This is related to 2 other questions I posted (sounds like I should post this as a new question) - the feedback helped, but I think the same issue will come back the next time I need to insert data. Things were running slowly still which forced me to temporarily remove some of the older data so that only 2 months' worth remained in the table that I'm querying.
Indexing strategy for different combinations of WHERE clauses incl. text patterns
How to get date_part query to hit index?
Giving further detail this time - hopefully it will help pinpoint the issue:
- PG version 10.7 (running on heroku
- Total DB size: 18.4GB (this contains 2 months worth of data, and it will grow at approximately the same rate each month)
- 15GB RAM
- Total available storage: 512GB
- The largest table (the one that the slowest query is acting on) is 9.6GB (it's the largest chunk of the total DB) - about 10 million records
Schema of the largest table:
-- Table Definition ----------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE reportimpression (
datelocal timestamp without time zone,
devicename text,
network text,
sitecode text,
advertisername text,
mediafilename text,
gender text,
agegroup text,
views integer,
impressions integer,
dwelltime numeric
);
-- Indices -------------------------------------------------------
CREATE INDEX reportimpression_feb2019_index ON reportimpression(datelocal timestamp_ops) WHERE datelocal >= '2019-02-01 00:00:00'::timestamp without time zone AND datelocal < '2019-03-01 00:00:00'::timestamp without time zone;
CREATE INDEX reportimpression_mar2019_index ON reportimpression(datelocal timestamp_ops) WHERE datelocal >= '2019-03-01 00:00:00'::timestamp without time zone AND datelocal < '2019-04-01 00:00:00'::timestamp without time zone;
CREATE INDEX reportimpression_jan2019_index ON reportimpression(datelocal timestamp_ops) WHERE datelocal >= '2019-01-01 00:00:00'::timestamp without time zone AND datelocal < '2019-02-01 00:00:00'::timestamp without time zone;
Slow query:
SELECT
date_part('hour', datelocal) AS hour,
SUM(CASE WHEN gender = 'male' THEN views ELSE 0 END) AS male,
SUM(CASE WHEN gender = 'female' THEN views ELSE 0 END) AS female
FROM reportimpression
WHERE
datelocal >= '3-1-2019' AND
datelocal < '4-1-2019'
GROUP BY date_part('hour', datelocal)
ORDER BY date_part('hour', datelocal)
The date range in this query will generally be for an entire month (it accepts user input from a web based report) - as you can see, I tried creating an index for each month's worth of data. That helped, but as far as I can tell, unless the query has recently been run (putting the results into the cache), it can still take up to a minute to run.
Explain analyze results:
Finalize GroupAggregate (cost=1035890.38..1035897.86 rows=1361 width=24) (actual time=3536.089..3536.108 rows=24 loops=1)
Group Key: (date_part('hour'::text, datelocal))
-> Sort (cost=1035890.38..1035891.06 rows=1361 width=24) (actual time=3536.083..3536.087 rows=48 loops=1)
Sort Key: (date_part('hour'::text, datelocal))
Sort Method: quicksort Memory: 28kB
-> Gather (cost=1035735.34..1035876.21 rows=1361 width=24) (actual time=3535.926..3579.818 rows=48 loops=1)
Workers Planned: 1
Workers Launched: 1
-> Partial HashAggregate (cost=1034735.34..1034740.11 rows=1361 width=24) (actual time=3532.917..3532.933 rows=24 loops=2)
Group Key: date_part('hour'::text, datelocal)
-> Parallel Index Scan using reportimpression_mar2019_index on reportimpression (cost=0.09..1026482.42 rows=3301168 width=17) (actual time=0.045..2132.174 rows=2801158 loops=2)
Planning time: 0.517 ms
Execution time: 3579.965 ms
I wouldn't think 10 million records would be too much to handle, especially given that I recently bumped up the PG plan that I'm on to try to throw resources at it, so I assume that the issue is still just either my indexes or my queries not being very efficient.
rows=2801158. Aggregating close to 3M rows won't fast. But it can be substantially faster, yet. To optimize indexing strategies, we need to know the range of possible queries, not just an example query, which may well misguide. Do you always aggregate by the hour? Always sumviews? Always divided by gender? – Erwin Brandstetter Apr 5 at 19:03