postgresql/doc/src/sgml/gin.sgml

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<!-- $PostgreSQL: pgsql/doc/src/sgml/gin.sgml,v 2.8 2007/01/31 15:09:45 teodor Exp $ -->
<chapter id="GIN">
<title>GIN Indexes</title>
<indexterm>
<primary>index</primary>
<secondary>GIN</secondary>
</indexterm>
<sect1 id="gin-intro">
<title>Introduction</title>
<para>
<acronym>GIN</acronym> stands for Generalized Inverted Index. It is
an index structure storing a set of (key, posting list) pairs, where
a <quote>posting list</> is a set of rows in which the key occurs. Each
indexed value may contain many keys, so the same row ID may appear in
multiple posting lists.
</para>
<para>
It is generalized in the sense that a <acronym>GIN</acronym> index
does not need to be aware of the operation that it accelerates.
Instead, it uses custom strategies defined for particular data types.
</para>
<para>
One advantage of <acronym>GIN</acronym> is that it allows the development
of custom data types with the appropriate access methods, by
an expert in the domain of the data type, rather than a database expert.
This is much the same advantage as using <acronym>GiST</acronym>.
</para>
<para>
The <acronym>GIN</acronym>
implementation in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> is primarily
maintained by Teodor Sigaev and Oleg Bartunov. There is more
information about <acronym>GIN</acronym> on their
<ulink url="http://www.sai.msu.su/~megera/oddmuse/index.cgi/Gin">website</ulink>.
</para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="gin-extensibility">
<title>Extensibility</title>
<para>
The <acronym>GIN</acronym> interface has a high level of abstraction,
requiring the access method implementer only to implement the semantics of
the data type being accessed. The <acronym>GIN</acronym> layer itself
takes care of concurrency, logging and searching the tree structure.
</para>
<para>
All it takes to get a <acronym>GIN</acronym> access method working
is to implement four user-defined methods, which define the behavior of
keys in the tree and the relationships between keys, indexed values,
and indexable queries. In short, <acronym>GIN</acronym> combines
extensibility with generality, code reuse, and a clean interface.
</para>
<para>
The four methods that an index operator class for
<acronym>GIN</acronym> must provide are:
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>int compare(Datum a, Datum b)</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Compares keys (not indexed values!) and returns an integer less than
zero, zero, or greater than zero, indicating whether the first key is
less than, equal to, or greater than the second.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>Datum* extractValue(Datum inputValue, int32 *nkeys)</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Returns an array of keys given a value to be indexed. The
number of returned keys must be stored into <literal>*nkeys</>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>Datum* extractQuery(Datum query, int32 *nkeys,
StrategyNumber n)</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Returns an array of keys given a value to be queried; that is,
<literal>query</> is the value on the right-hand side of an
indexable operator whose left-hand side is the indexed column.
<literal>n</> is the strategy number of the operator within the
operator class (see <xref linkend="xindex-strategies">).
Often, <function>extractQuery</> will need
to consult <literal>n</> to determine the data type of
<literal>query</> and the key values that need to be extracted.
The number of returned keys must be stored into <literal>*nkeys</>.
If number of keys is equal to zero then <function>extractQuery</>
should store 0 or -1 into <literal>*nkeys</>. 0 means that any
row matches the <literal>query</> and sequence scan should be
produced. -1 means nothing can satisfy <literal>query</>.
Choice of value should be based on semantics meaning of operation with
given strategy number.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>bool consistent(bool check[], StrategyNumber n, Datum query)</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Returns TRUE if the indexed value satisfies the query operator with
strategy number <literal>n</> (or may satisfy, if the operator is
marked RECHECK in the operator class). The <literal>check</> array has
the same length as the number of keys previously returned by
<function>extractQuery</> for this query. Each element of the
<literal>check</> array is TRUE if the indexed value contains the
corresponding query key, ie, if (check[i] == TRUE) the i-th key of the
<function>extractQuery</> result array is present in the indexed value.
The original <literal>query</> datum (not the extracted key array!) is
passed in case the <function>consistent</> method needs to consult it.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="gin-implementation">
<title>Implementation</title>
<para>
Internally, a <acronym>GIN</acronym> index contains a B-tree index
constructed over keys, where each key is an element of the indexed value
(a member of an array, for example) and where each tuple in a leaf page is
either a pointer to a B-tree over heap pointers (PT, posting tree), or a
list of heap pointers (PL, posting list) if the list is small enough.
</para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="gin-tips">
<title>GIN tips and tricks</title>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>Create vs insert</term>
<listitem>
<para>
In most cases, insertion into a <acronym>GIN</acronym> index is slow
due to the likelihood of many keys being inserted for each value.
So, for bulk insertions into a table it is advisable to drop the GIN
index and recreate it after finishing bulk insertion.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><xref linkend="guc-gin-fuzzy-search-limit"></term>
<listitem>
<para>
The primary goal of developing <acronym>GIN</acronym> indexes was
to create support for highly scalable, full-text search in
<productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, and there are often situations when
a full-text search returns a very large set of results. Moreover, this
often happens when the query contains very frequent words, so that the
large result set is not even useful. Since reading many
tuples from the disk and sorting them could take a lot of time, this is
unacceptable for production. (Note that the index search itself is very
fast.)
</para>
<para>
To facilitate controlled execution of such queries
<acronym>GIN</acronym> has a configurable soft upper limit on the size
of the returned set, the
<varname>gin_fuzzy_search_limit</varname> configuration parameter.
It is set to 0 (meaning no limit) by default.
If a non-zero limit is set, then the returned set is a subset of
the whole result set, chosen at random.
</para>
<para>
<quote>Soft</quote> means that the actual number of returned results
could differ slightly from the specified limit, depending on the query
and the quality of the system's random number generator.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
2006-09-14 15:40:28 +02:00
</variablelist>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="gin-limit">
<title>Limitations</title>
<para>
<acronym>GIN</acronym> doesn't support full index scans: because there are
often many keys per value, each heap pointer would be returned many times,
and there is no easy way to prevent this.
</para>
<para>
When <function>extractQuery</function> returns zero keys,
<acronym>GIN</acronym> will emit an error. Depending on the operator,
a void query might match all, some, or none of the indexed values (for
example, every array contains the empty array, but does not overlap the
empty array), and <acronym>GIN</acronym> can't determine the correct
answer, nor produce a full-index-scan result if it could determine that
that was correct.
</para>
<para>
It is not an error for <function>extractValue</> to return zero keys,
but in this case the indexed value will be unrepresented in the index.
This is another reason why full index scan is not useful &mdash; it would
miss such rows.
</para>
<para>
<acronym>GIN</acronym> searches keys only by equality matching. This may
be improved in future.
</para>
</sect1>
2006-09-14 23:15:07 +02:00
<sect1 id="gin-examples">
<title>Examples</title>
<para>
The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> source distribution includes
<acronym>GIN</acronym> classes for one-dimensional arrays of all internal
types. The following
<filename>contrib</> modules also contain <acronym>GIN</acronym>
operator classes:
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>intarray</term>
<listitem>
<para>Enhanced support for int4[]</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>tsearch2</term>
<listitem>
<para>Support for inverted text indexing. This is much faster for very
large, mostly-static sets of documents.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
2006-09-14 23:15:07 +02:00
</variablelist>
</sect1>
</chapter>