On Wed, Apr 14, 2021 at 11:09 AM Pavel Stehule <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > st 14. 4. 2021 v 9:57 odesÃlatel Dmitry Dolgov <[email protected]> > napsal: > >> > On Wed, Apr 14, 2021 at 09:20:08AM +0200, Pavel Stehule wrote: >> > st 14. 4. 2021 v 7:39 odesÃlatel Joel Jacobson <[email protected]> >> napsal: >> > >> > > Hi, >> > > >> > > commit 676887a3 added support for jsonb subscripting. >> > > >> > > Many thanks for working on this. I really like the improved syntax. >> > > >> > > I was also hoping for some performance benefits, >> > > but my testing shows that >> > > >> > > jsonb_value['existing_key'] = new_value; >> > > >> > > takes just as long time as >> > > >> > > jsonb_value := jsonb_set(jsonb_value, ARRAY['existing_key'], >> new_value); >> > > >> > > which is a bit surprising to me. Shouldn't subscripting be a lot >> faster, >> > > since it could modify the existing data structure in-place? What am I >> > > missing here? >> > > >> > >> > no - it doesn't support in-place modification. Only arrays and records >> > support it. >> > >> > >> > > I came to think of the this new functionality when trying to optimize >> some >> > > PL/pgSQL code where the bottle-neck turned out to be lots of calls >> > > to jsonb_set() for large jsonb objects. >> > > >> > >> > sure - there is big room for optimization. But this patch was big enough >> > without its optimization. And it was not clean, if I will be committed >> or >> > not (it waited in commitfest application for 4 years). So I accepted >> > implemented behaviour (without inplace update). Now, this patch is in >> core, >> > and anybody can work on others possible optimizations. >> >> Right, jsonb subscripting deals mostly with the syntax part and doesn't >> change internal jsonb behaviour. If I understand the original question >> correctly, "in-place" here means updating of e.g. just one particular >> key within a jsonb object, since jsonb_set looks like an overwrite of >> the whole jsonb. If so, then update will still cause the whole jsonb to >> be updated, there is no partial update functionality for the on-disk >> format. Although there is work going on to optimize this in case when >> jsonb is big enough to be put into a toast table (partial toast >> decompression thread, or bytea appendable toast). >> > > Almost all and almost everywhere Postgres's values are immutable. There is > only one exception - runtime plpgsql. "local variables" can hold values of > complex values unboxed. Then the repeated update is significantly cheaper. > Normal non repeated updates have the same speed, because the value should > be unboxed and boxed. Outside plpgsql the values are immutable. I think > this is a very hard problem, how to update big toasted values effectively, > and I am not sure if there is a solution. TOAST value is immutable. It > needs to introduce some alternative to TOAST. The benefits are clear - it > can be nice to have fast append arrays for time series. But this is a very > different topic. > I and Nikita are working on OLTP jsonb http://www.sai.msu.su/~megera/postgres/talks/jsonb-pgconfonline-2021.pdf > > Regards > > Pavel > > > > > > > > -- Postgres Professional: http://www.postgrespro.com The Russian Postgres Company
