/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * scankey.c * scan key support code * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2024, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * * IDENTIFICATION * src/backend/access/common/scankey.c * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #include "postgres.h" #include "access/skey.h" #include "catalog/pg_collation.h" /* * ScanKeyEntryInitialize * Initializes a scan key entry given all the field values. * The target procedure is specified by OID (but can be invalid * if SK_SEARCHNULL or SK_SEARCHNOTNULL is set). * * Note: CurrentMemoryContext at call should be as long-lived as the ScanKey * itself, because that's what will be used for any subsidiary info attached * to the ScanKey's FmgrInfo record. */ void ScanKeyEntryInitialize(ScanKey entry, int flags, AttrNumber attributeNumber, StrategyNumber strategy, Oid subtype, Oid collation, RegProcedure procedure, Datum argument) { entry->sk_flags = flags; entry->sk_attno = attributeNumber; entry->sk_strategy = strategy; entry->sk_subtype = subtype; entry->sk_collation = collation; entry->sk_argument = argument; if (RegProcedureIsValid(procedure)) { fmgr_info(procedure, &entry->sk_func); } else { Assert(flags & (SK_SEARCHNULL | SK_SEARCHNOTNULL)); MemSet(&entry->sk_func, 0, sizeof(entry->sk_func)); } } /* * ScanKeyInit * Shorthand version of ScanKeyEntryInitialize: flags and subtype * are assumed to be zero (the usual value), and collation is defaulted. * * This is the recommended version for hardwired lookups in system catalogs. * It cannot handle NULL arguments, unary operators, or nondefault operators, * but we need none of those features for most hardwired lookups. * * We set collation to C_COLLATION_OID always. This is the correct value * for all collation-aware columns in system catalogs, and it will be ignored * for other column types, so it's not worth trying to be more finicky. * * Note: CurrentMemoryContext at call should be as long-lived as the ScanKey * itself, because that's what will be used for any subsidiary info attached * to the ScanKey's FmgrInfo record. */ void ScanKeyInit(ScanKey entry, AttrNumber attributeNumber, StrategyNumber strategy, RegProcedure procedure, Datum argument) { entry->sk_flags = 0; entry->sk_attno = attributeNumber; entry->sk_strategy = strategy; entry->sk_subtype = InvalidOid; entry->sk_collation = C_COLLATION_OID; entry->sk_argument = argument; fmgr_info(procedure, &entry->sk_func); } /* * ScanKeyEntryInitializeWithInfo * Initializes a scan key entry using an already-completed FmgrInfo * function lookup record. * * Note: CurrentMemoryContext at call should be as long-lived as the ScanKey * itself, because that's what will be used for any subsidiary info attached * to the ScanKey's FmgrInfo record. */ void ScanKeyEntryInitializeWithInfo(ScanKey entry, int flags, AttrNumber attributeNumber, StrategyNumber strategy, Oid subtype, Oid collation, FmgrInfo *finfo, Datum argument) { entry->sk_flags = flags; entry->sk_attno = attributeNumber; entry->sk_strategy = strategy; entry->sk_subtype = subtype; entry->sk_collation = collation; entry->sk_argument = argument; fmgr_info_copy(&entry->sk_func, finfo, CurrentMemoryContext); }