790 lines
30 KiB
Markdown
790 lines
30 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Enablement
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group: Database
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#designated-technical-writers
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---
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# Understanding EXPLAIN plans
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PostgreSQL allows you to obtain query plans using the `EXPLAIN` command. This
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command can be invaluable when trying to determine how a query will perform.
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You can use this command directly in your SQL query, as long as the query starts
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with it:
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```sql
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EXPLAIN
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SELECT COUNT(*)
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FROM projects
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WHERE visibility_level IN (0, 20);
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```
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When running this on GitLab.com, we are presented with the following output:
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```sql
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Aggregate (cost=922411.76..922411.77 rows=1 width=8)
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-> Seq Scan on projects (cost=0.00..908044.47 rows=5746914 width=0)
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Filter: (visibility_level = ANY ('{0,20}'::integer[]))
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```
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When using _just_ `EXPLAIN`, PostgreSQL won't actually execute our query,
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instead it produces an _estimated_ execution plan based on the available
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statistics. This means the actual plan can differ quite a bit. Fortunately,
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PostgreSQL provides us with the option to execute the query as well. To do so,
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we need to use `EXPLAIN ANALYZE` instead of just `EXPLAIN`:
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```sql
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EXPLAIN ANALYZE
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SELECT COUNT(*)
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FROM projects
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WHERE visibility_level IN (0, 20);
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```
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This will produce:
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```sql
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Aggregate (cost=922420.60..922420.61 rows=1 width=8) (actual time=3428.535..3428.535 rows=1 loops=1)
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-> Seq Scan on projects (cost=0.00..908053.18 rows=5746969 width=0) (actual time=0.041..2987.606 rows=5746940 loops=1)
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Filter: (visibility_level = ANY ('{0,20}'::integer[]))
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Rows Removed by Filter: 65677
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Planning time: 2.861 ms
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Execution time: 3428.596 ms
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```
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As we can see this plan is quite different, and includes a lot more data. Let's
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discuss this step by step.
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Because `EXPLAIN ANALYZE` executes the query, care should be taken when using a
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query that will write data or might time out. If the query modifies data,
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consider wrapping it in a transaction that rolls back automatically like so:
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```sql
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BEGIN;
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EXPLAIN ANALYZE
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DELETE FROM users WHERE id = 1;
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ROLLBACK;
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```
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The `EXPLAIN` command also takes additional options, such as `BUFFERS`:
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```sql
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EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS)
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SELECT COUNT(*)
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FROM projects
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WHERE visibility_level IN (0, 20);
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```
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This will then produce:
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```sql
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Aggregate (cost=922420.60..922420.61 rows=1 width=8) (actual time=3428.535..3428.535 rows=1 loops=1)
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Buffers: shared hit=208846
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-> Seq Scan on projects (cost=0.00..908053.18 rows=5746969 width=0) (actual time=0.041..2987.606 rows=5746940 loops=1)
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Filter: (visibility_level = ANY ('{0,20}'::integer[]))
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Rows Removed by Filter: 65677
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Buffers: shared hit=208846
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Planning time: 2.861 ms
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Execution time: 3428.596 ms
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```
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For more information, refer to the official
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[`EXPLAIN` documentation](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-explain.html)
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and [using `EXPLAIN` guide](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/using-explain.html).
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## Nodes
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Every query plan consists of nodes. Nodes can be nested, and are executed from
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the inside out. This means that the innermost node is executed before an outer
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node. This can be best thought of as nested function calls, returning their
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results as they unwind. For example, a plan starting with an `Aggregate`
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followed by a `Nested Loop`, followed by an `Index Only scan` can be thought of
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as the following Ruby code:
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```ruby
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aggregate(
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nested_loop(
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index_only_scan()
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index_only_scan()
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)
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)
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```
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Nodes are indicated using a `->` followed by the type of node taken. For
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example:
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```sql
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Aggregate (cost=922411.76..922411.77 rows=1 width=8)
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-> Seq Scan on projects (cost=0.00..908044.47 rows=5746914 width=0)
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Filter: (visibility_level = ANY ('{0,20}'::integer[]))
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```
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Here the first node executed is `Seq scan on projects`. The `Filter:` is an
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additional filter applied to the results of the node. A filter is very similar
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to Ruby's `Array#select`: it takes the input rows, applies the filter, and
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produces a new list of rows. Once the node is done, we perform the `Aggregate`
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above it.
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Nested nodes will look like this:
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```sql
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Aggregate (cost=176.97..176.98 rows=1 width=8) (actual time=0.252..0.252 rows=1 loops=1)
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Buffers: shared hit=155
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-> Nested Loop (cost=0.86..176.75 rows=87 width=0) (actual time=0.035..0.249 rows=36 loops=1)
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Buffers: shared hit=155
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-> Index Only Scan using users_pkey on users users_1 (cost=0.43..4.95 rows=87 width=4) (actual time=0.029..0.123 rows=36 loops=1)
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Index Cond: (id < 100)
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Heap Fetches: 0
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-> Index Only Scan using users_pkey on users (cost=0.43..1.96 rows=1 width=4) (actual time=0.003..0.003 rows=1 loops=36)
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Index Cond: (id = users_1.id)
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Heap Fetches: 0
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Planning time: 2.585 ms
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Execution time: 0.310 ms
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```
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Here we first perform two separate "Index Only" scans, followed by performing a
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"Nested Loop" on the result of these two scans.
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## Node statistics
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Each node in a plan has a set of associated statistics, such as the cost, the
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number of rows produced, the number of loops performed, and more. For example:
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```sql
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Seq Scan on projects (cost=0.00..908044.47 rows=5746914 width=0)
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```
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Here we can see that our cost ranges from `0.00..908044.47` (we'll cover this in
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a moment), and we estimate (since we're using `EXPLAIN` and not `EXPLAIN
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ANALYZE`) a total of 5,746,914 rows to be produced by this node. The `width`
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statistics describes the estimated width of each row, in bytes.
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The `costs` field specifies how expensive a node was. The cost is measured in
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arbitrary units determined by the query planner's cost parameters. What
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influences the costs depends on a variety of settings, such as `seq_page_cost`,
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`cpu_tuple_cost`, and various others.
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The format of the costs field is as follows:
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```sql
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STARTUP COST..TOTAL COST
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```
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The startup cost states how expensive it was to start the node, with the total
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cost describing how expensive the entire node was. In general: the greater the
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values, the more expensive the node.
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When using `EXPLAIN ANALYZE`, these statistics will also include the actual time
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(in milliseconds) spent, and other runtime statistics (e.g. the actual number of
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produced rows):
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```sql
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Seq Scan on projects (cost=0.00..908053.18 rows=5746969 width=0) (actual time=0.041..2987.606 rows=5746940 loops=1)
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```
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Here we can see we estimated 5,746,969 rows to be returned, but in reality we
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returned 5,746,940 rows. We can also see that _just_ this sequential scan took
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2.98 seconds to run.
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Using `EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS)` will also give us information about the
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number of rows removed by a filter, the number of buffers used, and more. For
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example:
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```sql
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Seq Scan on projects (cost=0.00..908053.18 rows=5746969 width=0) (actual time=0.041..2987.606 rows=5746940 loops=1)
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Filter: (visibility_level = ANY ('{0,20}'::integer[]))
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Rows Removed by Filter: 65677
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Buffers: shared hit=208846
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```
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Here we can see that our filter has to remove 65,677 rows, and that we use
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208,846 buffers. Each buffer in PostgreSQL is 8 KB (8192 bytes), meaning our
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above node uses *1.6 GB of buffers*. That's a lot!
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## Node types
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There are quite a few different types of nodes, so we only cover some of the
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more common ones here.
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A full list of all the available nodes and their descriptions can be found in
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the [PostgreSQL source file `plannodes.h`](https://gitlab.com/postgres/postgres/blob/master/src/include/nodes/plannodes.h)
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### Seq Scan
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A sequential scan over (a chunk of) a database table. This is like using
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`Array#each`, but on a database table. Sequential scans can be quite slow when
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retrieving lots of rows, so it's best to avoid these for large tables.
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### Index Only Scan
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A scan on an index that did not require fetching anything from the table. In
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certain cases an index only scan may still fetch data from the table, in this
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case the node will include a `Heap Fetches:` statistic.
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### Index Scan
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A scan on an index that required retrieving some data from the table.
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### Bitmap Index Scan and Bitmap Heap scan
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Bitmap scans fall between sequential scans and index scans. These are typically
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used when we would read too much data from an index scan, but too little to
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perform a sequential scan. A bitmap scan uses what is known as a [bitmap
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index](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitmap_index) to perform its work.
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The [source code of PostgreSQL](https://gitlab.com/postgres/postgres/blob/REL_11_STABLE/src/include/nodes/plannodes.h#L441)
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states the following on bitmap scans:
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> Bitmap Index Scan delivers a bitmap of potential tuple locations; it does not
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> access the heap itself. The bitmap is used by an ancestor Bitmap Heap Scan
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> node, possibly after passing through intermediate Bitmap And and/or Bitmap Or
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> nodes to combine it with the results of other Bitmap Index Scans.
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### Limit
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Applies a `LIMIT` on the input rows.
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### Sort
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Sorts the input rows as specified using an `ORDER BY` statement.
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### Nested Loop
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A nested loop will execute its child nodes for every row produced by a node that
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precedes it. For example:
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```sql
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-> Nested Loop (cost=0.86..176.75 rows=87 width=0) (actual time=0.035..0.249 rows=36 loops=1)
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Buffers: shared hit=155
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-> Index Only Scan using users_pkey on users users_1 (cost=0.43..4.95 rows=87 width=4) (actual time=0.029..0.123 rows=36 loops=1)
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Index Cond: (id < 100)
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Heap Fetches: 0
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-> Index Only Scan using users_pkey on users (cost=0.43..1.96 rows=1 width=4) (actual time=0.003..0.003 rows=1 loops=36)
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Index Cond: (id = users_1.id)
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Heap Fetches: 0
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```
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Here the first child node (`Index Only Scan using users_pkey on users users_1`)
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produces 36 rows, and is executed once (`rows=36 loops=1`). The next node
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produces 1 row (`rows=1`), but is repeated 36 times (`loops=36`). This is
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because the previous node produced 36 rows.
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This means that nested loops can quickly slow the query down if the various
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child nodes keep producing many rows.
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## Optimising queries
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With that out of the way, let's see how we can optimise a query. Let's use the
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following query as an example:
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```sql
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SELECT COUNT(*)
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FROM users
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WHERE twitter != '';
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```
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This query simply counts the number of users that have a Twitter profile set.
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Let's run this using `EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS)`:
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```sql
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EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS)
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SELECT COUNT(*)
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FROM users
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WHERE twitter != '';
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```
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This will produce the following plan:
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```sql
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Aggregate (cost=845110.21..845110.22 rows=1 width=8) (actual time=1271.157..1271.158 rows=1 loops=1)
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Buffers: shared hit=202662
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-> Seq Scan on users (cost=0.00..844969.99 rows=56087 width=0) (actual time=0.019..1265.883 rows=51833 loops=1)
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Filter: ((twitter)::text <> ''::text)
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Rows Removed by Filter: 2487813
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Buffers: shared hit=202662
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Planning time: 0.390 ms
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Execution time: 1271.180 ms
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```
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From this query plan we can see the following:
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1. We need to perform a sequential scan on the `users` table.
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1. This sequential scan filters out 2,487,813 rows using a `Filter`.
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1. We use 202,622 buffers, which equals 1.58 GB of memory.
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1. It takes us 1.2 seconds to do all of this.
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Considering we are just counting users, that's quite expensive!
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Before we start making any changes, let's see if there are any existing indexes
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on the `users` table that we might be able to use. We can obtain this
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information by running `\d users` in a `psql` console, then scrolling down to
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the `Indexes:` section:
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```sql
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Indexes:
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"users_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
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"index_users_on_confirmation_token" UNIQUE, btree (confirmation_token)
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"index_users_on_email" UNIQUE, btree (email)
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"index_users_on_reset_password_token" UNIQUE, btree (reset_password_token)
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"index_users_on_static_object_token" UNIQUE, btree (static_object_token)
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"index_users_on_unlock_token" UNIQUE, btree (unlock_token)
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"index_on_users_name_lower" btree (lower(name::text))
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"index_users_on_accepted_term_id" btree (accepted_term_id)
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"index_users_on_admin" btree (admin)
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"index_users_on_created_at" btree (created_at)
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"index_users_on_email_trigram" gin (email gin_trgm_ops)
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"index_users_on_feed_token" btree (feed_token)
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"index_users_on_group_view" btree (group_view)
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"index_users_on_incoming_email_token" btree (incoming_email_token)
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"index_users_on_managing_group_id" btree (managing_group_id)
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"index_users_on_name" btree (name)
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"index_users_on_name_trigram" gin (name gin_trgm_ops)
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"index_users_on_public_email" btree (public_email) WHERE public_email::text <> ''::text
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"index_users_on_state" btree (state)
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"index_users_on_state_and_user_type" btree (state, user_type)
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"index_users_on_unconfirmed_email" btree (unconfirmed_email) WHERE unconfirmed_email IS NOT NULL
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"index_users_on_user_type" btree (user_type)
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"index_users_on_username" btree (username)
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"index_users_on_username_trigram" gin (username gin_trgm_ops)
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"tmp_idx_on_user_id_where_bio_is_filled" btree (id) WHERE COALESCE(bio, ''::character varying)::text IS DISTINCT FROM ''::text
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```
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Here we can see there is no index on the `twitter` column, which means
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PostgreSQL has to perform a sequential scan in this case. Let's try to fix this
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by adding the following index:
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```sql
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CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY twitter_test ON users (twitter);
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```
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If we now re-run our query using `EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS)` we get the
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following plan:
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```sql
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Aggregate (cost=61002.82..61002.83 rows=1 width=8) (actual time=297.311..297.312 rows=1 loops=1)
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Buffers: shared hit=51854 dirtied=19
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-> Index Only Scan using twitter_test on users (cost=0.43..60873.13 rows=51877 width=0) (actual time=279.184..293.532 rows=51833 loops=1)
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Filter: ((twitter)::text <> ''::text)
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Rows Removed by Filter: 2487830
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Heap Fetches: 26037
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Buffers: shared hit=51854 dirtied=19
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Planning time: 0.191 ms
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Execution time: 297.334 ms
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```
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Now it takes just under 300 milliseconds to get our data, instead of 1.2
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seconds. However, we still use 51,854 buffers, which is about 400 MB of memory.
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300 milliseconds is also quite slow for such a simple query. To understand why
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this query is still expensive, let's take a look at the following:
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```sql
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Index Only Scan using twitter_test on users (cost=0.43..60873.13 rows=51877 width=0) (actual time=279.184..293.532 rows=51833 loops=1)
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Filter: ((twitter)::text <> ''::text)
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Rows Removed by Filter: 2487830
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```
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We start with an index only scan on our index, but we somehow still apply a
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`Filter` that filters out 2,487,830 rows. Why is that? Well, let's look at how
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we created the index:
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```sql
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CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY twitter_test ON users (twitter);
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```
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We simply told PostgreSQL to index all possible values of the `twitter` column,
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even empty strings. Our query in turn uses `WHERE twitter != ''`. This means
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that the index does improve things, as we don't need to do a sequential scan,
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but we may still encounter empty strings. This means PostgreSQL _has_ to apply a
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Filter on the index results to get rid of those values.
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Fortunately, we can improve this even further using "partial indexes". Partial
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indexes are indexes with a `WHERE` condition that is applied when indexing data.
