752 lines
30 KiB
C
752 lines
30 KiB
C
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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*
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* relation.h
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* Definitions for planner's internal data structures.
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*
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*
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* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2003, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
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* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
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*
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* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/include/nodes/relation.h,v 1.94 2004/04/25 18:23:57 neilc Exp $
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*
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*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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*/
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#ifndef RELATION_H
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#define RELATION_H
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#include "access/sdir.h"
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#include "nodes/bitmapset.h"
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#include "nodes/parsenodes.h"
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/*
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* Relids
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* Set of relation identifiers (indexes into the rangetable).
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*/
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typedef Bitmapset *Relids;
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/*
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* When looking for a "cheapest path", this enum specifies whether we want
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* cheapest startup cost or cheapest total cost.
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*/
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typedef enum CostSelector
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{
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STARTUP_COST, TOTAL_COST
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} CostSelector;
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/*
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* The cost estimate produced by cost_qual_eval() includes both a one-time
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* (startup) cost, and a per-tuple cost.
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*/
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typedef struct QualCost
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{
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Cost startup; /* one-time cost */
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Cost per_tuple; /* per-evaluation cost */
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} QualCost;
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/*----------
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* RelOptInfo
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* Per-relation information for planning/optimization
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*
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* For planning purposes, a "base rel" is either a plain relation (a table)
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* or the output of a sub-SELECT or function that appears in the range table.
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* In either case it is uniquely identified by an RT index. A "joinrel"
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* is the joining of two or more base rels. A joinrel is identified by
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* the set of RT indexes for its component baserels. We create RelOptInfo
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* nodes for each baserel and joinrel, and store them in the Query's
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* base_rel_list and join_rel_list respectively.
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*
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* Note that there is only one joinrel for any given set of component
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* baserels, no matter what order we assemble them in; so an unordered
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* set is the right datatype to identify it with.
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*
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* We also have "other rels", which are like base rels in that they refer to
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* single RT indexes; but they are not part of the join tree, and are stored
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* in other_rel_list not base_rel_list.
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*
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* Currently the only kind of otherrels are those made for child relations
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* of an inheritance scan (SELECT FROM foo*). The parent table's RTE and
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* corresponding baserel represent the whole result of the inheritance scan.
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* The planner creates separate RTEs and associated RelOptInfos for each child
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* table (including the parent table, in its capacity as a member of the
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* inheritance set). These RelOptInfos are physically identical to baserels,
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* but are otherrels because they are not in the main join tree. These added
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* RTEs and otherrels are used to plan the scans of the individual tables in
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* the inheritance set; then the parent baserel is given an Append plan
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* comprising the best plans for the individual child tables.
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*
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* At one time we also made otherrels to represent join RTEs, for use in
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* handling join alias Vars. Currently this is not needed because all join
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* alias Vars are expanded to non-aliased form during preprocess_expression.
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*
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* Parts of this data structure are specific to various scan and join
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* mechanisms. It didn't seem worth creating new node types for them.
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*
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* relids - Set of base-relation identifiers; it is a base relation
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* if there is just one, a join relation if more than one
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* rows - estimated number of tuples in the relation after restriction
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* clauses have been applied (ie, output rows of a plan for it)
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* width - avg. number of bytes per tuple in the relation after the
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* appropriate projections have been done (ie, output width)
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* reltargetlist - List of Var nodes for the attributes we need to
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* output from this relation (in no particular order)
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* pathlist - List of Path nodes, one for each potentially useful
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* method of generating the relation
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* cheapest_startup_path - the pathlist member with lowest startup cost
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* (regardless of its ordering)
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* cheapest_total_path - the pathlist member with lowest total cost
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* (regardless of its ordering)
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* cheapest_unique_path - for caching cheapest path to produce unique
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* (no duplicates) output from relation
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*
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* If the relation is a base relation it will have these fields set:
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*
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* relid - RTE index (this is redundant with the relids field, but
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* is provided for convenience of access)
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* rtekind - distinguishes plain relation, subquery, or function RTE
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* min_attr, max_attr - range of valid AttrNumbers for rel
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* attr_needed - array of bitmapsets indicating the highest joinrel
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* in which each attribute is needed; if bit 0 is set then
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* the attribute is needed as part of final targetlist
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* attr_widths - cache space for per-attribute width estimates;
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* zero means not computed yet
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* indexlist - list of IndexOptInfo nodes for relation's indexes
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* (always NIL if it's not a table)
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* pages - number of disk pages in relation (zero if not a table)
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* tuples - number of tuples in relation (not considering restrictions)
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* subplan - plan for subquery (NULL if it's not a subquery)
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*
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* Note: for a subquery, tuples and subplan are not set immediately
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* upon creation of the RelOptInfo object; they are filled in when
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* set_base_rel_pathlist processes the object.
