postgresql/src/include/postgres.h
Tom Lane 23a27b039d Widen query numbers-of-tuples-processed counters to uint64.
This patch widens SPI_processed, EState's es_processed field, PortalData's
portalPos field, FuncCallContext's call_cntr and max_calls fields,
ExecutorRun's count argument, PortalRunFetch's result, and the max number
of rows in a SPITupleTable to uint64, and deals with (I hope) all the
ensuing fallout.  Some of these values were declared uint32 before, and
others "long".

I also removed PortalData's posOverflow field, since that logic seems
pretty useless given that portalPos is now always 64 bits.

The user-visible results are that command tags for SELECT etc will
correctly report tuple counts larger than 4G, as will plpgsql's GET
GET DIAGNOSTICS ... ROW_COUNT command.  Queries processing more tuples
than that are still not exactly the norm, but they're becoming more
common.

Most values associated with FETCH/MOVE distances, such as PortalRun's count
argument and the count argument of most SPI functions that have one, remain
declared as "long".  It's not clear whether it would be worth promoting
those to int64; but it would definitely be a large dollop of additional
API churn on top of this, and it would only help 32-bit platforms which
seem relatively less likely to see any benefit.

Andreas Scherbaum, reviewed by Christian Ullrich, additional hacking by me
2016-03-12 16:05:29 -05:00

750 lines
23 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* postgres.h
* Primary include file for PostgreSQL server .c files
*
* This should be the first file included by PostgreSQL backend modules.
* Client-side code should include postgres_fe.h instead.
*
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2016, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1995, Regents of the University of California
*
* src/include/postgres.h
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------
* TABLE OF CONTENTS
*
* When adding stuff to this file, please try to put stuff
* into the relevant section, or add new sections as appropriate.
*
* section description
* ------- ------------------------------------------------
* 1) variable-length datatypes (TOAST support)
* 2) datum type + support macros
* 3) exception handling backend support
*
* NOTES
*
* In general, this file should contain declarations that are widely needed
* in the backend environment, but are of no interest outside the backend.
*
* Simple type definitions live in c.h, where they are shared with
* postgres_fe.h. We do that since those type definitions are needed by
* frontend modules that want to deal with binary data transmission to or
* from the backend. Type definitions in this file should be for
* representations that never escape the backend, such as Datum or
* TOASTed varlena objects.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifndef POSTGRES_H
#define POSTGRES_H
#include "c.h"
#include "utils/elog.h"
#include "utils/palloc.h"
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------
* Section 1: variable-length datatypes (TOAST support)
* ----------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/*
* struct varatt_external is a traditional "TOAST pointer", that is, the
* information needed to fetch a Datum stored out-of-line in a TOAST table.
* The data is compressed if and only if va_extsize < va_rawsize - VARHDRSZ.
* This struct must not contain any padding, because we sometimes compare
* these pointers using memcmp.
*
* Note that this information is stored unaligned within actual tuples, so
* you need to memcpy from the tuple into a local struct variable before
* you can look at these fields! (The reason we use memcmp is to avoid
* having to do that just to detect equality of two TOAST pointers...)
*/
typedef struct varatt_external
{
int32 va_rawsize; /* Original data size (includes header) */
int32 va_extsize; /* External saved size (doesn't) */
Oid va_valueid; /* Unique ID of value within TOAST table */
Oid va_toastrelid; /* RelID of TOAST table containing it */
} varatt_external;
/*
* struct varatt_indirect is a "TOAST pointer" representing an out-of-line
* Datum that's stored in memory, not in an external toast relation.
* The creator of such a Datum is entirely responsible that the referenced
* storage survives for as long as referencing pointer Datums can exist.
*
* Note that just as for struct varatt_external, this struct is stored
* unaligned within any containing tuple.
*/
typedef struct varatt_indirect
{
struct varlena *pointer; /* Pointer to in-memory varlena */
} varatt_indirect;
/*
* struct varatt_expanded is a "TOAST pointer" representing an out-of-line
* Datum that is stored in memory, in some type-specific, not necessarily
* physically contiguous format that is convenient for computation not
* storage. APIs for this, in particular the definition of struct
* ExpandedObjectHeader, are in src/include/utils/expandeddatum.h.
*
* Note that just as for struct varatt_external, this struct is stored
* unaligned within any containing tuple.
