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path: root/src/backend/access/gin/ginget.c
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2014-05-06pgindent run for 9.4Bruce Momjian
This includes removing tabs after periods in C comments, which was applied to back branches, so this change should not effect backpatching.
2014-04-10Fix bugs in GIN "fast scan" with partial match.Heikki Linnakangas
There were a couple of bugs here. First, if the fuzzy limit was exceeded, the loop in entryGetItem might drop out too soon if a whole block needs to be skipped because it's < advancePast ("continue" in a while-loop checks the loop condition too). Secondly, the loop checked when stepping to a new page that there is at least one offset on the page < advancePast, but we cannot rely on that on subsequent calls of entryGetItem, because advancePast might change in between. That caused the skipping loop to read bogus items in the TbmIterateResult's offset array. First item and fix by Alexander Korotkov, second bug pointed out by Fabrízio de Royes Mello, by a small variation of Alexander's test query.
2014-03-31Rename GinLogicValue to GinTernaryValue.Heikki Linnakangas
It's more descriptive. Also, get rid of the enum, and use #defines instead, per Greg Stark's suggestion.
2014-03-17Fix typos in comments.Fujii Masao
Thom Brown
2014-02-07Initialize the entryRes array between each call to triConsistent.Heikki Linnakangas
The shimTriConstistentFn, which calls the opclass's consistent function with all combinations of TRUE/FALSE for any MAYBE argument, modifies the entryRes array passed by the caller. Change startScanKey to re-initialize it between each call to accommodate that. It's actually a bad habit by shimTriConsistentFn to modify its argument. But the only caller that doesn't already re-initialize the entryRes array was startScanKey, and it's easy for startScanKey to do so. Add a comment to shimTriConsistentFn about that. Note: this does not give a free pass to opclass-provided consistent functions to modify the entryRes argument; shimTriConsistent assumes that they don't, even though it does it itself. While at it, refactor startScanKey to allocate the requiredEntries and additionalEntries after it knows exactly how large they need to be. Saves a little bit of memory, and looks nicer anyway. Per complaint by Tom Lane, buildfarm and the pg_trgm regression test.
2014-02-07Speed up "rare & frequent" type GIN queries.Heikki Linnakangas
If you have a GIN query like "rare & frequent", we currently fetch all the items that match either rare or frequent, call the consistent function for each item, and let the consistent function filter out items that only match one of the terms. However, if we can deduce that "rare" must be present for the overall qual to be true, we can scan all the rare items, and for each rare item, skip over to the next frequent item with the same or greater TID. That greatly speeds up "rare & frequent" type queries. To implement that, introduce the concept of a tri-state consistent function, where the 3rd value is MAYBE, indicating that we don't know if that term is present. Operator classes only provide a boolean consistent function, so we simulate the tri-state consistent function by calling the boolean function several times, with the MAYBE arguments set to all combinations of TRUE and FALSE. Testing all combinations is only feasible for a small number of MAYBE arguments, but it is envisioned that we'll provide a way for operator classes to provide a native tri-state consistent function, which can be much more efficient. But that is not included in this patch. We were already using that trick to for lossy pages, calling the consistent function with the lossy entry set to TRUE and FALSE. Now that we have the tri-state consistent function, use it for lossy pages too. Alexander Korotkov, with fair amount of refactoring by me.
2014-01-29Further optimize GIN multi-key searches.Heikki Linnakangas
When skipping over some items in a posting tree, re-find the new location by descending the tree from root, rather than walking the right links. This can save a lot of I/O. Heavily modified from Alexander Korotkov's fast scan patch.
2014-01-29Further optimize multi-key GIN searches.Heikki Linnakangas
If we're skipping past a certain TID, avoid decoding posting list segments that only contain smaller TIDs. Extracted from Alexander Korotkov's fast scan patch, heavily modified.
2014-01-29Allow skipping some items in a multi-key GIN search.Heikki Linnakangas
In a multi-key search, ie. something like "col @> 'foo' AND col @> 'bar'", as soon as we find the next item that matches the first criteria, we don't need to check the second criteria for TIDs smaller the first match. That saves a lot of effort, especially if one of the terms is rare, while the second occurs very frequently. Based on ideas from Alexander Korotkov's fast scan patch.
