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55 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Monty
40b9b980da Removed wrongly placed test from group_min_max.test
This is mainly done to be able to push to 11.0
The test is moved in 10.6 to another file, which will add back the test.
2023-06-25 16:22:02 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
5fb2c031f7 Merge 10.11 into 11.0 2023-06-08 13:49:48 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
223c2c5b9d Merge 10.6 into 10.9 2023-06-08 10:46:19 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
80585c9d6f Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2023-06-08 10:42:56 +03:00
Sergei Petrunia
a0e7bd735b MDEV-31380: Assertion `s->table->opt_range_condition_rows <= s->found_records' failed
LooseScan code set opt_range_condition_rows to be the

  MIN(loose_scan_plan->records, table->records)

totally ignoring possible quick range selects.  If there was a quick
select $QUICK on another index with

  $QUICK->records < loose_scan_plan->records

this would create a situation where

   opt_range_condition_rows > $QUICK->records

which causes an assert in 10.6+ and potentially wrong query plan
choice in 10.5.

Fixed by making opt_range_condition_rows to be the minimum #rows
of any quick select.

Approved-by: Monty <monty@mariadb.org>
2023-06-07 13:54:34 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
31be25349f Merge 10.6 into 10.9 2023-05-25 09:24:32 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
270eeeb523 Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2023-05-23 12:25:39 +03:00
Monty
16258677b3 MDEV-6768 Wrong result with aggregate with join with no result set
When a query does implicit grouping and join operation produces an empty
result set, a NULL-complemented row combination is generated.
However, constant table fields still show non-NULL values.

What happens in the is that end_send_group() is called with a
const row but without any rows matching the WHERE clause.
This last part is shown by 'join->first_record' not being set.

This causes item->no_rows_in_result() to be called for all items to reset
all sum functions to their initial state. However fields are not set
to NULL.

The used fix is to produce NULL-complemented records for constant tables
as well. Also, reset the constant table's records back in case we're
in a subquery which may get re-executed.
An alternative fix would have item->no_rows_in_result() also work
with Item_field objects.

There is some other issues with the code:
- join->no_rows_in_result_called is used but never set.
- Tables that are used with group functions are not properly marked as
  maybe_null, which is required if the table rows should be regarded as
  null-complemented (not existing).
- The code that tries to detect if mixed_implicit_grouping should be set
  didn't take into account all usage of fields and sum functions.
- Item_func::restore_to_before_no_rows_in_result() called the wrong
  function.
- join->clear() does not use a table_map argument to clear_tables(),
  which caused it to ignore constant tables.
- unclear_tables() does not correctly restore status to what is
  was before clear_tables().

Main bug fix was to always use a table_map argument to clear_tables() and
always use join->clear() and clear_tables() together with unclear_tables().

Other fixes:
- Fixed Item_func::restore_to_before_no_rows_in_result()
- Set 'join->no_rows_in_result_called' when no_rows_in_result_set()
  is called.
- Removed not used argument from setup_end_select_func().
- More code comments
- Ensure that end_send_group() modifies the same fields as are in the
  result set.
- Changed return_zero_rows() to use pointers instead of references,
  similar to the rest of the code.

Reviewer: Sergei Petrunia <sergey@mariadb.com>
2023-05-22 17:15:46 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
54819192fe Merge 10.11 into 11.0 2023-04-26 18:50:15 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
3c25077899 Merge 10.6 into 10.8 2023-04-24 15:59:23 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
abe4c7bfd6 Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2023-04-21 16:38:22 +03:00
Sergei Petrunia
be7ef6566f MDEV-30605: Wrong result while using index for group-by
A GROUP BY query which uses "MIN(pk)" and has "pk<>const" in the
WHERE clause would produce wrong result when handled with "Using index
for group-by".  Here "pk" column is the table's primary key.

The problem was introduced by fix for MDEV-23634. It made the range
optimizer to not produce ranges for conditions in form "pk != const".

However, LooseScan code requires that the optimizer is able to
convert the condition on the MIN/MAX column into an equivalent range.
The range is used to locate the row that has the MIN/MAX value.

LooseScan checks this in check_group_min_max_predicates(). This fix
makes the code in that function to take into account that "pk != const"
does not produce a range.
2023-04-18 14:42:47 +03:00
Monty
3fa99f0c0e Change cost for REF to take into account cost for 1 extra key read_next
The main difference in code path between EQ_REF and REF is that for
REF we have to do an extra read_next on the index to check that there
is no more matching rows.

Before this patch we added a preference of EQ_REF by ensuring that REF
would always estimate to find at least 2 rows.

This patch adds the cost of the extra key read_next to REF access and
removes the code that limited REF to at least 2 rows. For some queries
this can have a big effect as the total estimated rows will be halved
for each REF table with 1 rows.

multi_range cost calculations are also changed to take into account
the difference between EQ_REF and REF.

