I've constructed a test which compares OFFSET, cursors, and ROW_NUMBER(). My impression of ROW_NUMBER(), that it would be consistent in speed regardless of where you are in the result set, is correct. However, that speed is dramatically slower than either OFFSET or CURSOR, which, as was also my impression, are pretty much the same in speed, both degrading in speed the further out to the end of the result you go.
Results:
offset(100,100): 0.016359
scroll(100,100): 0.018393
rownum(100,100): 15.535614
offset(100,480000): 1.761800
scroll(100,480000): 1.781913
rownum(100,480000): 15.158601
offset(100,999900): 3.670898
scroll(100,999900): 3.664517
rownum(100,999900): 14.581068
The test script uses sqlalchemy to set up tables and 1000000 rows of test data. It then uses a psycopg2 cursor to execute each SELECT statement and fetch results with the three different methods.
from sqlalchemy import *
metadata = MetaData()
engine = create_engine('postgresql://scott:tiger@localhost/test', echo=True)
t1 = Table('t1', metadata,
Column('id', Integer, primary_key=True),
Column('d1', String(50)),
Column('d2', String(50)),
Column('d3', String(50)),
Column('d4', String(50)),
Column('d5', String(50))
)
if not engine.has_table('t1'):
conn = engine.connect()
t1.create(conn)
# 1000000 rows
for i in range(100):
conn.execute(t1.insert(), [
dict(
('d%d' % col, "data data data %d %d" % (col, (i * 10000) + j))
for col in range(1, 6)
) for j in xrange(1, 10001)
])
import time
def timeit(fn, count, *args):
now = time.time()
for i in xrange(count):
fn(*args)
total = time.time() - now
print "%s(%s): %f" % (fn.__name__, ",".join(repr(x) for x in args), total)
# this is a raw psycopg2 connection.
conn = engine.raw_connection()
def offset(limit, offset):
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.execute("select * from t1 order by id limit %d offset %d" % (limit, offset))
cursor.fetchall()
cursor.close()
def rownum(limit, offset):
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.execute("select * from (select *, "
"row_number() over (order by id asc) as rownum from t1) as foo "
"where rownum>=%d and rownum<%d" % (offset, limit + offset))
cursor.fetchall()
cursor.close()
def scroll(limit, offset):
cursor = conn.cursor('foo')
cursor.execute("select * from t1 order by id")
cursor.scroll(offset)
cursor.fetchmany(limit)
cursor.close()
print
timeit(offset, 10, 100, 100)
timeit(scroll, 10, 100, 100)
timeit(rownum, 10, 100, 100)
print
timeit(offset, 10, 100, 480000)
timeit(scroll, 10, 100, 480000)
timeit(rownum, 10, 100, 480000)
print
timeit(offset, 10, 100, 999900)
timeit(scroll, 10, 100, 999900)
timeit(rownum, 10, 100, 999900)