postgresql/src/backend/rewrite/rewriteHandler.c
Tom Lane 375369acd1 Replace TupleTableSlot convention for whole-row variables and function
results with tuples as ordinary varlena Datums.  This commit does not
in itself do much for us, except eliminate the horrid memory leak
associated with evaluation of whole-row variables.  However, it lays the
groundwork for allowing composite types as table columns, and perhaps
some other useful features as well.  Per my proposal of a few days ago.
2004-04-01 21:28:47 +00:00

1338 lines
38 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* rewriteHandler.c
* Primary module of query rewriter.
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2003, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/rewrite/rewriteHandler.c,v 1.134 2004/04/01 21:28:44 tgl Exp $
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include "access/heapam.h"
#include "catalog/pg_operator.h"
#include "catalog/pg_type.h"
#include "miscadmin.h"
#include "nodes/makefuncs.h"
#include "optimizer/clauses.h"
#include "optimizer/prep.h"
#include "optimizer/var.h"
#include "parser/analyze.h"
#include "parser/parse_coerce.h"
#include "parser/parse_expr.h"
#include "parser/parse_oper.h"
#include "parser/parse_type.h"
#include "parser/parsetree.h"
#include "rewrite/rewriteHandler.h"
#include "rewrite/rewriteManip.h"
#include "utils/builtins.h"
#include "utils/lsyscache.h"
/* We use a list of these to detect recursion in RewriteQuery */
typedef struct rewrite_event
{
Oid relation; /* OID of relation having rules */
CmdType event; /* type of rule being fired */
} rewrite_event;
static Query *rewriteRuleAction(Query *parsetree,
Query *rule_action,
Node *rule_qual,
int rt_index,
CmdType event);
static List *adjustJoinTreeList(Query *parsetree, bool removert, int rt_index);
static void rewriteTargetList(Query *parsetree, Relation target_relation);
static TargetEntry *process_matched_tle(TargetEntry *src_tle,
TargetEntry *prior_tle,
const char *attrName);
static void markQueryForUpdate(Query *qry, bool skipOldNew);
static List *matchLocks(CmdType event, RuleLock *rulelocks,
int varno, Query *parsetree);
static Query *fireRIRrules(Query *parsetree, List *activeRIRs);
/*
* rewriteRuleAction -
* Rewrite the rule action with appropriate qualifiers (taken from
* the triggering query).
*/
static Query *
rewriteRuleAction(Query *parsetree,
Query *rule_action,
Node *rule_qual,
int rt_index,
CmdType event)
{
int current_varno,
new_varno;
int rt_length;
Query *sub_action;
Query **sub_action_ptr;
/*
* Make modifiable copies of rule action and qual (what we're passed
* are the stored versions in the relcache; don't touch 'em!).
*/
rule_action = (Query *) copyObject(rule_action);
rule_qual = (Node *) copyObject(rule_qual);
current_varno = rt_index;
rt_length = length(parsetree->rtable);
new_varno = PRS2_NEW_VARNO + rt_length;
/*
* Adjust rule action and qual to offset its varnos, so that we can
* merge its rtable with the main parsetree's rtable.
*
* If the rule action is an INSERT...SELECT, the OLD/NEW rtable entries
* will be in the SELECT part, and we have to modify that rather than
* the top-level INSERT (kluge!).
*/
sub_action = getInsertSelectQuery(rule_action, &sub_action_ptr);
OffsetVarNodes((Node *) sub_action, rt_length, 0);
OffsetVarNodes(rule_qual, rt_length, 0);
/* but references to *OLD* should point at original rt_index */
ChangeVarNodes((Node *) sub_action,
PRS2_OLD_VARNO + rt_length, rt_index, 0);
ChangeVarNodes(rule_qual,
PRS2_OLD_VARNO + rt_length, rt_index, 0);
/*
* Generate expanded rtable consisting of main parsetree's rtable plus
* rule action's rtable; this becomes the complete rtable for the rule
* action. Some of the entries may be unused after we finish
* rewriting, but we leave them all in place for two reasons:
*
* * We'd have a much harder job to adjust the query's varnos
* if we selectively removed RT entries.
*
* * If the rule is INSTEAD, then the original query won't be
* executed at all, and so its rtable must be preserved so that
* the executor will do the correct permissions checks on it.
*
* RT entries that are not referenced in the completed jointree will be
* ignored by the planner, so they do not affect query semantics. But
* any permissions checks specified in them will be applied during
* executor startup (see ExecCheckRTEPerms()). This allows us to check
* that the caller has, say, insert-permission on a view, when the view
* is not semantically referenced at all in the resulting query.
*
* When a rule is not INSTEAD, the permissions checks done on its copied
* RT entries will be redundant with those done during execution of the
* original query, but we don't bother to treat that case differently.
*
* NOTE: because planner will destructively alter rtable, we must ensure
* that rule action's rtable is separate and shares no substructure
* with the main rtable. Hence do a deep copy here.