The effect of the patch to the test suite:
- About 80 test case changed
- Almost all changes where for EXPLAIN where estimated rows for REF
  where changed from 2 to 1.
- A few test cases using explain extended had a change of 'filtered'.
  This is because of the estimated rows are now closer to the
  calculated selectivity.
- A very few test had a change of table order.
  This is because the change of estimated rows from 2 to 1 or the small
  cost change for REF
  (main.subselect_sj_jcl6, main.group_by, main.dervied_cond_pushdown,
  main.distinct, main.join_nested, main.order_by, main.join_cache)
- No key statistics and the estimated rows are now smaller which cased
  estimated filtering to be lower.
  (main.subselect_sj_mat)
- The number of total rows are halved.
  (main.derived_cond_pushdown)
- Plans with 1 row changed to use RANGE instead of REF.
  (main.group_min_max)
- ALL changed to REF
  (main.key_diff)
- Key changed from ref + index_only to PRIMARY key for InnoDB, as
  OPTIMIZER_ROW_LOOKUP_COST + OPTIMIZER_ROW_NEXT_FIND_COST is smaller than
  OPTIMIZER_KEY_LOOKUP_COST + OPTIMIZER_KEY_NEXT_FIND_COST.
  (main.join_outer_innodb)
- Cost changes printouts
  (main.opt_trace*)
- Result order change
  (innodb_gis.rtree)
2023-02-10 12:58:50 +02:00
Monty
727491b72a Added test cases for preceding test
This includes all test changes from
"Changing all cost calculation to be given in milliseconds"
and forwards.

Some of the things that caused changes in the result files:

- As part of fixing tests, I added 'echo' to some comments to be able to
  easier find out where things where wrong.
- MATERIALIZED has now a higher cost compared to X than before. Because
  of this some MATERIALIZED types have changed to DEPENDEND SUBQUERY.
  - Some test cases that required MATERIALIZED to repeat a bug was
    changed by adding more rows to force MATERIALIZED to happen.
- 'Filtered' in SHOW EXPLAIN has in many case changed from 100.00 to
  something smaller. This is because now filtered also takes into
  account the smallest possible ref access and filters, even if they
  where not used. Another reason for 'Filtered' being smaller is that
  we now also take into account implicit filtering done for subqueries
  using FIRSTMATCH.
  (main.subselect_no_exists_to_in)
  This is caluculated in best_access_path() and stored in records_out.
- Table orders has changed because more accurate costs.
- 'index' and 'ALL' for small tables has changed to use 'range' or
   'ref' because of optimizer_scan_setup_cost.
- index can be changed to 'range' as 'range' optimizer assumes we don't
  have to read the blocks from disk that range optimizer has already read.
  This can be confusing in the case where there is no obvious where clause
  but instead there is a hidden 'key_column > NULL' added by the optimizer.
  (main.subselect_no_exists_to_in)
- Scan on primary clustered key does not report 'Using Index' anymore
  (It's a table scan, not an index scan).
- For derived tables, the number of rows is now 100 instead of 2,
  which can be seen in EXPLAIN.
- More tests have "Using index for group by" as the cost of this
  optimization is now more correct (lower).
- A primary key could be preferred for a normal key, even if it would
  access more rows, as it's faster to do 1 lokoup and 3 'index_next' on a
  clustered primary key than one lookup trough a secondary.
  (main.stat_tables_innodb)

Notes:

- There was a 4.7% more calls to best_extension_by_limited_search() in
  the main.greedy_optimizer test.  However examining the test results
  it looked that the plans where slightly better (eq_ref where more
  chained together) so I assume this is ok.
- I have verified a few test cases where there was notable/unexpected
  changes in the plan and in all cases the new optimizer plans where
  faster.  (main.greedy_optimizer and some others)
2023-02-03 00:00:35 +03:00
Monty
b6215b9b20 Update row and key fetch cost models to take into account data copy costs
Before this patch, when calculating the cost of fetching and using a
row/key from the engine, we took into account the cost of finding a
row or key from the engine, but did not consistently take into account
index only accessed, clustered key or covered keys for all access
paths.

The cost of the WHERE clause (TIME_FOR_COMPARE) was not consistently
considered in best_access_path().  TIME_FOR_COMPARE was used in
calculation in other places, like greedy_search(), but was in some
cases (like scans) done an a different number of rows than was
accessed.

The cost calculation of row and index scans didn't take into account
the number of rows that where accessed, only the number of accepted
rows.

When using a filter, the cost of index_only_reads and cost of
accessing and disregarding 'filtered rows' where not taken into
account, which made filters cost less than there actually where.

