可以将文章内容翻译成中文,广告屏蔽插件可能会导致该功能失效(如失效,请关闭广告屏蔽插件后再试):
问题:
I'm dealing with a Postgres table (called "lives") that contains records with columns for time_stamp, usr_id, transaction_id, and lives_remaining. I need a query that will give me the most recent lives_remaining total for each usr_id
- There are multiple users (distinct usr_id's)
- time_stamp is not a unique identifier: sometimes user events (one by row in the table) will occur with the same time_stamp.
- trans_id is unique only for very small time ranges: over time it repeats
- remaining_lives (for a given user) can both increase and decrease over time
example:
time_stamp|lives_remaining|usr_id|trans_id
-----------------------------------------
07:00 | 1 | 1 | 1
09:00 | 4 | 2 | 2
10:00 | 2 | 3 | 3
10:00 | 1 | 2 | 4
11:00 | 4 | 1 | 5
11:00 | 3 | 1 | 6
13:00 | 3 | 3 | 1
As I will need to access other columns of the row with the latest data for each given usr_id, I need a query that gives a result like this:
time_stamp|lives_remaining|usr_id|trans_id
-----------------------------------------
11:00 | 3 | 1 | 6
10:00 | 1 | 2 | 4
13:00 | 3 | 3 | 1
As mentioned, each usr_id can gain or lose lives, and sometimes these timestamped events occur so close together that they have the same timestamp! Therefore this query won't work:
SELECT b.time_stamp,b.lives_remaining,b.usr_id,b.trans_id FROM
(SELECT usr_id, max(time_stamp) AS max_timestamp
FROM lives GROUP BY usr_id ORDER BY usr_id) a
JOIN lives b ON a.max_timestamp = b.time_stamp
Instead, I need to use both time_stamp (first) and trans_id (second) to identify the correct row. I also then need to pass that information from the subquery to the main query that will provide the data for the other columns of the appropriate rows. This is the hacked up query that I've gotten to work:
SELECT b.time_stamp,b.lives_remaining,b.usr_id,b.trans_id FROM
(SELECT usr_id, max(time_stamp || '*' || trans_id)
AS max_timestamp_transid
FROM lives GROUP BY usr_id ORDER BY usr_id) a
JOIN lives b ON a.max_timestamp_transid = b.time_stamp || '*' || b.trans_id
ORDER BY b.usr_id
Okay, so this works, but I don't like it. It requires a query within a query, a self join, and it seems to me that it could be much simpler by grabbing the row that MAX found to have the largest timestamp and trans_id. The table "lives" has tens of millions of rows to parse, so I'd like this query to be as fast and efficient as possible. I'm new to RDBM and Postgres in particular, so I know that I need to make effective use of the proper indexes. I'm a bit lost on how to optimize.
I found a similar discussion here. Can I perform some type of Postgres equivalent to an Oracle analytic function?
Any advice on accessing related column information used by an aggregate function (like MAX), creating indexes, and creating better queries would be much appreciated!
P.S. You can use the following to create my example case:
create TABLE lives (time_stamp timestamp, lives_remaining integer,
usr_id integer, trans_id integer);
insert into lives values ('2000-01-01 07:00', 1, 1, 1);
insert into lives values ('2000-01-01 09:00', 4, 2, 2);
insert into lives values ('2000-01-01 10:00', 2, 3, 3);
insert into lives values ('2000-01-01 10:00', 1, 2, 4);
insert into lives values ('2000-01-01 11:00', 4, 1, 5);
insert into lives values ('2000-01-01 11:00', 3, 1, 6);
insert into lives values ('2000-01-01 13:00', 3, 3, 1);
回答1:
On a table with 158k pseudo-random rows (usr_id uniformly distributed between 0 and 10k, trans_id
uniformly distributed between 0 and 30),
By query cost, below, I am referring to Postgres' cost based optimizer's cost estimate (with Postgres' default xxx_cost
values), which is a weighed function estimate of required I/O and CPU resources; you can obtain this by firing up PgAdminIII and running "Query/Explain (F7)" on the query with "Query/Explain options" set to "Analyze"
- Quassnoy's query has a cost estimate of 745k (!), and completes in 1.3 seconds (given a compound index on (
usr_id
, trans_id
, time_stamp
))
- Bill's query has a cost estimate of 93k, and completes in 2.9 seconds (given a compound index on (
usr_id
, trans_id
))
- Query #1 below has a cost estimate of 16k, and completes in 800ms (given a compound index on (
usr_id
, trans_id
, time_stamp
))
- Query #2 below has a cost estimate of 14k, and completes in 800ms (given a compound function index on (
usr_id
, EXTRACT(EPOCH FROM time_stamp)
, trans_id
))
- this is Postgres-specific
- Query #3 below (Postgres 8.4+) has a cost estimate and completion time comparable to (or better than) query #2 (given a compound index on (
usr_id
, time_stamp
, trans_id
)); it has the advantage of scanning the lives
table only once and, should you temporarily increase (if needed) work_mem to accommodate the sort in memory, it will be by far the fastest of all queries.
