/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * plannodes.h * definitions for query plan nodes * * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2003, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * $Id: plannodes.h,v 1.68 2003/08/08 21:42:48 momjian Exp $ * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #ifndef PLANNODES_H #define PLANNODES_H #include "access/sdir.h" #include "nodes/bitmapset.h" #include "nodes/primnodes.h" /* ---------------------------------------------------------------- * node definitions * ---------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* ---------------- * Plan node * * All plan nodes "derive" from the Plan structure by having the * Plan structure as the first field. This ensures that everything works * when nodes are cast to Plan's. (node pointers are frequently cast to Plan* * when passed around generically in the executor) * * We never actually instantiate any Plan nodes; this is just the common * abstract superclass for all Plan-type nodes. * ---------------- */ typedef struct Plan { NodeTag type; /* * estimated execution costs for plan (see costsize.c for more info) */ Cost startup_cost; /* cost expended before fetching any * tuples */ Cost total_cost; /* total cost (assuming all tuples * fetched) */ /* * planner's estimate of result size of this plan step */ double plan_rows; /* number of rows plan is expected to emit */ int plan_width; /* average row width in bytes */ /* * Common structural data for all Plan types. */ List *targetlist; /* target list to be computed at this node */ List *qual; /* implicitly-ANDed qual conditions */ struct Plan *lefttree; /* input plan tree(s) */ struct Plan *righttree; List *initPlan; /* Init Plan nodes (un-correlated expr * subselects) */ /* * Information for management of parameter-change-driven rescanning * * extParam includes the paramIDs of all external PARAM_EXEC params * affecting this plan node or its children. setParam params from the * node's initPlans are not included, but their extParams are. * * allParam includes all the extParam paramIDs, plus the IDs of local * params that affect the node (i.e., the setParams of its initplans). * These are _all_ the PARAM_EXEC params that affect this node. */ Bitmapset *extParam; Bitmapset *allParam; /* * We really need in some TopPlan node to store range table and * resultRelation from Query there and get rid of Query itself from * Executor. Some other stuff like below could be put there, too. */ int nParamExec; /* Number of them in entire query. This is * to get Executor know about how many * param_exec there are in query plan. */ } Plan; /* ---------------- * these are are defined to avoid confusion problems with "left" * and "right" and "inner" and "outer". The convention is that * the "left" plan is the "outer" plan and the "right" plan is * the inner plan, but these make the code more readable. * ---------------- */ #define innerPlan(node) (((Plan *)(node))->righttree) #define outerPlan(node) (((Plan *)(node))->lefttree) /* ---------------- * Result node - * If no outer plan, evaluate a variable-free targetlist. * If outer plan, return tuples from outer plan (after a level of * projection as shown by targetlist). * * If resconstantqual isn't NULL, it represents a one-time qualification * test (i.e., one that doesn't depend on any variables from the outer plan, * so needs to be evaluated only once). * ---------------- */ typedef struct Result { Plan plan; Node *resconstantqual; } Result; /* ---------------- * Append node - * Generate the concatenation of the results of sub-plans. * * Append nodes are sometimes used to switch between several result relations * (when the target of an UPDATE or DELETE is an inheritance set). Such a * node will have isTarget true. The Append executor is then responsible * for updating the executor state to point at the correct target relation * whenever it switches subplans. * ---------------- */ typedef struct Append { Plan plan; List *appendplans; bool isTarget; } Append; /* * ========== * Scan nodes * ========== */ typedef struct Scan { Plan plan; Index scanrelid; /* relid is index into the range table */ } Scan; /* ---------------- * sequential scan node * ---------------- */ typedef Scan SeqScan; /* ---------------- * index scan node * ---------------- */ typedef struct IndexScan { Scan scan; List *indxid; List *indxqual; List *indxqualorig; ScanDirection indxorderdir; } IndexScan; /* ---------------- * tid scan node * ---------------- */ typedef struct TidScan { Scan scan; List *tideval; } TidScan; /* ---------------- * subquery scan node * * SubqueryScan is for scanning the output of a sub-query in the range table. * We need