add_paths_to_joinrel(), all of which are 
    > performing a loop over the join_info_list. Perhaps that could be 
    > indexed a similar way to the eq_classes List. I'd imagine there's 
    > about another 20-30% of performance to squeeze out of this by doing 
    > that, plus a bit more by making the fkey_list per RelOptInfo.
    > 
    
    Looks promising.
    
    > Attached is v3 of the hacked up proof of concept performance demo patch.
    > 
    
    regards
    
    -- 
    Tomas Vondra                  http://www.2ndQuadrant.com
    PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
    
    
    
  9. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2018-12-30T00:36:25Z

    On Wed, 26 Dec 2018 at 09:50, Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > Yeah, good questions. I think the simplest thing we could do is building
    > them on the first access - that would at least ensure we don't build the
    > index without accessing it at least once.
    
    I think we first need to focus on what is back-patchable here.  The
    problem I see with the equivalence class index idea is that it would
    require passing the index down into
    match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() which is not a static function, so
    we can't really go changing its signature on a backbranch.
    
    Another idea would be to create a new version of
    match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() which uses the index, which would
    mean we'd not break any extensions that might happen to use
    match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col().
    
    Ideally, the quick fix in the v1 patch would be good enough for the
    backbranches, but a quick bit of benchmarking shows that there's still
    a big regression to what the performance is like without the foreign
    keys.
    
    (Average of EXPLAIN over 60 seconds)
    
    foreign key qual matching code commented out: 2486.204 ms
    Master: 13909.551 ms
    v1 patch: 7310.719 ms
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  10. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-02-05T09:43:54Z

    On Sat, 22 Dec 2018 at 09:28, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >
    > On Fri, 21 Dec 2018 at 06:44, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > > I was distressed to discover via perf that 69% of the runtime of this
    > > test now goes into match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col().  That seems
    > > clearly unacceptable.
    >
    > Agreed. That's pretty terrible.
    >
    > I looked at this a bit and see that
    > match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() is missing any smarts to skip
    > equivalence classes that don't have ec_relids bits for both rels. With
    > that added the run-time is reduced pretty dramatically.
    >
    > I've only tested with a debug build as of now, but I get:
    >
    > Unpatched:
    >
    > $ pgbench -n -T 60 -f query.sql postgres
    > latency average = 18411.604 ms
    >
    > Patched:
    > latency average = 8748.177 ms
    
    So that this does not get lost, I've added an entry for the original
    patch for the March commitfest.
    
    While the patch does not bring the performance back to what it was
    before this code was added, it makes a massive dent in the additional
    overhead.
    
    https://commitfest.postgresql.org/22/1984/
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  11. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-02-05T09:47:24Z

    On Tue, 5 Feb 2019 at 22:43, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > So that this does not get lost, I've added an entry for the original
    > patch for the March commitfest.
    
    Attaching the original patch again so the commitfest bot gets off my
    back about the other one not applying.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  12. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-02-21T02:00:33Z

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> writes:
    > Attaching the original patch again so the commitfest bot gets off my
    > back about the other one not applying.
    
    Pushed that one.  I'm interested by the "POC" patch, but I agree
    that it'd take some research to show that it isn't a net negative
    for simple queries.  It sounds like you're not really interested
    in pursuing that right now?
    
    Anyway, I rebased the POC patch up to HEAD, just in case anyone
    still wants to play with it.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  13. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-02-21T02:05:14Z

    On Thu, 21 Feb 2019 at 15:00, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > Pushed that one.  I'm interested by the "POC" patch, but I agree
    > that it'd take some research to show that it isn't a net negative
    > for simple queries.  It sounds like you're not really interested
    > in pursuing that right now?
    
    Thanks for pushing it.
    
    I'm still interested in the POC patch. I just knew it wasn't something
    for the back branches and thought something that was would be more
    important... Things having gone quiet here wasn't a good source of
    inspiration to do any further work on it. It's good to hear you're
    interested.
    
    > Anyway, I rebased the POC patch up to HEAD, just in case anyone
    > still wants to play with it.
    
    Cool. Thanks.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  14. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-03-08T19:05:50Z

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> writes:
    > On Thu, 21 Feb 2019 at 15:00, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >> Anyway, I rebased the POC patch up to HEAD, just in case anyone
    >> still wants to play with it.
    
    > Cool. Thanks.
    