*/
typedef struct ExpandedObjectHeader ExpandedObjectHeader;
typedef struct varatt_expanded
{
ExpandedObjectHeader *eohptr;
} varatt_expanded;
/*
* Type tag for the various sorts of "TOAST pointer" datums. The peculiar
* value for VARTAG_ONDISK comes from a requirement for on-disk compatibility
* with a previous notion that the tag field was the pointer datum's length.
*/
typedef enum vartag_external
{
VARTAG_INDIRECT = 1,
VARTAG_EXPANDED_RO = 2,
VARTAG_EXPANDED_RW = 3,
VARTAG_ONDISK = 18
} vartag_external;
/* this test relies on the specific tag values above */
#define VARTAG_IS_EXPANDED(tag) \
(((tag) & ~1) == VARTAG_EXPANDED_RO)
#define VARTAG_SIZE(tag) \
((tag) == VARTAG_INDIRECT ? sizeof(varatt_indirect) : \
VARTAG_IS_EXPANDED(tag) ? sizeof(varatt_expanded) : \
(tag) == VARTAG_ONDISK ? sizeof(varatt_external) : \
TrapMacro(true, "unrecognized TOAST vartag"))
/*
* These structs describe the header of a varlena object that may have been
* TOASTed. Generally, don't reference these structs directly, but use the
* macros below.
*
* We use separate structs for the aligned and unaligned cases because the
* compiler might otherwise think it could generate code that assumes
* alignment while touching fields of a 1-byte-header varlena.
*/
typedef union
{
struct /* Normal varlena (4-byte length) */
{
uint32 va_header;
char va_data[FLEXIBLE_ARRAY_MEMBER];
} va_4byte;
struct /* Compressed-in-line format */
{
uint32 va_header;
uint32 va_rawsize; /* Original data size (excludes header) */
char va_data[FLEXIBLE_ARRAY_MEMBER]; /* Compressed data */
} va_compressed;
} varattrib_4b;
typedef struct
{
uint8 va_header;
char va_data[FLEXIBLE_ARRAY_MEMBER]; /* Data begins here */
} varattrib_1b;
/* TOAST pointers are a subset of varattrib_1b with an identifying tag byte */
typedef struct
{
uint8 va_header; /* Always 0x80 or 0x01 */
uint8 va_tag; /* Type of datum */
char va_data[FLEXIBLE_ARRAY_MEMBER]; /* Type-specific data */
} varattrib_1b_e;
/*
* Bit layouts for varlena headers on big-endian machines:
*
* 00xxxxxx 4-byte length word, aligned, uncompressed data (up to 1G)
* 01xxxxxx 4-byte length word, aligned, *compressed* data (up to 1G)
* 10000000 1-byte length word, unaligned, TOAST pointer
* 1xxxxxxx 1-byte length word, unaligned, uncompressed data (up to 126b)
*
* Bit layouts for varlena headers on little-endian machines:
*
* xxxxxx00 4-byte length word, aligned, uncompressed data (up to 1G)
* xxxxxx10 4-byte length word, aligned, *compressed* data (up to 1G)
* 00000001 1-byte length word, unaligned, TOAST pointer
* xxxxxxx1 1-byte length word, unaligned, uncompressed data (up to 126b)
*
* The "xxx" bits are the length field (which includes itself in all cases).
* In the big-endian case we mask to extract the length, in the little-endian
* case we shift. Note that in both cases the flag bits are in the physically
* first byte. Also, it is not possible for a 1-byte length word to be zero;
* this lets us disambiguate alignment padding bytes from the start of an
* unaligned datum. (We now *require* pad bytes to be filled with zero!)
*
* In TOAST pointers the va_tag field (see varattrib_1b_e) is used to discern
* the specific type and length of the pointer datum.
*/
/*
* Endian-dependent macros. These are considered internal --- use the
* external macros below instead of using these directly.
*
* Note: IS_1B is true for external toast records but VARSIZE_1B will return 0
* for such records. Hence you should usually check for IS_EXTERNAL before
* checking for IS_1B.
