Thread
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explain plans for foreign servers
dinesh salve <cooltodinesh@gmail.com> — 2024-11-11T15:42:20Z
Hi Hackers, I am working on a feature in postgres_fdw extension to show plans used by remote postgresql servers in the output of the EXPLAIN command. I think this will help end users understand query execution plans used by remote servers. Sample output for table people where people_1 is local partition and people_2 is remote partition would look like - postgres:5432> explain select * from "test"."people"; QUERY PLAN Append (cost=0.00..399.75 rows=2270 width=46) → Seq Scan on "people.people_1" people_1 (cost=0.00..21.00 rows=1100 width=46) → Foreign Scan on "people.people_2" people_2 (cost=100.00..367.40 rows=1170 width=46) Remote Plan Seq Scan on "people.people_2" (cost=0.00..21.00 rows=1100 width=46) (5 rows) I would like community inputs on below high level thoughts: 1. To enable this feature, either we can introduce a new option in EXPLAIN command e.g. (fetch_remote_plans true) or control this behaviour using a guc defined in postgres_fdw extension. I am more inclined towards guc as this feature is for extension postgres_fdw. Adding the EXPLAIN command option might force other FDW extensions to handle this. 2. For ANALYZE = false, the idea is that postgres_fdw would create a connection to a remote server, prepare SQL to send over connection and store received plans in ExplainState. 3. For ANALYZE = true, idea is that postgres_fdw would set a new guc over connection to remote server, remote server postgres_fdw would read this guc and send back used query plan as a NOTICE (similar to auto_explain extension does) with custom header which postgres_fdw extension understands. . We also have an opportunity to introduce a new message type in the protocol to send back explain plans but it might look like too much work for this feature. Open to ideas here. Dinesh Salve SDE@AWS -
Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Andy Fan <zhihuifan1213@163.com> — 2024-11-12T00:33:33Z
dinesh salve <cooltodinesh@gmail.com> writes: Hi, > > I am working on a feature in postgres_fdw extension to show plans used > by remote postgresql servers in the output of the EXPLAIN command. > > I think this will help end users understand query execution plans used > by remote servers. Sample output for table people where people_1 is > local partition and people_2 is remote partition would look like This looks nice! Especially for the people who want a FDW based sharding cluster. > I would like community inputs on below high level thoughts: > > 1. To enable this feature, either we can introduce a new option in > EXPLAIN command e.g. (fetch_remote_plans true) or control this > behaviour using a guc defined in postgres_fdw extension. I am more > inclined towards guc as this feature is for extension > postgres_fdw. Adding the EXPLAIN command option might force other FDW > extensions to handle this. +1. > 2. For ANALYZE = false, the idea is that postgres_fdw would create a > connection to a remote server, prepare SQL to send over connection and > store received plans in ExplainState. > 3. For ANALYZE = true, idea is that postgres_fdw would set a new guc > over connection to remote server, remote server postgres_fdw would > read this guc and send back used query plan as a NOTICE (similar to > auto_explain extension does) with custom header which postgres_fdw > extension understands. We also have an opportunity to introduce a new > message type in the protocol to send back explain plans but it might > look like too much work for this feature. Open to ideas here. This generally looks good to me. Looking forward a patch for the details. -- Best Regards Andy Fan
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat.oss@gmail.com> — 2024-11-12T10:46:32Z
On Mon, Nov 11, 2024 at 9:12 PM dinesh salve <cooltodinesh@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Hi Hackers, > > I am working on a feature in postgres_fdw extension to show plans used by remote postgresql servers in the output of the EXPLAIN command. > I think this will help end users understand query execution plans used by remote servers. Sample output for table people where people_1 is local partition and people_2 is remote partition would look like - > > postgres:5432> explain select * from "test"."people"; > QUERY PLAN > Append (cost=0.00..399.75 rows=2270 width=46) > → Seq Scan on "people.people_1" people_1 (cost=0.00..21.00 rows=1100 width=46) > → Foreign Scan on "people.people_2" people_2 (cost=100.00..367.40 rows=1170 width=46) > Remote Plan > Seq Scan on "people.people_2" (cost=0.00..21.00 rows=1100 width=46) > (5 rows) > > I would like community inputs on below high level thoughts: > > 1. To enable this feature, either we can introduce a new option in EXPLAIN command e.g. (fetch_remote_plans true) or control this behaviour using a guc defined in postgres_fdw extension. I am more inclined towards guc as this feature is for extension postgres_fdw. Adding the EXPLAIN command option might force other FDW extensions to handle this. > > 2. For ANALYZE = false, the idea is that postgres_fdw would create a connection to a remote server, prepare SQL to send over connection and store received plans in ExplainState. > > 3. For ANALYZE = true, idea is that postgres_fdw would set a new guc over connection to remote server, remote server postgres_fdw would read this guc and send back used query plan as a NOTICE (similar to auto_explain extension does) with custom header which postgres_fdw extension understands. . We also have an opportunity to introduce a new message type in the protocol to send back explain plans but it might look like too much work for this feature. Open to ideas here. If use_remote_estimates is enabled for a given foreign server, postgres_fdw fetches EXPLAIN output and plugs those costs into the local plan's costs. You could use that - display the remote plan only when use_remote_estimates is enabled. However, there's no guarantee that the plan so fetched will be the plan used by foreign server when actually executing the query. Mostly likely that is true but no guarantee. That's also true if the plan is fetched only for the final query. Of course the EXPLAIN output differences between server versions need to taken care of. But the real question is usability. How do you plan to use it? -- Best Wishes, Ashutosh Bapat