*/
sub_action->rtable = nconc((List *) copyObject(parsetree->rtable),
sub_action->rtable);
/*
* Each rule action's jointree should be the main parsetree's jointree
* plus that rule's jointree, but usually *without* the original
* rtindex that we're replacing (if present, which it won't be for
* INSERT). Note that if the rule action refers to OLD, its jointree
* will add a reference to rt_index. If the rule action doesn't refer
* to OLD, but either the rule_qual or the user query quals do, then
* we need to keep the original rtindex in the jointree to provide
* data for the quals. We don't want the original rtindex to be
* joined twice, however, so avoid keeping it if the rule action
* mentions it.
*
* As above, the action's jointree must not share substructure with the
* main parsetree's.
*/
if (sub_action->commandType != CMD_UTILITY)
{
bool keeporig;
List *newjointree;
Assert(sub_action->jointree != NULL);
keeporig = (!rangeTableEntry_used((Node *) sub_action->jointree,
rt_index, 0)) &&
(rangeTableEntry_used(rule_qual, rt_index, 0) ||
rangeTableEntry_used(parsetree->jointree->quals, rt_index, 0));
newjointree = adjustJoinTreeList(parsetree, !keeporig, rt_index);
if (newjointree != NIL)
{
/*
* If sub_action is a setop, manipulating its jointree will do
* no good at all, because the jointree is dummy. (Perhaps
* someday we could push the joining and quals down to the
* member statements of the setop?)
*/
if (sub_action->setOperations != NULL)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("conditional UNION/INTERSECT/EXCEPT statements are not implemented")));
sub_action->jointree->fromlist =
nconc(newjointree, sub_action->jointree->fromlist);
}
}
/*
* We copy the qualifications of the parsetree to the action and vice
* versa. So force hasSubLinks if one of them has it. If this is not
* right, the flag will get cleared later, but we mustn't risk having
* it not set when it needs to be. (XXX this should probably be
* handled by AddQual and friends, not here...)
*/
if (parsetree->hasSubLinks)
sub_action->hasSubLinks = TRUE;
else if (sub_action->hasSubLinks)
parsetree->hasSubLinks = TRUE;
/*
* Event Qualification forces copying of parsetree and splitting into
* two queries one w/rule_qual, one w/NOT rule_qual. Also add user
* query qual onto rule action
*/
AddQual(sub_action, rule_qual);
AddQual(sub_action, parsetree->jointree->quals);
/*
* Rewrite new.attribute w/ right hand side of target-list entry for
* appropriate field name in insert/update.
*
* KLUGE ALERT: since ResolveNew returns a mutated copy, we can't just
* apply it to sub_action; we have to remember to update the sublink
* inside rule_action, too.
*/
if (event == CMD_INSERT || event == CMD_UPDATE)
{
sub_action = (Query *) ResolveNew((Node *) sub_action,
new_varno,
0,
parsetree->targetList,
event,
current_varno);
if (sub_action_ptr)
*sub_action_ptr = sub_action;
else
rule_action = sub_action;
}
return rule_action;
}
/*
* Copy the query's jointree list, and optionally attempt to remove any
* occurrence of the given rt_index as a top-level join item (we do not look
* for it within join items; this is OK because we are only expecting to find
* it as an UPDATE or DELETE target relation, which will be at the top level
* of the join). Returns modified jointree list --- this is a separate copy
* sharing no nodes with the original.
*/
static List *
adjustJoinTreeList(Query *parsetree, bool removert, int rt_index)
{
List *newjointree = copyObject(parsetree->jointree->fromlist);
List *jjt;
if (removert)
{
foreach(jjt, newjointree)
{
RangeTblRef *rtr = lfirst(jjt);
if (IsA(rtr, RangeTblRef) &&
rtr->rtindex == rt_index)
{
newjointree = lremove(rtr, newjointree);
/* foreach is safe because we exit loop after lremove... */
break;
}
}
}
return newjointree;
}
/*
* rewriteTargetList - rewrite INSERT/UPDATE targetlist into standard form
*
* This has the following responsibilities:
*
* 1. For an INSERT, add tlist entries to compute default values for any
* attributes that have defaults and are not assigned to in the given tlist.
* (We do not insert anything for default-less attributes, however. The
* planner will later insert NULLs for them, but there's no reason to slow
* down rewriter processing with extra tlist nodes.) Also, for both INSERT
* and UPDATE, replace explicit DEFAULT specifications with column default
* expressions.
*
* 2. Merge multiple entries for the same target attribute, or declare error
* if we can't. Presently, multiple entries are only allowed for UPDATE of
* an array field, for example "UPDATE table SET foo[2] = 42, foo[4] = 43".