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*
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* For otherrels that are inheritance children, these fields are filled
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* in just as for a baserel.
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*
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* The presence of the remaining fields depends on the restrictions
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* and joins that the relation participates in:
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*
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* baserestrictinfo - List of RestrictInfo nodes, containing info about
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* each qualification clause in which this relation
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* participates (only used for base rels)
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* baserestrictcost - Estimated cost of evaluating the baserestrictinfo
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* clauses at a single tuple (only used for base rels)
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* outerjoinset - For a base rel: if the rel appears within the nullable
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* side of an outer join, the set of all relids
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* participating in the highest such outer join; else NULL.
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* Otherwise, unused.
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* joininfo - List of JoinInfo nodes, containing info about each join
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* clause in which this relation participates
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* index_outer_relids - only used for base rels; set of outer relids
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* that participate in indexable joinclauses for this rel
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* index_inner_paths - only used for base rels; list of InnerIndexscanInfo
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* nodes showing best indexpaths for various subsets of
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* index_outer_relids.
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*
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* Note: Keeping a restrictinfo list in the RelOptInfo is useful only for
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* base rels, because for a join rel the set of clauses that are treated as
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* restrict clauses varies depending on which sub-relations we choose to join.
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* (For example, in a 3-base-rel join, a clause relating rels 1 and 2 must be
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* treated as a restrictclause if we join {1} and {2 3} to make {1 2 3}; but
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* if we join {1 2} and {3} then that clause will be a restrictclause in {1 2}
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* and should not be processed again at the level of {1 2 3}.) Therefore,
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* the restrictinfo list in the join case appears in individual JoinPaths
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* (field joinrestrictinfo), not in the parent relation. But it's OK for
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* the RelOptInfo to store the joininfo lists, because those are the same
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* for a given rel no matter how we form it.
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*
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* We store baserestrictcost in the RelOptInfo (for base relations) because
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* we know we will need it at least once (to price the sequential scan)
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* and may need it multiple times to price index scans.
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*
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* outerjoinset is used to ensure correct placement of WHERE clauses that
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* apply to outer-joined relations; we must not apply such WHERE clauses
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* until after the outer join is performed.
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*----------
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*/
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typedef enum RelOptKind
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{
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RELOPT_BASEREL,
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RELOPT_JOINREL,
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RELOPT_OTHER_CHILD_REL
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} RelOptKind;
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typedef struct RelOptInfo
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{
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NodeTag type;
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RelOptKind reloptkind;
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/* all relations included in this RelOptInfo */
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Relids relids; /* set of base relids (rangetable indexes) */
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/* size estimates generated by planner */
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double rows; /* estimated number of result tuples */
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int width; /* estimated avg width of result tuples */
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/* materialization information */
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FastList reltargetlist;
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List *pathlist; /* Path structures */
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struct Path *cheapest_startup_path;
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struct Path *cheapest_total_path;
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struct Path *cheapest_unique_path;
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/* information about a base rel (not set for join rels!) */
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Index relid;
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RTEKind rtekind; /* RELATION, SUBQUERY, or FUNCTION */
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AttrNumber min_attr; /* smallest attrno of rel (often <0) */
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AttrNumber max_attr; /* largest attrno of rel */
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Relids *attr_needed; /* array indexed [min_attr .. max_attr] */
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int32 *attr_widths; /* array indexed [min_attr .. max_attr] */
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List *indexlist;
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long pages;
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double tuples;
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struct Plan *subplan; /* if subquery */
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/* used by various scans and joins: */
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List *baserestrictinfo; /* RestrictInfo structures (if
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* base rel) */
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QualCost baserestrictcost; /* cost of evaluating the above */
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Relids outerjoinset; /* set of base relids */
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List *joininfo; /* JoinInfo structures */
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/* cached info about inner indexscan paths for relation: */
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Relids index_outer_relids; /* other relids in indexable join
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* clauses */
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List *index_inner_paths; /* InnerIndexscanInfo nodes */
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/*
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* Inner indexscans are not in the main pathlist because they are not
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* usable except in specific join contexts. We use the
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* index_inner_paths list just to avoid recomputing the best inner
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* indexscan repeatedly for similar outer relations. See comments for
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* InnerIndexscanInfo.
