Re: BUG #7627: Bad query plan when using LIMIT - Mailing list pgsql-bugs

From Tom Lane
Subject Re: BUG #7627: Bad query plan when using LIMIT
Date
Msg-id 2841.1351574832@sss.pgh.pa.us
Whole thread Raw
In response to BUG #7627: Bad query plan when using LIMIT  (edward@clericare.com)
Responses Re: BUG #7627: Bad query plan when using LIMIT  (Simon Riggs <simon@2ndQuadrant.com>)
List pgsql-bugs
edward@clericare.com writes:
> The following two queries differ only by adding "LIMIT 1", but the one with
> the limit gets radically worse performance. I've done VACUUM FULL, VACUUM
> ANALYZE, and REINDEX DATABASE and there are no modifications since.

> EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM commits WHERE id IN (SELECT id FROM commits
> ORDER BY tree_high LIMIT 605 ) AND tree_other IS NULL ORDER BY tree_high
> DESC;

> EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM commits WHERE id IN (SELECT id FROM commits
> ORDER BY tree_high LIMIT 605 ) AND tree_other IS NULL ORDER BY tree_high
> DESC LIMIT 1;

I think what's happening there is that the planner supposes that an
indexscan in "tree_high DESC" order will find rows matching the IN
condition uniformly distributed in the scan order --- but, because of
the construction of the IN clause, they're actually going to be
pessimally located at the very end of that scan order.  So it ends up
forming all of the nestloop result, when it had expected to have to
compute only 1/595 of it.  We've discussed dialing down the planner's
optimism about limit plans to not assume perfect independence of filter
conditions, but I don't think anyone would advocate for having it assume
the worst possible case, which is what you've got here unfortunately.

I can't help thinking that there's a way to express this problem without
the peculiar self-join, but I'm too tired to think of a good one right
now.  The best I can do is a window function:

select last_value(id) over (order by tree_high), last_value(...) ...
from (select * from commits order by tree_high limit 605) ss
where tree_other is null;

but it'd be pretty tedious to write out the last_value construct for
each column you want, and anyway this seems less than elegant even
aside from that objection.

            regards, tom lane

pgsql-bugs by date:

Previous
From: edward@clericare.com
Date:
Subject: BUG #7627: Bad query plan when using LIMIT
Next
From: Tianyin Xu
Date:
Subject: Re: BUG #7624: Misleading Log Message & Inconsistent Configuration Design