* We can merge such operations into a single assignment op. Essentially,
* the expression we want to produce in this case is like
* foo = array_set(array_set(foo, 2, 42), 4, 43)
*
* 3. Sort the tlist into standard order: non-junk fields in order by resno,
* then junk fields (these in no particular order).
*
* We must do items 1 and 2 before firing rewrite rules, else rewritten
* references to NEW.foo will produce wrong or incomplete results. Item 3
* is not needed for rewriting, but will be needed by the planner, and we
* can do it essentially for free while handling items 1 and 2.
*/
static void
rewriteTargetList(Query *parsetree, Relation target_relation)
{
CmdType commandType = parsetree->commandType;
List *tlist = parsetree->targetList;
List *new_tlist = NIL;
int attrno,
numattrs;
List *temp;
/*
* Scan the tuple description in the relation's relcache entry to make
* sure we have all the user attributes in the right order.
*/
numattrs = RelationGetNumberOfAttributes(target_relation);
for (attrno = 1; attrno <= numattrs; attrno++)
{
Form_pg_attribute att_tup = target_relation->rd_att->attrs[attrno - 1];
TargetEntry *new_tle = NULL;
/* We can ignore deleted attributes */
if (att_tup->attisdropped)
continue;
/*
* Look for targetlist entries matching this attr.
*
* Junk attributes are not candidates to be matched.
*/
foreach(temp, tlist)
{
TargetEntry *old_tle = (TargetEntry *) lfirst(temp);
Resdom *resdom = old_tle->resdom;
if (!resdom->resjunk && resdom->resno == attrno)
{
new_tle = process_matched_tle(old_tle, new_tle,
NameStr(att_tup->attname));
/* keep scanning to detect multiple assignments to attr */
}
}
/*
* Handle the two cases where we need to insert a default
* expression: it's an INSERT and there's no tlist entry for the
* column, or the tlist entry is a DEFAULT placeholder node.
*/
if ((new_tle == NULL && commandType == CMD_INSERT) ||
(new_tle && new_tle->expr && IsA(new_tle->expr, SetToDefault)))
{
Node *new_expr;
new_expr = build_column_default(target_relation, attrno);
/*
* If there is no default (ie, default is effectively NULL),
* we can omit the tlist entry in the INSERT case, since the
* planner can insert a NULL for itself, and there's no point
* in spending any more rewriter cycles on the entry. But in
* the UPDATE case we've got to explicitly set the column to
* NULL.
*/
if (!new_expr)
{
if (commandType == CMD_INSERT)
new_tle = NULL;
else
{
new_expr = (Node *) makeConst(att_tup->atttypid,
att_tup->attlen,
(Datum) 0,
true, /* isnull */
att_tup->attbyval);
/* this is to catch a NOT NULL domain constraint */
new_expr = coerce_to_domain(new_expr,
InvalidOid,
att_tup->atttypid,
COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST);
}
}
if (new_expr)
new_tle = makeTargetEntry(makeResdom(attrno,
att_tup->atttypid,
att_tup->atttypmod,
pstrdup(NameStr(att_tup->attname)),
false),
(Expr *) new_expr);
}
if (new_tle)
new_tlist = lappend(new_tlist, new_tle);
}
/*
* Copy all resjunk tlist entries to the end of the new tlist, and
* assign them resnos above the last real resno.
*
* Typical junk entries include ORDER BY or GROUP BY expressions (are
* these actually possible in an INSERT or UPDATE?), system attribute
* references, etc.
*/
foreach(temp, tlist)
{
TargetEntry *old_tle = (TargetEntry *) lfirst(temp);
Resdom *resdom = old_tle->resdom;
if (resdom->resjunk)
{
/* Get the resno right, but don't copy unnecessarily */
if (resdom->resno != attrno)
{
resdom = (Resdom *) copyObject((Node *) resdom);
resdom->resno = attrno;
old_tle = makeTargetEntry(resdom, old_tle->expr);
}
new_tlist = lappend(new_tlist, old_tle);
attrno++;
}
else
{
/* Let's just make sure we processed all the non-junk items */
if (resdom->resno < 1 || resdom->resno > numattrs)
elog(ERROR, "bogus resno %d in targetlist", resdom->resno);
}
}
parsetree->targetList = new_tlist;
}
/*
* Convert a matched TLE from the original tlist into a correct new TLE.
*
* This routine detects and handles multiple assignments to the same target
* attribute. (The attribute name is needed only for error messages.)
*/
static TargetEntry *
process_matched_tle(TargetEntry *src_tle,
TargetEntry *prior_tle,
const char *attrName)
{
Resdom *resdom = src_tle->resdom;
Node *priorbottom;
ArrayRef *newexpr;
if (prior_tle == NULL)
{
/*
* Normal case where this is the first assignment to the
* attribute.
*/
return src_tle;
}
/*
* Multiple assignments to same attribute. Allow only if all are
* array-assign operators with same bottom array object.