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
dinesh salve <cooltodinesh@gmail.com> — 2024-11-22T21:02:26Z
On Tue, Nov 12, 2024 at 4:16 PM Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat.oss@gmail.com> wrote: > On Mon, Nov 11, 2024 at 9:12 PM dinesh salve <cooltodinesh@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > > > Hi Hackers, > > > > I am working on a feature in postgres_fdw extension to show plans used > by remote postgresql servers in the output of the EXPLAIN command. > > I think this will help end users understand query execution plans used > by remote servers. Sample output for table people where people_1 is local > partition and people_2 is remote partition would look like - > > > > postgres:5432> explain select * from "test"."people"; > > QUERY PLAN > > Append (cost=0.00..399.75 rows=2270 width=46) > > → Seq Scan on "people.people_1" people_1 (cost=0.00..21.00 rows=1100 > width=46) > > → Foreign Scan on "people.people_2" people_2 (cost=100.00..367.40 > rows=1170 width=46) > > Remote Plan > > Seq Scan on "people.people_2" (cost=0.00..21.00 rows=1100 > width=46) > > (5 rows) > > > > I would like community inputs on below high level thoughts: > > > > 1. To enable this feature, either we can introduce a new option in > EXPLAIN command e.g. (fetch_remote_plans true) or control this behaviour > using a guc defined in postgres_fdw extension. I am more inclined > towards guc as this feature is for extension postgres_fdw. Adding the > EXPLAIN command option might force other FDW extensions to handle this. > > > > 2. For ANALYZE = false, the idea is that postgres_fdw would create a > connection to a remote server, prepare SQL to send over connection and > store received plans in ExplainState. > > > > 3. For ANALYZE = true, idea is that postgres_fdw would set a new guc > over connection to remote server, remote server postgres_fdw would read > this guc and send back used query plan as a NOTICE (similar to auto_explain > extension does) with custom header which postgres_fdw extension > understands. . We also have an opportunity to introduce a new message type > in the protocol to send back explain plans but it might look like too much > work for this feature. Open to ideas here. > > If use_remote_estimates is enabled for a given foreign server, > postgres_fdw fetches EXPLAIN output and plugs those costs into the > local plan's costs. You could use that - display the remote plan only > when use_remote_estimates is enabled. However, there's no guarantee > that the plan so fetched will be the plan used by foreign server when > actually executing the query. Mostly likely that is true but no > guarantee. That's also true if the plan is fetched only for the final > query. Of course the EXPLAIN output differences between server > versions need to taken care of. > > But the real question is usability. How do you plan to use it? > -- > Best Wishes, > Ashutosh Bapat > Hi Ashutosh, Thanks for the feedback. 1. As admins and devs need to look at plans from time to time, if a remote plan is displayed only when use_remote_estimates is enabled, either the end user needs to keep it enabled (at table or server level) all the time or enable/disable when they want to view remote plans. I actually wanted to decouple that action for the user and make it easy by just setting a guc -> SET postgres_fdw.show_remote_explain_plans = on; 2. Yeah, plans are not guaranteed but this feature would give a high level idea on overall query execution at one place. This could be pretty useful when postgresql is used for sharding and tables are set up as partitions and the end user wants to view overall query execution. Dinesh Salve SDE@AWS
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Anton Shmigirilov <a.shmigirilov@postgrespro.ru> — 2024-11-25T16:53:36Z
> Hi Hackers, > > I am working on a feature in postgres_fdw extension to show plans used by remote postgresql servers in the output of the EXPLAIN command. > I think this will help end users understand query execution plans used by remote servers. Sample output for table people where people_1 is local partition and people_2 is remote partition would look like - > > postgres:5432> explain select * from "test"."people"; > QUERY PLAN > Append (cost=0.00..399.75 rows=2270 width=46) > → Seq Scan on "people.people_1" people_1 (cost=0.00..21.00 rows=1100 width=46) > → Foreign Scan on "people.people_2" people_2 (cost=100.00..367.40 rows=1170 width=46) > Remote Plan > Seq Scan on "people.people_2" (cost=0.00..21.00 rows=1100 width=46) > (5 rows) > > I would like community inputs on below high level thoughts: > > 1. To enable this feature, either we can introduce a new option in EXPLAIN command e.g. (fetch_remote_plans true) or control this behaviour using a guc defined in postgres_fdw extension. I am more inclined towards guc as this feature is for extension postgres_fdw. Adding the EXPLAIN command option might force other FDW extensions to handle this. > > 2. For ANALYZE = false, the idea is that postgres_fdw would create a connection to a remote server, prepare SQL to send over connection and store received plans in ExplainState. > > 