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Performance analysis functions

The functions in this section support profiling and analyzing database and query performance.

The functions in this section support profiling and analyzing database and query performance.

1 - Profiling functions

This section contains profiling functions specific to Vertica.

This section contains profiling functions specific to Vertica.

1.1 - CLEAR_PROFILING

Clears from memory data for the specified profiling type.

Clears from memory data for the specified profiling type.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

CLEAR_PROFILING( 'profiling-type' [, 'scope'] )

Parameters

profiling-type
The type of profiling data to clear:
  • session: Clear profiling for basic session parameters and lock time out data.

  • query: Clear profiling for general information about queries that ran, such as the query strings used and the duration of queries.

  • ee: Clear profiling for information about the execution run of each query.

scope
Specifies at what scope to clear profiling on the specified data, one of the following:
  • local: Clear profiling data for the current session.

  • global: Clear profiling data across all database sessions.

Examples

The following statement clears profiled data for queries:

=> SELECT CLEAR_PROFILING('query');

See also

1.2 - DISABLE_PROFILING

Disables for the current session collection of profiling data of the specified type.

Disables for the current session collection of profiling data of the specified type. For detailed information, see Enabling profiling.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

DISABLE_PROFILING( 'profiling-type' )

Parameters

profiling-type
The type of profiling data to disable:
  • session: Disables profiling for basic session parameters and lock time out data.

  • query: Disables profiling for general information about queries that ran, such as the query strings used and the duration of queries.

  • ee: Disables profiling for information about the execution run of each query.

Examples

The following statement disables profiling on query execution runs:

=> SELECT DISABLE_PROFILING('ee');
   DISABLE_PROFILING
-----------------------
 EE Profiling Disabled
(1 row)

See also

1.3 - ENABLE_PROFILING

Enables collection of profiling data of the specified type for the current session.

Enables collection of profiling data of the specified type for the current session. For detailed information, see Enabling profiling.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

ENABLE_PROFILING( 'profiling-type' )

Parameters

profiling-type
The type of profiling data to enable:
  • session: Enable profiling for basic session parameters and lock time out data.

  • query: Enable profiling for general information about queries that ran, such as the query strings used and the duration of queries.

  • ee: Enable profiling for information about the execution run of each query.

Examples

The following statement enables profiling on query execution runs:

=> SELECT ENABLE_PROFILING('ee');
   ENABLE_PROFILING
----------------------
 EE Profiling Enabled
(1 row)

See also

1.4 - SHOW_PROFILING_CONFIG

Shows whether profiling is enabled.

Shows whether profiling is enabled.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Stable

Syntax

SHOW_PROFILING_CONFIG ()

Examples

The following statement shows that profiling is enabled globally for all profiling types (session, execution engine, and query):

=> SELECT SHOW_PROFILING_CONFIG();
SHOW_PROFILING_CONFIG
------------------------------------------
 Session Profiling: Session off, Global on
 EE Profiling:      Session off, Global on
 Query Profiling:   Session off, Global on
(1 row)

See also

2 - Statistics management functions

This section contains Vertica functions for collecting and managing table data statistics.

This section contains Vertica functions for collecting and managing table data statistics.

2.1 - ANALYZE_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT

Calculates the exact number of rows in an external table.

Calculates the exact number of rows in an external table. ANALYZE_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT runs in the background.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

ANALYZE_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT ('[[[database.]schema.]table-name ]')

Parameters

[database.]schema

Database and schema. The default schema is public. If you specify a database, it must be the current database.

table-name
Specifies the name of the external table for which to calculate the exact row count. If you supply an empty string, Vertica calculate the exact number of rows for all external tables.

Privileges

Any INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE privilege on the external table

Examples

Calculate the exact row count for all external tables:

=> SELECT ANALYZE_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT('');

Calculate the exact row count for table loader_rejects:

=> SELECT ANALYZE_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT('loader_rejects');

See also

2.2 - ANALYZE_STATISTICS

Collects and aggregates data samples and storage information from all nodes that store projections associated with the specified table.

Collects and aggregates data samples and storage information from all nodes that store projections associated with the specified table. The function skips columns of complex data types. You can set the scope of the collection at several levels:

  • Database

  • Table

  • Table column

By default, Vertica analyzes multiple columns in a single-query execution plan, depending on resource limits. This multi-column analysis reduces plan execution latency and speeds up analysis of relatively small tables with many columns.

Vertica writes statistics to the database catalog. The query optimizer uses this collected data to create query plans. Without this data, the query optimizer assumes uniform distribution of data values and equal storage usage for all projections.

You can cancel statistics collection with CTRL+C or by calling INTERRUPT_STATEMENT.

ANALYZE_STATISTICS is an alias of the function ANALYZE_HISTOGRAM, which is no longer documented.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

ANALYZE_STATISTICS ('[[[database.]schema.]table]' [, 'column-list' [, percent ]]  )

Returns

0—Success

If an error occurs, refer to vertica.log for details.

Arguments

[[database.]schema].table
Table on which to collect data. If set to an empty string, Vertica collects statistics for all database tables and their projections. The default schema is public. If you specify a database, it must be the current database.
column-list
Comma-delimited list of columns in table, typically predicate columns. Vertica narrows the scope of the data collection to the specified columns. Columns of complex types are not supported.

If you alter a table to add a column and populate its contents with either default or other values, call ANALYZE_STATISTICS on this column to get the most current statistics.

percent
Percentage of data to read from disk (not the amount to analyze), a float between 0 and 100. The default value is 10.

Analyzing a higher percentage takes proportionally longer to process, but produces a higher level of sampling accuracy.

Privileges

Non-superuser:

  • Schema: USAGE

  • Table: One of INSERT, DELETE, or UPDATE

Restrictions

  • Vertica supports ANALYZE_STATISTICS on local and global temporary tables. In both cases, you can obtain statistics only on tables that are created with the option ON COMMIT PRESERVE ROWS. Otherwise, Vertica deletes table content when committing the current transaction, so no table data is available for analysis.

  • Vertica collects no statistics from the following projections:

    • Live aggregate and Top-K projections
    • Projections that are defined to include a SQL function within an expression
  • Vertica collects no statistics on columns of ARRAY, SET, or ROW types.

Examples

See Collecting table statistics.

See also

ANALYZE_STATISTICS_PARTITION

2.3 - ANALYZE_STATISTICS_PARTITION

Collects and aggregates data samples and storage information for a range of partitions in the specified table.

Collects and aggregates data samples and storage information for a range of partitions in the specified table. Vertica writes the collected statistics to the database catalog.

You can cancel statistics collection with CTRL+C or meta-function INTERRUPT_STATEMENT.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

ANALYZE_STATISTICS_PARTITION ('[[database.]schema.]table', 'min-range-value','max-range-value' [, 'column-list' [, percent ]] )

Returns

0: Success

If an error occurs, refer to vertica.log for details.

Parameters

[database.]schema

Database and schema. The default schema is public. If you specify a database, it must be the current database.

table
Table on which to collect data.
min-range-value
max-range-value
Minimum and maximum value of partition keys to analyze, where min-range-value must be ≤ max-range-value. To analyze one partition, min-range-value and max-range-value must be equal.
column-list
Comma-delimited list of columns in table, typically a predicate column. Vertica narrows the scope of the data collection to the specified columns.
percent
Float value between 0 and 100 that specifies what percentage of data to read from disk (not the amount of data to analyze). If you omit this argument, Vertica sets the percentage to 10.

Analyzing more than 10 percent disk space takes proportionally longer to process, but produces a higher level of sampling accuracy.

Privileges

Non-superuser:

  • Schema: USAGE

  • Table: One of INSERT, DELETE, or UPDATE

Requirements and restrictions

The following requirements and restrictions apply to ANALYZE_STATISTICS_PARTITION:

  • The table must be partitioned and cannot contain unpartitioned data.

  • The table partition expression must specify a single column. The following expressions are supported:

    • Expressions that specify only the column—that is, partition on all column values. For example:

      PARTITION BY ship_date GROUP BY CALENDAR_HIERARCHY_DAY(ship_date, 2, 2)
      
    • If the column is a DATE or TIMESTAMP/TIMESTAMPTZ, the partition expression can specify a supported date/time function that returns that column or any portion of it, such as month or year. For example, the following partition expression specifies to partition on the year portion of column order_date:

      PARTITION BY YEAR(order_date)
      
    • Expressions that perform addition or subtraction on the column. For example:

      PARTITION BY YEAR(order_date) -1
      
  • The table partition expression cannot coerce the specified column to another data type.