*/
if (src_tle->expr == NULL || !IsA(src_tle->expr, ArrayRef) ||
((ArrayRef *) src_tle->expr)->refassgnexpr == NULL ||
prior_tle->expr == NULL || !IsA(prior_tle->expr, ArrayRef) ||
((ArrayRef *) prior_tle->expr)->refassgnexpr == NULL ||
((ArrayRef *) src_tle->expr)->refrestype !=
((ArrayRef *) prior_tle->expr)->refrestype)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR),
errmsg("multiple assignments to same column \"%s\"",
attrName)));
/*
* Prior TLE could be a nest of ArrayRefs if we do this more than
* once.
*/
priorbottom = (Node *) ((ArrayRef *) prior_tle->expr)->refexpr;
while (priorbottom != NULL && IsA(priorbottom, ArrayRef) &&
((ArrayRef *) priorbottom)->refassgnexpr != NULL)
priorbottom = (Node *) ((ArrayRef *) priorbottom)->refexpr;
if (!equal(priorbottom, ((ArrayRef *) src_tle->expr)->refexpr))
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR),
errmsg("multiple assignments to same column \"%s\"",
attrName)));
/*
* Looks OK to nest 'em.
*/
newexpr = makeNode(ArrayRef);
memcpy(newexpr, src_tle->expr, sizeof(ArrayRef));
newexpr->refexpr = prior_tle->expr;
return makeTargetEntry(resdom, (Expr *) newexpr);
}
/*
* Make an expression tree for the default value for a column.
*
* If there is no default, return a NULL instead.
*/
Node *
build_column_default(Relation rel, int attrno)
{
TupleDesc rd_att = rel->rd_att;
Form_pg_attribute att_tup = rd_att->attrs[attrno - 1];
Oid atttype = att_tup->atttypid;
int32 atttypmod = att_tup->atttypmod;
Node *expr = NULL;
Oid exprtype;
/*
* Scan to see if relation has a default for this column.
*/
if (rd_att->constr && rd_att->constr->num_defval > 0)
{
AttrDefault *defval = rd_att->constr->defval;
int ndef = rd_att->constr->num_defval;
while (--ndef >= 0)
{
if (attrno == defval[ndef].adnum)
{
/*
* Found it, convert string representation to node tree.
*/
expr = stringToNode(defval[ndef].adbin);
break;
}
}
}
if (expr == NULL)
{
/*
* No per-column default, so look for a default for the type
* itself.
*/
expr = get_typdefault(atttype);
}
if (expr == NULL)
return NULL; /* No default anywhere */
/*
* Make sure the value is coerced to the target column type; this will
* generally be true already, but there seem to be some corner cases
* involving domain defaults where it might not be true. This should
* match the parser's processing of non-defaulted expressions --- see
* updateTargetListEntry().
*/
exprtype = exprType(expr);
expr = coerce_to_target_type(NULL, /* no UNKNOWN params here */
expr, exprtype,
atttype, atttypmod,
COERCION_ASSIGNMENT,
COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST);
if (expr == NULL)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_DATATYPE_MISMATCH),
errmsg("column \"%s\" is of type %s"
" but default expression is of type %s",
NameStr(att_tup->attname),
format_type_be(atttype),
format_type_be(exprtype)),
errhint("You will need to rewrite or cast the expression.")));
return expr;
}
/*
* matchLocks -
* match the list of locks and returns the matching rules
*/
static List *
matchLocks(CmdType event,
RuleLock *rulelocks,
int varno,
Query *parsetree)
{
List *matching_locks = NIL;
int nlocks;
int i;
if (rulelocks == NULL)
return NIL;
if (parsetree->commandType != CMD_SELECT)
{
if (parsetree->resultRelation != varno)
return NIL;
}
nlocks = rulelocks->numLocks;
for (i = 0; i < nlocks; i++)
{
RewriteRule *oneLock = rulelocks->rules[i];
if (oneLock->event == event)
{
if (parsetree->commandType != CMD_SELECT ||
(oneLock->attrno == -1 ?
rangeTableEntry_used((Node *) parsetree, varno, 0) :
attribute_used((Node *) parsetree,
varno, oneLock->attrno, 0)))
matching_locks = lappend(matching_locks, oneLock);
}
}
return matching_locks;
}
static Query *
ApplyRetrieveRule(Query *parsetree,
RewriteRule *rule,
int rt_index,
bool relation_level,
Relation relation,
bool relIsUsed,
List *activeRIRs)
{
Query *rule_action;
RangeTblEntry *rte,
*subrte;
if (length(rule->actions) != 1)
elog(ERROR, "expected just one rule action");
if (rule->qual != NULL)
elog(ERROR, "cannot handle qualified ON SELECT rule");
if (!relation_level)
elog(ERROR, "cannot handle per-attribute ON SELECT rule");
/*
* Make a modifiable copy of the view query, and recursively expand
* any view references inside it.