To remedy the above, the following key & row fetch related costs
has been added:

- The cost of fetching and using a row is now split into different costs:
  - key + Row fetch cost (as before) but multiplied with the variable
  'optimizer_cache_cost' (default to 0.5). This allows the user to
  tell the optimizer the likehood of finding the key and row in the
  engine cache.
- ROW_COPY_COST, The cost copying a row from the engine to the
  sql layer or creating a row from the join_cache to the record
  buffer. Mostly affects table scan costs.
- ROW_LOOKUP_COST, the cost of fetching a row by rowid.
- KEY_COPY_COST the cost of finding the next key and copying it from
  the engine to the SQL layer. This is used when we calculate the cost
  index only reads. It makes index scans more expensive than before if
  they cover a lot of rows. (main.index_merge_myisam)
- KEY_LOOKUP_COST, the cost of finding the first key in a range.
  This replaces the old define IDX_LOOKUP_COST, but with a higher cost.
- KEY_NEXT_FIND_COST, the cost of finding the next key (and rowid).
  when doing a index scan and comparing the rowid to the filter.
  Before this cost was assumed to be 0.

All of the above constants/variables are now tuned to be somewhat in
proportion of executing complexity to each other.  There is tuning
need for these in the future, but that can wait until the above are
made user variables as that will make tuning much easier.

To make the usage of the above easy, there are new (not virtual)
cost calclation functions in handler:
- ha_read_time(), like read_time(), but take optimizer_cache_cost into
  account.
- ha_read_and_copy_time(), like ha_read_time() but take into account
  ROW_COPY_TIME
- ha_read_and_compare_time(), like ha_read_and_copy_time() but take
  TIME_FOR_COMPARE into account.
- ha_rnd_pos_time(). Read row with row id, taking ROW_COPY_COST
  into account.  This is used with filesort where we don't need
  to execute the WHERE clause again.
- ha_keyread_time(), like keyread_time() but take
  optimizer_cache_cost into account.
- ha_keyread_and_copy_time(), like ha_keyread_time(), but add
  KEY_COPY_COST.
- ha_key_scan_time(), like key_scan_time() but take
  optimizer_cache_cost nto account.
- ha_key_scan_and_compare_time(), like ha_key_scan_time(), but add
  KEY_COPY_COST & TIME_FOR_COMPARE.

I also added some setup costs for doing different types of scans and
creating temporary tables (on disk and in memory). This encourages
the optimizer to not use these for simple 'a few row' lookups if
there are adequate key lookup strategies.
- TABLE_SCAN_SETUP_COST, cost of starting a table scan.
- INDEX_SCAN_SETUP_COST, cost of starting an index scan.
- HEAP_TEMPTABLE_CREATE_COST, cost of creating in memory
  temporary table.
- DISK_TEMPTABLE_CREATE_COST, cost of creating an on disk temporary
  table.

When calculating cost of fetching ranges, we had a cost of
IDX_LOOKUP_COST (0.125) for doing a key div for a new range. This is
now replaced with 'io_cost * KEY_LOOKUP_COST (1.0) *
optimizer_cache_cost', which matches the cost we use for 'ref' and
other key lookups. The effect is that the cost is now a bit higher
when we have many ranges for a key.

Allmost all calculation with TIME_FOR_COMPARE is now done in
best_access_path(). 'JOIN::read_time' now includes the full
cost for finding the rows in the table.

In the result files, many of the changes are now again close to what
they where before the "Update cost for hash and cached joins" commit,
as that commit didn't fix the filter cost (too complex to do
everything in one commit).

The above changes showed a lot of a lot of inconsistencies in
optimizer cost calculation. The main objective with the other changes
was to do calculation as similar (and accurate) as possible and to make
different plans more comparable.

Detailed list of changes:

- Calculate index_only_cost consistently and correctly for all scan
  and ref accesses. The row fetch_cost and index_only_cost now
  takes into account clustered keys, covered keys and index
  only accesses.
- cost_for_index_read now returns both full cost and index_only_cost
- Fixed cost calculation of get_sweep_read_cost() to match other
  similar costs. This is bases on the assumption that data is more
  often stored on SSD than a hard disk.
- Replaced constant 2.0 with new define TABLE_SCAN_SETUP_COST.
- Some scan cost estimates did not take into account
  TIME_FOR_COMPARE. Now all scan costs takes this into
  account. (main.show_explain)
- Added session variable optimizer_cache_hit_ratio (default 50%). By
  adjusting this on can reduce or increase the cost of index or direct
  record lookups. The effect of the default is that key lookups is now
  a bit cheaper than before. See usage of 'optimizer_cache_cost' in
  handler.h.
- JOIN_TAB::scan_time() did not take into account index only scans,
  which produced a wrong cost when index scan was used. Changed
  JOIN_TAB:::scan_time() to take into consideration clustered and
  covered keys. The values are now cached and we only have to call
  this function once. Other calls are changed to use the cached
  values.  Function renamed to JOIN_TAB::estimate_scan_time().
- Fixed that most index cost calculations are done the same way and
  more close to 'range' calculations. The cost is now lower than
  before for small data sets and higher for large data sets as we take
  into account how many keys are read (main.opt_trace_selectivity,
  main.limit_rows_examined).
- Ensured that index_scan_cost() ==
  range(scan_of_all_rows_in_table_using_one_range) +
  MULTI_RANGE_READ_INFO_CONST. One effect of this is that if there
  is choice of doing a full index scan and a range-index scan over
  almost the whole table then index scan will be preferred (no
  range-read setup cost).  (innodb.innodb, main.show_explain,
  main.range)
  - Fixed the EQ_REF and REF takes into account clustered and covered
    keys.  This changes some plans to use covered or clustered indexes
    as these are much cheaper.  (main.subselect_mat_cost,
    main.state_tables_innodb, main.limit_rows_examined)
  - Rowid filter setup cost and filter compare cost now takes into
    account fetching and checking the rowid (KEY_NEXT_FIND_COST).
    (main.partition_pruning heap.heap_btree main.log_state)
  - Added KEY_NEXT_FIND_COST to
    Range_rowid_filter_cost_info::lookup_cost to account of the time
    to find and check the next key value against the container
  - Introduced ha_keyread_time(rows) that takes into account finding
    the next row and copying the key value to 'record'
    (KEY_COPY_COST).
  - Introduced ha_key_scan_time() for calculating an index scan over
    all rows.
  - Added IDX_LOOKUP_COST to keyread_time() as a startup cost.
  - Added index_only_fetch_cost() as a convenience function to
    OPT_RANGE.
  - keyread_time() cost is slightly reduced to prefer shorter keys.
    (main.index_merge_myisam)
  - All of the above caused some index_merge combinations to be
    rejected because of cost (main.index_intersect). In some cases
    'ref' where replaced with index_merge because of the low
    cost calculation of get_sweep_read_cost().
  - Some index usage moved from PRIMARY to a covering index.
    (main.subselect_innodb)
- Changed cost calculation of filter to take KEY_LOOKUP_COST and
  TIME_FOR_COMPARE into account.  See sql_select.cc::apply_filter().
  filter parameters and costs are now written to optimizer_trace.
- Don't use matchings_records_in_range() to try to estimate the number
  of filtered rows for ranges. The reason is that we want to ensure
  that 'range' is calculated similar to 'ref'. There is also more work
  needed to calculate the selectivity when using ranges and ranges and
  filtering.  This causes filtering column in EXPLAIN EXTENDED to be
  100.00 for some cases where range cannot use filtering.
  (main.rowid_filter)
- Introduced ha_scan_time() that takes into account the CPU cost of
  finding the next row and copying the row from the engine to
  'record'. This causes costs of table scan to slightly increase and
  some test to changed their plan from ALL to RANGE or ALL to ref.
  (innodb.innodb_mysql, main.select_pkeycache)
  In a few cases where scan time of very small tables have lower cost
  than a ref or range, things changed from ref/range to ALL.
  (main.myisam, main.func_group, main.limit_rows_examined,
  main.subselect2)
- Introduced ha_scan_and_compare_time() which is like ha_scan_time()
  but also adds the cost of the where clause (TIME_FOR_COMPARE).
- Added small cost for creating temporary table for
  materialization. This causes some very small tables to use scan
  instead of materialization.
- Added checking of the WHERE clause (TIME_FOR_COMPARE) of the
  accepted rows to ROR costs in get_best_ror_intersect()
- Removed '- 0.001' from 'join->best_read' and optimize_straight_join()
  to ensure that the 'Last_query_cost' status variable contains the
  same value as the one that was calculated by the optimizer.
- Take avg_io_cost() into account in handler::keyread_time() and
  handler::read_time(). This should have no effect as it's 1.0 by
  default, except for heap that overrides these functions.
- Some 'ref_or_null' accesses changed to 'range' because of cost
  adjustments (main.order_by)
- Added scan type "scan_with_join_cache" for optimizer_trace. This is
  just to show in the trace what kind of scan was used.
- When using 'scan_with_join_cache' take into account number of
  preceding tables (as have to restore all fields for all previous
  table combination when checking the where clause)
  The new cost added is:
  (row_combinations * ROW_COPY_COST * number_of_cached_tables).
  This increases the cost of join buffering in proportion of the
  number of tables in the join buffer. One effect is that full scans
  are now done earlier as the cost is then smaller.
  (main.join_outer_innodb, main.greedy_optimizer)
- Removed the usage of 'worst_seeks' in cost_for_index_read as it
  caused wrong plans to be created; It prefered JT_EQ_REF even if it
  would be much more expensive than a full table scan. A related
  issue was that worst_seeks only applied to full lookup, not to
  clustered or index only lookups, which is not consistent. This
  caused some plans to use index scan instead of eq_ref (main.union)
- Changed federated block size from 4096 to 1500, which is the
  typical size of an IO packet.
- Added costs for reading rows to Federated. Needed as there is no
  caching of rows in the federated engine.
- Added ha_innobase::rnd_pos_time() cost function.
- A lot of extra things added to optimizer trace
  - More costs, especially for materialization and index_merge.
  - Make lables more uniform
  - Fixed a lot of minor bugs
  - Added 'trace_started()' around a lot of trace blocks.
- When calculating ORDER BY with LIMIT cost for using an index
  the cost did not take into account the number of row retrivals
  that has to be done or the cost of comparing the rows with the
  WHERE clause. The cost calculated would be just a fraction of
  the real cost. Now we calculate the cost as we do for ranges
  and 'ref'.
- 'Using index for group-by' is used a bit more than before as
  now take into account the WHERE clause cost when comparing
  with 'ref' and prefer the method with fewer row combinations.
  (main.group_min_max).

