postgresql/src/include/fmgr.h

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/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* fmgr.h
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* Definitions for the Postgres function manager and function-call
* interface.
*
* This file must be included by all Postgres modules that either define
* or call fmgr-callable functions.
*
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2014, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
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* src/include/fmgr.h
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
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#ifndef FMGR_H
#define FMGR_H
Support ordered-set (WITHIN GROUP) aggregates. This patch introduces generic support for ordered-set and hypothetical-set aggregate functions, as well as implementations of the instances defined in SQL:2008 (percentile_cont(), percentile_disc(), rank(), dense_rank(), percent_rank(), cume_dist()). We also added mode() though it is not in the spec, as well as versions of percentile_cont() and percentile_disc() that can compute multiple percentile values in one pass over the data. Unlike the original submission, this patch puts full control of the sorting process in the hands of the aggregate's support functions. To allow the support functions to find out how they're supposed to sort, a new API function AggGetAggref() is added to nodeAgg.c. This allows retrieval of the aggregate call's Aggref node, which may have other uses beyond the immediate need. There is also support for ordered-set aggregates to install cleanup callback functions, so that they can be sure that infrastructure such as tuplesort objects gets cleaned up. In passing, make some fixes in the recently-added support for variadic aggregates, and make some editorial adjustments in the recent FILTER additions for aggregates. Also, simplify use of IsBinaryCoercible() by allowing it to succeed whenever the target type is ANY or ANYELEMENT. It was inconsistent that it dealt with other polymorphic target types but not these. Atri Sharma and Andrew Gierth; reviewed by Pavel Stehule and Vik Fearing, and rather heavily editorialized upon by Tom Lane
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/* We don't want to include primnodes.h here, so make some stub references */
typedef struct Node *fmNodePtr;
Support ordered-set (WITHIN GROUP) aggregates. This patch introduces generic support for ordered-set and hypothetical-set aggregate functions, as well as implementations of the instances defined in SQL:2008 (percentile_cont(), percentile_disc(), rank(), dense_rank(), percent_rank(), cume_dist()). We also added mode() though it is not in the spec, as well as versions of percentile_cont() and percentile_disc() that can compute multiple percentile values in one pass over the data. Unlike the original submission, this patch puts full control of the sorting process in the hands of the aggregate's support functions. To allow the support functions to find out how they're supposed to sort, a new API function AggGetAggref() is added to nodeAgg.c. This allows retrieval of the aggregate call's Aggref node, which may have other uses beyond the immediate need. There is also support for ordered-set aggregates to install cleanup callback functions, so that they can be sure that infrastructure such as tuplesort objects gets cleaned up. In passing, make some fixes in the recently-added support for variadic aggregates, and make some editorial adjustments in the recent FILTER additions for aggregates. Also, simplify use of IsBinaryCoercible() by allowing it to succeed whenever the target type is ANY or ANYELEMENT. It was inconsistent that it dealt with other polymorphic target types but not these. Atri Sharma and Andrew Gierth; reviewed by Pavel Stehule and Vik Fearing, and rather heavily editorialized upon by Tom Lane
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typedef struct Aggref *fmAggrefPtr;
/* Likewise, avoid including execnodes.h here */
typedef struct ExprContext *fmExprContextPtr;
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/* Likewise, avoid including stringinfo.h here */
typedef struct StringInfoData *fmStringInfo;
/*
* All functions that can be called directly by fmgr must have this signature.
* (Other functions can be called by using a handler that does have this
* signature.)
*/
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typedef struct FunctionCallInfoData *FunctionCallInfo;
typedef Datum (*PGFunction) (FunctionCallInfo fcinfo);
/*
* This struct holds the system-catalog information that must be looked up
* before a function can be called through fmgr. If the same function is
* to be called multiple times, the lookup need be done only once and the
* info struct saved for re-use.
*
* Note that fn_expr really is parse-time-determined information about the
* arguments, rather than about the function itself. But it's convenient
* to store it here rather than in FunctionCallInfoData, where it might more
* logically belong.
