I just encountered something like this in an execution plan:
-> Hash (cost=19865.48..19865.48 rows=489 width=12) (never executed)
Output: ly.total_count, ly.customer_id
-> Subquery Scan on ly (cost=19864.50..19865.48 rows=489 width=12)
(never executed)
Output: ly.total_count, ly.customer_id
-> HashAggregate (cost=19864.50..19864.99 rows=489 width=4)
(never executed)
Output: orders_1.customer_id, count(*)
-> Seq Scan on public.orders orders_1 (cost=0.00..19847.00
rows=3500 width=4) (never executed)
Output: orders_1.id, orders_1.customer_id,
orders_1.order_date, orders_1.amount, orders_1.sales_person_id
Filter: (date_part('year'::text,
(orders_1.order_date)::timestamp without time zone) = (date_part('year'::text,
(('now'::cstring)::date)::timestamp without time zone) - 1::double precision))
The above is only a part of the execution plan and represents a derived table
that is outer joined to the main table.
Postgres is correct to not execute this, because the condition in the sub-query
will indeed not return any rows.
I can see why the Hash Aggregate and the Hash Join nodes can be marked as
"(never executed").
But why does the Seq Scan node have the "(never executed)" as well?
I can't see how Postgres could tell that the condition won't return anything
without actually doing the Seq Scan (there is no index on the column order_date)
Thomas
--
Sent via pgsql-general mailing list ([email protected])
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general