LIMIT confuses the planner

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Hello,

I'm experiencing a strange issue. I have a table with around 11 million records (11471762 to be exact), storing login attempts to a web site. Thanks to the index I have created on username, looking into that table by username is very fast:



db=# EXPLAIN ANALYZE
SELECT
  *
FROM
  login_attempt
WHERE
  username='kouber'
ORDER BY
  login_attempt_sid DESC;

QUERY PLAN
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sort (cost=1415.15..1434.93 rows=7914 width=38) (actual time=0.103..0.104 rows=2 loops=1)
   Sort Key: login_attempt_sid
   Sort Method:  quicksort  Memory: 25kB
-> Index Scan using login_attempt_username_idx on login_attempt (cost=0.00..902.71 rows=7914 width=38) (actual time=0.090..0.091 rows=2 loops=1)
         Index Cond: ((username)::text = 'kouber'::text)
 Total runtime: 0.140 ms
(6 rows)



As you can see, there are only 2 records for that particular username.

However when I add a LIMIT clause to the same query the planner no longer uses the right index, hence the query becomes very slow:



db=# EXPLAIN ANALYZE
SELECT
  *
FROM
  login_attempt
WHERE
  username='kouber'
ORDER BY
  login_attempt_sid DESC LIMIT 20;

  QUERY PLAN
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Limit (cost=0.00..770.45 rows=20 width=38) (actual time=0.064..3797.660 rows=2 loops=1) -> Index Scan Backward using login_attempt_pkey on login_attempt (cost=0.00..304866.46 rows=7914 width=38) (actual time=0.062..3797.657 rows=2 loops=1)
         Filter: ((username)::text = 'kouber'::text)
 Total runtime: 3797.691 ms
(4 rows)



Now, recently I have altered some of the default parameters in order to get as much as possible out of the hardware - 12 GB of RAM, 8 processors. So, I guess I have done something wrong, thus the planner is taking that wrong decision. Here's what I have changed in postgresql.conf (from the default one):

max_connections = 200
shared_buffers = 256MB
work_mem = 64MB
maintenance_work_mem = 128MB
max_stack_depth = 6MB
max_fsm_pages = 100000
synchronous_commit = off
wal_buffers = 1MB
commit_delay = 100
commit_siblings = 5
checkpoint_segments = 10
checkpoint_timeout = 10min
random_page_cost = 0.1
effective_cache_size = 2048MB

Any idea what's wrong here?

Regards,
--
Kouber Saparev
http://kouber.saparev.com

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