Re: multi-column index
От | David Brown |
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Тема | Re: multi-column index |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 4238CE87.1040904@bigpond.net.au обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: multi-column index (Josh Berkus <josh@agliodbs.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: multi-column index
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Список | pgsql-performance |
Whoa Josh! I don't believe you're going to reduce the cost by 10 times through a bit of tweaking - not without lowering the sequential scan cost as well. The only thing I can think of is perhaps his primary index drastically needs repacking. Otherwise, isn't there a real anomaly here? Halving the key width might account for some of it, but it's still miles out of court. Actually, I'm surprised the planner came up with such a low cost for the single column index, unless ... perhaps correlation statistics aren't used when determining costs for multi-column indexes? Josh Berkus wrote: >Pretty simple, really. Look at the cost calculations for the index scan for >the multi-column index. PostgreSQL believes that: >The cost of a seq scan is 4788.14 >The cost of an 2-column index scan is 36720.39 >The cost of a 1-column index scan is 916.24 > >Assuming that you ran each of these queries multiple times to eliminate >caching as a factor, the issue is that the cost calculations are wrong. We >give you a number of GUC variables to change that: >effective_cache_size >random_page_cost >cpu_tuple_cost >etc. > >See the RUNTIME-CONFIGURATION docs for more details. >
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