Commit Graph

594 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bruce Momjian a7f49252d2 enable_constraint_exclusion => constraint_exclusion
Also improve wording.
2005-08-22 17:35:03 +00:00
Tom Lane 5d27bf20b4 Make use of new list primitives list_append_unique and list_concat_unique
where applicable.
2005-07-28 22:27:02 +00:00
Tom Lane a4ca842319 Fix a bunch of bad interactions between partial indexes and the new
planning logic for bitmap indexscans.  Partial indexes create corner
cases in which a scan might be done with no explicit index qual conditions,
and the code wasn't handling those cases nicely.  Also be a little
tenser about eliminating redundant clauses in the generated plan.
Per report from Dmitry Karasik.
2005-07-28 20:26:22 +00:00
Tom Lane d007a95055 Simple constraint exclusion. For now, only child tables of inheritance
scans are candidates for exclusion; this should be fixed eventually.
Simon Riggs, with some help from Tom Lane.
2005-07-23 21:05:48 +00:00
Tom Lane cc9bcbc8a4 Improve outer-join-deduction logic to be able to propagate equalities
through multiple join clauses.
2005-07-03 18:26:32 +00:00
Tom Lane cc5e80b8d1 Teach planner about some cases where a restriction clause can be
propagated inside an outer join.  In particular, given
LEFT JOIN ON (A = B) WHERE A = constant, we cannot conclude that
B = constant at the top level (B might be null instead), but we
can nonetheless put a restriction B = constant into the quals for
B's relation, since no inner-side rows not meeting that condition
can contribute to the final result.  Similarly, given
FULL JOIN USING (J) WHERE J = constant, we can't directly conclude
that either input J variable = constant, but it's OK to push such
quals into each input rel.  Per recent gripe from Kim Bisgaard.
Along the way, remove 'valid_everywhere' flag from RestrictInfo,
as on closer analysis it was not being used for anything, and was
defined backwards anyway.
2005-07-02 23:00:42 +00:00
Tom Lane bd6bf50b03 Teach planner to optionally ignore index columns that have an equality
constraint while determining whether the index sort order matches the
query's ORDER BY.  This for example allows an index on (x,y) to match
	... WHERE x = 42 ORDER BY y;
It only works for btree indexes, but since those are the only ones we
currently have that are ordered at all, that's good enough for now.
Per popular demand.
2005-06-14 04:04:30 +00:00
Tom Lane c186c93148 Change the planner to allow indexscan qualification clauses to use
nonconsecutive columns of a multicolumn index, as per discussion around
mid-May (pghackers thread "Best way to scan on-disk bitmaps").  This
turns out to require only minimal changes in btree, and so far as I can
see none at all in GiST.  btcostestimate did need some work, but its
original assumption that index selectivity == heap selectivity was
quite bogus even before this.
2005-06-13 23:14:49 +00:00
Tom Lane 2f1210629c Separate predicate-testing code out of indxpath.c, making it a module
in its own right.  As proposed by Simon Riggs, but with some editorializing
of my own.
2005-06-10 22:25:37 +00:00
Tom Lane a87ee007ed Quick hack to allow the outer query's tuple_fraction to be passed down
to a subquery if the outer query is simple enough that the LIMIT can
be reflected directly to the subquery.  This didn't use to be very
interesting, because a subquery that couldn't have been flattened into
the upper query was usually not going to be very responsive to
tuple_fraction anyway.  But with new code that allows UNION ALL subqueries
to pay attention to tuple_fraction, this is useful to do.  In particular
this lets the optimization occur when the UNION ALL is directly inside
a view.
2005-06-10 03:32:25 +00:00
Tom Lane a31ad27fc5 Simplify the planner's join clause management by storing join clauses
of a relation in a flat 'joininfo' list.  The former arrangement grouped
the join clauses according to the set of unjoined relids used in each;
however, profiling on test cases involving lots of joins proves that
that data structure is a net loss.  It takes more time to group the
join clauses together than is saved by avoiding duplicate tests later.
It doesn't help any that there are usually not more than one or two
clauses per group ...
2005-06-09 04:19:00 +00:00
Tom Lane 9a586fe0c5 Nab some low-hanging fruit: replace the planner's base_rel_list and
other_rel_list with a single array indexed by rangetable index.
This reduces find_base_rel from O(N) to O(1) without any real penalty.
While find_base_rel isn't one of the major bottlenecks in any profile
I've seen so far, it was starting to creep up on the radar screen
for complex queries --- so might as well fix it.
2005-06-06 04:13:36 +00:00
Tom Lane 9ab4d98168 Remove planner's private fields from Query struct, and put them into
a new PlannerInfo struct, which is passed around instead of the bare
Query in all the planning code.  This commit is essentially just a
code-beautification exercise, but it does open the door to making
larger changes to the planner data structures without having to muck
with the widely-known Query struct.
2005-06-05 22:32:58 +00:00
Tom Lane e18e8f8735 Change expandRTE() and ResolveNew() back to taking just the single
RTE of interest, rather than the whole rangetable list.  This makes
the API more understandable and avoids duplicate RTE lookups.  This
patch reverts no-longer-needed portions of my patch of 2004-08-19.
2005-06-04 19:19:42 +00:00
Tom Lane 872c1497fc Previous fix for "x FULL JOIN y ON true" failed to handle the case
where there was also a WHERE-clause restriction that applied to the
join.  The check on restrictlist == NIL is really unnecessary anyway,
because select_mergejoin_clauses already checked for and complained
about any unmergejoinable join clauses.  So just take it out.
2005-05-24 18:02:31 +00:00
Tom Lane 278bd0cc22 For some reason access/tupmacs.h has been #including utils/memutils.h,
which is neither needed by nor related to that header.  Remove the bogus
inclusion and instead include the header in those C files that actually
need it.  Also fix unnecessary inclusions and bad inclusion order in
tsearch2 files.
2005-05-06 17:24:55 +00:00
Tom Lane bedb78d386 Implement sharable row-level locks, and use them for foreign key references
to eliminate unnecessary deadlocks.  This commit adds SELECT ... FOR SHARE
paralleling SELECT ... FOR UPDATE.  The implementation uses a new SLRU
data structure (managed much like pg_subtrans) to represent multiple-
transaction-ID sets.  When more than one transaction is holding a shared
lock on a particular row, we create a MultiXactId representing that set
of transactions and store its ID in the row's XMAX.  This scheme allows
an effectively unlimited number of row locks, just as we did before,
while not costing any extra overhead except when a shared lock actually
has to be shared.   Still TODO: use the regular lock manager to control
the grant order when multiple backends are waiting for a row lock.

Alvaro Herrera and Tom Lane.
2005-04-28 21:47:18 +00:00
Tom Lane 1fcd4b7a07 While determining the filter clauses for an index scan (either plain
or bitmap), use pred_test to be a little smarter about cases where a
filter clause is logically unnecessary.  This may be overkill for the
plain indexscan case, but it's definitely useful for OR'd bitmap scans.
2005-04-25 03:58:30 +00:00
Tom Lane 79a1b00226 Replace slightly klugy create_bitmap_restriction() function with a
more efficient routine in restrictinfo.c (which can make use of
make_restrictinfo_internal).
2005-04-25 02:14:48 +00:00
Tom Lane 5b05185262 Remove support for OR'd indexscans internal to a single IndexScan plan
node, as this behavior is now better done as a bitmap OR indexscan.
This allows considerable simplification in nodeIndexscan.c itself as
well as several planner modules concerned with indexscan plan generation.
Also we can improve the sharing of code between regular and bitmap
indexscans, since they are now working with nigh-identical Plan nodes.
2005-04-25 01:30:14 +00:00
Tom Lane e092828241 Teach choose_bitmap_and() to actually be choosy --- that is, try to
make some estimate of which available indexes to AND together, rather
than blindly taking 'em all.  This could probably stand further
improvement, but it seems to do OK in simple tests.
2005-04-23 01:57:34 +00:00
Tom Lane bc843d3960 First cut at planner support for bitmap index scans. Lots to do yet,
but the code is basically working.  Along the way, rewrite the entire
approach to processing OR index conditions, and make it work in join
cases for the first time ever.  orindxpath.c is now basically obsolete,
but I left it in for the time being to allow easy comparison testing
against the old implementation.
2005-04-22 21:58:32 +00:00
Tom Lane 14c7fba3f7 Rethink original decision to use AND/OR Expr nodes to represent bitmap
logic operations during planning.  Seems cleaner to create two new Path
node types, instead --- this avoids duplication of cost-estimation code.
Also, create an enable_bitmapscan GUC parameter to control use of bitmap
plans.
2005-04-21 19:18:13 +00:00
Tom Lane e6f7edb9d5 Install some slightly realistic cost estimation for bitmap index scans. 2005-04-21 02:28:02 +00:00
Tom Lane eb4f58ad40 Don't try to run clauseless index scans on index types that don't support
it.  Per report from Marinos Yannikos.
2005-04-20 21:48:04 +00:00
Tom Lane 4a8c5d0375 Create executor and planner-backend support for decoupled heap and index
scans, using in-memory tuple ID bitmaps as the intermediary.  The planner
frontend (path creation and cost estimation) is not there yet, so none
of this code can be executed.  I have tested it using some hacked planner
code that is far too ugly to see the light of day, however.  Committing
now so that the bulk of the infrastructure changes go in before the tree
drifts under me.
2005-04-19 22:35:18 +00:00
Tom Lane addc42c339 Create the planner mechanism for optimizing simple MIN and MAX queries
into indexscans on matching indexes.  For the moment, it only handles
int4 and text datatypes; next step is to add a column to pg_aggregate
so that all MIN/MAX aggregates can be handled.  Per my recent proposal.
2005-04-11 23:06:57 +00:00
Tom Lane ad161bcc8a Merge Resdom nodes into TargetEntry nodes to simplify code and save a
few palloc's.  I also chose to eliminate the restype and restypmod fields
entirely, since they are redundant with information stored in the node's
contained expression; re-examining the expression at need seems simpler
and more reliable than trying to keep restype/restypmod up to date.

