On Thu, 2012-06-14 at 02:56 +0400, Alexander Korotkov wrote: > Hackers, > > > attached patch implements quad-tree on ranges. Some performance > results in comparison with current GiST indexing. > Index creation is slightly slower. Probably, it need some > investigation. Search queries on SP-GiST use much more pages. However > this comparison can be not really correct, because SP-GiST can pin > same buffer several times during one scan. In CPU search queries on > SP-GiST seems to be slightly faster. Dramatical difference in "column > <@ const" query is thanks to 2d-mapping. > Looking at this patch now. I see that it fails the opr_sanity test (on master), can you look into that?
It looks very promising from a performance standpoint. I think the "col <@ const" query will be a common query; and I also think that pattern will be useful to restrict a large table down to something more manageable. In the bounds_connected function, it might make more sense to use the word "adjacent" which I already used for ordinary ranges, rather than using the new word "connected". Also, I'm getting a little confused switching between thinking in terms of "X and Y" and "lower and upper" (particularly since lower and upper can be confused with > or <). I don't have a suggestion yet how to clarify that, but it might be good to use the spatial terminology in more places and avoid lower/upper except where needed. Please excuse the slow review, I'm catching up on the SP-GiST API. Regards, Jeff Davis -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers