Re: performance of implicit join vs. explicit conditions on inet queries?
От | Qingqing Zhou |
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Тема | Re: performance of implicit join vs. explicit conditions on inet queries? |
Дата | |
Msg-id | dk946n$2m3p$1@news.hub.org обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | performance of implicit join vs. explicit conditions on inet queries? (Robert Edmonds <edmonds42@bellsouth.net>) |
Ответы |
Re: performance of implicit join vs. explicit conditions on inet queries?
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Список | pgsql-performance |
"Tom Lane" <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote > > No, that's completely irrelevant to his problem. The reason we can't do > this is that the transformation from "x << const" to a range check on x > is a plan-time transformation; there's no mechanism in place to do it > at runtime. This is not easy to fix, because the mechanism that's doing > it is primarily intended for LIKE/regex index optimization, and in that > case a runtime pattern might well not be optimizable at all. > Not quite understand, sorry ... (1) For this query (in an as-is PG syntax, which find out all rectangles lie in a given rectangle) : SELECT r FROM all_rectangles WHERE r << rectangle('(1,9),(9,1)'); If there is a GiST/Rtree index associated with all_rectangles.r, how do optimizer estimate the cost to decide that we should use this index or not(then by a seqscan)? (2) Does your above explaination mean that we can't use GiST for a spatial join operation? Regards, Qingqing
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