2014-01-22Compress GIN posting lists, for smaller index size.Heikki Linnakangas
GIN posting lists are now encoded using varbyte-encoding, which allows them to fit in much smaller space than the straight ItemPointer array format used before. The new encoding is used for both the lists stored in-line in entry tree items, and in posting tree leaf pages. To maintain backwards-compatibility and keep pg_upgrade working, the code can still read old-style pages and tuples. Posting tree leaf pages in the new format are flagged with GIN_COMPRESSED flag, to distinguish old and new format pages. Likewise, entry tree tuples in the new format have a GIN_ITUP_COMPRESSED flag set in a bit that was previously unused. This patch bumps GIN_CURRENT_VERSION from 1 to 2. New indexes created with version 9.4 will therefore have version number 2 in the metapage, while old pg_upgraded indexes will have version 1. The code treats them the same, but it might be come handy in the future, if we want to drop support for the uncompressed format. Alexander Korotkov and me. Reviewed by Tomas Vondra and Amit Langote.
2014-01-07Update copyright for 2014Bruce Momjian
Update all files in head, and files COPYRIGHT and legal.sgml in all back branches.
2013-12-16Mark variables 'static' where possible. Move GinFuzzySearchLimit to ginget.cHeikki Linnakangas
Per "clang -Wmissing-variable-declarations" output, posted by Andres Freund. I didn't silence all those warnings, though, only the most obvious cases.
2013-11-27More GIN refactoring.Heikki Linnakangas
Separate the insertion payload from the more static portions of GinBtree. GinBtree now only contains information related to searching the tree, and the information of what to insert is passed separately. Add root block number to GinBtree, instead of passing it around all the functions as argument. Split off ginFinishSplit() from ginInsertValue(). ginFinishSplit is responsible for finding the parent and inserting the downlink to it.
2013-11-20Further GIN refactoring.Heikki Linnakangas
Merge some functions that were always called together. Makes the code little bit more readable.
2013-11-08Fix race condition in GIN posting tree page deletion.Heikki Linnakangas
If a page is deleted, and reused for something else, just as a search is following a rightlink to it from its left sibling, the search would continue scanning whatever the new contents of the page are. That could lead to incorrect query results, or even something more curious if the page is reused for a different kind of a page. To fix, modify the search algorithm to lock the next page before releasing the previous one, and refrain from deleting pages from the leftmost branch of the tree. Add a new Concurrency section to the README, explaining why this works. There is a lot more one could say about concurrency in GIN, but that's for another patch. Backpatch to all supported versions.
2013-10-03Minor GIN code refactoring.Heikki Linnakangas
It makes for cleaner code to have separate Get/Add functions for PostingItems and ItemPointers. A few callsites that have to deal with both types need to be duplicated because of this, but all the callers have to know which one they're dealing with anyway. Overall, this reduces the amount of casting required. Extracted from Alexander Korotkov's larger patch to change the data page format.
2013-01-01Update copyrights for 2013Bruce Momjian
Fully update git head, and update back branches in ./COPYRIGHT and legal.sgml files.
2012-07-16Remove unreachable codePeter Eisentraut
The Solaris Studio compiler warns about these instances, unlike more mainstream compilers such as gcc. But manual inspection showed that the code is clearly not reachable, and we hope no worthy compiler will complain about removing this code.
2012-01-01Update copyright notices for year 2012.Bruce Momjian
2011-09-01Remove unnecessary #include references, per pgrminclude script.Bruce Momjian
2011-06-09Pgindent run before 9.1 beta2.Bruce Momjian
2011-04-22Make GIN and GIST pass the index collation to all their support functions.Tom Lane
Experimentation with contrib/btree_gist shows that the majority of the GIST support functions potentially need collation information. Safest policy seems to be to pass it to all of them, instead of making assumptions about which ones could possibly need it.
2011-04-12Pass collations to functions in FunctionCallInfoData, not FmgrInfo.Tom Lane
Since collation is effectively an argument, not a property of the function, FmgrInfo is really the wrong place for it; and this becomes critical in cases where a cached FmgrInfo is used for varying purposes that might need different collation settings. Fix by passing it in FunctionCallInfoData instead. In particular this allows a clean fix for bug #5970 (record_cmp not working). This requires touching a bit more code than the original method, but nobody ever thought that collations would not be an invasive patch...
2011-04-10pgindent run before PG 9.1 beta 1.Bruce Momjian
2011-01-08Refactor GIN's handling of duplicate search entries.Tom Lane
The original coding could combine duplicate entries only when they originated from the same qual condition. In particular it could not combine cases where multiple qual conditions all give rise to full-index scan requests, which is an expensive case well worth optimizing. Refactor so that duplicates are recognized across all the quals.
