Re: enable_incremental_sort changes query behavior - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From James Coleman
Subject Re: enable_incremental_sort changes query behavior
Date
Msg-id CAAaqYe9DksvkytX2eV9N5H2dg1OYnGcD5dhRbPBeOTGr3oCmww@mail.gmail.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: enable_incremental_sort changes query behavior  (Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>)
Responses Re: enable_incremental_sort changes query behavior  (Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>)
List pgsql-hackers
On Fri, Nov 20, 2020 at 12:06 PM Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Wed, Oct 7, 2020 at 6:22 PM Tomas Vondra
> <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
> > I'm still not entirely sure I understand what's happening, or what the
> > exact rule is. Consider this query:
> >
> >    explain (verbose) select distinct i, t, md5(t) from ref_0;
> >
> > which on PG12 (i.e. before incremental sort) is planned like this:
> >
> >                                   QUERY PLAN
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >   Unique  (cost=78120.92..83120.92 rows=500000 width=65)
> >     Output: i, t, (md5(t))
> >     ->  Sort  (cost=78120.92..79370.92 rows=500000 width=65)
> >           Output: i, t, (md5(t))
> >           Sort Key: ref_0.i, ref_0.t, (md5(ref_0.t))
> >           ->  Seq Scan on public.ref_0  (cost=0.00..10282.00 rows=500000 width=65)
> >                 Output: i, t, md5(t)
> > (7 rows)
> >
> > i.e. the (stable) function is pushed all the way to the scan node. And
> > even if we replace it with a volatile expression it gets pushed down:
> >
> > explain (verbose) select distinct i, t, md5(random()::text || t) from ref_0;
> >
> >                                   QUERY PLAN
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >   Unique  (cost=83120.92..88120.92 rows=500000 width=65)
> >     Output: i, t, (md5(((random())::text || t)))
> >     ->  Sort  (cost=83120.92..84370.92 rows=500000 width=65)
> >           Output: i, t, (md5(((random())::text || t)))
> >           Sort Key: ref_0.i, ref_0.t, (md5(((random())::text || ref_0.t)))
> >           ->  Seq Scan on public.ref_0  (cost=0.00..15282.00 rows=500000 width=65)
> >                 Output: i, t, md5(((random())::text || t))
> > (7 rows)
> >
> >
> > But perhaps I just don't understand the assumption correctly?
>
> This isn't a counterexample, because there's no join tree here -- or,
> well, there is, but it's trivial, because there's only one relation
> involved. You can't have a non-Var expression computed before you
> finish all the joins, because there are no joins.
>
> What I said was: "target lists for any nodes below the top of the join
> tree were previously always just Var nodes." The topmost join allowed
> non-Var nodes before, but not lower levels.

As I understand what you're saying, the attached (from the repro case
in [1]'s discussion about parallel safety here) is a counterexample.

Specifically we have a plan like:

Merge Right Join
  -> Unique
    -> Gather Merge
      -> Sort
        -> Nested Loop

The pathtarget of the nested loop contains non-var expressions (in
this case a CASE expression).

Am I misunderstanding what you're saying?

I've attached verbose output (and the query).

James

Attachment

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