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2008-08-07Improve INTERSECT/EXCEPT hashing by realizing that we don't need to make anyTom Lane
hashtable entries for tuples that are found only in the second input: they can never contribute to the output. Furthermore, this implies that the planner should endeavor to put first the smaller (in number of groups) input relation for an INTERSECT. Implement that, and upgrade prepunion's estimation of the number of rows returned by setops so that there's some amount of sanity in the estimate of which one is smaller.
2008-08-07Support hashing for duplicate-elimination in INTERSECT and EXCEPT queries.Tom Lane
This completes my project of improving usage of hashing for duplicate elimination (aggregate functions with DISTINCT remain undone, but that's for some other day). As with the previous patches, this means we can INTERSECT/EXCEPT on datatypes that can hash but not sort, and it means that INTERSECT/EXCEPT without ORDER BY are no longer certain to produce sorted output.
2008-08-07Teach the system how to use hashing for UNION. (INTERSECT/EXCEPT will follow,Tom Lane
but seem like a separate patch since most of the remaining work is on the executor side.) I took the opportunity to push selection of the grouping operators for set operations into the parser where it belongs. Otherwise this is just a small exercise in making prepunion.c consider both alternatives. As with the recent DISTINCT patch, this means we can UNION on datatypes that can hash but not sort, and it means that UNION without ORDER BY is no longer certain to produce sorted output.
2008-08-05Department of second thoughts: fix newly-added code in planner.c to make realTom Lane
sure that DISTINCT ON does what it's supposed to, ie, sort by the full ORDER BY list before unique-ifying. The error seems masked in simple cases by the fact that query_planner won't return query pathkeys that only partially match the requested sort order, but I wouldn't want to bet that it couldn't be exposed in some way or other.
2008-08-05Improve SELECT DISTINCT to consider hash aggregation, as well as sort/uniq,Tom Lane
as methods for implementing the DISTINCT step. This eliminates the former performance gap between DISTINCT and GROUP BY, and also makes it possible to do SELECT DISTINCT on datatypes that only support hashing not sorting. SELECT DISTINCT ON is still always implemented by sorting; it would take executor changes to support hashing that, and it's not clear it's worth the trouble. This is a release-note-worthy incompatibility from previous PG versions, since SELECT DISTINCT can no longer be counted on to deliver sorted output without explicitly saying ORDER BY. (Anyone who can't cope with that can consider turning off enable_hashagg.) Several regression test queries needed to have ORDER BY added to preserve stable output order. I fixed the ones that manifested here, but there might be some other cases that show up on other platforms.
2008-08-03Make GROUP BY work properly for datatypes that only support hashing and notTom Lane
sorting. The infrastructure for this was all in place already; it's only necessary to fix the planner to not assume that sorting is always an available option.
2008-08-02Rearrange the querytree representation of ORDER BY/GROUP BY/DISTINCT itemsTom Lane
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.
2008-07-31Fix parser so that we don't modify the user-written ORDER BY list in orderTom Lane
to represent DISTINCT or DISTINCT ON. This gets rid of a longstanding annoyance that a view or rule using SELECT DISTINCT will be dumped out with an overspecified ORDER BY list, and is one small step along the way to decoupling DISTINCT and ORDER BY enough so that hash-based implementation of DISTINCT will be possible. In passing, improve transformDistinctClause so that it doesn't reject duplicate DISTINCT ON items, as was reported by Steve Midgley a couple weeks ago.
2008-07-13Clean up the use of some page-header-access macros: principally, useTom Lane
SizeOfPageHeaderData instead of sizeof(PageHeaderData) in places where that makes the code clearer, and avoid casting between Page and PageHeader where possible. Zdenek Kotala, with some additional cleanup by Heikki Linnakangas. I did not apply the parts of the proposed patch that would have resulted in slightly changing the on-disk format of hash indexes; it seems to me that's not a win as long as there's any chance of having in-place upgrade for 8.4.
2008-07-10Tighten up SS_finalize_plan's computation of valid_params to exclude Params ofTom Lane
the current query level that aren't in fact output parameters of the current initPlans. (This means, for example, output parameters of regular subplans.) To make this work correctly for output parameters coming from sibling initplans requires rejiggering the API of SS_finalize_plan just a bit: we need the siblings to be visible to it, rather than hidden as SS_make_initplan_from_plan had been doing. This is really part of my response to bug #4290, but I concluded this part probably shouldn't be back-patched, since all that it's doing is to make a debugging cross-check tighter.
