Re: Underestimated number of output rows with an aggregate function - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From Tom Lane
Subject Re: Underestimated number of output rows with an aggregate function
Date
Msg-id 2091880.1697387849@sss.pgh.pa.us
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In response to Underestimated number of output rows with an aggregate function  (Philippe BEAUDOIN <phb.emaj@free.fr>)
Responses Re: Underestimated number of output rows with an aggregate function  (Philippe BEAUDOIN <phb.emaj@free.fr>)
List pgsql-performance
Philippe BEAUDOIN <phb.emaj@free.fr> writes:
> During my analysis, I realized that the output rows estimate of the 
> second CTE is really bad, leading to a bad plan for the next CTE.
> I reproduced the issue in a very small test case with a simplified 
> query. Attached is a shell script and its output.

Yeah.  If you try it you'll see that the estimates for the
"keys.c1 = tbl.c1" and "keys.seq = tbl.seq" clauses are spot-on
individually.  The problem is that the planner assumes that they
are independent clauses, so it multiplies those selectivities together.
In reality, because seq is already unique, the condition on c1 adds
no additional selectivity.

If seq is guaranteed unique in your real application, you could just
drop the condition on c1.  Otherwise I'm not sure about a good
answer.  In principle creating extended stats on c1 and seq should
help, but I think we don't yet apply those for join clauses.

A partial answer could be to defeat application of the table's
statistics by writing

          JOIN keys ON (keys.c1 = tbl.c1+0 AND keys.seq = tbl.seq+0)

For me this gives an output estimate of 3000 rows, which is still not
great but should at least prevent choice of an insane plan at the
next join level.  However, it pessimizes the plan for this query
itself a little bit (about doubling the runtime).

> For the hash join node, the plan shows a "Inner Unique: true" property. 
> I wonder if this is normal.

Sure.  The output of the WITH is visibly unique on c1.

            regards, tom lane



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