postgresql/src/backend/access/common/tupdesc.c

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/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* tupdesc.c
* POSTGRES tuple descriptor support code
*
2017-01-03 19:48:53 +01:00
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2017, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
2010-09-20 22:08:53 +02:00
* src/backend/access/common/tupdesc.c
*
* NOTES
* some of the executor utility code such as "ExecTypeFromTL" should be
* moved here.
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include "access/htup_details.h"
#include "catalog/pg_collation.h"
#include "catalog/pg_type.h"
#include "miscadmin.h"
#include "parser/parse_type.h"
#include "utils/acl.h"
#include "utils/builtins.h"
#include "utils/resowner_private.h"
#include "utils/syscache.h"
/*
* CreateTemplateTupleDesc
* This function allocates an empty tuple descriptor structure.
*
* Tuple type ID information is initially set for an anonymous record type;
* caller can overwrite this if needed.
*/
TupleDesc
CreateTemplateTupleDesc(int natts, bool hasoid)
{
TupleDesc desc;
char *stg;
int attroffset;
/*
* sanity checks
*/
AssertArg(natts >= 0);
/*
* Allocate enough memory for the tuple descriptor, including the
* attribute rows, and set up the attribute row pointers.
*
* Note: we assume that sizeof(struct tupleDesc) is a multiple of the
* struct pointer alignment requirement, and hence we don't need to insert
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* alignment padding between the struct and the array of attribute row
* pointers.
*
* Note: Only the fixed part of pg_attribute rows is included in tuple
* descriptors, so we only need ATTRIBUTE_FIXED_PART_SIZE space per attr.
* That might need alignment padding, however.
*/
attroffset = sizeof(struct tupleDesc) + natts * sizeof(Form_pg_attribute);
attroffset = MAXALIGN(attroffset);
stg = palloc(attroffset + natts * MAXALIGN(ATTRIBUTE_FIXED_PART_SIZE));
desc = (TupleDesc) stg;
if (natts > 0)
{
Form_pg_attribute *attrs;
int i;
attrs = (Form_pg_attribute *) (stg + sizeof(struct tupleDesc));
desc->attrs = attrs;
stg += attroffset;
for (i = 0; i < natts; i++)
{
attrs[i] = (Form_pg_attribute) stg;
stg += MAXALIGN(ATTRIBUTE_FIXED_PART_SIZE);
}
}
else
desc->attrs = NULL;
/*
* Initialize other fields of the tupdesc.
*/
desc->natts = natts;
desc->constr = NULL;
desc->tdtypeid = RECORDOID;
desc->tdtypmod = -1;
desc->tdhasoid = hasoid;
desc->tdrefcount = -1; /* assume not reference-counted */
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return desc;
}
/*
* CreateTupleDesc
* This function allocates a new TupleDesc pointing to a given
* Form_pg_attribute array.
*
* Note: if the TupleDesc is ever freed, the Form_pg_attribute array
* will not be freed thereby.
*
* Tuple type ID information is initially set for an anonymous record type;
* caller can overwrite this if needed.
*/
TupleDesc
CreateTupleDesc(int natts, bool hasoid, Form_pg_attribute *attrs)
{
TupleDesc desc;
/*
* sanity checks
*/
AssertArg(natts >= 0);
desc = (TupleDesc) palloc(sizeof(struct tupleDesc));
desc->attrs = attrs;
desc->natts = natts;
desc->constr = NULL;
desc->tdtypeid = RECORDOID;
desc->tdtypmod = -1;
desc->tdhasoid = hasoid;
desc->tdrefcount = -1; /* assume not reference-counted */
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return desc;
}
/*
* CreateTupleDescCopy
* This function creates a new TupleDesc by copying from an existing
* TupleDesc.
*
* !!! Constraints and defaults are not copied !!!