Bugs fixed:
- Fixed that we don't calculate TIME_FOR_COMPARE twice for some plans,
  like in optimize_straight_join() and greedy_search()
- Fixed bug in save_explain_data where we could test for the wrong
  index when displaying 'Using index'. This caused some old plans to
  show 'Using index'.  (main.subselect_innodb, main.subselect2)
- Fixed bug in get_best_ror_intersect() where 'min_cost' was not
  updated, and the cost we compared with was not the one that was
  used.
- Fixed very wrong cost calculation for priority queues in
  check_if_pq_applicable(). (main.order_by now correctly uses priority
  queue)
- When calculating cost of EQ_REF or REF, we added the cost of
  comparing the WHERE clause with the found rows, not all row
  combinations. This made ref and eq_ref to be regarded way to cheap
  compared to other access methods.
- FORCE INDEX cost calculation didn't take into account clustered or
  covered indexes.
- JT_EQ_REF cost was estimated as avg_io_cost(), which is half the
  cost of a JT_REF key. This may be true for InnoDB primary key, but
  not for other unique keys or other engines. Now we use handler
  function to calculate the cost, which allows us to handle
  consistently clustered, covered keys and not covered keys.
- ha_start_keyread() didn't call extra_opt() if keyread was already
  enabled but still changed the 'keyread' variable (which is wrong).
  Fixed by not doing anything if keyread is already enabled.
- multi_range_read_info_cost() didn't take into account io_cost when
  calculating the cost of ranges.
- fix_semijoin_strategies_for_picked_join_order() used the wrong
  record_count when calling best_access_path() for SJ_OPT_FIRST_MATCH
  and SJ_OPT_LOOSE_SCAN.
- Hash joins didn't provide correct best_cost to the upper level, which
  means that the cost for hash_joins more expensive than calculated
  in best_access_path (a difference of 10x * TIME_OF_COMPARE).
  This is fixed in the new code thanks to that we now include
  TIME_OF_COMPARE cost in 'read_time'.

Other things:
- Added some 'if (thd->trace_started())' to speed up code
- Removed not used function Cost_estimate::is_zero()
- Simplified testing of HA_POS_ERROR in get_best_ror_intersect().
  (No cost changes)
- Moved ha_start_keyread() from join_read_const_table() to join_read_const()
  to enable keyread for all types of JT_CONST tables.
- Made a few very short functions inline in handler.h

Notes:
- In main.rowid_filter the join order of order and lineitem is swapped.
  This is because the cost of doing a range fetch of lineitem(98 rows) is
  almost as big as the whole join of order,lineitem. The filtering will
  also ensure that we only have to do very small key fetches of the rows
  in lineitem.
- main.index_merge_myisam had a few changes where we are now using
  less keys for index_merge. This is because index scans are now more
  expensive than before.
- handler->optimizer_cache_cost is updated in ha_external_lock().
  This ensures that it is up to date per statements.
  Not an optimal solution (for locked tables), but should be ok for now.
- 'DELETE FROM t1 WHERE t1.a > 0 ORDER BY t1.a' does not take cost of
  filesort into consideration when table scan is chosen.
  (main.myisam_explain_non_select_all)
- perfschema.table_aggregate_global_* has changed because an update
  on a table with 1 row will now use table scan instead of key lookup.

