Implementing Incremental View Maintenance - Mailing list pgsql-hackers
From | Yugo Nagata |
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Subject | Implementing Incremental View Maintenance |
Date | |
Msg-id | 20181227215726.4d166b4874f8983a641123f5@sraoss.co.jp Whole thread Raw |
Responses |
Re: Implementing Incremental View Maintenance
Re: Implementing Incremental View Maintenance Re: Implementing Incremental View Maintenance Re: Implementing Incremental View Maintenance Re: Implementing Incremental View Maintenance Re: Implementing Incremental View Maintenance Re: Implementing Incremental View Maintenance Re: Implementing Incremental View Maintenance Re: Implementing Incremental View Maintenance Re: Implementing Incremental View Maintenance |
List | pgsql-hackers |
Hi, I would like to implement Incremental View Maintenance (IVM) on PostgreSQL. IVM is a technique to maintain materialized views which computes and applies only the incremental changes to the materialized views rather than recomputate the contents as the current REFRESH command does. I had a presentation on our PoC implementation of IVM at PGConf.eu 2018 [1]. Our implementation uses row OIDs to compute deltas for materialized views. The basic idea is that if we have information about which rows in base tables are contributing to generate a certain row in a matview then we can identify the affected rows when a base table is updated. This is based on an idea of Dr. Masunaga [2] who is a member of our group and inspired from ID-based approach[3]. In our implementation, the mapping of the row OIDs of the materialized view and the base tables are stored in "OID map". When a base relation is modified, AFTER trigger is executed and the delta is recorded in delta tables using the transition table feature. The accual udpate of the matview is triggerd by REFRESH command with INCREMENTALLY option. However, we realize problems of our implementation. First, WITH OIDS will be removed since PG12, so OIDs are no longer available. Besides this, it would be hard to implement this since it needs many changes of executor nodes to collect base tables's OIDs during execuing a query. Also, the cost of maintaining OID map would be high. For these reasons, we started to think to implement IVM without relying on OIDs and made a bit more surveys. We also looked at Kevin Grittner's discussion [4] on incremental matview maintenance. In this discussion, Kevin proposed to use counting algorithm [5] to handle projection views (using DISTNICT) properly. This algorithm need an additional system column, count_t, in materialized views and delta tables of base tables. However, the discussion about IVM is now stoped, so we would like to restart and progress this. Through our PoC inplementation and surveys, I think we need to think at least the followings for implementing IVM. 1. How to extract changes on base tables I think there would be at least two approaches for it. - Using transition table in AFTER triggers - Extracting changes from WAL using logical decoding In our PoC implementation, we used AFTER trigger and transition tables, but using logical decoding might be better from the point of performance of base table modification. If we can represent a change of UPDATE on a base table as query-like rather than OLD and NEW, it may be possible to update the materialized view directly instead of performing delete & insert. 2. How to compute the delta to be applied to materialized views Essentially, IVM is based on relational algebra. Theorically, changes on base tables are represented as deltas on this, like "R <- R + dR", and the delta on the materialized view is computed using base table deltas based on "change propagation equations". For implementation, we have to derive the equation from the view definition query (Query tree, or Plan tree?) and describe this as SQL query to compulte delta to be applied to the materialized view. There could be several operations for view definition: selection, projection, join, aggregation, union, difference, intersection, etc. If we can prepare a module for each operation, it makes IVM extensable, so we can start a simple view definition, and then support more complex views. 3. How to identify rows to be modifed in materialized views When applying the delta to the materialized view, we have to identify which row in the matview is corresponding to a row in the delta. A naive method is matching by using all columns in a tuple, but clearly this is unefficient. If thematerialized view has unique index, we can use this. Maybe, we have to force materialized views to have all primary key colums in their base tables. In our PoC implementation, we used OID to identify rows, but this will be no longer available as said above. 4. When to maintain materialized views There are two candidates of the timing of maintenance, immediate (eager) or deferred. In eager maintenance, the materialized view is updated in the same transaction where the base table is updated. In deferred maintenance, this is done after the transaction is commited, for example, when view is accessed, as a response to user request, etc. In the previous discussion[4], it is planned to start from "eager" approach. In our PoC implementaion, we used the other aproach, that is, using REFRESH command to perform IVM. I am not sure which is better as a start point, but I begin to think that the eager approach may be more simple since we don't have to maintain base table changes in other past transactions. In the eager maintenance approache, we have to consider a race condition where two different transactions change base tables simultaneously as discussed in [4]. [1] https://www.postgresql.eu/events/pgconfeu2018/schedule/session/2195-implementing-incremental-view-maintenance-on-postgresql/ [2] https://ipsj.ixsq.nii.ac.jp/ej/index.php?active_action=repository_view_main_item_detail&page_id=13&block_id=8&item_id=191254&item_no=1 (Japaneseonly) [3] https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2750546 [4] https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1368561126.64093.YahooMailNeo%40web162904.mail.bf1.yahoo.com [5] https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=170066 Regards, -- Yugo Nagata <nagata@sraoss.co.jp>
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