*/
TupleDesc
CreateTupleDescCopy(TupleDesc tupdesc)
{
TupleDesc desc;
int i;
desc = CreateTemplateTupleDesc(tupdesc->natts, tupdesc->tdhasoid);
for (i = 0; i < desc->natts; i++)
{
memcpy(desc->attrs[i], tupdesc->attrs[i], ATTRIBUTE_FIXED_PART_SIZE);
desc->attrs[i]->attnotnull = false;
desc->attrs[i]->atthasdef = false;
desc->attrs[i]->attidentity = '\0';
}
desc->tdtypeid = tupdesc->tdtypeid;
desc->tdtypmod = tupdesc->tdtypmod;
return desc;
}
/*
* CreateTupleDescCopyConstr
* This function creates a new TupleDesc by copying from an existing
* TupleDesc (including its constraints and defaults).
*/
TupleDesc
CreateTupleDescCopyConstr(TupleDesc tupdesc)
{
TupleDesc desc;
TupleConstr *constr = tupdesc->constr;
int i;
desc = CreateTemplateTupleDesc(tupdesc->natts, tupdesc->tdhasoid);
for (i = 0; i < desc->natts; i++)
{
memcpy(desc->attrs[i], tupdesc->attrs[i], ATTRIBUTE_FIXED_PART_SIZE);
}
if (constr)
{
TupleConstr *cpy = (TupleConstr *) palloc0(sizeof(TupleConstr));
cpy->has_not_null = constr->has_not_null;
if ((cpy->num_defval = constr->num_defval) > 0)
{
cpy->defval = (AttrDefault *) palloc(cpy->num_defval * sizeof(AttrDefault));
memcpy(cpy->defval, constr->defval, cpy->num_defval * sizeof(AttrDefault));
for (i = cpy->num_defval - 1; i >= 0; i--)
{
if (constr->defval[i].adbin)
cpy->defval[i].adbin = pstrdup(constr->defval[i].adbin);
}
}
if ((cpy->num_check = constr->num_check) > 0)
{
cpy->check = (ConstrCheck *) palloc(cpy->num_check * sizeof(ConstrCheck));
memcpy(cpy->check, constr->check, cpy->num_check * sizeof(ConstrCheck));
for (i = cpy->num_check - 1; i >= 0; i--)
{
if (constr->check[i].ccname)
cpy->check[i].ccname = pstrdup(constr->check[i].ccname);
if (constr->check[i].ccbin)
cpy->check[i].ccbin = pstrdup(constr->check[i].ccbin);
cpy->check[i].ccvalid = constr->check[i].ccvalid;
cpy->check[i].ccnoinherit = constr->check[i].ccnoinherit;
}
}
desc->constr = cpy;
}
desc->tdtypeid = tupdesc->tdtypeid;
desc->tdtypmod = tupdesc->tdtypmod;
return desc;
}
/*
* TupleDescCopyEntry
* This function copies a single attribute structure from one tuple
* descriptor to another.
*
* !!! Constraints and defaults are not copied !!!
*/
void
TupleDescCopyEntry(TupleDesc dst, AttrNumber dstAttno,
TupleDesc src, AttrNumber srcAttno)
{
/*
* sanity checks
*/
AssertArg(PointerIsValid(src));
AssertArg(PointerIsValid(dst));
AssertArg(srcAttno >= 1);
AssertArg(srcAttno <= src->natts);
AssertArg(dstAttno >= 1);
AssertArg(dstAttno <= dst->natts);
memcpy(dst->attrs[dstAttno - 1], src->attrs[srcAttno - 1],
ATTRIBUTE_FIXED_PART_SIZE);
/*
* Aside from updating the attno, we'd better reset attcacheoff.
*
* XXX Actually, to be entirely safe we'd need to reset the attcacheoff of
* all following columns in dst as well. Current usage scenarios don't
* require that though, because all following columns will get initialized
* by other uses of this function or TupleDescInitEntry. So we cheat a
* bit to avoid a useless O(N^2) penalty.