2011-01-07Fix GIN to support null keys, empty and null items, and full index scans.Tom Lane
Per my recent proposal(s). Null key datums can now be returned by extractValue and extractQuery functions, and will be stored in the index. Also, placeholder entries are made for indexable items that are NULL or contain no keys according to extractValue. This means that the index is now always complete, having at least one entry for every indexed heap TID, and so we can get rid of the prohibition on full-index scans. A full-index scan is implemented much the same way as partial-match scans were already: we build a bitmap representing all the TIDs found in the index, and then drive the results off that. Also, introduce a concept of a "search mode" that can be requested by extractQuery when the operator requires matching to empty items (this is just as cheap as matching to a single key) or requires a full index scan (which is not so cheap, but it sure beats failing or giving wrong answers). The behavior remains backward compatible for opclasses that don't return any null keys or request a non-default search mode. Using these features, we can now make the GIN index opclass for anyarray behave in a way that matches the actual anyarray operators for &&, <@, @>, and = ... which it failed to do before in assorted corner cases. This commit fixes the core GIN code and ginarrayprocs.c, updates the documentation, and adds some simple regression test cases for the new behaviors using the array operators. The tsearch and contrib GIN opclass support functions still need to be looked over and probably fixed. Another thing I intend to fix separately is that this is pretty inefficient for cases where more than one scan condition needs a full-index search: we'll run duplicate GinScanEntrys, each one of which builds a large bitmap. There is some existing logic to merge duplicate GinScanEntrys but it needs refactoring to make it work for entries belonging to different scan keys. Note that most of gin.h has been split out into a new file gin_private.h, so that gin.h doesn't export anything that's not supposed to be used by GIN opclasses or the rest of the backend. I did quite a bit of other code beautification work as well, mostly fixing comments and choosing more appropriate names for things.
2011-01-01Stamp copyrights for year 2011.Bruce Momjian
2010-11-14Cleanup various comparisons with the constant "true".Robert Haas
Itagaki Takahiro, with slight modifications.
2010-10-17Fix a passel of inappropriately-named global functions in GIN.Tom Lane
The GIN code has absolutely no business exporting GIN-specific functions with names as generic as compareItemPointers() or newScanKey(); that's just trouble waiting to happen. I got annoyed about this again just now and decided to fix it. This commit ensures that all global symbols defined in access/gin/ have names including "gin" or "Gin". There were a couple of cases, like names involving "PostingItem", where arguably the names were already sufficiently nongeneric; but I figured as long as I was risking creating merge problems for unapplied GIN patches I might as well impose a uniform policy. I didn't touch any static symbol names. There might be some places where it'd be appropriate to rename some static functions to match siblings that are exported, but I'll leave that for another time.
2010-09-20Remove cvs keywords from all files.Magnus Hagander
2010-08-01Fix an additional set of problems in GIN's handling of lossy page pointers.Tom Lane
Although the key-combining code claimed to work correctly if its input contained both lossy and exact pointers for a single page in a single TID stream, in fact this did not work, and could not work without pretty fundamental redesign. Modify keyGetItem so that it will not return such a stream, by handling lossy-pointer cases a bit more explicitly than we did before. Per followup investigation of a gripe from Artur Dabrowski. An example of a query that failed given his data set is select count(*) from search_tab where (to_tsvector('german', keywords ) @@ to_tsquery('german', 'ee:* | dd:*')) and (to_tsvector('german', keywords ) @@ to_tsquery('german', 'aa:*')); Back-patch to 8.4 where the lossy pointer code was introduced.
2010-07-31Rewrite the key-combination logic in GIN's keyGetItem() and scanGetItem()Tom Lane
routines to make them behave better in the presence of "lossy" index pointers. The previous coding was outright incorrect for some cases, as recently reported by Artur Dabrowski: scanGetItem would fail to return index entries in cases where one index key had multiple exact pointers on the same page as another key had a lossy pointer. Also, keyGetItem was extremely inefficient for cases where a single index key generates multiple "entry" streams, such as an @@ operator with a multiple-clause tsquery. The presence of a lossy page pointer in any one stream defeated its ability to use the opclass consistentFn, resulting in probing many heap pages that didn't really need to be visited. In Artur's example case, a query like WHERE tsvector @@ to_tsquery('a & b') was about 50X slower than the theoretically equivalent WHERE tsvector @@ to_tsquery('a') AND tsvector @@ to_tsquery('b') The way that I chose to fix this was to have GIN call the consistentFn twice with both TRUE and FALSE values for the in-doubt entry stream, returning a hit if either call produces TRUE, but not if they both return FALSE. The code handles this for the case of a single in-doubt entry stream, but punts (falling back to the stupid behavior) if there's more than one lossy reference to the same page. The idea could be scaled up to deal with multiple lossy references, but I think that would probably be wasted complexity. At least to judge by Artur's example, such cases don't occur often enough to be worth trying to optimize. Back-patch to 8.4. 8.3 did not have lossy GIN index pointers, so not subject to these problems.
