Re: Why is this query running slowly? - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Tomas Vondra
Subject Re: Why is this query running slowly?
Date
Msg-id d344513f086a96bd4149fad0c1d6839c.squirrel@sq.gransy.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Why is this query running slowly?  (Yang Zhang <yanghatespam@gmail.com>)
List pgsql-general
On 15 Září 2011, 11:07, Yang Zhang wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 1:22 AM, Tomas Vondra <tv@fuzzy.cz> wrote:
>> On 15 Září 2011, 9:53, Yang Zhang wrote:
>>> I have a simple query that's been running for a while, which is fine,
>>> but it seems to be running very slowly, which is a problem:
>>>
>>> mydb=# explain select user_id from den where user_id not in (select
>>> duid from user_mappings) and timestamp between '2009-04-01' and
>>> '2010-04-01';
>>>
>>>            QUERY PLAN
>>>
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>  Seq Scan on den  (cost=711.58..66062724212.74 rows=22634720 width=4)
>>>    Filter: (("timestamp" >= '2009-04-01 00:00:00'::timestamp without
>>> time zone) AND ("timestamp" <= '2010-04-01 00:00:00'::timestamp
>>> without time zone) AND (NOT (SubPlan 1)))
>>>    SubPlan 1
>>>      ->  Materialize  (cost=711.58..1223.38 rows=36780 width=4)
>>>            ->  Seq Scan on user_mappings  (cost=0.00..530.80 rows=36780
>>> width=4)
>>>
>>> user_mappings is fairly small:
>>
>> The problem is that for each of the 22634720 rows in "den" a separate
>> uncorrelated subquery (a seq scan on user_mappings) has to be executed.
>> Althogh the subquery is not very expensive, multiplied by the number of
>> rows in "den" the total cost is extreme.
>>
>> The only solution is to get rid of the "not in" subquery - try to turn
>> it
>> to a join like this:
>>
>> SELECT user_id FROM den LEFT JOIN user_mappings ON (user_id = duid)
>> WHERE (timestamp BETWEEN '2009-04-01' AND '2010-04-01')
>>  AND (duid IS NULL)
>>
>> That should give the same result I guess.
>
> This worked great, thank you.  Too bad the planner isn't smart enough
> to do this yet!

It's probably a bit more complicated I guess - there are probably cases
when this would not work this great.

Anyway, you should consider Toby Corkindale's recommendation and check if
there's an index on that timestamp column - that might further improve the
performance. (I don't think an index on user_id might be useful in this
case).

Tomas


pgsql-general by date:

Previous
From: Yang Zhang
Date:
Subject: Re: Why is this query running slowly?
Next
From: Giorgio Valoti
Date:
Subject: Re: Jenkins