  • Vertica collects no statistics from the following projections:

    • Live aggregate and Top-K projections

    • Projections that are defined to include an SQL function within an expression

Examples

See Collecting partition statistics.

2.4 - DROP_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT

Removes external table row count statistics compiled by ANALYZE_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT.

Removes external table row count statistics compiled by ANALYZE_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT. DROP_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT runs in the background.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

DROP_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT ('[[[database.]schema.]table-name ]');

Parameters

schema

Database and schema. The default schema is public. If you specify a database, it must be the current database.

table-name
The external table for which to remove the exact row count. If you specify an empty string, Vertica drops the exact row count statistic for all external tables.

Privileges

  • INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE privilege on table

  • USAGE privilege on schema that contains the table

Examples

Drop row count statistics for external table loader_rejects:

=> SELECT DROP_EXTERNAL_ROW_COUNT('loader_rejects');

See also

Collecting database statistics

2.5 - DROP_STATISTICS

Removes statistical data on database projections previously generated by ANALYZE_STATISTICS.

Removes statistical data on database projections previously generated by ANALYZE_STATISTICS. When you drop this data, the Vertica optimizer creates query plans using default statistics.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

DROP_STATISTICS ('[[[database.]schema.]table]' [, 'category' [, '[column-list]'] )

Parameters

[database.]schema

Database and schema. The default schema is public. If you specify a database, it must be the current database.

table
Table on which to drop statistics. If set to an empty string, Vertica drops statistics for all database tables and their projections.
category
Category of statistics to drop, one of the following:
  • ALL (default): Drop all statistics, including histograms and row counts.

  • HISTOGRAMS: Drop only histograms. Row count statistics remain.

column-list
Comma-delimited list of columns in table, typically predicate columns. Vertica narrows the scope of dropped statistics to the specified columns. If you omit this parameter or supply an empty string, Vertica drops statistics on all columns.

Privileges

Non-superuser:

  • Schema: USAGE

  • Table: One of INSERT, DELETE, or UPDATE

Examples

Drop all base statistics for the table store.store_sales_fact:

=> SELECT DROP_STATISTICS('store.store_sales_fact');
 DROP_STATISTICS
-----------------
               0
(1 row)

Drop statistics for all table projections:

=> SELECT DROP_STATISTICS ('');
 DROP_STATISTICS
-----------------
               0
(1 row)

See also

DROP_STATISTICS_PARTITION

2.6 - DROP_STATISTICS_PARTITION

Removes statistical data on database projections previously generated by ANALYZE_STATISTICS_PARTITION.

Removes statistical data on database projections previously generated by ANALYZE_STATISTICS_PARTITION. When you drop this data, the Vertica optimizer creates query plans using table-level statistics, if available, or default statistics.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

DROP_STATISTICS_PARTITION ('[[database.]schema.]table', '[min-range-value]', '[max-range-value]' [, category [, '[column-list]'] )

Parameters

[database.]schema

Database and schema. The default schema is public. If you specify a database, it must be the current database.

table
Table on which to drop statistics.
min-range-value max-range-value
The minimum and maximum value of partition keys on which to drop statistics, where min-range-value must be ≤ max-range-value. If you supply empty strings for both parameters, Vertica drops all partition-level statistics for this table or the specified columns.
category
The category of statistics to drop, one of the following:
  • BASE (default): Drop histograms and row counts (min/max column values, histogram).

  • HISTOGRAMS: Drop only histograms. Row count statistics remain.

  • ALL: Drop all statistics.

column-list
A comma-delimited list of columns in table, typically predicate columns. Vertica narrows the scope of dropped statistics to the specified columns. If you omit this parameter or supply an empty string, Vertica drops statistics on all columns.

Privileges

Non-superuser:

  • Schema: USAGE

  • Table: One of INSERT, DELETE, or UPDATE

See also

DROP_STATISTICS

2.7 - EXPORT_STATISTICS

Generates statistics in XML format from data previously collected by ANALYZE_STATISTICS.