2008-07-10Fix mis-calculation of extParam/allParam sets for plan nodes, as seen inTom Lane
bug #4290. The fundamental bug is that masking extParam by outer_params, as finalize_plan had been doing, caused us to lose the information that an initPlan depended on the output of a sibling initPlan. On reflection the best thing to do seemed to be not to try to adjust outer_params for this case but get rid of it entirely. The only thing it was really doing for us was to filter out param IDs associated with SubPlan nodes, and that can be done (with greater accuracy) while processing individual SubPlan nodes in finalize_primnode. This approach was vindicated by the discovery that the masking method was hiding a second bug: SS_finalize_plan failed to remove extParam bits for initPlan output params that were referenced in the main plan tree (it only got rid of those referenced by other initPlans). It's not clear that this caused any real problems, given the limited use of extParam by the executor, but it's certainly not what was intended. I originally thought that there was also a problem with needing to include indirect dependencies on external params in initPlans' param sets, but it turns out that the executor handles this correctly so long as the depended-on initPlan is earlier in the initPlans list than the one using its output. That seems a bit of a fragile assumption, but it is true at the moment, so I just documented it in some code comments rather than making what would be rather invasive changes to remove the assumption. Back-patch to 8.1. Previous versions don't have the case of initPlans referring to other initPlans' outputs, so while the existing logic is still questionable for them, there are not any known bugs to be fixed. So I'll refrain from changing them for now.
2008-06-27Consider a clause to be outerjoin_delayed if it references the nullable sideTom Lane
of any lower outer join, even if it also references the non-nullable side and so could not get pushed below the outer join anyway. We need this in case the clause is an OR clause: if it doesn't get marked outerjoin_delayed, create_or_index_quals() could pull an indexable restriction for the nullable side out of it, leading to wrong results as demonstrated by today's bug report from toruvinn. (See added regression test case for an example.) In principle this has been wrong for quite a while. In practice I don't think any branch before 8.3 can really show the failure, because create_or_index_quals() will only pull out indexable conditions, and before 8.3 those were always strict. So though we might have improperly generated null-extended rows in the outer join, they'd get discarded from the result anyway. The gating factor that makes the failure visible is that 8.3 considers "col IS NULL" to be indexable. Hence I'm not going to risk back-patching further than 8.3.
2008-06-27Improve planner's estimation of the size of an append relation: rather thanTom Lane
taking the maximum of any child rel's width, we should weight the widths proportionally to the number of rows expected from each child. In hindsight this is obviously correct because row width is really a proxy for the total physical size of the relation. Per discussion with Scott Carey (bug #4264).
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.
2008-06-17Fix the code that adds regclass constants to a plan's list of relation OIDsTom Lane
that it depends on for replan-forcing purposes. We need to consider plain OID constants too, because eval_const_expressions folds a RelabelType atop a Const to just a Const. This change could result in OID values that aren't really for tables getting added to the dependency list, but the worst-case consequence would be occasional useless replans. Per report from Gabriele Messineo.
2008-05-27Alter the xxx_pattern_ops opclasses to use the regular equality operator ofTom Lane
the associated datatype as their equality member. This means that these opclasses can now support plain equality comparisons along with LIKE tests, thus avoiding the need for an extra index in some applications. This optimization was not possible when the pattern opclasses were first introduced, because we didn't insist that text equality meant bitwise equality; but we do now, so there is no semantic difference between regular and pattern equality operators. I removed the name_pattern_ops opclass altogether, since it's really useless: name's regular comparisons are just strcmp() and are unlikely to become something different. Instead teach indxpath.c that btree name_ops can be used for LIKE whether or not the locale is C. This might lead to a useful speedup in LIKE queries on the system catalogs in non-C locales. The ~=~ and ~<>~ operators are gone altogether. (It would have been nice to keep them for backward compatibility's sake, but since the pg_amop structure doesn't allow multiple equality operators per opclass, there's no way.) A not-immediately-obvious incompatibility is that the sort order within bpchar_pattern_ops indexes changes --- it had been identical to plain strcmp, but is now trailing-blank-insensitive. This will impact in-place upgrades, if those ever happen. Per discussions a couple months ago.
