Description
This command displays the execution plan that the
PostgreSQL planner
generates for the supplied query. The execution plan shows how
the table(s) referenced by the query will be scanned---by plain
sequential scan, index scan, etc.---and if multiple tables are
referenced, what join algorithms will be used to bring together
the required tuples from each input table.
The most critical part of the display is the estimated query execution
cost, which is the planner's guess at how long it will take to run the
query (measured in units of disk page fetches). Actually two numbers
are shown: the start-up time before the first tuple can be returned, and
the total time to return all the tuples. For most queries the total time
is what matters, but in contexts such as an EXISTS sub-query the planner
will choose the smallest start-up time instead of the smallest total time
(since the executor will stop after getting one tuple, anyway).
Also, if you limit the number of tuples to return with a LIMIT clause,
the planner makes an appropriate interpolation between the endpoint
costs to estimate which plan is really the cheapest.
The ANALYZE option causes the query to be actually executed, not only
planned. The total elapsed time expended within each plan node (in
milliseconds) and total number of rows it actually returned are added to
the display. This is useful for seeing whether the planner's estimates
are close to reality.
Caution |
Keep in mind that the query is actually executed when ANALYZE is used.
Although EXPLAIN will discard any output that a SELECT
would return,
other side-effects of the query will happen as usual.
If you wish to use EXPLAIN ANALYZE on an INSERT,
UPDATE, or DELETE query without letting the query affect your data,
use this approach:
BEGIN;
EXPLAIN ANALYZE ...;
ROLLBACK;
|
The VERBOSE option emits the full internal representation of the plan tree,
rather than just a summary.
Usually this option is only useful for debugging
PostgreSQL. The VERBOSE dump is either
pretty-printed or not, depending on the setting of the
EXPLAIN_PRETTY_PRINT configuration parameter.
Notes
There is only sparse documentation on the optimizer's use of cost
information in PostgreSQL.
Refer to the User's Guide and
Programmer's Guide for more information.
Usage
To show a query plan for a simple query on a table with a single
int4 column and 10000 rows:
EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM foo;
QUERY PLAN
---------------------------------------------------------
Seq Scan on foo (cost=0.00..155.00 rows=10000 width=4)
(1 row)
If there is an index and we use a query with an indexable WHERE condition,
EXPLAIN will show a different plan:
EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM foo WHERE i = 4;
QUERY PLAN
--------------------------------------------------------------
Index Scan using fi on foo (cost=0.00..5.98 rows=1 width=4)
Index Cond: (i = 4)
(2 rows)
And here is an example of a query plan for a query
using an aggregate function:
EXPLAIN SELECT sum(i) FROM foo WHERE i < 10;
QUERY PLAN
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Aggregate (cost=23.93..23.93 rows=1 width=4)
-> Index Scan using fi on foo (cost=0.00..23.92 rows=6 width=4)
Index Cond: (i < 10)
(3 rows)
Note that the specific numbers shown, and even the selected query
strategy, may vary between PostgreSQL
releases due to planner improvements.