Generates statistics in XML format from data previously collected by ANALYZE_STATISTICS. Before you export statistics, collect the latest data by calling ANALYZE_STATISTICS.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Stable

Syntax

EXPORT_STATISTICS ('[ filename ]' [,'table-spec' [,'column[,...]']])

Arguments

filename
Specifies where to write the generated XML. If filename already exists, EXPORT_STATISTICS overwrites it. If you supply an empty string, EXPORT_STATISTICS writes the XML to standard output.
table-spec
Specifies the table on which to export projection statistics:
  
[[database.]schema.]table
  

The default schema is public. If you specify a database, it must be the current database.

If table-spec is omitted or set to an empty string, Vertica exports all statistics for the database.

column
The name of a column in table-spec, typically a predicate column. You can specify multiple comma-delimited columns. Vertica narrows the scope of exported statistics to the specified columns.

Privileges

Superuser

Restrictions

EXPORT_STATISTICS does not export statistics for LONG data type columns.

Examples

The following statement exports statistics on the VMart example database to a file:

=> SELECT EXPORT_STATISTICS('/opt/vertica/examples/VMart_Schema/vmart_stats.xml');
        EXPORT_STATISTICS
-----------------------------------
Statistics exported successfully
(1 row)

The next statement exports statistics on a single column (price) from a table named food:

=> SELECT EXPORT_STATISTICS('/opt/vertica/examples/VMart_Schema/price.xml', 'food.price');
        EXPORT_STATISTICS
-----------------------------------
Statistics exported successfully
(1 row)

See also

2.8 - EXPORT_STATISTICS_PARTITION

Generates partition-level statistics in XML format from data previously collected by ANALYZE_STATISTICS_PARTITION.

Generates partition-level statistics in XML format from data previously collected by ANALYZE_STATISTICS_PARTITION.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Stable

Syntax

EXPORT_STATISTICS_PARTITION ('[ filename ]', 'table-spec', 'min-range-value','max-range-value' [, 'column[,...]' )

Arguments

filename
Specifies where to write the generated XML. If filename already exists, EXPORT_STATISTICS_PARTITION overwrites it. If you supply an empty string, the function writes to standard output.
table-spec
Specifies the table on which to export partition statistics:
  
[[database.]schema.]table
  

The default schema is public. If you specify a database, it must be the current database.

min-range-value, max-range-value
The minimum and maximum value of partition keys on which to export statistics, where min-range-value must be ≤ max-range-value.
column
The name of a column in table, typically a predicate column. You can specify multiple comma-delimited columns. Vertica narrows the scope of exported statistics to the specified columns.

Privileges

Superuser

Restrictions

EXPORT_STATISTICS_PARTITION does not export statistics for LONG data type columns.

See also

EXPORT_STATISTICS

2.9 - IMPORT_STATISTICS

Imports statistics from the XML file that was generated by EXPORT_STATISTICS.

Imports statistics from the XML file that was generated by EXPORT_STATISTICS. Imported statistics override existing statistics for the projections that are referenced in the XML file.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Stable

Syntax

IMPORT_STATISTICS ( 'filename' )

Parameters

filename
The path and name of an XML input file that was generated by EXPORT_STATISTICS.

Privileges

Superuser

Restrictions

  • IMPORT_STATISTICS imports only valid statistics. If the source XML file has invalid statistics for a specific column, those statistics are not imported and Vertica throws a warning. If the statistics file has an invalid structure, the import operation fails. To check a statistics file for validity, run VALIDATE_STATISTICS.

  • IMPORT_STATISTICS returns warnings for LONG data type columns, as the source XML file generated by EXPORT_STATISTICS contains no statistics for columns of that type.

Examples

Import the statistics for the VMart database from an XML file previously created by EXPORT_STATISTICS:

=> SELECT IMPORT_STATISTICS('/opt/vertica/examples/VMart_Schema/vmart_stats.xml');
                     IMPORT_STATISTICS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Importing statistics for projection date_dimension_super column date_key failure (stats did not contain row counts)
Importing statistics for projection date_dimension_super column date failure (stats did not contain row counts)
Importing statistics for projection date_dimension_super column full_date_description failure (stats did not contain row counts)
...
(1 row)

See also

2.10 - VALIDATE_STATISTICS

Validates statistics in the XML file generated by EXPORT_STATISTICS.