*/
rule_action = copyObject(lfirst(rule->actions));
rule_action = fireRIRrules(rule_action, activeRIRs);
/*
* VIEWs are really easy --- just plug the view query in as a
* subselect, replacing the relation's original RTE.
*/
rte = rt_fetch(rt_index, parsetree->rtable);
rte->rtekind = RTE_SUBQUERY;
rte->relid = InvalidOid;
rte->subquery = rule_action;
rte->inh = false; /* must not be set for a subquery */
/*
* We move the view's permission check data down to its rangetable.
* The checks will actually be done against the *OLD* entry therein.
*/
subrte = rt_fetch(PRS2_OLD_VARNO, rule_action->rtable);
Assert(subrte->relid == relation->rd_id);
subrte->requiredPerms = rte->requiredPerms;
subrte->checkAsUser = rte->checkAsUser;
rte->requiredPerms = 0; /* no permission check on subquery itself */
rte->checkAsUser = 0;
/*
* FOR UPDATE of view?
*/
if (intMember(rt_index, parsetree->rowMarks))
{
/*
* Remove the view from the list of rels that will actually be
* marked FOR UPDATE by the executor. It will still be access-
* checked for write access, though.
*/
parsetree->rowMarks = lremovei(rt_index, parsetree->rowMarks);
/*
* Set up the view's referenced tables as if FOR UPDATE.
*/
markQueryForUpdate(rule_action, true);
}
return parsetree;
}
/*
* Recursively mark all relations used by a view as FOR UPDATE.
*
* This may generate an invalid query, eg if some sub-query uses an
* aggregate. We leave it to the planner to detect that.
*
* NB: this must agree with the parser's transformForUpdate() routine.
*/
static void
markQueryForUpdate(Query *qry, bool skipOldNew)
{
Index rti = 0;
List *l;
foreach(l, qry->rtable)
{
RangeTblEntry *rte = (RangeTblEntry *) lfirst(l);
rti++;
/* Ignore OLD and NEW entries if we are at top level of view */
if (skipOldNew &&
(rti == PRS2_OLD_VARNO || rti == PRS2_NEW_VARNO))
continue;
if (rte->rtekind == RTE_RELATION)
{
if (!intMember(rti, qry->rowMarks))
qry->rowMarks = lappendi(qry->rowMarks, rti);
rte->requiredPerms |= ACL_SELECT_FOR_UPDATE;
}
else if (rte->rtekind == RTE_SUBQUERY)
{
/* FOR UPDATE of subquery is propagated to subquery's rels */
markQueryForUpdate(rte->subquery, false);
}
}
}
/*
* fireRIRonSubLink -
* Apply fireRIRrules() to each SubLink (subselect in expression) found
* in the given tree.
*
* NOTE: although this has the form of a walker, we cheat and modify the
* SubLink nodes in-place. It is caller's responsibility to ensure that
* no unwanted side-effects occur!
*
* This is unlike most of the other routines that recurse into subselects,
* because we must take control at the SubLink node in order to replace
* the SubLink's subselect link with the possibly-rewritten subquery.
*/
static bool
fireRIRonSubLink(Node *node, List *activeRIRs)
{
if (node == NULL)
return false;
if (IsA(node, SubLink))
{
SubLink *sub = (SubLink *) node;
/* Do what we came for */
sub->subselect = (Node *) fireRIRrules((Query *) sub->subselect,
activeRIRs);
/* Fall through to process lefthand args of SubLink */
}
/*
* Do NOT recurse into Query nodes, because fireRIRrules already
* processed subselects of subselects for us.
*/
return expression_tree_walker(node, fireRIRonSubLink,
(void *) activeRIRs);
}
/*
* fireRIRrules -
* Apply all RIR rules on each rangetable entry in a query
*/
static Query *
fireRIRrules(Query *parsetree, List *activeRIRs)
{
int rt_index;
/*
* don't try to convert this into a foreach loop, because rtable list
* can get changed each time through...
*/
rt_index = 0;
while (rt_index < length(parsetree->rtable))
{
RangeTblEntry *rte;
Relation rel;
List *locks;
RuleLock *rules;
RewriteRule *rule;
LOCKMODE lockmode;
bool relIsUsed;
int i;
++rt_index;
rte = rt_fetch(rt_index, parsetree->rtable);
/*
* A subquery RTE can't have associated rules, so there's nothing
* to do to this level of the query, but we must recurse into the
* subquery to expand any rule references in it.
*/
if (rte->rtekind == RTE_SUBQUERY)
{
rte->subquery = fireRIRrules(rte->subquery, activeRIRs);
continue;
}
/*
* Joins and other non-relation RTEs can be ignored completely.
*/
if (rte->rtekind != RTE_RELATION)
continue;
/*
* If the table is not referenced in the query, then we ignore it.
* This prevents infinite expansion loop due to new rtable entries
* inserted by expansion of a rule. A table is referenced if it is
* part of the join set (a source table), or is referenced by any
* Var nodes, or is the result table.
