Tom Lane wrote:
Phil Endecott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

I have a number of complex views for which the typical use is to select exactly one row by id, e.g. "select * from V where id=nnn". Some of these selects run orders of magnitude faster than others. Looking at the output of "explain analyse" it seems that in the fast cases the "id=nnn" condition is passed down to the lower-level operations, while in the slower cases the entire view is created and then filtered using the condition as a final step.

When in doubt, use the source ;-) ... most sorts of things like this are
pretty well commented, if you can find the relevant code.

Good plan.

 * 3. If the subquery uses DISTINCT ON, we must not push down any quals that
 * refer to non-DISTINCT output columns, because that could change the set
 * of rows returned.

OK, so this is why my query with DISTINCT ON was failing.  I can fix that.

I don't see anything in there about LEFT OUTER JOIN though.  Any ideas?

--Phil.


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TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your
     joining column's datatypes do not match

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