Thanks for looking into this and reproducing a similar result. The
index took 6 hours to complete on a 1.5GB table resulting in 35GB of
storage, and it took 36 hours to vacuum... I'm patient :-)
In the mean time I've dropped the index which has resulted in overall
performance gain on queries against the table, but we have not tested
the part of the application which would utilize this index.
- Tom
-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Lane [mailto:tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us]
Sent: Friday, June 29, 2007 1:58 PM
To: Dolafi, Tom
Cc: pgsql-performance@postgresql.org; Oleg Bartunov; Teodor Sigaev
Subject: Re: [PERFORM] rtree/gist index taking enormous amount of space
in 8.2.3
"Dolafi, Tom" <dolafit@janelia.hhmi.org> writes:
> min(fmin) | max(fmin) | avg(fmin)
> 1 | 55296469 | 11423945
> min(fmax) | max(fmax) | avg(fmax)
> 18 | 55553288 | 11424491
OK, I was able to reproduce a problem after making the further guess
that fmax is usually a little bit greater than fmin. The attached test
script generates an rtree index of around 800 pages on 8.1.9, and the
index build time is about 6 seconds on my machine. On CVS HEAD, the
script generates a gist index of over 30000 pages and the build time is
over 60 seconds. Since I'm using random() the numbers move around a
bit, but they're consistently awful. I experimented with a few other
distributions, such as fmin and fmax chosen independently in the same
range, and saw gist build time usually better than rtree and index size
only somewhat larger, so this particular distribution apparently fools
gist_box_picksplit rather badly. The problem seems nonlinear too ---
I had originally tried it with 1 million test rows instead of 100000,
and gave up waiting for the index build after more than an hour.
Oleg, Teodor, can this be improved?
regards, tom lane
drop table featureloc;
CREATE TABLE featureloc
(
fmin integer,
fmax integer
);
insert into featureloc
select r1, r1 + 1 + random() * 1000 from
(select 1 + random() * 55000000 as r1, 1 + random() * 55000000 as r2
from generate_series(1,100000) offset 0) as ss;
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION boxrange(integer, integer)
RETURNS box AS
'SELECT box (point(0, $1), point($2, 500000000))'
LANGUAGE 'sql' STRICT IMMUTABLE;
CREATE INDEX binloc_boxrange
ON featureloc
USING rtree
(boxrange(fmin, fmax));
vacuum verbose featureloc;