On 6/30/21 2:55 PM, Andrey Lepikhov wrote:
Sorry, I forgot to send CC into pgsql-hackers.
On 29/6/21 13:23, Tomas Vondra wrote:
Because sampling is fairly expensive, especially if you have to do it for large number of child relations. And you'd have to do that every time *any* child triggers autovacuum, pretty much. Merging the stats is way cheaper.

See the other thread linked from the first message.
Maybe i couldn't describe my idea clearly.
The most commonly partitioning is used for large tables.
I suppose to store a sampling reservoir for each partition, replace on update of statistics and merge to build statistics for parent table.
It can be spilled into tuplestore on a disk, or stored in a parent table.
In the case of complex inheritance we can store sampling reservoirs only for leafs. You can consider this idea as an imagination, but the merging statistics approach has an extensibility problem on another types of statistics.
>

Well, yeah - we might try that too, of course. This is simply exploring the "merge statistics" idea from [1], which is why it does not even attempt to do what you suggested. We may explore the approach with keeping per-partition samples, of course.

You're right maintaining a per-partition samples and merging those might solve (or at least reduce) some of the problems, e.g. eliminating most of the I/O that'd be needed for sampling. And yeah, it's not entirely clear how to merge some of the statistics types (like ndistinct). But for a lot of the basic stats it works quite nicely, I think.

I'm sure there'll be some complexity due to handling large / toasted values, etc. And we probably need to design this for large hierarchies (IMHO it should work with 10k partitions, not just 100), in which case it may still be quite a bit more expensive than merging the stats.

So maybe we should really support both, and combine them somehow?

regards


https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAM-w4HO9hUHvJDVwQ8%3DFgm-znF9WNvQiWsfyBjCr-5FD7gWKGA%40mail.gmail.com

--
Tomas Vondra
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company


Reply via email to