hello ... a view is already nice but i think it is still too narrow. the problem is: you don't want a view for every potential join. in addition to that - ideally there is not much left of a view when it comes to checking for costs. so, i think, this is not the kind of approach leading to total success here.
one side question: does anybody happen to know how this is one in oracle or db2? many thanks, hans On Jul 15, 2010, at 1:33 AM, Dimitri Fontaine wrote: > Joshua Tolley <eggyk...@gmail.com> writes: >>>>> ALTER TABLE x SET CORRELATION STATISTICS FOR (x.id =3D y.id AND x.id= > 2 =3D y.id2) >>>> =20 >>> it says X and Y ... the selectivity of joins are what i am most >>> interested in. cross correlation of columns within the same table are >>> just a byproduct. the core thing is: how can i estimate the number >>> of rows returned from a join? >> >> All the discussion of this topic that I've seen has been limited to the s= > ingle >> table case. The hard problem in that case is coming up with something you= > can >> precalculate that will actually be useful during query planning, without >> taking too much disk, memory, CPU, or something else. Expanding the discu= > ssion >> to include join relations certainly still has valid use cases, but is even >> harder, because you've also got to keep track of precisely how the underl= > ying >> relations are joined, so you know in what context the statistics remain v= > alid. > > Well I've been proposing to handle the correlation problem in another > way in some past mails here, and I've been trying to write it down too: > > http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-performance/2009-06/msg00118.php > http://tapoueh.org/char10.html#sec13 > > What I propose is to extend ANALYZE to be able to work on a VIEW too, > rather than just a table. The hard parts seems to be: > > a. what stats to record, exploiting the view definition the best we can > b. how to match a user query against the view definitions we have in > order to actually use the stats > > If you have answers or good ideas=C2=A0:) > > Regards, > --=20 > dim > > > -- > dim > -- Cybertec Schönig & Schönig GmbH Gröhrmühlgasse 26 A-2700 Wiener Neustadt Web: http://www.postgresql-support.de -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers