Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views
Hi, On Tue, Jan 04, 2005 at 10:06:18AM -0800, Josh Berkus wrote: are there any plans for rewriting queries to preexisting materialized views? I mean, rewrite a query (within the optimizer) to use a materialized view instead of the originating table? Automatically, and by default, no. Using the RULES system? Yes, you can already do this and the folks on the MattView project on pgFoundry are working to make it easier. I was just wondering if this might be on schedule for 8.x due to I read the thread about materialized views some days ago. If materialized views are someday implemented one should kepp this requested feature in mind due to I know from Oracle to let it improve query execution plans... Regards, Yann ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster
Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views
Yann, are there any plans for rewriting queries to preexisting materialized views? I mean, rewrite a query (within the optimizer) to use a materialized view instead of the originating table? Automatically, and by default, no. Using the RULES system? Yes, you can already do this and the folks on the MattView project on pgFoundry are working to make it easier. -- Josh Berkus Aglio Database Solutions San Francisco ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send unregister YourEmailAddressHere to [EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views
All, I am currently working on a project for my company that entails Databasing upwards of 300 million specific parameters. In the current DB Design, these parameters are mapped against two lookup tables (2 million, and 1.5 million respectively) and I am having extreme issues getting PG to scale to a working level. Here are my issues: 1)the 250 million records are currently whipped and reinserted as a daily snapshot and the fastest way I have found COPY to do this from a file is no where near fast enough to do this. SQL*Loader from Oracle does some things that I need, ie Direct Path to the db files access (skipping the RDBMS), inherently ignoring indexing rules and saving a ton of time (Dropping the index, COPY'ing 250 million records, then Recreating the index just takes way too long). 2)Finding a way to keep this many records in a fashion that can be easily queried. I even tried breaking it up into almost 2800 separate tables, basically views of the data pre-broken down, if this is a working method it can be done this way, but when I tried it, VACUUM, and the COPY's all seemed to slow down extremely. If there is anyone that can give me some tweak parameters or design help on this, it would be ridiculously appreciated. I have already created this in Oracle and it works, but we don't want to have to pay the monster if something as wonderful as Postgres can handle it. Ryan Wager -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Josh Berkus Sent: Tuesday, January 04, 2005 12:06 PM To: pgsql-performance@postgresql.org Cc: Yann Michel Subject: Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views Yann, are there any plans for rewriting queries to preexisting materialized views? I mean, rewrite a query (within the optimizer) to use a materialized view instead of the originating table? Automatically, and by default, no. Using the RULES system? Yes, you can already do this and the folks on the MattView project on pgFoundry are working to make it easier. -- Josh Berkus Aglio Database Solutions San Francisco ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send unregister YourEmailAddressHere to [EMAIL PROTECTED]) ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org
Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views
1)the 250 million records are currently whipped and reinserted as a daily snapshot and the fastest way I have found COPY to do this from a file is no where near fast enough to do this. SQL*Loader from Oracle does some things that I need, ie Direct Path to the db files access (skipping the RDBMS), inherently ignoring indexing rules and saving a ton of time (Dropping the index, COPY'ing 250 million records, then Recreating the index just takes way too long). If you have the hardware for it, instead of doing 1 copy, do 1 copy command per CPU (until your IO is maxed out anyway) and divide the work amongst them. I can push through 100MB/sec using methods like this -- which makes loading 100GB of data much faster. Ditto for indexes. Don't create a single index on one CPU and wait -- send off one index creation command per CPU. 2)Finding a way to keep this many records in a fashion that can be easily queried. I even tried breaking it up into almost 2800 separate tables, basically views of the data pre-broken down, if this is a working method it can be done this way, but when I tried it, VACUUM, and the COPY's all seemed to slow down extremely. Can you send us EXPLAIN ANALYSE output for the slow selects and a little insight into what your doing? A basic table structure, and indexes involved would be handy. You may change column and table names if you like. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Josh Berkus Sent: Tuesday, January 04, 2005 12:06 PM To: pgsql-performance@postgresql.org Cc: Yann Michel Subject: Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views Yann, are there any plans for rewriting queries to preexisting materialized views? I mean, rewrite a query (within the optimizer) to use a materialized view instead of the originating table? Automatically, and by default, no. Using the RULES system? Yes, you can already do this and the folks on the MattView project on pgFoundry are working to make it easier. -- ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send unregister YourEmailAddressHere to [EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views
Wagner, If there is anyone that can give me some tweak parameters or design help on this, it would be ridiculously appreciated. I have already created this in Oracle and it works, but we don't want to have to pay the monster if something as wonderful as Postgres can handle it. In addition to Rod's advice, please increase your checkpoint_segments and checkpoint_timeout parameters and make sure that the pg_xlog is on a seperate disk resource from the database. -- --Josh Josh Berkus Aglio Database Solutions San Francisco ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly
Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views
Rod, I do this, PG gets forked many times, it is tough to find the max number of times I can do this, but I have a Proc::Queue Manager Perl driver that handles all of the copy calls. I have a quad CPU machine. Each COPY only hits ones CPU for like 2.1% but anything over about 5 kicks the load avg up. Ill get some explain analysis and table structures out there pronto. -Original Message- From: Rod Taylor [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, January 04, 2005 1:02 PM To: Wager, Ryan D [NTK] Cc: Postgresql Performance Subject: Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views 1)the 250 million records are currently whipped and reinserted as a daily snapshot and the fastest way I have found COPY to do this from a file is no where near fast enough to do this. SQL*Loader from Oracle does some things that I need, ie Direct Path to the db files access (skipping the RDBMS), inherently ignoring indexing rules and saving a ton of time (Dropping the index, COPY'ing 250 million records, then Recreating the index just takes way too long). If you have the hardware for it, instead of doing 1 copy, do 1 copy command per CPU (until your IO is maxed out anyway) and divide the work amongst them. I can push through 100MB/sec using methods like this -- which makes loading 100GB of data much faster. Ditto for indexes. Don't create a single index on one CPU and wait -- send off one index creation command per CPU. 2)Finding a way to keep this many records in a fashion that can be easily queried. I even tried breaking it up into almost 2800 separate tables, basically views of the data pre-broken down, if this is a working method it can be done this way, but when I tried it, VACUUM, and the COPY's all seemed to slow down extremely. Can you send us EXPLAIN ANALYSE output for the slow selects and a little insight into what your doing? A basic table structure, and indexes involved would be handy. You may change column and table names if you like. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Josh Berkus Sent: Tuesday, January 04, 2005 12:06 PM To: pgsql-performance@postgresql.org Cc: Yann Michel Subject: Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views Yann, are there any plans for rewriting queries to preexisting materialized views? I mean, rewrite a query (within the optimizer) to use a materialized view instead of the originating table? Automatically, and by default, no. Using the RULES system? Yes, you can already do this and the folks on the MattView project on pgFoundry are working to make it easier. -- ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs/FAQ.html
Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views
Ryan, I do this, PG gets forked many times, it is tough to find the max number of times I can do this, but I have a Proc::Queue Manager Perl driver that handles all of the copy calls. I have a quad CPU machine. Each COPY only hits ones CPU for like 2.1% but anything over about 5 kicks the load avg up. That's consistent with Xeon problems we've seen elsewhere. Keep the # of processes at or below the # of processors. Moving pg_xlog is accomplished through: 1) in 8.0, changes to postgresql.conf (in 8.0 you'd also want to explore using multiple arrays with tablespaces to make things even faster) 2) in other versions: a) mount a seperate disk on PGDATA/pg_xlog, or b) symlink PGDATA/pg_xlog to another location -- --Josh Josh Berkus Aglio Database Solutions San Francisco ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 7: don't forget to increase your free space map settings
Re: [PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views
On Tue, 2005-01-04 at 14:02 -0500, Rod Taylor wrote: 1)the 250 million records are currently whipped and reinserted as a daily snapshot and the fastest way I have found COPY to do this from a file is no where near fast enough to do this. SQL*Loader from Oracle does some things that I need, ie Direct Path to the db files access (skipping the RDBMS), inherently ignoring indexing rules and saving a ton of time (Dropping the index, COPY'ing 250 million records, then Recreating the index just takes way too long). If you have the hardware for it, instead of doing 1 copy, do 1 copy command per CPU (until your IO is maxed out anyway) and divide the work amongst them. I can push through 100MB/sec using methods like this -- which makes loading 100GB of data much faster. Ditto for indexes. Don't create a single index on one CPU and wait -- send off one index creation command per CPU. Not sure what you mean by whipped. If you mean select and re-insert then perhaps using a pipe would produce better performance, since no disk access for the data file would be involved. In 8.0 COPY and CREATE INDEX is optimised to not use WAL at all if archive_command is not set. 8 is great... 2)Finding a way to keep this many records in a fashion that can be easily queried. I even tried breaking it up into almost 2800 separate tables, basically views of the data pre-broken down, if this is a working method it can be done this way, but when I tried it, VACUUM, and the COPY's all seemed to slow down extremely. Can you send us EXPLAIN ANALYSE output for the slow selects and a little insight into what your doing? A basic table structure, and indexes involved would be handy. You may change column and table names if you like. There's a known issue using UNION ALL views in 8.0 that makes them slightly more inefficient than using a single table. Perhaps that would explain your results. There shouldn't be any need to do the 2800 table approach in this instance. -- Best Regards, Simon Riggs ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 7: don't forget to increase your free space map settings
[PERFORM] query rewrite using materialized views
Hi, are there any plans for rewriting queries to preexisting materialized views? I mean, rewrite a query (within the optimizer) to use a materialized view instead of the originating table? Regards, Yann ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org