Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes:
> Am Mittwoch, 9. Mai 2007 19:40 schrieb Tom Lane:
>> Hmmm ... I see at least part of the problem, which is that email_header
>> is joined twice in this query, which means that it's counted twice in
>> figuring the total volume of pages competing for cache space. So the
>> thing thinks cache space is oversubscribed nearly 3X when in reality
>> the database is fully cached.
> I should add that other, similar queries in this database that do not
> involve joining the same table twice produce seemingly optimal plans.
> (It picks hash joins which are actually faster than nested loops.)
It strikes me that in a situation like this, where the same table is
being scanned twice by concurrent indexscans, we ought to amortize the
fetches across *both* scans rather than treating them independently;
so there are actually two different ways in which we're being too
pessimistic about the indexscanning cost.
Difficult to see how to fix that in the current planner design however;
since it's a bottom-up process, we have to cost the individual scans
without any knowledge of what approach will be chosen for other scans.
regards, tom lane