    I haven't done any of the performance testing that this patch
    clearly needs, but just in a quick look through the code:
    
    * I seriously dislike the usage of root->eq_classes, primarily the
    underdocumented way that it means one thing in some phases of the
    planner and something else in other phases.  You seem to be doing that
    in hopes of saving some memory, but is the index data structure really
    large enough to matter?  This scheme is certainly unlikely to continue
    to work if we add any additional uses of EquivalenceClassIndexes.
    So I think it might be better to pass them around as explicit
    arguments and/or attach them someplace else than PlannerInfo.
    
    * I'm also not very excited about having both a fast and slow path
    in places like has_relevant_eclass_joinclause() depending on whether
    the index exists or not.  IMO, if we're going to do this at all,
    we should just go over to requiring the index to exist when needed,
    and get rid of the slow paths.  (A possible variant to that is "build
    the index structure on-demand", though you'd have to be careful about
    GEQO memory management.)  Otherwise we'll forever be fighting hidden
    planner-performance bugs of the form "if you call function xyz from
    here, it'll be way slower than you expected".
    
    * There's not much point in making EquivalenceClassIndex a Node type
    if you're not going to wire it up to any of the Node infrastructure
    (particularly outfuncs.c, which might be useful for debug purposes).
    But I'm not really sure that it ought to be a distinct data structure
    at all --- maybe this requirement should be more tightly integrated
    with the ECs themselves?  One idea of what that might look like is to
    let each base RelOptInfo have a list of associated EquivalenceClasses,
    so that you'd only have to search through directly-relevant ECs when
    trying to prove something.  But I'm just handwaving here.
    
    * Spell check please, particularly EQUIVALANCE.
    
    * Documentation of the data structure is pretty weak, eg what is
    "this relation" in the comment about ei_index?  And how do you
    know how long the arrays are, or what they're indexed by?  And
    there's no explicit statement that ei_flags is a bitmask of those
    other symbols, much less any real statement of what each flag means.
    
    Setting the CF entry to WOA for now.  I wonder though if we should
    just push it out to v13 immediately --- are you intending to do more
    with it in the near future?
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
  15. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-03-09T00:18:57Z

    On Sat, 9 Mar 2019 at 08:05, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > Setting the CF entry to WOA for now.  I wonder though if we should
    > just push it out to v13 immediately --- are you intending to do more
    > with it in the near future?
    
    Thanks a lot for going over this and providing feedback.  I put the
    patch out there mostly to see if such a thing is something we might
    want, and it's good to see no objections to the idea. I didn't want to
    waste too much time if there was going to be some serious objections
    to the idea.
    
    This is something I'd like to look into for v13.  I think it'll be
    much easier to do if we can get your List reimplementation patch in
    first. That's going to allow list_nth on PlannerInfo->eq_classes to
    work quickly and will remove the need for having to build an array to
    store the classes, and as you mention, RelOptInfo could store a
    Bitmapset to store which ECs have members for this rel.   I've
    modified the CF entry to target v13.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  16. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-03-10T08:34:51Z

    On Sat, 9 Mar 2019 at 13:18, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > This is something I'd like to look into for v13.  I think it'll be
    > much easier to do if we can get your List reimplementation patch in
    > first. That's going to allow list_nth on PlannerInfo->eq_classes to
    > work quickly and will remove the need for having to build an array to
    > store the classes, and as you mention, RelOptInfo could store a
    > Bitmapset to store which ECs have members for this rel.   I've
    > modified the CF entry to target v13.
    
    I started looking at this again and I came up with the attached
    eclass_indexes_v2.patch.  This modifies the original patch
    significantly so that we no longer build this big eclass index when we
    think we might start to need it.  Instead, I've added a Bitmapset
    field to RelOptInfo named "eclass_indexes".  During add_eq_member() we
    just note down the PlannerInfo->eq_classes index of the eclass we're
    adding to in each RelOptInfo->eclass_indexes that's involved in the
    new eclass member being added.  This means we can use the Bitmapset
    lookup anytime we like. That allowed me to get rid of those special
    cases I had added to make use of the index when it exists.  I've now
    modified all the existing code to make use of the
    RelOptInfo->eclass_indexes field.
    
    As mentioned above, my thoughts on this patch were that this new
    method would only be any good once we got Tom's list implementation
    patch as that makes list_nth() O(1) instead of O(N).  On benchmarking
    this I was quite surprised that it still improves performance quite a
    bit even without the list reimplementation patch.
    