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*/
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} RelOptInfo;
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/*
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* IndexOptInfo
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* Per-index information for planning/optimization
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*
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* Prior to Postgres 7.0, RelOptInfo was used to describe both relations
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* and indexes, but that created confusion without actually doing anything
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* useful. So now we have a separate IndexOptInfo struct for indexes.
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*
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* classlist[], indexkeys[], and ordering[] have ncolumns entries.
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* Zeroes in the indexkeys[] array indicate index columns that are
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* expressions; there is one element in indexprs for each such column.
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*
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* Note: for historical reasons, the classlist and ordering arrays have
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* an extra entry that is always zero. Some code scans until it sees a
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* zero entry, rather than looking at ncolumns.
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*
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* The indexprs and indpred expressions have been run through
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* prepqual.c and eval_const_expressions() for ease of matching to
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* WHERE clauses. indpred is in implicit-AND form.
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*/
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typedef struct IndexOptInfo
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{
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NodeTag type;
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Oid indexoid; /* OID of the index relation */
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/* statistics from pg_class */
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long pages; /* number of disk pages in index */
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double tuples; /* number of index tuples in index */
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/* index descriptor information */
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int ncolumns; /* number of columns in index */
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Oid *classlist; /* OIDs of operator classes for columns */
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int *indexkeys; /* column numbers of index's keys, or 0 */
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Oid *ordering; /* OIDs of sort operators for each column */
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Oid relam; /* OID of the access method (in pg_am) */
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RegProcedure amcostestimate; /* OID of the access method's cost fcn */
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List *indexprs; /* expressions for non-simple index
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* columns */
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List *indpred; /* predicate if a partial index, else NIL */
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bool predOK; /* true if predicate matches query */
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bool unique; /* true if a unique index */
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/* cached info about inner indexscan paths for index */
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Relids outer_relids; /* other relids in usable join clauses */
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List *inner_paths; /* List of InnerIndexscanInfo nodes */
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} IndexOptInfo;
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/*
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* PathKeys
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*
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* The sort ordering of a path is represented by a list of sublists of
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* PathKeyItem nodes. An empty list implies no known ordering. Otherwise
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* the first sublist represents the primary sort key, the second the
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* first secondary sort key, etc. Each sublist contains one or more
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* PathKeyItem nodes, each of which can be taken as the attribute that
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* appears at that sort position. (See the top of optimizer/path/pathkeys.c
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* for more information.)
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*/
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typedef struct PathKeyItem
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{
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NodeTag type;
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Node *key; /* the item that is ordered */
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Oid sortop; /* the ordering operator ('<' op) */
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/*
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* key typically points to a Var node, ie a relation attribute, but it
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* can also point to an arbitrary expression representing the value
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* indexed by an index expression.
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*/
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} PathKeyItem;
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/*
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* Type "Path" is used as-is for sequential-scan paths. For other
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* path types it is the first component of a larger struct.
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*
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* Note: "pathtype" is the NodeTag of the Plan node we could build from this
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* Path. It is partially redundant with the Path's NodeTag, but allows us
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* to use the same Path type for multiple Plan types where there is no need
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* to distinguish the Plan type during path processing.
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*/
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typedef struct Path
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{
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NodeTag type;
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NodeTag pathtype; /* tag identifying scan/join method */
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RelOptInfo *parent; /* the relation this path can build */
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/* estimated execution costs for path (see costsize.c for more info) */
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Cost startup_cost; /* cost expended before fetching any
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* tuples */
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Cost total_cost; /* total cost (assuming all tuples
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* fetched) */
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List *pathkeys; /* sort ordering of path's output */
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/* pathkeys is a List of Lists of PathKeyItem nodes; see above */
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} Path;
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/*----------
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* IndexPath represents an index scan. Although an indexscan can only read
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* a single relation, it can scan it more than once, potentially using a
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* different index during each scan. The result is the union (OR) of all the
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* tuples matched during any scan. (The executor is smart enough not to return
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* the same tuple more than once, even if it is matched in multiple scans.)
