Hannu Krosing wrote:
> A question to all pg hackers
>
> Is anybody working on adding pipelining to set returning functions.
>
> How much effort would it take ?
>
> Where should I start digging ?
>
i asked myself basically the same question some time ago.
pipelining seems fairly impossible unless we ban joins on those
"plugins" completely.
i think this should be fine for your case (no need to join PL/proxy
partitions) - what we want here is to re-unify data and sent it through
centralized BI.
> BACKGROUND:
>
> AFAICS , currently set returning functions materialise their results
> before returning, as seen by this simple test:
>
> hannu=# select * from generate_series(1,10) limit 2;
> generate_series
> -----------------
> 1
> 2
> (2 rows)
>
> Time: 1.183 ms
>
>
> hannu=# select * from generate_series(1,10000000) limit 2;
> generate_series
> -----------------
> 1
> 2
> (2 rows)
>
> Time: 3795.032 ms
>
> being able to pipeline (generate results as needed) would enable several
> interesting techniques, especially if combined with pl/proxy or any
> other functions which stream external data.
>
> Applications and design patterns like http://telegraph.cs.berkeley.edu/
> or http://labs.google.com/papers/mapreduce.html would suddenly become
> very easy to implement.
>
> -----------------
> Hannu
>
>
currently things like nodeSeqscan do SeqNext and so on - one records is
passed on to the next level.
why not have a nodePlugin or so doing the same?
or maybe some additional calling convention for streaming functions...
e.g.:
CREATE STREAMING FUNCTION xy() RETURNS NEXT RECORD AS $$ return exactly one record to keep doing return NULL to
mark"end of table"
$$ LANGUAGE 'any';
so - for those function no ... WHILE ... RETURN NEXT
but just one tuple per call ...
this would pretty much do it for this case.
i would not even call this a special case - whenever there is a LOT of
data, this could make sense.
best regards,
hans
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