A reference to a CTE may occur not in the master of the CTE
specification. In this case if the reference to the CTE is
the first one the specification should be detached from its
master and attached to the referencing select.
Also fixed the TYPE column in the lines of the EXPLAIN output
created for CTE tables.
- Fix win64 pointer truncation warnings
(usually coming from misusing 0x%lx and long cast in DBUG)
- Also fix printf-format warnings
Make the above mentioned warnings fatal.
- fix pthread_join on Windows to set return value.
If the method SELECT_LEX::mark_const_derived() is called for a select
that is used in the specification of a materialized derived table / view D
then method should not set the flag fill_me for D on when
the flag JOIN::with_two_phase_optimization is set on for this select.
If compiling a non DBUG binary with
-DDBUG_ASSERT_AS_PRINTF asserts will be
changed to printf + stack trace (of stack
trace are enabled).
- Changed #ifndef DBUG_OFF to
#ifdef DBUG_ASSERT_EXISTS
for those DBUG_OFF that was just used to enable
assert
- Assert checking that could greatly impact
performance where changed to DBUG_ASSERT_SLOW which
is not affected by DBUG_ASSERT_AS_PRINTF
- Added one extra option to my_print_stacktrace() to
get more silent in case of stack trace printing as
part of assert.
- Added sql/mariadb.h file that should be included first by files in sql
directory, if sql_plugin.h is not used (sql_plugin.h adds SHOW variables
that must be done before my_global.h is included)
- Removed a lot of include my_global.h from include files
- Removed include's of some files that my_global.h automatically includes
- Removed duplicated include's of my_sys.h
- Replaced include my_config.h with my_global.h
with window functions (mdev-10855).
This patch just modified the function pushdown_cond_for_derived()
to support this feature.
Some test cases demonstrating this optimization were added to
derived_cond_pushdown.test.
"Optimization for equi-joins of derived tables with GROUP BY"
should be considered rather as a 'proof of concept'.
The task itself is targeted at an optimization that employs re-writing
equi-joins with grouping derived tables / views into lateral
derived tables. Here's an example of such transformation:
select t1.a,t.max,t.min
from t1 [left] join
(select a, max(t2.b) max, min(t2.b) min from t2
group by t2.a) as t
on t1.a=t.a;
=>
select t1.a,tl.max,tl.min
from t1 [left] join
lateral (select a, max(t2.b) max, min(t2.b) min from t2
where t1.a=t2.a) as t
on 1=1;
The transformation pushes the equi-join condition t1.a=t.a into the
derived table making it dependent on table t1. It means that for
every row from t1 a new derived table must be filled out. However
the size of any of these derived tables is just a fraction of the
original derived table t. One could say that transformation 'splits'
the rows used for the GROUP BY operation into separate groups
performing aggregation for a group only in the case when there is
a match for the current row of t1.
Apparently the transformation may produce a query with a better
performance only in the case when
- the GROUP BY list refers only to fields returned by the derived table
- there is an index I on one of the tables T used in FROM list of
the specification of the derived table whose prefix covers the
the fields from the proper beginning of the GROUP BY list or
fields that are equal to those fields.
Whether the result of the re-writing can be executed faster depends
on many factors:
- the size of the original derived table
- the size of the table T
- whether the index I is clustering for table T
- whether the index I fully covers the GROUP BY list.
This patch only tries to improve the chosen execution plan using
this transformation. It tries to do it only when the chosen
plan reaches the derived table by a key whose prefix covers
all the fields of the derived table produced by the fields of
the table T from the GROUP BY list.
The code of the patch does not evaluates the cost of the improved
plan. If certain conditions are met the transformation is applied.
Make st_select_lex::set_explain_type() take into account that JOIN_TABs
it is traversing may be also post-join aggregation JOIN_TABs (which
have pos_in_table_list=NULL, etc).