3. For ANALYZE = true, idea is that postgres_fdw would set a new guc over connection to remote server, remote server postgres_fdw would read this guc and send back used query plan as a NOTICE (similar to auto_explain extension does) with custom header which postgres_fdw extension understands. . We also have an opportunity to introduce a new message type in the protocol to send back explain plans but it might look like too much work for this feature. Open to ideas here. > > Dinesh Salve > SDE@AWS Hi Dinesh, Thank you for your proposal regarding explain for foreign servers. I have been working on a similar feature and there are several considerations to take into account. To enable this feature it is preferable to use GUC rather than the EXPLAIN option, as it simplifies regression testing. You can simply set it to off before most tests that involve plan checking, while leaving the rest unchanged. This leads to a reduction in the size of the differences. If it is necessary to provide only the execution plan of the foreign query (without actual timing metrics), you should send EXPLAIN with ANALYZE set to OFF, regardless of the initial ANALYZE state. This approach will prevent the re-execution of the remote query (the SQL part of the ForeignScan node), which could potentially lead to side effects. It's safe to send ANALYZE ON during remote EXPLAIN only if your remote SQL is idempotent, i.e. doesn't change anything. That way you can't sent it for *Modify nodes, but it can be applicable for certain ForeignScans, such as those involving FunctionScan. In general, it is safer to enforce ANALYZE OFF in all cases. Also you can't expose to main EXPLAIN some metrics obtained from remote side through the "remote" explain. For example, values such as actual time, planning time, execution time, and similar metrics cannot be exposed because they relates to events that occurred during the "EXPLAIN" communication, rather than during the actual planning and execution phases. Therefore, these times would likely mislead the user. I suppose it's better to enforce EXPLAIN with TIMING OFF and SUMMARY OFF when obtaining the remote portion of EXPLAIN. While reconstructing (deparsing) the SQL query to send as part of EXPLAIN to the remote server, you can obtain SQL statements with placeholders (i.e. $1, $2, etc) instead of actual parameter values. It's syntactically incorrect SQL, which will lead to an error on the remote side. There are two ways to avoid this. You can use GENERIC_PLAN feature (v16+), which accepts dollar-parameters here. Another option is to use params_list == NULL in the deparseSelectStmtForRel() function to substitute dummy null values for placeholders, thereby generating syntactically correct SQL. The downside of this approach is the need to perform an additional deparse stage, which can be redundant. However looking forward a patch, it is likely that some (or all) of my thoughts may become irrelevant. -- Best regards, Anton Shmigirilov, Postgres Professional
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
dinesh salve <cooltodinesh@gmail.com> — 2024-12-14T12:49:37Z
On Mon, Nov 25, 2024 at 10:23 PM Anton Shmigirilov < a.shmigirilov@postgrespro.ru> wrote: > > > Hi Hackers, > > > > I am working on a feature in postgres_fdw extension to show plans used > by remote postgresql servers in the output of the EXPLAIN command. > > I think this will help end users understand query execution plans used > by remote servers. Sample output for table people where people_1 is local > partition and people_2 is remote partition would look like - > > > > postgres:5432> explain select * from "test"."people"; > > QUERY PLAN > > Append (cost=0.00..399.75 rows=2270 width=46) > > → Seq Scan on "people.people_1" people_1 (cost=0.00..21.00 rows=1100 > width=46) > > → Foreign Scan on "people.people_2" people_2 (cost=100.00..367.40 > rows=1170 width=46) > > Remote Plan > > Seq Scan on "people.people_2" (cost=0.00..21.00 rows=1100 > width=46) > > (5 rows) > > > > I would like community inputs on below high level thoughts: > > > > 1. To enable this feature, either we can introduce a new option in > EXPLAIN command e.g. (fetch_remote_plans true) or control this behaviour > using a guc defined in postgres_fdw extension. I am more inclined > towards guc as this feature is for extension postgres_fdw. Adding the > EXPLAIN command option might force other FDW extensions to handle this. > > > > 2. For ANALYZE = false, the idea is that postgres_fdw would create a > connection to a remote server, prepare SQL to send over connection and > store received plans in ExplainState. > > > > 3. For ANALYZE = true, idea is that postgres_fdw would set a new guc > over connection to remote server, remote server postgres_fdw would read > this guc and send back used query plan as a NOTICE (similar to auto_explain > extension does) with custom header which postgres_fdw extension > understands. . We also have an opportunity to introduce a new message type > in the protocol to send back explain plans but it might look like too much > work for this feature. Open to ideas here. > > > > Dinesh Salve > > SDE@AWS > > Hi Dinesh, > > Thank you for your proposal regarding explain for foreign servers. > > I have been working on a similar feature and there are several > considerations to take into account. > > To enable this feature it is preferable to use GUC rather than the EXPLAIN > option, as it simplifies regression testing. You can simply set it to off > before most tests that involve plan checking, while leaving the rest > unchanged. This leads to a reduction in the size of the differences. > > If it is necessary to provide only the execution plan of the foreign query > (without actual timing metrics), you should send EXPLAIN with ANALYZE set > to OFF, regardless