a special plan node above the sub-query's plan as a place to switch * execution contexts. Although we are not scanning a physical relation, * we make this a descendant of Scan anyway for code-sharing purposes. * * Note: we store the sub-plan in the type-specific subplan field, not in * the generic lefttree field as you might expect. This is because we do * not want plan-tree-traversal routines to recurse into the subplan without * knowing that they are changing Query contexts. * ---------------- */ typedef struct SubqueryScan { Scan scan; Plan *subplan; } SubqueryScan; /* ---------------- * FunctionScan node * ---------------- */ typedef struct FunctionScan { Scan scan; /* no other fields needed at present */ } FunctionScan; /* * ========== * Join nodes * ========== */ /* ---------------- * Join node * * jointype: rule for joining tuples from left and right subtrees * joinqual: qual conditions that came from JOIN/ON or JOIN/USING * (plan.qual contains conditions that came from WHERE) * * When jointype is INNER, joinqual and plan.qual are semantically * interchangeable. For OUTER jointypes, the two are *not* interchangeable; * only joinqual is used to determine whether a match has been found for * the purpose of deciding whether to generate null-extended tuples. * (But plan.qual is still applied before actually returning a tuple.) * For an outer join, only joinquals are allowed to be used as the merge * or hash condition of a merge or hash join. * ---------------- */ typedef struct Join { Plan plan; JoinType jointype; List *joinqual; /* JOIN quals (in addition to plan.qual) */ } Join; /* ---------------- * nest loop join node * ---------------- */ typedef struct NestLoop { Join join; } NestLoop; /* ---------------- * merge join node * ---------------- */ typedef struct MergeJoin { Join join; List *mergeclauses; } MergeJoin; /* ---------------- * hash join (probe) node * ---------------- */ typedef struct HashJoin { Join join; List *hashclauses; } HashJoin; /* ---------------- * materialization node * ---------------- */ typedef struct Material { Plan plan; } Material; /* ---------------- * sort node * ---------------- */ typedef struct Sort { Plan plan; int numCols; /* number of sort-key columns */ AttrNumber *sortColIdx; /* their indexes in the target list */ Oid *sortOperators; /* OIDs of operators to sort them by */ } Sort; /* --------------- * group node - * Used for queries with GROUP BY (but no aggregates) specified. * The input must be presorted according to the grouping columns. * --------------- */ typedef struct Group { Plan plan; int numCols; /* number of grouping columns */ AttrNumber *grpColIdx; /* their indexes in the target list */ } Group; /* --------------- * aggregate node * * An Agg node implements plain or grouped aggregation. For grouped * aggregation, we can work with presorted input or unsorted input; * the latter strategy uses an internal hashtable. * * Notice the lack of any direct info about the aggregate functions to be * computed. They are found by scanning the node's tlist and quals during * executor startup. (It is possible that there are no aggregate functions; * this could happen if they get optimized away by constant-folding, or if * we are using the Agg node to implement hash-based grouping.) * --------------- */ typedef enum AggStrategy { AGG_PLAIN, /* simple agg across all input rows */ AGG_SORTED, /* grouped agg, input must be sorted */ AGG_HASHED /* grouped agg, use internal hashtable */ } AggStrategy; typedef struct Agg { Plan plan; AggStrategy aggstrategy; int numCols; /* number of grouping columns */ AttrNumber *grpColIdx; /* their indexes in the target list */ long numGroups; /* estimated number of groups in input */ } Agg; /* ---------------- * unique node * ---------------- */ typedef struct Unique { Plan plan; int numCols; /* number of columns to check for * uniqueness */ AttrNumber *uniqColIdx; /* indexes into the target list */ } Unique; /* ---------------- * hash build node * ---------------- */ typedef struct Hash { Plan plan; List *hashkeys; } Hash; /* ---------------- * setop node * ---------------- */ typedef enum SetOpCmd { SETOPCMD_INTERSECT, SETOPCMD_INTERSECT_ALL, SETOPCMD_EXCEPT, SETOPCMD_EXCEPT_ALL } SetOpCmd; typedef struct SetOp { Plan plan; SetOpCmd cmd; /* what to do */ int numCols; /* number of columns to check for * duplicate-ness */ AttrNumber *dupColIdx; /* indexes into the target list */ AttrNumber flagColIdx; } SetOp; /* ---------------- * limit node * ---------------- */ typedef struct Limit { Plan plan; Node *limitOffset; /* OFFSET parameter, or NULL if none */ Node *limitCount; /* COUNT parameter, or NULL if none */ } Limit; #endif /* PLANNODES_H */