Commit graph

218 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
6a0865e4bb In a non-hashed Agg node, reset the "aggcontext" at group boundaries, instead
of individually pfree'ing pass-by-reference transition values.  This should
be at least as fast as the prior coding, and it has the major advantage of
clearing out any working data an aggregate function may have stored in or
underneath the aggcontext.  This avoids memory leakage when an aggregate
such as array_agg() is used in GROUP BY mode.  Per report from Chris Spotts.

Back-patch to 8.4.  In principle the problem could arise in prior versions,
but since they didn't have array_agg the issue seems not critical.
2009-07-23 20:45:27 +00:00
Tom Lane
e8d78d35f4 ExecAgg() failed to finish running out set-returning functions in the last
aggregated tuple of a run.  Per report from Laurenz Albe.  This is a new
bug in 8.4, but only because prior versions rejected SRFs in an Agg plan
node altogether.
2009-06-17 16:05:34 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
0e550ff617 Revert DTrace patch from Robert Lor 2009-04-02 20:59:10 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
227f817c1f Add support for additional DTrace probes.
Robert Lor
2009-04-02 19:14:34 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
511db38ace Update copyright for 2009. 2009-01-01 17:24:05 +00:00
Tom Lane
7028c13557 Fix an oversight in two different recent patches: nodes that support SRFs
in their targetlists had better reset ps_TupFromTlist during ReScan calls.
There's no need to back-patch here since nodeAgg and nodeGroup didn't
even pretend to support SRFs in prior releases.
2008-10-23 15:29:23 +00:00
Neil Conway
e034e517a7 Fix a small memory leak in ExecReScanAgg() in the hashed aggregation case.
In the previous coding, the list of columns that needed to be hashed on
was allocated in the per-query context, but we reallocated every time
the Agg node was rescanned. Since this information doesn't change over
a rescan, just construct the list of columns once during ExecInitAgg().
2008-10-16 19:25:55 +00:00
Tom Lane
a26c7e3d71 Support set-returning functions in the target lists of Agg and Group plan
nodes.  This is a pretty ugly feature but since we don't yet have a
plausible substitute, we'd better support it everywhere.
Per gripe from Jeff Davis.
2008-09-08 00:22:56 +00:00
Tom Lane
e5536e77a5 Move exprType(), exprTypmod(), expression_tree_walker(), and related routines
into nodes/nodeFuncs, so as to reduce wanton cross-subsystem #includes inside
the backend.  There's probably more that should be done along this line,
but this is a start anyway.
2008-08-25 22:42:34 +00:00
Tom Lane
9511304752 Rearrange the querytree representation of ORDER BY/GROUP BY/DISTINCT items
as per my recent proposal:

1. Fold SortClause and GroupClause into a single node type SortGroupClause.
We were already relying on them to be struct-equivalent, so using two node
tags wasn't accomplishing much except to get in the way of comparing items
with equal().

2. Add an "eqop" field to SortGroupClause to carry the associated equality
operator.  This is cheap for the parser to get at the same time it's looking
up the sort operator, and storing it eliminates the need for repeated
not-so-cheap lookups during planning.  In future this will also let us
represent GROUP/DISTINCT operations on datatypes that have hash opclasses
but no btree opclasses (ie, they have equality but no natural sort order).
The previous representation simply didn't work for that, since its only
indicator of comparison semantics was a sort operator.

3. Add a hasDistinctOn boolean to struct Query to explicitly record whether
the distinctClause came from DISTINCT or DISTINCT ON.  This allows removing
some complicated and not 100% bulletproof code that attempted to figure
that out from the distinctClause alone.

This patch doesn't in itself create any new capability, but it's necessary
infrastructure for future attempts to use hash-based grouping for DISTINCT
and UNION/INTERSECT/EXCEPT.
2008-08-02 21:32:01 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
f8c4d7db60 Restructure some header files a bit, in particular heapam.h, by removing some
unnecessary #include lines in it.  Also, move some tuple routine prototypes and
macros to htup.h, which allows removal of heapam.h inclusion from some .c
files.

For this to work, a new header file access/sysattr.h needed to be created,
initially containing attribute numbers of system columns, for pg_dump usage.

While at it, make contrib ltree, intarray and hstore header files more
consistent with our header style.
2008-05-12 00:00:54 +00:00
Tom Lane
220db7ccd8 Simplify and standardize conversions between TEXT datums and ordinary C
strings.  This patch introduces four support functions cstring_to_text,
cstring_to_text_with_len, text_to_cstring, and text_to_cstring_buffer, and
two macros CStringGetTextDatum and TextDatumGetCString.  A number of
existing macros that provided variants on these themes were removed.