*/
typedef struct FmgrInfo
{
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PGFunction fn_addr; /* pointer to function or handler to be called */
Oid fn_oid; /* OID of function (NOT of handler, if any) */
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short fn_nargs; /* 0..FUNC_MAX_ARGS, or -1 if variable arg
* count */
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bool fn_strict; /* function is "strict" (NULL in => NULL out) */
bool fn_retset; /* function returns a set */
unsigned char fn_stats; /* collect stats if track_functions > this */
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void *fn_extra; /* extra space for use by handler */
MemoryContext fn_mcxt; /* memory context to store fn_extra in */
fmNodePtr fn_expr; /* expression parse tree for call, or NULL */
} FmgrInfo;
/*
* This struct is the data actually passed to an fmgr-called function.
*/
typedef struct FunctionCallInfoData
{
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FmgrInfo *flinfo; /* ptr to lookup info used for this call */
fmNodePtr context; /* pass info about context of call */
fmNodePtr resultinfo; /* pass or return extra info about result */
Oid fncollation; /* collation for function to use */
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bool isnull; /* function must set true if result is NULL */
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short nargs; /* # arguments actually passed */
Datum arg[FUNC_MAX_ARGS]; /* Arguments passed to function */
bool argnull[FUNC_MAX_ARGS]; /* T if arg[i] is actually NULL */
} FunctionCallInfoData;
/*
* This routine fills a FmgrInfo struct, given the OID
* of the function to be called.
*/
extern void fmgr_info(Oid functionId, FmgrInfo *finfo);
/*
* Same, when the FmgrInfo struct is in a memory context longer-lived than
* CurrentMemoryContext. The specified context will be set as fn_mcxt
* and used to hold all subsidiary data of finfo.
*/
extern void fmgr_info_cxt(Oid functionId, FmgrInfo *finfo,
MemoryContext mcxt);
/* Convenience macro for setting the fn_expr field */
#define fmgr_info_set_expr(expr, finfo) \
((finfo)->fn_expr = (expr))
/*
* Copy an FmgrInfo struct
*/
extern void fmgr_info_copy(FmgrInfo *dstinfo, FmgrInfo *srcinfo,
MemoryContext destcxt);
/*
* This macro initializes all the fields of a FunctionCallInfoData except
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* for the arg[] and argnull[] arrays. Performance testing has shown that
* the fastest way to set up argnull[] for small numbers of arguments is to
* explicitly set each required element to false, so we don't try to zero
* out the argnull[] array in the macro.
*/
#define InitFunctionCallInfoData(Fcinfo, Flinfo, Nargs, Collation, Context, Resultinfo) \
do { \
(Fcinfo).flinfo = (Flinfo); \
(Fcinfo).context = (Context); \
(Fcinfo).resultinfo = (Resultinfo); \
(Fcinfo).fncollation = (Collation); \
(Fcinfo).isnull = false; \
(Fcinfo).nargs = (Nargs); \
} while (0)
/*
* This macro invokes a function given a filled-in FunctionCallInfoData
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* struct. The macro result is the returned Datum --- but note that
* caller must still check fcinfo->isnull! Also, if function is strict,
* it is caller's responsibility to verify that no null arguments are present
* before calling.
*/
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#define FunctionCallInvoke(fcinfo) ((* (fcinfo)->flinfo->fn_addr) (fcinfo))
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Support macros to ease writing fmgr-compatible functions
*
* A C-coded fmgr-compatible function should be declared as
*
* Datum
* function_name(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
* {
* ...
* }
*
* It should access its arguments using appropriate PG_GETARG_xxx macros
* and should return its result using PG_RETURN_xxx.
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/* Standard parameter list for fmgr-compatible functions */
#define PG_FUNCTION_ARGS FunctionCallInfo fcinfo
/*
* Get collation function should use.
*/
#define PG_GET_COLLATION() (fcinfo->fncollation)
/*
* Get number of arguments passed to function.
*/
#define PG_NARGS() (fcinfo->nargs)
/*
* If function is not marked "proisstrict" in pg_proc, it must check for
* null arguments using this macro. Do not try to GETARG a null argument!
*/
#define PG_ARGISNULL(n) (fcinfo->argnull[n])
/*
* Support for fetching detoasted copies of toastable datatypes (all of
* which are varlena types). pg_detoast_datum() gives you either the input
* datum (if not toasted) or a detoasted copy allocated with palloc().
* pg_detoast_datum_copy() always gives you a palloc'd copy --- use it
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* if you need a modifiable copy of the input. Caller is expected to have
* checked for null inputs first, if necessary.
*
* pg_detoast_datum_packed() will return packed (1-byte header) datums
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* unmodified. It will still expand an externally toasted or compressed datum.
* The resulting datum can be accessed using VARSIZE_ANY() and VARDATA_ANY()
* (beware of multiple evaluations in those macros!)
*
* WARNING: It is only safe to use pg_detoast_datum_packed() and
* VARDATA_ANY() if you really don't care about the alignment. Either because
* you're working with something like text where the alignment doesn't matter
* or because you're not going to access its constituent parts and just use
* things like memcpy on it anyways.
*
* Note: it'd be nice if these could be macros, but I see no way to do that
* without evaluating the arguments multiple times, which is NOT acceptable.
*/
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extern struct varlena *pg_detoast_datum(struct varlena * datum);
extern struct varlena *pg_detoast_datum_copy(struct varlena * datum);
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extern struct varlena *pg_detoast_datum_slice(struct varlena * datum,
int32 first, int32 count);
extern struct varlena *pg_detoast_datum_packed(struct varlena * datum);
#define PG_DETOAST_DATUM(datum) \
pg_detoast_datum((struct varlena *) DatumGetPointer(datum))
#define PG_DETOAST_DATUM_COPY(datum) \
pg_detoast_datum_copy((struct varlena *) DatumGetPointer(datum))
#define PG_DETOAST_DATUM_SLICE(datum,f,c) \
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pg_detoast_datum_slice((struct varlena *) DatumGetPointer(datum), \
(int32) (f), (int32) (c))
/* WARNING -- unaligned pointer */
#define PG_DETOAST_DATUM_PACKED(datum) \
pg_detoast_datum_packed((struct varlena *) DatumGetPointer(datum))
/*
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* Support for cleaning up detoasted copies of inputs. This must only
* be used for pass-by-ref datatypes, and normally would only be used
* for toastable types. If the given pointer is different from the
* original argument, assume it's a palloc'd detoasted copy, and pfree it.
* NOTE: most functions on toastable types do not have to worry about this,
* but we currently require that support functions for indexes not leak
* memory.
*/
#define PG_FREE_IF_COPY(ptr,n) \
do { \
if ((Pointer) (ptr) != PG_GETARG_POINTER(n)) \
pfree(ptr); \
} while (0)
/* Macros for fetching arguments of standard types */
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#define PG_GETARG_DATUM(n) (fcinfo->arg[n])
#define PG_GETARG_INT32(n) DatumGetInt32(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_UINT32(n) DatumGetUInt32(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
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#define PG_GETARG_INT16(n) DatumGetInt16(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_UINT16(n) DatumGetUInt16(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
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#define PG_GETARG_CHAR(n) DatumGetChar(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_BOOL(n) DatumGetBool(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_OID(n) DatumGetObjectId(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_POINTER(n) DatumGetPointer(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_CSTRING(n) DatumGetCString(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
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#define PG_GETARG_NAME(n) DatumGetName(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
/* these macros hide the pass-by-reference-ness of the datatype: */
#define PG_GETARG_FLOAT4(n) DatumGetFloat4(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_FLOAT8(n) DatumGetFloat8(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
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#define PG_GETARG_INT64(n) DatumGetInt64(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
/* use this if you want the raw, possibly-toasted input datum: */
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#define PG_GETARG_RAW_VARLENA_P(n) ((struct varlena *) PG_GETARG_POINTER(n))
/* use this if you want the input datum de-toasted: */
#define PG_GETARG_VARLENA_P(n) PG_DETOAST_DATUM(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
/* and this if you can handle 1-byte-header datums: */
#define PG_GETARG_VARLENA_PP(n) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_PACKED(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
/* DatumGetFoo macros for varlena types will typically look like this: */
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#define DatumGetByteaP(X) ((bytea *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM(X))
#define DatumGetByteaPP(X) ((bytea *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_PACKED(X))
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#define DatumGetTextP(X) ((text *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM(X))
#define DatumGetTextPP(X) ((text *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_PACKED(X))
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#define DatumGetBpCharP(X) ((BpChar *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM(X))
#define DatumGetBpCharPP(X) ((BpChar *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_PACKED(X))
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#define DatumGetVarCharP(X) ((VarChar *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM(X))
#define DatumGetVarCharPP(X) ((VarChar *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_PACKED(X))
#define DatumGetHeapTupleHeader(X) ((HeapTupleHeader) PG_DETOAST_DATUM(X))
/* And we also offer variants that return an OK-to-write copy */