of the initial ANALYZE state. This approach will prevent > the re-execution of the remote query (the SQL part of the ForeignScan > node), which could potentially lead to side effects. It's safe to send > ANALYZE ON during remote EXPLAIN only if your remote SQL is idempotent, > i.e. doesn't change anything. That way you can't sent it for *Modify nodes, > but it can be applicable for certain ForeignScans, such as those involving > FunctionScan. In general, it is safer to enforce ANALYZE OFF in all cases. > > Also you can't expose to main EXPLAIN some metrics obtained from remote > side through the "remote" explain. For example, values such as actual time, > planning time, execution time, and similar metrics cannot be exposed > because they relates to events that occurred during the "EXPLAIN" > communication, rather than during the actual planning and execution phases. > Therefore, these times would likely mislead the user. I suppose it's better > to enforce EXPLAIN with TIMING OFF and SUMMARY OFF when obtaining the > remote portion of EXPLAIN. > > While reconstructing (deparsing) the SQL query to send as part of EXPLAIN > to the remote server, you can obtain SQL statements with placeholders (i.e. > $1, $2, etc) instead of actual parameter values. It's syntactically > incorrect SQL, which will lead to an error on the remote side. There are > two ways to avoid this. You can use GENERIC_PLAN feature (v16+), which > accepts dollar-parameters here. Another option is to use params_list == > NULL in the deparseSelectStmtForRel() function to substitute dummy null > values for placeholders, thereby generating syntactically correct SQL. The > downside of this approach is the need to perform an additional deparse > stage, which can be redundant. > > However looking forward a patch, it is likely that some (or all) of my > thoughts may become irrelevant. > > -- > Best regards, > Anton Shmigirilov, > Postgres Professional Hello Anton, Yeah, using guc to enable this feature. I am using auto_explain style design to get a query plan after foreign server executes it. I am forwarding user EXPLAIN options to foreign as it is so as to ensure the user gets expected output. I have prepared a patch which works for SELECT commands and I am planning to work on other commands based on feedback so that I invest in right direction. Appreciate if you could take a look and share feedback. Attached the steps I used to test this as well. Looping in Andy as he expressed interest in review :) Dinesh Salve SDE@AWS
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> — 2025-02-26T19:13:30Z
Hi, Thanks for working on this patch! I looked at the patch from and I have several comments. There are some others, but wanted to start with the most important I found, in order of importance. 1/ The use of NOTICE to propagate the explain plan. I see the message content is checked, but this does not look robust and could lead to some strange results if another ExecutorRun hook emits a similar notice message. + // We might receive plans per batch of cursor, but we only need to store one. + // do we really need to handle len==0. report warn if we still recived. have test around this warn. + if (strstr(notice, "postgres_fdw_explain_plan") && explain_plans->len == 0) { 2/ The current patch requires that the remote side has postgres_fdw enabled. This seems very much against the philosophy of FDWs. Only the side which creates the foreign tables should require the extension to be installed. Also, if auto_explain_plan is enabled on the foreign table side, it seems the explain_ExecutorRun is exercised. This code path should only be taken on the remote side. right? 3/ ExecutorRun is the wrong place to send the plans from, because postgres_fdw performs FETCHES from a SQL declared cursor, and each fetch will hit ExecutorRun. If you return the first plan from ExecutorRun and stop consuming the rest of the plans, you will only get the results from a single fetch only. The plan should be generated and sent back at CLOSE cursor time. 4/ As far as presenting the remote plans, I think adding them inline in the EXPLAIN output will make the plans hard to read, especially fas the plans become more complex. What about they get added to a new section called "remote plans" and the remote plans will be identified by the plan_node_id, which we can add. Below is a sketch-up to make it clear what I am thinking. """ Sort (cost=1..10 rows=10 width=120) (actual time=1..10 rows=10 loops=1) -> Foreign Scan on prices (cost=100.00..200.00 rows=10width=59) (actual time=1..100 rows=10 loops=1) (node=1) Planning Time: 10 ms Execution Time: 100 ms Remote Plans --------------- node 1: Seq Scan on prices (cost=100.00..4576146.22 rows=467980 width=59) (actual time=8737.505..2258486.086 rows=31752 loops=1) """ Here is a thought about how to generate and consume the plans. What if we do something like a new EXPLAIN option which returns all the rows back to the client, and then writes out the plan to some local memory. We would then be able to fetch the last plan through a sql function, i.e. SELECT pg_last_explain(). This may have applications beyond postgre_fdw; but in the case of postgres_fdw, it will call the remote sql using this EXPLAIN option and at the end of execution, it will be responsible to fetch the plans from pg_last_explain. I Have not fully formulated this idea, but wanted to share it. Regards, Sami Imseih Amazon Web Services (AWS) -
Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Jeff Davis <pgsql@j-davis.com> — 2025-03-05T19:00:43Z