*/
relIsUsed = rangeTableEntry_used((Node *) parsetree, rt_index, 0);
if (!relIsUsed && rt_index != parsetree->resultRelation)
continue;
/*
* This may well be the first access to the relation during the
* current statement (it will be, if this Query was extracted from
* a rule or somehow got here other than via the parser).
* Therefore, grab the appropriate lock type for the relation, and
* do not release it until end of transaction. This protects the
* rewriter and planner against schema changes mid-query.
*
* If the relation is the query's result relation, then
* RewriteQuery() already got the right lock on it, so we need no
* additional lock. Otherwise, check to see if the relation is
* accessed FOR UPDATE or not.
*/
if (rt_index == parsetree->resultRelation)
lockmode = NoLock;
else if (intMember(rt_index, parsetree->rowMarks))
lockmode = RowShareLock;
else
lockmode = AccessShareLock;
rel = heap_open(rte->relid, lockmode);
/*
* Collect the RIR rules that we must apply
*/
rules = rel->rd_rules;
if (rules == NULL)
{
heap_close(rel, NoLock);
continue;
}
locks = NIL;
for (i = 0; i < rules->numLocks; i++)
{
rule = rules->rules[i];
if (rule->event != CMD_SELECT)
continue;
if (rule->attrno > 0)
{
/* per-attr rule; do we need it? */
if (!attribute_used((Node *) parsetree, rt_index,
rule->attrno, 0))
continue;
}
locks = lappend(locks, rule);
}
/*
* If we found any, apply them --- but first check for recursion!
*/
if (locks != NIL)
{
List *newActiveRIRs;
List *l;
if (oidMember(RelationGetRelid(rel), activeRIRs))
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_OBJECT_DEFINITION),
errmsg("infinite recursion detected in rules for relation \"%s\"",
RelationGetRelationName(rel))));
newActiveRIRs = lconso(RelationGetRelid(rel), activeRIRs);
foreach(l, locks)
{
rule = lfirst(l);
parsetree = ApplyRetrieveRule(parsetree,
rule,
rt_index,
rule->attrno == -1,
rel,
relIsUsed,
newActiveRIRs);
}
}
heap_close(rel, NoLock);
}
/*
* Recurse into sublink subqueries, too. But we already did the ones
* in the rtable.
*/
if (parsetree->hasSubLinks)
query_tree_walker(parsetree, fireRIRonSubLink, (void *) activeRIRs,
QTW_IGNORE_RT_SUBQUERIES);
/*
* If the query was marked having aggregates, check if this is still
* true after rewriting. Ditto for sublinks. Note there should be no
* aggs in the qual at this point. (Does this code still do anything
* useful? The view-becomes-subselect-in-FROM approach doesn't look
* like it could remove aggs or sublinks...)
*/
if (parsetree->hasAggs)
{
parsetree->hasAggs = checkExprHasAggs((Node *) parsetree);
if (parsetree->hasAggs)
if (checkExprHasAggs((Node *) parsetree->jointree))
elog(ERROR, "failed to remove aggregates from qual");
}
if (parsetree->hasSubLinks)
parsetree->hasSubLinks = checkExprHasSubLink((Node *) parsetree);
return parsetree;
}
/*
* Modify the given query by adding 'AND rule_qual IS NOT TRUE' to its
* qualification. This is used to generate suitable "else clauses" for
* conditional INSTEAD rules. (Unfortunately we must use "x IS NOT TRUE",
* not just "NOT x" which the planner is much smarter about, else we will
* do the wrong thing when the qual evaluates to NULL.)
*
* The rule_qual may contain references to OLD or NEW. OLD references are
* replaced by references to the specified rt_index (the relation that the
* rule applies to). NEW references are only possible for INSERT and UPDATE
* queries on the relation itself, and so they should be replaced by copies
* of the related entries in the query's own targetlist.
*/
static Query *
CopyAndAddInvertedQual(Query *parsetree,
Node *rule_qual,
int rt_index,
CmdType event)
{
Query *new_tree = (Query *) copyObject(parsetree);
Node *new_qual = (Node *) copyObject(rule_qual);
/* Fix references to OLD */
ChangeVarNodes(new_qual, PRS2_OLD_VARNO, rt_index, 0);
/* Fix references to NEW */
if (event == CMD_INSERT || event == CMD_UPDATE)
new_qual = ResolveNew(new_qual,
PRS2_NEW_VARNO,
0,
parsetree->targetList,
event,
rt_index);
/* And attach the fixed qual */
AddInvertedQual(new_tree, new_qual);
return new_tree;
}
/*
* fireRules -
* Iterate through rule locks applying rules.
