When Manticore executes a fullscan query, it can either use a plain scan to check every document against the filters or employ additional data and/or algorithms to speed up query execution. Manticore uses a cost-based optimizer (CBO), also known as a "query optimizer" to determine which approach to take.
The CBO can also enhance the performance of full-text queries. See below for more details.
The CBO may decide to replace one or more query filters with one of the following entities if it determines that doing so will improve performance:
- A docid index utilizes a special docid-only secondary index stored in files with the
.spt
extension. Besides improving filters on document IDs, the docid index is also used to accelerate document ID to row ID lookups and to speed up the application of large killlists during daemon startup. - A columnar scan relies on columnar storage and can only be used on a columnar attribute. It scans every value and tests it against the filter, but it is heavily optimized and is typically faster than the default approach.
- Secondary indexes are generated for all attributes by default. They use the PGM index along with Manticore's built-in inverted index to retrieve the list of row IDs corresponding to a value or range of values. Secondary indexes are stored in files with the
.spidx
extension.
The optimizer estimates the cost of each execution path using various attribute statistics, including:
- Information on the data distribution within an attribute (histograms, stored in
.sphi
files). Histograms are generated automatically when data is indexed and serve as the primary source of information for the CBO. - Information from PGM (secondary indexes), which helps estimate the number of document lists to read. This assists in gauging doclist merge performance and in selecting the appropriate merge algorithm (priority queue merge or bitmap merge).
- Columnar encoding statistics, employed to estimate columnar data decompression performance.
- A columnar min-max tree. While the CBO uses histograms to estimate the number of documents left after applying the filter, it also needs to determine how many documents the filter had to process. For columnar attributes, partial evaluation of the min-max tree serves this purpose.
- Full-text dictionary. The CBO utilizes term stats to estimate the cost of evaluating the full-text tree.
The optimizer computes the execution cost for every filter used in a query. Since certain filters can be replaced with several different entities (e.g., for a document id, Manticore can use a plain scan, a docid index lookup, a columnar scan (if the document id is columnar), and a secondary index), the optimizer evaluates all available combinations. However, there is a maximum limit of 1024 combinations.
To estimate query execution costs, the optimizer calculates the estimated costs of the most significant operations performed when executing the query. It uses preset constants to represent the cost of each operation.
The optimizer compares the costs of each execution path and chooses the path with the lowest cost to execute the query.
When working with full-text queries that have filters by attributes, the query optimizer decides between two possible execution paths. One is to execute the full-text query, retrieve the matches, and use filters. The other is to replace filters with one or more entities described above, fetch rowids from them, and inject them into the full-text matching tree. This way, full-text search results will intersect with full-scan results. The query optimizer estimates the cost of full-text tree evaluation and the best possible path for computing filter results. Using this information, the optimizer chooses the execution path.
Another factor to consider is multithreaded query execution (when pseudo_sharding
is enabled). The CBO is aware that some queries can be executed in multiple threads and takes this into account. The CBO prioritizes shorter query execution times (i.e., latency) over throughput. For instance, if a query using a columnar scan can be executed in multiple threads (and occupy multiple CPU cores) and is faster than a query executed in a single thread using secondary indexes, multithreaded execution will be preferred.
Queries using secondary indexes and docid indexes always run in a single thread, as benchmarks indicate that there is little to no benefit in making them multithreaded.
At present, the optimizer only uses CPU costs and does not take memory or disk usage into account.
ALTER TABLE table ADD COLUMN column_name [{INTEGER|INT|BIGINT|FLOAT|BOOL|MULTI|MULTI64|JSON|STRING|TIMESTAMP|TEXT [INDEXED [ATTRIBUTE]]}] [engine='columnar']
ALTER TABLE table DROP COLUMN column_name
This feature only supports adding one field at a time for RT tables. The supported data types are:
int
- integer attributetimestamp
- timestamp attributebigint
- big integer attributefloat
- float attributebool
- boolean attributemulti
- multi-valued integer attributemulti64
- multi-valued bigint attributejson
- json attributestring
/text attribute
/string attribute
- string attributetext
/text indexed stored
/string indexed stored
- full-text indexed field with original value stored in docstoretext indexed
/string indexed
- full-text indexed field, indexed only (the original value is not stored in docstore)text indexed attribute
/string indexed attribute
- full text indexed field + string attribute (not storing the original value in docstore)text stored
/string stored
- the value will be only stored in docstore, not full-text indexed, not a string attribute- adding
engine='columnar'
to any attribute (except for json) will make it stored in the columnar storage
- ❗It's recommended to backup table files before
ALTER
ing it to avoid data corruption in case of a sudden power interruption or other similar issues. - Querying a table is impossible while a column is being added.
- Newly created attribute's values are set to 0.
ALTER
will not work for distributed tables and tables without any attributes.DROP COLUMN
will fail if a table has only one field.- When dropping a field which is both a full-text field and a string attribute the first
ALTER DROP
drops the attribute, the second one drops the full-text field. - Adding/dropping full-text field is only supported in the RT mode.