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*
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* 'indexinfo' is a list of IndexOptInfo nodes, one per scan to be performed.
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*
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* 'indexclauses' is a list of index qualifications, also one per scan.
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* Each entry in 'indexclauses' is a sublist of qualification clauses to be
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* used for that scan, with implicit AND semantics across the sublist items.
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* NOTE that the semantics of the top-level list in 'indexclauses' is OR
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* combination, while the sublists are implicitly AND combinations!
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*
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* 'indexquals' has the same structure as 'indexclauses', but it contains
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* the actual indexqual conditions that can be used with the index(es).
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* In simple cases this is identical to 'indexclauses', but when special
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* indexable operators appear in 'indexclauses', they are replaced by the
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* derived indexscannable conditions in 'indexquals'.
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*
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* Both 'indexclauses' and 'indexquals' are lists of sublists of RestrictInfo
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* nodes. (Before 7.5, we kept bare operator expressions in these lists, but
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* storing RestrictInfos is more efficient since selectivities can be cached.)
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*
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* 'isjoininner' is TRUE if the path is a nestloop inner scan (that is,
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* some of the index conditions are join rather than restriction clauses).
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*
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* 'indexscandir' is one of:
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* ForwardScanDirection: forward scan of an ordered index
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* BackwardScanDirection: backward scan of an ordered index
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* NoMovementScanDirection: scan of an unordered index, or don't care
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* (The executor doesn't care whether it gets ForwardScanDirection or
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* NoMovementScanDirection for an indexscan, but the planner wants to
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* distinguish ordered from unordered indexes for building pathkeys.)
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*
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* 'rows' is the estimated result tuple count for the indexscan. This
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* is the same as path.parent->rows for a simple indexscan, but it is
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* different for a nestloop inner scan, because the additional indexquals
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* coming from join clauses make the scan more selective than the parent
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* rel's restrict clauses alone would do.
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*----------
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*/
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typedef struct IndexPath
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{
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Path path;
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List *indexinfo;
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List *indexclauses;
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List *indexquals;
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bool isjoininner;
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ScanDirection indexscandir;
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double rows; /* estimated number of result tuples */
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} IndexPath;
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/*
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* TidPath represents a scan by TID
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*
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* tideval is an implicitly OR'ed list of quals of the form CTID = something.
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* Note they are bare quals, not RestrictInfos.
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*/
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typedef struct TidPath
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{
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Path path;
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List *tideval; /* qual(s) involving CTID = something */
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} TidPath;
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/*
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* AppendPath represents an Append plan, ie, successive execution of
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* several member plans. Currently it is only used to handle expansion
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* of inheritance trees.
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*/
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typedef struct AppendPath
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{
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Path path;
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List *subpaths; /* list of component Paths */
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} AppendPath;
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/*
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* ResultPath represents use of a Result plan node, either to compute a
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* variable-free targetlist or to gate execution of a subplan with a
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* one-time (variable-free) qual condition. Note that in the former case
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* path.parent will be NULL; in the latter case it is copied from the subpath.
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*
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* Note that constantqual is a list of bare clauses, not RestrictInfos.
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*/
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typedef struct ResultPath
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{
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Path path;
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Path *subpath;
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List *constantqual;
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} ResultPath;
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/*
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* MaterialPath represents use of a Material plan node, i.e., caching of
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* the output of its subpath. This is used when the subpath is expensive
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* and needs to be scanned repeatedly, or when we need mark/restore ability
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* and the subpath doesn't have it.
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*/
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typedef struct MaterialPath
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{
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Path path;
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Path *subpath;
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} MaterialPath;
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/*
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* UniquePath represents elimination of distinct rows from the output of
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* its subpath.
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*
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* This is unlike the other Path nodes in that it can actually generate
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* different plans: either hash-based or sort-based implementation, or a
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* no-op if the input path can be proven distinct already. The decision
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* is sufficiently localized that it's not worth having separate Path node
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* types. (Note: in the no-op case, we could eliminate the UniquePath node
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* entirely and just return the subpath; but it's convenient to have a
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* UniquePath in the path tree to signal upper-level routines that the input
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* is known distinct.)
