From: | Bruce Momjian <pgman(at)candle(dot)pha(dot)pa(dot)us> |
---|---|
To: | Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us> |
Cc: | Peter Eisentraut <peter_e(at)gmx(dot)net>, PostgreSQL-development <pgsql-hackers(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
Subject: | Re: LIKE optimization and locale |
Date: | 2000-11-26 20:43:48 |
Message-ID: | 200011262043.PAA13975@candle.pha.pa.us |
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Lists: | pgsql-hackers |
> The core problem is: given a string "foo", find a string "fop" that
> is greater than any possible extension "foobar" of "foo". We need
> not find the least such string (else it would indeed be a hard
> problem), just a reasonably close upper bound. The algorithm we have
> in 7.0.* increments the last byte(s) of "foo" until it finds
> something greater than "foo". That handles collation orders that are
> different from numerical order, but it still breaks down in the cases
> Peter mentions.
This increment seems sub-optimal.
>
> One variant I've been wondering about is to test a candidate bound
> string against not only "foo", but all single-character extensions of
> "foo", ie, "foo\001" through "foo\255". That would catch situations
> like the one most recently complained of, where the last character
> of the proposed bound string is just a noise-character in dictionary
> order. But I'm afraid it's still not good enough to catch all cases
> ... and it doesn't generalize to MULTIBYTE very well anyway.
This was my suggestion, to test all 255 chars and find the lowest that
is greater than the target, but I see that multi-byte would be a
problem. Oh, well. I hoped some postmaster-generated lookup table
could fix this.
--
Bruce Momjian | http://candle.pha.pa.us
pgman(at)candle(dot)pha(dot)pa(dot)us | (610) 853-3000
+ If your life is a hard drive, | 830 Blythe Avenue
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