TODO in upcomming commits:
- Fix selectivity calculation for ranges with and without filtering and
  when there is a ref access but scan is chosen.
  For this we have to store the lowest known value for
  'accepted_records' in the OPT_RANGE structure.
- Change that records_read does not include filtered rows.
- test_if_cheaper_ordering() needs to be updated to properly calculate
  costs. This will fix tests like main.order_by_innodb,
  main.single_delete_update
- Extend get_range_limit_read_cost() to take into considering
  cost_for_index_read() if there where no quick keys. This will reduce
  the computed cost for ORDER BY with LIMIT in some cases.
  (main.innodb_ext_key)
- Fix that we take into account selectivity when counting the number
  of rows we have to read when considering using a index table scan to
  resolve ORDER BY.
- Add new calculation for rnd_pos_time() where we take into account the
  benefit of reading multiple rows from the same page.
2023-02-02 21:43:30 +03:00
Monty
6fa7451759 Adjust costs for doing index scan in cost_group_min_max()
The idea is that when doing a tree dive (once per group), we need to
compare key values, which is fast.  For each new group, we have to
compare the full where clause for the row.
Compared to original code, the cost of group_min_max() has slightly
increased which affects some test with only a few rows.
main.group_min_max and main.distinct have been modified to show the
effect of the change.

The patch also adjust the number of groups in case of quick selects:
- For simple WHERE clauses, ensure that we have at least as many groups
  as we have conditions on the used group-by key parts.
  The assumption is that each condition will create at least one group.
- Ensure that there are no more groups than rows found by quick_select

Test changes:
- For some small tables there has been a change of
  Using index for group-by -> Using index for group-by (scanning)
  Range -> Index and Using index for group-by -> Using index
2023-02-02 20:25:25 +03:00
Monty
dc2f0d138d Fix calculation of selectivity
calculate_cond_selectivity_for_table() is largely rewritten:
- Process keys in the order of rows found, smaller ranges first. If two
  ranges has equal number of rows, use the one with more key parts.
  This helps us to mark more used fields to not be used for further
  selectivity calculations. See cmp_quick_ranges().
- Ignore keys with fields that where used by previous keys
- Don't use rec_per_key[] to calculate selectivity for smaller
  secondary key parts.  This does not work as rec_per_key[] value
  is calculated in the context of the previous key parts, not for the
  key part itself. The one exception is if the previous key parts
  are all constants.

Other things:
- Ensure that select->cond_selectivity is always between 0 and 1.
- Ensure that select->opt_range_condition_rows is never updated to
  a higher value. It is initially set to the number of rows in table.
- We now store in table->opt_range_condition_rows the lowest number of
  rows that any row-read-method has found so far. Before it was only done
  for QUICK_SELECT_I::QS_TYPE_ROR_UNION and
  QUICK_SELECT_I::QS_TYPE_INDEX_MERGE.
  Now it is done for a lot more methods. See
  calculate_cond_selectivity_for_table() for details.
- Calculate and use selectivity for the first key part of a multiple key
  part if the first key part is a constant.
  WHERE key1_part1=5 and key2_part1=5.  IF key1 is used, then we can still
  use selectivity for key2

Changes in test results:
- 'filtered' is slightly changed, usually to something slightly smaller.
- A few cases where for group by queries the table order changed. This was
  because the number of resulting rows from a group by query with MIN/MAX
  is now set to be smaller.
- A few index was changed as we now prefer index with more key parts if
  the number of resulting rows is the same.
2023-02-02 20:10:19 +03:00
Monty
87d4d7232c Limit calculated rows to the number of rows in the table
The result file changes are mainly that number of rows is one smaller
for some queries with DISTINCT or GROUP BY
2023-01-30 15:22:20 +02:00
Marko Mäkelä
92c8d6f168 Merge 10.7 into 10.8
The MDEV-25004 test innodb_fts.versioning is omitted because ever since
commit 685d958e38 InnoDB would not allow
writes to a database where the redo log file ib_logfile0 is missing.
2023-01-10 14:42:50 +02:00
Marko Mäkelä
56c9b0bca0 Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2023-01-10 13:54:17 +02:00
Monty
d0603fc5ba MDEV-30240 Wrong result upon aggregate function with SQL_BUFFER_RESULT
The problem was that when storing rows into a temporary table,
MIN/MAX items that where marked as constants (as theire value had
been computed at start of query) would be reset.

