Save another little bit of planner overhead on simple queries, by having

clauselist_selectivity skip some analysis that's useless when there's only
one clause in the given list.  Actually this can win even for not-so-simple
queries, because we also apply clauselist_selectivity to sublists such as the
quals matching an index; which are likely to have only a single entry even
when the total query is quite complicated.
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2007-11-24 19:08:51 +00:00
parent 7ebbc815d9
commit aca467b9b3
1 changed files with 9 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/optimizer/path/clausesel.c,v 1.87 2007/08/31 23:35:22 tgl Exp $
* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/optimizer/path/clausesel.c,v 1.88 2007/11/24 19:08:51 tgl Exp $
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
@ -100,6 +100,14 @@ clauselist_selectivity(PlannerInfo *root,
RangeQueryClause *rqlist = NULL;
ListCell *l;
/*
* If there's exactly one clause, then no use in trying to match up
* pairs, so just go directly to clause_selectivity().
*/
if (list_length(clauses) == 1)
return clause_selectivity(root, (Node *) linitial(clauses),
varRelid, jointype);
/*
* Initial scan over clauses. Anything that doesn't look like a potential
* rangequery clause gets multiplied into s1 and forgotten. Anything that