initdb forced due to change in contents of stored rules.
2005-04-06 16:34:07 +00:00
Tom Lane 280de290d7 In cost_mergejoin, the early-exit effect should not apply to the
outer side of an outer join.  Per andrew@supernews.
2005-04-04 01:43:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 5db2e83852 Rethink the order of expression preprocessing: eval_const_expressions
really ought to run before canonicalize_qual, because it can now produce
forms that canonicalize_qual knows how to improve (eg, NOT clauses).
Also, because eval_const_expressions already knows about flattening
nested ANDs and ORs into N-argument form, the initial flatten_andors
pass in canonicalize_qual is now completely redundant and can be
removed.  This doesn't save a whole lot of code, but the time and
palloc traffic eliminated is a useful gain on large expression trees.
2005-03-28 00:58:26 +00:00
Tom Lane bf3dbb5881 First steps towards index scans with heap access decoupled from index
access: define new index access method functions 'amgetmulti' that can
fetch multiple TIDs per call.  (The functions exist but are totally
untested as yet.)  Since I was modifying pg_am anyway, remove the
no-longer-needed 'rel' parameter from amcostestimate functions, and
also remove the vestigial amowner column that was creating useless
work for Alvaro's shared-object-dependencies project.
Initdb forced due to changes in pg_am.
2005-03-27 23:53:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 926e8a00d3 Add a back-link from IndexOptInfo structs to their parent RelOptInfo
structs.  There are many places in the planner where we were passing
both a rel and an index to subroutines, and now need only pass the
index struct.  Notationally simpler, and perhaps a tad faster.
2005-03-27 06:29:49 +00:00
Tom Lane febc9a613c Expand the 'special index operator' machinery to handle special cases
for boolean indexes.  Previously we would only use such an index with
WHERE clauses like 'indexkey = true' or 'indexkey = false'.  The new
code transforms the cases 'indexkey', 'NOT indexkey', 'indexkey IS TRUE',
and 'indexkey IS FALSE' into one of these.  While this is only marginally
useful in itself, I intend soon to change constant-expression simplification
so that 'foo = true' and 'foo = false' are reduced to just 'foo' and
'NOT foo' ... which would lose the ability to use boolean indexes for
such queries at all, if the indexscan machinery couldn't make the
reverse transformation.
2005-03-26 23:29:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 595ed2a855 Make the behavior of HAVING without GROUP BY conform to the SQL spec.
Formerly, if such a clause contained no aggregate functions we mistakenly
treated it as equivalent to WHERE.  Per spec it must cause the query to
be treated as a grouped query of a single group, the same as appearance
of aggregate functions would do.  Also, the HAVING filter must execute
after aggregate function computation even if it itself contains no
aggregate functions.
2005-03-10 23:21:26 +00:00
Tom Lane 849074f9ae Revise hash join code so that we can increase the number of batches
on-the-fly, and thereby avoid blowing out memory when the planner has
underestimated the hash table size.  Hash join will now obey the
work_mem limit with some faithfulness.  Per my recent proposal
(hash aggregate part isn't done yet though).
2005-03-06 22:15:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 3104a92866 Another go at making pred_test() handle all reasonable combinations
of AND and OR clauses.  The key point here is that an OR on the
predicate side has to be treated gingerly: we may be able to prove
that the OR is implied even when no one of its components is implied.
For example (x OR y) implies (x OR y OR z) even though no one of x,
y, or z can be individually proven.  This code handles both the
example shown recently by Sergey Koshcheyev and the one shown last
October by Dawid Kuroczko.
2005-03-02 04:10:53 +00:00
Tom Lane 95871703e3 Adjust OR indexscan logic to not generate redundant condition-free OR
indexscans involving partial indexes.  These would always be dominated
by a simple indexscan on such an index, so there's no point in considering
them.  Fixes overoptimism in a patch I applied last October.
2005-03-01 01:40:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 4e89bae704 Revert the logic for expanding AND/OR conditions in pred_test() to what
it was in 7.4, and add some comments explaining why it has to be this way.
I broke it for OR'd index predicates in a fit of code cleanup last summer.
Per example from Sergey Koshcheyev.
2005-03-01 00:24:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 94e4778a31 The result of a FULL or RIGHT join can't be assumed to be sorted by the
left input's sorting, because null rows may be inserted at various points.
Per report from Ferenc Lutischá¸n.
2005-01-23 02:21:36 +00:00
PostgreSQL Daemon 2ff501590b Tag appropriate files for rc3
Also performed an initial run through of upgrading our Copyright date to
extend to 2005 ... first run here was very simple ... change everything
where: grep 1996-2004 && the word 'Copyright' ... scanned through the
generated list with 'less' first, and after, to make sure that I only
picked up the right entries ...
2004-12-31 22:04:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 4e91824b94 Make some adjustments to reduce platform dependencies in plan selection.
In particular, there was a mathematical tie between the two possible
nestloop-with-materialized-inner-scan plans for a join (ie, we computed
the same cost with either input on the inside), resulting in a roundoff
error driven choice, if the relations were both small enough to fit in
sort_mem.  Add a small cost factor to ensure we prefer materializing the
smaller input.  This changes several regression test plans, but with any
luck we will now have more stability across platforms.
2004-12-02 01:34:18 +00:00
Tom Lane 547bb4a7f2 Use a hopefully-more-reliable method of detecting default selectivity
estimates when combining the estimates for a range query.  As pointed out
by Miquel van Smoorenburg, the existing check for an impossible combined
result would quite possibly fail to detect one default and one non-default
input.  It seems better to use the default range query estimate in such
cases.  To do so, add a check for an estimate of exactly DEFAULT_INEQ_SEL.
This is a bit ugly because it introduces additional coupling between
clauselist_selectivity and scalarltsel/scalargtsel, but it's not like
there wasn't plenty already...
2004-11-09 00:34:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 3d6e538edf pred_test() logic was being too narrow-minded about where it might find
RestrictInfo nodes in the query expression.  Per example from James Robinson.
2004-11-05 20:45:10 +00:00
Tom Lane 529db99c6e Avoid overflow in cost_sort when work_mem exceeds 1Gb. 2004-10-23 00:05:27 +00:00
Tom Lane 26112850ec Fix OR-index-scan planner to recognize that a partial index is usable
for scanning one term of an OR clause if the index's predicate is implied
by that same OR clause term (possibly in conjunction with top-level WHERE
clauses).  Per recent example from Dawid Kuroczko,
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-performance/2004-10/msg00095.php
Also, fix a very long-standing bug in index predicate testing, namely the
bizarre ordering of decomposition of predicate and restriction clauses.
AFAICS the correct way is to break down the predicate all the way, and
then for each component term see if you can prove it from the entire
restriction set.  The original coding had a purely-implementation-artifact
distinction between ANDing at the top level and ANDing below that, and
proceeded to get the decomposition order wrong everywhere below the top
level, with the result that even slightly complicated AND/OR predicates
could not be proven.  For instance, given
create index foop on foo(f2) where f1=42 or f1=1
    or (f1 = 11 and f2 = 55);
the old code would fail to match this index to the query
select * from foo where f1 = 11 and f2 = 55;
when it obviously ought to match.
2004-10-11 22:57:00 +00:00
Tom Lane 47aa95e951 Clean up handling of inherited-table update queries, per bug report
from Sebastian Böck.  The fix involves being more consistent about
when rangetable entries are copied or modified.  Someday we really
need to fix this stuff to not scribble on its input data structures
in the first place...
2004-10-02 22:39:49 +00:00
Bruce Momjian b6b71b85bc Pgindent run for 8.0. 2004-08-29 05:07:03 +00:00
Bruce Momjian da9a8649d8 Update copyright to 2004. 2004-08-29 04:13:13 +00:00
Tom Lane bbd6eb5b95 Repair some issues with column aliases and RowExpr construction in the
presence of dropped columns.  Document the already-presumed fact that
eref aliases in relation RTEs are supposed to have entries for dropped
columns; cause the user alias structs to have such entries too, so that
there's always a one-to-one mapping to the underlying physical attnums.
Adjust expandRTE() and related code to handle the case where a column
that is part of a JOIN has been dropped.  Generalize expandRTE()'s API
so that it can be used in a couple of places that formerly rolled their
own implementation of the same logic.  Fix ruleutils.c to suppress
display of aliases for columns that were dropped since the rule was made.
2004-08-19 20:57:41 +00:00
Tom Lane fcbc438727 Label CVS tip as 8.0devel instead of 7.5devel. Adjust various comments
and documentation to reference 8.0 instead of 7.5.
2004-08-04 21:34:35 +00:00
Tom Lane 7643bed58e When using extended-query protocol, postpone planning of unnamed statements
until Bind is received, so that actual parameter values are visible to the
planner.  Make use of the parameter values for estimation purposes (but
don't fold them into the actual plan).  This buys back most of the
potential loss of plan quality that ensues from using out-of-line
parameters instead of putting literal values right into the query text.