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For example:
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```sql
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CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY some_index ON users (email) WHERE id < 100
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```
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This index would only index the `email` value of rows that match `WHERE id <
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100`. We can use partial indexes to change our Twitter index to the following:
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```sql
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CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY twitter_test ON users (twitter) WHERE twitter != '';
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```
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Once created, if we run our query again we will be given the following plan:
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```sql
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Aggregate (cost=1608.26..1608.27 rows=1 width=8) (actual time=19.821..19.821 rows=1 loops=1)
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Buffers: shared hit=44036
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-> Index Only Scan using twitter_test on users (cost=0.41..1479.71 rows=51420 width=0) (actual time=0.023..15.514 rows=51833 loops=1)
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Heap Fetches: 1208
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Buffers: shared hit=44036
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Planning time: 0.123 ms
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Execution time: 19.848 ms
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```
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That's _a lot_ better! Now it only takes 20 milliseconds to get the data, and we
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only use about 344 MB of buffers (instead of the original 1.58 GB). The reason
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this works is that now PostgreSQL no longer needs to apply a `Filter`, as the
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index only contains `twitter` values that are not empty.
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Keep in mind that you shouldn't just add partial indexes every time you want to
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optimise a query. Every index has to be updated for every write, and they may
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require quite a bit of space, depending on the amount of indexed data. As a
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result, first check if there are any existing indexes you may be able to reuse.
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If there aren't any, check if you can perhaps slightly change an existing one to
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fit both the existing and new queries. Only add a new index if none of the
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existing indexes can be used in any way.
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When comparing execution plans, don't take timing as the only important metric.
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Good timing is the main goal of any optimization, but it can be too volatile to
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be used for comparison (for example, it depends a lot on the state of cache).
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When optimizing a query, we usually need to reduce the amount of data we're
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dealing with. Indexes are the way to work with fewer pages (buffers) to get the
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result, so, during optimization, look at the number of buffers used (read and hit),
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and work on reducing these numbers. Reduced timing will be the consequence of reduced
|
|
buffer numbers. [#database-lab](#database-lab) guarantees that the plan is structurally
|
|
identical to production (and overall number of buffers is the same as on production),
|
|
but difference in cache state and I/O speed may lead to different timings.
|
|
|
|
## Queries that can't be optimised
|
|
|
|
Now that we have seen how to optimise a query, let's look at another query that
|
|
we might not be able to optimise:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS)
|
|
SELECT COUNT(*)
|
|
FROM projects
|
|
WHERE visibility_level IN (0, 20);
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The output of `EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS)` is as follows:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
Aggregate (cost=922420.60..922420.61 rows=1 width=8) (actual time=3428.535..3428.535 rows=1 loops=1)
|
|
Buffers: shared hit=208846
|
|
-> Seq Scan on projects (cost=0.00..908053.18 rows=5746969 width=0) (actual time=0.041..2987.606 rows=5746940 loops=1)
|
|
Filter: (visibility_level = ANY ('{0,20}'::integer[]))
|
|
Rows Removed by Filter: 65677
|
|
Buffers: shared hit=208846
|
|
Planning time: 2.861 ms
|
|
Execution time: 3428.596 ms
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Looking at the output we see the following Filter:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
Filter: (visibility_level = ANY ('{0,20}'::integer[]))
|
|
Rows Removed by Filter: 65677
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Looking at the number of rows removed by the filter, we may be tempted to add an
|
|
index on `projects.visibility_level` to somehow turn this Sequential scan +
|
|
filter into an index-only scan.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately, doing so is unlikely to improve anything. Contrary to what some
|
|
might believe, an index being present _does not guarantee_ that PostgreSQL will
|
|
actually use it. For example, when doing a `SELECT * FROM projects` it is much
|
|
cheaper to just scan the entire table, instead of using an index and then
|
|
fetching data from the table. In such cases PostgreSQL may decide to not use an
|
|
index.
|
|
|
|
Second, let's think for a moment what our query does: it gets all projects with
|
|
visibility level 0 or 20. In the above plan we can see this produces quite a lot
|
|
of rows (5,745,940), but how much is that relative to the total? Let's find out
|
|
by running the following query:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
SELECT visibility_level, count(*) AS amount
|
|
FROM projects
|
|
GROUP BY visibility_level
|
|
ORDER BY visibility_level ASC;
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
For GitLab.com this produces:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
visibility_level | amount
|
|
------------------+---------
|
|
0 | 5071325
|
|
10 | 65678
|
|
20 | 674801
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Here the total number of projects is 5,811,804, and 5,746,126 of those are of
|
|
level 0 or 20. That's 98% of the entire table!
