Database

Managing Indexes in PostgreSQL


An index makes your Postgres queries faster. The index is like a "table of contents" for your data - a reference list which allows queries to quickly locate a row in a given table without needing to scan the entire table (which in large tables can take a long time).

Indexes can be structured in a few different ways. The type of index chosen depends on the values you are indexing. By far the most common index type, and the default in Postgres, is the B-Tree. A B-Tree is the generalized form of a binary search tree, where nodes can have more than two children.

Even though indexes improve query performance, the Postgres query planner may not always make use of a given index when choosing which optimizations to make. Additionally indexes come with some overhead - additional writes and increased storage - so it's useful to understand how and when to use indexes, if at all.

Create an index

Let's take an example table:


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create table persons (
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id bigint generated by default as identity primary key,
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age int,
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height int,
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weight int,
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name text,
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deceased boolean
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);

We might want to frequently query users based on their age:


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select name from persons where age = 32;

Without an index, Postgres will scan every row in the table to find equality matches on age.

You can verify this by doing an explain on the query:


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explain select name from persons where age = 32;

Outputs:


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Seq Scan on persons (cost=0.00..22.75 rows=x width=y)
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Filter: (age = 32)

To add a simple B-Tree index you can run:


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create index idx_persons_age on persons (age);

Here is a simplified diagram of the index we just created (note that in practice, nodes actually have more than two children).

You can see that in any large data set, traversing the index to locate a given value can be done in much less operations (O(log n)) than compared to scanning the table one value at a time from top to bottom (O(n)).

Partial indexes

If you are frequently querying a subset of rows then it may be more efficient to build a partial index. In our example, perhaps we only want to match on age where deceased is false. We could build a partial index:


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create index idx_living_persons_age on persons (age)
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where deceased is false;

Ordering indexes

By default B-Tree indexes are sorted in ascending order, but sometimes you may want to provide a different ordering. Perhaps our application has a page featuring the top 10 oldest people. Here we would want to sort in descending order, and include NULL values last. For this we can use:


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create index idx_persons_age_desc on persons (age desc nulls last);

Reindexing

After a while indexes can become stale and may need rebuilding. Postgres provides a reindex command for this, but due to Postgres locks being placed on the index during this process, you may want to make use of the concurrent keyword.


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reindex index concurrently idx_persons_age;

Alternatively you can reindex all indexes on a particular table:


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reindex table concurrently persons;

Take note that reindex can be used inside a transaction, but reindex [index/table] concurrently cannot.

Index Advisor

Indexes can improve query performance of your tables as they grow. The Supabase Dashboard offers an Index Advisor, which suggests potential indexes to add to your tables.

For more information on the Index Advisor and its suggestions, see the index_advisor extension.

To use the Dashboard Index Advisor:

  1. Go to the Query Performance page.
  2. Click on a query to bring up the Details side panel.
  3. Select the Indexes tab.
  4. Enable Index Advisor if prompted.

Understanding Index Advisor results

The Indexes tab shows the existing indexes used in the selected query. Note that indexes suggested in the "New Index Recommendations" section may not be used when you create them. Postgres' query planner may intentionally ignore an available index if it determines that the query will be faster without. For example, on a small table, a sequential scan might be faster than an index scan. In that case, the planner will switch to using the index as the table size grows, helping to future proof the query.

If additional indexes might improve your query, the Index Advisor shows the suggested indexes with the estimated improvement in startup and total costs:

  • Startup cost is the cost to fetch the first row
  • Total cost is the cost to fetch all the rows

Costs are in arbitrary units, where a single sequential page read costs 1.0 units.