This patch creates a notion of constant-folding expressions 'for
estimation purposes only', in which case we can be more aggressive than
the normal eval_const_expressions() logic can be.  Right now the only
difference in behavior is inserting bound values for Params, but it will
be interesting to look at other possibilities.  One that we've seen
come up repeatedly is reducing now() and related functions to current
values, so that queries like ... WHERE timestampcol > now() - '1 day'
have some chance of being planned effectively.

Oliver Jowett, with some kibitzing from Tom Lane.
2004-06-11 01:09:22 +00:00
Tom Lane 3485cc3a7c Adjust cost_nonsequential_access() to have more reasonable behavior
when random_page_cost has a small value.  Per Manfred Koizar, though
I didn't use his equation exactly.
2004-06-10 21:02:00 +00:00
Tom Lane ae93e5fd6e Make the world very nearly safe for composite-type columns in tables.
1. Solve the problem of not having TOAST references hiding inside composite
values by establishing the rule that toasting only goes one level deep:
a tuple can contain toasted fields, but a composite-type datum that is
to be inserted into a tuple cannot.  Enforcing this in heap_formtuple
is relatively cheap and it avoids a large increase in the cost of running
the tuptoaster during final storage of a row.
2. Fix some interesting problems in expansion of inherited queries that
reference whole-row variables.  We never really did this correctly before,
but it's now relatively painless to solve by expanding the parent's
whole-row Var into a RowExpr() selecting the proper columns from the
child.
If you dike out the preventive check in CheckAttributeType(),
composite-type columns now seem to actually work.  However, we surely
cannot ship them like this --- without I/O for composite types, you
can't get pg_dump to dump tables containing them.  So a little more
work still to do.
2004-06-05 01:55:05 +00:00
Tom Lane e590ceecf1 Just about there on de-FastList-ification. 2004-06-01 04:47:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 80c6847cc5 Desultory de-FastList-ification. RelOptInfo.reltargetlist is back to
being a plain List.
2004-06-01 03:03:05 +00:00
Neil Conway 72b6ad6313 Use the new List API function names throughout the backend, and disable the
list compatibility API by default. While doing this, I decided to keep
the llast() macro around and introduce llast_int() and llast_oid() variants.
2004-05-30 23:40:41 +00:00
Neil Conway d0b4399d81 Reimplement the linked list data structure used throughout the backend.
In the past, we used a 'Lispy' linked list implementation: a "list" was
merely a pointer to the head node of the list. The problem with that
design is that it makes lappend() and length() linear time. This patch
fixes that problem (and others) by maintaining a count of the list
length and a pointer to the tail node along with each head node pointer.
A "list" is now a pointer to a structure containing some meta-data
about the list; the head and tail pointers in that structure refer
to ListCell structures that maintain the actual linked list of nodes.

The function names of the list API have also been changed to, I hope,
be more logically consistent. By default, the old function names are
still available; they will be disabled-by-default once the rest of
the tree has been updated to use the new API names.
2004-05-26 04:41:50 +00:00
Tom Lane 2f63232d30 Promote row expressions to full-fledged citizens of the expression syntax,
rather than allowing them only in a few special cases as before.  In
particular you can now pass a ROW() construct to a function that accepts
a rowtype parameter.  Internal generation of RowExprs fixes a number of
corner cases that used to not work very well, such as referencing the
whole-row result of a JOIN or subquery.  This represents a further step in
the work I started a month or so back to make rowtype values into
first-class citizens.
2004-05-10 22:44:49 +00:00
Neil Conway 1812d3b233 Remove the last traces of Joe Hellerstein's "xfunc" optimization. Patch
from Alvaro Herrera. Also, removed lispsort.c, since it is no longer
used.
2004-04-25 18:23:57 +00:00
Tom Lane 5d1af6aee3 build_subquery_pathkeys() was examining wrong copy of subquery target list,
causing it to fail to recognize the output ordering of subqueries that
contain set operations (UNION/INTERSECT/EXPECT).  Per example from Karel Zak.
2004-04-07 17:42:28 +00:00
Tom Lane e5170860ee Support FULL JOIN with no join clauses, such as X FULL JOIN Y ON TRUE.
That particular corner case is not exactly compelling, but given 7.4's
ability to discard redundant join clauses, it is possible for the situation
to arise from queries that are not so obviously silly.  Per bug report
of 6-Apr-04.
2004-04-06 18:46:03 +00:00
Tom Lane 7820ee24c9 Now that we are allowing index opclasses to contain operators that are
only stable and not immutable, pred_test_simple_clause has to guard
against making invalid deductions.  Add a test for immutability of
the selected test_op.
2004-03-27 00:24:28 +00:00
Tom Lane 7998e8ca6a Test for whether a previous IN join restricts the current join was too
strict, per discussion with Dennis Haney.
Also, rearrange the preceding tests to avoid redundancy.
2004-03-08 17:20:17 +00:00
Tom Lane bc19d6641a When testing usability of a partial index, recognize that an index
predicate of the form 'foo IS NOT NULL' is implied by a WHERE clause
that uses 'foo' in any strict operator or function.  Per suggestion
and preliminary implementation by John Siracusa; some further hacking
by moi.
2004-03-07 05:43:53 +00:00
Tom Lane a536ed53bc Make use of statistics on index expressions. There are still some
corner cases that could stand improvement, but it does all the basic
stuff.  A byproduct is that the selectivity routines are no longer
constrained to working on simple Vars; we might in future be able to
improve the behavior for subexpressions that don't match indexes.
2004-02-17 00:52:53 +00:00
Tom Lane 391c3811a2 Rename SortMem and VacuumMem to work_mem and maintenance_work_mem.
Make btree index creation and initial validation of foreign-key constraints
use maintenance_work_mem rather than work_mem as their memory limit.
Add some code to guc.c to allow these variables to be referenced by their
old names in SHOW and SET commands, for backwards compatibility.
2004-02-03 17:34:04 +00:00
Tom Lane 5d66583678 Repair planner failure for cases involving Cartesian products inside
IN (sub-SELECT) constructs.  We must force a clauseless join of the
sub-select member relations, but it wasn't happening because the code
thought it would be able to use the join clause arising from the IN.
2004-01-24 00:37:28 +00:00
Tom Lane 0ee53b5c33 Don't return an overoptimistic result from join_in_selectivity when
we have detected that an IN subquery must return unique results.
2004-01-19 03:52:28 +00:00
Tom Lane cfd7fb7ed4 Fix permission-checking bug reported by Tim Burgess 10-Feb-03 (this time
for sure...).  Rather than relying on the query context of a rangetable
entry to identify what permissions it wants checked, store a full AclMode
mask in each RTE, and check exactly those bits.  This allows an RTE
specifying, say, INSERT privilege on a view to be copied into a derived
UPDATE query without changing meaning.  Per recent discussion thread.
initdb forced due to change of stored rule representation.
2004-01-14 23:01:55 +00:00
Tom Lane cad5f4a8c4 Make some improvements in the intelligence of the partial-index
predicate tester.  It can now deal with commuted clauses (for
instance, 4 < x implies x > 3), subclauses more complicated than
a simple Var (for example, upper(x) = 't' implies upper(x) > 'a'),
and <> operators (for example, x < 3 implies x <> 4).  Still
only understands operators associated with btree opclasses, though.
Inspired by example from Martin Hampl.
2004-01-07 22:02:48 +00:00
Tom Lane b0c4a50bbb Instead of rechecking lossy index operators by putting them into the
regular qpqual ('filter condition'), add special-purpose code to
nodeIndexscan.c to recheck them.  This ends being almost no net addition
of code, because the removal of planner code balances out the extra
executor code, but it is significantly more efficient when a lossy
operator is involved in an OR indexscan.  The old implementation had
to recheck the entire indexqual in such cases.
2004-01-06 04:31:01 +00:00
Tom Lane fa559a86ee Adjust indexscan planning logic to keep RestrictInfo nodes associated
with index qual clauses in the Path representation.  This saves a little
work during createplan and (probably more importantly) allows reuse of
cached selectivity estimates during indexscan planning.  Also fix latent
bug: wrong plan would have been generated for a 'special operator' used
in a nestloop-inner-indexscan join qual, because the special operator
would not have gotten into the list of quals to recheck.  This bug is
only latent because at present the special-operator code could never
trigger on a join qual, but sooner or later someone will want to do it.
2004-01-05 23:39:54 +00:00
Tom Lane cce442da6d Dept. of second thoughts: clause_selectivity shouldn't try to cache its
result for jointypes associated with IN processing.
2004-01-05 16:44:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 9091e8d1b2 Add the ability to extract OR indexscan conditions from OR-of-AND
join conditions in which each OR subclause includes a constraint on
the same relation.  This implements the other useful side-effect of
conversion to CNF format, without its unpleasant side-effects.  As
per pghackers discussion of a few weeks ago.
2004-01-05 05:07:36 +00:00
Tom Lane 82b4dd394f Merge restrictlist_selectivity into clauselist_selectivity by
teaching the latter to accept either RestrictInfo nodes or bare
clause expressions; and cache the selectivity result in the RestrictInfo
node when possible.  This extends the caching behavior of approx_selectivity
to many more contexts, and should reduce duplicate selectivity
calculations.
2004-01-04 03:51:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 6cb1c0238b Rewrite OR indexscan processing to be more flexible. We can now for the
first time generate an OR indexscan for a two-column index when the WHERE
condition is like 'col1 = foo AND (col2 = bar OR col2 = baz)' --- before,
the OR had to be on the first column of the index or we'd not notice the
possibility of using it.  Some progress towards extracting OR indexscans
from subclauses of an OR that references multiple relations, too, although
this code is #ifdef'd out because it needs more work.
2004-01-04 00:07:32 +00:00
Tom Lane be6c38b903 Adjust the definition of RestrictInfo's left_relids and right_relids
fields: now they are valid whenever the clause is a binary opclause,
not only when it is a potential join clause (there is a new boolean
field canjoin to signal the latter condition).  This lets us avoid
recomputing the relid sets over and over while examining indexes.
Still more work to do to make this as useful as it could be, because
there are places that could use the info but don't have access to the
RestrictInfo node.
2003-12-30 23:53:15 +00:00
Tom Lane b53ca9bbcb Improve comment. 2003-12-29 21:44:49 +00:00
Bruce Momjian ed96bfde18 Here is the definition of relation_byte_size() in optimizer/path/costsize.c:
----------------------------------------------------------------------
/*
 * relation_byte_size
 *        Estimate the storage space in bytes for a given number of tuples
 *        of a given width (size in bytes).
 */
static double
relation_byte_size(double tuples, int width)
{
        return tuples * (MAXALIGN(width) + MAXALIGN(sizeof(HeapTupleData)));
}

