1

I'm trying to create a Postgres GIN index to speed up the following query:

CREATE TABLE foo (
    id serial primary key,
    a jsonb not null
);

insert into foo(a) values
    ('[{"b": "aaa"}, {"b": "ddd"}]'::jsonb),
    ('[{"b": "aaa"}, {"b": "aaa"}]'::jsonb),
    ('[{"b": "aaa"}]'::jsonb),
    ('[{"b": "aaa"}]'::jsonb),
    ('[{"b": "aaa"}]'::jsonb),
    ('[{"b": "bbb"}]'::jsonb),
    ('[{"b": "bbb"}]'::jsonb),
    ('[{"b": "bbb"}]'::jsonb),
    ('[{"b": "ccc"}]'::jsonb),
    ('[]'::jsonb);

select distinct id from (
    select id, jsonb_array_elements(a)->>'b' as b from foo
) t where t.b = 'aaa'

Is such a thing possible in Postgres? I am open to other alternatives as well. Unfortunately, I can't normalize the table, so I'll need to work with the table structure that I already have.

0

1 Answer 1

1

Yes, you can apply a GIN index here but it may not be particularly useful:

CREATE INDEX find_fast_jsonb_value
ON foo USING GIN (a jsonb_path_ops);

Now you still have to search through the arrays for matching key/value pairs. Your query then becomes:

SELECT DISTINCT id
FROM foo, jsonb_array_elements(a) AS t(b)  -- Implicit LATERAL join
WHERE b @> '{"b": "aaa"}';                 -- Comparing json key/values here

This also places the set-returning-function jsonb_array_elements() in the FROM clause, where it belongs.

4
  • Hi Patrick, thanks for the reply. However, I'm receiving two errors from this method: ERROR: index expression cannot return a set and ERROR: syntax error at or near "->>" LINE 27: FROM foo, jsonb_array_elements(a)->>'b' AS t(b) -- Implicit ... I wonder, what would be the performance difference of using a btree index, compared to maintaining a manual index using triggers? That might be easier to maintain and extend in the future. Thanks!
    – RandomBK
    Jan 23, 2016 at 7:12
  • Thanks for your time. I ended up finding the answer in another thread: stackoverflow.com/questions/26499266/…
    – RandomBK
    Jan 23, 2016 at 7:23
  • The query I ended up using was SELECT DISTINCT id from foo where a @> '[{"b": "aaa"}]', which was a bit more efficient
    – RandomBK
    Jan 23, 2016 at 7:46
  • 1
    just a note about GIN indexes: there are 2 types, and jsonb_path_ops from this answer is the non-default one. Both index types have their pros and cons, but jsonb_path_ops can basically only be used with the containment operator (@>).
    – minusf
    Aug 2, 2018 at 16:00

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.