Fixed by not reseting MIN/MAX items that are marked as const in
Item_sum_min_max::clear().
2023-01-03 19:44:19 +02:00
Marko Mäkelä
f79cebb4d0 Merge 10.7 into 10.8 2022-07-28 10:33:26 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
30914389fe Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2022-07-27 17:52:37 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
098c0f2634 Merge 10.4 into 10.5 2022-07-27 17:17:24 +03:00
Oleksandr Byelkin
3bb36e9495 Merge branch '10.3' into 10.4 2022-07-27 11:02:57 +02:00
Alexander Barkov
57f5c319af MDEV-21445 Strange/inconsistent behavior of IN condition when mixing numbers and strings 2022-07-06 15:42:21 +04:00
Marko Mäkelä
dce8a846ae Merge 10.7 into 10.8 2022-03-03 11:34:58 +02:00
Marko Mäkelä
d96433ad20 Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2022-03-01 17:40:27 +02:00
Sergei Petrunia
a1965b80e1 Make testcase for MDEV-26585 stable. 2022-03-01 17:19:58 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
c75e3770dc Merge 10.7 into 10.8 2022-02-09 16:24:19 +02:00
Marko Mäkelä
cce994057b Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2022-02-09 15:49:50 +02:00
Oleksandr Byelkin
34c5019698 Merge branch '10.5' into bb-10.5-release 2022-02-09 08:57:41 +01:00
Monty
38058c04a4 MDEV-26585 Wrong query results when using index for group-by
The problem was that "group_min_max optimization" does not work if
some aggregate functions, like COUNT(*), is used.
The function get_best_group_min_max() is using the join->sum_funcs
array to check which aggregate functions are used.
The bug was that aggregates in HAVING where not yet added to
join->sum_funcs at the time get_best_group_min_max() was called.

Fixed by populate join->sum_funcs already in prepare, which means that
all sum functions will be in join->sum_funcs in get_best_group_min_max().
A benefit of this approach is that we can remove several calls to
make_sum_func_list() from the code and simplify the function.

I removed some wrong setting of 'sort_and_group'.
This variable is set when alloc_group_fields() is called, as part
of allocating the cache needed by end_send_group() and does not need
to be set by other functions.

One problematic thing was that Spider is using *join->sum_funcs to detect
at which stage the optimizer is and do internal calculations of aggregate
functions. Updating join->sum_funcs early caused Spider to fail when trying
to find min/max values in opt_sum_query().
Fixed by temporarily resetting sum_funcs during opt_sum_query().

Reviewer: Sergei Petrunia
2022-02-08 14:32:29 +02:00
Monty
d314bd2664 MDEV-27442 Wrong result upon query with DISTINCT and EXISTS subquery
The problem was that get_best_group_min_max() did not check if fields used
by the "group_min_max optimization" where used in sub queries.
Because of this, it did not detect that a key (b,a) was used in the WHERE
clause for the statement:
SELECT DISTINCT b FROM t1 WHERE EXISTS ( SELECT 1 FROM DUAL WHERE a > 1 ).

Fixed by also traversing the sub queries when checking if a field is used.
This disables group_min_max_optimization for the above query.

Reviewer: Sergei Petrunia
2022-02-08 14:32:28 +02:00
Oleksandr Byelkin
4fb2cb1a30 Merge branch '10.7' into 10.8 2022-02-04 14:50:25 +01:00
Oleksandr Byelkin
f5c5f8e41e Merge branch '10.5' into 10.6 2022-02-03 17:01:31 +01:00
Oleksandr Byelkin
cf63eecef4 Merge branch '10.4' into 10.5 2022-02-01 20:33:04 +01:00
Monty
fdec885201 MDEV-25830 optimizer_use_condition_selectivity=4 sometimes produces worse plan than optimizer_use_condition_selectivity=1
The issue was that calc_cond_selectivity_for_table prefered ranges with
many parts and when deciding on which selectivity to use.

Fixed by going through ranges according to the number of rows in the range.

This ensures that selectivity from ranges with few rows will be prefered
over ranges with many rows for indexes that uses the same columns.
2022-01-19 18:49:53 +02:00
Sergei Petrunia
be55ad0d34 MDEV-27062: Make histogram_type=JSON_HB the new default 2022-01-19 18:10:11 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
d2e2d32933 Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2021-04-14 12:32:27 +03:00
Marko Mäkelä
6c3e860cbf Merge 10.4 into 10.5 2021-04-14 11:35:39 +03:00
Sergei Petrunia
c03841ec0e MDEV-23634: Select query hanged the server and leads to OOM ...
Handle "col<>const" in the same way that MDEV-21958 did for
"col NOT IN(const-list)": do not use the condition for range/index_merge
accesses if there is a unique UNIQUE KEY(col).