*
* Input arguments:
* parsetree - original query
* rt_index - RT index of result relation in original query
* event - type of rule event
* locks - list of rules to fire
* Output arguments:
* *instead_flag - set TRUE if any unqualified INSTEAD rule is found
* (must be initialized to FALSE)
* *qual_product - filled with modified original query if any qualified
* INSTEAD rule is found (must be initialized to NULL)
* Return value:
* list of rule actions adjusted for use with this query
*
* Qualified INSTEAD rules generate their action with the qualification
* condition added. They also generate a modified version of the original
* query with the negated qualification added, so that it will run only for
* rows that the qualified action doesn't act on. (If there are multiple
* qualified INSTEAD rules, we AND all the negated quals onto a single
* modified original query.) We won't execute the original, unmodified
* query if we find either qualified or unqualified INSTEAD rules. If
* we find both, the modified original query is discarded too.
*/
static List *
fireRules(Query *parsetree,
int rt_index,
CmdType event,
List *locks,
bool *instead_flag,
Query **qual_product)
{
List *results = NIL;
List *i;
foreach(i, locks)
{
RewriteRule *rule_lock = (RewriteRule *) lfirst(i);
Node *event_qual = rule_lock->qual;
List *actions = rule_lock->actions;
QuerySource qsrc;
List *r;
/* Determine correct QuerySource value for actions */
if (rule_lock->isInstead)
{
if (event_qual != NULL)
qsrc = QSRC_QUAL_INSTEAD_RULE;
else
{
qsrc = QSRC_INSTEAD_RULE;
*instead_flag = true; /* report unqualified INSTEAD */
}
}
else
qsrc = QSRC_NON_INSTEAD_RULE;
if (qsrc == QSRC_QUAL_INSTEAD_RULE)
{
/*
* If there are INSTEAD rules with qualifications, the
* original query is still performed. But all the negated rule
* qualifications of the INSTEAD rules are added so it does
* its actions only in cases where the rule quals of all
* INSTEAD rules are false. Think of it as the default action
* in a case. We save this in *qual_product so RewriteQuery()
* can add it to the query list after we mangled it up enough.
*
* If we have already found an unqualified INSTEAD rule, then
* *qual_product won't be used, so don't bother building it.
*/
if (!*instead_flag)
{
if (*qual_product == NULL)
*qual_product = parsetree;
*qual_product = CopyAndAddInvertedQual(*qual_product,
event_qual,
rt_index,
event);
}
}
/* Now process the rule's actions and add them to the result list */
foreach(r, actions)
{
Query *rule_action = lfirst(r);
if (rule_action->commandType == CMD_NOTHING)
continue;
rule_action = rewriteRuleAction(parsetree, rule_action,
event_qual, rt_index, event);
rule_action->querySource = qsrc;
rule_action->canSetTag = false; /* might change later */
results = lappend(results, rule_action);
}
}
return results;
}
/*
* RewriteQuery -
* rewrites the query and apply the rules again on the queries rewritten
*
* rewrite_events is a list of open query-rewrite actions, so we can detect
* infinite recursion.
*/
static List *
RewriteQuery(Query *parsetree, List *rewrite_events)
{
CmdType event = parsetree->commandType;
bool instead = false;
Query *qual_product = NULL;
List *rewritten = NIL;
/*
* If the statement is an update, insert or delete - fire rules on it.
*
* SELECT rules are handled later when we have all the queries that
* should get executed. Also, utilities aren't rewritten at all (do
* we still need that check?)
*/
if (event != CMD_SELECT && event != CMD_UTILITY)
{
int result_relation;
RangeTblEntry *rt_entry;
Relation rt_entry_relation;
List *locks;
result_relation = parsetree->resultRelation;
Assert(result_relation != 0);
rt_entry = rt_fetch(result_relation, parsetree->rtable);
Assert(rt_entry->rtekind == RTE_RELATION);
/*
* This may well be the first access to the result relation during
* the current statement (it will be, if this Query was extracted
* from a rule or somehow got here other than via the parser).
* Therefore, grab the appropriate lock type for a result
* relation, and do not release it until end of transaction. This
* protects the rewriter and planner against schema changes
* mid-query.
*/
rt_entry_relation = heap_open(rt_entry->relid, RowExclusiveLock);
/*
* If it's an INSERT or UPDATE, rewrite the targetlist into
* standard form. This will be needed by the planner anyway, and
* doing it now ensures that any references to NEW.field will
* behave sanely.
*/
if (event == CMD_INSERT || event == CMD_UPDATE)
rewriteTargetList(parsetree, rt_entry_relation);
/*
* Collect and apply the appropriate rules.
*/
locks = matchLocks(event, rt_entry_relation->rd_rules,
result_relation, parsetree);
if (locks != NIL)
{
List *product_queries;
product_queries = fireRules(parsetree,
result_relation,
event,
locks,
&instead,
&qual_product);
/*
* If we got any product queries, recursively rewrite them ---
* but first check for recursion!