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#define DatumGetByteaPCopy(X) ((bytea *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_COPY(X))
#define DatumGetTextPCopy(X) ((text *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_COPY(X))
#define DatumGetBpCharPCopy(X) ((BpChar *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_COPY(X))
#define DatumGetVarCharPCopy(X) ((VarChar *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_COPY(X))
#define DatumGetHeapTupleHeaderCopy(X) ((HeapTupleHeader) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_COPY(X))
/* Variants which return n bytes starting at pos. m */
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#define DatumGetByteaPSlice(X,m,n) ((bytea *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_SLICE(X,m,n))
#define DatumGetTextPSlice(X,m,n) ((text *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_SLICE(X,m,n))
#define DatumGetBpCharPSlice(X,m,n) ((BpChar *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_SLICE(X,m,n))
#define DatumGetVarCharPSlice(X,m,n) ((VarChar *) PG_DETOAST_DATUM_SLICE(X,m,n))
/* GETARG macros for varlena types will typically look like this: */
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#define PG_GETARG_BYTEA_P(n) DatumGetByteaP(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_BYTEA_PP(n) DatumGetByteaPP(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
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#define PG_GETARG_TEXT_P(n) DatumGetTextP(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_TEXT_PP(n) DatumGetTextPP(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
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#define PG_GETARG_BPCHAR_P(n) DatumGetBpCharP(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_BPCHAR_PP(n) DatumGetBpCharPP(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
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#define PG_GETARG_VARCHAR_P(n) DatumGetVarCharP(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_VARCHAR_PP(n) DatumGetVarCharPP(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_HEAPTUPLEHEADER(n) DatumGetHeapTupleHeader(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
/* And we also offer variants that return an OK-to-write copy */
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#define PG_GETARG_BYTEA_P_COPY(n) DatumGetByteaPCopy(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_TEXT_P_COPY(n) DatumGetTextPCopy(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_BPCHAR_P_COPY(n) DatumGetBpCharPCopy(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_VARCHAR_P_COPY(n) DatumGetVarCharPCopy(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
#define PG_GETARG_HEAPTUPLEHEADER_COPY(n) DatumGetHeapTupleHeaderCopy(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n))
/* And a b-byte slice from position a -also OK to write */
#define PG_GETARG_BYTEA_P_SLICE(n,a,b) DatumGetByteaPSlice(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n),a,b)
#define PG_GETARG_TEXT_P_SLICE(n,a,b) DatumGetTextPSlice(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n),a,b)
#define PG_GETARG_BPCHAR_P_SLICE(n,a,b) DatumGetBpCharPSlice(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n),a,b)
#define PG_GETARG_VARCHAR_P_SLICE(n,a,b) DatumGetVarCharPSlice(PG_GETARG_DATUM(n),a,b)
/* To return a NULL do this: */
#define PG_RETURN_NULL() \
do { fcinfo->isnull = true; return (Datum) 0; } while (0)
/* A few internal functions return void (which is not the same as NULL!) */
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#define PG_RETURN_VOID() return (Datum) 0
/* Macros for returning results of standard types */
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#define PG_RETURN_DATUM(x) return (x)
#define PG_RETURN_INT32(x) return Int32GetDatum(x)
#define PG_RETURN_UINT32(x) return UInt32GetDatum(x)
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#define PG_RETURN_INT16(x) return Int16GetDatum(x)
#define PG_RETURN_CHAR(x) return CharGetDatum(x)
#define PG_RETURN_BOOL(x) return BoolGetDatum(x)
#define PG_RETURN_OID(x) return ObjectIdGetDatum(x)
#define PG_RETURN_POINTER(x) return PointerGetDatum(x)
#define PG_RETURN_CSTRING(x) return CStringGetDatum(x)
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#define PG_RETURN_NAME(x) return NameGetDatum(x)
/* these macros hide the pass-by-reference-ness of the datatype: */
#define PG_RETURN_FLOAT4(x) return Float4GetDatum(x)
#define PG_RETURN_FLOAT8(x) return Float8GetDatum(x)
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#define PG_RETURN_INT64(x) return Int64GetDatum(x)
/* RETURN macros for other pass-by-ref types will typically look like this: */
#define PG_RETURN_BYTEA_P(x) PG_RETURN_POINTER(x)
#define PG_RETURN_TEXT_P(x) PG_RETURN_POINTER(x)
#define PG_RETURN_BPCHAR_P(x) PG_RETURN_POINTER(x)
#define PG_RETURN_VARCHAR_P(x) PG_RETURN_POINTER(x)
#define PG_RETURN_HEAPTUPLEHEADER(x) PG_RETURN_POINTER(x)
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Support for detecting call convention of dynamically-loaded functions
*
* Dynamically loaded functions may use either the version-1 ("new style")
* or version-0 ("old style") calling convention. Version 1 is the call
* convention defined in this header file; version 0 is the old "plain C"
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* convention. A version-1 function must be accompanied by the macro call
*
* PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(function_name);
*
* Note that internal functions do not need this decoration since they are
* assumed to be version-1.
