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1999-05-17 00:26:33 +00:00

416 lines
12 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* joinutils.c
* Utilities for matching and building join and path keys
*
* Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/src/backend/optimizer/path/pathkeys.c,v 1.9 1999/05/17 00:26:33 tgl Exp $
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include "nodes/pg_list.h"
#include "nodes/relation.h"
#include "nodes/plannodes.h"
#include "optimizer/internal.h"
#include "optimizer/paths.h"
#include "optimizer/var.h"
#include "optimizer/keys.h"
#include "optimizer/tlist.h"
#include "optimizer/joininfo.h"
#include "optimizer/ordering.h"
static int match_pathkey_joinkeys(List *pathkey, List *joinkeys,
int outer_or_inner);
static List *new_join_pathkey(List *pathkeys, List *join_rel_tlist,
List *joinclauses);
/*--------------------
* Explanation of Path.pathkeys
*
* Path.pathkeys is a List of List of Var nodes that represent the sort
* order of the result generated by the Path.
*
* In single/base relation RelOptInfo's, the Path's represent various ways
* of generating the relation and the resulting ordering of the tuples.
* Sequential scan Paths have NIL pathkeys, indicating no known ordering.
* Index scans have Path.pathkeys that represent the chosen index.
* A single-key index pathkeys would be { {tab1_indexkey1} }. For a
* multi-key index pathkeys would be { {tab1_indexkey1}, {tab1_indexkey2} },
* indicating major sort by indexkey1 and minor sort by indexkey2.
*
* Multi-relation RelOptInfo Path's are more complicated. Mergejoins are
* only performed with equijoins ("="). Because of this, the multi-relation
* path actually has more than one primary Var key. For example, a
* mergejoin Path of "tab1.col1 = tab2.col1" would generate a pathkeys of
* { {tab1.col1, tab2.col1} }, indicating that the major sort order of the
* Path can be taken to be *either* tab1.col1 or tab2.col1.
* They are equal, so they are both primary sort keys. This allows future
* joins to use either Var as a pre-sorted key to prevent upper Mergejoins
* from having to re-sort the Path. This is why pathkeys is a List of Lists.
*
* Note that while the order of the top list is meaningful (primary vs.
* secondary sort key), the order of each sublist is arbitrary.
*
* For multi-key sorts, if the outer is sorted by a multi-key index, the
* multi-key index remains after the join. If the inner has a multi-key
* sort, only the primary key of the inner is added to the result.
* Mergejoins only join on the primary key. Currently, non-primary keys
* in the pathkeys List are of limited value.
*
* Although Hashjoins also work only with equijoin operators, it is *not*
* safe to consider the output of a Hashjoin to be sorted in any particular
* order --- not even the outer path's order. This is true because the
* executor might have to split the join into multiple batches.
*
* NestJoin does not perform sorting, and allows non-equijoins, so it does
* not allow useful pathkeys. (But couldn't we use the outer path's order?)
*
* -- bjm
*--------------------
*/
/****************************************************************************
* KEY COMPARISONS
****************************************************************************/
/*
* order_joinkeys_by_pathkeys
* Attempts to match the keys of a path against the keys of join clauses.
* This is done by looking for a matching join key in 'joinkeys' for
* every path key in the list 'path.keys'. If there is a matching join key
* (not necessarily unique) for every path key, then the list of
* corresponding join keys and join clauses are returned in the order in
* which the keys matched the path keys.
*
* 'pathkeys' is a list of path keys:
* ( ( (var) (var) ... ) ( (var) ... ) )
* 'joinkeys' is a list of join keys:
* ( (outer inner) (outer inner) ... )
* 'joinclauses' is a list of clauses corresponding to the join keys in
* 'joinkeys'
* 'outer_or_inner' is a flag that selects the desired pathkey of a join key
* in 'joinkeys'
*
* Returns the join keys and corresponding join clauses in a list if all
* of the path keys were matched:
* (
* ( (outerkey0 innerkey0) ... (outerkeyN or innerkeyN) )
* ( clause0 ... clauseN )
* )
* and nil otherwise.
*
* Returns a list of matched join keys and a list of matched join clauses
* in pointers if valid order can be found.
