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I have a table with 12 million records. There are indexes on columns col_1 and col_2. I use postgresql 9.3. I need two types of queries on it. First, some queries with just one condition in where clause, such as:

select count(*) 
from table_1
where 
   col_1 >= 123456;

explain analyze: @CraigRinger

Aggregate  (cost=164523.60..164523.61 rows=1 width=0) (actual time=1803.281..1803.281 rows=1 loops=1)
->  Index Only Scan using table1_col1_idx on table_1  (cost=0.43..151242.20 rows=5312558 width=0) (actual time=60.713..1344.393 rows=5318333 loops=1)
     Index Cond: (col_1 >= 123456)
     Heap Fetches: 0
 Total runtime: 1803.330 ms

and one other query like:

select count(*) 
from table_1
where
    col_2 >= 987654;

explain analyze:

Aggregate  (cost=364134.66..364134.67 rows=1 width=0) (actual time=3935.708..3935.708 rows=1 loops=1)
->  Index Only Scan using table1_col2_idx on table_1  (cost=0.43..334739.38 rows=11758111 width=0) (actual time=7.521..2904.569 rows=11760285 loops=1)
     Index Cond: (col_2 >= 987654)
     Heap Fetches: 0
Total runtime: 3935.760 ms

But, the problem is huge run time of a combined where clause: when two or more conditions combines with AND/OR. For example:

select count(*)
from table_1
where
    col_1 >= 123456; AND col_2 >= 987654;

explain analyze:

 ->  Seq Scan on table_1  (cost=0.00..650822.93 rows=5295377 width=0) (actual time=0.056..45445.711 rows=5301622 loops=1)
     Filter: ((col_2 >= 987654) AND (col_1 >= 123456))
     Rows Removed by Filter: 6494640
Total runtime: 45961.622 ms

It's unacceptable: 3 seconds against 45 seconds! So, is there any solution to improve such combined queries? How to modify this query to force planner use indexes on col_1 and col_2?

I also, tried : set enable_seqscan = false;

Then, the planner modifies its search plan to bitmap scan; that results in run time = 137 seconds!!!

Aggregate  (cost=666246.28..666246.29 rows=1 width=0) (actual time=137311.964..137311.964 rows=1 loops=1)
->  Bitmap Heap Scan on table_1  (cost=99440.46..653007.83 rows=5295377 width=0) (actual time=1105.153..136527.723 rows=5301622 loops=1)
     Recheck Cond: (col_1 >= 123456)
     Filter: (col_2 >= 987654)
     Rows Removed by Filter: 16711
     ->  Bitmap Index Scan on table1_col1_idx  (cost=0.00..98116.62 rows=5312558 width=0) (actual time=862.677..862.677 rows=5318333 loops=1)
           Index Cond: (col_1 >= 123456)
Total runtime: 137314.450 ms
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  • 1
    wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/SlowQueryQuestions
    – user330315
    Sep 23, 2014 at 6:26
  • Assuming there are indexes on col_1 and col_2, it's probably doing an index-only scan for the individual queries, but must look up the table for the others, or if the data window is too large (likely) just do a full table scan for the combined one
    – Bohemian
    Sep 23, 2014 at 6:28
  • Please see he "asking better questions" section of stackoverflow.com/tags/postgresql/info then edit your question appropriately. Sep 23, 2014 at 6:56
  • @Bohemian Probably a bitmap index scan, but we shouldn't have to guess - this question should include explain analyze output and the PostgreSQL version. Still, +1 anyway for actually including the queries... Sep 23, 2014 at 6:56
  • Did you try a combined index on (col_1, col_2)?
    – user330315
    Sep 23, 2014 at 7:43

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