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*/
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typedef enum
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{
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UNIQUE_PATH_NOOP, /* input is known unique already */
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UNIQUE_PATH_HASH, /* use hashing */
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UNIQUE_PATH_SORT /* use sorting */
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} UniquePathMethod;
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typedef struct UniquePath
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{
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Path path;
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Path *subpath;
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UniquePathMethod umethod;
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double rows; /* estimated number of result tuples */
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} UniquePath;
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/*
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* All join-type paths share these fields.
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*/
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typedef struct JoinPath
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{
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Path path;
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JoinType jointype;
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Path *outerjoinpath; /* path for the outer side of the join */
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Path *innerjoinpath; /* path for the inner side of the join */
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List *joinrestrictinfo; /* RestrictInfos to apply to join */
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/*
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* See the notes for RelOptInfo to understand why joinrestrictinfo is
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* needed in JoinPath, and can't be merged into the parent RelOptInfo.
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*/
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} JoinPath;
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/*
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* A nested-loop path needs no special fields.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef JoinPath NestPath;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* A mergejoin path has these fields.
|
|
*
|
|
* path_mergeclauses lists the clauses (in the form of RestrictInfos)
|
|
* that will be used in the merge.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that the mergeclauses are a subset of the parent relation's
|
|
* restriction-clause list. Any join clauses that are not mergejoinable
|
|
* appear only in the parent's restrict list, and must be checked by a
|
|
* qpqual at execution time.
|
|
*
|
|
* outersortkeys (resp. innersortkeys) is NIL if the outer path
|
|
* (resp. inner path) is already ordered appropriately for the
|
|
* mergejoin. If it is not NIL then it is a PathKeys list describing
|
|
* the ordering that must be created by an explicit sort step.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct MergePath
|
|
{
|
|
JoinPath jpath;
|
|
List *path_mergeclauses; /* join clauses to be used for
|
|
* merge */
|
|
List *outersortkeys; /* keys for explicit sort, if any */
|
|
List *innersortkeys; /* keys for explicit sort, if any */
|
|
} MergePath;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* A hashjoin path has these fields.
|
|
*
|
|
* The remarks above for mergeclauses apply for hashclauses as well.
|
|
*
|
|
* Hashjoin does not care what order its inputs appear in, so we have
|
|
* no need for sortkeys.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct HashPath
|
|
{
|
|
JoinPath jpath;
|
|
List *path_hashclauses; /* join clauses used for hashing */
|
|
} HashPath;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Restriction clause info.
|
|
*
|
|
* We create one of these for each AND sub-clause of a restriction condition
|
|
* (WHERE or JOIN/ON clause). Since the restriction clauses are logically
|
|
* ANDed, we can use any one of them or any subset of them to filter out
|
|
* tuples, without having to evaluate the rest. The RestrictInfo node itself
|
|
* stores data used by the optimizer while choosing the best query plan.
|
|
*
|
|
* If a restriction clause references a single base relation, it will appear
|
|
* in the baserestrictinfo list of the RelOptInfo for that base rel.
|
|
*
|
|
* If a restriction clause references more than one base rel, it will
|
|
* appear in the JoinInfo lists of every RelOptInfo that describes a strict
|
|
* subset of the base rels mentioned in the clause. The JoinInfo lists are
|
|
* used to drive join tree building by selecting plausible join candidates.
|
|
* The clause cannot actually be applied until we have built a join rel
|
|
* containing all the base rels it references, however.
|
|
*
|
|
* When we construct a join rel that includes all the base rels referenced
|
|
* in a multi-relation restriction clause, we place that clause into the
|
|
* joinrestrictinfo lists of paths for the join rel, if neither left nor
|
|
* right sub-path includes all base rels referenced in the clause. The clause
|
|
* will be applied at that join level, and will not propagate any further up
|
|
* the join tree. (Note: the "predicate migration" code was once intended to
|
|
* push restriction clauses up and down the plan tree based on evaluation
|
|
* costs, but it's dead code and is unlikely to be resurrected in the
|
|
* foreseeable future.)