*/
bool
order_joinkeys_by_pathkeys(List *pathkeys,
List *joinkeys,
List *joinclauses,
int outer_or_inner,
List **matchedJoinKeysPtr,
List **matchedJoinClausesPtr)
{
List *matched_joinkeys = NIL;
List *matched_joinclauses = NIL;
List *pathkey = NIL;
List *i = NIL;
int matched_joinkey_index = -1;
int matched_keys = 0;
/*
* Reorder the joinkeys by picking out one that matches each pathkey,
* and create a new joinkey/joinclause list in pathkey order
*/
foreach(i, pathkeys)
{
pathkey = lfirst(i);
matched_joinkey_index = match_pathkey_joinkeys(pathkey, joinkeys,
outer_or_inner);
if (matched_joinkey_index != -1)
{
matched_keys++;
if (matchedJoinKeysPtr)
{
JoinKey *joinkey = nth(matched_joinkey_index, joinkeys);
matched_joinkeys = lappend(matched_joinkeys, joinkey);
}
if (matchedJoinClausesPtr)
{
Expr *joinclause = nth(matched_joinkey_index,
joinclauses);
Assert(joinclauses);
matched_joinclauses = lappend(matched_joinclauses, joinclause);
}
}
else
/* A pathkey could not be matched. */
break;
}
/*
* Did we fail to match all the joinkeys?
* Extra pathkeys are no problem.
*/
if (matched_keys != length(joinkeys))
{
if (matchedJoinKeysPtr)
*matchedJoinKeysPtr = NIL;
if (matchedJoinClausesPtr)
*matchedJoinClausesPtr = NIL;
return false;
}
if (matchedJoinKeysPtr)
*matchedJoinKeysPtr = matched_joinkeys;
if (matchedJoinClausesPtr)
*matchedJoinClausesPtr = matched_joinclauses;
return true;
}
/*
* match_pathkey_joinkeys
* Returns the 0-based index into 'joinkeys' of the first joinkey whose
* outer or inner pathkey matches any subkey of 'pathkey'.
*
* All these keys are equivalent, so any of them can match. See above.
*/
static int
match_pathkey_joinkeys(List *pathkey,
List *joinkeys,
int outer_or_inner)
{
Var *key;
int pos;
List *i, *x;
JoinKey *jk;
foreach(i, pathkey)
{
key = (Var *) lfirst(i);
pos = 0;
foreach(x, joinkeys)
{
jk = (JoinKey *) lfirst(x);
if (equal(key, extract_join_key(jk, outer_or_inner)))
return pos;
pos++;
}
}
return -1; /* no index found */
}
/*
* get_cheapest_path_for_joinkeys
* Attempts to find a path in 'paths' whose keys match a set of join
* keys 'joinkeys'. To match,
* 1. the path node ordering must equal 'ordering'.
* 2. each pathkey of a given path must match(i.e., be(equal) to) the
* appropriate pathkey of the corresponding join key in 'joinkeys',
* i.e., the Nth path key must match its pathkeys against the pathkey of
* the Nth join key in 'joinkeys'.
*
* 'joinkeys' is the list of key pairs to which the path keys must be
* matched
* 'ordering' is the ordering of the(outer) path to which 'joinkeys'
* must correspond
* 'paths' is a list of(inner) paths which are to be matched against
* each join key in 'joinkeys'
* 'outer_or_inner' is a flag that selects the desired pathkey of a join key
* in 'joinkeys'
*
* Find the cheapest path that matches the join keys
*/
Path *
get_cheapest_path_for_joinkeys(List *joinkeys,
PathOrder *ordering,
List *paths,
int outer_or_inner)
{
Path *matched_path = NULL;
List *i;
foreach(i, paths)
{
Path *path = (Path *) lfirst(i);
int better_sort;
if (order_joinkeys_by_pathkeys(path->pathkeys, joinkeys, NIL,
outer_or_inner, NULL, NULL) &&
pathorder_match(ordering, path->pathorder, &better_sort) &&
better_sort == 0)
{
if (matched_path == NULL ||
path->path_cost < matched_path->path_cost)
matched_path = path;
}
}
return matched_path;
}
/*
* make_pathkeys_from_joinkeys
* Builds a pathkey list for a path by pulling one of the pathkeys from
* a list of join keys 'joinkeys' and then finding the var node in the
* target list 'tlist' that corresponds to that pathkey.
