hypopg 1.0.0

This Release
hypopg 1.0.0
Date
Status
Stable
Latest Stable
hypopg 1.4.0 —
Latest Unstable
hypopg 0.0.5 —
Other Releases
Abstract
An extension adding hypothetical indexes in PostgreSQL.
Released By
rjuju
License
PostgreSQL
Resources
Special Files
Tags

Extensions

hypopg 1.0.0
An extension adding hypothetical indexes in PostgreSQL.

Documentation

CHANGELOG
Changelog

README

HypoPG

HypoPG is a PostgreSQL extension adding support for hypothetical indexes.

This project is sponsored by Dalibo.

Installation

  • Compatible with PostgreSQL 9.2 and above
  • Needs PostgreSQL header files
  • decompress the tarball
  • sudo make install
  • In every needed database: CREATE EXTENSION hypopg;

Usage

NOTE: The hypothetical indexes are contained in a single backend. Therefeore, if you add multiple hypothetical indexes, concurrent connexions doing EXPLAIN won't be bothered by your hypothetical indexes.

Assuming a simple test case:

rjuju=# CREATE TABLE hypo AS SELECT id, 'line ' || id AS val FROM generate_series(1,10000) id;
rjuju=# EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM hypo WHERE id = 1;
                      QUERY PLAN
-------------------------------------------------------
 Seq Scan on hypo  (cost=0.00..180.00 rows=1 width=13)
   Filter: (id = 1)
(2 rows)

The easiest way to create an hypothetical index is to use the hypopg_create_index functions with a regular CREATE INDEX statement as arg.

For instance:

rjuju=# SELECT * FROM hypopg_create_index('CREATE INDEX ON hypo (id)');

NOTE: Some information of the CREATE INDEX statement will be ignored, such as the index name if provided. Some of ignored informations will be handled in future release.

You can check the available hypothetical indexes in your own backend:

rjuju=# SELECT * FROM hypopg_list_indexes();
 indexrelid |                 indexname                 | nspname | relname | amname
 -----------+-------------------------------------------+---------+---------+--------
     205101 | <41072>btree_hypo_id                      | public  | hypo    | btree

If you need more technical informations on the hypothetical indexes, the hypopg() function will return the hypothetical indexes in a similar way as pg_index system catalog.

And now, let's see if your previous EXPLAIN statement would use such an index:

rjuju=# EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM hypo WHERE id = 1;
                                     QUERY PLAN
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Index Scan using <41072>hypo_btree_hypo_id on hypo  (cost=0.29..8.30 rows=1 width=13)
   Index Cond: (id = 1)
(2 rows)

Of course, only EXPLAIN without analyze will use hypothetical indexes:

rjuju=# EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM hypo WHERE id = 1;
                                           QUERY PLAN
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Seq Scan on hypo  (cost=0.00..180.00 rows=1 width=13) (actual time=0.036..6.072 rows=1 loops=1)
   Filter: (id = 1)
   Rows Removed by Filter: 9999
 Planning time: 0.109 ms
 Execution time: 6.113 ms
(5 rows)

To remove your backend's hypothetical indexes, you can use the function hypopg_drop_index(indexrelid) with the OID that hypopg_list_indexes() function returns, call hypopg_reset() to remove all at once or just close your current connection.