Thread: Join with equals?

Join with equals?

From
Randall Skelton
Date:
Greetings all,

I am trying to do what should be a simple join but the tables are very
large and it is taking a long, long time.  I have the feeling that I
have stuffed up something in the syntax.

Here is what I have:

telemetry=> select (tq1.timestamp = tq2.timestamp) as timestamp,
tq1.value as q1, tq2.value as q2 from cal_quat_1 tq1 inner join
cal_quat_2 as tq2 using (timestamp) where timestamp > '2004-01-12
09:47:56.0000 +0' and timestamp < '2004-01-12 09:50:44.7187 +0' order
by timestamp;

telemetry=> \d cal_quat_1
                 Table "cal_quat_1"
   Column   |           Type           | Modifiers
-----------+--------------------------+-----------
  timestamp | timestamp with time zone |
  value     | double precision         |

telemetry=> \d cal_quat_2
                 Table "cal_quat_2"
   Column   |           Type           | Modifiers
-----------+--------------------------+-----------
  timestamp | timestamp with time zone |
  value     | double precision         |

My understanding of an inner join is that the query above will restrict
this to finding tq1.timestamp, tq1.value and then move onto t12.value
to search the subset.  I have tried this with and without the '=' sign
and it isn't clear if it is making any difference at all.  I have not
allowed the query to finish as it seems to take more than 10 minutes.
Both timestamps are indexed and I expect about 150 rows to be returned.
  At the end of the day, I have four identical tables of quaternions
(timestamp, value) and I need to extract them all for a range of
timestamps.

Cheers,
Randall


Re: Join with equals?

From
Martijn van Oosterhout
Date:
On Wed, Feb 18, 2004 at 11:58:24AM -0500, Randall Skelton wrote:
> Greetings all,
>
> I am trying to do what should be a simple join but the tables are very
> large and it is taking a long, long time.  I have the feeling that I
> have stuffed up something in the syntax.
>
> Here is what I have:
>
> telemetry=> select (tq1.timestamp = tq2.timestamp) as timestamp,
> tq1.value as q1, tq2.value as q2 from cal_quat_1 tq1 inner join
> cal_quat_2 as tq2 using (timestamp) where timestamp > '2004-01-12
> 09:47:56.0000 +0' and timestamp < '2004-01-12 09:50:44.7187 +0' order
> by timestamp;

Please run ANALYZE and then send the EXPLAIN ANALYZE <query> output.
--
Martijn van Oosterhout   <kleptog@svana.org>   http://svana.org/kleptog/
> If the Catholic church can survive the printing press, science fiction
> will certainly weather the advent of bookwarez.
>    http://craphound.com/ebooksneitherenorbooks.txt - Cory Doctorow

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