*/
dst->attrs[dstAttno - 1]->attnum = dstAttno;
dst->attrs[dstAttno - 1]->attcacheoff = -1;
/* since we're not copying constraints or defaults, clear these */
dst->attrs[dstAttno - 1]->attnotnull = false;
dst->attrs[dstAttno - 1]->atthasdef = false;
dst->attrs[dstAttno - 1]->attidentity = '\0';
}
/*
* Free a TupleDesc including all substructure
*/
void
FreeTupleDesc(TupleDesc tupdesc)
{
int i;
/*
* Possibly this should assert tdrefcount == 0, to disallow explicit
* freeing of un-refcounted tupdescs?
*/
Assert(tupdesc->tdrefcount <= 0);
if (tupdesc->constr)
{
if (tupdesc->constr->num_defval > 0)
{
AttrDefault *attrdef = tupdesc->constr->defval;
for (i = tupdesc->constr->num_defval - 1; i >= 0; i--)
{
if (attrdef[i].adbin)
pfree(attrdef[i].adbin);
}
pfree(attrdef);
}
if (tupdesc->constr->num_check > 0)
{
ConstrCheck *check = tupdesc->constr->check;
for (i = tupdesc->constr->num_check - 1; i >= 0; i--)
{
if (check[i].ccname)
pfree(check[i].ccname);
if (check[i].ccbin)
pfree(check[i].ccbin);
}
pfree(check);
}
pfree(tupdesc->constr);
}
pfree(tupdesc);
}
/*
* Increment the reference count of a tupdesc, and log the reference in
* CurrentResourceOwner.
*
* Do not apply this to tupdescs that are not being refcounted. (Use the
* macro PinTupleDesc for tupdescs of uncertain status.)
*/
void
IncrTupleDescRefCount(TupleDesc tupdesc)
{
Assert(tupdesc->tdrefcount >= 0);
ResourceOwnerEnlargeTupleDescs(CurrentResourceOwner);
tupdesc->tdrefcount++;
ResourceOwnerRememberTupleDesc(CurrentResourceOwner, tupdesc);
}
/*
* Decrement the reference count of a tupdesc, remove the corresponding
* reference from CurrentResourceOwner, and free the tupdesc if no more
* references remain.
*
* Do not apply this to tupdescs that are not being refcounted. (Use the
* macro ReleaseTupleDesc for tupdescs of uncertain status.)
*/
void
DecrTupleDescRefCount(TupleDesc tupdesc)
{
Assert(tupdesc->tdrefcount > 0);
ResourceOwnerForgetTupleDesc(CurrentResourceOwner, tupdesc);
if (--tupdesc->tdrefcount == 0)
FreeTupleDesc(tupdesc);
}
/*
* Compare two TupleDesc structures for logical equality
*
* Note: we deliberately do not check the attrelid and tdtypmod fields.
* This allows typcache.c to use this routine to see if a cached record type
* matches a requested type, and is harmless for relcache.c's uses.
* We don't compare tdrefcount, either.
*/
bool
equalTupleDescs(TupleDesc tupdesc1, TupleDesc tupdesc2)
{
int i,
j,
n;
if (tupdesc1->natts != tupdesc2->natts)
return false;
if (tupdesc1->tdtypeid != tupdesc2->tdtypeid)
return false;
if (tupdesc1->tdhasoid != tupdesc2->tdhasoid)
return false;
for (i = 0; i < tupdesc1->natts; i++)
{
Form_pg_attribute attr1 = tupdesc1->attrs[i];
Form_pg_attribute attr2 = tupdesc2->attrs[i];
/*
2005-10-15 04:49:52 +02:00
* We do not need to check every single field here: we can disregard
* attrelid and attnum (which were used to place the row in the attrs
* array in the first place). It might look like we could dispense
* with checking attlen/attbyval/attalign, since these are derived
* from atttypid; but in the case of dropped columns we must check
* them (since atttypid will be zero for all dropped columns) and in
* general it seems safer to check them always.
*
2005-10-15 04:49:52 +02:00
* attcacheoff must NOT be checked since it's possibly not set in both
* copies.
*/
if (strcmp(NameStr(attr1->attname), NameStr(attr2->attname)) != 0)
return false;
if (attr1->atttypid != attr2->atttypid)
return false;
if (attr1->attstattarget != attr2->attstattarget)
return false;
if (attr1->attlen != attr2->attlen)
return false;
if (attr1->attndims != attr2->attndims)
return false;
if (attr1->atttypmod != attr2->atttypmod)
return false;
if (attr1->attbyval != attr2->attbyval)
return false;
if (attr1->attstorage != attr2->attstorage)
return false;
if (attr1->attalign != attr2->attalign)
return false;
if (attr1->attnotnull != attr2->attnotnull)
return false;
if (attr1->atthasdef != attr2->atthasdef)
return false;
if (attr1->attidentity != attr2->attidentity)
return false;
if (attr1->attisdropped != attr2->attisdropped)
return false;
if (attr1->attislocal != attr2->attislocal)
return false;
if (attr1->attinhcount != attr2->attinhcount)
return false;
if (attr1->attcollation != attr2->attcollation)
return false;
/* attacl, attoptions and attfdwoptions are not even present... */
}
if (tupdesc1->constr != NULL)
{
TupleConstr *constr1 = tupdesc1->constr;
TupleConstr *constr2 = tupdesc2->constr;
if (constr2 == NULL)
return false;
if (constr1->has_not_null != constr2->has_not_null)
return false;
n = constr1->num_defval;
if (n != (int) constr2->num_defval)
return false;
for (i = 0; i < n; i++)
{
AttrDefault *defval1 = constr1->defval + i;
AttrDefault *defval2 = constr2->defval;
/*
2005-10-15 04:49:52 +02:00
* We can't assume that the items are always read from the system
* catalogs in the same order; so use the adnum field to identify
* the matching item to compare.
*/
for (j = 0; j < n; defval2++, j++)
{
if (defval1->adnum == defval2->adnum)
break;
}
if (j >= n)
return false;
if (strcmp(defval1->adbin, defval2->adbin) != 0)
return false;
}
n = constr1->num_check;
if (n != (int) constr2->num_check)
return false;
for (i = 0; i < n; i++)
{
ConstrCheck *check1 = constr1->check + i;
ConstrCheck *check2 = constr2->check;
/*
2005-10-15 04:49:52 +02:00
* Similarly, don't assume that the checks are always read in the
* same order; match them up by name and contents. (The name
* *should* be unique, but...)
*/
for (j = 0; j < n; check2++, j++)
{
if (strcmp(check1->ccname, check2->ccname) == 0 &&
strcmp(check1->ccbin, check2->ccbin) == 0 &&
check1->ccvalid == check2->ccvalid &&
check1->ccnoinherit == check2->ccnoinherit)
break;
}
if (j >= n)
return false;
}
}
else if (tupdesc2->constr != NULL)
return false;
return true;
}
/*
* TupleDescInitEntry
* This function initializes a single attribute structure in
* a previously allocated tuple descriptor.
*
* If attributeName is NULL, the attname field is set to an empty string
* (this is for cases where we don't know or need a name for the field).
* Also, some callers use this function to change the datatype-related fields
* in an existing tupdesc; they pass attributeName = NameStr(att->attname)
* to indicate that the attname field shouldn't be modified.
*
* Note that attcollation is set to the default for the specified datatype.
* If a nondefault collation is needed, insert it afterwards using
* TupleDescInitEntryCollation.