On Wed, 2025-02-26 at 13:13 -0600, Sami Imseih wrote: > 1/ The use of NOTICE to propagate the explain plan. > I see the message content is checked, but this does not look robust > and could lead to > some strange results if another ExecutorRun hook emits a similar > notice message. Fundamentally, EXPLAIN ANALYZE needs to return two result sets for this patch to work: the ordinary result, and the EXPLAIN ANALYZE result. The current patch hacks around that by returning the ordinary result set from the foreign server, and then returning the EXPLAIN ANALYZE result as a NOTICE. Ideally, we'd have EXPLAIN ANALYZE return two result sets, kind of like how a query with a semicolon returns two result sets. That changes the expected message flow for EXPLAIN ANALYZE, though, so we'd need a new option so we are sure the client is expecting it (is this a sane idea?). I wonder if Robert's extensible EXPLAIN work[1] could be useful here? We'd also need a DestReceiver capable of returning two result sets. These problems sound solvable, but would require some more discussion. > What if we do something like a new EXPLAIN option which returns all > the rows > back to the client, and then writes out the plan to some local > memory. That's another idea, but I am starting to think returning two result sets from EXPLAIN ANALYZE would be generally useful. Regards, Jeff Davis [1] https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CA%2BTgmoYSzg58hPuBmei46o8D3SKX%2BSZoO4K_aGQGwiRzvRApLg%40mail.gmail.com
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2025-03-05T19:12:13Z
Jeff Davis <pgsql@j-davis.com> writes: > Ideally, we'd have EXPLAIN ANALYZE return two result sets, kind of like > how a query with a semicolon returns two result sets. That changes the > expected message flow for EXPLAIN ANALYZE, though, so we'd need a new > option so we are sure the client is expecting it (is this a sane > idea?). I'm afraid not. That pretty fundamentally breaks the wire protocol, I think. Also (1) there could be more than two, no, if the query touches more than one foreign table? How would the client know how many to expect? (2) there would be no particularly compelling ordering for the multiple resultsets. > I wonder if Robert's extensible EXPLAIN work[1] could be useful > here? I'm wondering the same. You could certainly imagine cramming all of the foreign EXPLAIN output into some new field attached to the ForeignScan node. Readability and indentation would require some thought, but the other approaches don't have any mechanism for addressing that at all. regards, tom lane
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> — 2025-03-05T19:26:15Z
>> What if we do something like a new EXPLAIN option which returns all >> the rows >> back to the client, and then writes out the plan to some local >> memory. > That's another idea, but I am starting to think returning two result > sets from EXPLAIN ANALYZE would be generally useful. I did not think that would be doable. Because a ForeignScanNode for postgres_fdw is a DECLARE CURSOR followed by a serious of FETCH statements and finally a CLOSE, I suspect we can store the plan in memory when the cursor is closed and then it's up to the fdw to call a remote sql to fetch the plan to the other side to append it on top of the explain output. I also thought about 2 options 1/ new EXPLAIN option to do this -or- 2/ put in core GUCs to allow storing the last plan in memory at ExecutorEnd. >> I wonder if Robert's extensible EXPLAIN work[1] could be useful >> here? > I'm wondering the same. You could certainly imagine cramming > all of the foreign EXPLAIN output into some new field attached > to the ForeignScan node. Readability and indentation would > require some thought, but the other approaches don't have any > mechanism for addressing that at al FWIW, I had the same thought [0] and planned on doing the investigation. [0] https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAA5RZ0tLrNOw-OgPkv49kbNmZS4nFn9vzpN5HXX_xvOaM9%3D5ww%40mail.gmail.com -- Sami Imseih
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Jeff Davis <pgsql@j-davis.com> — 2025-03-05T23:24:31Z
On Wed, 2025-03-05 at 14:12 -0500, Tom Lane wrote: > I'm afraid not. That pretty fundamentally breaks the wire protocol, > I think. The extended protocol docs say: "The possible responses to Execute are the same as those described above for queries issued via simple query protocol, except that Execute doesn't cause ReadyForQuery or RowDescription to be issued." Each result set needs a RowDescription, so I think you're right that it breaks the extended protocol. I missed that the first time. Regards, Jeff Davis
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
dinesh salve <cooltodinesh@gmail.com> — 2025-11-18T03:25:39Z
Hi Sami, Thanks for the feedback. I have refactored the commit on the latest version of PG and added a few more tests. To simplify the roll out of this feature, I decided to work on analyze=false use case first. Please find the attached patch for the same. Regards, Dinesh On Thu, Mar 6, 2025 at 4:54 AM Jeff Davis <pgsql@j-davis.com> wrote: > On Wed, 2025-03-05 at 14:12 -0500, Tom Lane wrote: > > I'm afraid not. That pretty fundamentally breaks the wire protocol, > > I think. > > The extended protocol docs say: "The possible responses to Execute are > the same as those described above for queries issued via simple query > protocol, except that Execute doesn't cause ReadyForQuery or > RowDescription to be issued." > > Each result set needs a RowDescription, so I think you're right that it > breaks the extended protocol. I missed that the first time. > > Regards, > Jeff Davis > > -- Regards, Dinesh Salve Cell:- 91 8125898845
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> — 2025-12-03T22:40:26Z