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Shouldn't this be HeapTupleHeaderData and not HeapTupleData ?

(Of course, from a costing perspective these shouldn't be very different but ...)

Sailesh Krishnamurthy
2003-12-18 03:46:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 109a4a603f Be a little smarter in group_clauses_by_indexkey_for_join: detect cases
where a joinclause is redundant with a restriction clause.  Original coding
believed this was impossible and didn't need to be checked for, but that
was a thinko ...
2003-12-18 00:22:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 99e922a01d Repair planner failure when there are multiple IN clauses, each with
a join in its subselect.  In this situation we *must* build a bushy
plan because there are no valid left-sided or right-sided join trees.
Accordingly, hoary sanity check needs an update.  Per report from
Alessandro Depase.
2003-12-17 17:07:48 +00:00
Tom Lane 7f8f7665fc Planner failed to be smart about binary-compatible expressions in pathkeys
and hash bucket-size estimation.  Issue has been there awhile but is more
critical in 7.4 because it affects varchar columns.  Per report from
Greg Stark.
2003-12-03 17:45:10 +00:00
PostgreSQL Daemon 969685ad44 $Header: -> $PostgreSQL Changes ... 2003-11-29 19:52:15 +00:00
Tom Lane fa5c8a055a Cross-data-type comparisons are now indexable by btrees, pursuant to my
pghackers proposal of 8-Nov.  All the existing cross-type comparison
operators (int2/int4/int8 and float4/float8) have appropriate support.
The original proposal of storing the right-hand-side datatype as part of
the primary key for pg_amop and pg_amproc got modified a bit in the event;
it is easier to store zero as the 'default' case and only store a nonzero
when the operator is actually cross-type.  Along the way, remove the
long-since-defunct bigbox_ops operator class.
2003-11-12 21:15:59 +00:00
Tom Lane a1dcd8f6dd Add a little more smarts to estimate_hash_bucketsize(): if there's no
statistics, but there is a unique index on the column, we can safely
assume it's well-distributed.
2003-10-05 22:44:25 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut feb4f44d29 Message editing: remove gratuitous variations in message wording, standardize
terms, add some clarifications, fix some untranslatable attempts at dynamic
message building.
2003-09-25 06:58:07 +00:00
Tom Lane 88381ade63 Code cleanup inspired by recent resname bug report (doesn't fix the bug
yet, though).  Avoid using nth() to fetch tlist entries; provide a
common routine get_tle_by_resno() to search a tlist for a particular
resno.  This replaces a couple uses of nth() and a dozen hand-coded
search loops.  Also, replace a few uses of nth(length-1, list) with
llast().
2003-08-11 20:46:47 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 46785776c4 Another pgindent run with updated typedefs. 2003-08-08 21:42:59 +00:00
Bruce Momjian f3c3deb7d0 Update copyrights to 2003. 2003-08-04 02:40:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 089003fb46 pgindent run. 2003-08-04 00:43:34 +00:00
Tom Lane 45708f5ebc Error message editing in backend/optimizer, backend/rewrite. 2003-07-25 00:01:09 +00:00
Tom Lane 3d09f6c560 Make cost estimates for SubqueryScan more realistic: charge cpu_tuple_cost
for each row processed, and don't forget the evaluation cost of any
restriction clauses attached to the node.  Per discussion with Greg Stark.
2003-07-14 22:35:54 +00:00
Tom Lane 835bb975d8 Restructure building of join relation targetlists so that a join plan
node emits only those vars that are actually needed above it in the
plan tree.  (There were comments in the code suggesting that this was
done at some point in the dim past, but for a long time we have just
made join nodes emit everything that either input emitted.)  Aside from
being marginally more efficient, this fixes the problem noted by Peter
Eisentraut where a join above an IN-implemented-as-join might fail,
because the subplan targetlist constructed in the latter case didn't
meet the expectation of including everything.
Along the way, fix some places that were O(N^2) in the targetlist
length.  This is not all the trouble spots for wide queries by any
means, but it's a step forward.
2003-06-29 23:05:05 +00:00
Tom Lane bee217924d Support expressions of the form 'scalar op ANY (array)' and
'scalar op ALL (array)', where the operator is applied between the
lefthand scalar and each element of the array.  The operator must
yield boolean; the result of the construct is the OR or AND of the
per-element results, respectively.

