Thread: Small GIN optimizations (after 9.4)

Small GIN optimizations (after 9.4)

From
Heikki Linnakangas
Date:
While hacking on the GIN patches, I've come up with a few different 
ideas for improving performance. It's too late for 9.4, but I'll list 
them here if someone wants to work on them later:

* Represent ItemPointers as uint64's, to speed up comparisons. 
ginCompareItemPointers is inlined into only a few instructions, but it's 
still more expensive than a single-instruction 64-bit comparison. 
ginCompareItemPointers is called very heavily in a GIN scan, so even a 
small improvement there would make for a noticeable speedup. It might be 
an improvement in code clarity, too.

* Keep the entry streams of a GinScanKey in a binary heap, to quickly 
find the minimum curItem among them.

I did this in various versions of the fast scan patch, but then I 
realized that the straightforward way of doing it is wrong, because a 
single GinScanEntry can be part of multiple GinScanKeys. If an entry's 
curItem is updated as part of advancing one key, and the entry is in a 
heap of another key, updating the curItem can violate the heap property 
of the other entry's heap.

* Build a truth table (or cache) of consistent-function's results, and 
use that instead of calling consistent for every item.

* Deduce AND or OR logic from the consistent function. Or have the 
opclass provide a tree of AND/OR/NOT nodes directly, instead of a 
consistent function. For example, if the query is "foo & bar", we could 
avoid calling consistent function altogether, and only return items that 
match both.

* Delay decoding segments during a scan. Currently, we decode all 
segments of a posting tree page into a single array at once. But with 
"fast scan", we might be able to skip over all entries in some of the 
segments. So it would be better to copy the segments into 
backend-private memory in compressed format, and decode them one segment 
at a time (or maybe even one item at a time), when needed. That would 
avoid the unnecessary decoding of segments that can be skipped over, and 
would also reduce memory usage of a scan.

I'll add these to the TODO.

- Heikki



Re: Small GIN optimizations (after 9.4)

From
PostgreSQL - Hans-Jürgen Schönig
Date:
i think there is one more thing which would be really good in GIN and which would solve a ton of issues.
atm GIN entries are sorted by item pointer.
if we could sort them by a "column" it would fix a couple of real work issues such as ...
SELECT ... FROM foo WHERE "tsearch_query" ORDER BY price DESC LIMIT 10

... or so.
it many cases you want to search for a, say, product and find the cheapest / most expensive one.
if the tsearch_query yields a high number of rows (which it often does) the subsequent sort will kill you.
many thanks,
    hans


On Feb 6, 2014, at 12:36 PM, Heikki Linnakangas wrote:

> While hacking on the GIN patches, I've come up with a few different ideas for improving performance. It's too late
for9.4, but I'll list them here if someone wants to work on them later: 
>
> * Represent ItemPointers as uint64's, to speed up comparisons. ginCompareItemPointers is inlined into only a few
instructions,but it's still more expensive than a single-instruction 64-bit comparison. ginCompareItemPointers is
calledvery heavily in a GIN scan, so even a small improvement there would make for a noticeable speedup. It might be an
improvementin code clarity, too. 
>
> * Keep the entry streams of a GinScanKey in a binary heap, to quickly find the minimum curItem among them.
>
> I did this in various versions of the fast scan patch, but then I realized that the straightforward way of doing it
iswrong, because a single GinScanEntry can be part of multiple GinScanKeys. If an entry's curItem is updated as part of
advancingone key, and the entry is in a heap of another key, updating the curItem can violate the heap property of the
otherentry's heap. 
>
> * Build a truth table (or cache) of consistent-function's results, and use that instead of calling consistent for
everyitem. 
>
> * Deduce AND or OR logic from the consistent function. Or have the opclass provide a tree of AND/OR/NOT nodes
directly,instead of a consistent function. For example, if the query is "foo & bar", we could avoid calling consistent
functionaltogether, and only return items that match both. 
>
> * Delay decoding segments during a scan. Currently, we decode all segments of a posting tree page into a single array
atonce. But with "fast scan", we might be able to skip over all entries in some of the segments. So it would be better
tocopy the segments into backend-private memory in compressed format, and decode them one segment at a time (or maybe
evenone item at a time), when needed. That would avoid the unnecessary decoding of segments that can be skipped over,
andwould also reduce memory usage of a scan. 
>
> I'll add these to the TODO.
>
> - Heikki
>
>
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Re: Small GIN optimizations (after 9.4)

From
Alexander Korotkov
Date:
On Thu, Feb 6, 2014 at 8:31 PM, PostgreSQL - Hans-Jürgen Schönig <postgres@cybertec.at> wrote:
i think there is one more thing which would be really good in GIN and which would solve a ton of issues.
atm GIN entries are sorted by item pointer.
if we could sort them by a "column" it would fix a couple of real work issues such as ...

        SELECT ... FROM foo WHERE "tsearch_query" ORDER BY price DESC LIMIT 10

... or so.
it many cases you want to search for a, say, product and find the cheapest / most expensive one.
if the tsearch_query yields a high number of rows (which it often does) the subsequent sort will kill you.