*/
#ifdef WORDS_BIGENDIAN
#define VARATT_IS_4B(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header & 0x80) == 0x00)
#define VARATT_IS_4B_U(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header & 0xC0) == 0x00)
#define VARATT_IS_4B_C(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header & 0xC0) == 0x40)
#define VARATT_IS_1B(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header & 0x80) == 0x80)
#define VARATT_IS_1B_E(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header) == 0x80)
#define VARATT_NOT_PAD_BYTE(PTR) \
(*((uint8 *) (PTR)) != 0)
/* VARSIZE_4B() should only be used on known-aligned data */
#define VARSIZE_4B(PTR) \
(((varattrib_4b *) (PTR))->va_4byte.va_header & 0x3FFFFFFF)
#define VARSIZE_1B(PTR) \
(((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header & 0x7F)
#define VARTAG_1B_E(PTR) \
(((varattrib_1b_e *) (PTR))->va_tag)
#define SET_VARSIZE_4B(PTR,len) \
(((varattrib_4b *) (PTR))->va_4byte.va_header = (len) & 0x3FFFFFFF)
#define SET_VARSIZE_4B_C(PTR,len) \
(((varattrib_4b *) (PTR))->va_4byte.va_header = ((len) & 0x3FFFFFFF) | 0x40000000)
#define SET_VARSIZE_1B(PTR,len) \
(((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header = (len) | 0x80)
#define SET_VARTAG_1B_E(PTR,tag) \
(((varattrib_1b_e *) (PTR))->va_header = 0x80, \
((varattrib_1b_e *) (PTR))->va_tag = (tag))
#else /* !WORDS_BIGENDIAN */
#define VARATT_IS_4B(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header & 0x01) == 0x00)
#define VARATT_IS_4B_U(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header & 0x03) == 0x00)
#define VARATT_IS_4B_C(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header & 0x03) == 0x02)
#define VARATT_IS_1B(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header & 0x01) == 0x01)
#define VARATT_IS_1B_E(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header) == 0x01)
#define VARATT_NOT_PAD_BYTE(PTR) \
(*((uint8 *) (PTR)) != 0)
/* VARSIZE_4B() should only be used on known-aligned data */
#define VARSIZE_4B(PTR) \
((((varattrib_4b *) (PTR))->va_4byte.va_header >> 2) & 0x3FFFFFFF)
#define VARSIZE_1B(PTR) \
((((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header >> 1) & 0x7F)
#define VARTAG_1B_E(PTR) \
(((varattrib_1b_e *) (PTR))->va_tag)
#define SET_VARSIZE_4B(PTR,len) \
(((varattrib_4b *) (PTR))->va_4byte.va_header = (((uint32) (len)) << 2))
#define SET_VARSIZE_4B_C(PTR,len) \
(((varattrib_4b *) (PTR))->va_4byte.va_header = (((uint32) (len)) << 2) | 0x02)
#define SET_VARSIZE_1B(PTR,len) \
(((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_header = (((uint8) (len)) << 1) | 0x01)
#define SET_VARTAG_1B_E(PTR,tag) \
(((varattrib_1b_e *) (PTR))->va_header = 0x01, \
((varattrib_1b_e *) (PTR))->va_tag = (tag))
#endif /* WORDS_BIGENDIAN */
#define VARHDRSZ_SHORT offsetof(varattrib_1b, va_data)
#define VARATT_SHORT_MAX 0x7F
#define VARATT_CAN_MAKE_SHORT(PTR) \
(VARATT_IS_4B_U(PTR) && \
(VARSIZE(PTR) - VARHDRSZ + VARHDRSZ_SHORT) <= VARATT_SHORT_MAX)
#define VARATT_CONVERTED_SHORT_SIZE(PTR) \
(VARSIZE(PTR) - VARHDRSZ + VARHDRSZ_SHORT)
#define VARHDRSZ_EXTERNAL offsetof(varattrib_1b_e, va_data)
#define VARDATA_4B(PTR) (((varattrib_4b *) (PTR))->va_4byte.va_data)
#define VARDATA_4B_C(PTR) (((varattrib_4b *) (PTR))->va_compressed.va_data)
#define VARDATA_1B(PTR) (((varattrib_1b *) (PTR))->va_data)
#define VARDATA_1B_E(PTR) (((varattrib_1b_e *) (PTR))->va_data)
#define VARRAWSIZE_4B_C(PTR) \
(((varattrib_4b *) (PTR))->va_compressed.va_rawsize)
/* Externally visible macros */
/*
* VARDATA, VARSIZE, and SET_VARSIZE are the recommended API for most code
* for varlena datatypes. Note that they only work on untoasted,
* 4-byte-header Datums!
*
* Code that wants to use 1-byte-header values without detoasting should
* use VARSIZE_ANY/VARSIZE_ANY_EXHDR/VARDATA_ANY. The other macros here
* should usually be used only by tuple assembly/disassembly code and
* code that specifically wants to work with still-toasted Datums.