Original coding by Joe Conway, after an idea of Peter's.  Rewritten
by Tom to keep the implementation strictly separate from subqueries.
2003-06-29 00:33:44 +00:00
Tom Lane cb02610e50 Adjust nestloop-with-inner-indexscan plan generation so that we catch
some cases of redundant clauses that were formerly not caught.  We have
to special-case this because the clauses involved never get attached to
the same join restrictlist and so the existing logic does not notice
that they are redundant.
2003-06-15 22:51:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 8a6ac83dab Fix some planner performance problems with large WHERE clauses, by
introducing new 'FastList' list-construction subroutines to use in
hot spots.  This avoids the O(N^2) behavior of repeated lappend's
by keeping a tail pointer, while not changing behavior by reversing
list order as the lcons() method would do.
2003-05-28 22:32:50 +00:00
Tom Lane fc8d970cbc Replace functional-index facility with expressional indexes. Any column
of an index can now be a computed expression instead of a simple variable.
Restrictions on expressions are the same as for predicates (only immutable
functions, no sub-selects).  This fixes problems recently introduced with
inlining SQL functions, because the inlining transformation is applied to
both expression trees so the planner can still match them up.  Along the
way, improve efficiency of handling index predicates (both predicates and
index expressions are now cached by the relcache) and fix 7.3 oversight
that didn't record dependencies of predicate expressions.
2003-05-28 16:04:02 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 98b6f37e47 Make debug_ GUC varables output DEBUG1 rather than LOG, and mention in
docs that CLIENT/LOG_MIN_MESSAGES now controls debug_* output location.
Doc changes included.
2003-05-27 17:49:47 +00:00
Tom Lane f45df8c014 Cause CHAR(n) to TEXT or VARCHAR conversion to automatically strip trailing
blanks, in hopes of reducing the surprise factor for newbies.  Remove
redundant operators for VARCHAR (it depends wholly on TEXT operations now).
Clean up resolution of ambiguous operators/functions to avoid surprising
choices for domains: domains are treated as equivalent to their base types
and binary-coercibility is no longer considered a preference item when
choosing among multiple operators/functions.  IsBinaryCoercible now correctly
reflects the notion that you need *only* relabel the type to get from type
A to type B: that is, a domain is binary-coercible to its base type, but
not vice versa.  Various marginal cleanup, including merging the essentially
duplicate resolution code in parse_func.c and parse_oper.c.  Improve opr_sanity
regression test to understand about binary compatibility (using pg_cast),
and fix a couple of small errors in the catalogs revealed thereby.
Restructure "special operator" handling to fetch operators via index opclasses
rather than hardwiring assumptions about names (cleans up the pattern_ops
stuff a little).
2003-05-26 00:11:29 +00:00
Tom Lane 9e43184b9d Add missing #include. 2003-05-15 19:34:46 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 2c0556068f Indexing support for pattern matching operations via separate operator
class when lc_collate is not C.
2003-05-15 15:50:21 +00:00
Tom Lane 1c9ac7dfd0 Change pg_amop's index on (amopclaid,amopopr) to index (amopopr,amopclaid).
This makes no difference for existing uses, but allows SelectSortFunction()
and pred_test_simple_clause() to use indexscans instead of seqscans to
locate entries for a particular operator in pg_amop.  Better yet, they can
use the SearchSysCacheList() API to cache the search results.
2003-05-13 04:38:58 +00:00
Tom Lane 1940434f1e Repair sloppiness about where cached mergeclause pathkeys are allocated.
Without this fix, CVS tip dumps core when running the regression tests
with geqo_threshold = 2.  I would think that a similar patch might be
needed in 7.3, but cannot duplicate the failure in that branch --- so
for now, leave well enough alone.
2003-05-02 19:48:53 +00:00
Tom Lane 5f677af2da Adjust subquery qual pushdown rules so that we can push down a qual
into a UNION that has some type coercions applied to the component
queries, so long as the qual itself does not reference any columns that
have such coercions.  Per example from Jonathan Bartlett 24-Apr-03.
2003-04-24 23:43:09 +00:00
Tom Lane efeffae245 Tweak selectivity and related routines to cope with domains. Per report
from Andreas Pflug.
2003-03-23 01:49:02 +00:00
Tom Lane 9323cb0aab Department of second thoughts: probably shouldn't use nth() to get the
appropriate targetlist entry out of the subquery.  Use an explicit search
like we do everywhere else.
2003-03-22 17:11:25 +00:00
Tom Lane 05f916e6ad Adjust subquery qual pushdown rules to be more forgiving: if a qual
refers to a non-DISTINCT output column of a DISTINCT ON subquery, or
if it refers to a function-returning-set, we cannot push it down.
But the old implementation refused to push down *any* quals if the
subquery had any such 'dangerous' outputs.  Now we just look at the
output columns actually referenced by each qual expression.  More code
than before, but probably no slower since we don't make unnecessary checks.
2003-03-22 01:49:38 +00:00
Tom Lane aa83bc04e0 Restructure parsetree representation of DECLARE CURSOR: now it's a
utility statement (DeclareCursorStmt) with a SELECT query dangling from
it, rather than a SELECT query with a few unusual fields in it.  Add
code to determine whether a planned query can safely be run backwards.
If DECLARE CURSOR specifies SCROLL, ensure that the plan can be run
backwards by adding a Materialize plan node if it can't.  Without SCROLL,
you get an error if you try to fetch backwards from a cursor that can't
handle it.  (There is still some discussion about what the exact
behavior should be, but this is necessary infrastructure in any case.)
Along the way, make EXPLAIN DECLARE CURSOR work.
2003-03-10 03:53:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 21591967bc Turns out new IN implementation has got some problems in an UPDATE or
DELETE with inherited target table.  Fix it; add a regression test.
Also, correct ancient misspelling of 'inherited'.
2003-03-05 20:01:04 +00:00
Tom Lane 51972a9d5d COALESCE() and NULLIF() are now first-class expressions, not macros
that turn into CASE expressions.  They evaluate their arguments at most
once.  Patch by Kris Jurka, review and (very light) editorializing by me.
2003-02-16 02:30:39 +00:00
Tom Lane 0d7abfe7cf Marginal tweaks to make sure that roundoff error won't cause us to make
a bad choice between sorted and hashed aggregation.
2003-02-15 21:39:58 +00:00
Tom Lane 056467ec6b Teach planner how to propagate pathkeys from sub-SELECTs in FROM up to
the outer query.  (The implementation is a bit klugy, but it would take
nontrivial restructuring to make it nicer, which this is probably not
worth.)  This avoids unnecessary sort steps in examples like
SELECT foo,count(*) FROM (SELECT ... ORDER BY foo,bar) sub GROUP BY foo
which means there is now a reasonable technique for controlling the
order of inputs to custom aggregates, even in the grouping case.
2003-02-15 20:12:41 +00:00
Tom Lane c15a4c2aef Replace planner's representation of relation sets, per pghackers discussion.
Instead of Lists of integers, we now store variable-length bitmap sets.
This should be faster as well as less error-prone.
2003-02-08 20:20:55 +00:00
Tom Lane 3752e85bad Determine the set of constraints applied to a domain at executor
startup, not in the parser; this allows ALTER DOMAIN to work correctly
with domain constraint operations stored in rules.  Rod Taylor;
code review by Tom Lane.
2003-02-03 21:15:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 2e46b762eb Extend join-selectivity API (oprjoin interface) so that join type is
passed to join selectivity estimators.  Make use of this in eqjoinsel
to derive non-bogus selectivity for IN clauses.  Further tweaking of
cost estimation for IN.
initdb forced because of pg_proc.h changes.
2003-01-28 22:13:41 +00:00
Tom Lane 70fba70430 Upgrade cost estimation for joins, per discussion with Bradley Baetz.
Try to model the effect of rescanning input tuples in mergejoins;
account for JOIN_IN short-circuiting where appropriate.  Also, recognize
that mergejoin and hashjoin clauses may now be more than single operator
calls, so we have to charge appropriate execution costs.
2003-01-27 20:51:54 +00:00
Tom Lane 9f5f212475 Allow the planner to collapse explicit inner JOINs together, rather than
necessarily following the JOIN syntax to develop the query plan.  The old
behavior is still available by setting GUC variable JOIN_COLLAPSE_LIMIT
to 1.  Also create a GUC variable FROM_COLLAPSE_LIMIT to control the
similar decision about when to collapse sub-SELECT lists into their parent
lists.  (This behavior existed already, but the limit was always
GEQO_THRESHOLD/2; now it's separately adjustable.)
2003-01-25 23:10:30 +00:00
Tom Lane f5e83662d0 Modify planner's implied-equality-deduction code so that when a set
of known-equal expressions includes any constant expressions (including
Params from outer queries), we actively suppress any 'var = var'
clauses that are or could be deduced from the set, generating only the
deducible 'var = const' clauses instead.  The idea here is to push down
the restrictions implied by the equality set to base relations whenever
possible.  Once we have applied the 'var = const' clauses, the 'var = var'
clauses are redundant, and should be suppressed both to save work at
execution and to avoid double-counting restrictivity.
2003-01-24 03:58:44 +00:00
Tom Lane c4d0ff32e9 Make estimation of mergejoin scan selectivities more robust, per recent
example from RaÇl GutiÅrrez.
2003-01-22 20:16:42 +00:00
Tom Lane bdfbfde1b1 IN clauses appearing at top level of WHERE can now be handled as joins.
There are two implementation techniques: the executor understands a new
JOIN_IN jointype, which emits at most one matching row per left-hand row,
or the result of the IN's sub-select can be fed through a DISTINCT filter
and then joined as an ordinary relation.
Along the way, some minor code cleanup in the optimizer; notably, break
out most of the jointree-rearrangement preprocessing in planner.c and
put it in a new file prep/prepjointree.c.
2003-01-20 18:55:07 +00:00
Tom Lane de97072e3c Allow merge and hash joins to occur on arbitrary expressions (anything not
containing a volatile function), rather than only on 'Var = Var' clauses
as before.  This makes it practical to do flatten_join_alias_vars at the
start of planning, which in turn eliminates a bunch of klugery inside the
planner to deal with alias vars.  As a free side effect, we now detect
implied equality of non-Var expressions; for example in
	SELECT ... WHERE a.x = b.y and b.y = 42
we will deduce a.x = 42 and use that as a restriction qual on a.  Also,
we can remove the restriction introduced 12/5/02 to prevent pullup of
subqueries whose targetlists contain sublinks.
Still TODO: make statistical estimation routines in selfuncs.c and costsize.c
smarter about expressions that are more complex than plain Vars.  The need
for this is considerably greater now that we have to be able to estimate
the suitability of merge and hash join techniques on such expressions.
2003-01-15 19:35:48 +00:00
Tom Lane d4ce5a4f4c Revise cost_qual_eval() to compute both startup (one-time) and per-tuple
costs for expression evaluation, not only per-tuple cost as before.
This extension is needed in order to deal realistically with hashed or
materialized sub-selects.
2003-01-12 22:35:29 +00:00
Tom Lane a0fa0117a5 Better solution to integer overflow problem in hash batch-number
computation: reduce the bucket number mod nbatch.  This changes the
association between original bucket numbers and batches, but that
doesn't matter.  Minor other cleanups in hashjoin code to help
centralize decisions.
2002-12-30 15:21:23 +00:00
Tom Lane f772e6cbf7 Clamp the output of estimate_hash_bucketsize() to a sane range;
per example from Bruno Wolff in which it produced a silly result.
2002-12-26 23:38:42 +00:00
Tom Lane e932a724a4 To suppress memory leakage in long-lived Lists, lremove() should pfree
the cons cell it's deleting from the list.  Do this, and fix a few callers
that were bogusly assuming it wouldn't free the cons cell.
2002-12-17 01:18:35 +00:00
Tom Lane 9f76d0d926 Fix GEQO to work again in CVS tip, by being more careful about memory
allocation in best_inner_indexscan().  While at it, simplify GEQO's
interface to the main planner --- make_join_rel() offers exactly the
API it really wants, whereas calling make_rels_by_clause_joins() and
make_rels_by_clauseless_joins() required jumping through hoops.
Rewrite gimme_tree for clarity (sometimes iteration is much better than
recursion), and approximately halve GEQO's runtime by recognizing that
tours of the forms (a,b,c,d,...) and (b,a,c,d,...) are equivalent
because of symmetry in make_join_rel().
2002-12-16 21:30:30 +00:00
Tom Lane 5bab36e9f6 Revise executor APIs so that all per-query state structure is built in
a per-query memory context created by CreateExecutorState --- and destroyed
by FreeExecutorState.  This provides a final solution to the longstanding
problem of memory leaked by various ExecEndNode calls.
2002-12-15 16:17:59 +00:00
Tom Lane 2d8d66628a Clean up plantree representation of SubPlan-s --- SubLink does not appear
in the planned representation of a subplan at all any more, only SubPlan.
This means subselect.c doesn't scribble on its input anymore, which seems
like a good thing; and there are no longer three different possible
interpretations of a SubLink.  Simplify node naming and improve comments
in primnodes.h.  No change to stored rules, though.
2002-12-14 00:17:59 +00:00
Tom Lane 3a4f7dde16 Phase 3 of read-only-plans project: ExecInitExpr now builds expression
execution state trees, and ExecEvalExpr takes an expression state tree
not an expression plan tree.  The plan tree is now read-only as far as
the executor is concerned.  Next step is to begin actually exploiting
this property.
2002-12-13 19:46:01 +00:00
Tom Lane 77b7a740f9 Adjust costsize calculations to avoid introducing unnecessary roundoff
error.  This seems to explain the differing choice of plan that's been
causing geometry regress test to fail for the last few days.
2002-12-13 17:29:25 +00:00
Tom Lane a0bf885f9e Phase 2 of read-only-plans project: restructure expression-tree nodes
so that all executable expression nodes inherit from a common supertype
Expr.  This is somewhat of an exercise in code purity rather than any
real functional advance, but getting rid of the extra Oper or Func node
formerly used in each operator or function call should provide at least
a little space and speed improvement.
initdb forced by changes in stored-rules representation.
2002-12-12 15:49:42 +00:00
Tom Lane 935969415a Be more realistic about plans involving Materialize nodes: take their
cost into account while planning.
2002-11-30 05:21:03 +00:00
Tom Lane ddb2d78de0 Upgrade planner and executor to allow multiple hash keys for a hash join,
instead of only one.  This should speed up planning (only one hash path
to consider for a given pair of relations) as well as allow more effective
hashing, when there are multiple hashable joinclauses.
2002-11-30 00:08:22 +00:00
Tom Lane f893ee271f Remove unused constisset and constiscast fields of Const nodes. Clean
up code and documentation associated with Param nodes.
2002-11-25 21:29:42 +00:00
Tom Lane 04c8785c7b Restructure planning of nestloop inner indexscans so that the set of usable
joinclauses is determined accurately for each join.  Formerly, the code only
considered joinclauses that used all of the rels from the outer side of the
join; thus for example
	FROM (a CROSS JOIN b) JOIN c ON (c.f1 = a.x AND c.f2 = b.y)
could not exploit a two-column index on c(f1,f2), since neither of the
qual clauses would be in the joininfo list it looked in.  The new code does
this correctly, and also is able to eliminate redundant clauses, thus fixing
the problem noted 24-Oct-02 by Hans-Jürgen Schönig.
2002-11-24 21:52:15 +00:00
Tom Lane 6c1d4662af Finish implementation of hashed aggregation. Add enable_hashagg GUC
parameter to allow it to be forced off for comparison purposes.
Add ORDER BY clauses to a bunch of regression test queries that will
otherwise produce randomly-ordered output in the new regime.
2002-11-21 00:42:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 9b12ab6d5d Add new palloc0 call as merge of palloc and MemSet(0). 2002-11-13 00:39:48 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 75fee4535d Back out use of palloc0 in place if palloc/MemSet. Seems constant len
to MemSet is a performance boost.
2002-11-11 03:02:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 8fee9615cc Merge palloc()/MemSet(0) calls into a single palloc0() call. 2002-11-10 07:25:14 +00:00
Tom Lane f6dba10e62 First phase of implementing hash-based grouping/aggregation. An AGG plan
node now does its own grouping of the input rows, and has no need for a
preceding GROUP node in the plan pipeline.  This allows elimination of
the misnamed tuplePerGroup option for GROUP, and actually saves more code
in nodeGroup.c than it costs in nodeAgg.c, as well as being presumably
faster.  Restructure the API of query_planner so that we do not commit to
using a sorted or unsorted plan in query_planner; instead grouping_planner
makes the decision.  (Right now it isn't any smarter than query_planner
was, but that will change as soon as it has the option to select a hash-
based aggregation step.)  Despite all the hackery, no initdb needed since
only in-memory node types changed.
2002-11-06 00:00:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 884cd4b6be Reduce a couple of debugging messages from LOG to DEBUG1 category. 2002-11-01 19:33:09 +00:00
Tom Lane c0f7dcdac1 Fix range-query estimation to not double-exclude NULLs, per gripe from
Ray Ontko 28-June-02.  Also, fix prefix_selectivity for NAME lefthand
variables (it was bogusly assuming binary compatibility), and adjust
make_greater_string() to not call pg_mbcliplen() with invalid multibyte
data (this last per bug report that I can't find at the moment, but it
was in July '02).
2002-10-19 02:56:16 +00:00
Tom Lane b26dfb9522 Extend pg_cast castimplicit column to a three-way value; this allows us
to be flexible about assignment casts without introducing ambiguity in
operator/function resolution.  Introduce a well-defined promotion hierarchy
for numeric datatypes (int2->int4->int8->numeric->float4->float8).
Change make_const to initially label numeric literals as int4, int8, or
numeric (never float8 anymore).
Explicitly mark Func and RelabelType nodes to indicate whether they came
from a function call, explicit cast, or implicit cast; use this to do
reverse-listing more accurately and without so many heuristics.
Explicit casts to char, varchar, bit, varbit will truncate or pad without
raising an error (the pre-7.2 behavior), while assigning to a column without
any explicit cast will still raise an error for wrong-length data like 7.3.
This more nearly follows the SQL spec than 7.2 behavior (we should be
reporting a 'completion condition' in the explicit-cast cases, but we have
no mechanism for that, so just do silent truncation).
Fix some problems with enforcement of typmod for array elements;
it didn't work at all in 'UPDATE ... SET array[n] = foo', for example.
Provide a generalized array_length_coerce() function to replace the
specialized per-array-type functions that used to be needed (and were
missing for NUMERIC as well as all the datetime types).
Add missing conversions int8<->float4, text<->numeric, oid<->int8.
initdb forced.
2002-09-18 21:35:25 +00:00
Tom Lane 52c9d25933 Be careful to include postgres.h *before* any system headers, to ensure
that the right flavors of largefile-related definitions are seen.
Most of these changes are probably unnecessary, but better safe than
sorry.
2002-09-05 00:43:07 +00:00
Bruce Momjian e50f52a074 pgindent run. 2002-09-04 20:31:48 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 595a5a78e0 > Okay. When you get back to the original issue, the gold is hidden in
> src/backend/optimizer/path/indxpath.c; see the "special indexable
> operators" stuff near the bottom of that file.  (It's a bit of a crock
> that this code is hardwired there, and not somehow accessed through a
> system catalog, but it's what we've got at the moment.)