This is not intended to be a small change. However, some solution might be possible in post 9.4 gin improvements or in new secret indexing project which will be presented at PGCon :-)

------
With best regards,
Alexander Korotkov.  

Re: Small GIN optimizations (after 9.4)

From
Alexander Korotkov
Date:
On Thu, Feb 6, 2014 at 3:36 PM, Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnakangas@vmware.com> wrote:
While hacking on the GIN patches, I've come up with a few different ideas for improving performance. It's too late for 9.4, but I'll list them here if someone wants to work on them later:

* Represent ItemPointers as uint64's, to speed up comparisons. ginCompareItemPointers is inlined into only a few instructions, but it's still more expensive than a single-instruction 64-bit comparison. ginCompareItemPointers is called very heavily in a GIN scan, so even a small improvement there would make for a noticeable speedup. It might be an improvement in code clarity, too.

* Keep the entry streams of a GinScanKey in a binary heap, to quickly find the minimum curItem among them.

I did this in various versions of the fast scan patch, but then I realized that the straightforward way of doing it is wrong, because a single GinScanEntry can be part of multiple GinScanKeys. If an entry's curItem is updated as part of advancing one key, and the entry is in a heap of another key, updating the curItem can violate the heap property of the other entry's heap.

* Build a truth table (or cache) of consistent-function's results, and use that instead of calling consistent for every item.
 
Caching seems more appropriate for me. Intuition tells me that when number of entries is high then far not all consistent combinations will be used. However, intuition might be false :-)

* Deduce AND or OR logic from the consistent function. Or have the opclass provide a tree of AND/OR/NOT nodes directly, instead of a consistent function. For example, if the query is "foo & bar", we could avoid calling consistent function altogether, and only return items that match both.
 
I also had this idea. But this solution doesn't cover similarity queries. If you have 20 entries and consistent function returns true when at least 10 of 20 are present then representation in AND/OR/NOT nodes would be too enormous, so useless. 

* Delay decoding segments during a scan. Currently, we decode all segments of a posting tree page into a single array at once. But with "fast scan", we might be able to skip over all entries in some of the segments. So it would be better to copy the segments into backend-private memory in compressed format, and decode them one segment at a time (or maybe even one item at a time), when needed. That would avoid the unnecessary decoding of segments that can be skipped over, and would also reduce memory usage of a scan.
 
I would like to add another one as continue of fast-scan:
* Skip scanning of some entries at all forcing recheck instead. Correct decision should be done based on costs. However, I'm not sure about design. Because it's like a planning feature. How correct to do this inside of GIN?

------
With best regards,
Alexander Korotkov.  

Re: Small GIN optimizations (after 9.4)

From
Bruce Momjian
Date:
On Sun, Feb  9, 2014 at 02:17:12PM +0400, Alexander Korotkov wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 6, 2014 at 8:31 PM, PostgreSQL - Hans-J rgen Sch nig <
> postgres@cybertec.at> wrote:
> 
>     i think there is one more thing which would be really good in GIN and which
>     would solve a ton of issues.
>     atm GIN entries are sorted by item pointer.
>     if we could sort them by a "column" it would fix a couple of real work
>     issues such as ...
> 
>             SELECT ... FROM foo WHERE "tsearch_query" ORDER BY price DESC LIMIT
>     10
> 
>     ... or so.
>     it many cases you want to search for a, say, product and find the cheapest
>     / most expensive one.
>     if the tsearch_query yields a high number of rows (which it often does) the
>     subsequent sort will kill you.
> 
> 
> This is not intended to be a small change. However, some solution might be
> possible in post 9.4 gin improvements or in new secret indexing project which
> will be presented at PGCon :-)

Would any of the listed changes cause backward-incompatible changes to
the on-disk format, causing problems for pg_upgrade?

--  Bruce Momjian  <bruce@momjian.us>        http://momjian.us EnterpriseDB
http://enterprisedb.com
 + Everyone has their own god. +



Re: Small GIN optimizations (after 9.4)

From
Alexander Korotkov
Date:
On Wed, Feb 12, 2014 at 2:58 AM, Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> wrote:
On Sun, Feb  9, 2014 at 02:17:12PM +0400, Alexander Korotkov wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 6, 2014 at 8:31 PM, PostgreSQL - Hans-J rgen Sch nig <
> postgres@cybertec.at> wrote:
>
>     i think there is one more thing which would be really good in GIN and which
>     would solve a ton of issues.
>     atm GIN entries are sorted by item pointer.
>     if we could sort them by a "column" it would fix a couple of real work
>     issues such as ...
>
>             SELECT ... FROM foo WHERE "tsearch_query" ORDER BY price DESC LIMIT
>     10
>
>     ... or so.
>     it many cases you want to search for a, say, product and find the cheapest
>     / most expensive one.
>     if the tsearch_query yields a high number of rows (which it often does) the
>     subsequent sort will kill you.
>
>
> This is not intended to be a small change. However, some solution might be
> possible in post 9.4 gin improvements or in new secret indexing project which
> will be presented at PGCon :-)

Would any of the listed changes cause backward-incompatible changes to
the on-disk format, causing problems for pg_upgrade?

None of them.

------
With best regards,
Alexander Korotkov.