@@ -127,40 +127,49 @@ PREPARE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class
127127 <title>Notes</title>
128128
129129 <para>
130- Prepared statements can use generic plans rather than re-planning with
131- each set of supplied <command>EXECUTE</command> values. This occurs
132- immediately for prepared statements with no parameters; otherwise
133- it occurs only after five or more executions produce plans whose
134- estimated cost average (including planning overhead) is more expensive
135- than the generic plan cost estimate. Once a generic plan is chosen,
136- it is used for the remaining lifetime of the prepared statement.
137- Using <command>EXECUTE</command> values which are rare in columns with
138- many duplicates can generate custom plans that are so much cheaper
139- than the generic plan, even after adding planning overhead, that the
140- generic plan might never be used.
130+ A prepared statement can be executed with either a <firstterm>generic
131+ plan</firstterm> or a <firstterm>custom plan</firstterm>. A generic
132+ plan is the same across all executions, while a custom plan is generated
133+ for a specific execution using the parameter values given in that call.
134+ Use of a generic plan avoids planning overhead, but in some situations
135+ a custom plan will be much more efficient to execute because the planner
136+ can make use of knowledge of the parameter values. (Of course, if the
137+ prepared statement has no parameters, then this is moot and a generic
138+ plan is always used.)
141139 </para>
142140
143141 <para>
144- A generic plan assumes that each value supplied to
145- <command>EXECUTE</command> is one of the column's distinct values
146- and that column values are uniformly distributed. For example,
147- if statistics record three distinct column values, a generic plan
148- assumes a column equality comparison will match 33% of processed rows.
149- Column statistics also allow generic plans to accurately compute the
150- selectivity of unique columns. Comparisons on non-uniformly-distributed
151- columns and specification of non-existent values affects the average
152- plan cost, and hence if and when a generic plan is chosen.
142+ By default (that is, when <xref linkend="guc-plan-cache_mode"/> is set
143+ to <literal>auto</literal>), the server will automatically choose
144+ whether to use a generic or custom plan for a prepared statement that
145+ has parameters. The current rule for this is that the first five
146+ executions are done with custom plans and the average estimated cost of
147+ those plans is calculated. Then a generic plan is created and its
148+ estimated cost is compared to the average custom-plan cost. Subsequent
149+ executions use the generic plan if its cost is not so much higher than
150+ the average custom-plan cost as to make repeated replanning seem
151+ preferable.
152+ </para>
153+
154+ <para>
155+ This heuristic can be overridden, forcing the server to use either
156+ generic or custom plans, by setting <varname>plan_cache_mode</varname>
157+ to <literal>force_generic_plan</literal>
158+ or <literal>force_custom_plan</literal> respectively.
159+ This setting is primarily useful if the generic plan's cost estimate
160+ is badly off for some reason, allowing it to be chosen even though
161+ its actual cost is much more than that of a custom plan.
153162 </para>
154163
155164 <para>
156165 To examine the query plan <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> is using
157- for a prepared statement, use <xref linkend="sql-explain"/>, e.g.
158- <command>EXPLAIN EXECUTE</command>.
166+ for a prepared statement, use <xref linkend="sql-explain"/>, for example
167+ <programlisting>
168+ EXPLAIN EXECUTE <replaceable>stmt_name</replaceable>(<replaceable>parameter_values</replaceable>);
169+ </programlisting>
159170 If a generic plan is in use, it will contain parameter symbols
160- <literal>$<replaceable>n</replaceable></literal>, while a custom plan will have the
161- supplied parameter values substituted into it.
162- The row estimates in the generic plan reflect the selectivity
163- computed for the parameters.
171+ <literal>$<replaceable>n</replaceable></literal>, while a custom plan
172+ will have the supplied parameter values substituted into it.
164173 </para>
165174
166175 <para>
@@ -221,7 +230,7 @@ PREPARE usrrptplan (int) AS
221230EXECUTE usrrptplan(1, current_date);
222231</programlisting>
223232
224- Note that the data type of the second parameter is not specified,
233+ In this example, the data type of the second parameter is not specified,
225234 so it is inferred from the context in which <literal>$2</literal> is used.
226235 </para>
227236 </refsect1>
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