Tom Lane wrote:
> Leonardo Francalanci <m_lists@yahoo.it> writes:
> >> Cases with lots of irrelevant indexes. Zoltan's example had 4 indexes
> >> per child table, only one of which was relevant to the query. In your
> >> test case there are no irrelevant indexes, which is why the runtime
> >> didn't change.
>
> > Mmh... I must be doing something wrong. It looks to me it's not just
> > the irrelevant indexes: it's the "order by" that counts.
>
> Ah, I oversimplified a bit: actually, if you don't have an ORDER BY or
> any mergejoinable join clauses, then the possibly_useful_pathkeys test
> in find_usable_indexes figures out that we aren't interested in the sort
> ordering of *any* indexes, so the whole thing gets short-circuited.
> You need at least the possibility of interest in sorted output from an
> indexscan before any of this code runs.
FYI, I always wondered if the rare use of mergejoins justified the extra
planning time of carrying around all those joinpaths.
-- Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> http://momjian.us EnterpriseDB
http://enterprisedb.com
+ It's impossible for everything to be true. +