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that in the presence of more than two rels, a multi-rel restriction
|
|
* might reach different heights in the join tree depending on the join
|
|
* sequence we use. So, these clauses cannot be associated directly with
|
|
* the join RelOptInfo, but must be kept track of on a per-join-path basis.
|
|
*
|
|
* When dealing with outer joins we have to be very careful about pushing qual
|
|
* clauses up and down the tree. An outer join's own JOIN/ON conditions must
|
|
* be evaluated exactly at that join node, and any quals appearing in WHERE or
|
|
* in a JOIN above the outer join cannot be pushed down below the outer join.
|
|
* Otherwise the outer join will produce wrong results because it will see the
|
|
* wrong sets of input rows. All quals are stored as RestrictInfo nodes
|
|
* during planning, but there's a flag to indicate whether a qual has been
|
|
* pushed down to a lower level than its original syntactic placement in the
|
|
* join tree would suggest. If an outer join prevents us from pushing a qual
|
|
* down to its "natural" semantic level (the level associated with just the
|
|
* base rels used in the qual) then the qual will appear in JoinInfo lists
|
|
* that reference more than just the base rels it actually uses. By
|
|
* pretending that the qual references all the rels appearing in the outer
|
|
* join, we prevent it from being evaluated below the outer join's joinrel.
|
|
* When we do form the outer join's joinrel, we still need to distinguish
|
|
* those quals that are actually in that join's JOIN/ON condition from those
|
|
* that appeared higher in the tree and were pushed down to the join rel
|
|
* because they used no other rels. That's what the is_pushed_down flag is
|
|
* for; it tells us that a qual came from a point above the join of the
|
|
* specific set of base rels that it uses (or that the JoinInfo structures
|
|
* claim it uses). A clause that originally came from WHERE will *always*
|
|
* have its is_pushed_down flag set; a clause that came from an INNER JOIN
|
|
* condition, but doesn't use all the rels being joined, will also have
|
|
* is_pushed_down set because it will get attached to some lower joinrel.
|
|
*
|
|
* We also store a valid_everywhere flag, which says that the clause is not
|
|
* affected by any lower-level outer join, and therefore any conditions it
|
|
* asserts can be presumed true throughout the plan tree.
|
|
*
|
|
* In general, the referenced clause might be arbitrarily complex. The
|
|
* kinds of clauses we can handle as indexscan quals, mergejoin clauses,
|
|
* or hashjoin clauses are fairly limited --- the code for each kind of
|
|
* path is responsible for identifying the restrict clauses it can use
|
|
* and ignoring the rest. Clauses not implemented by an indexscan,
|
|
* mergejoin, or hashjoin will be placed in the plan qual or joinqual field
|
|
* of the finished Plan node, where they will be enforced by general-purpose
|
|
* qual-expression-evaluation code. (But we are still entitled to count
|
|
* their selectivity when estimating the result tuple count, if we
|
|
* can guess what it is...)
|
|
*
|
|
* When the referenced clause is an OR clause, we generate a modified copy
|
|
* in which additional RestrictInfo nodes are inserted below the top-level
|
|
* OR/AND structure. This is a convenience for OR indexscan processing:
|
|
* indexquals taken from either the top level or an OR subclause will have
|
|
* associated RestrictInfo nodes.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct RestrictInfo
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
|
|
Expr *clause; /* the represented clause of WHERE or JOIN */
|
|
|
|
bool is_pushed_down; /* TRUE if clause was pushed down in level */
|
|
|
|
bool valid_everywhere; /* TRUE if valid on every level */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* This flag is set true if the clause looks potentially useful as a
|
|
* merge or hash join clause, that is if it is a binary opclause with
|
|
* nonoverlapping sets of relids referenced in the left and right sides.
|
|
* (Whether the operator is actually merge or hash joinable isn't
|
|
* checked, however.)
