Re: POC, WIP: OR-clause support for indexes
Alexander Korotkov <aekorotkov@gmail.com>
Commits
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Make group_similar_or_args() reorder clause list as little as possible
- 775a06d44c04 18.0 landed
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Allow usage of match_orclause_to_indexcol() for joins
- 627d63419e22 18.0 landed
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Skip not SOAP-supported indexes while transforming an OR clause into SAOP
- 5bba0546eecb 18.0 landed
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Remove the wrong assertion from match_orclause_to_indexcol()
- d4d11940df94 18.0 landed
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Teach bitmap path generation about transforming OR-clauses to SAOP's
- ae4569161a27 18.0 landed
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Transform OR-clauses to SAOP's during index matching
- d4378c0005e6 18.0 landed
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Fix the value of or_to_any_transform_limit in postgresql.conf.sample
- 2af75e117478 17.0 landed
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Transform OR clauses to ANY expression
- 72bd38cc99a1 17.0 landed
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MergeAttributes code deduplication
- 64444ce071f6 17.0 cited
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SEARCH and CYCLE clauses
- 3696a600e229 14.0 cited
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Improve estimation of OR clauses using extended statistics.
- 25a9e54d2db3 14.0 cited
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Teach btree to handle ScalarArrayOpExpr quals natively.
- 9e8da0f75731 9.2.0 cited
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Revise collation derivation method and expression-tree representation.
- b310b6e31ce5 9.1.0 cited
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Instead of trying to force WHERE clauses into CNF or DNF normal form,
- 9888192fb773 8.0.0 cited
On Fri, Oct 4, 2024 at 9:20 PM Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 4, 2024 at 2:00 PM Alexander Korotkov <aekorotkov@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Yes, transformAExprIn() does the work to coerce all the expressions in
> > the right part to the same type. Similar logic could be implemented
> > in match_orclause_to_indexcol(). What worries me is whether it's
> > quite late stage for this kind of work. transformAExprIn() works
> > during parse stage, when we need to to resolve types, operators etc.
> > And we do that once.
>
> I agree that it would be a bit awkward. Especially having spent so
> much time talking about doing this later on, not during parsing. That
> doesn't mean that it's necessarily the wrong thing to do, though.
>
> > If we replicate the same logic to
> > match_orclause_to_indexcol(), then we may end up with index scan using
> > one operator and sequential scan using another operator.
>
> But that's already true today. For example, these two queries use
> different operators at runtime, assuming both use a B-Tree index scan:
>
> select * from tenk1 where four = any('{0,1}'::int[]) and four =
> any('{1,2}'::bigint[]);
>
> select * from tenk1 where four = any('{1,2}'::bigint[]) and four =
> any('{0,1}'::int[]); -- flip the order of the arrays, change nothing
> else
>
> This isn't apparent from what EXPLAIN ANALYZE output shows, but the
> fact is that only one operator (and one array) will be used at
> runtime, after nbtree preprocessing completes. I'm not entirely sure
> how this kind of difference might affect a sequential scan. I imagine
> that it can use either or both operators unpredictably.
Yes, but those operators are in the B-tree operator family. That
implies a lot about semantics of those operators making B-tree
legitimate to do such transformations. But it's different story when
you apply it to arbitrary operator and arbitrary implicit cast. I can
imagine implicit casts which could throw errors or loose precision.
It's OK to apply them as soon as user made them implicit. But
applying them in different ways for different optimizer decisions
looks risky.
------
Regards,
Alexander Korotkov
Supabase