> I have refactored the commit on the latest version of PG and added a few more tests. Thanks for the update! > To simplify the roll out of this feature, I decided to work on analyze=false use case first. I did not go through the entire patch yet, but a few things stood out from my first pass. 1/ RegisterExtensionExplainOption is called during _PG_init, which is fine, but I also wonder if we can call this during postgresExplainForeignScan as well? The reason being is for _PG_init to be invoked, the user must load postgres_fdw (LOAD, session_preload_libraries, shared_preload_libraries), which from my experience is not very common in postgres_fdw. Users ordinarily just "CREATE EXTENSION..." So this needs to be documented [0] 2/ Does this behave sanely with multiple fdw connections? Can we add tests for this? + + /* + * add one of the tables to foreign_scan_table to get the + * serverId for remote plans + */ + if (list_length(foreign_scan_table) == 0) + foreign_scan_table = lappend_oid(foreign_scan_table, rte->relid); + [0] https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/postgres-fdw.html -- Sami Imseih Amazon Web Services (AWS)
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> — 2025-12-04T00:34:23Z
I forgot to mention this point earlier. I noticed GENERIC_PLAN is hard-coded to 1 (true). Is that an oversight, or is it required? ``` + GENERIC_PLAN 1, \ ``` -- Sami Imseih Amazon Web Services (AWS)
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> — 2025-12-09T21:08:08Z
Hi, I spent more time reviewing this patch. Here are additional comments. 1/ Remove unnecessary includes #include "commands/explain_state.h" from option.c. #include "utils/json.h" from postgres_fdw.c. 2/ Add new EXPLAIN options MEMORY and SUMMARY flags added to the remote EXPLAIN query formatting. These do not require ANALYZE to be used. A larger question is how would we want to ensure that new core EXPLAIN options can be automatically set? This is not quite common, but perhaps it is a good thing to add a comment near ExplainState explaining that if a new option is added, make sure that postgre_fdw remote_plans are updated. ``` typedef struct ExplainState { StringInfo str; /* output buffer */ /* options */ bool verbose; /* be verbose */ bool analyze; /* print actual times */ bool costs; /* print estimated co ``` 3/ Removed unnecessary pstrdup() when appending remote plan rows to explain_plan. Removed unnecessary pstrdup() when appending remote plan rows to explain_plan. ``` + appendStringInfo(&explain->explain_plan, "%s\n", pstrdup(PQgetvalue(res, i, 0))); ``` 4/ Simplify foreign table OID handling in postgresExplainForeignScan I am not sure why we need a list that can only hold a single value. Can we just use an Oid variable to store this? 5/ Encapsulates getting the connection, executing the remote EXPLAIN, and releasing the connection. Replaces repeated code in postgresExplainForeignScan, postgresExplainForeignModify, and postgresExplainDirectModify. For #4 and #5, attached is my attempt to simplify these routines. What do you think? 6/ Updated typedefs.list ... to include PgFdwExplainRemotePlans and PgFdwExplainState. 7/ Tests I quickly skimmed the tests, but I did not see a join push-down test. We should add that. -- Sami Imseih Amazon Web Services (AWS) -
Re: explain plans for foreign servers
dinesh salve <cooltodinesh@gmail.com> — 2026-01-07T10:00:25Z
Thanks Sami for feedback. Few points I wanted to call out and need your inputs on - Supporting remote_plans options for inserts: Only "explain insert" are executed with bind variables (verified by logging all sqls while running make check) and while executing that on remote is erroring out with error "there is no parameter $1". We can either NOT support remote plans for insert statements or always use generic_plan option on remote sql. Using "generic_plan" on remote comes with an additional check if remote supports this option or not in case remote shard is older postgres. I prefer not supporting remote_plans for inserts as there is nothing much that goes in insert statement plans unless its "insert into..select". User can always run explain on that select separately. Appreciate your inputs on this. About decision which explain options we should forward to remote shard: This is because local and remote postgres could be different and we still need to address what all options we send in remote sql as remote shard might not even support them. We can forward only limited options to remote which are widely supported (pg >= 9) i.e. verbose, costs, buffers, format only. If we need to support all possible options, we need to query the version of remote postgres and then prepare remote sql. Thoughts? Regard, Dinesh (AWS) On Wed, Dec 10, 2025 at 2:38 AM Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > I spent more time reviewing this patch. Here are additional comments. > > 1/ Remove unnecessary includes > > #include "commands/explain_state.h" from option.c. > #include "utils/json.h" from postgres_fdw.c. > > 2/ Add new EXPLAIN options > > MEMORY and SUMMARY flags added to the remote EXPLAIN query formatting. > These do not require ANALYZE to be used. > > A larger question is how would we want to ensure that new core EXPLAIN > options can be automatically set? > > This is not quite common, but perhaps it is a good thing to add a comment > near ExplainState explaining that if a new option is added, make sure > that postgre_fdw remote_plans are updated. > > ``` > typedef struct ExplainState > { > StringInfo str; /* output buffer */ > /* options */ > bool verbose; /* be verbose */ > bool analyze; /* print actual times */ > bool costs; /* print estimated co > > ``` > > 3/ Removed unnecessary pstrdup() when appending remote plan rows to > explain_plan. > > Removed unnecessary pstrdup() when appending remote plan rows to > explain_plan. > > ``` > + appendStringInfo(&explain->explain_plan, > "%s\n", pstrdup(PQgetvalue(res, i, 0))); > ``` > > > 4/ Simplify foreign table OID handling in postgresExplainForeignScan > > I am not sure why we need a list that can only hold a single value. > Can we just use an Oid variable to store this? > > > 5/ Encapsulates getting the connection, executing the remote EXPLAIN, > and releasing the connection. > > Replaces repeated code in postgresExplainForeignScan, > postgresExplainForeignModify, and postgresExplainDirectModify. > > For #4 and #5, attached is my attempt to simplify these routines. What > do you think? > > 6/ Updated typedefs.list > > ... to include PgFdwExplainRemotePlans and PgFdwExplainState. > > > 7/ Tests > > I quickly skimmed the tests, but I did not see a join push-down test. > We should add > that. > > > -- > Sami Imseih > Amazon Web Services (AWS) -
Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> — 2026-01-10T00:16:26Z
> Supporting remote_plans options for inserts: > Only "explain insert" are executed with bind variables > (verified by logging all sqls while running make check) and while executing > that on remote is erroring out with error "there is no parameter $1". We can > either NOT support remote plans for insert statements > or always use generic_plan option on remote sql. Using "generic_plan" on > remote comes with an additional check if remote supports > this option or not in case remote shard is older postgres. > I prefer not supporting remote_plans for inserts as there is nothing much that > goes in insert statement plans unless its "insert into..select". > User can always run explain on that select separately. Appreciate your > inputs on this. After looking at this a bit more, I don't think the INSERT case is the only one. Here is an example: ``` -- Setup foreign server and table CREATE EXTENSION postgres_fdw; CREATE SERVER remote_server FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER postgres_fdw OPTIONS (host 'localhost', port '5432', dbname 'postgres'); CREATE USER MAPPING FOR CURRENT_USER SERVER remote_server OPTIONS (user 'postgres', password 'password'); CREATE TABLE local_table (id int, name text); CREATE FOREIGN TABLE remote_table ( id int, name text ) SERVER remote_server OPTIONS (table_name 'local_table'); postgres=# load 'postgres_fdw'; LOAD postgres=# explain (remote_plans, verbose) select * from remote_table where id = (select 1); ERROR: there is no parameter $1 CONTEXT: remote SQL command: EXPLAIN ( FORMAT TEXT, VERBOSE 1, COSTS 1, SETTINGS 0) SELECT id, name FROM public.local_table WHERE ((id = $1::integer)) postgres=# postgres=# explain (verbose) select * from remote_table where id = (select 1); QUERY PLAN ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Foreign Scan on public.remote_table (cost=100.01..128.54 rows=7 width=36) Output: remote_table.id, remote_table.name Remote SQL: SELECT id, name FROM public.local_table WHERE ((id = $1::integer)) InitPlan expr_1 -> Result (cost=0.00..0.01 rows=1 width=4) Output: 1 (6 rows) ```` The above is due to the value of the subquery is sent as a parameter; see `printRemoteParam`in deparse.c. Also see this comment in deparse.c: ``` * This is used when we're just trying to EXPLAIN the remote query. * We don't have the actual value of the runtime parameter yet, and we don't * want the remote planner to generate a plan that depends on such a value * anyway. Thus, we can't do something simple like "$1::paramtype". * Instead, we emit "((SELECT null::paramtype)::paramtype)". ``` The above comment is related to the EXPLAIN being sent remotely when use_remote_estimate is enabled. But the point is, it will not be possible to send the runtime parameters to the remote EXPLAIN. So "generic_plan" as a mandatory option may be the best way to proceed, and only make the remote_plans option available to remote versions that support this option. Maybe others have a better way? > About decision which explain options we should forward to remote shard: > This is because local and remote postgres could be different and we still > need to address what all options we send in remote sql as remote shard > might not even support them. We can forward only limited options to > remote which are widely supported (pg >= 9) i.e. verbose, costs, buffers, > format only. If we need to support all possible options, we need to query > the version of remote postgres and then prepare remote sql. Thoughts? I think if we try to forward an option that is on the source side but not on the remote side, it's fair to just error out with "ERROR: unrecognized EXPLAIN option..." That should be acceptable, because the user will know better not to use that option. right? -- Sami Imseih Amazon Web Services (AWS) -
Re: explain plans for foreign servers
dinesh salve <cooltodinesh@gmail.com> — 2026-06-19T19:04:43Z
> So "generic_plan" as a mandatory option may be the best way to proceed, > and only make the remote_plans option available to remote versions that > support this option. > Maybe others have a better way? I agree, I found use of generic_plan convenient here. Attached patch 2 considers this. I have added an error message if the remote postgres server is not compatible with options being sent. Also updated documentation with limitations. Thanks a lot for feedback, Sami. Please review the attached patch and share feedback. On Sat, Jan 10, 2026 at 5:46 AM Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> wrote: > > Supporting remote_plans options for inserts: > > Only "explain insert" are executed with bind variables > > (verified by logging all sqls while running make check) and while > executing > > that on remote is erroring out with error "there is no parameter $1". We > can > > either NOT support remote plans for insert statements > > or always use generic_plan option on remote sql. Using "generic_plan" on > > remote comes with an additional check if remote supports > > this option or not in case