adaptive_estimator 1.3.3

This Release
adaptive_estimator 1.3.3
Date
Status
Testing
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Abstract
Estimates number of distinct elements in a data set (aggregate and a data type).
Description
Provides an alternative to COUNT(DISTINCT) aggregate, computing an estimate of number of distinct values, and a data type that may be used within a table (and updated continuously). This implementation is based on Wegman's adaptive sampling (see the paper 'On Adaptive Sampling' by P. Flajolet, published in 1990).
Released By
tomasv
License
BSD
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Extensions

adaptive_counter 1.3.3

README

Adaptive Distinct Estimator

This is an implementation of Adaptive Sampling algorithm presented in paper "On Adaptive Sampling" pub. in 1990 (written by P. Flajolet).

Contents of the extension

The extension provides the following elements

  • adaptive_estimator data type (may be used for columns, in PL/pgSQL)

  • functions to work with the adaptive_estimator data type

    • adaptive_size(error real, ndistinct int)
    • adaptive_init(error real, ndistinct int)

    • adaptive_add_item(adaptive_estimator counter, item anyelement)

    • adaptive_get_estimate(adaptive_estimator counter)

    • adaptive_get_error(adaptive_estimator counter)
    • adaptive_get_ndistinct(adaptive_estimator counter)
    • adaptive_get_item_size(adaptive_estimator counter)

    • adaptive_reset(adaptive_estimator counter)

    • adaptive_merge(adaptive_estimator c1, adaptive_estimator c2)

    • length(adaptive_estimator counter)

    The purpose of the functions is quite obvious from the names, alternatively consult the SQL script for more details.

  • aggregate functions

    • adaptive_distinct(anyelement, real, int)
    • adaptive_distinct(anyelement)

    where the 1-parameter version uses 0.025 (2.5%) and 1.000.000 as default values for the two parameters. That's quite generous and it may result in unnecessarily large estimators, so if you can work with lower precision / expect less distinct values, pass the parameters explicitly.

Usage

Using the aggregate is quite straightforward - just use it like a regular aggregate function

db=# SELECT adaptive_distinct(i, 0.01, 100000)
     FROM generate_series(1,100000) s(i);

and you can use it from a PL/pgSQL (or another PL) like this:

DO LANGUAGE plpgsql $$
DECLARE
    v_counter adaptive_estimator := adaptive_init(0.01,10000);
    v_estimate real;
BEGIN
    PERFORM adaptive_add_item(v_counter, 1);
    PERFORM adaptive_add_item(v_counter, 2);
    PERFORM adaptive_add_item(v_counter, 3);

    SELECT adaptive_get_estimate(v_counter) INTO v_estimate;

    RAISE NOTICE 'estimate = %',v_estimate;
END$$;

And this can be done from a trigger (updating an estimate stored in a table).

Problems

Be careful about the implementation, as the estimators may easily occupy several kilobytes (depends on the precision etc.). Keep in mind that the PostgreSQL MVCC works so that it creates a copy of the row on update, an that may easily lead to bloat. So group the updates or something like that.

This is of course made worse by using unnecessarily large estimators, so always tune the estimator to use the lowest acceptable precision and lowest expected number of distinct elements (because that's what increases the estimator size).