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
typedef struct
{
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int api_version; /* specifies call convention version number */
/* More fields may be added later, for version numbers > 1. */
} Pg_finfo_record;
/* Expected signature of an info function */
typedef const Pg_finfo_record *(*PGFInfoFunction) (void);
/*
* Macro to build an info function associated with the given function name.
* Win32 loadable functions usually link with 'dlltool --export-all', but it
* doesn't hurt to add PGDLLIMPORT in case they don't.
*/
#define PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(funcname) \
Datum funcname(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS); \
extern PGDLLEXPORT const Pg_finfo_record * CppConcat(pg_finfo_,funcname)(void); \
const Pg_finfo_record * \
CppConcat(pg_finfo_,funcname) (void) \
{ \
static const Pg_finfo_record my_finfo = { 1 }; \
return &my_finfo; \
} \
extern int no_such_variable
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Support for verifying backend compatibility of loaded modules
*
* We require dynamically-loaded modules to include the macro call
* PG_MODULE_MAGIC;
* so that we can check for obvious incompatibility, such as being compiled
* for a different major PostgreSQL version.
*
* To compile with versions of PostgreSQL that do not support this,
* you may put an #ifdef/#endif test around it. Note that in a multiple-
* source-file module, the macro call should only appear once.
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*
* The specific items included in the magic block are intended to be ones that
* are custom-configurable and especially likely to break dynamically loaded
* modules if they were compiled with other values. Also, the length field
* can be used to detect definition changes.
*
* Note: we compare magic blocks with memcmp(), so there had better not be
* any alignment pad bytes in them.
*
* Note: when changing the contents of magic blocks, be sure to adjust the
* incompatible_module_error() function in dfmgr.c.
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/* Definition of the magic block structure */
typedef struct
{
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int len; /* sizeof(this struct) */
int version; /* PostgreSQL major version */
int funcmaxargs; /* FUNC_MAX_ARGS */
int indexmaxkeys; /* INDEX_MAX_KEYS */
int namedatalen; /* NAMEDATALEN */
int float4byval; /* FLOAT4PASSBYVAL */
int float8byval; /* FLOAT8PASSBYVAL */
} Pg_magic_struct;
/* The actual data block contents */
#define PG_MODULE_MAGIC_DATA \
{ \
sizeof(Pg_magic_struct), \
PG_VERSION_NUM / 100, \
FUNC_MAX_ARGS, \
INDEX_MAX_KEYS, \
NAMEDATALEN, \
FLOAT4PASSBYVAL, \
FLOAT8PASSBYVAL \
}
/*
* Declare the module magic function. It needs to be a function as the dlsym
* in the backend is only guaranteed to work on functions, not data
*/
typedef const Pg_magic_struct *(*PGModuleMagicFunction) (void);
#define PG_MAGIC_FUNCTION_NAME Pg_magic_func
#define PG_MAGIC_FUNCTION_NAME_STRING "Pg_magic_func"
#define PG_MODULE_MAGIC \
extern PGDLLEXPORT const Pg_magic_struct *PG_MAGIC_FUNCTION_NAME(void); \
const Pg_magic_struct * \
PG_MAGIC_FUNCTION_NAME(void) \
{ \
static const Pg_magic_struct Pg_magic_data = PG_MODULE_MAGIC_DATA; \
return &Pg_magic_data; \
} \
extern int no_such_variable
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Support routines and macros for callers of fmgr-compatible functions
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/* These are for invocation of a specifically named function with a
* directly-computed parameter list. Note that neither arguments nor result
* are allowed to be NULL.
