I have a table that is range partitioned on timestamp with timezone field. I was pretty surprised to find that the following where condition caused the planner to query every single 'child' table in the partition:
WHERE reading_time > (now() - '72:00:00'::interval)
As I learned, the planner doesn't know what now() will be at execution time, so it generates the plan to query every child table. That's understandable, but that defeats the purpose of setting up partitions in the first place! If I issue reading_time > '2018-03-31', it'll only do an index scan the tables that have data that meets those conditions.
What happens if I create the following function
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION public.last_72hours(in_time timestamp with time zone)
Select * from precip where reading_time > (in_time - '72:00:00'::interval)
--the function will then do work on the returned rows
END;
Then I can call the function with
SELECT last_72hours(now())
When does now() get evaluated? Or, in other words, does the literal time value (e.g., 2018-03-31 1:01:01+5) get passed into the function? If it's the literal value, then Postgres only queries the appropriate child tables, right? But if it's evaluating now() inside the function, then I'm back to the plan that scans the index of every child table. It seems like there's no easy what to see what the planner is doing in the function. Is that correct?