/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * supportnodes.h * Definitions for planner support functions. * * This file defines the API for "planner support functions", which * are SQL functions (normally written in C) that can be attached to * another "target" function to give the system additional knowledge * about the target function. All the current capabilities have to do * with planning queries that use the target function, though it is * possible that future extensions will add functionality to be invoked * by the parser or executor. * * A support function must have the SQL signature * supportfn(internal) returns internal * The argument is a pointer to one of the Node types defined in this file. * The result is usually also a Node pointer, though its type depends on * which capability is being invoked. In all cases, a NULL pointer result * (that's PG_RETURN_POINTER(NULL), not PG_RETURN_NULL()) indicates that * the support function cannot do anything useful for the given request. * Support functions must return a NULL pointer, not fail, if they do not * recognize the request node type or cannot handle the given case; this * allows for future extensions of the set of request cases. * * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2024, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * src/include/nodes/supportnodes.h * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #ifndef SUPPORTNODES_H #define SUPPORTNODES_H #include "nodes/plannodes.h" struct PlannerInfo; /* avoid including pathnodes.h here */ struct IndexOptInfo; struct SpecialJoinInfo; struct WindowClause; /* * The Simplify request allows the support function to perform plan-time * simplification of a call to its target function. For example, a varchar * length coercion that does not decrease the allowed length of its argument * could be replaced by a RelabelType node, or "x + 0" could be replaced by * "x". This is invoked during the planner's constant-folding pass, so the * function's arguments can be presumed already simplified. * * The planner's PlannerInfo "root" is typically not needed, but can be * consulted if it's necessary to obtain info about Vars present in * the given node tree. Beware that root could be NULL in some usages. * * "fcall" will be a FuncExpr invoking the support function's target * function. (This is true even if the original parsetree node was an * operator call; a FuncExpr is synthesized for this purpose.) * * The result should be a semantically-equivalent transformed node tree, * or NULL if no simplification could be performed. Do *not* return or * modify *fcall, as it isn't really a separately allocated Node. But * it's okay to use fcall->args, or parts of it, in the result tree. */ typedef struct SupportRequestSimplify { NodeTag type; struct PlannerInfo *root; /* Planner's infrastructure */ FuncExpr *fcall; /* Function call to be simplified */ } SupportRequestSimplify; /* * The Selectivity request allows the support function to provide a * selectivity estimate for a function appearing at top level of a WHERE * clause (so it applies only to functions returning boolean). * * The input arguments are the same as are supplied to operator restriction * and join estimators, except that we unify those two APIs into just one * request type. See clause_selectivity() for the details. * * If an estimate can be made, store it into the "selectivity" field and * return the address of the SupportRequestSelectivity node; the estimate * must be between 0 and 1 inclusive. Return NULL if no estimate can be * made (in which case the planner will fall back to a default estimate, * traditionally 1/3). * * If the target function is being used as the implementation of an operator, * the support function will not be used for this purpose; the operator's * restriction or join estimator is consulted instead. */ typedef struct SupportRequestSelectivity { NodeTag type; /* Input fields: */ struct PlannerInfo *root; /* Planner's infrastructure */ Oid funcid; /* function we are inquiring about */ List *args; /* pre-simplified arguments to function */ Oid inputcollid; /* function's input collation */ bool is_join; /* is this a join or restriction case? */ int varRelid; /* if restriction, RTI of target relation */ JoinType jointype; /* if join, outer join type */ struct SpecialJoinInfo *sjinfo; /* if outer join, info about join */ /* Output fields: */ Selectivity selectivity; /* returned selectivity estimate */ } SupportRequestSelectivity; /* * The Cost request allows the support function to provide an execution * cost estimate for its target function. The cost estimate can include * both a one-time (query startup) component and a per-execution component. * The estimate should *not* include the costs of evaluating the target * function's arguments, only the target function itself. * * The "node" argument is normally the parse node that is invoking the * target function. This is a FuncExpr in the simplest case, but it could * also be an OpExpr, DistinctExpr, NullIfExpr, or WindowFunc, or possibly * other cases in future. NULL is passed if the function cannot presume * its arguments to be equivalent to what the calling node presents as * arguments; that happens for, e.g., aggregate support functions and * per-column comparison operators used by RowExprs. * * If an estimate can be made, store it into the cost fields and return the * address of the SupportRequestCost node. Return NULL if no estimate can be * made, in which case the planner will rely on the target function's procost * field. (Note: while procost is automatically scaled by cpu_operator_cost, * this is not the case for the outputs of the Cost request; the support * function must scale its results appropriately on its own.) */ typedef struct SupportRequestCost { NodeTag type; /* Input fields: */ struct PlannerInfo *root; /* Planner's infrastructure (could be NULL) */ Oid funcid; /* function we are inquiring about */ Node *node; /* parse node invoking function, or NULL */ /* Output fields: */ Cost startup; /* one-time cost */ Cost per_tuple; /* per-evaluation cost */ } SupportRequestCost; /* * The Rows request allows the support function to provide an output rowcount * estimate for its target function (so it applies only to set-returning * functions). * * The "node" argument is the parse node that is invoking the target function; * currently this will always be a FuncExpr or OpExpr. * * If an estimate can be made, store it into the rows field and return the * address of the SupportRequestRows node. Return NULL if no estimate can be * made, in which case the planner will rely on the target function's prorows * field. */ typedef struct SupportRequestRows { NodeTag type; /* Input fields: */ struct PlannerInfo *root; /* Planner's infrastructure (could be NULL) */ Oid funcid; /* function we are inquiring about */ Node *node; /* parse node invoking function */ /* Output fields: */ double rows; /* number of rows expected to be returned */ } SupportRequestRows; /* * The IndexCondition request allows the support function to generate * a directly-indexable condition based on a target function call that is * not itself indexable. The target function call must appear at the top * level of WHERE or JOIN/ON, so this applies only to functions returning * boolean. * * The "node" argument is the parse node that is invoking the target function; * currently this will always be a FuncExpr or OpExpr. The call is made * only if at least one function argument matches an index column's variable * or expression. "indexarg" identifies the matching argument (it's the * argument's zero-based index in the node's args list). * * If the transformation is possible, return a List of directly-indexable * condition expressions, else return NULL. (A List is used because it's * sometimes useful to generate more than one indexable condition, such as * when a LIKE with constant prefix gives rise to both >= and < conditions.) * * "Directly indexable" means that the condition must be directly executable * by the index machinery. Typically this means that it is a binary OpExpr * with the index column value on the left, a pseudo-constant on the right, * and an operator that is in the index column's operator family. Other * possibilities include RowCompareExpr, ScalarArrayOpExpr, and NullTest, * depending on the index type; but those seem less likely to be useful for * derived index conditions. "Pseudo-constant" means that the right-hand * expression must not contain any volatile functions, nor any Vars of the * table the index is for; use is_pseudo_constant_for_index() to check this. * (Note: if the passed "node" is an OpExpr, the core planner already verified * that the non-indexkey operand is pseudo-constant; but when the "node" * is a FuncExpr, it does not check, since it doesn't know which of the * function's arguments you might need to use in an index comparison value.) * * In many cases, an index condition can be generated but it is weaker than * the function condition itself; for example, a LIKE with a constant prefix * can produce an index range check based on the prefix, but we still need * to execute the LIKE operator to verify the rest of the pattern. We say * that such an index condition is "lossy". When returning an index condition, * you should set the "lossy" request field to true if the condition is lossy, * or false if it is an exact equivalent of the function's result. The core * code will initialize that field to true, which is the common case. * * It is important to verify that the index operator family is the correct * one for the condition you want to generate. Core support functions tend * to use the known OID of a built-in opfamily for this, but extensions need * to work harder, since their OIDs aren't fixed. A possibly workable * answer for an index on an extension datatype is to verify the index AM's * OID instead, and then assume that there's only one relevant opclass for * your datatype so the opfamily must be the right one. Generating OpExpr * nodes may also require knowing extension datatype OIDs (often you can * find these out by applying exprType() to a function argument) and * operator OIDs (which you can look up using get_opfamily_member). */ typedef struct SupportRequestIndexCondition { NodeTag type; /* Input fields: */ struct PlannerInfo *root; /* Planner's infrastructure */ Oid funcid; /* function we are inquiring about */ Node *node; /* parse node invoking function */ int indexarg; /* index of function arg matching indexcol */ struct IndexOptInfo *index; /* planner's info about target index */ int indexcol; /* index of target index column (0-based) */ Oid opfamily; /* index column's operator family */ Oid indexcollation; /* index column's collation */ /* Output fields: */ bool lossy; /* set to false if index condition is an exact * equivalent of the function call */ } SupportRequestIndexCondition; /* ---------- * To support more efficient query execution of any monotonically increasing * and/or monotonically decreasing window functions, we support calling the * window function's prosupport function passing along this struct whenever * the planner sees an OpExpr qual directly reference a window function in a * subquery. When the planner encounters this, we populate this struct and * pass it along to the window function's prosupport function so that it can * evaluate if the given WindowFunc is; * * a) monotonically increasing, or * b) monotonically decreasing, or * c) both monotonically increasing and decreasing, or * d) none of the above. * * A function that is monotonically increasing can never return a value that * is lower than a value returned in a "previous call". A monotonically * decreasing function can never return a value higher than a value returned * in a previous call. A function that is both must return the same value * each time. * * We define "previous call" to mean a previous call to the same WindowFunc * struct in the same window partition. * * row_number() is an example of a monotonically increasing function. The * return value will be reset back to 1 in each new partition. An example of * a monotonically increasing and decreasing function is COUNT(*) OVER (). * Since there is no ORDER BY clause in this example, all rows in the * partition are peers and all rows within the partition will be within the * frame bound. Likewise for COUNT(*) OVER(ORDER BY a ROWS BETWEEN UNBOUNDED * PRECEDING AND UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING). * * COUNT(*) OVER (ORDER BY a ROWS BETWEEN CURRENT ROW AND UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING) * is an example of a monotonically decreasing function. * * Implementations must only concern themselves with the given WindowFunc * being monotonic in a single partition. * * Inputs: * 'window_func' is the pointer to the window function being called. * * 'window_clause' pointer to the WindowClause data. Support functions can * use this to check frame bounds, etc. * * Outputs: * 'monotonic' the resulting MonotonicFunction value for the given input * window function and window clause. * ---------- */ typedef struct SupportRequestWFuncMonotonic { NodeTag type; /* Input fields: */ WindowFunc *window_func; /* Pointer to the window function data */ struct WindowClause *window_clause; /* Pointer to the window clause data */ /* Output fields: */ MonotonicFunction monotonic; } SupportRequestWFuncMonotonic; /* * Some WindowFunc behavior might not be affected by certain variations in * the WindowClause's frameOptions. For example, row_number() is coded in * such a way that the frame options don't change the returned row number. * nodeWindowAgg.c will have less work to do if the ROWS option is used * instead of the RANGE option as no check needs to be done for peer rows. * Since RANGE is included in the default frame options, window functions * such as row_number() might want to change that to ROW. * * Here we allow a WindowFunc's support function to determine which, if * anything, can be changed about the WindowClause which the WindowFunc * belongs to. Currently only the frameOptions can be modified. However, * we may want to allow more optimizations in the future. * * The support function is responsible for ensuring the optimized version of * the frameOptions doesn't affect the result of the window function. The * planner is responsible for only changing the frame options when all * WindowFuncs using this particular WindowClause agree on what the optimized * version of the frameOptions are. If a particular WindowFunc being used * does not have a support function then the planner will not make any changes * to the WindowClause's frameOptions. * * 'window_func' and 'window_clause' are set by the planner before calling the * support function so that the support function has these fields available. * These may be required in order to determine which optimizations are * possible. * * 'frameOptions' is set by the planner to WindowClause.frameOptions. The * support function must only adjust this if optimizations are possible for * the given WindowFunc. */ typedef struct SupportRequestOptimizeWindowClause { NodeTag type; /* Input fields: */ WindowFunc *window_func; /* Pointer to the window function data */ struct WindowClause *window_clause; /* Pointer to the window clause data */ /* Input/Output fields: */ int frameOptions; /* New frameOptions, or left untouched if no * optimizations are possible. */ } SupportRequestOptimizeWindowClause; #endif /* SUPPORTNODES_H */