    Using Tom's test case [1], I get the following:
    
    * master (82a5649fb)
    latency average = 6992.320 ms
    latency average = 6990.297 ms
    latency average = 7030.619 ms
    
    * master + eclass_indexes_v2
    latency average = 2537.536 ms
    latency average = 2530.824 ms
    latency average = 2543.770 ms
    
    If I add in Tom's list reimplementation too, I get:
    
    * master + Tom's list reimplementation v3 + eclass_indexes
    latency average = 1225.910 ms
    latency average = 1209.565 ms
    latency average = 1207.326 ms
    
    I really didn't expect just this patch alone to speed this up as it
    calls list_nth() in a loop.  I can only imagine that with this
    workload that these list_nth() loops are not performing many loops,
    otherwise, the performance would die off quickly. I thought about how
    we could defend against workloads where there's a large number of
    eclasses and most match a given relation.  I ended up with a small
    function named list_skip_forward() that simply keeps looping for N
    times eating N ListCells into the given ListCell.  This does improve
    performance a little bit more, but probably, more importantly, should
    be a good defence against the worst case.  As is, the function would
    become completely redundant with Tom's list reimplementation patch, so
    for now, I just snuck it in as a static function in equivclass.c.
    
    I've attached this list_skip_forward.patch too.  This patch is a bit
    rough around the edges as I only just started playing with it in the
    past 30 mins or so.  Perhaps it shows that we might be able to fix
    this in PG12 and not have to wait for the list reimplementation at
    all.
    
    The performance with both attached patches is:
    
    * master + eclass_indexes + list_skip_forward_v0
    latency average = 2375.383 ms
    latency average = 2351.450 ms
    latency average = 2339.259 ms
    
    Still nowhere near as good as with the list reimplementation patch,
    but way better than master.
    
    [1] https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/6970.1545327857@sss.pgh.pa.us
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  17. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-03-10T11:08:45Z

    On Sun, 10 Mar 2019 at 21:34, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > I started looking at this again and I came up with the attached
    > eclass_indexes_v2.patch.
    
    The CF bot didn't like v2. It warned about an uninitialized variable.
    My compiler didn't.
    
    Here's v3, hopefully with that fixed.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  18. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-03-17T21:08:12Z

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> writes:
    > [ eclass_indexes_v3.patch ]
    
    I looked at this for a little bit.  I'm on board with the basic idea
    of assigning integer indexes to the ECs and keeping bitmapsets of
    relevant EC indexes in RelOptInfos.  However ... man, is that
    delete_eclass() thing ugly.  And slow, and fragile-feeling.
    
    I think that maybe we could improve that situation by not trying to
    maintain the RelOptInfo.eclass_indexes sets at all during the initial
    construction of the ECs, but only setting them up after we've completed
    doing that.  We already have an assumption that we know when EC merging
    is done and it's safe to make pathkeys that reference the "canonical"
    (merged) ECs, so it seems like that would be a point where we could
    build the indexing bitmapsets safely.  This hinges on not needing the
    bitmapsets till after that point, but it'd be easy to arrange some
    Asserts verifying that we don't try to use them before that.
    
    If that doesn't work (because we need the index info sooner), maybe we
    could consider never removing ECs from eq_classes, so that their indices
    never change, then teaching most/all of the loops over eq_classes to
    ignore entries with non-null ec_merged.  But we probably want the indexing
    bitmapsets to reflect canonical EC numbers, so we'd still have to do some
    updating I fear -- or else be prepared to chase up the ec_merged links
    when using the index bitmaps.
    
    Stepping back a little bit, I wonder whether now is the time to rethink
    the overall EC data structure, as foreseen in this old comment:
    
     * Note: constructing merged EquivalenceClasses is a standard UNION-FIND
     * problem, for which there exist better data structures than simple lists.
     * If this code ever proves to be a bottleneck then it could be sped up ---
     * but for now, simple is beautiful.
    
    I'm not very sure what a better data structure would really look like ---
    after perusing Sedgewick's section on UNION-FIND, it seems like the
    ec_merged links are more or less what he's recommending anyway, and the
    expensive part of this is probably all the equal() tests to find whether
    two proposed EC member expressions are already in the set of known
    expressions.  So I'm just handwaving here.  But my point is that we
    needn't feel wedded to the idea of keeping the ECs in a list, if we can
    think of some better data structure for them.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
  19. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-03-18T01:06:19Z

    Thanks for looking at this.
    
    On Mon, 18 Mar 2019 at 10:08, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > I looked at this for a little bit.  I'm on board with the basic idea
    > of assigning integer indexes to the ECs and keeping bitmapsets of
    > relevant EC indexes in RelOptInfos.  However ... man, is that
    > delete_eclass() thing ugly.  And slow, and fragile-feeling.
    
    Yeah. When I discovered we remove eclasses from the list I was a
    little annoyed as the code was pretty simple before having to account
    for that.  I'll grant you ugly and slow, but I don't quite see the
    fragile part.
    
