2011/3/16 Davenport, Julie <JDavenport@xxxxxxxx>: > Yes, the column course_begin_date is a timestamp, so that would not work in this instance, but I will keep that in mind for future use elsewhere. ÂI agree, there are ways to rewrite this query, just wondering which is best to take advantage of 8.4. > Thanks much. > > ok, sorry, do column_course_begin::date = ... :) Pavel > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Tomas Vondra [mailto:tv@xxxxxxxx] > Sent: Wednesday, March 16, 2011 4:40 PM > To: Pavel Stehule > Cc: pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx; Davenport, Julie > Subject: Re: query taking much longer since Postgres 8.4 upgrade > > Dne 16.3.2011 22:31, Pavel Stehule napsal(a): >> 2011/3/16 Tomas Vondra <tv@xxxxxxxx>: >>> Dne 16.3.2011 21:38, Davenport, Julie napsal(a): >>>> OK, I did the explain analyze on both sides (using a file for output instead) and used the tool you suggested. >>>> >>>> 8.0 - http://explain.depesz.com/s/Wam >>>> 8.4 - http://explain.depesz.com/s/asJ >>> >>> Great, that's exactly what I asked for. I'll repost that to the mailing >>> list so that the others can check it too. >>> >>>> When I run the queries I get 59,881 rows on the 8.0 side and 59,880 on the 8.4 side, which is what I expect because 8.4 side was updated a couple hours later and some minor changes make sense. >>> >>> Hm, obviously both versions got the row estimates wrong, but the 8.4 >>> difference (200x) is much bigger that the 8.0 (10x). This might be one >>> of the reasons why a different plan is chosen. >> >> the expression >> >> to_char(course_begin_date, 'YYYYMMDD'::text) = '20101025'::text >> >> should be a problem >> >> much better is test on equality in date domain like: >> >> course_begin_date = to_date('20101025', 'YYYYMMDD') >> >> this is faster and probably better estimated > > Which is not going to work if the course_begin_date column is a > timestamp, because of the time part. > > But yes, there are several ways to improve this query, yet it does not > explain why the 8.4 is so much slower. > > Tomas > -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general