On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 10:30 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
> Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@commandprompt.com> writes:
>> Tom Lane escribió:
>>> Yeah, it could definitely run slower than the existing code --- in
>>> particular the combination of all three (FOR UPDATE ORDER BY LIMIT)
>>> would tend to become a seqscan-and-sort rather than possibly just
>>> reading one end of an index. However, I quote the old aphorism that
>>> it can be made indefinitely fast if it doesn't have to give the right
>>> answer. The reason the current behavior is fast is it's giving the
>>> wrong answer :-(
>
>> So this probably merits a warning in the release notes for people to
>> check that their queries continue to run with the performance they
>> expect.
>
> One problem with this is that there isn't any good way for someone to
> get back the old behavior if they want to. Which might be a perfectly
> reasonable thing, eg if they know that no concurrent update is supposed
> to change the sort-key column. The obvious thing would be to allow
>
> select * from (select * from foo order by col limit 10) ss for update;
>
> to apply the FOR UPDATE last. Unfortunately, that's not how it works
> now because the FOR UPDATE will get pushed down into the subquery.
> I was shot down when I proposed a related change, a couple weeks ago
> http://archives.postgresql.org/message-id/7741.1255278907@sss.pgh.pa.us
> but it seems like we might want to reconsider.
"Shot down" might be an overstatement of the somewhat cautious
reaction that proposal. :-)
Could the desired behavior be obtained using a CTE?
...Robert