Rationalize handling of array type names in bootstrap data.

Formerly, Catalog.pm turned a C array type declaration in the catalog
header files into a SQL type, e.g., 'foo[]'.  Along the way, genbki.pl
turned this into '_foo' for the purpose of type lookups, but wrote 'foo[]'
to postgres.bki.  During bootstrap, bootscanner.l had to have a special
case rule to tokenize this, and then MapArrayTypeName() would turn 'foo[]'
into '_foo' one more time.

This seems unnecessarily complicated, especially since nobody cares that
much about the readability of postgres.bki.  Instead, make Catalog.pm
convert the C declaration into '_foo' to start with, and preserve that
representation of the type name throughout bootstrap data processing.
Then rip out the special-case code in bootscanner.l and bootstrap.c.

This changes postgres.bki to the extent that array fields are now
declared like
  proconfig = _text ,
rather than
  proconfig = text[] ,

No documentation update, since the SGML docs didn't mention any of this
in the first place, and it's all pretty transparent to writers of
catalog header files anyway.

John Naylor

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGUNao=-Q2-vAN3PYcdF5tnL5JAHwGwzZGuYHtq+Mk_9ng@mail.gmail.com
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2018-04-17 18:29:11 -04:00
parent e90d4ddc63
commit 9ffcccdb95
5 changed files with 8 additions and 46 deletions

View File

@ -65,10 +65,8 @@ static int yyline = 1; /* line number for error reporting */
%option prefix="boot_yy"
D [0-9]
id [-A-Za-z0-9_]+
sid \"([^\"])*\"
arrayid [A-Za-z0-9_]+\[{D}*\]
%%
@ -111,10 +109,6 @@ insert { return INSERT_TUPLE; }
"NOT" { return XNOT; }
"NULL" { return XNULL; }
{arrayid} {
yylval.str = MapArrayTypeName(yytext);
return ID;
}
{id} {
yylval.str = scanstr(yytext);
return ID;

View File

@ -1036,36 +1036,6 @@ AllocateAttribute(void)
MemoryContextAllocZero(TopMemoryContext, ATTRIBUTE_FIXED_PART_SIZE);
}
/*
* MapArrayTypeName
*
* Given a type name, produce the corresponding array type name by prepending
* '_' and truncating as needed to fit in NAMEDATALEN-1 bytes. This is only
* used in bootstrap mode, so we can get away with assuming that the input is
* ASCII and we don't need multibyte-aware truncation.
*
* The given string normally ends with '[]' or '[digits]'; we discard that.
*
* The result is a palloc'd string.
*/
char *
MapArrayTypeName(const char *s)
{
int i,
j;
char newStr[NAMEDATALEN];
newStr[0] = '_';
j = 1;
for (i = 0; i < NAMEDATALEN - 2 && s[i] != '['; i++, j++)
newStr[j] = s[i];
newStr[j] = '\0';
return pstrdup(newStr);
}
/*
* index_register() -- record an index that has been set up for building
* later.

View File

@ -161,10 +161,14 @@ sub ParseHeader
{
$atttype = $RENAME_ATTTYPE{$atttype};
}
if ($attname =~ /(.*)\[.*\]/) # array attribute
# If the C name ends with '[]' or '[digits]', we have
# an array type, so we discard that from the name and
# prepend '_' to the type.
if ($attname =~ /(\w+)\[\d*\]/)
{
$attname = $1;
$atttype .= '[]';
$atttype = '_' . $atttype;
}
$column{type} = $atttype;

View File

@ -351,7 +351,7 @@ EOM
# Replace OID synonyms with OIDs per the appropriate lookup rule.
#
# If the column type is oidvector or oid[], we have to replace
# If the column type is oidvector or _oid, we have to replace
# each element of the array as per the lookup rule.
if ($column->{lookup})
{
@ -369,7 +369,7 @@ EOM
\%bki_values, @lookupnames);
$bki_values{$attname} = join(' ', @lookupoids);
}
elsif ($atttype eq 'oid[]')
elsif ($atttype eq '_oid')
{
if ($bki_values{$attname} ne '_null_')
{
@ -598,10 +598,6 @@ sub morph_row_for_pgattr
$row->{attname} = $attname;
# Adjust type name for arrays: foo[] becomes _foo, so we can look it up in
# pg_type
$atttype = '_' . $1 if $atttype =~ /(.+)\[\]$/;
# Copy the type data from pg_type, and add some type-dependent items
my $type = $types{$atttype};

View File

@ -44,8 +44,6 @@ extern void InsertOneTuple(Oid objectid);
extern void InsertOneValue(char *value, int i);
extern void InsertOneNull(int i);
extern char *MapArrayTypeName(const char *s);
extern void index_register(Oid heap, Oid ind, IndexInfo *indexInfo);
extern void build_indices(void);