*/
void
TupleDescInitEntry(TupleDesc desc,
AttrNumber attributeNumber,
const char *attributeName,
Oid oidtypeid,
int32 typmod,
int attdim)
{
HeapTuple tuple;
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Form_pg_type typeForm;
Form_pg_attribute att;
/*
* sanity checks
*/
AssertArg(PointerIsValid(desc));
AssertArg(attributeNumber >= 1);
AssertArg(attributeNumber <= desc->natts);
/*
* initialize the attribute fields
*/
att = desc->attrs[attributeNumber - 1];
att->attrelid = 0; /* dummy value */
/*
* Note: attributeName can be NULL, because the planner doesn't always
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* fill in valid resname values in targetlists, particularly for resjunk
* attributes. Also, do nothing if caller wants to re-use the old attname.
*/
if (attributeName == NULL)
MemSet(NameStr(att->attname), 0, NAMEDATALEN);
else if (attributeName != NameStr(att->attname))
namestrcpy(&(att->attname), attributeName);
att->attstattarget = -1;
att->attcacheoff = -1;
att->atttypmod = typmod;
att->attnum = attributeNumber;
att->attndims = attdim;
att->attnotnull = false;
att->atthasdef = false;
att->attidentity = '\0';
att->attisdropped = false;
att->attislocal = true;
att->attinhcount = 0;
/* attacl, attoptions and attfdwoptions are not present in tupledescs */
tuple = SearchSysCache1(TYPEOID, ObjectIdGetDatum(oidtypeid));
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(tuple))
elog(ERROR, "cache lookup failed for type %u", oidtypeid);
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typeForm = (Form_pg_type) GETSTRUCT(tuple);
att->atttypid = oidtypeid;
att->attlen = typeForm->typlen;
att->attbyval = typeForm->typbyval;
att->attalign = typeForm->typalign;
att->attstorage = typeForm->typstorage;
att->attcollation = typeForm->typcollation;
ReleaseSysCache(tuple);
}
/*
* TupleDescInitBuiltinEntry
* Initialize a tuple descriptor without catalog access. Only
* a limited range of builtin types are supported.
*/
void
TupleDescInitBuiltinEntry(TupleDesc desc,
AttrNumber attributeNumber,
const char *attributeName,
Oid oidtypeid,
int32 typmod,
int attdim)
{
Form_pg_attribute att;
/* sanity checks */
AssertArg(PointerIsValid(desc));
AssertArg(attributeNumber >= 1);
AssertArg(attributeNumber <= desc->natts);
/* initialize the attribute fields */
att = desc->attrs[attributeNumber - 1];
att->attrelid = 0; /* dummy value */
/* unlike TupleDescInitEntry, we require an attribute name */
Assert(attributeName != NULL);
namestrcpy(&(att->attname), attributeName);
att->attstattarget = -1;
att->attcacheoff = -1;
att->atttypmod = typmod;
att->attnum = attributeNumber;
att->attndims = attdim;
att->attnotnull = false;
att->atthasdef = false;
att->attidentity = '\0';
att->attisdropped = false;
att->attislocal = true;
att->attinhcount = 0;
/* attacl, attoptions and attfdwoptions are not present in tupledescs */
att->atttypid = oidtypeid;
/*
* Our goal here is to support just enough types to let basic builtin
* commands work without catalog access - e.g. so that we can do certain
* things even in processes that are not connected to a database.
*/
switch (oidtypeid)
{
case TEXTOID:
case TEXTARRAYOID:
att->attlen = -1;
att->attbyval = false;
att->attalign = 'i';
att->attstorage = 'x';
att->attcollation = DEFAULT_COLLATION_OID;
break;
case BOOLOID:
att->attlen = 1;
att->attbyval = true;
att->attalign = 'c';
att->attstorage = 'p';
att->attcollation = InvalidOid;
break;
case INT4OID:
att->attlen = 4;
att->attbyval = true;
att->attalign = 'i';
att->attstorage = 'p';
att->attcollation = InvalidOid;
break;
case INT8OID:
att->attlen = 8;
att->attbyval = FLOAT8PASSBYVAL;
att->attalign = 'd';
att->attstorage = 'p';
att->attcollation = InvalidOid;
break;
}
}
/*
* TupleDescInitEntryCollation
*
* Assign a nondefault collation to a previously initialized tuple descriptor
* entry.