The testcase is in main/range.test. The rest of test updates are
due to widespread use of 'pk<>1' in the testsuite. Changed the test
to use different but equivalent forms of the conditions.
2021-04-08 17:25:02 +03:00
Varun Gupta
d79c3f3297 MDEV-24353: Adding GROUP BY slows down a query
A heuristic in best_access_path says that if for an index
ref access involved key parts which are greater than equal to that
for range access, then range access should not be considered.
The assumption made by this heuristic does not hold when
the range optimizer opted to use the group-by min-max optimization.
So the fix here would be to not consider the heuristic if
the range optimizer picked the usage of group-by min-max
optimization.
2020-12-11 18:38:18 +05:30
Monty
eb483c5181 Updated optimizer costs in multi_range_read_info_const() and sql_select.cc
- multi_range_read_info_const now uses the new records_in_range interface
- Added handler::avg_io_cost()
- Don't calculate avg_io_cost() in get_sweep_read_cost if avg_io_cost is
  not 1.0.  In this case we trust the avg_io_cost() from the handler.
- Changed test_quick_select to use TIME_FOR_COMPARE instead of
  TIME_FOR_COMPARE_IDX to align this with the rest of the code.
- Fixed bug when using test_if_cheaper_ordering where we didn't use
  keyread if index was changed
- Fixed a bug where we didn't use index only read when using order-by-index
- Added keyread_time() to HEAP.
  The default keyread_time() was optimized for blocks and not suitable for
  HEAP. The effect was the HEAP prefered table scans over ranges for btree
  indexes.
- Fixed get_sweep_read_cost() for HEAP tables
- Ensure that range and ref have same cost for simple ranges
  Added a small cost (MULTI_RANGE_READ_SETUP_COST) to ranges to ensure
  we favior ref for range for simple queries.
- Fixed that matching_candidates_in_table() uses same number of records
  as the rest of the optimizer
- Added avg_io_cost() to JT_EQ_REF cost. This helps calculate the cost for
  HEAP and temporary tables better. A few tests changed because of this.
- heap::read_time() and heap::keyread_time() adjusted to not add +1.
  This was to ensure that handler::keyread_time() doesn't give
  higher cost for heap tables than for normal tables. One effect of
  this is that heap and derived tables stored in heap will prefer
  key access as this is now regarded as cheap.
- Changed cost for index read in sql_select.cc to match
  multi_range_read_info_const(). All index cost calculation is now
  done trough one function.
- 'ref' will now use quick_cost for keys if it exists. This is done
  so that for '=' ranges, 'ref' is prefered over 'range'.
- scan_time() now takes avg_io_costs() into account
- get_delayed_table_estimates() uses block_size and avg_io_cost()
- Removed default argument to test_if_order_by_key(); simplifies code
2020-03-27 03:58:32 +02:00
Marko Mäkelä
c016ea660e Merge 10.2 into 10.3 2019-09-23 10:25:34 +03:00
Oleksandr Byelkin
2792c6e7b0 Merge branch '10.3' into 10.4 2019-07-28 13:43:26 +02:00
Galina Shalygina
7fe1ca7ed6 Merge branch '10.4' into bb-10.4-mdev7486 2019-02-19 11:00:39 +03:00
Sergei Petrunia
15a77a1a2c MDEV-18608: Defaults for 10.4: histogram size should be set
Change the defaults:

-histogram_size=0
+histogram_size=254

-histogram_type=SINGLE_PREC_HB
+histogram_type=DOUBLE_PREC_HB

Adjust the testcases:
- Some have ignorable changes in EXPLAIN outputs and
  more counter increments due to EITS table reads.
- Testcases that meaningfully depend on the old defaults
  are changed to use the old values.
2019-02-18 13:37:57 +03:00
Galina Shalygina
7a77b221f1 MDEV-7486: Condition pushdown from HAVING into WHERE
Condition can be pushed from the HAVING clause into the WHERE clause
if it depends only on the fields that are used in the GROUP BY list
or depends on the fields that are equal to grouping fields.
Aggregate functions can't be pushed down.

How the pushdown is performed on the example:

SELECT t1.a,MAX(t1.b)
FROM t1
GROUP BY t1.a
HAVING (t1.a>2) AND (MAX(c)>12);

=>

SELECT t1.a,MAX(t1.b)
FROM t1
WHERE (t1.a>2)
GROUP BY t1.a
HAVING (MAX(c)>12);

The implementation scheme:

1. Extract the most restrictive condition cond from the HAVING clause of
   the select that depends only on the fields that are used in the GROUP BY
   list of the select (directly or indirectly through equalities)
2. Save cond as a condition that can be pushed into the WHERE clause
   of the select
3. Remove cond from the HAVING clause if it is possible

The optimization is implemented in the function
st_select_lex::pushdown_from_having_into_where().

New test file having_cond_pushdown.test is created.
2019-02-17 23:38:44 -08:00
Igor Babaev
37deed3f37 Merge branch '10.4' into bb-10.4-mdev16188 2019-02-03 18:41:18 -08:00