Add a fudge factor to genericcostestimate() to prevent the planner from

thinking that indexes of different sizes are equally attractive.  Per
gripe from Jim Nasby.  (I remain unconvinced that there's such a problem
in existing releases, but CVS HEAD definitely has got a problem because
of its new count-only-leaf-pages approach to indexscan costing.)
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2006-07-24 01:19:48 +00:00
parent a794fb0681
commit 8dcaea7be0

View File

@ -15,7 +15,7 @@
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/utils/adt/selfuncs.c,v 1.209 2006/07/14 14:52:24 momjian Exp $
* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/utils/adt/selfuncs.c,v 1.210 2006/07/24 01:19:48 tgl Exp $
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
@ -4657,6 +4657,24 @@ genericcostestimate(PlannerInfo *root,
*indexTotalCost = numIndexPages * random_page_cost;
}
/*
* A difficulty with the leaf-pages-only cost approach is that for
* small selectivities (eg, single index tuple fetched) all indexes
* will look equally attractive because we will estimate exactly 1
* leaf page to be fetched. All else being equal, we should prefer
* physically smaller indexes over larger ones. (An index might be
* smaller because it is partial or because it contains fewer columns;
* presumably the other columns in the larger index aren't useful to
* the query, or the larger index would have better selectivity.)
*
* We can deal with this by adding a very small "fudge factor" that
* depends on the index size. The fudge factor used here is one
* random_page_cost per 100000 index pages, which should be small
* enough to not alter index-vs-seqscan decisions, but will prevent
* indexes of different sizes from looking exactly equally attractive.
*/
*indexTotalCost += index->pages * random_page_cost / 100000.0;
/*
* CPU cost: any complex expressions in the indexquals will need to be
* evaluated once at the start of the scan to reduce them to runtime keys