Most of the places that need to make such conversions now require just one
function or macro call, in place of the multiple notational layers that used
to be needed.  There are no longer any direct calls of textout or textin,
and we got most of the places that were using handmade conversions via
memcpy (there may be a few still lurking, though).

This commit doesn't make any serious effort to eliminate transient memory
leaks caused by detoasting toasted text objects before they reach
text_to_cstring.  We changed PG_GETARG_TEXT_P to PG_GETARG_TEXT_PP in a few
places where it was easy, but much more could be done.

Brendan Jurd and Tom Lane
2008-03-25 22:42:46 +00:00
Tom Lane
89c0a87fda The original implementation of polymorphic aggregates didn't really get the
checking of argument compatibility right; although the problem is only exposed
with multiple-input aggregates in which some arguments are polymorphic and
some are not.  Per bug #3852 from Sokolov Yura.
2008-01-11 18:39:41 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
9098ab9e32 Update copyrights in source tree to 2008. 2008-01-01 19:46:01 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
fdf5a5efb7 pgindent run for 8.3. 2007-11-15 21:14:46 +00:00
Neil Conway
c556b29a11 Fix a gradual memory leak in ExecReScanAgg(). Because the aggregation
hash table is allocated in a child context of the agg node's memory
context, MemoryContextReset() will reset but *not* delete the child
context. Since ExecReScanAgg() proceeds to build a new hash table
from scratch (in a new sub-context), this results in leaking the
header for the previous memory context. Therefore, use
MemoryContextResetAndDeleteChildren() instead.

Credit: My colleague Sailesh Krishnamurthy at Truviso for isolating
the cause of the leak.
2007-08-08 18:07:05 +00:00
Tom Lane
57690c6803 Support enum data types. Along the way, use macros for the values of
pg_type.typtype whereever practical.  Tom Dunstan, with some kibitzing
from Tom Lane.
2007-04-02 03:49:42 +00:00
Tom Lane
cc77005df7 Change Agg and Group nodes so that Vars contained in their targetlists
and quals have varno OUTER, rather than zero, to indicate a reference to
an output of their lefttree subplan.  This is consistent with the way
that every other upper-level node type does it, and allows some simplifications
in setrefs.c and EXPLAIN.
2007-02-22 23:44:25 +00:00
Tom Lane
5413eef8dc Repair failure to check that a table is still compatible with a previously
made query plan.  Use of ALTER COLUMN TYPE creates a hazard for cached
query plans: they could contain Vars that claim a column has a different
type than it now has.  Fix this by checking during plan startup that Vars
at relation scan level match the current relation tuple descriptor.  Since
at that point we already have at least AccessShareLock, we can be sure the
column type will not change underneath us later in the query.  However,
since a backend's locks do not conflict against itself, there is still a
hole for an attacker to exploit: he could try to execute ALTER COLUMN TYPE
while a query is in progress in the current backend.  Seal that hole by
rejecting ALTER TABLE whenever the target relation is already open in
the current backend.

This is a significant security hole: not only can one trivially crash the
backend, but with appropriate misuse of pass-by-reference datatypes it is
possible to read out arbitrary locations in the server process's memory,
which could allow retrieving database content the user should not be able
to see.  Our thanks to Jeff Trout for the initial report.

Security: CVE-2007-0556
2007-02-02 00:07:03 +00:00
Tom Lane
a191a169d6 Change the planner-to-executor API so that the planner tells the executor
which comparison operators to use for plan nodes involving tuple comparison
(Agg, Group, Unique, SetOp).  Formerly the executor looked up the default
equality operator for the datatype, which was really pretty shaky, since it's
possible that the data being fed to the node is sorted according to some
nondefault operator class that could have an incompatible idea of equality.
The planner knows what it has sorted by and therefore can provide the right
equality operator to use.  Also, this change moves a couple of catalog lookups
out of the executor and into the planner, which should help startup time for
pre-planned queries by some small amount.  Modify the planner to remove some
other cavalier assumptions about always being able to use the default
operators.  Also add "nulls first/last" info to the Plan node for a mergejoin
--- neither the executor nor the planner can cope yet, but at least the API is
in place.
2007-01-10 18:06:05 +00:00
Tom Lane
4431758229 Support ORDER BY ... NULLS FIRST/LAST, and add ASC/DESC/NULLS FIRST/NULLS LAST
per-column options for btree indexes.  The planner's support for this is still
pretty rudimentary; it does not yet know how to plan mergejoins with
nondefault ordering options.  The documentation is pretty rudimentary, too.
I'll work on improving that stuff later.

Note incompatible change from prior behavior: ORDER BY ... USING will now be
rejected if the operator is not a less-than or greater-than member of some
btree opclass.  This prevents less-than-sane behavior if an operator that
doesn't actually define a proper sort ordering is selected.
2007-01-09 02:14:16 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
29dccf5fe0 Update CVS HEAD for 2007 copyright. Back branches are typically not
back-stamped for this.
2007-01-05 22:20:05 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
f99a569a2e pgindent run for 8.2. 2006-10-04 00:30:14 +00:00
Tom Lane
108fe47301 Aggregate functions now support multiple input arguments. I also took
the opportunity to treat COUNT(*) as a zero-argument aggregate instead
of the old hack that equated it to COUNT(1); this is materially cleaner
(no more weird ANYOID cases) and ought to be at least a tiny bit faster.
Original patch by Sergey Koposov; review, documentation, simple regression
tests, pg_dump and psql support by moi.
2006-07-27 19:52:07 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
e0522505bd Remove 576 references of include files that were not needed. 2006-07-14 14:52:27 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
a22d76d96a Allow include files to compile own their own.
Strip unused include files out unused include files, and add needed
includes to C files.

The next step is to remove unused include files in C files.
2006-07-13 16:49:20 +00:00
Tom Lane
485375a1c9 Fix hash aggregation to suppress unneeded columns from being stored in
tuple hash table entries.  This addresses the problem previously noted
that use of a 'physical tlist' in the input scan node could bloat the
hash table entries far beyond what the planner expects.  It's a better
answer than my previous thought of undoing the physical tlist optimization,
because we can also remove columns that are needed to compute the aggregate
functions but aren't part of the grouping column set.
2006-06-28 19:40:52 +00:00
Tom Lane
cfc710312e Adjust TupleHashTables to use MinimalTuple format for contained tuples. 2006-06-28 17:05:49 +00:00
Tom Lane
59fd249a30 Remove ancient kluge that kept nodeAgg.c from crashing on UPDATEs involving
aggregates.  We just disallowed that, and AFAICS there should be no other
cases where direct (non-aggregated) references to input columns are allowed
in a query with aggregation and no GROUP BY.
2006-06-21 18:39:42 +00:00
Tom Lane
147d4bf3e5 Modify all callers of datatype input and receive functions so that if these
functions are not strict, they will be called (passing a NULL first parameter)
during any attempt to input a NULL value of their datatype.  Currently, all
our input functions are strict and so this commit does not change any
behavior.  However, this will make it possible to build domain input functions
that centralize checking of domain constraints, thereby closing numerous holes
in our domain support, as per previous discussion.

While at it, I took the opportunity to introduce convenience functions
InputFunctionCall, OutputFunctionCall, etc to use in code that calls I/O
functions.  This eliminates a lot of grotty-looking casts, but the main
motivation is to make it easier to grep for these places if we ever need
to touch them again.
2006-04-04 19:35:37 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
f2f5b05655 Update copyright for 2006. Update scripts. 2006-03-05 15:59:11 +00:00
Tom Lane
2c0ef9777c Extend the ExecInitNode API so that plan nodes receive a set of flag
bits indicating which optional capabilities can actually be exercised
at runtime.  This will allow Sort and Material nodes, and perhaps later
other nodes, to avoid unnecessary overhead in common cases.
This commit just adds the infrastructure and arranges to pass the correct
flag values down to plan nodes; none of the actual optimizations are here
yet.  I'm committing this separately in case anyone wants to measure the
added overhead.  (It should be negligible.)

Simon Riggs and Tom Lane
2006-02-28 04:10:28 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
436a2956d8 Re-run pgindent, fixing a problem where comment lines after a blank
comment line where output as too long, and update typedefs for /lib
directory.  Also fix case where identifiers were used as variable names
in the backend, but as typedefs in ecpg (favor the backend for
indenting).

Backpatch to 8.1.X.
2005-11-22 18:17:34 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
1dc3498251 Standard pgindent run for 8.1. 2005-10-15 02:49:52 +00:00
Tom Lane
7762619e95 Replace pg_shadow and pg_group by new role-capable catalogs pg_authid
and pg_auth_members.  There are still many loose ends to finish in this
patch (no documentation, no regression tests, no pg_dump support for
instance).  But I'm going to commit it now anyway so that Alvaro can
make some progress on shared dependencies.  The catalog changes should
be pretty much done.
2005-06-28 05:09:14 +00:00
Tom Lane
278bd0cc22 For some reason access/tupmacs.h has been #including utils/memutils.h,
which is neither needed by nor related to that header.  Remove the bogus
inclusion and instead include the header in those C files that actually
need it.  Also fix unnecessary inclusions and bad inclusion order in
tsearch2 files.
2005-05-06 17:24:55 +00:00
Tom Lane
70c9763d48 Convert oidvector and int2vector into variable-length arrays. This
change saves a great deal of space in pg_proc and its primary index,
and it eliminates the former requirement that INDEX_MAX_KEYS and
FUNC_MAX_ARGS have the same value.  INDEX_MAX_KEYS is still embedded
in the on-disk representation (because it affects index tuple header
size), but FUNC_MAX_ARGS is not.  I believe it would now be possible
to increase FUNC_MAX_ARGS at little cost, but haven't experimented yet.
There are still a lot of vestigial references to FUNC_MAX_ARGS, which
I will clean up in a separate pass.  However, getting rid of it
altogether would require changing the FunctionCallInfoData struct,
and I'm not sure I want to buy into that.
2005-03-29 00:17:27 +00:00
Tom Lane
bd9b4a9d46 Use InitFunctionCallInfoData() macro instead of MemSet in performance
critical places in execQual.  By Atsushi Ogawa; some minor cleanup by moi.
2005-03-22 20:13:09 +00:00
Tom Lane
f97aebd162 Revise TupleTableSlot code to avoid unnecessary construction and disassembly
of tuples when passing data up through multiple plan nodes.  A slot can now
hold either a normal "physical" HeapTuple, or a "virtual" tuple consisting
of Datum/isnull arrays.  Upper plan levels can usually just copy the Datum
arrays, avoiding heap_formtuple() and possible subsequent nocachegetattr()
calls to extract the data again.  This work extends Atsushi Ogawa's earlier
patch, which provided the key idea of adding Datum arrays to TupleTableSlots.
(I believe however that something like this was foreseen way back in Berkeley
days --- see the old comment on ExecProject.)  A test case involving many
levels of join of fairly wide tables (about 80 columns altogether) showed
about 3x overall speedup, though simple queries will probably not be
helped very much.

I have also duplicated some code in heaptuple.c in order to provide versions
of heap_formtuple and friends that use "bool" arrays to indicate null
attributes, instead of the old convention of "char" arrays containing either
'n' or ' '.  This provides a better match to the convention used by
ExecEvalExpr.  While I have not made a concerted effort to get rid of uses
of the old routines, I think they should be deprecated and eventually removed.
2005-03-16 21:38:10 +00:00
Tom Lane
fa5e44017a Adjust the API for aggregate function calls so that a C-coded function
can tell whether it is being used as an aggregate or not.  This allows
such a function to avoid re-pallocing a pass-by-reference transition
value; normally it would be unsafe for a function to scribble on an input,
but in the aggregate case it's safe to reuse the old transition value.
Make int8inc() do this.  This gets a useful improvement in the speed of
COUNT(*), at least on narrow tables (it seems to be swamped by I/O when
the table rows are wide).  Per a discussion in early December with
Neil Conway.  I also fixed int_aggregate.c to check this, thereby
turning it into something approaching a supportable technique instead
of being a crude hack.
2005-03-12 20:25:06 +00:00
Tom Lane
0bf2587df4 Improve planner's estimation of the space needed for HashAgg plans:
look at the actual aggregate transition datatypes and the actual overhead
needed by nodeAgg.c, instead of using pessimistic round numbers.
Per a discussion with Michael Tiemann.
2005-01-28 19:34:28 +00:00
Tom Lane
5ae5e3bfe6 Check that aggregate creator has the right to execute the transition
functions of the aggregate, at both aggregate creation and execution times.
2005-01-27 23:42:18 +00:00
PostgreSQL Daemon
2ff501590b Tag appropriate files for rc3
Also performed an initial run through of upgrading our Copyright date to
extend to 2005 ... first run here was very simple ... change everything
where: grep 1996-2004 && the word 'Copyright' ... scanned through the
generated list with 'less' first, and after, to make sure that I only
picked up the right entries ...
2004-12-31 22:04:05 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
b6b71b85bc Pgindent run for 8.0. 2004-08-29 05:07:03 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
da9a8649d8 Update copyright to 2004. 2004-08-29 04:13:13 +00:00
Tom Lane
82f755ec80 Test HAVING condition before computing targetlist of an Aggregate node.
This is required by SQL spec to avoid failures in cases like
  SELECT sum(win)/sum(lose) FROM ... GROUP BY ... HAVING sum(lose) > 0;
AFAICT we have gotten this wrong since day one.  Kudos to Holger Jakobs
for being the first to notice.
2004-07-10 18:39:23 +00:00
Tom Lane
c541bb86e9 Infrastructure for I/O of composite types: arrange for the I/O routines
of a composite type to get that type's OID as their second parameter,
in place of typelem which is useless.  The actual changes are mostly
centralized in getTypeInputInfo and siblings, but I had to fix a few
places that were fetching pg_type.typelem for themselves instead of
using the lsyscache.c routines.  Also, I renamed all the related variables
from 'typelem' to 'typioparam' to discourage people from assuming that
they necessarily contain array element types.
2004-06-06 00:41:28 +00:00
Neil Conway
72b6ad6313 Use the new List API function names throughout the backend, and disable the
list compatibility API by default. While doing this, I decided to keep
the llast() macro around and introduce llast_int() and llast_oid() variants.
2004-05-30 23:40:41 +00:00
Neil Conway
d0b4399d81 Reimplement the linked list data structure used throughout the backend.
In the past, we used a 'Lispy' linked list implementation: a "list" was
merely a pointer to the head node of the list. The problem with that
design is that it makes lappend() and length() linear time. This patch
fixes that problem (and others) by maintaining a count of the list
length and a pointer to the tail node along with each head node pointer.
A "list" is now a pointer to a structure containing some meta-data
about the list; the head and tail pointers in that structure refer
to ListCell structures that maintain the actual linked list of nodes.

