From 46651ce6fe013220ed397add242004d764fc0153 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sat, 4 May 2024 14:15:05 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 14.5. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- doc/src/sgml/html/indexes-intro.html | 75 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 75 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/src/sgml/html/indexes-intro.html (limited to 'doc/src/sgml/html/indexes-intro.html') diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/html/indexes-intro.html b/doc/src/sgml/html/indexes-intro.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c800606 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/src/sgml/html/indexes-intro.html @@ -0,0 +1,75 @@ + +11.1. Introduction

11.1. Introduction

+ Suppose we have a table similar to this: +

+CREATE TABLE test1 (
+    id integer,
+    content varchar
+);
+

+ and the application issues many queries of the form: +

+SELECT content FROM test1 WHERE id = constant;
+

+ With no advance preparation, the system would have to scan the entire + test1 table, row by row, to find all + matching entries. If there are many rows in + test1 and only a few rows (perhaps zero + or one) that would be returned by such a query, this is clearly an + inefficient method. But if the system has been instructed to maintain an + index on the id column, it can use a more + efficient method for locating matching rows. For instance, it + might only have to walk a few levels deep into a search tree. +

+ A similar approach is used in most non-fiction books: terms and + concepts that are frequently looked up by readers are collected in + an alphabetic index at the end of the book. The interested reader + can scan the index relatively quickly and flip to the appropriate + page(s), rather than having to read the entire book to find the + material of interest. Just as it is the task of the author to + anticipate the items that readers are likely to look up, + it is the task of the database programmer to foresee which indexes + will be useful. +

+ The following command can be used to create an index on the + id column, as discussed: +

+CREATE INDEX test1_id_index ON test1 (id);
+

+ The name test1_id_index can be chosen + freely, but you should pick something that enables you to remember + later what the index was for. +

+ To remove an index, use the DROP INDEX command. + Indexes can be added to and removed from tables at any time. +

+ Once an index is created, no further intervention is required: the + system will update the index when the table is modified, and it will + use the index in queries when it thinks doing so would be more efficient + than a sequential table scan. But you might have to run the + ANALYZE command regularly to update + statistics to allow the query planner to make educated decisions. + See Chapter 14 for information about + how to find out whether an index is used and when and why the + planner might choose not to use an index. +

+ Indexes can also benefit UPDATE and + DELETE commands with search conditions. + Indexes can moreover be used in join searches. Thus, + an index defined on a column that is part of a join condition can + also significantly speed up queries with joins. +

+ Creating an index on a large table can take a long time. By default, + PostgreSQL allows reads (SELECT statements) to occur + on the table in parallel with index creation, but writes (INSERT, + UPDATE, DELETE) are blocked until the index build is finished. + In production environments this is often unacceptable. + It is possible to allow writes to occur in parallel with index + creation, but there are several caveats to be aware of — + for more information see Building Indexes Concurrently. +

+ After an index is created, the system has to keep it synchronized with the + table. This adds overhead to data manipulation operations. + Therefore indexes that are seldom or never used in queries + should be removed. +

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