|
|
*/
|
|
bool can_join;
|
|
|
|
/* The set of relids (varnos) referenced in the clause: */
|
|
Relids clause_relids;
|
|
|
|
/* These fields are set for any binary opclause: */
|
|
Relids left_relids; /* relids in left side of clause */
|
|
Relids right_relids; /* relids in right side of clause */
|
|
|
|
/* This field is NULL unless clause is an OR clause: */
|
|
Expr *orclause; /* modified clause with RestrictInfos */
|
|
|
|
/* cache space for cost and selectivity */
|
|
QualCost eval_cost; /* eval cost of clause; -1 if not yet set */
|
|
Selectivity this_selec; /* selectivity; -1 if not yet set */
|
|
|
|
/* valid if clause is mergejoinable, else InvalidOid: */
|
|
Oid mergejoinoperator; /* copy of clause operator */
|
|
Oid left_sortop; /* leftside sortop needed for mergejoin */
|
|
Oid right_sortop; /* rightside sortop needed for mergejoin */
|
|
|
|
/* cache space for mergeclause processing; NIL if not yet set */
|
|
List *left_pathkey; /* canonical pathkey for left side */
|
|
List *right_pathkey; /* canonical pathkey for right side */
|
|
|
|
/* cache space for mergeclause processing; -1 if not yet set */
|
|
Selectivity left_mergescansel; /* fraction of left side to scan */
|
|
Selectivity right_mergescansel; /* fraction of right side to scan */
|
|
|
|
/* valid if clause is hashjoinable, else InvalidOid: */
|
|
Oid hashjoinoperator; /* copy of clause operator */
|
|
|
|
/* cache space for hashclause processing; -1 if not yet set */
|
|
Selectivity left_bucketsize; /* avg bucketsize of left side */
|
|
Selectivity right_bucketsize; /* avg bucketsize of right side */
|
|
} RestrictInfo;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Join clause info.
|
|
*
|
|
* We make a list of these for each RelOptInfo, containing info about
|
|
* all the join clauses this RelOptInfo participates in. (For this
|
|
* purpose, a "join clause" is a WHERE clause that mentions both vars
|
|
* belonging to this relation and vars belonging to relations not yet
|
|
* joined to it.) We group these clauses according to the set of
|
|
* other base relations (unjoined relations) mentioned in them.
|
|
* There is one JoinInfo for each distinct set of unjoined_relids,
|
|
* and its jinfo_restrictinfo lists the clause(s) that use that set
|
|
* of other relations.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct JoinInfo
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
Relids unjoined_relids; /* some rels not yet part of my RelOptInfo */
|
|
List *jinfo_restrictinfo; /* relevant RestrictInfos */
|
|
} JoinInfo;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Inner indexscan info.
|
|
*
|
|
* An inner indexscan is one that uses one or more joinclauses as index
|
|
* conditions (perhaps in addition to plain restriction clauses). So it
|
|
* can only be used as the inner path of a nestloop join where the outer
|
|
* relation includes all other relids appearing in those joinclauses.
|
|
* The set of usable joinclauses, and thus the best inner indexscan,
|
|
* thus varies depending on which outer relation we consider; so we have
|
|
* to recompute the best such path for every join. To avoid lots of
|
|
* redundant computation, we cache the results of such searches. For
|
|
* each index we compute the set of possible otherrelids (all relids
|
|
* appearing in joinquals that could become indexquals for this index).
|
|
* Two outer relations whose relids have the same intersection with this
|
|
* set will have the same set of available joinclauses and thus the same
|
|
* best inner indexscan for that index. Similarly, for each base relation,
|
|
* we form the union of the per-index otherrelids sets. Two outer relations
|
|
* with the same intersection with that set will have the same best overall
|
|
* inner indexscan for the base relation. We use lists of InnerIndexscanInfo
|
|
* nodes to cache the results of these searches at both the index and
|
|
* relation level.
|
|
*
|
|
* The search key also includes a bool showing whether the join being
|
|
* considered is an outer join. Since we constrain the join order for
|
|
* outer joins, I believe that this bool can only have one possible value
|
|
* for any particular base relation; but store it anyway to avoid confusion.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct InnerIndexscanInfo
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
/* The lookup key: */
|
|
Relids other_relids; /* a set of relevant other relids */
|
|
bool isouterjoin; /* true if join is outer */
|
|
/* Best path for this lookup key: */
|
|
Path *best_innerpath; /* best inner indexscan, or NULL if none */
|
|
} InnerIndexscanInfo;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* IN clause info.
|
|
*
|
|
* When we convert top-level IN quals into join operations, we must restrict
|
|
* the order of joining and use special join methods at some join points.
|
|
* We record information about each such IN clause in an InClauseInfo struct.
|
|
* These structs are kept in the Query node's in_info_list.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct InClauseInfo
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
Relids lefthand; /* base relids in lefthand expressions */
|
|
Relids righthand; /* base relids coming from the subselect */
|
|
List *sub_targetlist; /* targetlist of original RHS subquery */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Note: sub_targetlist is just a list of Vars or expressions; it does
|
|
* not contain TargetEntry nodes.
|
|
*/
|
|
} InClauseInfo;
|
|
|
|
#endif /* RELATION_H */
|