Bruce Momjian wrote:
Because DB2 doesn't like hints, and the fact that they have gotten to a
point where they feel they do not need them, I feel we too can get to a
point where we don't need them either.  The question is whether we can
get there quickly enough for our userbase.

In all fairness, when I used to work with DB2 we often had to rewrite queries to persuade the planner to choose a different plan. Often it was more of an issue of plan stability; a query would suddenly become horribly slow in production because a table had grown slowly to the point that it chose a different plan than before. Then we had to modify the query again, or manually set the statistics. In extreme cases we had to split a query to multiple parts and use temporary tables and move logic to the application to get a query to perform consistently and fast enough. I really really missed hints.

Because DB2 doesn't have MVCC, an accidental table scan is very serious, because with stricter isolation levels that keeps the whole table locked.

That said, I really don't like the idea of hints like "use index X" embedded in a query. I do like the idea of hints that give the planner more information about the data. I don't have a concrete proposal, but here's some examples of hints I'd like to see:

"table X sometimes has millions of records and sometimes it's empty"
"Expression (table.foo = table2.bar * 2) has selectivity 0.99"
"if foo.bar = 5 then foo.field2 IS NULL"
"Column X is unique"
"function foobar() always returns either 1 or 2, and it returns 2 90% of the time." "if it's Monday, then table NEW_ORDERS has a cardinality of 100000, otherwise 10."

BTW: Do we make use of CHECK constraints in the planner? In DB2, that was one nice and clean way of hinting the planner about things. If I remember correctly, you could even define CHECK constraints that weren't actually checked at run-time, but were used by the planner.


--
  Heikki Linnakangas
  EnterpriseDB   http://www.enterprisedb.com

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