*/
extern Datum DirectFunctionCall1Coll(PGFunction func, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1);
extern Datum DirectFunctionCall2Coll(PGFunction func, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2);
extern Datum DirectFunctionCall3Coll(PGFunction func, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3);
extern Datum DirectFunctionCall4Coll(PGFunction func, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4);
extern Datum DirectFunctionCall5Coll(PGFunction func, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5);
extern Datum DirectFunctionCall6Coll(PGFunction func, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6);
extern Datum DirectFunctionCall7Coll(PGFunction func, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6, Datum arg7);
extern Datum DirectFunctionCall8Coll(PGFunction func, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6, Datum arg7, Datum arg8);
extern Datum DirectFunctionCall9Coll(PGFunction func, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6, Datum arg7, Datum arg8,
Datum arg9);
/* These are for invocation of a previously-looked-up function with a
* directly-computed parameter list. Note that neither arguments nor result
* are allowed to be NULL.
*/
extern Datum FunctionCall1Coll(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1);
extern Datum FunctionCall2Coll(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2);
extern Datum FunctionCall3Coll(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3);
extern Datum FunctionCall4Coll(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4);
extern Datum FunctionCall5Coll(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5);
extern Datum FunctionCall6Coll(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6);
extern Datum FunctionCall7Coll(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6, Datum arg7);
extern Datum FunctionCall8Coll(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6, Datum arg7, Datum arg8);
extern Datum FunctionCall9Coll(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6, Datum arg7, Datum arg8,
Datum arg9);
/* These are for invocation of a function identified by OID with a
* directly-computed parameter list. Note that neither arguments nor result
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* are allowed to be NULL. These are essentially FunctionLookup() followed
* by FunctionCallN(). If the same function is to be invoked repeatedly,
* do the FunctionLookup() once and then use FunctionCallN().
*/
extern Datum OidFunctionCall0Coll(Oid functionId, Oid collation);
extern Datum OidFunctionCall1Coll(Oid functionId, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1);
extern Datum OidFunctionCall2Coll(Oid functionId, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2);
extern Datum OidFunctionCall3Coll(Oid functionId, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3);
extern Datum OidFunctionCall4Coll(Oid functionId, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4);
extern Datum OidFunctionCall5Coll(Oid functionId, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5);
extern Datum OidFunctionCall6Coll(Oid functionId, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6);
extern Datum OidFunctionCall7Coll(Oid functionId, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6, Datum arg7);
extern Datum OidFunctionCall8Coll(Oid functionId, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6, Datum arg7, Datum arg8);
extern Datum OidFunctionCall9Coll(Oid functionId, Oid collation,
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Datum arg1, Datum arg2,
Datum arg3, Datum arg4, Datum arg5,
Datum arg6, Datum arg7, Datum arg8,
Datum arg9);
/* These macros allow the collation argument to be omitted (with a default of
* InvalidOid, ie, no collation). They exist mostly for backwards
* compatibility of source code.
*/
#define DirectFunctionCall1(func, arg1) \
DirectFunctionCall1Coll(func, InvalidOid, arg1)
#define DirectFunctionCall2(func, arg1, arg2) \
DirectFunctionCall2Coll(func, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2)
#define DirectFunctionCall3(func, arg1, arg2, arg3) \
DirectFunctionCall3Coll(func, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3)
#define DirectFunctionCall4(func, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \
DirectFunctionCall4Coll(func, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4)
#define DirectFunctionCall5(func, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5) \
DirectFunctionCall5Coll(func, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5)
#define DirectFunctionCall6(func, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6) \
DirectFunctionCall6Coll(func, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6)
#define DirectFunctionCall7(func, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7) \
DirectFunctionCall7Coll(func, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7)
#define DirectFunctionCall8(func, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8) \
DirectFunctionCall8Coll(func, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8)
#define DirectFunctionCall9(func, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8, arg9) \
DirectFunctionCall9Coll(func, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8, arg9)
#define FunctionCall1(flinfo, arg1) \
FunctionCall1Coll(flinfo, InvalidOid, arg1)
#define FunctionCall2(flinfo, arg1, arg2) \
FunctionCall2Coll(flinfo, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2)
#define FunctionCall3(flinfo, arg1, arg2, arg3) \
FunctionCall3Coll(flinfo, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3)
#define FunctionCall4(flinfo, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \
FunctionCall4Coll(flinfo, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4)
#define FunctionCall5(flinfo, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5) \
FunctionCall5Coll(flinfo, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5)
#define FunctionCall6(flinfo, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6) \