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
2008-05-15Add code to eval_const_expressions() to support const-simplification ofTom Lane
CoerceViaIO nodes. This improves the ability of the planner to deal with cases where the node input is a constant. Per bug #4170.
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.
2008-05-02Allow the planner's estimate of the fraction of a cursor's rows that will beTom Lane
retrieved to be controlled through a GUC variable. Robert Hell
2008-04-21Fix convert_IN_to_join to properly handle the case where the subselect'sTom Lane
output is not of the same type that's needed for the IN comparison (ie, where the parser inserted an implicit coercion above the subselect result). We should record the coerced expression, not just a raw Var referencing the subselect output, as the quantity that needs to be unique-ified if we choose to implement the IN as Unique followed by a plain join. As of 8.3 this error was causing crashes, as seen in bug #4113 from Javier Hernandez, because the executor was being told to hash or sort the raw subselect output column using operators appropriate to the coerced type. In prior versions there was no crash because the executor chose the hash or sort operators for itself based on the column type it saw. However, that's still not really right, because what's unique for one data type might not be unique for another. In corner cases we could get multiple outputs of a row that should appear only once, as demonstrated by the regression test case included in this commit. However, this patch doesn't apply cleanly to 8.2 or before, and the code involved has shifted enough over time that I'm hesitant to try to back-patch. Given the lack of complaints from the field about such corner cases, I think the bug may not be important enough to risk breaking other things with a back-patch.
2008-04-21Allow float8, int8, and related datatypes to be passed by value on machinesTom Lane
where Datum is 8 bytes wide. Since this will break old-style C functions (those still using version 0 calling convention) that have arguments or results of these types, provide a configure option to disable it and retain the old pass-by-reference behavior. Likewise, provide a configure option to disable the recently-committed float4 pass-by-value change. Zoltan Boszormenyi, plus configurability stuff by me.
2008-04-17Fix a couple of oversights associated with the "physical tlist" optimization:Tom Lane
we had several code paths where a physical tlist could be used for the input to a Sort node, which is a dumb idea because any unneeded table columns will increase the volume of data the sort has to push around. (Unfortunately the easy-looking fix of calling disuse_physical_tlist during make_sort_xxx doesn't work because in most cases we're already committed to the current input tlist --- it's been marked with sort column numbers, or we've built grouping column numbers using it, etc. The tlist has to be selected properly at the calling level before we start constructing sort-col information. This is easy enough to do, we were just failing to take the point into consideration.) Back-patch to 8.3. I believe the problem probably exists clear back to 7.4 when the physical tlist optimization was added, but I'm afraid to back-patch further than 8.3 without a great deal more study than I want to put into it. The code in this area has drifted a lot over time. The real-world importance of these code paths is uncertain anyway --- I think in many cases we'd probably prefer hash-based methods.
2008-04-13Since createplan.c no longer cares whether index operators are lossy, it hasTom Lane
no particular need to do get_op_opfamily_properties() while building an indexscan plan. Postpone that lookup until executor start. This simplifies createplan.c a lot more than it complicates nodeIndexscan.c, and makes things more uniform since we already had to do it that way for RowCompare expressions. Should be a bit faster too, at least for plans that aren't re-used many times, since we avoid palloc'ing and perhaps copying the intermediate list data structure.
2008-04-13Phase 2 of project to make index operator lossiness be determined at runtimeTom Lane
instead of plan time. Extend the amgettuple API so that the index AM returns a boolean indicating whether the indexquals need to be rechecked, and make that rechecking happen in nodeIndexscan.c (currently the only place where it's expected to be needed; other callers of index_getnext are just erroring out for now). For the moment, GIN and GIST have stub logic that just always sets the recheck flag to TRUE --- I'm hoping to get Teodor to handle pushing that control down to the opclass consistent() functions. The planner no longer pays any attention to amopreqcheck, and that catalog column will go away in due course.