The function names of the list API have also been changed to, I hope,
be more logically consistent. By default, the old function names are
still available; they will be disabled-by-default once the rest of
the tree has been updated to use the new API names.
2004-05-26 04:41:50 +00:00
Tom Lane
642cd0ab13 Repair memory leakage introduced into the non-hashed aggregate case by
7.4 rewrite for hashed aggregate support.  If the transition data type
is pass-by-reference, the transValue must be pfreed when starting a new
group boundary, else we have a one-value-per-group leakage.  Thanks to
Rae Steining for providing a reproducible test case.
2004-03-13 00:54:10 +00:00
Tom Lane
391c3811a2 Rename SortMem and VacuumMem to work_mem and maintenance_work_mem.
Make btree index creation and initial validation of foreign-key constraints
use maintenance_work_mem rather than work_mem as their memory limit.
Add some code to guc.c to allow these variables to be referenced by their
old names in SHOW and SET commands, for backwards compatibility.
2004-02-03 17:34:04 +00:00
PostgreSQL Daemon
969685ad44 $Header: -> $PostgreSQL Changes ... 2003-11-29 19:52:15 +00:00
Tom Lane
80860c32d9 Improve dynahash.c's API so that caller can specify the comparison function
as well as the hash function (formerly the comparison function was hardwired
as memcmp()).  This makes it possible to eliminate the special-purpose
hashtable management code in execGrouping.c in favor of using dynahash to
manage tuple hashtables; which is a win because dynahash knows how to expand
a hashtable when the original size estimate was too small, whereas the
special-purpose code was too stupid to do that.  (See recent gripe from
Stephan Szabo about poor performance when hash table size estimate is way
off.)  Free side benefit: when using string_hash, the default comparison
function is now strncmp() instead of memcmp().  This should eliminate some
part of the overhead associated with larger NAMEDATALEN values.
2003-08-19 01:13:41 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
46785776c4 Another pgindent run with updated typedefs. 2003-08-08 21:42:59 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
f3c3deb7d0 Update copyrights to 2003. 2003-08-04 02:40:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
089003fb46 pgindent run. 2003-08-04 00:43:34 +00:00
Tom Lane
c4cf7fb814 Adjust 'permission denied' messages to be more useful and consistent. 2003-08-01 00:15:26 +00:00
Tom Lane
5e6d691e0d Error message editing in backend/executor. 2003-07-21 17:05:12 +00:00
Tom Lane
e3b1b6c0cd Aggregates can be polymorphic, using polymorphic implementation functions.
It also works to create a non-polymorphic aggregate from polymorphic
functions, should you want to do that.  Regression test added, docs still
lacking.  By Joe Conway, with some kibitzing from Tom Lane.
2003-07-01 19:10:53 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
111d8e522b Back out array mega-patch.
Joe Conway
2003-06-25 21:30:34 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
46bf651480 Array mega-patch.
Joe Conway
2003-06-24 23:14:49 +00:00
Tom Lane
bff0422b6c Revise hash join and hash aggregation code to use the same datatype-
specific hash functions used by hash indexes, rather than the old
not-datatype-aware ComputeHashFunc routine.  This makes it safe to do
hash joining on several datatypes that previously couldn't use hashing.
The sets of datatypes that are hash indexable and hash joinable are now
exactly the same, whereas before each had some that weren't in the other.
2003-06-22 22:04:55 +00:00
Tom Lane
e649796f12 Implement outer-level aggregates to conform to the SQL spec, with
extensions to support our historical behavior.  An aggregate belongs
to the closest query level of any of the variables in its argument,
or the current query level if there are no variables (e.g., COUNT(*)).
The implementation involves adding an agglevelsup field to Aggref,
and treating outer aggregates like outer variables at planning time.
2003-06-06 15:04:03 +00:00
Tom Lane
d24d75ff19 Small performance improvement for hash joins and hash aggregation:
when the plan is ReScanned, we don't have to rebuild the hash table
if there is no parameter change for its child node.  This idea has
been used for a long time in Sort and Material nodes, but was not in
the hash code till now.
2003-05-30 20:23:10 +00:00
Tom Lane
145014f811 Make further use of new bitmapset code: executor's chgParam, extParam,
locParam lists can be converted to bitmapsets to speed updating.  Also,
replace 'locParam' with 'allParam', which contains all the paramIDs
relevant to the node (i.e., the union of extParam and locParam); this
saves a step during SetChangedParamList() without costing anything
elsewhere.
2003-02-09 00:30:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
85caf1784a Detect duplicate aggregate calls and evaluate only one copy. This
speeds up some useful real-world cases like
SELECT x, COUNT(*) FROM t GROUP BY x HAVING COUNT(*) > 100.
2003-02-04 00:48:23 +00:00
Tom Lane
1afac12910 Create a new file executor/execGrouping.c to centralize utility routines
shared by nodeGroup, nodeAgg, and soon nodeSubplan.
2003-01-10 23:54:24 +00:00
Tom Lane
5bab36e9f6 Revise executor APIs so that all per-query state structure is built in
a per-query memory context created by CreateExecutorState --- and destroyed
by FreeExecutorState.  This provides a final solution to the longstanding
problem of memory leaked by various ExecEndNode calls.
2002-12-15 16:17:59 +00:00
Tom Lane
3a4f7dde16 Phase 3 of read-only-plans project: ExecInitExpr now builds expression
execution state trees, and ExecEvalExpr takes an expression state tree
not an expression plan tree.  The plan tree is now read-only as far as
the executor is concerned.  Next step is to begin actually exploiting
this property.
2002-12-13 19:46:01 +00:00
Tom Lane
a0bf885f9e Phase 2 of read-only-plans project: restructure expression-tree nodes
so that all executable expression nodes inherit from a common supertype
Expr.  This is somewhat of an exercise in code purity rather than any
real functional advance, but getting rid of the extra Oper or Func node
formerly used in each operator or function call should provide at least
a little space and speed improvement.
initdb forced by changes in stored-rules representation.
2002-12-12 15:49:42 +00:00
Tom Lane
1fd0c59e25 Phase 1 of read-only-plans project: cause executor state nodes to point
to plan nodes, not vice-versa.  All executor state nodes now inherit from
struct PlanState.  Copying of plan trees has been simplified by not
storing a list of SubPlans in Plan nodes (eliminating duplicate links).
The executor still needs such a list, but it can build it during
