Hello Tom,
Sorry for the misleading. Could you try these two queries? I made the query even slower in latest version of postgres. These are information about how we set up evaluation environment and query result. Thanks, Jinho Jung Install Multiple version of DBs in one machine ====================================== # Install 10.5 $ wget --quiet -O - https://www.postgresql.org/media/keys/ACCC4CF8.asc | sudo apt-key add - $ sudo sh -c 'echo "deb http://apt.postgresql.org/pub/repos/apt/ xenial-pgdg main" > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/pgdg_xenial.list' $ sudo apt update $ sudo apt-get install postgresql-10 # Install 9.6 $ sudo apt-get install postgresql-9.6 # Install 9.5 $ sudo apt-get install postgresql-9.5 # Install 9.4 $ sudo apt-get install postgresql-9.4 postgresql-contrib-9.4 libpq-dev postgresql-server-dev-9.4 # check $ pg_lsclusters Original regression query ========================== explain analyze select 1 from information_schema.role_usage_grants as ref_2, lateral ( select max((null)) over (partition by ref_3.amopfamily) as c8 from pg_catalog.pg_amop as ref_3 ) as subq_0 ; ORIGINAL querying time on old version(9.4/9.5): 5.7ms on latest version(10): 91.76ms CORRELATED query to maximize error =================================== explain analyze select * from information_schema.role_usage_grants f1 where grantor = ( select max(ref_2.grantor) from information_schema.role_usage_grants as ref_2, lateral ( select max((null)) over (partition by ref_3.amopfamily) as c8 from pg_catalog.pg_amop as ref_3 ) as subq_0 where ref_2.object_catalog = f1.object_catalog ) ; CORRELATED querying time on old version(9.4/9.5): 0.6s on latest version(10): 113s 188 times slower ________________________________ From: Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us> Sent: Saturday, October 13, 2018 5:59:06 PM To: Jung, Jinho Cc: pgsql-hackers@lists.postgresql.org Subject: Re: Regarding query minimizer (simplifier) "Jung, Jinho" <jinho.j...@gatech.edu> writes: > Hello, I am Jinho Jung, Phd Student from GeorgiaTech, and try to find any SQL > queries that cause performance regression. While conducting evaluation, I > found an interesting query which makes x80 times slower execution in version > 10.5 than version 9.4. Please see the attached files, if you are interested. Hm, testing this in the regression database, it seems pretty speedy across all supported branches, and indeed slower in 9.4 than later branches (~25 ms vs ~10 ms). It seems likely that you're testing in a very different database, perhaps one with many more tables ... but if you don't explain the test scenario, we aren't going to have much luck investigating. regards, tom lane
query_regression
Description: query_regression
query_much_regression
Description: query_much_regression