Thread
Commits
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Doc: improve documentation about ORDER BY in matviews.
- ce43b3dc52c9 14.2 landed
- a7359913a1c2 13.6 landed
- 514f0ae4f40f 10.20 landed
- 3f43dcc1c686 11.15 landed
- 2f908e1a3b9c 12.10 landed
- 4f33af23e7e3 15.0 landed
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ORDER BY in materialized view example?
Maciek Sakrejda <m.sakrejda@gmail.com> — 2021-11-23T06:18:46Z
An example in the materialized view documentation [1] includes an ORDER BY clause without a clear reason. Does it help build the index more efficiently? I suppose it's also sort of like a CLUSTER? But it seems like the ORDER BY should either be explained or dropped: as is, this gives the impression that the ORDER BY can be "embedded" into the resulting relation and persist to other queries that do not include an explicit ORDER BY. (I recently ran across this belief, though not sure if this was due to this example.) Thoughts? [1]: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/rules-materializedviews.html
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Re: ORDER BY in materialized view example?
Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@enterprisedb.com> — 2021-11-23T16:06:32Z
On 23.11.21 07:18, Maciek Sakrejda wrote: > An example in the materialized view documentation [1] includes an ORDER > BY clause without a clear reason. Does it help build the index more > efficiently? I suppose it's also sort of like a CLUSTER? > > But it seems like the ORDER BY should either be explained or dropped: as > is, this gives the impression that the ORDER BY can be "embedded" into > the resulting relation and persist to other queries that do not include > an explicit ORDER BY. (I recently ran across this belief, though not > sure if this was due to this example.) > > Thoughts? > > [1]: > https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/rules-materializedviews.html > <https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/rules-materializedviews.html> I agree the ORDER BY is not relevant to the example. There might be some implementation-dependent advantage to ordering a materialized view, but if there is, it isn't explained in the example.
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Re: ORDER BY in materialized view example?
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-11-23T17:44:56Z
Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@enterprisedb.com> writes: > On 23.11.21 07:18, Maciek Sakrejda wrote: >> An example in the materialized view documentation [1] includes an ORDER >> BY clause without a clear reason. Does it help build the index more >> efficiently? I suppose it's also sort of like a CLUSTER? > I agree the ORDER BY is not relevant to the example. There might be > some implementation-dependent advantage to ordering a materialized view, > but if there is, it isn't explained in the example. Yeah. It would result in the initial contents of the matview being ordered, but I'm sure we don't wish to guarantee that REFRESH would preserve that. I'm on board with just removing the ORDER BY from that example. There is also this rather opaque "note" in the REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW man page: While the default index for future CLUSTER operations is retained, REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW does not order the generated rows based on this property. If you want the data to be ordered upon generation, you must use an ORDER BY clause in the backing query. I'd rather say something like If there is an ORDER BY clause in the matview's defining query, the original contents of the matview will be ordered that way; but REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW does not guarantee to preserve that ordering. regards, tom lane -
Re: ORDER BY in materialized view example?
Jonathan S. Katz <jkatz@postgresql.org> — 2021-11-23T18:11:08Z
On 11/23/21 12:44 PM, Tom Lane wrote: > Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@enterprisedb.com> writes: >> On 23.11.21 07:18, Maciek Sakrejda wrote: >>> An example in the materialized view documentation [1] includes an ORDER >>> BY clause without a clear reason. Does it help build the index more >>> efficiently? I suppose it's also sort of like a CLUSTER? > >> I agree the ORDER BY is not relevant to the example. There might be >> some implementation-dependent advantage to ordering a materialized view, >> but if there is, it isn't explained in the example. > > Yeah. It would result in the initial contents of the matview being > ordered, but I'm sure we don't wish to guarantee that REFRESH would > preserve that. I'm on board with just removing the ORDER BY from > that example. +1 > I'd rather say something like > > If there is an ORDER BY clause in the matview's defining query, > the original contents of the matview will be ordered that way; > but REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW does not guarantee to preserve > that ordering. +1. I think I got bit by this in the real world years back. The above comment is pretty clear. Thanks, Jonathan
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Re: ORDER BY in materialized view example?
Maciek Sakrejda <m.sakrejda@gmail.com> — 2021-11-29T01:05:48Z
Thanks for the feedback. I only had passing familiarity with materialized views and I didn't even realize the order would not be preserved. All the more reason to drop that. I'm attaching two patches: the first drops the original ORDER BY I e-mailed about, and the second applies Tom's change to the man page note (verbatim, though with "materialized view" since the "matview" shorthand doesn't seem to be used in the docs, and with markup). On Tue, Nov 23, 2021 at 10:11 AM Jonathan S. Katz <jkatz@postgresql.org> wrote: > On 11/23/21 12:44 PM, Tom Lane wrote: > > Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@enterprisedb.com> writes: > >> On 23.11.21 07:18, Maciek Sakrejda wrote: > >>> An example in the materialized view documentation [1] includes an ORDER > >>> BY clause without a clear reason. Does it help build the index more > >>> efficiently? I suppose it's also sort of like a CLUSTER? > > > >> I agree the ORDER BY is not relevant to the example. There might be > >> some implementation-dependent advantage to ordering a materialized view, > >> but if there is, it isn't explained in the example. > > > > Yeah. It would result in the initial contents of the matview being > > ordered, but I'm sure we don't wish to guarantee that REFRESH would > > preserve that. I'm on board with just removing the ORDER BY from > > that example. > > +1 > > > I'd rather say something like > > > > If there is an ORDER BY clause in the matview's defining query, > > the original contents of the matview will be ordered that way; > > but REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW does not guarantee to preserve > > that ordering. > > +1. I think I got bit by this in the real world years back. The above > comment is pretty clear. > > Thanks, > > Jonathan >
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Re: ORDER BY in materialized view example?
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-11-29T17:14:13Z
Maciek Sakrejda <m.sakrejda@gmail.com> writes: > I'm attaching two patches: the first drops the original ORDER BY I e-mailed > about, and the second applies Tom's change to the man page note (verbatim, > though with "materialized view" since the "matview" shorthand doesn't seem > to be used in the docs, and with markup). Pushed, thanks for preparing the patch. regards, tom lane