|
|
|
|
So no matter what we do, this query will retrieve 98% of the entire table. Since
|
|
most time is spent doing exactly that, there isn't really much we can do to
|
|
improve this query, other than _not_ running it at all.
|
|
|
|
What is important here is that while some may recommend to straight up add an
|
|
index the moment you see a sequential scan, it is _much more important_ to first
|
|
understand what your query does, how much data it retrieves, and so on. After
|
|
all, you can not optimise something you do not understand.
|
|
|
|
### Cardinality and selectivity
|
|
|
|
Earlier we saw that our query had to retrieve 98% of the rows in the table.
|
|
There are two terms commonly used for databases: cardinality, and selectivity.
|
|
Cardinality refers to the number of unique values in a particular column in a
|
|
table.
|
|
|
|
Selectivity is the number of unique values produced by an operation (e.g. an
|
|
index scan or filter), relative to the total number of rows. The higher the
|
|
selectivity, the more likely PostgreSQL is able to use an index.
|
|
|
|
In the above example, there are only 3 unique values: 0, 10, and 20. This means
|
|
the cardinality is 3. The selectivity in turn is also very low: 0.0000003% (2 /
|
|
5,811,804), because our `Filter` only filters using two values (`0` and `20`).
|
|
With such a low selectivity value it's not surprising that PostgreSQL decides
|
|
using an index is not worth it, because it would produce almost no unique rows.
|
|
|
|
## Rewriting queries
|
|
|
|
So the above query can't really be optimised as-is, or at least not much. But
|
|
what if we slightly change the purpose of it? What if instead of retrieving all
|
|
projects with `visibility_level` 0 or 20, we retrieve those that a user
|
|
interacted with somehow?
|
|
|
|
Fortunately, GitLab has an answer for this, and it's a table called
|
|
`user_interacted_projects`. This table has the following schema:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
Table "public.user_interacted_projects"
|
|
Column | Type | Modifiers
|
|
------------+---------+-----------
|
|
user_id | integer | not null
|
|
project_id | integer | not null
|
|
Indexes:
|
|
"index_user_interacted_projects_on_project_id_and_user_id" UNIQUE, btree (project_id, user_id)
|
|
"index_user_interacted_projects_on_user_id" btree (user_id)
|
|
Foreign-key constraints:
|
|
"fk_rails_0894651f08" FOREIGN KEY (user_id) REFERENCES users(id) ON DELETE CASCADE
|
|
"fk_rails_722ceba4f7" FOREIGN KEY (project_id) REFERENCES projects(id) ON DELETE CASCADE
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Let's rewrite our query to JOIN this table onto our projects, and get the
|
|
projects for a specific user:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
EXPLAIN ANALYZE
|
|
SELECT COUNT(*)
|
|
FROM projects
|
|
INNER JOIN user_interacted_projects ON user_interacted_projects.project_id = projects.id
|
|
WHERE projects.visibility_level IN (0, 20)
|
|
AND user_interacted_projects.user_id = 1;
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
What we do here is the following:
|
|
|
|
1. Get our projects.
|
|
1. INNER JOIN `user_interacted_projects`, meaning we're only left with rows in
|
|
`projects` that have a corresponding row in `user_interacted_projects`.
|
|
1. Limit this to the projects with `visibility_level` of 0 or 20, and to
|
|
projects that the user with ID 1 interacted with.
