Re: Help with sql

From: Steve Crawford <scrawford(at)pinpointresearch(dot)com>
To: Perry Smith <pedzsan(at)gmail(dot)com>
Cc: pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org
Subject: Re: Help with sql
Date: 2012-07-07 00:56:39
Message-ID: 4FF78947.5080902@pinpointresearch.com
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On 07/06/2012 02:34 PM, Perry Smith wrote:
> Hi Guys,
>
> This isn't a PostgreSQL specific question but just a SQL question. If this is not an appropriate question for this list, please let me know.
>
> It is also, perhaps, a really silly question.
>
> This query (without the 'explain' keyword) , when executed takes forever and a day:
>
>> condor_development=> explain select id from filesets where id not in ( select fileset_id from service_pack_fileset_maps );
>> QUERY PLAN
>> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> Seq Scan on filesets (cost=0.00..71937742.00 rows=26088 width=4)
>> Filter: (NOT (SubPlan 1))
>> SubPlan 1
>> -> Materialize (cost=0.00..2517.78 rows=95852 width=4)
>> -> Seq Scan on service_pack_fileset_maps (cost=0.00..1663.52 rows=95852 width=4)
>> (5 rows)
> This query returns within a second:
>
>> condor_development=> explain select id from filesets where id not in ( select distinct fileset_id from service_pack_fileset_maps );
>> QUERY PLAN
>> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> Seq Scan on filesets (cost=2102.31..3153.53 rows=26088 width=4)
>> Filter: (NOT (hashed SubPlan 1))
>> SubPlan 1
>> -> HashAggregate (cost=1903.15..2062.48 rows=15933 width=4)
>> -> Seq Scan on service_pack_fileset_maps (cost=0.00..1663.52 rows=95852 width=4)
>> (5 rows)
> The difference is the "distinct" keyword in the inner select.
>
> What I'm confused about is why isn't the "distinct" implicit? I thought the construct "blah in ( select ... )" was using "sets" and an item (I thought) can not be in a set more than once.
>
> Perhaps my question is the opposite really? Why would you not always use "distinct" in the inner select when the operator is "in" or "not in" ?
>
> And if I can throw in another question on top: is there a different method other than "not in" that would work better?
Actually it is *very* PostgreSQL specific. In fact, it may even be
PostgreSQL *version* specific as you are delving into how the planner
decides how to handle a query.

It appears that the planner is assuming, based on collected stats and
available indexes, that there will be roughly 1/6 the records returned
by the "distinct" query and thus chose a different method to join the
records. One useful piece of information would be the indexes on the two
tables.

As to other methods, you can use:
... where not exists (select 1 from service_pack_fileset_maps where
fileset_id = filesets.id)...
(Note: as alluded to above, ...not in... works better in some releases
and ...not exists... better in others due to improvements over time.)

Still another method:
select id from filesets except select fileset_id from
service_pack_fileset_maps;

Cheers,
Steve

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