The attached patch re-enables a bytea right hand argument (as compared
to a text right hand argument), and enables index usage, for bytea LIKE

Joe Conway
2002-09-02 06:22:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 97ac103289 Remove sys/types.h in files that include postgres.h, and hence c.h,
because c.h has sys/types.h.
2002-09-02 02:47:07 +00:00
Tom Lane 0201dac1c3 Push down outer qualification clauses into UNION and INTERSECT subqueries.
Per pghackers discussion from back around 1-August.
2002-08-29 16:03:49 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 43515ba3f8 Remove _deadcode. 2002-07-24 19:16:43 +00:00
Tom Lane 942a2e94fa Fix testing of partial-index predicates to work correctly in cases where
varno of index's relation is not 1.  This embarrassing oversight pointed
out by Dmitry Tkach 12-Jul-02.
2002-07-13 19:20:34 +00:00
Thomas G. Lockhart 68d9fbeb55 Implement the IS DISTINCT FROM operator per SQL99.
Reused the Expr node to hold DISTINCT which strongly resembles
 the existing OP info. Define DISTINCT_EXPR which strongly resembles
 the existing OPER_EXPR opType, but with handling for NULLs required
 by SQL99.
We have explicit support for single-element DISTINCT comparisons
 all the way through to the executor. But, multi-element DISTINCTs
 are handled by expanding into a comparison tree in gram.y as is done for
 other row comparisons. Per discussions, it might be desirable to move
 this into one or more purpose-built nodes to be handled in the backend.
Define the optional ROW keyword and token per SQL99.
 This allows single-element row constructs, which were formerly disallowed
 due to shift/reduce conflicts with parenthesized a_expr clauses.
Define the SQL99 TREAT() function. Currently, use as a synonym for CAST().
2002-07-04 15:24:11 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 73ad6ca96c The attached patch fixes some spelling mistakes, makes the
comments on one of the optimizer functions a lot more
clear, adds a summary of the recent KSQO discussion to the
comments in the code, adds regression tests for the bug with
sequence state Tom fixed recently and another reg. test, and
removes some PostQuel legacy stuff: ExecAppend -> ExecInsert,
ExecRetrieve -> ExecSelect, etc.