*
* WARNING: It is only safe to use VARDATA_ANY() -- typically with
* PG_DETOAST_DATUM_PACKED() -- if you really don't care about the alignment.
* Either because you're working with something like text where the alignment
* doesn't matter or because you're not going to access its constituent parts
* and just use things like memcpy on it anyways.
*/
#define VARDATA(PTR) VARDATA_4B(PTR)
#define VARSIZE(PTR) VARSIZE_4B(PTR)
#define VARSIZE_SHORT(PTR) VARSIZE_1B(PTR)
#define VARDATA_SHORT(PTR) VARDATA_1B(PTR)
#define VARTAG_EXTERNAL(PTR) VARTAG_1B_E(PTR)
#define VARSIZE_EXTERNAL(PTR) (VARHDRSZ_EXTERNAL + VARTAG_SIZE(VARTAG_EXTERNAL(PTR)))
#define VARDATA_EXTERNAL(PTR) VARDATA_1B_E(PTR)
#define VARATT_IS_COMPRESSED(PTR) VARATT_IS_4B_C(PTR)
#define VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL(PTR) VARATT_IS_1B_E(PTR)
#define VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL_ONDISK(PTR) \
(VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL(PTR) && VARTAG_EXTERNAL(PTR) == VARTAG_ONDISK)
#define VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL_INDIRECT(PTR) \
(VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL(PTR) && VARTAG_EXTERNAL(PTR) == VARTAG_INDIRECT)
#define VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL_EXPANDED_RO(PTR) \
(VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL(PTR) && VARTAG_EXTERNAL(PTR) == VARTAG_EXPANDED_RO)
#define VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL_EXPANDED_RW(PTR) \
(VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL(PTR) && VARTAG_EXTERNAL(PTR) == VARTAG_EXPANDED_RW)
#define VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL_EXPANDED(PTR) \
(VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL(PTR) && VARTAG_IS_EXPANDED(VARTAG_EXTERNAL(PTR)))
#define VARATT_IS_SHORT(PTR) VARATT_IS_1B(PTR)
#define VARATT_IS_EXTENDED(PTR) (!VARATT_IS_4B_U(PTR))
#define SET_VARSIZE(PTR, len) SET_VARSIZE_4B(PTR, len)
#define SET_VARSIZE_SHORT(PTR, len) SET_VARSIZE_1B(PTR, len)
#define SET_VARSIZE_COMPRESSED(PTR, len) SET_VARSIZE_4B_C(PTR, len)
#define SET_VARTAG_EXTERNAL(PTR, tag) SET_VARTAG_1B_E(PTR, tag)
#define VARSIZE_ANY(PTR) \
(VARATT_IS_1B_E(PTR) ? VARSIZE_EXTERNAL(PTR) : \
(VARATT_IS_1B(PTR) ? VARSIZE_1B(PTR) : \
VARSIZE_4B(PTR)))
/* Size of a varlena data, excluding header */
#define VARSIZE_ANY_EXHDR(PTR) \
(VARATT_IS_1B_E(PTR) ? VARSIZE_EXTERNAL(PTR)-VARHDRSZ_EXTERNAL : \
(VARATT_IS_1B(PTR) ? VARSIZE_1B(PTR)-VARHDRSZ_SHORT : \
VARSIZE_4B(PTR)-VARHDRSZ))
/* caution: this will not work on an external or compressed-in-line Datum */
/* caution: this will return a possibly unaligned pointer */
#define VARDATA_ANY(PTR) \
(VARATT_IS_1B(PTR) ? VARDATA_1B(PTR) : VARDATA_4B(PTR))
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------
* Section 2: datum type + support macros
* ----------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/*
* Port Notes:
* Postgres makes the following assumptions about datatype sizes:
*
* sizeof(Datum) == sizeof(void *) == 4 or 8
* sizeof(char) == 1
* sizeof(short) == 2
*
* When a type narrower than Datum is stored in a Datum, we place it in the
* low-order bits and are careful that the DatumGetXXX macro for it discards
* the unused high-order bits (as opposed to, say, assuming they are zero).
* This is needed to support old-style user-defined functions, since depending
* on architecture and compiler, the return value of a function returning char
* or short may contain garbage when called as if it returned Datum.