FunctionCall6Coll(flinfo, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6)
#define FunctionCall7(flinfo, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7) \
FunctionCall7Coll(flinfo, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7)
#define FunctionCall8(flinfo, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8) \
FunctionCall8Coll(flinfo, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8)
#define FunctionCall9(flinfo, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8, arg9) \
FunctionCall9Coll(flinfo, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8, arg9)
#define OidFunctionCall0(functionId) \
OidFunctionCall0Coll(functionId, InvalidOid)
#define OidFunctionCall1(functionId, arg1) \
OidFunctionCall1Coll(functionId, InvalidOid, arg1)
#define OidFunctionCall2(functionId, arg1, arg2) \
OidFunctionCall2Coll(functionId, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2)
#define OidFunctionCall3(functionId, arg1, arg2, arg3) \
OidFunctionCall3Coll(functionId, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3)
#define OidFunctionCall4(functionId, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \
OidFunctionCall4Coll(functionId, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4)
#define OidFunctionCall5(functionId, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5) \
OidFunctionCall5Coll(functionId, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5)
#define OidFunctionCall6(functionId, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6) \
OidFunctionCall6Coll(functionId, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6)
#define OidFunctionCall7(functionId, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7) \
OidFunctionCall7Coll(functionId, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7)
#define OidFunctionCall8(functionId, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8) \
OidFunctionCall8Coll(functionId, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8)
#define OidFunctionCall9(functionId, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8, arg9) \
OidFunctionCall9Coll(functionId, InvalidOid, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8, arg9)
/* Special cases for convenient invocation of datatype I/O functions. */
extern Datum InputFunctionCall(FmgrInfo *flinfo, char *str,
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Oid typioparam, int32 typmod);
extern Datum OidInputFunctionCall(Oid functionId, char *str,
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Oid typioparam, int32 typmod);
extern char *OutputFunctionCall(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Datum val);
extern char *OidOutputFunctionCall(Oid functionId, Datum val);
extern Datum ReceiveFunctionCall(FmgrInfo *flinfo, fmStringInfo buf,
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Oid typioparam, int32 typmod);
extern Datum OidReceiveFunctionCall(Oid functionId, fmStringInfo buf,
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Oid typioparam, int32 typmod);
extern bytea *SendFunctionCall(FmgrInfo *flinfo, Datum val);
extern bytea *OidSendFunctionCall(Oid functionId, Datum val);
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/*
* Routines in fmgr.c
*/
extern const Pg_finfo_record *fetch_finfo_record(void *filehandle, char *funcname);
extern void clear_external_function_hash(void *filehandle);
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extern Oid fmgr_internal_function(const char *proname);
extern Oid get_fn_expr_rettype(FmgrInfo *flinfo);
extern Oid get_fn_expr_argtype(FmgrInfo *flinfo, int argnum);
extern Oid get_call_expr_argtype(fmNodePtr expr, int argnum);
extern bool get_fn_expr_arg_stable(FmgrInfo *flinfo, int argnum);
extern bool get_call_expr_arg_stable(fmNodePtr expr, int argnum);
extern bool get_fn_expr_variadic(FmgrInfo *flinfo);
extern bool CheckFunctionValidatorAccess(Oid validatorOid, Oid functionOid);
/*
* Routines in dfmgr.c
*/
extern char *Dynamic_library_path;
extern PGFunction load_external_function(char *filename, char *funcname,
bool signalNotFound, void **filehandle);
extern PGFunction lookup_external_function(void *filehandle, char *funcname);
extern void load_file(const char *filename, bool restricted);
extern void **find_rendezvous_variable(const char *varName);
/*
* Support for aggregate functions
*
Support ordered-set (WITHIN GROUP) aggregates. This patch introduces generic support for ordered-set and hypothetical-set aggregate functions, as well as implementations of the instances defined in SQL:2008 (percentile_cont(), percentile_disc(), rank(), dense_rank(), percent_rank(), cume_dist()). We also added mode() though it is not in the spec, as well as versions of percentile_cont() and percentile_disc() that can compute multiple percentile values in one pass over the data. Unlike the original submission, this patch puts full control of the sorting process in the hands of the aggregate's support functions. To allow the support functions to find out how they're supposed to sort, a new API function AggGetAggref() is added to nodeAgg.c. This allows retrieval of the aggregate call's Aggref node, which may have other uses beyond the immediate need. There is also support for ordered-set aggregates to install cleanup callback functions, so that they can be sure that infrastructure such as tuplesort objects gets cleaned up. In passing, make some fixes in the recently-added support for variadic aggregates, and make some editorial adjustments in the recent FILTER additions for aggregates. Also, simplify use of IsBinaryCoercible() by allowing it to succeed whenever the target type is ANY or ANYELEMENT. It was inconsistent that it dealt with other polymorphic target types but not these. Atri Sharma and Andrew Gierth; reviewed by Pavel Stehule and Vik Fearing, and rather heavily editorialized upon by Tom Lane
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* These are actually in executor/nodeAgg.c, but we declare them here since
* the whole point is for callers to not be overly friendly with nodeAgg.
