Plan rows - 1 or many
От | Peter Mogensen |
---|---|
Тема | Plan rows - 1 or many |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 532016DD.6000209@one.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответы |
Re: Plan rows - 1 or many
|
Список | pgsql-general |
Hi, I have an application where I would really like to be able to look at en SQL query and answer the question: "Is this query capable of returning more than 1 row?" So basically, queries are divided into 2 categories. Those that look up a single row (if it exists) and those who return a (possible empty) set of rows. (which could also be a set of 1 due to current database content.) Example: It's obvious to see that this query can never return more than one row, no matter what's in the DB: SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE uniquecolumn = 17; But only because we know the column has a unique constraint. Now, unique constraints might be more complex. It could be composite (A,B) where A is a foreign key to another table (Ta) where we can determine that both row referenced by A is unique wrt. the query, so filtering on B and a unique column in Ta would still only ever result in 1 row. SELECT * FROM Ta,Tb WHERE Ta.id = Tb.A AND Tb.B = 17 AND Ta.uniquecolumn = 42; This seems to be about the same as the query planners "plan_rows" try to do. I'm aware that plan_rows is only an estimate and can't answer the question of exactly how many rows in general a query returns, but the question is whether it can be trusted to answer the above more narrow question? I tried look at the source, but could quite figure out if plan_rows were intended to be strict about when it concluded that there was only one row. (like when it evaluated a GROUP BY with only 1 aggregate). Can I conclude that when plan_rows is 1 then there will never be more than 1 row returned by the query? /Peter
В списке pgsql-general по дате отправления: