Re: profiling connection overhead - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Tom Lane
Subject Re: profiling connection overhead
Date
Msg-id 26799.1290987718@sss.pgh.pa.us
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: profiling connection overhead  (Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>)
Responses Re: profiling connection overhead
List pgsql-hackers
Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> writes:
> After our recent conversation
> about KNNGIST, it occurred to me to wonder whether there's really any
> point in pretending that a user can usefully add an AM, both due to
> hard-wired planner knowledge and due to lack of any sort of extensible
> XLOG support.  If not, we could potentially turn pg_am into a
> hardcoded lookup table rather than a modifiable catalog, which would
> also likely be faster; and perhaps reference AMs elsewhere with
> characters rather than OIDs.  But even if this were judged a sensible
> thing to do I'm not very sure that even a purpose-built synthetic
> benchmark would be able to measure the speedup.

Well, the lack of extensible XLOG support is definitely a big handicap
to building a *production* index AM as an add-on.  But it's not such a
handicap for development.  And I don't believe that the planner is
hardwired in any way that doesn't allow new index types.  GIST and GIN
have both been added successfully without kluging the planner.  It does
know a lot more about btree than other index types, but that doesn't
mean you can't add a new index type that doesn't behave like btree;
that's more reflective of where development effort has been spent.

So I would consider the above idea a step backwards, and I doubt it
would save anything meaningful anyway.
        regards, tom lane


pgsql-hackers by date:

Previous
From: Robert Haas
Date:
Subject: Re: profiling connection overhead
Next
From: KaiGai Kohei
Date:
Subject: Re: [GENERAL] column-level update privs + lock table