    > I think that maybe we could improve that situation by not trying to
    > maintain the RelOptInfo.eclass_indexes sets at all during the initial
    > construction of the ECs, but only setting them up after we've completed
    > doing that.  We already have an assumption that we know when EC merging
    > is done and it's safe to make pathkeys that reference the "canonical"
    > (merged) ECs, so it seems like that would be a point where we could
    > build the indexing bitmapsets safely.  This hinges on not needing the
    > bitmapsets till after that point, but it'd be easy to arrange some
    > Asserts verifying that we don't try to use them before that.
    
    I don't think that's really that easily workable.  Consider, for
    example, when add_child_rel_equivalences() is called, this is well
    after the location I think you have in mind. Probably this function
    should be modified to use the indexes, but it must also update the
    indexes too.
    
    > If that doesn't work (because we need the index info sooner), maybe we
    > could consider never removing ECs from eq_classes, so that their indices
    > never change, then teaching most/all of the loops over eq_classes to
    > ignore entries with non-null ec_merged.  But we probably want the indexing
    > bitmapsets to reflect canonical EC numbers, so we'd still have to do some
    > updating I fear -- or else be prepared to chase up the ec_merged links
    > when using the index bitmaps.
    
    That's probably a better solution. Perhaps we can continue to nullify
    the ec_members, then just skip eclasses with a NIL ec_members.  I
    avoided that in the patch because I was worried about what extension
    might be doing, but if you think it's okay, then I can change the
    patch.
    
    > Stepping back a little bit, I wonder whether now is the time to rethink
    > the overall EC data structure, as foreseen in this old comment:
    >
    >  * Note: constructing merged EquivalenceClasses is a standard UNION-FIND
    >  * problem, for which there exist better data structures than simple lists.
    >  * If this code ever proves to be a bottleneck then it could be sped up ---
    >  * but for now, simple is beautiful.
    
    I've thought for a while now that it wouldn't be too hard to have
    equal(), or some version of it return -1, 0, 1 to allow us to binary
    search or build a binary search tree of nodes.  I imagine it wouldn't
    be too hard to create a compact binary search tree inside an array
    with indexes to the left and right sub-tree instead of pointers. That
    would likely be a bit more cache friendly and allow simple
    non-recursive traversals of the entire tree.  However, that does not
    sound like something this patch should be doing.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  20. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-03-18T04:20:32Z

    On Mon, 18 Mar 2019 at 14:06, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >
    > On Mon, 18 Mar 2019 at 10:08, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > > If that doesn't work (because we need the index info sooner), maybe we
    > > could consider never removing ECs from eq_classes, so that their indices
    > > never change, then teaching most/all of the loops over eq_classes to
    > > ignore entries with non-null ec_merged.  But we probably want the indexing
    > > bitmapsets to reflect canonical EC numbers, so we'd still have to do some
    > > updating I fear -- or else be prepared to chase up the ec_merged links
    > > when using the index bitmaps.
    >
    > That's probably a better solution. Perhaps we can continue to nullify
    > the ec_members, then just skip eclasses with a NIL ec_members.  I
    > avoided that in the patch because I was worried about what extension
    > might be doing, but if you think it's okay, then I can change the
    > patch.
    
    I've modified the patch to do it this way.
    
    The only loop over eq_classes I saw outside of equivclass.c was in
    postgres_fdw.c.  This just calls eclass_useful_for_merging() on each
    EC in the list. Instead of having that loop skip deleted ECs, I
    changed eclass_useful_for_merging() so that it just returns false for
    that case.
    
    The only other thing I change was to create a new function named
    get_common_eclass_indexes() which removes some duplicate code where we
    were getting ECs common to two relations. I also made it so this
    function does not allocate unnecessary Bitmapsets when the inputs are
    simple relations.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  21. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-03-21T21:10:06Z

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> writes:
    > [ eclass_indexes_v4.patch ]
    
    I still don't like this approach too much.  I think we can fairly easily
    construct the eclass_indexes at a higher level instead of trying to
    manage them in add_eq_member, and after some hacking I have the attached.
    Some notes:
    
    * To be sure of knowing whether the indexes have been made yet, I added
    a new flag variable PlannerInfo.ec_merging_done.  This seems like a
    cleaner fix for the dependency between canonical-pathkey construction
    and EC construction, too.  I did need to add code to set the flag in
    a couple of short-circuit code paths where we never call
    generate_base_implied_equalities(), though.
    
    * I kind of want to rename generate_base_implied_equalities() to
    something else, considering that it does a good bit more than just
    that now.  But I haven't thought of a good name.  I considered
    finalize_equivalence_classes(), but that seems like an overstatement
    when it's still possible for new sort-key eclasses to get made later.
    
    * I did not include your changes to use the indexes in
    generate_join_implied_equalities[_for_ecs], because they were wrong.
    generate_join_implied_equalities_for_ecs is supposed to consider only
    ECs listed in the input list.  (It's troublesome that apparently we
    don't have any regression tests exposing that need; we should try to
    make a test case that does show it.)  There's probably some way to
    still make use of the indexes there.  If nothing else, we could refactor
    so that generate_join_implied_equalities isn't just a wrapper around
    generate_join_implied_equalities_for_ecs but has its own looping, and
    we only use the indexes in generate_join_implied_equalities not the
    other entry point.  I haven't tried though.
    
    * You mentioned postgres_fdw.c's get_useful_ecs_for_relation as
    potentially affected by this change.  It looks to me like we could
    nuke that function altogether in favor of having its caller scan the
    foreign table's eclass_indexes.  I haven't tried that either.
    
    
    I'm unsure how hard we should push to get something like this into v12.
    I'm concerned that its dependency on list_nth might result in performance
    regressions in some cases; it's a lot easier to believe that this will
    be mostly-a-win with the better List infrastructure we're hoping to get
    into v13.  If you want to keep playing with it, OK, but I'm kind of
    tempted to shelve it for now.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
  22. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-03-22T10:38:32Z

    Thanks for having a hack at this.
    
    On Fri, 22 Mar 2019 at 10:10, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    > I'm unsure how hard we should push to get something like this into v12.
    > I'm concerned that its dependency on list_nth might result in performance
    > regressions in some cases; it's a lot easier to believe that this will
    > be mostly-a-win with the better List infrastructure we're hoping to get
    > into v13.  If you want to keep playing with it, OK, but I'm kind of
    > tempted to shelve it for now.
    
    Yeah,  mentioned a similar concern above.  The best I could come up
    with to combat it was the list_skip_forward function. It wasn't
    particularly pretty and was only intended as a stop-gap until List
    become array-based. I think it should stop any regression.  I'm okay
    with waiting until we get array based Lists, if you think that's best,
    but it's a bit sad to leave this regression in yet another major
    release.
    
    However, there's always a danger we find some show-stopper with your
    list reimplementation patch, in which case I wouldn't really like to
    be left with list_skip_forward() in core.
    
    If there's any consensus we want this for v12, then I'll happily look
    over your patch, otherwise, I'll look sometime before July.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
  23. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2019-03-22T13:41:30Z

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> writes:
    > On Fri, 22 Mar 2019 at 10:10, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >> I'm unsure how hard we should push to get something like this into v12.
    >> I'm concerned that its dependency on list_nth might result in performance
    >> regressions in some cases; ...
    
    > However, there's always a danger we find some show-stopper with your
    > list reimplementation patch, in which case I wouldn't really like to
    > be left with list_skip_forward() in core.
    
    We could always do something like what we've already done with
    simple_rel_array and simple_rte_array, ie, replace the eq_classes
    List with a manually-managed pointer array.  Given the small number
    of places that touch that list, it wouldn't be too awful --- but
    still, I'd only consider that if the List-reimplementation patch
    goes down in flames.
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    
    
  24. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-05-25T04:37:54Z

    On Fri, 22 Mar 2019 at 10:10, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
    >
    > David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> writes:
    > > [ eclass_indexes_v4.patch ]
    >
    > I still don't like this approach too much.  I think we can fairly easily
    > construct the eclass_indexes at a higher level instead of trying to
    > manage them in add_eq_member, and after some hacking I have the attached.
    
    I've rebased this on top of the pgindent changes (attached) and looked over it.
    
    The only problem I see is that you're not performing a bms_copy() of
    the parent's eclass_indexes in add_child_rel_equivalences(). You've
    written a comment that claims it's fine to just point to the parent's
    in:
    
    /*
    * The child is now mentioned in all the same eclasses as its parent ---
    * except for corner cases such as a volatile EC.  But it's okay if
    * eclass_indexes lists too many rels, so just borrow the parent's index
    * set rather than making a new one.
    */
    child_rel->eclass_indexes = parent_rel->eclass_indexes;
    
    but that's not true since in get_eclass_for_sort_expr() we perform:
    
    rel->eclass_indexes = bms_add_member(rel->eclass_indexes,
    ec_index);
    
    which will work fine about in about 63 out of 64 cases, but once
    bms_add_member has to reallocate the set then it'll leave the child
    rel's eclass_indexes pointing to freed memory.  I'm not saying I have
    any reproducible test case that can crash the backend from this, but
    it does seem like a bug waiting to happen.
    