*/
/* AggCheckCallContext can return one of the following codes, or 0: */
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#define AGG_CONTEXT_AGGREGATE 1 /* regular aggregate */
#define AGG_CONTEXT_WINDOW 2 /* window function */
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extern int AggCheckCallContext(FunctionCallInfo fcinfo,
MemoryContext *aggcontext);
Support ordered-set (WITHIN GROUP) aggregates. This patch introduces generic support for ordered-set and hypothetical-set aggregate functions, as well as implementations of the instances defined in SQL:2008 (percentile_cont(), percentile_disc(), rank(), dense_rank(), percent_rank(), cume_dist()). We also added mode() though it is not in the spec, as well as versions of percentile_cont() and percentile_disc() that can compute multiple percentile values in one pass over the data. Unlike the original submission, this patch puts full control of the sorting process in the hands of the aggregate's support functions. To allow the support functions to find out how they're supposed to sort, a new API function AggGetAggref() is added to nodeAgg.c. This allows retrieval of the aggregate call's Aggref node, which may have other uses beyond the immediate need. There is also support for ordered-set aggregates to install cleanup callback functions, so that they can be sure that infrastructure such as tuplesort objects gets cleaned up. In passing, make some fixes in the recently-added support for variadic aggregates, and make some editorial adjustments in the recent FILTER additions for aggregates. Also, simplify use of IsBinaryCoercible() by allowing it to succeed whenever the target type is ANY or ANYELEMENT. It was inconsistent that it dealt with other polymorphic target types but not these. Atri Sharma and Andrew Gierth; reviewed by Pavel Stehule and Vik Fearing, and rather heavily editorialized upon by Tom Lane
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extern fmAggrefPtr AggGetAggref(FunctionCallInfo fcinfo);
extern fmExprContextPtr AggGetPerTupleEContext(FunctionCallInfo fcinfo);
extern fmExprContextPtr AggGetPerAggEContext(FunctionCallInfo fcinfo);
/*
* We allow plugin modules to hook function entry/exit. This is intended
* as support for loadable security policy modules, which may want to
* perform additional privilege checks on function entry or exit, or to do
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* other internal bookkeeping. To make this possible, such modules must be
* able not only to support normal function entry and exit, but also to trap
* the case where we bail out due to an error; and they must also be able to
* prevent inlining.
*/
typedef enum FmgrHookEventType
{
FHET_START,
FHET_END,
FHET_ABORT
} FmgrHookEventType;
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typedef bool (*needs_fmgr_hook_type) (Oid fn_oid);
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typedef void (*fmgr_hook_type) (FmgrHookEventType event,
FmgrInfo *flinfo, Datum *arg);
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extern PGDLLIMPORT needs_fmgr_hook_type needs_fmgr_hook;
extern PGDLLIMPORT fmgr_hook_type fmgr_hook;
#define FmgrHookIsNeeded(fn_oid) \
(!needs_fmgr_hook ? false : (*needs_fmgr_hook)(fn_oid))
/*
* !!! OLD INTERFACE !!!
*
* fmgr() is the only remaining vestige of the old-style caller support
* functions. It's no longer used anywhere in the Postgres distribution,
* but we should leave it around for a release or two to ease the transition
* for user-supplied C functions. OidFunctionCallN() replaces it for new
* code.
*/
/*
* DEPRECATED, DO NOT USE IN NEW CODE
*/
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extern char *fmgr(Oid procedureId,...);
#endif /* FMGR_H */