On Mon, 4 Nov 2024 at 22:52, ma lz <ma100@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> some sql like ' select a from t1 intersect select a from t1 '
>
> if t1 has large number rows but has few distinct rows
>
> select distinct a from t1 intersect select distinct a from t1; — this is faster than origin sql
>
> can postgres do this optimize during plan-queries?
No, the planner does not attempt that optimisation. INTERSECT really
isn't very well optimised.
If we did want to improve this area, I think the first thing we'd want
to do is use standard join types rather than HashSetOp Intersect to
implement INTERSECT (without ALL). To do that efficiently, we'd need
to do a bit more work on the standard join types to have them
efficiently support IS NOT DISTINCT FROM clauses as the join keys.
There's a fair bit of work to do and it's likely not been done as
INTERSECT isn't used that commonly.
There was a bit of work done in PG17 to teach the query planner some
new tricks around UNION. I think UNION is a much more commonly used
setop than INTERSECT, so you might have to wait a while. For now, it's
best to adjust your query.
David