*/
typedef uintptr_t Datum;
#define SIZEOF_DATUM SIZEOF_VOID_P
typedef Datum *DatumPtr;
#define GET_1_BYTE(datum) (((Datum) (datum)) & 0x000000ff)
#define GET_2_BYTES(datum) (((Datum) (datum)) & 0x0000ffff)
#define GET_4_BYTES(datum) (((Datum) (datum)) & 0xffffffff)
#if SIZEOF_DATUM == 8
#define GET_8_BYTES(datum) ((Datum) (datum))
#endif
#define SET_1_BYTE(value) (((Datum) (value)) & 0x000000ff)
#define SET_2_BYTES(value) (((Datum) (value)) & 0x0000ffff)
#define SET_4_BYTES(value) (((Datum) (value)) & 0xffffffff)
#if SIZEOF_DATUM == 8
#define SET_8_BYTES(value) ((Datum) (value))
#endif
/*
* DatumGetBool
* Returns boolean value of a datum.
*
* Note: any nonzero value will be considered TRUE, but we ignore bits to
* the left of the width of bool, per comment above.
*/
#define DatumGetBool(X) ((bool) (((bool) (X)) != 0))
/*
* BoolGetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a boolean.
*
* Note: any nonzero value will be considered TRUE.
*/
#define BoolGetDatum(X) ((Datum) ((X) ? 1 : 0))
/*
* DatumGetChar
* Returns character value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetChar(X) ((char) GET_1_BYTE(X))
/*
* CharGetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a character.
*/
#define CharGetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_1_BYTE(X))
/*
* Int8GetDatum
* Returns datum representation for an 8-bit integer.
*/
#define Int8GetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_1_BYTE(X))
/*
* DatumGetUInt8
* Returns 8-bit unsigned integer value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetUInt8(X) ((uint8) GET_1_BYTE(X))
/*
* UInt8GetDatum
* Returns datum representation for an 8-bit unsigned integer.
*/
#define UInt8GetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_1_BYTE(X))
/*
* DatumGetInt16
* Returns 16-bit integer value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetInt16(X) ((int16) GET_2_BYTES(X))
/*
* Int16GetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a 16-bit integer.
*/
#define Int16GetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_2_BYTES(X))
/*
* DatumGetUInt16
* Returns 16-bit unsigned integer value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetUInt16(X) ((uint16) GET_2_BYTES(X))
/*
* UInt16GetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a 16-bit unsigned integer.
*/
#define UInt16GetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_2_BYTES(X))
/*
* DatumGetInt32
* Returns 32-bit integer value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetInt32(X) ((int32) GET_4_BYTES(X))
/*
* Int32GetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a 32-bit integer.
*/
#define Int32GetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_4_BYTES(X))
/*
* DatumGetUInt32
* Returns 32-bit unsigned integer value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetUInt32(X) ((uint32) GET_4_BYTES(X))
/*
* UInt32GetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a 32-bit unsigned integer.
*/
#define UInt32GetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_4_BYTES(X))
/*
* DatumGetObjectId
* Returns object identifier value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetObjectId(X) ((Oid) GET_4_BYTES(X))
/*
* ObjectIdGetDatum
* Returns datum representation for an object identifier.
*/
#define ObjectIdGetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_4_BYTES(X))
/*
* DatumGetTransactionId
* Returns transaction identifier value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetTransactionId(X) ((TransactionId) GET_4_BYTES(X))
/*
* TransactionIdGetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a transaction identifier.
*/
#define TransactionIdGetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_4_BYTES((X)))
/*
* MultiXactIdGetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a multixact identifier.
*/
#define MultiXactIdGetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_4_BYTES((X)))
/*
* DatumGetCommandId
* Returns command identifier value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetCommandId(X) ((CommandId) GET_4_BYTES(X))
/*
* CommandIdGetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a command identifier.
*/
#define CommandIdGetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_4_BYTES(X))
/*
* DatumGetPointer
* Returns pointer value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetPointer(X) ((Pointer) (X))
/*
* PointerGetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a pointer.
*/
#define PointerGetDatum(X) ((Datum) (X))
/*
* DatumGetCString
* Returns C string (null-terminated string) value of a datum.
*
* Note: C string is not a full-fledged Postgres type at present,
* but type input functions use this conversion for their inputs.
*/
#define DatumGetCString(X) ((char *) DatumGetPointer(X))
/*
* CStringGetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a C string (null-terminated string).
*
* Note: C string is not a full-fledged Postgres type at present,
* but type output functions use this conversion for their outputs.
* Note: CString is pass-by-reference; caller must ensure the pointed-to
* value has adequate lifetime.
*/
#define CStringGetDatum(X) PointerGetDatum(X)
/*
* DatumGetName
* Returns name value of a datum.
