Hi,

Are there any recent performance evaluations of the overhead of row filters? I
think it'd be good to get some numbers comparing:

1) $workload with master
2) $workload with patch, but no row filters
3) $workload with patch, row filter matching everything
4) $workload with patch, row filter matching few rows

For workload I think it'd be worth testing:
a) bulk COPY/INSERT into one table
b) Many transactions doing small modifications to one table
c) Many transactions targetting many different tables
d) Interspersed DDL + small changes to a table


> +/*
> + * Initialize for row filter expression execution.
> + */
> +static ExprState *
> +pgoutput_row_filter_init_expr(Node *rfnode)
> +{
> +     ExprState  *exprstate;
> +     Expr       *expr;
> +
> +     /*
> +      * This is the same code as ExecPrepareExpr() but that is not used 
> because
> +      * we want to cache the expression. There should probably be another
> +      * function in the executor to handle the execution outside a normal 
> Plan
> +      * tree context.
> +      */
> +     expr = expression_planner((Expr *) rfnode);
> +     exprstate = ExecInitExpr(expr, NULL);
> +
> +     return exprstate;
> +}

In what memory context does this run? Are we taking care to deal with leaks?
I'm pretty sure the planner relies on cleanup via memory contexts.


> +     memset(entry->exprstate, 0, sizeof(entry->exprstate));
> +
> +     schemaId = get_rel_namespace(entry->publish_as_relid);
> +     schemaPubids = GetSchemaPublications(schemaId);

Isn't this stuff that we've already queried before? If we re-fetch a lot of
information it's not clear to me that it's actually a good idea to defer
building the row filter.


> +     am_partition = get_rel_relispartition(entry->publish_as_relid);

All this stuff likely can cause some memory "leakage" if you run it in a
long-lived memory context.


> +     /*
> +      * Find if there are any row filters for this relation. If there are,
> +      * then prepare the necessary ExprState and cache it in
> +      * entry->exprstate. To build an expression state, we need to ensure
> +      * the following:
> +      *
> +      * All publication-table mappings must be checked.
> +      *
> +      * If the relation is a partition and pubviaroot is true, use the row
> +      * filter of the topmost partitioned table instead of the row filter of
> +      * its own partition.
> +      *
> +      * Multiple publications might have multiple row filters for this
> +      * relation. Since row filter usage depends on the DML operation, there
> +      * are multiple lists (one for each operation) to which row filters
> +      * will be appended.
> +      *
> +      * FOR ALL TABLES implies "don't use row filter expression" so it takes
> +      * precedence.
> +      *
> +      * ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA implies "don't use row filter expression" if
> +      * the schema is the same as the table schema.
> +      */
> +     foreach(lc, data->publications)
> +     {
> +             Publication *pub = lfirst(lc);
> +             HeapTuple       rftuple = NULL;
> +             Datum           rfdatum = 0;
> +             bool            pub_no_filter = false;
> +
> +             if (pub->alltables)
> +             {
> +                     /*
> +                      * If the publication is FOR ALL TABLES then it is 
> treated the
> +                      * same as if this table has no row filters (even if 
> for other
> +                      * publications it does).
> +                      */
> +                     pub_no_filter = true;
> +             }
> +             else if (list_member_oid(schemaPubids, pub->oid))
> +             {
> +                     /*
> +                      * If the publication is FOR ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA and 
> it overlaps
> +                      * with the current relation in the same schema then 
> this is also
> +                      * treated same as if this table has no row filters 
> (even if for
> +                      * other publications it does).
> +                      */
> +                     pub_no_filter = true;

Isn't this basically O(schemas * publications)?




> +     if (has_filter)
> +     {
> +             /* Create or reset the memory context for row filters */
> +             if (entry->cache_expr_cxt == NULL)
> +                     entry->cache_expr_cxt = 
> AllocSetContextCreate(CacheMemoryContext,
> +                                                                             
>                                   "Row filter expressions",
> +                                                                             
>                                   ALLOCSET_DEFAULT_SIZES);
> +             else
> +                     MemoryContextReset(entry->cache_expr_cxt);

I see this started before this patch, but I don't think it's a great idea that
pgoutput does a bunch of stuff in CacheMemoryContext. That makes it
unnecessarily hard to debug leaks.

