Using partition pruning v15
EDB Postgres Advanced Server's query planner uses partition pruning to compute an efficient plan to locate any rows that match the conditions specified in the WHERE
clause of a SELECT
statement. To successfully prune partitions from an execution plan, the WHERE
clause must constrain the information that's compared to the partitioning key column specified when creating the partitioned table.
When querying a... | Partition pruning is effective when... |
---|---|
List-partitioned table | The WHERE clause compares a literal value to the partitioning key using operators like equal (=) or AND . |
Range-partitioned table | The WHERE clause compares a literal value to a partitioning key using operators such as equal (=), less than (<), or greater than (>). |
Hash-partitioned table | The WHERE clause compares a literal value to the partitioning key using an operator such as equal (=). |
The partition pruning mechanism uses two optimization techniques:
- Fast pruning
- Constraint exclusion
Partition pruning techniques limit the search for data only to those partitions where the values you're searching for might reside. Both pruning techniques remove partitions from a query's execution plan, improving performance.
The difference between the fast pruning and constraint exclusion is that fast pruning understands the relationship between the partitions in an Oracle-partitioned table. Constraint exclusion doesn't. For example, when a query searches for a specific value in a list-partitioned table, fast pruning can reason that only a specific partition can hold that value. Constraint exclusion must examine the constraints defined for each partition. Fast pruning occurs early in the planning process to reduce the number of partitions that the planner must consider. Constraint exclusion occurs late in the planning process.
Using constraint exclusion
The constraint_exclusion
parameter controls constraint exclusion. The constraint_exclusion
parameter can have a value of on
, off
, or partition
. To enable constraint exclusion, you must set the parameter to either partition
or on
. By default, the parameter is set to partition
.
For more information about constraint exclusion, see the PostgreSQL documentation.
When constraint exclusion is enabled, the server examines the constraints defined for each partition to determine if that partition can satisfy a query.
When you execute a SELECT
statement that doesn't contain a WHERE
clause, the query planner must recommend an execution plan that searches the entire table. When you execute a SELECT
statement that contains a WHERE
clause, the query planner:
- Determines the partition to store the row
- Sends query fragments to that partition
- Prunes the partitions that can't contain that row from the execution plan
If you aren't using partitioned tables, disabling constraint exclusion might improve performance.
Fast pruning
Like constraint exclusion, fast pruning can optimize only queries that include a WHERE
or join clause. However, the qualifiers in the WHERE
clause must match a certain form. In both cases, the query planner avoids searching for data in partitions that can't hold the data required by the query.
Fast pruning is controlled by a Boolean configuration parameter named edb_enable_pruning
. Set edb_enable_pruning
to ON
to enable fast pruning of certain queries. Set edb_enable_pruning
to OFF
to disable fast pruning.
Note
Fast pruning can optimize queries against subpartitioned tables or optimize queries against range-partitioned tables only for tables that are partitioned on one column.
For LIST-partitioned tables, EDB Postgres Advanced Server can fast prune queries that contain a WHERE
clause that constrains a partitioning column to a literal value. For example, given a LIST-partitioned table such as:
Fast pruning can reason about WHERE
clauses such as:
WHERE country = 'US'
WHERE country IS NULL;
With the first WHERE
clause, fast pruning eliminates partitions europe
, asia
, and others
because those partitions can't hold rows that satisfy the qualifier WHERE country = 'US'
.
With the second WHERE
clause, fast pruning eliminates partitions americas
, europe
, and asia
because those partitions can't hold rows where country IS NULL
.
The operator specified in the WHERE
clause must be an equals sign (=) or the equality operator appropriate for the data type of the partitioning column.
For range-partitioned tables, EDB Postgres Advanced Server can fast prune queries that contain a WHERE
clause that constrains a partitioning column to a literal value. However, the operator can be any of the following:
>
>=
=
<=
<
Fast pruning also reasons about more complex expressions involving AND
and BETWEEN
operators, such as:
Fast pruning can't prune based on expressions involving OR
or IN
. For example, when querying a RANGE-partitioned table, such as:
Fast pruning can reason about WHERE
clauses such as:
WHERE size > 100 -- scan partitions 'medium' and 'large'
WHERE size >= 100 -- scan partitions 'medium' and 'large'
WHERE size = 100 -- scan partition 'medium'
WHERE size <= 100 -- scan partitions 'small' and 'medium'
WHERE size < 100 -- scan partition 'small'
WHERE size > 100 AND size < 199 -- scan partition 'medium'
WHERE size BETWEEN 100 AND 199 -- scan partition 'medium'
WHERE color = 'red' AND size = 100 -- scan 'medium'
WHERE color = 'red' AND (size > 100 AND size < 199) -- scan 'medium'
In each case, fast pruning requires that the qualifier refer to a partitioning column and literal value (or IS NULL/IS NOT NULL
).
Note
Fast pruning can also optimize DELETE
and UPDATE
statements containing these WHERE
clauses.
example_partition_pruning
- On this page
- Using constraint exclusion
- Fast pruning