for example, an SQL function can be used in a functional index. (I make
no promises about speed, but it'll work ;-).) Clean up and simplify
handling of functions returning sets.
pg_proc.c (where it's actually used). Fix it to correctly handle tlists
that contain resjunk target items, and improve error messages. This
addresses bug reported by Krupnikov 6-July-00.
macros where appropriate (the code used to have several different ways
of doing that, including Int32, Int8, UInt8, ...). Remove last few
references to float32 and float64 typedefs --- it's all float4/float8
now. The typedefs themselves should probably stay in c.h for a release
or two, though, to avoid breaking user-written C functions.
right thing with variable-free clauses that contain noncachable functions,
such as 'WHERE random() < 0.5' --- these are evaluated once per
potential output tuple. Expressions that contain only Params are
now candidates to be indexscan quals --- for example, 'var = ($1 + 1)'
can now be indexed. Cope with RelabelType nodes atop potential indexscan
variables --- this oversight prevents 7.0.* from recognizing some
potentially indexscanable situations.
from Param nodes, per discussion a few days ago on pghackers. Add new
expression node type FieldSelect that implements the functionality where
it's actually needed. Clean up some other unused fields in Func nodes
as well.
NOTE: initdb forced due to change in stored expression trees for rules.
that RAND_MAX applies to them, since it doesn't. Instead add a
config.h parameter MAX_RANDOM_VALUE. This is currently set at 2^31-1
but could be auto-configured if that ever proves necessary. Also fix
some outright bugs like calling srand() where srandom() is appropriate.
multiple times in the parsetree (can happen in COALESCE or BETWEEN
contexts, for example). This is a pretty grotty solution --- it will
do for now, but perhaps we can do better when we redesign querytrees.
What we need is a consistent policy about whether querytrees should be
considered read-only structures or not ...
to use with a multiple-key index. Formerly we would only extract clauses
that had to do with the first key of the index, which was correct but
didn't exploit the index fully.
mergejoinable qual clauses, and add them to the query quals. For
example, WHERE a = b AND b = c will cause us to add AND a = c.
This is necessary to ensure that it's safe to use these variables
as interchangeable sort keys, which is something 7.0 knows how to do.
Should provide a useful improvement in planning ability, too.
work as expected. THe underlying implementation is essentially
'SET foo = array_set(foo, 1, bar)', so we have to turn the items
into nested invocations of array_set() to make it work correctly.
Side effect: we now complain about 'UPDATE tab SET foo = bar, foo = baz'
which is illegal per SQL92 but we didn't detect it before.
them, but forgot to attach relevant restriction clauses, so that the
plan represented a scan over the whole table with restrictions applied
as qpquals not indexquals. Another day, another bug...
* the result is not recorded anywhere
* the result is not used anywhere
* the result is only used in some places, whereas others have been getting away with it
* the result is used improperly
Also make command line options handling a little better (e.g., --disable-locale,
while redundant, should really still *dis*able).
memory contexts. Currently, only leaks in expressions executed as
quals or projections are handled. Clean up some old dead cruft in
executor while at it --- unused fields in state nodes, that sort of thing.
for details). It doesn't really do that much yet, since there are no
short-term memory contexts in the executor, but the infrastructure is
in place and long-term contexts are handled reasonably. A few long-
standing bugs have been fixed, such as 'VACUUM; anything' in a single
query string crashing. Also, out-of-memory is now considered a
recoverable ERROR, not FATAL.
Eliminate a large amount of crufty, now-dead code in and around
memory management.
Fix problem with holding off SIGTRAP, SIGSEGV, etc in postmaster and
backend startup.
materialized tupleset is small enough) instead of a temporary relation.
This was something I was thinking of doing anyway for performance, and Jan
says he needs it for TOAST because he doesn't want to cope with toasting
noname relations. With this change, the 'noname table' support in heap.c
is dead code, and I have accordingly removed it. Also clean up 'noname'
plan handling in planner --- nonames are either sort or materialize plans,
and it seems less confusing to handle them separately under those names.
discussion of 5/19/00). pg_index is now searched for indexes of a
relation using an indexscan. Moreover, this is done once and cached
in the relcache entry for the relation, in the form of a list of OIDs
for the indexes. This list is used by the parser and executor to drive
lookups in the pg_index syscache when they want to know the properties
of the indexes. Net result: index information will be fully cached
for repetitive operations such as inserts.
actually use their targetlist, are given a targetlist that is just a
pointer to the first appended plan's targetlist. This is OK, but what
is not OK is that any sub-select expressions in said tlist were being
entered in the subPlan lists of both the Append and the first appended
plan. That led to two startup and two shutdown calls for the same
plan node at exec time, which led to crashes. Fix is to not generate
a list of subPlans for an Append node. Same problem and fix apply
to other node types that don't have a real, functioning targetlist:
Material, Sort, Unique, Hash.
