Amit Langote wrote: > [Jesper] also pointed out a case with a > list-partitioned table where pruning doesn't a produce a result as one > would expect and what constraint exclusion would produce. > > create table lp (a char) partition by list (a); > create table lp_ad partition of lp for values in ('a', 'd'); > create table lp_bc partition of lp for values in ('b', 'c'); > create table lp_default partition of lp default; > explain (costs off) select * from lp where a > 'a' and a < 'd'; > QUERY PLAN > ----------------------------------------------------------- > Append > -> Seq Scan on lp_ad > Filter: ((a > 'a'::bpchar) AND (a < 'd'::bpchar)) > -> Seq Scan on lp_bc > Filter: ((a > 'a'::bpchar) AND (a < 'd'::bpchar)) > -> Seq Scan on lp_default > Filter: ((a > 'a'::bpchar) AND (a < 'd'::bpchar)) > (7 rows) > > One would expect that lp_ad is not scanned.
One would? I, for one, wouldn't particularly sweat over this case TBH. It seems a pretty silly case. If this works for "a <> 'a' and a <> 'd'" (I mean, lp_ad is pruned for that qual), that sounds sufficient to me. -- Álvaro Herrera https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services