Error messages remain unchanged until a vote.

Neil Conway
2002-06-26 21:58:56 +00:00
Bruce Momjian e2c007046f Back out cleanup patch. Got old version and needs work.
Neil Conway
2002-06-25 17:58:10 +00:00
Bruce Momjian ed275aea42 The attached patch fixes some spelling mistakes, makes the
comments on one of the optimizer functions a lot more
clear, adds a summary of the recent KSQO discussion to the
comments in the code, adds regression tests for the bug with
sequence state Tom fixed recently and another reg. test, and
removes some PostQuel legacy stuff: ExecAppend -> ExecInsert,
ExecRetrieve -> ExecSelect, etc. This was changed because the
elog() messages from this routine are user-visible, so we
should be using the SQL terms.

Neil Conway
2002-06-25 17:27:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian d84fe82230 Update copyright to 2002. 2002-06-20 20:29:54 +00:00
Tom Lane 44fbe20d62 Restructure indexscan API (index_beginscan, index_getnext) per
yesterday's proposal to pghackers.  Also remove unnecessary parameters
to heap_beginscan, heap_rescan.  I modified pg_proc.h to reflect the
new numbers of parameters for the AM interface routines, but did not
force an initdb because nothing actually looks at those fields.
2002-05-20 23:51:44 +00:00
Tom Lane 3389a110d4 Get rid of long-since-vestigial Iter node type, in favor of adding a
returns-set boolean field in Func and Oper nodes.  This allows cleaner,
more reliable tests for expressions returning sets in the planner and
parser.  For example, a WHERE clause returning a set is now detected
and complained of in the parser, not only at runtime.
2002-05-12 23:43:04 +00:00
Tom Lane f9e4f611a1 First pass at set-returning-functions in FROM, by Joe Conway with
some kibitzing from Tom Lane.  Not everything works yet, and there's
no documentation or regression test, but let's commit this so Joe
doesn't need to cope with tracking changes in so many files ...
2002-05-12 20:10:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 6cef5d2549 Operators live in namespaces. CREATE/DROP/COMMENT ON OPERATOR take
qualified operator names directly, for example CREATE OPERATOR myschema.+
( ... ).  To qualify an operator name in an expression you need to write
OPERATOR(myschema.+) (thanks to Peter for suggesting an escape hatch).
I also took advantage of having to reformat pg_operator to fix something
that'd been bugging me for a while: mergejoinable operators should have
explicit links to the associated cross-data-type comparison operators,
rather than hardwiring an assumption that they are named < and >.
2002-04-16 23:08:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 4bdb4be62e Divide functions into three volatility classes (immutable, stable, and
volatile), rather than the old cachable/noncachable distinction.  This
allows indexscan optimizations in many places where we formerly didn't.
Also, add a pronamespace column to pg_proc (it doesn't do anything yet,
however).
2002-04-05 00:31:36 +00:00
Tom Lane 337b22cb47 Code review for DOMAIN patch. 2002-03-20 19:45:13 +00:00
Tom Lane 6eeb95f0f5 Restructure representation of join alias variables. An explicit JOIN
now has an RTE of its own, and references to its outputs now are Vars
referencing the JOIN RTE, rather than CASE-expressions.  This allows
reverse-listing in ruleutils.c to use the correct alias easily, rather
than painfully reverse-engineering the alias namespace as it used to do.
Also, nested FULL JOINs work correctly, because the result of the inner
joins are simple Vars that the planner can cope with.  This fixes a bug
reported a couple times now, notably by Tatsuo on 18-Nov-01.  The alias
Vars are expanded into COALESCE expressions where needed at the very end
of planning, rather than during parsing.
Also, beginnings of support for showing plan qualifier expressions in
EXPLAIN.  There are probably still cases that need work.
initdb forced due to change of stored-rule representation.
2002-03-12 00:52:10 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 92288a1cf9 Change made to elog:
o  Change all current CVS messages of NOTICE to WARNING.  We were going
to do this just before 7.3 beta but it has to be done now, as you will
see below.

o Change current INFO messages that should be controlled by
client_min_messages to NOTICE.

o Force remaining INFO messages, like from EXPLAIN, VACUUM VERBOSE, etc.
to always go to the client.

o Remove INFO from the client_min_messages options and add NOTICE.

Seems we do need three non-ERROR elog levels to handle the various
behaviors we need for these messages.

Regression passed.
2002-03-06 06:10:59 +00:00
Bruce Momjian a033daf566 Commit to match discussed elog() changes. Only update is that LOG is
now just below FATAL in server_min_messages.  Added more text to
highlight ordering difference between it and client_min_messages.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

REALLYFATAL => PANIC
STOP => PANIC
New INFO level the prints to client by default
New LOG level the prints to server log by default
Cause VACUUM information to print only to the client
NOTICE => INFO where purely information messages are sent
DEBUG => LOG for purely server status messages
DEBUG removed, kept as backward compatible
DEBUG5, DEBUG4, DEBUG3, DEBUG2, DEBUG1 added
DebugLvl removed in favor of new DEBUG[1-5] symbols
New server_min_messages GUC parameter with values:
        DEBUG[5-1], INFO, NOTICE, ERROR, LOG, FATAL, PANIC
New client_min_messages GUC parameter with values:
        DEBUG[5-1], LOG, INFO, NOTICE, ERROR, FATAL, PANIC
Server startup now logged with LOG instead of DEBUG
Remove debug_level GUC parameter
elog() numbers now start at 10
Add test to print error message if older elog() values are passed to elog()
Bootstrap mode now has a -d that requires an argument, like postmaster
2002-03-02 21:39:36 +00:00
Tom Lane 54f7f62d4a Fix thinko: cost_mergejoin must pay attention to which side of the
mergeclause is which when extracting selectivity info.
2002-03-01 20:50:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 8f0a9e85b3 Second thoughts dept: arrange to cache mergejoin scan selectivity
in RestrictInfo nodes, instead of recomputing on every use.
2002-03-01 06:01:20 +00:00
Tom Lane f8c109528c Teach planner about the idea that a mergejoin won't necessarily read
both input streams to the end.  If one variable's range is much less
than the other, an indexscan-based merge can win by not scanning all
of the other table.  Per example from Reinhard Max.
2002-03-01 04:09:28 +00:00
Tom Lane 63cc56de54 Suppress subquery pullup and pushdown when the subquery has any
set-returning functions in its target list.  This ensures that we
won't rewrite the query in a way that places set-returning functions
into quals (WHERE clauses).  Cf. bug reports from Joe Conway.
2001-12-10 22:54:12 +00:00
Tom Lane c5c97318f9 In find_mergeclauses_for_pathkeys, it's okay to return multiple merge
clauses per path key.  Indeed, we *must* do so or we will be unable to
form a valid plan for FULL JOIN with overlapping join conditions, eg
select * from a full join b on
a.v1 = b.v1 and a.v2 = b.v2 and a.v1 = b.v2.
2001-11-11 20:33:53 +00:00
Tom Lane ad511a3ff3 sort_inner_and_outer needs a check to ensure that it's consumed all the
mergeclauses in RIGHT/FULL join cases, just like the other routines have.
I'm not quite sure why I thought it didn't need one --- but Nick
Fankhauser's recent bug report proves that it does.
2001-11-11 19:18:54 +00:00
Bruce Momjian ea08e6cd55 New pgindent run with fixes suggested by Tom. Patch manually reviewed,
initdb/regression tests pass.
2001-11-05 17:46:40 +00:00
Bruce Momjian c41b6b1b9c Fix small problem Tom Lane found with pgindent run. 2001-10-30 05:38:56 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 6783b2372e Another pgindent run. Fixes enum indenting, and improves #endif
spacing.  Also adds space for one-line comments.
2001-10-28 06:26:15 +00:00
Bruce Momjian b81844b173 pgindent run on all C files. Java run to follow. initdb/regression
tests pass.
2001-10-25 05:50:21 +00:00
Tom Lane 6254465d06 Extend code that deduces implied equality clauses to detect whether a
clause being added to a particular restriction-clause list is redundant
with those already in the list.  This avoids useless work at runtime,
and (perhaps more importantly) keeps the selectivity estimation routines
from generating too-small estimates of numbers of output rows.
Also some minor improvements in OPTIMIZER_DEBUG displays.
2001-10-18 16:11:42 +00:00
Tom Lane f933766ba7 Restructure pg_opclass, pg_amop, and pg_amproc per previous discussions in
pgsql-hackers.  pg_opclass now has a row for each opclass supported by each
index AM, not a row for each opclass name.  This allows pg_opclass to show
directly whether an AM supports an opclass, and furthermore makes it possible
to store additional information about an opclass that might be AM-dependent.
pg_opclass and pg_amop now store "lossy" and "haskeytype" information that we
previously expected the user to remember to provide in CREATE INDEX commands.
Lossiness is no longer an index-level property, but is associated with the
use of a particular operator in a particular index opclass.

