Обсуждение: performance problem with 3-column indexes
the table has about 30k records. simple select statement, by primary key, requires plenty of cpu
time when the primary key has three columns when the primary key has two columns several times less cpu is
required (even though the contents of the table is the same.
so: PRIMARY KEY(C_ID, C_D_ID, C_W_ID) -> PRIMARY KEY (C_ID, C_D_ID) select cpu: 600 ->
selectcpu 60
----------- how can i work around it? -----------------
and no, I can't blend the two columns into one, the spec does not
allow that - so is there some tuning parameter?
P.S. The table definition:
CREATE TABLE CUSTOMER (C_ID SMALLINT NOT NULL, /*--*/C_D_ID SMALLINT NOT NULL, /*--*/C_W_ID
SMALLINT NOT NULL, /*--*/C_FIRST VARCHAR(16) NOT NULL,C_MIDDLE VARCHAR(2) NOT NULL,C_LAST
VARCHAR(16) NOT NULL,C_STREET_1 VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,C_STREET_2 VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,C_CITY
VARCHAR(20)NOT NULL,C_STATE VARCHAR(2) NOT NULL,C_ZIP INTEGER NOT NULL, /*--*/C_PHONE
NUMERIC(16)NOT NULL,C_SINCE timestamp,C_CREDIT VARCHAR(2) NOT NULL,C_CREDIT_LIM NUMERIC(12,2) NOT
NULL,C_DISCOUNT NUMERIC(4,4) NOT NULL,C_BALANCE NUMERIC(12,2) NOT NULL,C_YTD_PAYMENT NUMERIC(12,2) NOT
NULL,C_PAYMENT_CNT SMALLINT NOT NULL, /*--*/C_DELIVERY_CNT SMALLINT NOT NULL, /*--*/C_DATA
VARCHAR(500)NOT NULL,PRIMARY KEY (C_ID, C_D_ID, C_W_ID)
);
Can you give an example query and explain output for both cases? Have you run vacuum analyze? Since I haven't seen the query, one thing that might bite you would be if you aren't casting your constants to smallint, although I don't know why that would change on the index definition. On 6 Nov 2001, charles wrote: > the table has about 30k records. > simple select statement, by primary key, requires plenty of cpu > time when the primary key has three columns > when the primary key has two columns several times less cpu is > required (even though the contents of the table is the same. > > so: > PRIMARY KEY(C_ID, C_D_ID, C_W_ID) -> PRIMARY KEY (C_ID, C_D_ID) > select cpu: 600 -> select cpu 60 >
czl@iname.com (charles) writes:
> simple select statement, by primary key, requires plenty of cpu
> time when the primary key has three columns
> when the primary key has two columns several times less cpu is
> required (even though the contents of the table is the same.
What does EXPLAIN show in the two cases? What PG version is this?
regards, tom lane