|
|
|
|
If we run this query we get the following plan:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
Aggregate (cost=871.03..871.04 rows=1 width=8) (actual time=9.763..9.763 rows=1 loops=1)
|
|
-> Nested Loop (cost=0.86..870.52 rows=203 width=0) (actual time=1.072..9.748 rows=143 loops=1)
|
|
-> Index Scan using index_user_interacted_projects_on_user_id on user_interacted_projects (cost=0.43..160.71 rows=205 width=4) (actual time=0.939..2.508 rows=145 loops=1)
|
|
Index Cond: (user_id = 1)
|
|
-> Index Scan using projects_pkey on projects (cost=0.43..3.45 rows=1 width=4) (actual time=0.049..0.050 rows=1 loops=145)
|
|
Index Cond: (id = user_interacted_projects.project_id)
|
|
Filter: (visibility_level = ANY ('{0,20}'::integer[]))
|
|
Rows Removed by Filter: 0
|
|
Planning time: 2.614 ms
|
|
Execution time: 9.809 ms
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Here it only took us just under 10 milliseconds to get the data. We can also see
|
|
we're retrieving far fewer projects:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
Index Scan using projects_pkey on projects (cost=0.43..3.45 rows=1 width=4) (actual time=0.049..0.050 rows=1 loops=145)
|
|
Index Cond: (id = user_interacted_projects.project_id)
|
|
Filter: (visibility_level = ANY ('{0,20}'::integer[]))
|
|
Rows Removed by Filter: 0
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Here we see we perform 145 loops (`loops=145`), with every loop producing 1 row
|
|
(`rows=1`). This is much less than before, and our query performs much better!
|
|
|
|
If we look at the plan we also see our costs are very low:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
Index Scan using projects_pkey on projects (cost=0.43..3.45 rows=1 width=4) (actual time=0.049..0.050 rows=1 loops=145)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Here our cost is only 3.45, and it only takes us 0.050 milliseconds to do so.
|
|
The next index scan is a bit more expensive:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
Index Scan using index_user_interacted_projects_on_user_id on user_interacted_projects (cost=0.43..160.71 rows=205 width=4) (actual time=0.939..2.508 rows=145 loops=1)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Here the cost is 160.71 (`cost=0.43..160.71`), taking about 2.5 milliseconds
|
|
(based on the output of `actual time=....`).
|
|
|
|
The most expensive part here is the "Nested Loop" that acts upon the result of
|
|
these two index scans:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
Nested Loop (cost=0.86..870.52 rows=203 width=0) (actual time=1.072..9.748 rows=143 loops=1)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Here we had to perform 870.52 disk page fetches for 203 rows, 9.748
|
|
milliseconds, producing 143 rows in a single loop.
|
|
|
|
The key takeaway here is that sometimes you have to rewrite (parts of) a query
|
|
to make it better. Sometimes that means having to slightly change your feature
|
|
to accommodate for better performance.
|
|
|
|
## What makes a bad plan
|
|
|
|
This is a bit of a difficult question to answer, because the definition of "bad"
|
|
is relative to the problem you are trying to solve. However, some patterns are
|
|
best avoided in most cases, such as:
|
|
|
|
- Sequential scans on large tables
|
|
- Filters that remove a lot of rows
|
|
- Performing a certain step (e.g. an index scan) that requires _a lot_ of
|
|
buffers (e.g. more than 512 MB for GitLab.com).
|
|
|
|
As a general guideline, aim for a query that:
|
|
|
|
1. Takes no more than 10 milliseconds. Our target time spent in SQL per request
|
|
is around 100 milliseconds, so every query should be as fast as possible.
|
|
1. Does not use an excessive number of buffers, relative to the workload. For
|
|
example, retrieving ten rows shouldn't require 1 GB of buffers.
|
|
1. Does not spend a long amount of time performing disk IO operations. The
|
|
setting `track_io_timing` must be enabled for this data to be included in the
|
|
output of `EXPLAIN ANALYZE`.
|
|
1. Applies a `LIMIT` when retrieving rows without aggregating them, such as
|
|
`SELECT * FROM users`.
|
|
1. Doesn't use a `Filter` to filter out too many rows, especially if the query
|
|
does not use a `LIMIT` to limit the number of returned rows. Filters can
|
|
usually be removed by adding a (partial) index.
|
|
|
|
These are _guidelines_ and not hard requirements, as different needs may require
|
|
different queries. The only _rule_ is that you _must always measure_ your query
|
|
(preferably using a production-like database) using `EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS)`
|
|
and related tools such as:
|
|
|
|
- [`explain.depesz.com`](https://explain.depesz.com/).
|
|
- [`explain.dalibo.com/`](https://explain.dalibo.com/).