- Example
mysql> desc rt;
+------------+-----------+
| Field | Type |
+------------+-----------+
| id | bigint |
| text | field |
| group_id | uint |
| date_added | timestamp |
+------------+-----------+
mysql> alter table rt add column test integer;
mysql> desc rt;
+------------+-----------+
| Field | Type |
+------------+-----------+
| id | bigint |
| text | field |
| group_id | uint |
| date_added | timestamp |
| test | uint |
+------------+-----------+
mysql> alter table rt drop column group_id;
mysql> desc rt;
+------------+-----------+
| Field | Type |
+------------+-----------+
| id | bigint |
| text | field |
| date_added | timestamp |
| test | uint |
+------------+-----------+
mysql> alter table rt add column title text indexed;
mysql> desc rt;
+------------+-----------+------------+
| Field | Type | Properties |
+------------+-----------+------------+
| id | bigint | |
| text | text | indexed |
| title | text | indexed |
| date_added | timestamp | |
| test | uint | |
+------------+-----------+------------+
mysql> alter table rt add column title text attribute;
mysql> desc rt;
+------------+-----------+------------+
| Field | Type | Properties |
+------------+-----------+------------+
| id | bigint | |
| text | text | indexed |
| title | text | indexed |
| date_added | timestamp | |
| test | uint | |
| title | string | |
+------------+-----------+------------+
mysql> alter table rt drop column title;
mysql> desc rt;
+------------+-----------+------------+
| Field | Type | Properties |
+------------+-----------+------------+
| id | bigint | |
| text | text | indexed |
| title | text | indexed |
| date_added | timestamp | |
| test | uint | |
+------------+-----------+------------+
mysql> alter table rt drop column title;
mysql> desc rt;
+------------+-----------+------------+
| Field | Type | Properties |
+------------+-----------+------------+
| id | bigint | |
| text | text | indexed |
| date_added | timestamp | |
| test | uint | |
+------------+-----------+------------+
ALTER TABLE table ft_setting='value'[, ft_setting2='value']
You can use ALTER
to modify the full-text settings of your table in RT mode. However, it only affects new documents and not existing ones.
Example:
- create a table with a full-text field and
charset_table
that allows only 3 searchable characters:a
,b
andc
. - then we insert document 'abcd' and find it by query
abcd
, thed
just gets ignored since it's not in thecharset_table
array - then we understand, that we want
d
to be searchable too, so we add it with help ofALTER
- but the same query
where match('abcd')
still says it searched byabc
, because the existing document remembers previous contents ofcharset_table
- then we add another document
abcd
and search byabcd
again - now it finds the both documents and
show meta
says it used two keywords:abc
(to find the old document) andabcd
(for the new one).
- Example
mysql> create table rt(title text) charset_table='a,b,c';
mysql> insert into rt(title) values('abcd');
mysql> select * from rt where match('abcd');
+---------------------+-------+
| id | title |
+---------------------+-------+
| 1514630637682688054 | abcd |
+---------------------+-------+
mysql> show meta;
+---------------+-------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+---------------+-------+
| total | 1 |
| total_found | 1 |
| time | 0.000 |
| keyword[0] | abc |
| docs[0] | 1 |
| hits[0] | 1 |
+---------------+-------+
mysql> alter table rt charset_table='a,b,c,d';
mysql> select * from rt where match('abcd');
+---------------------+-------+
| id | title |
+---------------------+-------+
| 1514630637682688054 | abcd |
+---------------------+-------+
mysql> show meta
+---------------+-------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+---------------+-------+
| total | 1 |
| total_found | 1 |
| time | 0.000 |
| keyword[0] | abc |
| docs[0] | 1 |
| hits[0] | 1 |
+---------------+-------+
mysql> insert into rt(title) values('abcd');
mysql> select * from rt where match('abcd');
+---------------------+-------+
| id | title |
+---------------------+-------+
| 1514630637682688055 | abcd |
| 1514630637682688054 | abcd |
+---------------------+-------+
mysql> show meta;
+---------------+-------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+---------------+-------+
| total | 2 |
| total_found | 2 |
| time | 0.000 |
| keyword[0] | abc |
| docs[0] | 1 |
| hits[0] | 1 |
| keyword[1] | abcd |
| docs[1] | 1 |
| hits[1] | 1 |
+---------------+-------+
ALTER TABLE table RECONFIGURE
ALTER
can also reconfigure an RT table in the plain mode, so that new tokenization, morphology and other text processing settings from the configuration file take effect for new documents. Note, that the existing document will be left intact. Internally, it forcibly saves the current RAM chunk as a new disk chunk and adjusts the table header, so that new documents are tokenized using the updated full-text settings.
- Example
mysql> show table rt settings;
+---------------+-------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+---------------+-------+
| settings | |
+---------------+-------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> alter table rt reconfigure;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> show table rt settings;
+---------------+----------------------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+---------------+----------------------+
| settings | morphology = stem_en |
+---------------+----------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
ALTER TABLE table REBUILD SECONDARY
You can also use ALTER
to rebuild secondary indexes in a given table. Sometimes, a secondary index can be disabled for the entire table or for one or multiple attributes within the table:
- When an attribute is updated, its secondary index gets disabled.
- If Manticore loads a table with an old version of secondary indexes that is no longer supported, the secondary indexes will be disabled for the entire table.
ALTER TABLE table REBUILD SECONDARY
rebuilds secondary indexes from attribute data and enables them again.
Additionally, an old version of secondary indexes may be supported but will lack certain features. REBUILD SECONDARY
can be used to update secondary indexes.
- Example
ALTER TABLE rt REBUILD SECONDARY;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)