Re: Hibernate generated query slow compared to 'equivalent' hand written one

From: Kyle Moser <moser(dot)kyle(at)gmail(dot)com>
To: Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us>
Cc: pgsql-performance(at)postgresql(dot)org
Subject: Re: Hibernate generated query slow compared to 'equivalent' hand written one
Date: 2016-10-14 18:09:56
Message-ID: CAAJSdFFhqHN+qWtMyzWZKo7UsK1qFdRPs0H8bW1cLFW=oLCktg@mail.gmail.com
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Tom,

Thanks so much for the response. They are the same data, that was due to
deidentification on my part. So even though the second Hibernate query says
"index only scan" (in addition to the filter, as you said) it is
inefficient. Why does it say index only scan if it can't use the index due
to the types being numeric and the index being bigint? (I suppose my
question here is how to interpret the output properly - so I don't make
this mistake again).

On Fri, Oct 14, 2016 at 1:46 PM, Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us> wrote:

> Kyle Moser <moser(dot)kyle(at)gmail(dot)com> writes:
> > The depesz link for explain (analyze, buffers) is shown below for 3
> > different queries. The first two queries show a log dump of the postgres
> > log, showing a query that was generated by Java Hibernate. The third
> query
> > was one I wrote and ran in pgadmin that I think is similar to what
> > Hibernate is doing.
>
> It's not all that similar: according to the EXPLAIN output, the condition
> Hibernate is generating is
>
> Filter: ((FK_USER)::numeric = ANY ('{213,382,131,...,717}'::numeric[]))
>
> whereas your handwritten query is generating
>
> Index Cond: (fk_user = ANY ('{70,150,1248,1269,1530,...,
> 199954}'::bigint[]))
>
> IOW, Hibernate is telling the server that the parameters it's supplying
> are NUMERIC not INTEGER, which results in a query using numeric_eq, which
> can't be indexed by a bigint index.
>
> If you can't find a hammer big enough to persuade Hibernate that it's
> dealing with integers/bigints rather than numerics, you could probably
> regain most of the performance by creating an index on (FK_USER::numeric).
>
> BTW, why is one of your EXPLAINs showing the identifiers in upper case
> and the other in lower case? One could be forgiven for wondering if
> these were really against the same data.
>
> regards, tom lane
>

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