Re: From with case - Mailing list pgsql-sql
From | Ben Morrow |
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Subject | Re: From with case |
Date | |
Msg-id | 20130326062206.GA84680@anubis.morrow.me.uk Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: From with case (Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>) |
Responses |
Re: From with case
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List | pgsql-sql |
Quoth pavel.stehule@gmail.com (Pavel Stehule): > Dne 25.3.2013 23:51 "Ben Morrow" <ben@morrow.me.uk> napsal(a): > > > > I would use a view for this: > > > > create view vale_any as > > select 'P'::text "type", v.adiant, v.desc_per, v.cod > > from valepag v > > union all > > select 'R', v.adiant, v.desc_per, v.cod > > from valerec v; > > > > then > > > > for rSql in > > select a.adiant, a.desc_per > > from vale_any a > > where a.type = cTip and a.cod = 2 > > loop > > This design has a performance problem. You read both tables everywhere - > for large tables can be bad You would think so, but, in general, Pg is cleverer than that. For the simple case of queries with constants in (so, a client-submitted query like select * from vale_any a where a.type = 'P' and a.cod = 2 or the equivalent with bound placeholders) the planner won't even plan the parts of the view which don't get used. Try some experiments with EXPLAIN to see what I mean: the unused sections of the Append (that is, the UNION ALL) are either omitted entirely or get replaced with Result One-Time Filter: false (I'm not entirely sure what makes the difference, though it seems to be to do with how complicated the individual parts of the UNION are). PL/pgSQL is a bit more complicated, because (unless you use EXECUTE) it pre-plans all its statements, so the condition on a.type is not constant at planning time. However, if you PREPARE a statement like prepare v as select * from vale_any a where a.type = $1 and a.cod = $2 and then run it with EXPLAIN ANALYZE EXECUTE v ('P', 2) you will see that although the plan includes the parts of the view that don't get used they are all marked '(never executed)' by EXPLAIN ANALYZE, because the executor had enough information to work out they could never return any rows. Skipping those parts of the plan at execute time does have a small cost--for small tables you will see the total query time go up a little for a prepared statement--but nothing like the cost of scanning a large table. I would expect it's about the same as the cost of a PL/pgSQL IF/THEN/ELSE. It's worth noting at this point that if you know the rows of a UNION will be distinct it's worth making it a UNION ALL, since otherwise Pg has to add a sort-and-uniq step which can be expensive. Ben