This new index is used but still the read is 230mb.

https://explain.dalibo.com/plan/b0f28a9e8a136afd


________________________________
De : Chris Hoover <chr...@aweber.com>
Envoyé : lundi 12 juin 2023 22:55
À : benoit
Cc : pgsql-performance@lists.postgresql.org
Objet : Re: Forced to use UNION ALL when having multiple ANY operators and 
ORDER BY LIMIT

I normally create my indexes to match the where clause of the query. While 
technically, it should not matter, I find a lot of time, it does.

I would create an index on (status, sender_reference, sent_at) and see if the 
improves your query performance.

        SELECT * FROM docs WHERE status IN ('draft', 'sent') AND 
sender_reference IN ('Custom/1175', 'Client/362', 'Custom/280') ORDER BY 
sent_at DESC
Thanks,


Chris Hoover
Senior DBA
AWeber.com
Cell: (803) 528-2269
Email: chr...@aweber.com



On Jun 12, 2023, at 4:17 PM, benoit <ben...@hopsandfork.com> wrote:


Hello

I have a database with few 60gb tables. Tables rows are requested with multiple 
ANY or IN operators. I am not able to find an easy way to make DB able to use 
indexes. I often hit the index, but see a a spike of 200mb of IO or disk read.

I am using version 13 but soon 14.

I wrote a reproduction script on version 14 with plans included. 
https://gist.github.com/benoittgt/ab72dc4cfedea2a0c6a5ee809d16e04d

I also have plans on a snapshot of the DB with real data.
- The current query that I try to improve : 
https://explain.dalibo.com/plan/8b8f6e0he9feb551
  - I added the DB schema + index in query view. As you can see I have many 
indexes for testing purpose and try what the planner can do.
- The optimized query when I have only one ANY and migrate to UNION ALL for 
each parameter of the ANY operator 
https://explain.dalibo.com/plan/427gg053d07328ga . Query is fast as I would 
like but it means generate some merge to be able to get a fast result.
- The new issue I have when I have a new ANY operator on the previous optimized 
query. Big IO/read https://explain.dalibo.com/plan/e7ha9g637b4eh946

It seems to me quite undoable to generate for every parameters a query that 
will then merge. I have sometimes 3-4 ANY operators with up to 15 elements in 
an array.

Is there a misusage of my indexes?
Is there a limitation when using ANY or IN operators and ordered LIMIT behind?

Thanks a lot

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