*/
void
TupleDescInitEntryCollation(TupleDesc desc,
AttrNumber attributeNumber,
Oid collationid)
{
/*
* sanity checks
*/
AssertArg(PointerIsValid(desc));
AssertArg(attributeNumber >= 1);
AssertArg(attributeNumber <= desc->natts);
desc->attrs[attributeNumber - 1]->attcollation = collationid;
}
/*
* BuildDescForRelation
*
* Given a relation schema (list of ColumnDef nodes), build a TupleDesc.
*
* Note: the default assumption is no OIDs; caller may modify the returned
* TupleDesc if it wants OIDs. Also, tdtypeid will need to be filled in
* later on.
*/
TupleDesc
BuildDescForRelation(List *schema)
{
int natts;
AttrNumber attnum;
ListCell *l;
TupleDesc desc;
bool has_not_null;
char *attname;
Oid atttypid;
int32 atttypmod;
Oid attcollation;
int attdim;
/*
* allocate a new tuple descriptor
*/
natts = list_length(schema);
desc = CreateTemplateTupleDesc(natts, false);
has_not_null = false;
attnum = 0;
foreach(l, schema)
{
ColumnDef *entry = lfirst(l);
AclResult aclresult;
/*
2005-10-15 04:49:52 +02:00
* for each entry in the list, get the name and type information from
* the list and have TupleDescInitEntry fill in the attribute
* information we need.
*/
attnum++;
attname = entry->colname;
Remove collation information from TypeName, where it does not belong. The initial collations patch treated a COLLATE spec as part of a TypeName, following what can only be described as brain fade on the part of the SQL committee. It's a lot more reasonable to treat COLLATE as a syntactically separate object, so that it can be added in only the productions where it actually belongs, rather than needing to reject it in a boatload of places where it doesn't belong (something the original patch mostly failed to do). In addition this change lets us meet the spec's requirement to allow COLLATE anywhere in the clauses of a ColumnDef, and it avoids unfriendly behavior for constructs such as "foo::type COLLATE collation". To do this, pull collation information out of TypeName and put it in ColumnDef instead, thus reverting most of the collation-related changes in parse_type.c's API. I made one additional structural change, which was to use a ColumnDef as an intermediate node in AT_AlterColumnType AlterTableCmd nodes. This provides enough room to get rid of the "transform" wart in AlterTableCmd too, since the ColumnDef can carry the USING expression easily enough. Also fix some other minor bugs that have crept in in the same areas, like failure to copy recently-added fields of ColumnDef in copyfuncs.c. While at it, document the formerly secret ability to specify a collation in ALTER TABLE ALTER COLUMN TYPE, ALTER TYPE ADD ATTRIBUTE, and ALTER TYPE ALTER ATTRIBUTE TYPE; and correct some misstatements about what the default collation selection will be when COLLATE is omitted. BTW, the three-parameter form of format_type() should go away too, since it just contributes to the confusion in this area; but I'll do that in a separate patch.