ExecutorStart since it has to scan the plan tree anyway.
No initdb forced since no stored-on-disk structures changed, but you
will need a full recompile because of node-numbering changes.
2002-12-05 15:50:39 +00:00
Tom Lane
f68f11928d Tighten selection of equality and ordering operators for grouping
operations: make sure we use operators that are compatible, as determined
by a mergejoin link in pg_operator.  Also, add code to planner to ensure
we don't try to use hashed grouping when the grouping operators aren't
marked hashable.
2002-11-29 21:39:12 +00:00
Tom Lane
b60be3f2f8 Add an at-least-marginally-plausible method of estimating the number
of groups produced by GROUP BY.  This improves the accuracy of planning
estimates for grouped subselects, and is needed to check whether a
hashed aggregation plan risks memory overflow.
2002-11-19 23:22:00 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
9b12ab6d5d Add new palloc0 call as merge of palloc and MemSet(0). 2002-11-13 00:39:48 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
75fee4535d Back out use of palloc0 in place if palloc/MemSet. Seems constant len
to MemSet is a performance boost.
2002-11-11 03:02:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
8fee9615cc Merge palloc()/MemSet(0) calls into a single palloc0() call. 2002-11-10 07:25:14 +00:00
Tom Lane
2103b7baa2 Phase 2 of hashed-aggregation project. nodeAgg.c now knows how to do
hashed aggregation, but there's not yet planner support for it.
2002-11-06 22:31:24 +00:00
Tom Lane
f6dba10e62 First phase of implementing hash-based grouping/aggregation. An AGG plan
node now does its own grouping of the input rows, and has no need for a
preceding GROUP node in the plan pipeline.  This allows elimination of
the misnamed tuplePerGroup option for GROUP, and actually saves more code
in nodeGroup.c than it costs in nodeAgg.c, as well as being presumably
faster.  Restructure the API of query_planner so that we do not commit to
using a sorted or unsorted plan in query_planner; instead grouping_planner
makes the decision.  (Right now it isn't any smarter than query_planner
was, but that will change as soon as it has the option to select a hash-
based aggregation step.)  Despite all the hackery, no initdb needed since
only in-memory node types changed.
2002-11-06 00:00:45 +00:00
Tom Lane
884cd4b6be Reduce a couple of debugging messages from LOG to DEBUG1 category. 2002-11-01 19:33:09 +00:00
Tom Lane
3b8ba163d0 Tweak a few of the most heavily used function call points to zero out
just the significant fields of FunctionCallInfoData, rather than MemSet'ing
the whole struct to zero.  Unused positions in the arg[] array will
thereby contain garbage rather than zeroes.  This buys back some of the
performance hit from increasing FUNC_MAX_ARGS.  Also tweak tuplesort.c
code for more speed by marking some routines 'inline'.  All together
these changes speed up simple sorts, like count(distinct int4column),
by about 25% on a P4 running RH Linux 7.2.
2002-10-04 17:19:55 +00:00
Tom Lane
6d0d15c451 Make the world at least somewhat safe for zero-column tables, and
remove the special case in ALTER DROP COLUMN to prohibit dropping a
table's last column.
2002-09-28 20:00:19 +00:00
Tom Lane
b26dfb9522 Extend pg_cast castimplicit column to a three-way value; this allows us
to be flexible about assignment casts without introducing ambiguity in
operator/function resolution.  Introduce a well-defined promotion hierarchy
for numeric datatypes (int2->int4->int8->numeric->float4->float8).
Change make_const to initially label numeric literals as int4, int8, or
numeric (never float8 anymore).
Explicitly mark Func and RelabelType nodes to indicate whether they came
from a function call, explicit cast, or implicit cast; use this to do
reverse-listing more accurately and without so many heuristics.
Explicit casts to char, varchar, bit, varbit will truncate or pad without
raising an error (the pre-7.2 behavior), while assigning to a column without
any explicit cast will still raise an error for wrong-length data like 7.3.
This more nearly follows the SQL spec than 7.2 behavior (we should be
reporting a 'completion condition' in the explicit-cast cases, but we have
no mechanism for that, so just do silent truncation).
Fix some problems with enforcement of typmod for array elements;
it didn't work at all in 'UPDATE ... SET array[n] = foo', for example.
Provide a generalized array_length_coerce() function to replace the
specialized per-array-type functions that used to be needed (and were
missing for NUMERIC as well as all the datetime types).
Add missing conversions int8<->float4, text<->numeric, oid<->int8.
initdb forced.
2002-09-18 21:35:25 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
e50f52a074 pgindent run. 2002-09-04 20:31:48 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
d84fe82230 Update copyright to 2002. 2002-06-20 20:29:54 +00:00
Tom Lane
22d641a7d4 Get rid of the last few uses of typeidTypeName() rather than
format_type_be() in error messages.
2002-05-17 22:35:13 +00:00
Tom Lane
857661ba2e Enforce EXECUTE privilege for aggregate functions. 2002-04-29 22:28:19 +00:00
Tom Lane
6cef5d2549 Operators live in namespaces. CREATE/DROP/COMMENT ON OPERATOR take
qualified operator names directly, for example CREATE OPERATOR myschema.+
( ... ).  To qualify an operator name in an expression you need to write
OPERATOR(myschema.+) (thanks to Peter for suggesting an escape hatch).
I also took advantage of having to reformat pg_operator to fix something
that'd been bugging me for a while: mergejoinable operators should have
explicit links to the associated cross-data-type comparison operators,
rather than hardwiring an assumption that they are named < and >.
2002-04-16 23:08:12 +00:00
Tom Lane
902a6a0a4b Restructure representation of aggregate functions so that they have pg_proc
entries, per pghackers discussion.  This fixes aggregates to live in
namespaces, and also simplifies/speeds up lookup in parse_func.c.
Also, add a 'proimplicit' flag to pg_proc that controls whether a type
coercion function may be invoked implicitly, or only explicitly.  The
current settings of these flags are more permissive than I would like,
but we will need to debate and refine the behavior; for now, I avoided
breaking regression tests as much as I could.
2002-04-11 20:00:18 +00:00
Tom Lane
337b22cb47 Code review for DOMAIN patch. 2002-03-20 19:45:13 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
a033daf566 Commit to match discussed elog() changes. Only update is that LOG is
now just below FATAL in server_min_messages.  Added more text to
highlight ordering difference between it and client_min_messages.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

