Okay, forget what i've just written, sorry for that.
I've digged deeper and checked my generic example - it works perfectly using
a merge-append in combination with limit.
i'm sorry i didn't check that first. it just won't work in my real-life
example.
though each part of the query is using an index-scan it is than using a
'normal' append
instead of a merge-append, but i don't know why.
here is the expected query plan as used with my generic example:
Limit (cost=0.86..0.90 rows=1 width=12)
-> Merge Append (cost=0.86..104314.37 rows=3435900 width=12)
Sort Key: kpkp_orders.buchungsdatum DESC
-> Index Only Scan Backward using kpkp_orders_1 on
kpkp_orders (cost=0.43..34977.68 rows=1717950 width=12)
-> Index Only Scan Backward using kpkp_invoices_1 on
kpkp_invoices (cost=0.43..34977.68 rows=1717950 width=12)
this is fast.
and here is the query plan used on my real-life example:
Limit (cost=918.40..918.41 rows=1 width=8)
-> Sort (cost=918.40..919.59 rows=473 width=8)
Sort Key: s.belegdatum DESC
-> Subquery Scan on s (cost=0.56..916.04 rows=473 width=8)
-> Append (cost=0.56..911.31 rows=473 width=327)
-> Subquery Scan on "*SELECT* 1"
(cost=0.56..624.08 rows=318 width=187)
-> Index Scan using
soit_erpprozesshistorie_12 on erpprozesshistorie eph (cost=0.56..620.10
rows=318 width=181)
Index Cond: ((clientid = '0'::numeric)
AND (activeflag = 't'::bpchar) AND (prozessuntertyp = 2) AND (CASE WHEN
((typ = 1) OR (typ = 7)) THEN 1 ELSE CASE WHEN (typ = 3) THEN 2 ELSE
CASE WHEN ((typ = 4) OR (typ = 9)) THEN 3 ELSE 4 END END END = 1) AND
(CASE WHEN (prozesstyp = 1) THEN true ELSE false END = true) AND
(artikelvariante_objid = '1064748816'::numeric))
-> Subquery Scan on "*SELECT* 2"
(cost=0.43..284.87 rows=155 width=214)
-> Index Scan using soit_umsatz_alt_08 on
umsatz_alt (cost=0.43..282.93 rows=155 width=186)
Index Cond: ((clientid = '0'::numeric)
AND (activeflag = 't'::bpchar) AND (verkauf = true) AND
(artikelvariante_objid = '1064748816'::numeric))
so my question is: under wich circumstance does the query-planner use or
prefer the 'merge append' over 'append'?
Thanks in advance!
Am 08.05.25 um 11:57 schrieb Karsten P:
Hi,
i've already googled so far but didn't find anything regarding my
problem..
I hope i'm here at the right place.
Following situation (this is just an simplyfied example):
suppose we have two tables, lets say
orders
- column 'order_number' -> varchar
- column 'order_date' -> timestamp
with index on order_date
and
invoices
- column 'invoice_number' -> varchar
- column 'invoice_date' -> timestamp
with index on invoice_date
and many records in both if them.
now we have a view combining both of them as
create view documents as
(
select order_number as document_number, order_date as
document_date from orders
union all select invoice_number, invoice_date from invoices
)
finding the last order placed in the database ist really easy:
select order_number from orders order by order_date desc limit 1
will result in an index scan backward on orders
same with invoices only...
but when querying the view
select document_number from documents order by document_date desc
limit 1
seems to break down to
- collect all rows from orders
- combine it with all rows from invoices
- sort all rows (descending)
- limit to one row
with many data this is quite slow.
I've tested this with PG9.6 and PG14, it doesn't seem to make a
difference (correct me if i'm wrong).
So my question is: What about optimizing the query-planner that if
- a query with unions of selects is executed
- and an 'order by' in combination with 'limit' is applied on the
complete query (not only on subselects)
- and there is a matching index for each select
the order by and limit - part of the sql is also beeing applied on
each sub-select ?
actually
select document_number from documents order by document_date desc
limit 1
is beeing processed as
select order_number from orders
union all select invoice_number from invoices
order by document_number desc
limit 1
but would it be possible to let the query-optimizer expand the query to
select order_number from (
(select order_number, order_date from orders order by
order_date desc limit 1)
union all (select invoice_number, invoice_date from invoices
order by invoice_date desc limit 1)
) as subselect
order by order_date desc
limit 1
as this would use two (or number of unions) index-backward-scans
and than only has to reorder at maximum two rows before limiting to
the first of it?
this should be significantly faster.
thanks a lot and greetz,
Karsten