Along the way, IndexSupportInitialize now uses the syscaches to retrieve
pg_amop and pg_amproc entries.  I find this reduces backend launch time by
about ten percent, at the cost of a couple more special cases in catcache.c's
IndexScanOK.

Initial work by Oleg Bartunov and Teodor Sigaev, further hacking by Tom Lane.

initdb forced.
2001-08-21 16:36:06 +00:00
Tom Lane 246793469e Modify partial-index-predicate applicability tester to test whether
clauses are equal(), before trying to match them up using btree opclass
inference rules.  This allows it to recognize many simple cases involving
non-btree operations, for example 'x IS NULL'.  Clean up code a little.
2001-08-06 18:09:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 421467cdc8 Fix optimizer to not try to push WHERE clauses down into a sub-SELECT that
has a DISTINCT ON clause, per bug report from Anthony Wood.  While at it,
improve the DISTINCT-ON-clause recognizer routine to not be fooled by out-
of-order DISTINCT lists.
2001-07-31 17:56:31 +00:00
Tom Lane 40db52af34 Do not push down quals into subqueries that have LIMIT/OFFSET clauses,
since the added qual could change the set of rows that get past the
LIMIT.  Per discussion on pgsql-sql 7/15/01.
2001-07-16 17:57:02 +00:00
Tom Lane f31dc0ada7 Partial indexes work again, courtesy of Martijn van Oosterhout.
Note: I didn't force an initdb, figuring that one today was enough.
However, there is a new function in pg_proc.h, and pg_dump won't be
able to dump partial indexes until you add that function.
2001-07-16 05:07:00 +00:00
Tom Lane 4d58a7ca87 Optimizer can now estimate selectivity of IS NULL, IS NOT NULL,
IS TRUE, etc, with some degree of verisimilitude.  Split out
selectivity support functions from builtins.h into a new header
file selfuncs.h, so as to reduce the number of header files builtins.h
must depend on.  Fix a few missing inclusions exposed thereby.
From Joe Conway, with some kibitzing from Tom Lane.
2001-06-25 21:11:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 1f1ca182be Make inet/cidr << and <<= operators indexable. From Alex Pilosov <alex@pilosoft.com>. 2001-06-17 02:05:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 01a819abe3 Make planner compute the number of hash buckets the same way that
nodeHash.c will compute it (by sharing code).
2001-06-11 00:17:08 +00:00
Tom Lane a8fe109ac1 Fix thinko in hash cost estimation: average frequency
should be computed from total number of distinct values in whole
relation, not # distinct values we expect to have after restriction
clauses are applied.
2001-06-10 02:59:35 +00:00
Tom Lane cdd230d628 Improve planning of OR indexscan plans: for quals like
WHERE (a = 1 or a = 2) and b = 42
and an index on (a,b), include the clause b = 42 in the indexquals
generated for each arm of the OR clause.  Essentially this is an index-
driven conversion from CNF to DNF.  Implementation is a bit klugy, but
better than not exploiting the extra quals at all ...
2001-06-05 17:13:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 7c579fa12d Further work on making use of new statistics in planner. Adjust APIs
of costsize.c routines to pass Query root, so that costsize can figure
more things out by itself and not be so dependent on its callers to tell
it everything it needs to know.  Use selectivity of hash or merge clause
to estimate number of tuples processed internally in these joins
(this is more useful than it would've been before, since eqjoinsel is
somewhat more accurate than before).
2001-06-05 05:26:05 +00:00
Tom Lane be03eb25f3 Modify optimizer data structures so that IndexOptInfo lists built for
create_index_paths are not immediately discarded, but are available for
subsequent planner work.  This allows avoiding redundant syscache lookups
in several places.  Change interface to operator selectivity estimation
procedures to allow faster and more flexible estimation.
Initdb forced due to change of pg_proc entries for selectivity functions!
2001-05-20 20:28:20 +00:00
Tom Lane c23bc6fbb0 First cut at making indexscan cost estimates depend on correlation
between index order and table order.
2001-05-09 23:13:37 +00:00
Tom Lane 6cda3ad8fe Cause planner to make use of average-column-width statistic that is now
collected by ANALYZE.  Also, add some modest amount of intelligence to
guesses that are used for varlena columns in the absence of any ANALYZE
statistics.  The 'width' reported by EXPLAIN is finally something less
than totally bogus for varlena columns ... and, in consequence, hashjoin
estimating should be a little better ...
2001-05-09 00:35:09 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 857abb0e57 Add newlines around debug output in optimizer showing total costs. 2001-05-08 17:25:28 +00:00
Tom Lane f905d65ee3 Rewrite of planner statistics-gathering code. ANALYZE is now available as
a separate statement (though it can still be invoked as part of VACUUM, too).
pg_statistic redesigned to be more flexible about what statistics are
stored.  ANALYZE now collects a list of several of the most common values,
not just one, plus a histogram (not just the min and max values).  Random
sampling is used to make the process reasonably fast even on very large
tables.  The number of values and histogram bins collected is now
user-settable via an ALTER TABLE command.

There is more still to do; the new stats are not being used everywhere
they could be in the planner.  But the remaining changes for this project
should be localized, and the behavior is already better than before.

A not-very-related change is that sorting now makes use of btree comparison
routines if it can find one, rather than invoking '<' twice.
2001-05-07 00:43:27 +00:00
Tom Lane a43f20cb0a Tweak nestloop costing to weight restart cost of inner path more heavily.
Without this, it was making some pretty silly decisions about whether an
expensive sub-SELECT should be the inner or outer side of a join...
2001-04-25 22:04:37 +00:00
Tom Lane f9094c44c0 Prevent generation of invalid plans for RIGHT or FULL joins with multiple
join clauses.  The mergejoin executor wants all the join clauses to appear
as merge quals, not as extra joinquals, for these kinds of joins.  But the
planner would consider plans in which partially-sorted input paths were
used, leading to only some of the join clauses becoming merge quals.
This is fine for inner/left joins, not fine for right/full joins.
2001-04-15 00:48:17 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 7cf952e7b4 Fix comments that were mis-wrapped, for Tom Lane. 2001-03-23 04:49:58 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 0686d49da0 Remove dashes in comments that don't need them, rewrap with pgindent. 2001-03-22 06:16:21 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 9e1552607a pgindent run. Make it all clean. 2001-03-22 04:01:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 13cc7eb3e2 Clean up two rather nasty bugs in operator selection code.
1. If there is exactly one pg_operator entry of the right name and oprkind,
oper() and related routines would return that entry whether its input type
had anything to do with the request or not.  This is just premature
optimization: we shouldn't return the single candidate until after we verify
that it really is a valid candidate, ie, is at least coercion-compatible
with the given types.

2. oper() and related routines only promise a coercion-compatible result.
Unfortunately, there were quite a few callers that assumed the returned
operator is binary-compatible with the given datatype; they would proceed
to call it without making any datatype coercions.  These callers include
sorting, grouping, aggregation, and VACUUM ANALYZE.  In general I think
it is appropriate for these callers to require an exact or binary-compatible
match, so I've added a new routine compatible_oper() that only succeeds if
it can find an operator that doesn't require any run-time conversions.
Callers now call oper() or compatible_oper() depending on whether they are
prepared to deal with type conversion or not.

The upshot of these bugs is revealed by the following silliness in PL/Tcl's
selftest: it creates an operator @< on int4, and then tries to use it to
sort a char(N) column.  The system would let it do that :-( (and evidently
has done so since 6.3 :-( :-().  The result in this case was just a silly
sort order, but the reverse combination would've provoked coredump from
trying to dereference integers.  With this fix you get more reasonable
behavior:
pltcl_test=# select * from T_pkey1 order by key1, key2 using @<;
ERROR:  Unable to identify an operator '@<' for types 'bpchar' and 'bpchar'
        You will have to retype this query using an explicit cast
2001-02-16 03:16:58 +00:00
Tom Lane b29f68f611 Take OUTER JOIN semantics into account when estimating the size of join
relations.  It's not very bright, but at least it now knows that
A LEFT JOIN B must produce at least as many rows as are in A ...
2001-02-16 00:03:08 +00:00
Tom Lane 83b4ab53ad Update a couple of obsolete comments. 2001-02-15 17:46:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 503f042cd7 Fix inappropriate attempt to push down qual clauses into a view that
has UNION/INTERSECT/EXCEPT operations.  Per bug report from Ferrier.
2001-02-03 21:17:52 +00:00