2008-04-09Small wording improvements for source code READMEs.Bruce Momjian
2008-04-09Revert README cleanups.Bruce Momjian
2008-04-09Revert sentence removal from nickname in FAQ.Bruce Momjian
2008-04-01Fix an oversight I made in a cleanup patch over a year ago:Tom Lane
eval_const_expressions needs to be passed the PlannerInfo ("root") structure, because in some cases we want it to substitute values for Param nodes. (So "constant" is not so constant as all that ...) This mistake partially disabled optimization of unnamed extended-Query statements in 8.3: in particular the LIKE-to-indexscan optimization would never be applied if the LIKE pattern was passed as a parameter, and constraint exclusion depending on a parameter value didn't work either.
2008-03-31Apply my original fix for Taiki Yamaguchi's bug report about DISTINCT MAX().Tom Lane
Add some regression tests for plausible failures in this area.
2008-03-29Revert my erroneous fix for Taiki Yamaguchi's DISTINCT MAX() bug.Tom Lane
Whatever we do about that, this isn't the path to the solution.
2008-03-28Department of second thoughts: the rule that ORDER BY and DISTINCT areTom Lane
useless for an ungrouped-aggregate query holds regardless of whether optimize_minmax_aggregates succeeds. So we might as well apply the optimization in any case. I'll leave 8.3 as it was, since this version is a tad more invasive than my earlier patch.
2008-03-27When we have successfully optimized a MIN or MAX aggregate into an indexscan,Tom Lane
the query result must be exactly one row (since we don't do this when there's any GROUP BY). Therefore any ORDER BY or DISTINCT attached to the query is useless and can be dropped. Aside from saving useless cycles, this protects us against problems with matching the hacked-up tlist entries to sort clauses, as seen in a bug report from Taiki Yamaguchi. We might need to work harder if we ever try to optimize grouped queries with this approach, but this solution will do for now.
2008-03-26Move the HTSU_Result enum definition into snapshot.h, to avoid includingAlvaro Herrera
tqual.h into heapam.h. This makes all inclusion of tqual.h explicit. I also sorted alphabetically the includes on some source files.
2008-03-26Rename snapmgmt.c/h to snapmgr.c/h, for consistency with other files.Alvaro Herrera
Per complaint from Tom Lane.
2008-03-26Separate snapshot management code from tuple visibility code, create aAlvaro Herrera
snapmgmt.c file for the former. The header files have also been reorganized in three parts: the most basic snapshot definitions are now in a new file snapshot.h, and the also new snapmgmt.h keeps the definitions for snapmgmt.c. tqual.h has been reduced to the bare minimum. This patch is just a first step towards managing live snapshots within a transaction; there is no functionality change. Per my proposal to pgsql-patches on 20080318191940.GB27458@alvh.no-ip.org and subsequent discussion.
2008-03-25Simplify and standardize conversions between TEXT datums and ordinary CTom Lane
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
2008-03-24When a relation has been proven empty by constraint exclusion, propagate thatTom Lane
knowledge up through any joins it participates in. We were doing that already in some special cases but not in the general case. Also, defend against zero row estimates for the input relations in cost_mergejoin --- this fix may have eliminated the only scenario in which that can happen, but be safe. Per report from Alex Solovey.
2008-03-21More README src cleanups.Bruce Momjian
2008-03-20Make source code READMEs more consistent. Add CVS tags to all README files.Bruce Momjian
2008-03-18Arrange to "inline" SQL functions that appear in a query's FROM clause,Tom Lane
are declared to return set, and consist of just a single SELECT. We can replace the FROM-item with a sub-SELECT and then optimize much as if we were dealing with a view. Patch from Richard Rowell, cleaned up by me.
2008-03-15Change hash index creation so that rather than always establishing exactlyTom Lane
two buckets at the start, we create a number of buckets appropriate for the estimated size of the table. This avoids a lot of expensive bucket-split actions during initial index build on an already-populated table. This is one of the two core ideas of Tom Raney and Shreya Bhargava's patch to reduce hash index build time. I'm committing it separately to make it easier for people to test the effects of this separately from the effects of their other core idea (pre-sorting the index entries by bucket number).
2008-02-19Refactor backend makefiles to remove lots of duplicate codePeter Eisentraut
2008-02-07Fix silly mistake in expand_indexqual_rowcompare --- in converting a forboth()Tom Lane
into an iteration over three parallel lists, I had accidentally put the lnext steps outside the loop. Sigh. Per bug #3938.
