"Todd A. Cook" <tc...@blackducksoftware.com> writes: > On 05/15/13 13:27, tc...@blackducksoftware.com wrote: >> When nearly identical update queries arrive simultaneously, the first one to >> execute runs normally, but subsequent executions run _extremely_ slowly. >> We've seen this behaviour in production, and the contrived test case below >> reproduces the issue.
> I've repeated the test below on a 9.1.9 installation, and it works fine there. Given the reference to EvalPlanQual in your stack trace, I'm thinking the explanation is this 9.0 fix: Author: Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us> Branch: master Release: REL9_0_BR [9f2ee8f28] 2009-10-26 02:26:45 +0000 Re-implement EvalPlanQual processing to improve its performance and eliminate a lot of strange behaviors that occurred in join cases. We now identify the "current" row for every joined relation in UPDATE, DELETE, and SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE queries. If an EvalPlanQual recheck is necessary, we jam the appropriate row into each scan node in the rechecking plan, forcing it to emit only that one row. The former behavior could rescan the whole of each joined relation for each recheck, which was terrible for performance, and what's much worse could result in duplicated output tuples. Also, the original implementation of EvalPlanQual could not re-use the recheck execution tree --- it had to go through a full executor init and shutdown for every row to be tested. To avoid this overhead, I've associated a special runtime Param with each LockRows or ModifyTable plan node, and arranged to make every scan node below such a node depend on that Param. Thus, by signaling a change in that Param, the EPQ machinery can just rescan the already-built test plan. This patch also adds a prohibition on set-returning functions in the targetlist of SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE. This is needed to avoid the duplicate-output-tuple problem. It seems fairly reasonable since the other restrictions on SELECT FOR UPDATE are meant to ensure that there is a unique correspondence between source tuples and result tuples, which an output SRF destroys as much as anything else does. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-bugs mailing list (pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-bugs