Re: pg_stats and range statistics
Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com>
From: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com>
To: Egor Rogov <e.rogov@postgrespro.ru>,
"Gregory Stark (as CFM)" <stark.cfm@gmail.com>
Cc: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>,
Soumyadeep Chakraborty <soumyadeep2007@gmail.com>,
pgsql-hackers@lists.postgresql.org
Date: 2023-03-23T22:46:14Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
On 3/20/23 20:54, Egor Rogov wrote: > On 20.03.2023 22:27, Gregory Stark (as CFM) wrote: >> On Sun, 22 Jan 2023 at 18:22, Tomas Vondra >> <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com> wrote: >>> I wonder if we have other functions doing something similar, i.e. >>> accepting a polymorphic type and then imposing additional restrictions >>> on it. >> Meh, there's things like array comparison functions that require both >> arguments to be the same kind of arrays. And array_agg that requires >> the elements to be the same type as the state array (ie, same type as >> the first element). Not sure there are any taking just one specific >> type though. >> >>>> Shouldn't this add some sql tests ? >>> Yeah, I guess we should have a couple tests calling these functions on >>> different range arrays. >>> >>> This reminds me lower()/upper() have some extra rules about handling >>> empty ranges / infinite boundaries etc. These functions should behave >>> consistently (as if we called lower() in a loop) and I'm pretty sure >>> that's not the current state. >> Are we still waiting on these two items? Egor, do you think you'll >> have a chance to work it for this month? > > > I can try to tidy things up, but I'm not sure if we reached a consensus. > We don't have any objections, and that's probably the best consensus we can get here, I guess ... So if you could clean it up a bit, and do something about the two open items I mentioned (a bunch of tests on different array, and behavior consistent with lower/upper), that'd be great. > Do we stick with the ranges_upper(anyarray) and ranges_lower(anyarray) > functions? This approach is okay with me. Tomas, have you made up your > mind? > I think the function approach is fine, but in my January 22 message I was wondering why we're not actually naming them simply lower/upper. > Do we want to document these functions? They are very > pg_statistic-specific and won't be useful for end users imo. > I don't see why not to document them. Sure, we're using them in a fairly specific context, but I don't see why not to let people use them too (which would be hard without docs). regards -- Tomas Vondra EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
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API reference →
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Collect and use histograms of lower and upper bounds for range types.
- 918eee0c497c 9.3.0 cited