Re: Partitioning update-heavy queue with hash partitions vs partial indexes - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From burcinyazici@gmail.com
Subject Re: Partitioning update-heavy queue with hash partitions vs partial indexes
Date
Msg-id CBF1A1B2-CF41-4DED-8FE2-4A40D67A04D5@gmail.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Partitioning update-heavy queue with hash partitions vs partial indexes  (David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>)
Responses Re: Partitioning update-heavy queue with hash partitions vs partial indexes  (Dorian Hoxha <dorian.hoxha@gmail.com>)
List pgsql-performance
hi,
Consider adding id%10 as a new column?you will have one time burden but after creating index on it, update perf will
satisfy.

Burcin 📱

> On 11 Aug 2023, at 07:49, David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Thu, 10 Aug 2023 at 20:36, Dorian Hoxha <dorian.hoxha@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> Do Not Use Partial Indexes as a Substitute for Partitioning
>>> While a search in this larger index might have to descend through a couple more tree levels than a search in a
smallerindex, that's almost certainly going to be cheaper than the planner effort needed to select the appropriate one
ofthe partial indexes. The core of the problem is that the system does not understand the relationship among the
partialindexes, and will laboriously test each one to see if it's applicable to the current query. 
>>
>> Would this be true in my case too?
>
> Yes.  The process of determining which partial indexes are valid for
> the given query must consider each index one at a time and validate
> the index's WHERE clause against the query's WHERE clause to see if it
> can be used.  There is no shortcut that sees you have a series of
> partial indexes with WHERE id % 10 = N; which just picks 1 index
> without searching all of them.
>
>> Is it faster for the planner to select a correct partition(hash partitioning on `id` column) instead of a correct
partialindex like in my case? I don't think I'll need more than ~32 partitions/partial-indexes in an extreme scenario. 
>
> I mean, test it and find out, but probably, yes, the partition pruning
> code for hash partitioning is an O(1) operation and is very fast.
> Once the given Constants have been hashed, finding the partition is
> just a single divide operation away.
>
> David
>
>



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