Apparently, back in the dim reaches of prehistory, the parser couldn't
be trusted to label Const nodes with the correct constbyval value ...
and someone preferred to patch around this in copyObject rather than
fix the problem at the source. The problem is long gone, but the hack
lingered on. Until now.
in the TupleDesc that the caller already has (for call from ExecMain) or
can make just as easily as ExecInitJunkFilter() can (for call from
ExecAppend). Also, don't bother to build a junk filter for an INSERT
operation that doesn't actually need one, which is the normal case.
In particular, don't bother to look up type information for attributes
where we're not actually going to use it, and avoid copying entire tlist
structure when it's not necessary.
during initial run formation by keeping both current run and next-run
tuples in the same heap (yup, Knuth is smarter than I am). And, during
merge passes, make use of available sort memory to load multiple tuples
from any one input 'tape' at a time, thereby improving locality of
access to the temp file.
before calling execProject, when the outerPlan has returned zero tuples.
I took this out under the mistaken impression that the input tuple
couldn't be referenced by execProject if we weren't in GROUP BY mode.
But it can, if we're in an UPDATE or DELETE...
One, it now returns the previous hook. That way people don't have to dig
around in libpq-int.h for that information anymore. It previously
returned void, so there should be no incompatibilities.
Second, you cannot set the callback to NULL anymore. (Of course you can
still call it with NULL just to get the current hook.) The way libpq uses
the callback pointer, having a NULL there wasn't very healthy.
Peter Eisentraut
The following patch extends the COMMENT ON functionality to the
rest of the database objects beyond just tables, columns, and views. The
grammer of the COMMENT ON statement now looks like:
COMMENT ON [
[ DATABASE | INDEX | RULE | SEQUENCE | TABLE | TYPE | VIEW ] <objname>
|
COLUMN <relation>.<attribute> |
AGGREGATE <aggname> <aggtype> |
FUNCTION <funcname> (arg1, arg2, ...) |
OPERATOR <op> (leftoperand_typ rightoperand_typ) |
TRIGGER <triggername> ON relname>
Mike Mascari
(mascarim@yahoo.com)