On Thu, Feb 20, 2014 at 1:48 PM, Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnakan...@vmware.com > wrote:
> On 02/09/2014 12:11 PM, Alexander Korotkov wrote: > >> I've rebased catalog changes with last master. Patch is attached. I've >> rerun my test suite with both last master ('committed') and attached >> patch ('ternary-consistent'). >> > > Thanks! > > > method | sum >> ------------------------+------------------ >> committed | 143491.715000001 >> fast-scan-11 | 126916.111999999 >> fast-scan-light | 137321.211 >> fast-scan-light-heikki | 138168.028000001 >> master | 446976.288 >> ternary-consistent | 125923.514 >> >> I explain regression in last master by change of MAX_MAYBE_ENTRIES from 8 >> to 4. >> > > Yeah, probably. I set MAX_MAYBE_ENTRIES to 8 in initial versions to make > sure we get similar behavior in Tomas' tests that used 6 search terms. But > I always felt that it was too large for real queries, once we have the > catalog changes, that's why I lowered to 4 when committing. If an opclass > benefits greatly from fast scan, it should provide the ternary consistent > function, and not rely on the shim implementation. > > > I'm not sure about decision to reserve separate procedure number for >> ternary consistent. Probably, it would be better to add ginConfig method. >> It would be useful for post 9.4 improvements. >> > > Hmm, it might be useful for an opclass to provide both, a boolean and > ternary consistent function, if the boolean version is significantly more > efficient when all the arguments are TRUE/FALSE. OTOH, you could also do a > quick check through the array to see if there are any MAYBE arguments, > within the consistent function. But I'm inclined to keep the possibility to > provide both versions. As long as we support the boolean version at all, > there's not much difference in terms of the amount of code to support > having them both for the same opclass. > > A ginConfig could be useful for many other things, but I don't think it's > worth adding it now. > > > What's the difference between returning GIN_MAYBE and GIN_TRUE+recheck? We > discussed that earlier, but didn't reach any conclusion. That needs to be > clarified in the docs. One possibility is to document that they're > equivalent. Another is to forbid one of them. Yet another is to assign a > different meaning to each. > > I've been thinking that it might be useful to define them so that a MAYBE > result from the tri-consistent function means that it cannot decide if you > have a match or not, because some of the inputs were MAYBE. And > TRUE+recheck means that even if all the MAYBE inputs were passed as TRUE or > FALSE, the result would be the same, TRUE+recheck. The practical difference > would be that if the tri-consistent function returns TRUE+recheck, ginget.c > wouldn't need to bother fetching the other entries, it could just return > the entry with recheck=true immediately. While with MAYBE result, it would > fetch the other entries and call tri-consistent again. ginget.c doesn't > currently use the tri-consistent function that way - it always fetches all > the entries for a potential match before calling tri-consistent, but it > could. I had it do that in some of the patch versions, but Tomas' testing > showed that it was a big loss on some queries, because the consistent > function was called much more often. Still, something like that might be > sensible in the future, so it might be good to distinguish those cases in > the API now. Note that ginarrayproc is already using the return values like > that: in GinContainedStrategy, it always returns TRUE+recheck regardless of > the inputs, but in other cases it uses GIN_MAYBE. Next revision of patch is attached. In this version opclass should provide at least one consistent function: binary or ternary. It's expected to achieve best performance when opclass provide both of them. However, tests shows opposite :( I've to recheck it carefully. I've removed recheck flag from ternary consistent function. It have to return GIN_MAYBE instead. ------ With best regards, Alexander Korotkov.
gin-ternary-consistent-2.patch
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