All times above include retrieval of the full 10k rows result-set.
Your goal is minimal cost estimate and minimal query execution time, with an emphasis on estimated cost. Query execution can dependent significantly on runtime conditions (e.g. whether relevant rows are already fully cached in memory or not), whereas the cost estimate is not. On the other hand, keep in mind that cost estimate is exactly that, an estimate.
The best query execution time is obtained when running on a dedicated database without load (e.g. playing with pgAdminIII on a development PC.) Query time will vary in production based on actual machine load/data access spread. When one query appears slightly faster (<20%) than the other but has a much higher cost, it will generally be wiser to choose the one with higher execution time but lower cost.
When you expect that there will be no competition for memory on your production machine at the time the query is run (e.g. the RDBMS cache and filesystem cache won't be thrashed by concurrent queries and/or filesystem activity) then the query time you obtained in standalone (e.g. pgAdminIII on a development PC) mode will be representative. If there is contention on the production system, query time will degrade proportionally to the estimated cost ratio, as the query with the lower cost does not rely as much on cache whereas the query with higher cost will revisit the same data over and over (triggering additional I/O in the absence of a stable cache), e.g.:
cost | time (dedicated machine) | time (under load) |
-------------------+--------------------------+-----------------------+
some query A: 5k | (all data cached) 900ms | (less i/o) 1000ms |
some query B: 50k | (all data cached) 900ms | (lots of i/o) 10000ms |
Do not forget to run ANALYZE lives
once after creating the necessary indices.
Query #1
-- incrementally narrow down the result set via inner joins
-- the CBO may elect to perform one full index scan combined
-- with cascading index lookups, or as hash aggregates terminated
-- by one nested index lookup into lives - on my machine
-- the latter query plan was selected given my memory settings and
-- histogram
SELECT
l1.*
FROM
lives AS l1
INNER JOIN (
SELECT
usr_id,
MAX(time_stamp) AS time_stamp_max
FROM
lives
GROUP BY
usr_id
) AS l2
ON
l1.usr_id = l2.usr_id AND
l1.time_stamp = l2.time_stamp_max
INNER JOIN (
SELECT
usr_id,
time_stamp,
MAX(trans_id) AS trans_max
FROM
lives
GROUP BY
usr_id, time_stamp
) AS l3
ON
l1.usr_id = l3.usr_id AND
l1.time_stamp = l3.time_stamp AND
l1.trans_id = l3.trans_max
Query #2
-- cheat to obtain a max of the (time_stamp, trans_id) tuple in one pass
-- this results in a single table scan and one nested index lookup into lives,
-- by far the least I/O intensive operation even in case of great scarcity
-- of memory (least reliant on cache for the best performance)
SELECT
l1.*
FROM
lives AS l1
INNER JOIN (
SELECT
usr_id,
MAX(ARRAY[EXTRACT(EPOCH FROM time_stamp),trans_id])
AS compound_time_stamp
FROM
lives
GROUP BY
usr_id
) AS l2
ON
l1.usr_id = l2.usr_id AND
EXTRACT(EPOCH FROM l1.time_stamp) = l2.compound_time_stamp[1] AND
l1.trans_id = l2.compound_time_stamp[2]
2013/01/29 update
Finally, as of version 8.4, Postgres supports Window Function meaning you can write something as simple and efficient as:
Query #3
-- use Window Functions
-- performs a SINGLE scan of the table
SELECT DISTINCT ON (usr_id)
last_value(time_stamp) OVER wnd,
last_value(lives_remaining) OVER wnd,
usr_id,
last_value(trans_id) OVER wnd
FROM lives
WINDOW wnd AS (
PARTITION BY usr_id ORDER BY time_stamp, trans_id
ROWS BETWEEN UNBOUNDED PRECEDING AND UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING
);
回答2:
I would propose a clean version based on DISTINCT ON
(see docs):
SELECT DISTINCT ON (usr_id)
time_stamp,
lives_remaining,
usr_id,
trans_id
FROM lives
ORDER BY usr_id, time_stamp DESC, trans_id DESC;
回答3:
Here's another method, which happens to use no correlated subqueries or GROUP BY. I'm not expert in PostgreSQL performance tuning, so I suggest you try both this and the solutions given by other folks to see which works better for you.
