Commit c03386c3 authored by Sean McGivern's avatar Sean McGivern

Force Postgres to avoid trigram indexes when in a group

When filtering issues with a search string in a group, we observed on GitLab.com
that Postgres was using an inefficient query plan, preferring the (global)
trigram indexes on description and title, rather than using a filter on the
restricted set of issues within the group.

Change the callers of the IssuableFinder to use a CTE in this case to fence the
rest of the query from the LIKE filters, so that the optimiser is forced to
perform the filter in the order we prefer.

This will only force the use of a CTE when:

1. The use_cte_for_search params is truthy.
2. We are using Postgres.
3. We have passed the `search` param.

The third item is important - searching issues using the search box does not use
the finder in this way, but contructs a query and appends `full_search` to
that. For some reason, this query does not suffer from the same issue.

Currenly, we only pass this param when filtering issuables (issues or MRs) in a
group context.
parent 57e6a98c
......@@ -95,6 +95,7 @@ module IssuableCollections
elsif @group
@filter_params[:group_id] = @group.id
@filter_params[:include_subgroups] = true
@filter_params[:use_cte_for_search] = true
end
@filter_params.permit(finder_type.valid_params)
......
......@@ -23,6 +23,7 @@
# created_before: datetime
# updated_after: datetime
# updated_before: datetime
# use_cte_for_search: boolean
#
class IssuableFinder
prepend FinderWithCrossProjectAccess
......@@ -54,6 +55,7 @@ class IssuableFinder
sort
state
include_subgroups
use_cte_for_search
]
end
......@@ -74,19 +76,21 @@ class IssuableFinder
items = init_collection
items = filter_items(items)
# Filtering by project HAS TO be the last because we use the project IDs yielded by the issuable query thus far
items = by_project(items)
# This has to be last as we may use a CTE as an optimization fence by
# passing the use_cte_for_search param
# https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/queries-with.html
items = by_search(items)
sort(items)
end
def filter_items(items)
items = by_project(items)
items = by_scope(items)
items = by_created_at(items)
items = by_updated_at(items)
items = by_state(items)
items = by_group(items)
items = by_search(items)
items = by_assignee(items)
items = by_author(items)
items = by_non_archived(items)
......@@ -107,7 +111,6 @@ class IssuableFinder
#
def count_by_state
count_params = params.merge(state: nil, sort: nil)
labels_count = label_names.any? ? label_names.count : 1
finder = self.class.new(current_user, count_params)
counts = Hash.new(0)
......@@ -116,6 +119,11 @@ class IssuableFinder
# per issuable, so we have to count those in Ruby - which is bad, but still
# better than performing multiple queries.
#
# This does not apply when we are using a CTE for the search, as the labels
# GROUP BY is inside the subquery in that case, so we set labels_count to 1.
labels_count = label_names.any? ? label_names.count : 1
labels_count = 1 if use_cte_for_search?
finder.execute.reorder(nil).group(:state).count.each do |key, value|
counts[Array(key).last.to_sym] += value / labels_count
end
......@@ -326,8 +334,24 @@ class IssuableFinder
items
end
def use_cte_for_search?
return false unless search
return false unless Gitlab::Database.postgresql?
params[:use_cte_for_search]
end
def by_search(items)
search ? items.full_search(search) : items
return items unless search
if use_cte_for_search?
cte = Gitlab::SQL::RecursiveCTE.new(klass.table_name)
cte << items
items = klass.with(cte.to_arel).from(klass.table_name)
end
items.full_search(search)
end
def by_iids(items)
......
---
title: Improve performance of group issues filtering on GitLab.com
merge_request: 19429
author:
type: performance
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