2011-03-10 04:38:52 +01:00
typenameTypeIdAndMod(NULL, entry->typeName, &atttypid, &atttypmod);
aclresult = pg_type_aclcheck(atttypid, GetUserId(), ACL_USAGE);
if (aclresult != ACLCHECK_OK)
aclcheck_error_type(aclresult, atttypid);
Remove collation information from TypeName, where it does not belong. The initial collations patch treated a COLLATE spec as part of a TypeName, following what can only be described as brain fade on the part of the SQL committee. It's a lot more reasonable to treat COLLATE as a syntactically separate object, so that it can be added in only the productions where it actually belongs, rather than needing to reject it in a boatload of places where it doesn't belong (something the original patch mostly failed to do). In addition this change lets us meet the spec's requirement to allow COLLATE anywhere in the clauses of a ColumnDef, and it avoids unfriendly behavior for constructs such as "foo::type COLLATE collation". To do this, pull collation information out of TypeName and put it in ColumnDef instead, thus reverting most of the collation-related changes in parse_type.c's API. I made one additional structural change, which was to use a ColumnDef as an intermediate node in AT_AlterColumnType AlterTableCmd nodes. This provides enough room to get rid of the "transform" wart in AlterTableCmd too, since the ColumnDef can carry the USING expression easily enough. Also fix some other minor bugs that have crept in in the same areas, like failure to copy recently-added fields of ColumnDef in copyfuncs.c. While at it, document the formerly secret ability to specify a collation in ALTER TABLE ALTER COLUMN TYPE, ALTER TYPE ADD ATTRIBUTE, and ALTER TYPE ALTER ATTRIBUTE TYPE; and correct some misstatements about what the default collation selection will be when COLLATE is omitted. BTW, the three-parameter form of format_type() should go away too, since it just contributes to the confusion in this area; but I'll do that in a separate patch.
2011-03-10 04:38:52 +01:00
attcollation = GetColumnDefCollation(NULL, entry, atttypid);
attdim = list_length(entry->typeName->arrayBounds);
if (entry->typeName->setof)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_TABLE_DEFINITION),
errmsg("column \"%s\" cannot be declared SETOF",
attname)));
TupleDescInitEntry(desc, attnum, attname,
atttypid, atttypmod, attdim);
/* Override TupleDescInitEntry's settings as requested */
TupleDescInitEntryCollation(desc, attnum, attcollation);
if (entry->storage)
desc->attrs[attnum - 1]->attstorage = entry->storage;
/* Fill in additional stuff not handled by TupleDescInitEntry */
desc->attrs[attnum - 1]->attnotnull = entry->is_not_null;
has_not_null |= entry->is_not_null;
desc->attrs[attnum - 1]->attislocal = entry->is_local;
desc->attrs[attnum - 1]->attinhcount = entry->inhcount;
}
if (has_not_null)
{
TupleConstr *constr = (TupleConstr *) palloc0(sizeof(TupleConstr));
constr->has_not_null = true;
constr->defval = NULL;
constr->num_defval = 0;
constr->check = NULL;
constr->num_check = 0;
desc->constr = constr;
}
else
{
desc->constr = NULL;
}
return desc;
}
/*
* BuildDescFromLists
*
* Build a TupleDesc given lists of column names (as String nodes),
* column type OIDs, typmods, and collation OIDs.
*
* No constraints are generated.
*
* This is essentially a cut-down version of BuildDescForRelation for use
* with functions returning RECORD.
*/
TupleDesc
BuildDescFromLists(List *names, List *types, List *typmods, List *collations)
{
int natts;
AttrNumber attnum;
ListCell *l1;
ListCell *l2;
ListCell *l3;
ListCell *l4;
TupleDesc desc;
natts = list_length(names);
Assert(natts == list_length(types));
Assert(natts == list_length(typmods));
Assert(natts == list_length(collations));
/*
* allocate a new tuple descriptor
*/
desc = CreateTemplateTupleDesc(natts, false);
attnum = 0;
l2 = list_head(types);
l3 = list_head(typmods);
l4 = list_head(collations);
foreach(l1, names)
{
char *attname = strVal(lfirst(l1));
Oid atttypid;
int32 atttypmod;
Oid attcollation;
atttypid = lfirst_oid(l2);
l2 = lnext(l2);
atttypmod = lfirst_int(l3);
l3 = lnext(l3);
attcollation = lfirst_oid(l4);
l4 = lnext(l4);
attnum++;
TupleDescInitEntry(desc, attnum, attname, atttypid, atttypmod, 0);
TupleDescInitEntryCollation(desc, attnum, attcollation);
}
return desc;
}