SELECT l1.*
FROM lives l1 LEFT OUTER JOIN lives l2
ON (l1.usr_id = l2.usr_id AND (l1.time_stamp < l2.time_stamp
OR (l1.time_stamp = l2.time_stamp AND l1.trans_id < l2.trans_id)))
WHERE l2.usr_id IS NULL
ORDER BY l1.usr_id;
I am assuming that trans_id
is unique at least over any given value of time_stamp
.
回答4:
I like the style of Mike Woodhouse's answer on the other page you mentioned. It's especially concise when the thing being maximised over is just a single column, in which case the subquery can just use MAX(some_col)
and GROUP BY
the other columns, but in your case you have a 2-part quantity to be maximised, you can still do so by using ORDER BY
plus LIMIT 1
instead (as done by Quassnoi):
SELECT *
FROM lives outer
WHERE (usr_id, time_stamp, trans_id) IN (
SELECT usr_id, time_stamp, trans_id
FROM lives sq
WHERE sq.usr_id = outer.usr_id
ORDER BY trans_id, time_stamp
LIMIT 1
)
I find using the row-constructor syntax WHERE (a, b, c) IN (subquery)
nice because it cuts down on the amount of verbiage needed.
回答5:
Actaully there's a hacky solution for this problem. Let's say you want to select the biggest tree of each forest in a region.
SELECT (array_agg(tree.id ORDER BY tree_size.size)))[1]
FROM tree JOIN forest ON (tree.forest = forest.id)
GROUP BY forest.id
When you group trees by forests there will be an unsorted list of trees and you need to find the biggest one. First thing you should do is to sort the rows by their sizes and select the first one of your list. It may seems inefficient but if you have millions of rows it will be quite faster than the solutions that includes JOIN
's and WHERE
conditions.
BTW, note that ORDER_BY
for array_agg
is introduced in Postgresql 9.0
回答6:
SELECT l.*
FROM (
SELECT DISTINCT usr_id
FROM lives
) lo, lives l
WHERE l.ctid = (
SELECT ctid
FROM lives li
WHERE li.usr_id = lo.usr_id
ORDER BY
time_stamp DESC, trans_id DESC
LIMIT 1
)
Creating an index on (usr_id, time_stamp, trans_id)
will greatly improve this query.
You should always, always have some kind of PRIMARY KEY
in your tables.
回答7:
I think you've got one major problem here: there's no monotonically increasing "counter" to guarantee that a given row has happened later in time than another. Take this example:
timestamp lives_remaining user_id trans_id
10:00 4 3 5
10:00 5 3 6
10:00 3 3 1
10:00 2 3 2
You cannot determine from this data which is the most recent entry. Is it the second one or the last one? There is no sort or max() function you can apply to any of this data to give you the correct answer.
Increasing the resolution of the timestamp would be a huge help. Since the database engine serializes requests, with sufficient resolution you can guarantee that no two timestamps will be the same.
Alternatively, use a trans_id that won't roll over for a very, very long time. Having a trans_id that rolls over means you can't tell (for the same timestamp) whether trans_id 6 is more recent than trans_id 1 unless you do some complicated math.
回答8:
There is a new option in Postgressql 9.5 called DISTINCT ON
SELECT DISTINCT ON (location) location, time, report
FROM weather_reports
ORDER BY location, time DESC;
It eliminates duplicate rows an leaves only the first row as defined my the ORDER BY clause.
see the official documentation