2008-01-17Fix subselect.c to avoid assuming that a SubLink's testexpr references eachTom Lane
subquery output column exactly once left-to-right. Although this is the case in the original parser output, it might not be so after rewriting and constant-folding, as illustrated by bug #3882 from Jan Mate. Instead scan the subquery's target list to obtain needed per-column information; this is duplicative of what the parser did, but only a couple dozen lines need be copied, and we can clean up a couple of notational uglinesses. Bug was introduced in 8.2 as part of revision of SubLink representation.
2008-01-12Fix logical errors in constraint exclusion: we cannot assume that a CHECKTom Lane
constraint yields TRUE for every row of its table, only that it does not yield FALSE (a NULL result isn't disallowed). This breaks a couple of implications that would be true in two-valued logic. I had put in one such mistake in an 8.2.5 patch: foo IS NULL doesn't refute a strict operator on foo. But there was another in the original 8.2 release: NOT foo doesn't refute an expression whose truth would imply the truth of foo. Per report from Rajesh Kumar Mallah. To preserve the ability to do constraint exclusion with one partition holding NULL values, extend relation_excluded_by_constraints() to check for attnotnull flags, and add col IS NOT NULL expressions to the set of constraints we hope to refute.
2008-01-11The original implementation of polymorphic aggregates didn't really get theTom Lane
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.
2008-01-11Fix an old error in clause_selectivity: the default selectivity estimateTom Lane
for unhandled clause types ought to be 0.5, not 1.0. I fear I introduced this silliness due to misreading the intent of the very-poorly-structured code that was there when we inherited the file from Berkeley. The lack of sanity in this behavior was exposed by an example from Sim Zacks. (Arguably this is a bug fix and should be back-patched, but I'm a bit hesitant to introduce a possible planner behavior change in the back branches; it might detune queries that worked acceptably in the past.) While at it, make estimation for DistinctExpr do something marginally realistic, rather than just defaulting.
2008-01-11Fix a conceptual error in my patch of 2007-10-26 that avoided consideringTom Lane
clauseless joins of relations that have unexploited join clauses. Rather than looking at every other base relation in the query, the correct thing is to examine the other relations in the "initial_rels" list of the current make_rel_from_joinlist() invocation, because those are what we actually have the ability to join against. This might be a subset of the whole query in cases where join_collapse_limit or from_collapse_limit or full joins have prevented merging the whole query into a single join problem. This is a bit untidy because we have to pass those rels down through a new PlannerInfo field, but it's necessary. Per bug #3865 from Oleg Kharin.
2008-01-09Fix some planner issues found while investigating Kevin Grittner's reportTom Lane
of poorer planning in 8.3 than 8.2: 1. After pushing a constant across an outer join --- ie, given "a LEFT JOIN b ON (a.x = b.y) WHERE a.x = 42", we can deduce that b.y is sort of equal to 42, in the sense that we needn't fetch any b rows where it isn't 42 --- loop to see if any additional deductions can be made. Previous releases did that by recursing, but I had mistakenly thought that this was no longer necessary given the EquivalenceClass machinery. 2. Allow pushing constants across outer join conditions even if the condition is outerjoin_delayed due to a lower outer join. This is safe as long as the condition is strict and we re-test it at the upper join. 3. Keep the outer-join clause even if we successfully push a constant across it. This is *necessary* in the outerjoin_delayed case, but even in the simple case, it seems better to do this to ensure that the join search order heuristics will consider the join as reasonable to make. Mark such a clause as having selectivity 1.0, though, since it's not going to eliminate very many rows after application of the constant condition. 4. Tweak have_relevant_eclass_joinclause to report that two relations are joinable when they have vars that are equated to the same constant. We won't actually generate any joinclause from such an EquivalenceClass, but again it seems that in such a case it's a good idea to consider the join as worth costing out. 5. Fix a bug in select_mergejoin_clauses that was exposed by these changes: we have to reject candidate mergejoin clauses if either side was equated to a constant, because we can't construct a canonical pathkey list for such a clause. This is an implementation restriction that might be worth fixing someday, but it doesn't seem critical to get it done for 8.3.