    Apart from that, as far as I can tell, the patch seems fine.
    
    I didn't add the bms_copy(). I'll wait for your comments before doing so.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  25. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-06-16T07:42:14Z

    On Sat, 25 May 2019 at 16:37, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > The only problem I see is that you're not performing a bms_copy() of
    > the parent's eclass_indexes in add_child_rel_equivalences(). You've
    > written a comment that claims it's fine to just point to the parent's
    > in:
    >
    > /*
    > * The child is now mentioned in all the same eclasses as its parent ---
    > * except for corner cases such as a volatile EC.  But it's okay if
    > * eclass_indexes lists too many rels, so just borrow the parent's index
    > * set rather than making a new one.
    > */
    > child_rel->eclass_indexes = parent_rel->eclass_indexes;
    >
    > but that's not true since in get_eclass_for_sort_expr() we perform:
    >
    > rel->eclass_indexes = bms_add_member(rel->eclass_indexes,
    > ec_index);
    >
    > which will work fine about in about 63 out of 64 cases, but once
    > bms_add_member has to reallocate the set then it'll leave the child
    > rel's eclass_indexes pointing to freed memory.  I'm not saying I have
    > any reproducible test case that can crash the backend from this, but
    > it does seem like a bug waiting to happen.
    >
    > Apart from that, as far as I can tell, the patch seems fine.
    >
    > I didn't add the bms_copy(). I'll wait for your comments before doing so.
    
    I've rebased this on top of the current master. d25ea0127 conflicted
    with the old version.
    
    I also tried to get the planner to crash by trying to find a case
    where a new eclass is added after setting the child relations
    eclass_indexes. I thought this could be done via a call to
    make_pathkey_from_sortinfo(), but I was unable to find any case that
    passes create_it as true. I added some code to emit a warning when
    this happens after a call to add_child_rel_equivalences() and found
    that the warning wasn't raised after running make check. However, I'm
    still pretty scared by not making a copy of the Bitmapset. It seems
    like if anything ever changed in this area then we could end up with
    some very rare crashes if the parent's eclass_indexes grew another
    bitmapword since the child took it's copy of them, so I added the
    bms_copy() in the attached version.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  26. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-07-18T07:24:05Z

    On Sun, 16 Jun 2019 at 19:42, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >
    > I've rebased this on top of the current master. d25ea0127 conflicted
    > with the old version.
    
    ... and again, per recent conflicting change in equivclass.c
    
    I've also taken a fresh set of performance benchmarks since 1cff1b95a
    has recently changed the list.c implementation to use arrays instead
    of singly-linked-lists.
    
    I've attached 2 patched:
    
    0001: Is the rebased version of eclass_indexes_v7.patch.
    0002: Is new and goes even further to improve performance.
    
    Using schema.sql and query.sql from
    https://postgr.es/m/6970.1545327857%40sss.pgh.pa.us I get:
    
    master @ 21039555
    
    postgres=# \i query.sql
    Time: 5078.105 ms (00:05.078)
    Time: 5279.733 ms (00:05.280)
    Time: 5375.766 ms (00:05.376)
    Time: 5382.716 ms (00:05.383)
    
    master + 0001:
    
    postgres=# \i query.sql
    Time: 2116.394 ms (00:02.116)
    Time: 2076.883 ms (00:02.077)
    Time: 2142.237 ms (00:02.142)
    Time: 2199.468 ms (00:02.199)
    
    (2.47x faster than master)
    
    Per what Tom mentioned in
    https://postgr.es/m/16252.1553202606@sss.pgh.pa.us about
    generate_join_implied_equalities[_for_ecs].   Since
    generate_join_implied_equalities() is still quite an overhead in
    profiles, it seems to make sense to special purpose this function
    rather than have it call generate_join_implied_equalities_for_ecs()
    and pass the root->eq_classes list.  Passing the list means we can't
    use the new ec_indexes Bitmapset, so can get no benefit of the
    improved EC lookup method.
    
