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	Prior to this patch, every FETCH call would generate a unique queryId with a different size specified. Depending on the workloads, this could lead to a significant bloat in pg_stat_statements, as repeatedly calling a specific cursor would result in a new queryId each time. For example, FETCH 1 c1; and FETCH 2 c1; would produce different queryIds. This patch improves the situation by normalizing the fetch size, so as semantically similar statements generate the same queryId. As a result, statements like the below, which differ syntactically but have the same effect, will now share a single queryId: FETCH FROM c1 FETCH NEXT c1 FETCH 1 c1 In order to do a normalization based on the keyword used in FETCH, FetchStmt is tweaked with a new FetchDirectionKeywords. This matters for "howMany", which could be set to a negative value depending on the direction, and we want to normalize the queries with enough information about the direction keywords provided, including RELATIVE, ABSOLUTE or all the ALL variants. Author: Sami Imseih <samimseih@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA5RZ0tA6LbHCg2qSS+KuM850BZC_+ZgHV7Ug6BXw22TNyF+MA@mail.gmail.com
		
			
				
	
	
		
			74 lines
		
	
	
		
			1.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			PL/PgSQL
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			74 lines
		
	
	
		
			1.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			PL/PgSQL
		
	
	
	
	
	
| --
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| -- Cursors
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| --
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| 
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| -- These tests require track_utility to be enabled.
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| SET pg_stat_statements.track_utility = TRUE;
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| SELECT pg_stat_statements_reset() IS NOT NULL AS t;
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| 
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| -- DECLARE
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| -- SELECT is normalized.
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| DECLARE cursor_stats_1 CURSOR WITH HOLD FOR SELECT 1;
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| CLOSE cursor_stats_1;
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| DECLARE cursor_stats_1 CURSOR WITH HOLD FOR SELECT 2;
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| CLOSE cursor_stats_1;
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| 
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| SELECT calls, rows, query FROM pg_stat_statements ORDER BY query COLLATE "C";
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| SELECT pg_stat_statements_reset() IS NOT NULL AS t;
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| 
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| -- FETCH
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| BEGIN;
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| DECLARE cursor_stats_1 CURSOR WITH HOLD FOR SELECT 2;
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| DECLARE cursor_stats_2 CURSOR WITH HOLD FOR SELECT 3;
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| FETCH 1 IN cursor_stats_1;
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| FETCH 1 IN cursor_stats_2;
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| CLOSE cursor_stats_1;
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| CLOSE cursor_stats_2;
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| COMMIT;
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| 
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| SELECT calls, rows, query FROM pg_stat_statements ORDER BY query COLLATE "C";
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| SELECT pg_stat_statements_reset() IS NOT NULL AS t;
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| 
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| -- Normalization of FETCH statements
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| BEGIN;
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| DECLARE pgss_cursor CURSOR FOR SELECT FROM generate_series(1, 10);
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| -- implicit directions
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| FETCH pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH 1 pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH 2 pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH -1 pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit NEXT
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| FETCH NEXT pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit PRIOR
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| FETCH PRIOR pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit FIRST
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| FETCH FIRST pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit LAST
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| FETCH LAST pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit ABSOLUTE
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| FETCH ABSOLUTE 1 pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH ABSOLUTE 2 pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH ABSOLUTE -1 pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit RELATIVE
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| FETCH RELATIVE 1 pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH RELATIVE 2 pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH RELATIVE -1 pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit FORWARD
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| FETCH ALL pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit FORWARD ALL
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| FETCH FORWARD ALL pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit FETCH FORWARD
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| FETCH FORWARD pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH FORWARD 1 pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH FORWARD 2 pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH FORWARD -1 pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit FETCH BACKWARD
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| FETCH BACKWARD pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH BACKWARD 1 pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH BACKWARD 2 pgss_cursor;
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| FETCH BACKWARD -1 pgss_cursor;
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| -- explicit BACKWARD ALL
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| FETCH BACKWARD ALL pgss_cursor;
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| COMMIT;
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| SELECT calls, query FROM pg_stat_statements ORDER BY query COLLATE "C";
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