>>Grzegorz>>
Hello,

W dniu 2012-08-29 23:06, Merlin Moncure pisze:
Well, the only reason what you're trying to do works at all is because the 
database isn't stricter about double checking to see if your stuff is 
IMMUTABLE: it isn't, so of course it doesn't work. How about a trigger on the 
child table that updates an indexed column on parent? merlin 

According to docs:
"An IMMUTABLE function cannot modify the database and is guaranteed to return 
the same results given the same arguments forever."

My tables look like this:
CREATE TABLE groups (
  id serial PRIMARY KEY,
  last_item integer REFERENCES items
) WITHOUT OIDS;

CREATE TABLE items (
  id serial PRIMARY KEY,
  group integer NOT NULL REFERENCES groups,
  ts timestamp DEFAULT now()
) WITHOUT OIDS;

The index:
CREATE INDEX groups_last_ts
  ON groups
  USING btree
  (items_ts(last_post));

Plpgsql function items_ts returns timestamp for given item, which will never 
change(that's my assumption), so in fact according to definition IT IS 
immutable fuction.

Unfortunately, whenever I update last_item column in groups, I get wrong 
results, so I query like this:

SELECT * FROM groups WHERE items_ts(last_item) > now() - interval '1 week'

returns "outdated" results

I do realize about other ways for solving this problem, however I would prefer 
if it worked in the way described above.

>>/Grzegorz>>


From before you wrote:

"When I insert new record to children table, select over parents with function 
gives wrong(outdated) results."

Which is not the same as what you are describing above.


Furthermore:

"I created functional index on parents with function, which selects max value 
of timestamp from child elements(for given parent_id)."

Is not the same as:

"..items_ts returns the timestamp for the given item..."


If all "items_ts" did was return the timestamp of the provided child then when 
you update the "last_item" column on "groups" (however you would decide to do 
that) a new index entry would be created that stores the timestamp for the 
specified child id.  As long as the child's timestamp doesn't change (or become 
deleted) then the index will maintain the correct value.

Given that you are seeing "outdated" results that means you are changing the 
"items" table without updating the "groups" table in a corresponding manner but 
instead are expecting the index function to somehow magically update.  That is 
not how the system works.

If you want to put forth a self-contained example with descriptions of exactly 
where you believe there is a problem then maybe we can help you understand 
better.  As it stands now you have provided two different descriptions of your 
situation.  The first one seems to be the most accurate and based upon that 
description the advice you have been given is correct.  The second example is 
incomplete but could indeed work (given specific assumptions).  The idea you 
are suggesting is that you maintain the id of the most recent "item" on the 
"group" table then use a functional index to cache the timestamp of that child. 
 The question becomes how do you update the "item id" on the "groups" table 
when you add new records to "items".

David J.







-- 
Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general

Reply via email to