From: pgsql-sql-ow...@postgresql.org [mailto:pgsql-sql-ow...@postgresql.org] On 
Behalf Of Viktor Bojovic
Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2011 5:27 PM
To: pgsql-sql@postgresql.org; pgsql-ad...@postgresql.org
Subject: [SQL] function based index problem

 

Hi,
on table entry (17M records) there is one index:

CREATE INDEX ndxlen
  ON uniprot_frekvencije.entry
  USING btree
  (length(sequence::text));

When using ">=" in search which returns only two records, query runs much 
(hundred times) slower. i don't know why it doesn't use index scan. I just 
wanted to ask how can i modify the query to use that index? Explain plans are 
pasted below.

bioinf=> explain select * from entry where length(sequence)=36805;
                                 QUERY PLAN                                 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Bitmap Heap Scan on entry  (cost=1523.54..294886.26 rows=81226 width=1382)
   Recheck Cond: (length((sequence)::text) = 36805)
   ->  Bitmap Index Scan on ndxlen  (cost=0.00..1503.23 rows=81226 width=0)
         Index Cond: (length((sequence)::text) = 36805)
(4 rows)

bioinf=> explain select * from entry where length(sequence)>=36805;
                             QUERY PLAN                             
--------------------------------------------------------------------
 Seq Scan on entry  (cost=0.00..5400995.21 rows=5415049 width=1382)
   Filter: (length((sequence)::text) >= 36805)
(2 rows)

Thanx in advance
-- 
---------------------------------------
Viktor Bojović
---------------------------------------
Wherever I go, Murphy goes with me

 

Some observations/suggestions:

 

Please do not Cross-Post

You have not provided your PostgreSQL version

 

You state the “>=” query only returns 2 rows but the plan expects to return 5.4 
MILLION – with that many results Sequential Scan is going to be faster than an 
Index

Either you have not run “ANALYZE” or you have more data than you think matching 
your criteria.  Try “EXPLAIN ANALYZE” to actually run the query and see what 
you get.

 

It is likely that a simple ANALYZE on the table will solve your problem (ALWAYS 
RUN ANALYZE BEFORE POSTING QUESTIONS LIKE THIS); in the unlikely event it does 
not please post the “EXPLAIN ANALYZE” results so we can see exactly how many 
records each query returned.

 

David J.

 

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