(ie, parameters instead of consts) will be treated as a range query.
We do not know the actual selectivities involved, but it seems like
a good idea to use a smaller estimate than we would use for two unrelated
inequalities.
That means you can now set your options in either or all of $PGDATA/configuration,
some postmaster option (--enable-fsync=off), or set a SET command. The list of
options is in backend/utils/misc/guc.c, documentation will be written post haste.
pg_options is gone, so is that pq_geqo config file. Also removed were backend -K,
-Q, and -T options (no longer applicable, although -d0 does the same as -Q).
Added to configure an --enable-syslog option.
changed all callers from TPRINTF to elog(DEBUG)
key call sites are changed, but most called functions are still oldstyle.
An exception is that the PL managers are updated (so, for example, NULL
handling now behaves as expected in plperl and plpgsql functions).
NOTE initdb is forced due to added column in pg_proc.
think that both sides of indexqual look like index keys. An example is
create table inside (f1 float8 primary key);
create table outside (g1 float8, g2 float8);
select * from inside,outside where f1 = atan2(g1+1, g2);
ERROR: ExecInitIndexScan: both left and right ops are rel-vars
(note that failure is potentially platform-dependent). Solution is a
cleanup I had had in mind to make anyway: functional index keys should
be represented as Var nodes in the fixed indexqual, just like regular
index keys.
cases where joinclauses were present but some joins have to be made
by cartesian-product join anyway. An example is
SELECT * FROM a,b,c WHERE (a.f1 + b.f2 + c.f3) = 0;
Even though all the rels have joinclauses, we must join two of them
in cartesian style before we can use the join clause...
(SELECT FROM table*). Cause was reference to 'eref' field of an RTE,
which is null in an RTE loaded from a stored rule parsetree. There
wasn't any good reason to be touching the refname anyway...
table for an average of NTUP_PER_BUCKET tuples/bucket, but cost_hashjoin
was assuming a target load of one tuple/bucket. This was causing a
noticeable underestimate of hashjoin costs.
(LIKE and regexp matches). These are not yet referenced in pg_operator,
so by default the system will continue to use eqsel/neqsel.
Also, tweak convert_to_scalar() logic so that common prefixes of strings
are stripped off, allowing better accuracy when all strings in a table
share a common prefix.
contained a sub-SELECT nested within an AND/OR tree that cnfify()
thought it should rearrange. Same physical sub-SELECT node could
end up linked into multiple places in resulting expression tree.
This is harmless for most node types, but not for SubLink.
Repair bug by making physical copies of subexpressions that get
logically duplicated by cnfify(). Also, tweak the heuristic that
decides whether it's a good idea to do cnfify() --- we don't really
want that to happen when it would cause multiple copies of a subselect
to be generated, I think.
WHERE in a place where it can be part of a nestloop inner indexqual.
As the code stood, it put the same physical sub-Plan node into both
indxqual and indxqualorig of the IndexScan plan node. That confused
later processing in the optimizer (which expected that tracing the
subPlan list would visit each subplan node exactly once), and would
probably have blown up in the executor if the planner hadn't choked first.
Fix by making the 'fixed' indexqual be a complete deep copy of the
original indexqual, rather than trying to share nodes below the topmost
operator node. This had further ramifications though, because we were
making the aforesaid list of sub-Plan nodes during SS_process_sublinks
which is run before construction of the 'fixed' indexqual, meaning that
the copy of the sub-Plan didn't show up in that list. Fix by rearranging
logic so that the sub-Plan list is built by the final set_plan_references
pass, not in SS_process_sublinks. This may sound like a mess, but it's
actually a good deal cleaner now than it was before, because we are no
longer dependent on the assumption that planning will never make a copy
of a sub-Plan node.
to next integer. Previously, if selectivity was small, we could compute
very tiny scan cost on the basis of estimating that only 0.001 tuple
would be fetched, which is silly. This naturally led to some rather
silly plans...