Seems like all this should live somwhere below ctx->context, allocated in
pgoutput_startup()?

Consider what happens in a long-lived replication connection, where
occasionally there's a transient error causing streaming to stop. At that
point you'll just loose all knowledge of entry->cache_expr_cxt, no?


> +
> +/* Inialitize the slot for storing new and old tuple */
> +static void
> +init_tuple_slot(Relation relation, RelationSyncEntry *entry)
> +{
> +     MemoryContext   oldctx;
> +     TupleDesc               oldtupdesc;
> +     TupleDesc               newtupdesc;
> +
> +     oldctx = MemoryContextSwitchTo(CacheMemoryContext);
> +
> +     /*
> +      * Create tuple table slots. Create a copy of the TupleDesc as it needs 
> to
> +      * live as long as the cache remains.
> +      */
> +     oldtupdesc = CreateTupleDescCopy(RelationGetDescr(relation));
> +     newtupdesc = CreateTupleDescCopy(RelationGetDescr(relation));
> +
> +     entry->old_slot = MakeSingleTupleTableSlot(oldtupdesc, 
> &TTSOpsHeapTuple);
> +     entry->new_slot = MakeSingleTupleTableSlot(newtupdesc, 
> &TTSOpsHeapTuple);
> +
> +     MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldctx);
> +}

This *definitely* shouldn't be allocated in CacheMemoryContext. It's one thing
to have a named context below CacheMemoryContext, that's still somewhat
identifiable. But allocating directly in CacheMemoryContext is almost always a
bad idea.

What is supposed to clean any of this up in case of error?


I guess I'll start a separate thread about memory handling in pgoutput :/


> +     /*
> +      * We need this map to avoid relying on ReorderBufferChangeType enums
> +      * having specific values.
> +      */
> +     static int map_changetype_pubaction[] = {
> +             [REORDER_BUFFER_CHANGE_INSERT] = PUBACTION_INSERT,
> +             [REORDER_BUFFER_CHANGE_UPDATE] = PUBACTION_UPDATE,
> +             [REORDER_BUFFER_CHANGE_DELETE] = PUBACTION_DELETE
> +     };

Why is this "static"? Function-local statics only really make sense for
variables that are changed and should survive between calls to a function.


> +     Assert(*action == REORDER_BUFFER_CHANGE_INSERT ||
> +                *action == REORDER_BUFFER_CHANGE_UPDATE ||
> +                *action == REORDER_BUFFER_CHANGE_DELETE);
> +
> +     Assert(new_slot || old_slot);
> +
> +     /* Get the corresponding row filter */
> +     filter_exprstate = entry->exprstate[map_changetype_pubaction[*action]];
> +
> +     /* Bail out if there is no row filter */
> +     if (!filter_exprstate)
> +             return true;
> +
> +     elog(DEBUG3, "table \"%s.%s\" has row filter",
> +              get_namespace_name(RelationGetNamespace(relation)),
> +              RelationGetRelationName(relation));
> +
> +     estate = create_estate_for_relation(relation);
> +     ecxt = GetPerTupleExprContext(estate);

So we do this for each filtered row? That's a *lot* of
overhead. CreateExecutorState() creates its own memory context, allocates an
EState, then GetPerTupleExprContext() allocates an ExprContext, which then
creates another memory context.

I don't really see any need to allocate this over-and-over?

>               case REORDER_BUFFER_CHANGE_INSERT:
>                       {
> -                             HeapTuple       tuple = 
> &change->data.tp.newtuple->tuple;
> +                             /*
> +                              * Schema should be sent before the logic that 
> replaces the
> +                              * relation because it also sends the 
> ancestor's relation.
> +                              */
> +                             maybe_send_schema(ctx, change, relation, 
> relentry);
> +
> +                             new_slot = relentry->new_slot;
> +
> +                             ExecClearTuple(new_slot);
> +                             
> ExecStoreHeapTuple(&change->data.tp.newtuple->tuple,
> +                                                                new_slot, 
> false);

Why? This isn't free, and you're doing it unconditionally. I'd bet this alone
is noticeable slowdown over the current state.


Greetings,

Andres Freund


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