Validates statistics in the XML file generated by EXPORT_STATISTICS.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Stable

Syntax

VALIDATE_STATISTICS ( 'XML-file' )

Parameters

XML-file
the path and name of the XML file that contains the statistics to validate.

Privileges

Superuser

Reporting valid statistics

The following example shows the results when the statistics are valid:

=> SELECT EXPORT_STATISTICS('cust_dim_stats.xml','customer_dimension');
    EXPORT_STATISTICS
-----------------------------------
 Statistics exported successfully
(1 row)

=> SELECT VALIDATE_STATISTICS('cust_dim_stats.xml');
 VALIDATE_STATISTICS
---------------------
(1 row)

Identifying invalid statistics

If VALIDATE_STATISTICS is unable to read a document's XML, it throws this error:

=> SELECT VALIDATE_STATISTICS('/home/dbadmin/stats.xml');
                       VALIDATE_STATISTICS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Error validating statistics file: At line 1:1. Invalid document structure
(1 row)

If some table statistics are invalid, VALIDATE_STATISTICS returns a report that identifies them. In the following example, the function reports that attributes distinct, buckets, rows, count, and distinctCount cannot be negative numbers.

=> SELECT VALIDATE_STATISTICS('/stats.xml');
WARNING 0:  Invalid value '-1' for attribute 'distinct' under column 'public.t.x'.
   Please use a positive value.
WARNING 0:  Invalid value '-1' for attribute 'buckets' under column 'public.t.x'.
   Please use a positive value.
WARNING 0:  Invalid value '-1' for attribute 'rows' under column 'public.t.x'.
   Please use a positive value.
WARNING 0:  Invalid value '-1' for attribute 'count' under bound '1', column 'public.t.x'.
   Please use a positive value.
WARNING 0:  Invalid value '-1' for attribute 'distinctCount' under bound '1', column 'public.t.x'.
   Please use a positive value.
 VALIDATE_STATISTICS
---------------------
 (1 row)

In this case, run ANALYZE_STATISTICS on the table again to create valid statistics.

See also

3 - Workload management functions

This section contains workload management functions specific to Vertica.

This section contains workload management functions specific to Vertica.

3.1 - ANALYZE_WORKLOAD

Runs Workload Analyzer, a utility that analyzes system information held in system tables.

Runs Workload Analyzer, a utility that analyzes system information held in system tables.

Workload Analyzer intelligently monitors the performance of SQL queries and workload history, resources, and configurations to identify the root causes for poor query performance. ANALYZE_WORKLOAD returns tuning recommendations for all events within the scope and time that you specify, from system table TUNING_RECOMMENDATIONS.

Tuning recommendations are based on a combination of statistics, system and data collector events, and database-table-projection design. Workload Analyzer recommendations can help you quickly and easily tune query performance.

See Workload analyzer recommendations for the common triggering conditions and recommendations.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

ANALYZE_WORKLOAD ( '[ scope ]' [, 'since-time' | save-data ] );

Parameters

scope
Specifies the catalog objects to analyze, as follows:
[[database.]schema.]table

If set to an empty string, Vertica returns recommendations for all database objects.

If you specify a database, it must be the current database.

since-time
Specifies the start time for the analysis time span, which continues up to the current system status, inclusive. If you omit this parameter, ANALYZE_WORKLOAD returns recommendations on events since the last time you called this function.
save-data
Specifies whether to save returned values from ANALYZE_WORKLOAD:
  • false (default): Results are discarded.

  • true: Saves the results returned by ANALYZE_WORKLOAD. Subsequent calls to ANALYZE_WORKLOAD return results that start from the last invocation when results were saved. Object events preceding that invocation are ignored.

Return values

Returns aggregated tuning recommendations from TUNING_RECOMMENDATIONS.

Privileges

Superuser

Examples

See Getting tuning recommendations.

See also

3.2 - CHANGE_CURRENT_STATEMENT_RUNTIME_PRIORITY

Changes the run-time priority of an active query.

Changes the run-time priority of an active query.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

CHANGE_CURRENT_STATEMENT_RUNTIME_PRIORITY(transaction-id, 'value')

Parameters

transaction-id
Identifies the transaction, obtained from the system table SESSIONS.
value
The RUNTIMEPRIORITY value: HIGH, MEDIUM, or LOW.

Privileges

  • Superuser: None

  • Non-superusers can only change the runtime priority of their own queries, and cannot raise the runtime priority of a query to a level higher than that of the resource pool.

Examples

See Changing runtime priority of a running query.

3.3 - CHANGE_RUNTIME_PRIORITY

Changes the run-time priority of a query that is actively running.

Changes the run-time priority of a query that is actively running. Note that, while this function is still valid, you should instead use CHANGE_CURRENT_STATEMENT_RUNTIME_PRIORITY to change run-time priority. CHANGE_RUNTIME_PRIORITY will be deprecated in a future release of Vertica.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

CHANGE_RUNTIME_PRIORITY(TRANSACTION_ID,STATEMENT_ID, 'value')

Parameters

TRANSACTION_ID
An identifier for the transaction within the session.

TRANSACTION_ID cannot be NULL.

You can find the transaction ID in the Sessions table.

STATEMENT_ID
A unique numeric ID assigned by the Vertica catalog, which identifies the currently executing statement.

You can find the statement ID in the Sessions table.

You can specify NULL to change the run-time priority of the currently running query within the transaction.

'value'
The RUNTIMEPRIORITY value. Can be HIGH, MEDIUM, or LOW.

Privileges

No special privileges required. However, non-superusers can change the run-time priority of their own queries only. In addition, non-superusers can never raise the run-time priority of a query to a level higher than that of the resource pool.

Examples

=> SELECT CHANGE_RUNTIME_PRIORITY(45035996273705748, NULL, 'low');

3.4 - MOVE_STATEMENT_TO_RESOURCE_POOL

Attempts to move the specified query to the specified target pool.

Attempts to move the specified query to the specified target pool.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

MOVE_STATEMENT_TO_RESOURCE_POOL (session_id , transaction_id, statement_id, target_resource_pool_name)

Parameters

session_id
Identifier for the session where the query you want to move is currently executing.
transaction_id
Identifier for the transaction within the session.
statement_id
Unique numeric ID for the statement you want to move.
target_resource_pool_name
Name of the existing resource pool to which you want to move the specified query.

Outputs

The function may return the following results:

MOV_REPLAN: Target pool does not have sufficient resources. See v_monitor.resource_pool_move for details. Vertica will attempt to replan the statement on target pool.
MOV_REPLAN: Target pool has priority HOLD. Vertica will attempt to replan the statement on target pool.
MOV_FAILED: Statement not found.
MOV_NO_OP: Statement already on target pool.
MOV_REPLAN: Statement is in queue. Vertica will attempt to replan the statement on target pool.
MOV_SUCC: Statement successfully moved to target pool.

Privileges

Superuser

Examples

The following example shows how you can move a specific statement to a resource pool called my_target_pool:

=> SELECT MOVE_STATEMENT_TO_RESOURCE_POOL ('v_vmart_node0001.example.-31427:0x82fbm', 45035996273711993, 1, 'my_target_pool');

See also:

3.5 - SLEEP

Waits a specified number of seconds before executing another statement or command.

Waits a specified number of seconds before executing another statement or command.

This is a meta-function. You must call meta-functions in a top-level SELECT statement.

Behavior type

Volatile

Syntax

SLEEP( seconds )

Parameters

seconds
The wait time, specified in one or more seconds (0 or higher) expressed as a positive integer. Single quotes are optional; for example, SLEEP(3) is the same as SLEEP('3').

Notes

  • This function returns value 0 when successful; otherwise it returns an error message due to syntax errors.

  • You cannot cancel a sleep operation.

  • Be cautious when using SLEEP() in an environment with shared resources, such as in combination with transactions that take exclusive locks.

Examples

The following command suspends execution for 100 seconds:

=> SELECT SLEEP(100);
 sleep
-------
     0
(1 row)