2010-02-26pgindent run for 9.0Bruce Momjian
2010-01-02Update copyright for the year 2010.Bruce Momjian
2009-11-13Fix multicolumn GIN's wrong results with fastupdate enabled.Teodor Sigaev
User-defined consistent functions believes the check array contains at least one true element which was not a true for scanning pending list. Per report from Yury Don <yura@vpcit.ru>
2009-06-118.4 pgindent run, with new combined Linux/FreeBSD/MinGW typedef listBruce Momjian
provided by Andrew.
2009-05-19Fix bug #4814 (wrong subscript in consistent-function call), and add someTom Lane
minimal regression test coverage for matchPartialInPendingList().
2009-04-05Fix infinite loop while checking of partial match in pending list.Teodor Sigaev
Improve comments. Now GIN-indexable operators should be strict. Per Tom's questions/suggestions.
2009-03-25Adjust the APIs for GIN opclass support functions to allow the extractQuery()Tom Lane
method to pass extra data to the consistent() and comparePartial() methods. This is the core infrastructure needed to support the soon-to-appear contrib/btree_gin module. The APIs are still upward compatible with the definitions used in 8.3 and before, although *not* with the previous 8.4devel function definitions. catversion bump for changes in pg_proc entries (although these are just cosmetic, since GIN doesn't actually look at the function signature before calling it...) Teodor Sigaev and Oleg Bartunov
2009-03-24Implement "fastupdate" support for GIN indexes, in which we try to accumulateTom Lane
multiple index entries in a holding area before adding them to the main index structure. This helps because bulk insert is (usually) significantly faster than retail insert for GIN. This patch also removes GIN support for amgettuple-style index scans. The API defined for amgettuple is difficult to support with fastupdate, and the previously committed partial-match feature didn't really work with it either. We might eventually figure a way to put back amgettuple support, but it won't happen for 8.4. catversion bumped because of change in GIN's pg_am entry, and because the format of GIN indexes changed on-disk (there's a metapage now, and possibly a pending list). Teodor Sigaev
2009-01-10Revise the TIDBitmap API to support multiple concurrent iterations over aTom Lane
bitmap. This is extracted from Greg Stark's posix_fadvise patch; it seems worth committing separately, since it's potentially useful independently of posix_fadvise.
2009-01-01Update copyright for 2009.Bruce Momjian
2008-10-20Remove mark/restore support in GIN and GiST indexes.Teodor Sigaev
Per Tom's comment. Also revome useless GISTScanOpaque->flags field.
2008-09-04Fix strategy propagation to scanEntry for partial match by moving propagationTeodor Sigaev
to initializaion of scanEntry.
2008-07-11Multi-column GIN indexes. Teodor SigaevTom Lane
2008-06-19Improve our #include situation by moving pointer types away from theAlvaro Herrera
corresponding struct definitions. This allows other headers to avoid including certain highly-loaded headers such as rel.h and relscan.h, instead using just relcache.h, heapam.h or genam.h, which are more lightweight and thus cause less unnecessary dependencies.
2008-05-16Extend GIN to support partial-match searches, and extend tsquery to supportTom Lane
prefix matching using this facility. Teodor Sigaev and Oleg Bartunov
2008-05-12Restructure some header files a bit, in particular heapam.h, by removing someAlvaro Herrera
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.
2008-04-22Fix using too many LWLocks bug, reported by Craig RingerTeodor Sigaev
<craig@postnewspapers.com.au>. It was my mistake, I missed limitation of number of held locks, now GIN doesn't use continiuous locks, but still hold buffers pinned to prevent interference with vacuum's deletion algorithm. Backpatch is needed.
2008-04-14Push index operator lossiness determination down to GIST/GIN opclassTom Lane
"consistent" functions, and remove pg_amop.opreqcheck, as per recent discussion. The main immediate benefit of this is that we no longer need 8.3's ugly hack of requiring @@@ rather than @@ to test weight-using tsquery searches on GIN indexes. In future it should be possible to optimize some other queries better than is done now, by detecting at runtime whether the index match is exact or not. Tom Lane, after an idea of Heikki's, and with some help from Teodor.