*/
if (product_queries != NIL)
{
List *n;
rewrite_event *rev;
foreach(n, rewrite_events)
{
rev = (rewrite_event *) lfirst(n);
if (rev->relation == RelationGetRelid(rt_entry_relation) &&
rev->event == event)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_OBJECT_DEFINITION),
errmsg("infinite recursion detected in rules for relation \"%s\"",
RelationGetRelationName(rt_entry_relation))));
}
rev = (rewrite_event *) palloc(sizeof(rewrite_event));
rev->relation = RelationGetRelid(rt_entry_relation);
rev->event = event;
rewrite_events = lcons(rev, rewrite_events);
foreach(n, product_queries)
{
Query *pt = (Query *) lfirst(n);
List *newstuff;
newstuff = RewriteQuery(pt, rewrite_events);
rewritten = nconc(rewritten, newstuff);
}
}
}
heap_close(rt_entry_relation, NoLock); /* keep lock! */
}
/*
* For INSERTs, the original query is done first; for UPDATE/DELETE,
* it is done last. This is needed because update and delete rule
* actions might not do anything if they are invoked after the update
* or delete is performed. The command counter increment between the
* query executions makes the deleted (and maybe the updated) tuples
* disappear so the scans for them in the rule actions cannot find
* them.
*
* If we found any unqualified INSTEAD, the original query is not done at
* all, in any form. Otherwise, we add the modified form if qualified
* INSTEADs were found, else the unmodified form.
*/
if (!instead)
{
if (parsetree->commandType == CMD_INSERT)
{
if (qual_product != NULL)
rewritten = lcons(qual_product, rewritten);
else
rewritten = lcons(parsetree, rewritten);
}
else
{
if (qual_product != NULL)
rewritten = lappend(rewritten, qual_product);
else
rewritten = lappend(rewritten, parsetree);
}
}
return rewritten;
}
/*
* QueryRewrite -
* Primary entry point to the query rewriter.
* Rewrite one query via query rewrite system, possibly returning 0
* or many queries.
*
* NOTE: The code in QueryRewrite was formerly in pg_parse_and_plan(), and was
* moved here so that it would be invoked during EXPLAIN.
*/
List *
QueryRewrite(Query *parsetree)
{
List *querylist;
List *results = NIL;
List *l;
CmdType origCmdType;
bool foundOriginalQuery;
Query *lastInstead;
/*
* Step 1
*
* Apply all non-SELECT rules possibly getting 0 or many queries
*/
querylist = RewriteQuery(parsetree, NIL);
/*
* Step 2
*
* Apply all the RIR rules on each query
*/
foreach(l, querylist)
{
Query *query = (Query *) lfirst(l);
query = fireRIRrules(query, NIL);
/*
* If the query target was rewritten as a view, complain.
*/
if (query->resultRelation)
{
RangeTblEntry *rte = rt_fetch(query->resultRelation,
query->rtable);
if (rte->rtekind == RTE_SUBQUERY)
{
switch (query->commandType)
{
case CMD_INSERT:
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("cannot insert into a view"),
errhint("You need an unconditional ON INSERT DO INSTEAD rule.")));
break;
case CMD_UPDATE:
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("cannot update a view"),
errhint("You need an unconditional ON UPDATE DO INSTEAD rule.")));
break;
case CMD_DELETE:
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("cannot delete from a view"),
errhint("You need an unconditional ON DELETE DO INSTEAD rule.")));
break;
default:
elog(ERROR, "unrecognized commandType: %d",
(int) query->commandType);
break;
}
}
}
results = lappend(results, query);
}
/*
* Step 3
*
* Determine which, if any, of the resulting queries is supposed to set
* the command-result tag; and update the canSetTag fields
* accordingly.
*
* If the original query is still in the list, it sets the command tag.
* Otherwise, the last INSTEAD query of the same kind as the original
* is allowed to set the tag. (Note these rules can leave us with no
* query setting the tag. The tcop code has to cope with this by
* setting up a default tag based on the original un-rewritten query.)
*
* The Asserts verify that at most one query in the result list is marked
* canSetTag. If we aren't checking asserts, we can fall out of the
* loop as soon as we find the original query.
*/
origCmdType = parsetree->commandType;
foundOriginalQuery = false;
lastInstead = NULL;
foreach(l, results)
{
Query *query = (Query *) lfirst(l);
if (query->querySource == QSRC_ORIGINAL)
{
Assert(query->canSetTag);
Assert(!foundOriginalQuery);
foundOriginalQuery = true;
#ifndef USE_ASSERT_CHECKING
break;
#endif
}
else
{
Assert(!query->canSetTag);
if (query->commandType == origCmdType &&
(query->querySource == QSRC_INSTEAD_RULE ||
query->querySource == QSRC_QUAL_INSTEAD_RULE))
lastInstead = query;
}
}
if (!foundOriginalQuery && lastInstead != NULL)
lastInstead->canSetTag = true;
return results;
}