Re: On the performance of views - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From Shridhar Daithankar
Subject Re: On the performance of views
Date
Msg-id 4015326A.8000706@frodo.hserus.net
Whole thread Raw
In response to On the performance of views  (Bill Moran <wmoran@potentialtech.com>)
Responses Re: On the performance of views
Re: On the performance of views
List pgsql-performance
Bill Moran wrote:

> I have an application that I'm porting from MSSQL to PostgreSQL.  Part
> of this
> application consists of hundreds of stored procedures that I need to
> convert
> to Postgres functions ... or views?
>
> At first I was going to just convert all MSSQL procedures to Postgres
> functions.
> But now that I'm looking at it, a lot of them may be candidates for
> views.  A
> lot of them take on the format of:
>
> SELECT a.cola, b.colb, c.colc
> FROM a JOIN b JOIN c
> WHERE a.prikey=$1

Make sure that you typecase correctly. It makes a differnce of order of
magnitude when you say 'where intpkey=<somevalue>::int' rather than 'where
intpkey=<somevalue>'.

It is called typecasting and highly recommened in postgresql for correctly
choosing indexes.

I remember another post on some list, which said pl/pgsql seems to be very
strongly typed language compared to MSSQL counterpart. So watch for that as well.

>
> (this is slightly oversimplified, but as a generalization of hundreds of
> functions, it's pretty accurate)
>
> Now, I know this questions is pretty generalized, and I intend to test
> before
> actually commiting to a particular course of action, but I'm very early
> in the
> conversion and I'm curious as to whether people with more experience than I
> think that views will provide better performance than functions containing
> SQL statements like the above.  The client is _very_ interested in

To my understanding, views are expanded at runtime and considered while
preparing plan for the complete (and possibly bigger) query(Consider a view
joined with something else). That is not as easy/possible if at all, when it is
function. For postgresql query planner, the function is a black box(rightly so,
I would say).

So using views opens possibility of changing query plans if required. Most of
the times that should be faster than using them as functions.

Of course, the standard disclaimer, YMMV. Try yourself.

Correct me if I am wrong.

HTH

  Shridhar

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