|
|
|
|
## Producing query plans
|
|
|
|
There are a few ways to get the output of a query plan. Of course you
|
|
can directly run the `EXPLAIN` query in the `psql` console, or you can
|
|
follow one of the other options below.
|
|
|
|
### Rails console
|
|
|
|
Using the [`activerecord-explain-analyze`](https://github.com/6/activerecord-explain-analyze)
|
|
you can directly generate the query plan from the Rails console:
|
|
|
|
```ruby
|
|
pry(main)> require 'activerecord-explain-analyze'
|
|
=> true
|
|
pry(main)> Project.where('build_timeout > ?', 3600).explain(analyze: true)
|
|
Project Load (1.9ms) SELECT "projects".* FROM "projects" WHERE (build_timeout > 3600)
|
|
↳ (pry):12
|
|
=> EXPLAIN for: SELECT "projects".* FROM "projects" WHERE (build_timeout > 3600)
|
|
Seq Scan on public.projects (cost=0.00..2.17 rows=1 width=742) (actual time=0.040..0.041 rows=0 loops=1)
|
|
Output: id, name, path, description, created_at, updated_at, creator_id, namespace_id, ...
|
|
Filter: (projects.build_timeout > 3600)
|
|
Rows Removed by Filter: 14
|
|
Buffers: shared hit=2
|
|
Planning time: 0.411 ms
|
|
Execution time: 0.113 ms
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### ChatOps
|
|
|
|
[GitLab employees can also use our ChatOps solution, available in Slack using the
|
|
`/chatops` slash command](chatops_on_gitlabcom.md).
|
|
You can use ChatOps to get a query plan by running the following:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
/chatops run explain SELECT COUNT(*) FROM projects WHERE visibility_level IN (0, 20)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Visualising the plan using <https://explain.depesz.com/> is also supported:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
/chatops run explain --visual SELECT COUNT(*) FROM projects WHERE visibility_level IN (0, 20)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Quoting the query is not necessary.
|
|
|
|
For more information about the available options, run:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
/chatops run explain --help
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### `#database-lab`
|
|
|
|
Another tool GitLab employees can use is a chatbot powered by [Joe](https://gitlab.com/postgres-ai/joe)
|
|
which uses [Database Lab](https://gitlab.com/postgres-ai/database-lab) to instantly provide developers
|
|
with their own clone of the production database.
|
|
|
|
Joe is available in the
|
|
[`#database-lab`](https://gitlab.slack.com/archives/CLJMDRD8C) channel on Slack.
|
|
|
|
Unlike ChatOps, it gives you a way to execute DDL statements (like creating indexes and tables) and get query plan not only for `SELECT` but also `UPDATE` and `DELETE`.
|
|
|
|
For example, in order to test new index you can do the following:
|
|
|
|
Create the index:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
exec CREATE INDEX index_projects_last_activity ON projects (last_activity_at) WHERE last_activity_at IS NOT NULL
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Analyze the table to update its statistics:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
exec ANALYZE projects
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Get the query plan:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
explain SELECT * FROM projects WHERE last_activity_at < CURRENT_DATE
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Once done you can rollback your changes:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
reset
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
For more information about the available options, run:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
help
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
#### Tips & Tricks
|
|
|
|
The database connection is now maintained during your whole session, so you can use `exec set ...` for any session variables (such as `enable_seqscan` or `work_mem`). These settings will be applied to all subsequent commands until you reset them.
|
|
|
|
It is also possible to use transactions. This may be useful when you are working on statements that modify the data, for example INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE. The `explain` command will perform `EXPLAIN ANALYZE`, which executes the statement. In order to run each `explain` starting from a clean state you can wrap it in a transaction, for example:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
exec BEGIN
|
|
|
|
explain UPDATE some_table SET some_column = TRUE
|
|
|
|
exec ROLLBACK
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Further reading
|
|
|
|
A more extensive guide on understanding query plans can be found in
|
|
the [presentation](https://public.dalibo.com/exports/conferences/_archives/_2012/201211_explain/understanding_explain.pdf)
|
|
from [Dalibo.org](https://www.dalibo.com/en/).
|