Hi, Thanks everyone for your suggestions. I would like to add explain analyze of both the plans so that we can have broader picture.
I have a work_mem of 1000 MB. The Plan which we get regularly with table being analyzed . tpch=# explain analyze select b from tab2 left join tab1 on a = b; QUERY PLAN -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hash Left Join (cost=945515.68..1071064.34 rows=78264 width=4) (actual time=9439.410..20445.620 rows=78264 loops=1) Hash Cond: (tab2.b = tab1.a) -> Seq Scan on tab2 (cost=0.00..1129.64 rows=78264 width=4) (actual time=0.006..5.116 rows=78264 loops=1) -> Hash (cost=442374.30..442374.30 rows=30667630 width=4) (actual time=9133.593..9133.593 rows=30667722 loops=1) Buckets: 33554432 Batches: 2 Memory Usage: 801126kB -> Seq Scan on tab1 (cost=0.00..442374.30 rows=30667630 width=4) (actual time=0.030..3584.652 rows=30667722 loops=1) Planning time: 0.055 ms Execution time: 20472.603 ms (8 rows) I reproduced the other plan by not analyzing the smaller table. tpch=# explain analyze select b from tab2 left join tab1 on a = b; QUERY PLAN -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hash Right Join (cost=2102.88..905274.97 rows=78039 width=4) (actual time=15.331..7590.406 rows=78264 loops=1) Hash Cond: (tab1.a = tab2.b) -> Seq Scan on tab1 (cost=0.00..442375.48 rows=30667748 width=4) (actual time=0.046..2697.480 rows=30667722 loops=1) -> Hash (cost=1127.39..1127.39 rows=78039 width=4) (actual time=15.133..15.133 rows=78264 loops=1) Buckets: 131072 Batches: 1 Memory Usage: 3776kB -> Seq Scan on tab2 (cost=0.00..1127.39 rows=78039 width=4) (actual time=0.009..5.516 rows=78264 loops=1) Planning time: 0.053 ms Execution time: 7592.688 ms (8 rows) The actual plan seems to be Slower. The smaller table (tab2) has exactly each row duplicated 8 times and all the rows in larger table (tab2) are distinct. what may be the exact reason and can we fix this ? P.s I have also attached a sql file to reproduce this ---- On Tue, 13 Mar 2018 12:42:12 +0530 Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.ba...@enterprisedb.com> wrote ---- On Mon, Mar 12, 2018 at 10:02 PM, Narendra Pradeep U U <narendra.prad...@zohocorp.com> wrote: > Hi , > > Recently I came across a case where the planner choose larger table on > hash side. I am not sure whether it is an intended behavior or we are > missing something. > > I have two tables (a and b) each with single column in it. One table > 'a' is large with around 30 million distinct rows and other table 'b' has > merely 70,000 rows with one-seventh (10,000) distinct rows. I have analyzed > both the table. But while joining both the table I get the larger table on > hash side. > > tpch=# explain select b from b left join a on a = b; > QUERY PLAN > --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Hash Left Join (cost=824863.75..950104.42 rows=78264 width=4) > Hash Cond: (b.b = a.a)o > -> Foreign Scan on b (cost=0.00..821.64 rows=78264 width=4) > CStore File: > /home/likewise-open/pg96/data/cstore_fdw/1818708/1849879 > CStore File Size: 314587 > -> Hash (cost=321721.22..321721.22 rows=30667722 width=4) > -> Foreign Scan on a (cost=0.00..321721.22 rows=30667722 width=4) > CStore File: > /home/likewise-open/pg96/data/cstore_fdw/1818708/1849876 > CStore File Size: 123236206 > (9 rows) > > > > I would like to know the reason for choosing this plan and Is there a easy > fix to prevent such plans (especially like this one where it choose a larger > hash table) ? A plan with larger table being hashed doesn't necessarily bad performing one. During partition-wise join analysis I have seen plans with larger table being hashed perform better than the plans with smaller table being hashed. But I have seen the other way around as well. Although, I don't know an easy way to force which side of join gets hashed. I tried that under the debugger. In your case, if you run EXPLAIN ANALYZE on this query, produce outputs of two plans: one with larger table being hashed and second with the smaller one being hashed, you will see which of them performs better. -- Best Wishes, Ashutosh Bapat EnterpriseDB Corporation The Postgres Database Company
join_plan.sql
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