*
* 'joinkeys' is a list of join key pairs
* 'tlist' is a relation target list
* 'outer_or_inner' is a flag that selects the desired pathkey of a join key
* in 'joinkeys'
*
* Returns a list of pathkeys: ((tlvar1)(tlvar2)...(tlvarN)).
* It is a list of lists because of multi-key indexes.
*/
List *
make_pathkeys_from_joinkeys(List *joinkeys,
List *tlist,
int outer_or_inner)
{
List *pathkeys = NIL;
List *jk;
foreach(jk, joinkeys)
{
JoinKey *jkey = (JoinKey *) lfirst(jk);
Var *key;
List *p, *p2;
bool found = false;
key = (Var *) extract_join_key(jkey, outer_or_inner);
/* check to see if it is in the target list */
if (matching_tlist_var(key, tlist))
{
/*
* Include it in the pathkeys list if we haven't already done so
*/
foreach(p, pathkeys)
{
List *pathkey = lfirst(p);
foreach(p2, pathkey)
{
Var *pkey = lfirst(p2);
if (equal(key, pkey))
{
found = true;
break;
}
}
if (found)
break;
}
if (!found)
pathkeys = lappend(pathkeys, lcons(key, NIL));
}
}
return pathkeys;
}
/****************************************************************************
* NEW PATHKEY FORMATION
****************************************************************************/
/*
* new_join_pathkeys
* Find the path keys for a join relation by finding all vars in the list
* of join clauses 'joinclauses' such that:
* (1) the var corresponding to the outer join relation is a
* key on the outer path
* (2) the var appears in the target list of the join relation
* In other words, add to each outer path key the inner path keys that
* are required for qualification.
*
* 'outer_pathkeys' is the list of the outer path's path keys
* 'join_rel_tlist' is the target list of the join relation
* 'joinclauses' is the list of restricting join clauses
*
* Returns the list of new path keys.
*
*/
List *
new_join_pathkeys(List *outer_pathkeys,
List *join_rel_tlist,
List *joinclauses)
{
List *final_pathkeys = NIL;
List *i;
foreach(i, outer_pathkeys)
{
List *outer_pathkey = lfirst(i);
List *new_pathkey;
new_pathkey = new_join_pathkey(outer_pathkey, join_rel_tlist,
joinclauses);
if (new_pathkey != NIL)
final_pathkeys = lappend(final_pathkeys, new_pathkey);
}
return final_pathkeys;
}
/*
* new_join_pathkey
* Generate an individual pathkey sublist, consisting of the outer vars
* already mentioned in 'pathkey' plus any inner vars that are joined to
* them (and thus can now also be considered path keys, per discussion
* at the top of this file).
*
* Note that each returned pathkey is the var node found in
* 'join_rel_tlist' rather than the joinclause var node.
* (Is this important?) Also, we return a fully copied list
* that does not share any subnodes with existing data structures.
* (Is that important, either?)
*
* Returns a new pathkey (list of pathkey variables).
*
*/
static List *
new_join_pathkey(List *pathkey,
List *join_rel_tlist,
List *joinclauses)
{
List *new_pathkey = NIL;
List *i,
*j;
foreach(i, pathkey)
{
Var *key = (Var *) lfirst(i);
Expr *tlist_key;
Assert(key);
tlist_key = matching_tlist_var(key, join_rel_tlist);
if (tlist_key && !member(tlist_key, new_pathkey))
new_pathkey = lcons(copyObject(tlist_key), new_pathkey);
foreach(j, joinclauses)
{
Expr *joinclause = lfirst(j);
Expr *tlist_other_var;
tlist_other_var = matching_tlist_var(
other_join_clause_var(key, joinclause),
join_rel_tlist);
if (tlist_other_var && !member(tlist_other_var, new_pathkey))
new_pathkey = lcons(copyObject(tlist_other_var), new_pathkey);
}
}
return new_pathkey;
}