REALLYFATAL => PANIC
STOP => PANIC
New INFO level the prints to client by default
New LOG level the prints to server log by default
Cause VACUUM information to print only to the client
NOTICE => INFO where purely information messages are sent
DEBUG => LOG for purely server status messages
DEBUG removed, kept as backward compatible
DEBUG5, DEBUG4, DEBUG3, DEBUG2, DEBUG1 added
DebugLvl removed in favor of new DEBUG[1-5] symbols
New server_min_messages GUC parameter with values:
        DEBUG[5-1], INFO, NOTICE, ERROR, LOG, FATAL, PANIC
New client_min_messages GUC parameter with values:
        DEBUG[5-1], LOG, INFO, NOTICE, ERROR, FATAL, PANIC
Server startup now logged with LOG instead of DEBUG
Remove debug_level GUC parameter
elog() numbers now start at 10
Add test to print error message if older elog() values are passed to elog()
Bootstrap mode now has a -d that requires an argument, like postmaster
2002-03-02 21:39:36 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
b81844b173 pgindent run on all C files. Java run to follow. initdb/regression
tests pass.
2001-10-25 05:50:21 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
0686d49da0 Remove dashes in comments that don't need them, rewrap with pgindent. 2001-03-22 06:16:21 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
9e1552607a pgindent run. Make it all clean. 2001-03-22 04:01:46 +00:00
Tom Lane
13cc7eb3e2 Clean up two rather nasty bugs in operator selection code.
1. If there is exactly one pg_operator entry of the right name and oprkind,
oper() and related routines would return that entry whether its input type
had anything to do with the request or not.  This is just premature
optimization: we shouldn't return the single candidate until after we verify
that it really is a valid candidate, ie, is at least coercion-compatible
with the given types.

