From: | Evil Azrael <evilazrael(at)evilazrael(dot)de> |
---|---|
To: | Ryszard Lach <siaco(at)autograf(dot)pl> |
Cc: | pgsql-performance(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: "select max/count(id)" not using index |
Date: | 2003-12-22 10:59:58 |
Message-ID: | 110164283326.20031222115958@evilazrael.de |
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Lists: | pgsql-performance |
Guten Tag Ryszard Lach,
Am Montag, 22. Dezember 2003 um 11:39 schrieben Sie:
RL> Hi.
RL> I have a table with 24k records and btree index on column 'id'. Is this
RL> normal, that 'select max(id)' or 'select count(id)' causes a sequential
RL> scan? It takes over 24 seconds (on a pretty fast machine):
Yes, that was occasionally discussed on the mailinglists. For the
max(id) you can use instead "SELECT id FROM table ORDER BY id DESC
LIMIT 1"
Christoph Nelles
=>> explain ANALYZE select max(id) from ogloszenia;
RL> QUERY PLAN
RL> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
RL> Aggregate (cost=3511.05..3511.05 rows=1 width=4) (actual
RL> time=24834.629..24834.629 rows=1 loops=1)
RL> -> Seq Scan on ogloszenia (cost=0.00..3473.04 rows=15204 width=4)
RL> (actual time=0.013..24808.377 rows=16873 loops=1)
RL> Total runtime: 24897.897 ms
RL> Maybe it's caused by a number of varchar fields in this table? However,
RL> 'id' column is 'integer' and is primary key.
RL> Clustering table on index created on 'id' makes such a queries
RL> many faster, but they still use a sequential scan.
RL> Richard.
--
Mit freundlichen Grüssen
Evil Azrael mailto:evilazrael(at)evilazrael(dot)de
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