Odd Sort/Limit/Max Problem - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From Josh Berkus
Subject Odd Sort/Limit/Max Problem
Date
Msg-id 200212131155.51985.josh@agliodbs.com
Whole thread Raw
Responses Re: Odd Sort/Limit/Max Problem
Re: Odd Sort/Limit/Max Problem
List pgsql-performance
Folks,

Consider this performance quandry brought to me by Elein, which I can replcate
in 7.2.3 and in 7.4 devel:

case_clients is a medium-large table with about 110,000 rows.  The field
date_resolved is a timestamp field which is indexed and allows nulls (in
fact, is null for 40% of entries).

First, as expected, a regular aggregate is slow:

jwnet=> explain analyze select max(date_resolved) from case_clients;
NOTICE:  QUERY PLAN:

Aggregate  (cost=3076.10..3076.10 rows=1 width=4) (actual time=484.24..484.24
rows=1 loops=1)
  ->  Seq Scan on case_clients  (cost=0.00..2804.48 rows=108648 width=4)
(actual time=0.08..379.81 rows=108648 loops=1)
Total runtime: 484.44 msec


So we use the workaround standard for PostgreSQL:

jwnet=> explain analyze select date_resolved from case_clients order by
date_resolved desc limit 1;
NOTICE:  QUERY PLAN:

Limit  (cost=0.00..1.50 rows=1 width=4) (actual time=0.22..0.23 rows=1
loops=1)
  ->  Index Scan Backward using idx_caseclients_resolved on case_clients
(cost=0.00..163420.59 rows=108648 width=4) (actual time=0.21..0.22 rows=2
loops=1)
Total runtime: 0.33 msec

... which is fast, but returns NULL, since nulls sort to the bottom!  So we
add IS NOT NULL:

jwnet=> explain analyze select date_resolved from case_clients where
date_resolved is not null order by date_resolved desc limit 1;
NOTICE:  QUERY PLAN:

Limit  (cost=0.00..4.06 rows=1 width=4) (actual time=219.63..219.64 rows=1
loops=1)
  ->  Index Scan Backward using idx_caseclients_resolved on case_clients
(cost=0.00..163420.59 rows=40272 width=4) (actual time=219.62..219.62 rows=2
loops=1)
Total runtime: 219.76 msec

Aieee!  Almost as slow as the aggregate!

Now, none of those times is huge on this test database, but on a larger
database (> 1million rows) the performance problem is much worse.  For some
reason, the backward index scan seems to have to transverse all of the NULLs
before selecting a value.  I find this peculiar, as I was under the
impression that NULLs were not indexed.

What's going on here?

--
-Josh Berkus
 Aglio Database Solutions
 San Francisco


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