Re: Incremental sorts and EXEC_FLAG_REWIND - Mailing list pgsql-hackers
From | Tomas Vondra |
---|---|
Subject | Re: Incremental sorts and EXEC_FLAG_REWIND |
Date | |
Msg-id | 20200424225709.4wpsp7pifdihjsvg@development Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: Incremental sorts and EXEC_FLAG_REWIND (James Coleman <jtc331@gmail.com>) |
Responses |
Re: Incremental sorts and EXEC_FLAG_REWIND
|
List | pgsql-hackers |
On Fri, Apr 24, 2020 at 04:35:02PM -0400, James Coleman wrote: >On Sun, Apr 19, 2020 at 12:14 PM James Coleman <jtc331@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> On Wed, Apr 15, 2020 at 2:04 PM James Coleman <jtc331@gmail.com> wrote: >> > >> > On Wed, Apr 15, 2020 at 11:02 AM James Coleman <jtc331@gmail.com> wrote: >> > > >> > > On Tue, Apr 14, 2020 at 2:53 AM Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote: >> > > > >> > > > Hi, >> > > > >> > > > When initializing an incremental sort node, we have the following as >> > > > of ExecInitIncrementalSort(): >> > > > /* >> > > > * Incremental sort can't be used with either EXEC_FLAG_REWIND, >> > > > * EXEC_FLAG_BACKWARD or EXEC_FLAG_MARK, because we only one of many sort >> > > > * batches in the current sort state. >> > > > */ >> > > > Assert((eflags & (EXEC_FLAG_BACKWARD | >> > > > EXEC_FLAG_MARK)) == 0); >> > > > While I don't quite follow why EXEC_FLAG_REWIND should be allowed here >> > > > to begin with (because incremental sorts don't support rescans without >> > > > parameter changes, right?), the comment and the assertion are telling >> > > > a different story. >> > > >> > > I remember changing this assertion in response to an issue I'd found >> > > which led to rewriting the rescan implementation, but I must have >> > > missed updating the comment. >> > >> > All right, here are the most relevant messages: >> > >> > [1]: Here I'd said: >> > ---------- >> > While working on finding a test case to show rescan isn't implemented >> > properly yet, I came across a bug. At the top of >> > ExecInitIncrementalSort, we assert that eflags does not contain >> > EXEC_FLAG_REWIND. But the following query (with merge and hash joins >> > disabled) breaks that assertion: >> > >> > select * from t join (select * from t order by a, b) s on s.a = t.a >> > where t.a in (1,2); >> > >> > The comments about this flag in src/include/executor/executor.h say: >> > >> > * REWIND indicates that the plan node should try to efficiently support >> > * rescans without parameter changes. (Nodes must support ExecReScan calls >> > * in any case, but if this flag was not given, they are at liberty to do it >> > * through complete recalculation. Note that a parameter change forces a >> > * full recalculation in any case.) >> > >> > Now we know that except in rare cases (as just discussed recently up >> > thread) we can't implement rescan efficiently. >> > >> > So is this a planner bug (i.e., should we try not to generate >> > incremental sort plans that require efficient rewind)? Or can we just >> > remove that part of the assertion and know that we'll implement the >> > rescan, albeit inefficiently? We already explicitly declare that we >> > don't support backwards scanning, but I don't see a way to declare the >> > same for rewind. >> > ---------- >> > >> > So it seems to me that we can't disallow REWIND, and we have to >> > support rescan, but, we could try to mitigate the effects (without a >> > param change) with a materialize node, as noted below. >> > >> > [2]: Here, in response to my questioning above if this was a planner >> > bug, I'd said: >> > ---------- >> > Other nodes seem to get a materialization node placed above them to >> > support this case "better". Is that something we should be doing? >> > ---------- >> > >> > I never got any reply on this point; if we _did_ introduce a >> > materialize node here, then it would mean we could start disallowing >> > REWIND again. See the email for full details of a specific plan that I >> > encountered that reproduced this. >> > >> > Thoughts? >> > >> > > In the meantime, your question is primarily about making sure the >> > > code/comments/etc. are consistent and not a behavioral problem or >> > > failure you've seen in testing? >> > >> > Still want to confirm this is the case. >> > >> > James >> > >> > [1]: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAAaqYe9%2Bap2SbU_E2WaC4F9ZMF4oa%3DpJZ1NBwaKDMP6GFUA77g%40mail.gmail.com >> > [2]: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAAaqYe-sOp2o%3DL7nvGZDJ6GsL9%3Db_ztrGE1rhyi%2BF82p3my2bQ%40mail.gmail.com >> >> Looking at this more, I think this is definitely suspect. The current >> code shields lower nodes from EXEC_FLAG_BACKWARD and EXEC_FLAG_MARK -- >> the former is definitely fine because we declare that we don't support >> backwards scans. The latter seems like the same reasoning would apply, >> but unfortunately we didn't add it to ExecSupportsMarkRestore, so I've >> attached a patch to do that. >> >> The EXEC_FLAG_REWIND situation though I'm still not clear on -- given >> the comments/docs seem to suggest it's a hint for efficiency rather >> than something that has to work or be declared as not implemented, so >> it seems like one of the following should be the outcome: >> >> 1. "Disallow" it by only generating materialize nodes above the >> incremental sort node if REWIND will be required. I'm not sure if this >> would mean that incremental sort just wouldn't be useful in that case? >> 2. Keep the existing implementation where we basically ignore REWIND >> and use our more inefficient implementation. In this case, I believe >> we need to stop shielding child nodes from REWIND, though, since we we >> aren't actually storing the full result set and will instead be >> re-executing the child nodes. >> >> I've attached a patch to take course (2), since it's the easiest to >> implement. But I'd still like feedback on what we should do here, >> because I don't feel like I actually know what the semantics expected >> of the executor/planner are on this point. If we do go with this >> approach, someone should verify my comments additions about >> materialize nodes is correct. > >I also happened to noticed that in rescan we are always setting >node->bounded = false. I was under the impression that >ExecSetTupleBound would be called *after* ExecReScanIncrementalSort, >but looking at both ExecSetTupleBound and ExecReScanSort, but it seems >that the inverse is true. Therefore if we set this to false each time, >then we lose any possibility of using the bounded optimization for all >rescans. > >I've added a tiny patch (minus one line) to the earlier patch series >to fix that. > Thanks. I'll take a look at the issue and fixes. regards -- Tomas Vondra http://www.2ndQuadrant.com PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services
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