2. oper() and related routines only promise a coercion-compatible result.
Unfortunately, there were quite a few callers that assumed the returned
operator is binary-compatible with the given datatype; they would proceed
to call it without making any datatype coercions.  These callers include
sorting, grouping, aggregation, and VACUUM ANALYZE.  In general I think
it is appropriate for these callers to require an exact or binary-compatible
match, so I've added a new routine compatible_oper() that only succeeds if
it can find an operator that doesn't require any run-time conversions.
Callers now call oper() or compatible_oper() depending on whether they are
prepared to deal with type conversion or not.

The upshot of these bugs is revealed by the following silliness in PL/Tcl's
selftest: it creates an operator @< on int4, and then tries to use it to
sort a char(N) column.  The system would let it do that :-( (and evidently
has done so since 6.3 :-( :-().  The result in this case was just a silly
sort order, but the reverse combination would've provoked coredump from
trying to dereference integers.  With this fix you get more reasonable
behavior:
pltcl_test=# select * from T_pkey1 order by key1, key2 using @<;
ERROR:  Unable to identify an operator '@<' for types 'bpchar' and 'bpchar'
        You will have to retype this query using an explicit cast
2001-02-16 03:16:58 +00:00
Tom Lane
db3ac67d8f Update comments about memory management. 2001-02-15 21:47:08 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
623bf843d2 Change Copyright from PostgreSQL, Inc to PostgreSQL Global Development Group. 2001-01-24 19:43:33 +00:00
Tom Lane
a933ee38bb Change SearchSysCache coding conventions so that a reference count is
maintained for each cache entry.  A cache entry will not be freed until
the matching ReleaseSysCache call has been executed.  This eliminates
worries about cache entries getting dropped while still in use.  See
my posting to pg-hackers of even date for more info.
2000-11-16 22:30:52 +00:00
Tom Lane
782c16c6a1 SQL-language functions are now callable in ordinary fmgr contexts ...
for example, an SQL function can be used in a functional index.  (I make
no promises about speed, but it'll work ;-).)  Clean up and simplify
handling of functions returning sets.
2000-08-24 03:29:15 +00:00
Tom Lane
bec98a31c5 Revise aggregate functions per earlier discussions in pghackers.
There's now only one transition value and transition function.
NULL handling in aggregates is a lot cleaner.  Also, use Numeric
accumulators instead of integer accumulators for sum/avg on integer
datatypes --- this avoids overflow at the cost of being a little slower.
Implement VARIANCE() and STDDEV() aggregates in the standard backend.

Also, enable new LIKE selectivity estimators by default.  Unrelated
change, but as long as I had to force initdb anyway...
2000-07-17 03:05:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
badce86a2c First stage of reclaiming memory in executor by resetting short-term
memory contexts.  Currently, only leaks in expressions executed as
quals or projections are handled.  Clean up some old dead cruft in
executor while at it --- unused fields in state nodes, that sort of thing.
2000-07-12 02:37:39 +00:00