From: | Alessandro Gagliardi <alessandro(at)path(dot)com> |
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To: | pgsql-performance(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: From Simple to Complex |
Date: | 2012-01-31 23:43:10 |
Message-ID: | CAAB3BB+tgVjObo5tt3XM2yyvxQyqKNEyu+NdtrcTD806WJYoYg@mail.gmail.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-performance |
I just got a pointer on presenting EXPLAIN ANALYZE in a more human friendly
fashion (thanks, Agent M!): http://explain.depesz.com/s/A9S
From this it looks like the bottleneck happens when Postgres does an Index
Scan using emotions_moment_id_idx on emotions before filtering on
moments.inserted so I thought I'd try filtering on emotions.inserted
instead but that only made it worse. At the same time, I noticed that "FROM
pg_class, moments WHERE moments.tableoid = pg_class.oid" tends to run a bit
faster than "FROM pg_class JOIN moments ON moments.tableoid =
pg_class.oid". So I tried:
SELECT relname, emotion, COUNT(feedback_id)
FROM pg_class, moments, emotions
WHERE moments.tableoid = pg_class.oid
AND emotions.inserted > 'yesterday'
AND moments.inserted BETWEEN 'yesterday' AND 'today'
AND emotions.moment_id = moments.moment_id
GROUP BY relname, emotion
ORDER BY relname, emotion;
That was a bit faster, but still very slow. Here's the EXPLAIN:
http://explain.depesz.com/s/ZdF
On Tue, Jan 31, 2012 at 2:53 PM, Alessandro Gagliardi
<alessandro(at)path(dot)com>wrote:
> I changed the query a bit so the results would not change over the
> course of the day to:
>
> SELECT relname, emotion, COUNT(feedback_id) FROM pg_class, moments
> JOIN emotions USING (moment_id)
> WHERE moments.inserted BETWEEN 'yesterday' AND 'today' AND
> moments.tableoid = pg_class.oid
> GROUP BY relname, emotion ORDER BY relname, emotion;
>
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