Martijn van Oosterhout wrote: > On Fri, Mar 09, 2007 at 10:59:56AM +0100, Gaetano Mendola wrote: >> Is really this what we want? I did a migration 8.0.x => 8.2.3 and I had on >> first hour of service up >> lot of queries "blocked" due to this, consider in my case I have on v_ta >> milions of records and usually >> that join extracts 1 row. Is there a way to set till I don't check all my >> huge schema to disable this >> behaviour? > > Most people figured it was a improvment. It's configured per function > now, which wasn't the case before. I dont't think there was ever any > discussion about having a global switch.
Well it's not an improvement in term of performances but a performance degradation in the best case and in the worst can be devastating: create table ta ( a integer, b integer ); CREATE TABLE create table tb ( b integer, c integer ); CREATE TABLE CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION sp_delete_selected_row ( INTEGER ) RETURNS INTEGER AS' DECLARE a_id ALIAS FOR $1; BEGIN DELETE FROM ta where a = a_id; return 0; END; ' LANGUAGE 'plpgsql'; CREATE FUNCTION CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW v_ta AS SELECT sp_delete_selected_row(a) AS a, b AS b FROM ta ; CREATE VIEW insert into ta values (2,3); INSERT 0 1 insert into ta values (3,4); INSERT 0 1 insert into tb values (4,5); INSERT 0 1 select * from v_ta join tb using (b) where c = 5; b | a | c ---+---+--- 4 | 0 | 5 (1 row) select * from ta; a | b ---+--- (0 rows) All rows are gone instead of the only one extracted from that query. IMHO is a undesired side effect. In my case I destroyed my application statistics on how many time a certain row was extracted. Regards Gaetano Mendola ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: explain analyze is your friend