    Since generate_join_implied_equalities_for_ecs() is fairly short, I
    don't think it's all that bad to keep another slightly altered copy of
    it.  Especially given the following performance results from doing so:
    
    master + 0001 + 0002:
    
    postgres=# \i query.sql
    Time: 1308.742 ms (00:01.309)
    Time: 1294.766 ms (00:01.295)
    Time: 1293.113 ms (00:01.293)
    Time: 1300.643 ms (00:01.301)
    
    (4.06x faster than master)
    
    Unless there's some objection, I'll be looking into pushing both 0001
    and 0002 in a single commit in the next few days.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
  27. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-07-21T05:43:27Z

    On Thu, 18 Jul 2019 at 19:24, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    > Unless there's some objection, I'll be looking into pushing both 0001
    > and 0002 in a single commit in the next few days.
    
    I've pushed this after doing a bit of final tweaking.
    
    After a re-read, I didn't really like all the code that rechecked that
    ec->ec_relids matched the relation we're searching for.  The only code
    that seems to be able to put additional members into eclass_indexes
    that there's no mention of in the actual class was in
    add_child_rel_equivalences(). The comments for the definition of
    eclass_indexes said nothing about there being a possibility of the
    field containing an index for an EC that knows nothing about the given
    relation.   Fixing that either meant fixing the comment to say that
    "they *may* contain", or fixing up the code so that it's strict about
    what ECs can be mentioned in eclass_indexes.  I went with the fixing
    the code option since it also allows us to get rid of some redundant
    checks, to which I turned into Asserts() to catch any possible future
    bugs that might be introduced by any code that might one day remove
    rels from an EC, e.g something like
    https://commitfest.postgresql.org/23/1712/
    
    I also did some performance tests on the most simple query I could
    think of that uses eclasses.
    
    select2.sql: SELECT * FROM t1 INNER JOIN t2 ON t1.a=t2.a
    
    Master:
    
    $ pgbench -n -f select2.sql -T 60 postgres
    tps = 12143.597276 (excluding connections establishing)
    tps = 12100.773839 (excluding connections establishing)
    tps = 12086.209389 (excluding connections establishing)
    tps = 12098.194927 (excluding connections establishing)
    tps = 12105.140058 (excluding connections establishing)
    
    Patched:
    
    $ pgbench -n -f select2.sql -T 60 postgres
    tps = 12224.597530 (excluding connections establishing)
    tps = 12097.286522 (excluding connections establishing)
    tps = 12035.306729 (excluding connections establishing)
    tps = 11965.848289 (excluding connections establishing)
    tps = 12059.846474 (excluding connections establishing)
    
    There's a bit of noise there, but on average we're just 0.25% slower
    on the worse case and the benchmarks shown above put us ~406% better
    on with the fairly complex query that Tom posted in the initial email
    on this thread.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
    
  28. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    Andreas Seltenreich <seltenreich@gmx.de> — 2019-07-21T12:44:31Z

    David Rowley writes:
    
    > On Thu, 18 Jul 2019 at 19:24, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >> Unless there's some objection, I'll be looking into pushing both 0001
    >> and 0002 in a single commit in the next few days.
    >
    > I've pushed this after doing a bit of final tweaking.
    
    sqlsmith triggers an assertion in this commit (3373c7155350):
    
    TRAP: FailedAssertion("!(rel->reloptkind == RELOPT_BASEREL)", File: "equivclass.c", Line: 764)
    
    Here's a somewhat reduced testcase to be run on the regression db:
    
    --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
    select
        max(date_mii(now()::date, 42)) over (partition by subq_1.c9 order by c3),
        min(c3) over (partition by subq_1.c8 )
    from
      (select 1 as c3 from public.partr_def2 as ref_0
    	    left join public.num_exp_power_10_ln as sample_0
    	    on (ref_0.a = sample_0.id ) ) as subq_0
        right join (select 1 as c8, 1 as c9) as subq_1
        on (true);
    --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
    
    Backtrace below.
    
    regards,
    Andreas
    
    
    (gdb) bt
    #0  __GI_raise (sig=sig@entry=6) at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c:50
    #1  0x00007face8834535 in __GI_abort () at abort.c:79
    #2  0x0000562b8d2731a3 in ExceptionalCondition (
        conditionName=conditionName@entry=0x562b8d418320 "!(rel->reloptkind == RELOPT_BASEREL)",
        errorType=errorType@entry=0x562b8d2c601d "FailedAssertion", fileName=fileName@entry=0x562b8d418190 "equivclass.c",
        lineNumber=lineNumber@entry=764) at assert.c:54
    #3  0x0000562b8d067ddc in get_eclass_for_sort_expr (root=root@entry=0x562b8e9077c8, expr=expr@entry=0x7facdf610030,
        nullable_relids=0x7facdf6216f8, nullable_relids@entry=0x7facdf615560, opfamilies=0x7facdf621348,
        opcintype=opcintype@entry=2277, collation=collation@entry=0, sortref=1, rel=0x0, create_it=true) at equivclass.c:764
    #4  0x0000562b8d07326e in make_pathkey_from_sortinfo (root=0x562b8e9077c8, expr=0x7facdf610030, nullable_relids=0x7facdf615560,
        opfamily=397, opcintype=2277, collation=0, reverse_sort=false, nulls_first=false, sortref=1, rel=0x0, create_it=true)
        at pathkeys.c:215
    #5  0x0000562b8d07401f in make_pathkey_from_sortop (create_it=true, sortref=1, nulls_first=false, ordering_op=1072,
        nullable_relids=0x7facdf615560, expr=0x7facdf610030, root=0x562b8e9077c8) at pathkeys.c:258
    #6  make_pathkeys_for_sortclauses (root=root@entry=0x562b8e9077c8, sortclauses=sortclauses@entry=0x7facdf620f98,
        tlist=tlist@entry=0x562b8e929768) at pathkeys.c:1086
    #7  0x0000562b8d082533 in make_pathkeys_for_window (root=root@entry=0x562b8e9077c8, tlist=0x562b8e929768, wc=<optimized out>,
        wc=<optimized out>) at planner.c:5642
    #8  0x0000562b8d087c81 in create_one_window_path (wflists=<optimized out>, activeWindows=<optimized out>,
        output_target=<optimized out>, input_target=<optimized out>, path=0x7facdf620ea8, window_rel=<optimized out>,
        root=<optimized out>) at planner.c:4663
    #9  create_window_paths (activeWindows=<optimized out>, wflists=0x7facdf613b80, output_target_parallel_safe=<optimized out>,
        output_target=0x7facdf6205b8, input_target=0x7facdf6206f8, input_rel=<optimized out>, root=0x562b8e9077c8) at planner.c:4588
    #10 grouping_planner (root=<optimized out>, inheritance_update=false, tuple_fraction=<optimized out>) at planner.c:2211
    #11 0x0000562b8d089dfa in subquery_planner (glob=glob@entry=0x562b8e91bb20, parse=parse@entry=0x562b8e906740,
        parent_root=parent_root@entry=0x0, hasRecursion=hasRecursion@entry=false, tuple_fraction=tuple_fraction@entry=0)
        at planner.c:1013
    #12 0x0000562b8d08afa7 in standard_planner (parse=0x562b8e906740, cursorOptions=256, boundParams=<optimized out>) at planner.c:406
    
    
    
    
  29. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-07-21T13:50:35Z

    On Mon, 22 Jul 2019 at 00:44, Andreas Seltenreich <seltenreich@gmx.de> wrote:
    > sqlsmith triggers an assertion in this commit (3373c7155350):
    >
    > TRAP: FailedAssertion("!(rel->reloptkind == RELOPT_BASEREL)", File: "equivclass.c", Line: 764)
    
    Thanks for the report.
    
    It looks like this is caused by the join removal code removing the
    LEFT JOIN and leaving a dead rel in the eclasses ec_relids.  The fix
    is likely either to adjust the Assert to allow that or to add an if
    test so that we only bother calling bms_add_member for base rels.  I'm
    not quite sure yet.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
    
    
    
    
  30. Re: Performance issue in foreign-key-aware join estimation

    David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> — 2019-07-21T22:35:27Z

    On Mon, 22 Jul 2019 at 01:50, David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
    >
    > On Mon, 22 Jul 2019 at 00:44, Andreas Seltenreich <seltenreich@gmx.de> wrote:
    > > sqlsmith triggers an assertion in this commit (3373c7155350):
    > >
    > > TRAP: FailedAssertion("!(rel->reloptkind == RELOPT_BASEREL)", File: "equivclass.c", Line: 764)
    >
    > Thanks for the report.
    >
    > It looks like this is caused by the join removal code removing the
    > LEFT JOIN and leaving a dead rel in the eclasses ec_relids.  The fix
    > is likely either to adjust the Assert to allow that or to add an if
    > test so that we only bother calling bms_add_member for base rels.  I'm
    > not quite sure yet.
    
    I ended up adjusting the Assert to allow dead rels too.  I thought
    about adding an if test so we only do the bms_add_member for base
    rels, but I didn't really like the special case where eclass_indexes
    wouldn't be correctly set for dead rels. I had thoughts that dead rels
    were not common enough to go to additional trouble over.  That's
    debatable of course.  I also thought about removing the Assert
    completely, but it does help verify we don't get anything unexpected
    in ec_relids.
    
    -- 
     David Rowley                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
     PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services