Re: Internal operations when the planner makes a hash join. - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From negora
Subject Re: Internal operations when the planner makes a hash join.
Date
Msg-id 4B845C48.2030904@negora.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Internal operations when the planner makes a hash join.  ("Kevin Grittner" <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov>)
Responses Re: Internal operations when the planner makes a hash join.  ("Kevin Grittner" <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov>)
List pgsql-performance
<font face="Verdana">Hello Kevin. I'm going to take and apply your advices, certainly. No more "crazy" PL/PgSQLs then.
Iwas worried because of the possibility that repetition of fields caused some kind of memory saturation. But I guess
thatPostgreSQL takes care of that fact properly. I even might return the entire result to my external Java application
(Iwas using a similar approach on it too). I just hope that the speed of that single SQL compensates the transfer of
sucha big mass of data between PostgreSQL and Java in terms of delay. Thanks ;) .<br /><br /><br /></font><br /> Kevin
Grittnerwrote: <blockquote cite="mid:4B83F811020000250002F579@gw.wicourts.gov" type="cite"><pre wrap="">negora <a
class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E"href="mailto:negora@negora.com"><negora@negora.com></a> wrote: </pre><blockquote
type="cite"><prewrap="">The origin of my doubt resides in the fact that I need to do a
 
joint between 3 HUGE tables (millions of registries) and do
certain operations with the retrieved information. I was deciding
whether to use one SELECT with 3 JOINs, as I've been doing since
the beginning, or build a PL/PgSQL function based on 3 nested "FOR
... IN SELECT ... LOOP" structures which tried to minimize the
subsequent table searches storing intermediate useful data in
arrays   </pre></blockquote><pre wrap=""> 
It's almost always faster (and less error prone) to write one SELECT
statement declaring what you want than to try to do better by
navigating individual rows procedurally.  I would *strongly*
recommend you write it with the JOINs and then post here if you have
any concerns about the performance.  In general, try to *declare*
what you want, and let the PostgreSQL planner sort out the best way
to navigate the tables to produce what you want.  If you hit some
particular weakness in the planner, you many need to coerce it, but
certainly you should not *start* with that.
-Kevin
 </pre></blockquote>

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