remote shard is older postgres. > > I prefer not supporting remote_plans for inserts as there is nothing > much that > > goes in insert statement plans unless its "insert into..select". > > User can always run explain on that select separately. Appreciate your > > inputs on this. > > After looking at this a bit more, I don't think the INSERT case is the > only one. > > Here is an example: > ``` > -- Setup foreign server and table > CREATE EXTENSION postgres_fdw; > CREATE SERVER remote_server FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER postgres_fdw > OPTIONS (host 'localhost', port '5432', dbname 'postgres'); > CREATE USER MAPPING FOR CURRENT_USER SERVER remote_server > OPTIONS (user 'postgres', password 'password'); > > CREATE TABLE local_table (id int, name text); > CREATE FOREIGN TABLE remote_table ( > id int, > name text > ) SERVER remote_server OPTIONS (table_name 'local_table'); > > postgres=# load 'postgres_fdw'; > LOAD > postgres=# explain (remote_plans, verbose) select * from remote_table > where id = (select 1); > ERROR: there is no parameter $1 > CONTEXT: remote SQL command: EXPLAIN ( > FORMAT TEXT, VERBOSE > 1, COSTS 1, SETTINGS > 0) SELECT id, name FROM public.local_table WHERE ((id = > $1::integer)) > postgres=# > > postgres=# explain (verbose) select * from remote_table where id = (select > 1); > QUERY PLAN > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Foreign Scan on public.remote_table (cost=100.01..128.54 rows=7 width=36) > Output: remote_table.id, remote_table.name > Remote SQL: SELECT id, name FROM public.local_table WHERE ((id = > $1::integer)) > InitPlan expr_1 > -> Result (cost=0.00..0.01 rows=1 width=4) > Output: 1 > (6 rows) > > ```` > > The above is due to the value of the subquery is sent as a parameter; see > `printRemoteParam`in deparse.c. > > Also see this comment in deparse.c: > > ``` > * This is used when we're just trying to EXPLAIN the remote query. > * We don't have the actual value of the runtime parameter yet, and we don't > * want the remote planner to generate a plan that depends on such a value > * anyway. Thus, we can't do something simple like "$1::paramtype". > * Instead, we emit "((SELECT null::paramtype)::paramtype)". > ``` > > The above comment is related to the EXPLAIN being sent remotely when > use_remote_estimate is enabled. But the point is, it will not be possible > to > send the runtime parameters to the remote EXPLAIN. > > So "generic_plan" as a mandatory option may be the best way to proceed, > and only make the remote_plans option available to remote versions that > support this option. > > Maybe others have a better way? > > > > About decision which explain options we should forward to remote shard: > > This is because local and remote postgres could be different and we still > > need to address what all options we send in remote sql as remote shard > > might not even support them. We can forward only limited options to > > remote which are widely supported (pg >= 9) i.e. verbose, costs, buffers, > > format only. If we need to support all possible options, we need to query > > the version of remote postgres and then prepare remote sql. Thoughts? > > I think if we try to forward an option that is on the source side but not > on > the remote side, it's fair to just error out with "ERROR: > unrecognized EXPLAIN option..." > > That should be acceptable, because the user will know better not to use > that > option. right? > > -- > Sami Imseih > Amazon Web Services (AWS) >
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> — 2026-07-03T18:35:53Z
Hi Dinesh, Thanks for the patch. v2 needed rebasing, but I also went ahead and applied my comments to v3. 1/ Forward all user options instead of hardcoding ExplainState booleans The current approach reads individual ExplainState fields to construct the remote EXPLAIN: ``` appendStringInfo(&explain_sql, ", VERBOSE %s", es->verbose ? "TRUE" : "FALSE"); ... ..... ``` After thinking about this a bit, this creates a maintenance problem. Any new non-ANALYZE EXPLAIN option added to core requires someone to remember to update postgres_fdw. I previously suggested a comment in explain_state.h to remind developers, but I think we should do something better. The explain_validate_options_hook already receives the user's original option list. We save it in PgFdwExplainState and use to construct the remote EXPLAIN SQL, skipping only remote_plans and generic_plan. New core EXPLAIN options will automatically be forwarded to the remote when the user specifies them, with no postgres_fdw code change needed. If the remote doesn't recognize an option, it errors clearly rather than silently ignoring it. I tested this against a PG 16 remote. EXPLAIN (REMOTE_PLANS, MEMORY) correctly errors with "unrecognized EXPLAIN option 'memory'" since PG 16 does not have MEMORY. This seems better than silent omission. 2/ I also made some comment improvements. Some were just too verbose. 3/ Documentation improvements The generic plan limitation only matters when the remote SQL contains parameter placeholders. For queries with only literals (e.g., WHERE id = 42), the generic plan is identical to a custom plan. The docs should clarify this rather than making it seem like a general limitation. I also added some concrete examples showing both cases where a literal is used vs a parameter. Attached is my attempt at the above. What do you think? -- Sami Imseih Amazon Web Services (AWS)
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Re: explain plans for foreign servers
dinesh salve <cooltodinesh@gmail.com> — 2026-07-04T17:07:19Z
Just took a look and it looks great, thanks Sami for trimming down the documentation and avoiding maintenance of version and their options. I have moved the patch to the current commitfest PG20-2.