*/
#define DatumGetName(X) ((Name) DatumGetPointer(X))
/*
* NameGetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a name.
*
* Note: Name is pass-by-reference; caller must ensure the pointed-to
* value has adequate lifetime.
*/
#define NameGetDatum(X) PointerGetDatum(X)
/*
* DatumGetInt64
* Returns 64-bit integer value of a datum.
*
* Note: this macro hides whether int64 is pass by value or by reference.
*/
#ifdef USE_FLOAT8_BYVAL
#define DatumGetInt64(X) ((int64) GET_8_BYTES(X))
#else
#define DatumGetInt64(X) (* ((int64 *) DatumGetPointer(X)))
#endif
/*
* Int64GetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a 64-bit integer.
*
* Note: if int64 is pass by reference, this function returns a reference
* to palloc'd space.
*/
#ifdef USE_FLOAT8_BYVAL
#define Int64GetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_8_BYTES(X))
#else
extern Datum Int64GetDatum(int64 X);
#endif
/*
* DatumGetUInt64
* Returns 64-bit unsigned integer value of a datum.
*
* Note: this macro hides whether int64 is pass by value or by reference.
*/
#ifdef USE_FLOAT8_BYVAL
#define DatumGetUInt64(X) ((uint64) GET_8_BYTES(X))
#else
#define DatumGetUInt64(X) (* ((uint64 *) DatumGetPointer(X)))
#endif
/*
* UInt64GetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a 64-bit unsigned integer.
*
* Note: if int64 is pass by reference, this function returns a reference
* to palloc'd space.
*/
#ifdef USE_FLOAT8_BYVAL
#define UInt64GetDatum(X) ((Datum) SET_8_BYTES(X))
#else
#define UInt64GetDatum(X) Int64GetDatum((int64) (X))
#endif
/*
* DatumGetFloat4
* Returns 4-byte floating point value of a datum.
*
* Note: this macro hides whether float4 is pass by value or by reference.
*/
#ifdef USE_FLOAT4_BYVAL
extern float4 DatumGetFloat4(Datum X);
#else
#define DatumGetFloat4(X) (* ((float4 *) DatumGetPointer(X)))
#endif
/*
* Float4GetDatum
* Returns datum representation for a 4-byte floating point number.
*
* Note: if float4 is pass by reference, this function returns a reference
* to palloc'd space.
*/
extern Datum Float4GetDatum(float4 X);
/*
* DatumGetFloat8
* Returns 8-byte floating point value of a datum.
*
* Note: this macro hides whether float8 is pass by value or by reference.
*/
#ifdef USE_FLOAT8_BYVAL
extern float8 DatumGetFloat8(Datum X);
#else
#define DatumGetFloat8(X) (* ((float8 *) DatumGetPointer(X)))
#endif
/*
* Float8GetDatum
* Returns datum representation for an 8-byte floating point number.
*
* Note: if float8 is pass by reference, this function returns a reference
* to palloc'd space.
*/
extern Datum Float8GetDatum(float8 X);
/*
* Int64GetDatumFast
* Float8GetDatumFast
* Float4GetDatumFast
*
* These macros are intended to allow writing code that does not depend on
* whether int64, float8, float4 are pass-by-reference types, while not
* sacrificing performance when they are. The argument must be a variable
* that will exist and have the same value for as long as the Datum is needed.
* In the pass-by-ref case, the address of the variable is taken to use as
* the Datum. In the pass-by-val case, these will be the same as the non-Fast
* macros.
*/
#ifdef USE_FLOAT8_BYVAL
#define Int64GetDatumFast(X) Int64GetDatum(X)
#define Float8GetDatumFast(X) Float8GetDatum(X)
#else
#define Int64GetDatumFast(X) PointerGetDatum(&(X))
#define Float8GetDatumFast(X) PointerGetDatum(&(X))
#endif
#ifdef USE_FLOAT4_BYVAL
#define Float4GetDatumFast(X) Float4GetDatum(X)
#else
#define Float4GetDatumFast(X) PointerGetDatum(&(X))
#endif
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------
* Section 3: exception handling backend support
* ----------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/*
* Backend only infrastructure for the assertion-related macros in c.h.
*
* ExceptionalCondition must be present even when assertions are not enabled.
*/
extern void ExceptionalCondition(const char *conditionName,
const char *errorType,
const char *fileName, int lineNumber) pg_attribute_noreturn();
#endif /* POSTGRES_H */