postgresql/src/backend/parser
Bruce Momjian bd8ffc6f3f Hi!
INTERSECT and EXCEPT is available for postgresql-v6.4!

The patch against v6.4 is included at the end of the current text
(in uuencoded form!)

I also included the text of my Master's Thesis. (a postscript
version). I hope that you find something of it useful and would be
happy if parts of it find their way into the PostgreSQL documentation
project (If so, tell me, then I send the sources of the document!)

The contents of the document are:
  -) The first chapter might be of less interest as it gives only an
     overview on SQL.

  -) The second chapter gives a description on much of PostgreSQL's
     features (like user defined types etc. and how to use these features)

  -) The third chapter starts with an overview of PostgreSQL's internal
     structure with focus on the stages a query has to pass (i.e. parser,
     planner/optimizer, executor). Then a detailed description of the
     implementation of the Having clause and the Intersect/Except logic is
     given.

Originally I worked on v6.3.2 but never found time enough to prepare
and post a patch. Now I applied the changes to v6.4 to get Intersect
and Except working with the new version. Chapter 3 of my documentation
deals with the changes against v6.3.2, so keep that in mind when
comparing the parts of the code printed there with the patched sources
of v6.4.

Here are some remarks on the patch. There are some things that have
still to be done but at the moment I don't have time to do them
myself. (I'm doing my military service at the moment) Sorry for that
:-(

-) I used a rewrite technique for the implementation of the Except/Intersect
   logic which rewrites the query to a semantically equivalent query before
   it is handed to the rewrite system (for views, rules etc.), planner,
   executor etc.

-) In v6.3.2 the types of the attributes of two select statements
   connected by the UNION keyword had to match 100%. In v6.4 the types
   only need to be familiar (i.e. int and float can be mixed). Since this
   feature did not exist when I worked on Intersect/Except it
   does not work correctly for Except/Intersect queries WHEN USED IN
   COMBINATION WITH UNIONS! (i.e. sometimes the wrong type is used for the
   resulting table. This is because until now the types of the attributes of
   the first select statement have been used for the resulting table.
   When Intersects and/or Excepts are used in combination with Unions it
   might happen, that the first select statement of the original query
   appears at another position in the query which will be executed. The reason
   for this is the technique used for the implementation of
   Except/Intersect which does a query rewrite!)
   NOTE: It is NOT broken for pure UNION queries and pure INTERSECT/EXCEPT
         queries!!!

-) I had to add the field intersect_clause to some data structures
   but did not find time to implement printfuncs for the new field.
   This does NOT break the debug modes but when an Except/Intersect
   is used the query debug output will be the already rewritten query.

-) Massive changes to the grammar rules for SELECT and INSERT statements
   have been necessary (see comments in gram.y and documentation for
   deatails) in order to be able to use mixed queries like
   (SELECT ... UNION (SELECT ... EXCEPT SELECT)) INTERSECT SELECT...;

-) When using UNION/EXCEPT/INTERSECT you will get:
   NOTICE: equal: "Don't know if nodes of type xxx are equal".
   I did not have  time to add comparsion support for all the needed nodes,
   but the default behaviour of the function equal met my requirements.
   I did not dare to supress this message!

   That's the reason why the regression test for union will fail: These
   messages are also included in the union.out file!

-) Somebody of you changed the union_planner() function for v6.4
   (I copied the targetlist to new_tlist and that was removed and
   replaced by a cleanup of the original targetlist). These chnages
   violated some having queries executed against views so I changed
   it back again. I did not have time to examine the differences between the
   two versions but now it works :-)
   If you want to find out, try the file queries/view_having.sql on
   both versions and compare the results . Two queries won't produce a
   correct result with your version.

regards

    Stefan
1999-01-18 00:10:17 +00:00
..
analyze.c Hi! 1999-01-18 00:10:17 +00:00
gram.c SELECT FOR UPDATE syntax 1999-01-05 15:46:25 +00:00
gram.y Hi! 1999-01-18 00:10:17 +00:00
keywords.c Hi! 1999-01-18 00:10:17 +00:00
Makefile From: t-ishii@sra.co.jp 1998-07-26 04:31:41 +00:00
parse_agg.c Define routines and catalog entries for string min()/max() functions. 1998-12-08 06:19:15 +00:00
parse_clause.c Clean up code in analyze.c for SERIAL data type. 1998-09-25 13:36:08 +00:00
parse_coerce.c Implement CASE expression. 1998-12-04 15:34:49 +00:00
parse_expr.c Improve CASE statement support. 1998-12-13 23:56:44 +00:00
parse_func.c Fix reference to null pointer when no aggregate function candidates 1998-12-23 14:38:40 +00:00
parse_node.c Fix for constbyval . 1998-10-01 22:45:32 +00:00
parse_oper.c Fix up error messages when looking up functions and operators to not 1998-12-13 23:54:40 +00:00
parse_relation.c OK, folks, here is the pgindent output. 1998-09-01 04:40:42 +00:00
parse_target.c Improve CASE statement support. 1998-12-13 23:56:44 +00:00
parse_type.c New HeapTuple structure/interface. 1998-11-27 19:52:36 +00:00
parse.h SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL ... 1998-12-18 09:10:39 +00:00
parser.c OK, folks, here is the pgindent output. 1998-09-01 04:40:42 +00:00
README cleanup 1998-08-23 14:43:46 +00:00
scan.c Fix deadlock so it only checks once. 1998-12-18 19:45:38 +00:00
scan.l Make functions static or ifdef NOT_USED. Prevent pg_version creation. 1998-10-08 18:30:52 +00:00
scansup.c pgindent run before 6.3 release, with Thomas' requested changes. 1998-02-26 04:46:47 +00:00

This directory does more than tokenize and parse SQL queries.  It also
creates Query structures for the various complex queries that is passed
to the optimizer and then executor.

parser.c	things start here
scan.l		break query into tokens
scansup.c	handle escapes in input
keywords.c	turn keywords into specific tokens
gram.y		parse the tokens and fill query-type-specific structures
analyze.c	handle post-parse processing for each query type
parse_clause.c	handle clauses like WHERE, ORDER BY, GROUP BY, ...
parse_coerce.c	used for coercing expressions of different types
parse_expr.c	handle expressions like col, col + 3, x = 3 or x = 4
parse_oper.c	handle operations in expressions
parse_agg.c	handle aggregates, like SUM(col1),  AVG(col2), ...
parse_func.c	handle functions, table.column and column identifiers
parse_node.c	create nodes for various structures
parse_target.c	handle the result list of the query
parse_relation.c support routines for tables and column handling
parse_type.c	support routines for type handling