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Commit 83ea6c540 added support for virtual generated columns that are computed on read. All Var nodes in the query that reference virtual generated columns must be replaced with the corresponding generation expressions. Currently, this replacement occurs in the rewriter. However, this approach has several issues. If a Var referencing a virtual generated column has any varnullingrels, those varnullingrels need to be propagated into the generation expression. Failing to do so can lead to "wrong varnullingrels" errors and improper outer-join removal. Additionally, if such a Var comes from the nullable side of an outer join, we may need to wrap the generation expression in a PlaceHolderVar to ensure that it is evaluated at the right place and hence is forced to null when the outer join should do so. In certain cases, such as when the query uses grouping sets, we also need a PlaceHolderVar for anything that is not a simple Var to isolate subexpressions. Failure to do so can result in incorrect results. To fix these issues, this patch expands the virtual generated columns in the planner rather than in the rewriter, and leverages the pullup_replace_vars architecture to avoid code duplication. The generation expressions will be correctly marked with nullingrel bits and wrapped in PlaceHolderVars when needed by the pullup_replace_vars callback function. This requires handling the OLD/NEW RETURNING list Vars in pullup_replace_vars_callback, as it may now deal with Vars referencing the result relation instead of a subquery. The "wrong varnullingrels" error was reported by Alexander Lakhin. The incorrect result issue and the improper outer-join removal issue were reported by Richard Guo. Author: Richard Guo <guofenglinux@gmail.com> Author: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Jian He <jian.universality@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/75eb1a6f-d59f-42e6-8a78-124ee808cda7@gmail.com
2369 lines
83 KiB
C
2369 lines
83 KiB
C
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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*
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* primnodes.h
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* Definitions for "primitive" node types, those that are used in more
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* than one of the parse/plan/execute stages of the query pipeline.
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* Currently, these are mostly nodes for executable expressions
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* and join trees.
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*
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*
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* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2025, 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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* src/include/nodes/primnodes.h
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*
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*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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*/
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#ifndef PRIMNODES_H
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#define PRIMNODES_H
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#include "access/attnum.h"
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#include "access/cmptype.h"
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#include "nodes/bitmapset.h"
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#include "nodes/pg_list.h"
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typedef enum OverridingKind
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{
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OVERRIDING_NOT_SET = 0,
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OVERRIDING_USER_VALUE,
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OVERRIDING_SYSTEM_VALUE,
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} OverridingKind;
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------
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* node definitions
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* ----------------------------------------------------------------
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*/
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/*
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* Alias -
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* specifies an alias for a range variable; the alias might also
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* specify renaming of columns within the table.
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*
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* Note: colnames is a list of String nodes. In Alias structs
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* associated with RTEs, there may be entries corresponding to dropped
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* columns; these are normally empty strings (""). See parsenodes.h for info.
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*/
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typedef struct Alias
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{
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NodeTag type;
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char *aliasname; /* aliased rel name (never qualified) */
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List *colnames; /* optional list of column aliases */
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} Alias;
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/* What to do at commit time for temporary relations */
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typedef enum OnCommitAction
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{
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ONCOMMIT_NOOP, /* No ON COMMIT clause (do nothing) */
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ONCOMMIT_PRESERVE_ROWS, /* ON COMMIT PRESERVE ROWS (do nothing) */
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ONCOMMIT_DELETE_ROWS, /* ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS */
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ONCOMMIT_DROP, /* ON COMMIT DROP */
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} OnCommitAction;
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/*
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* RangeVar - range variable, used in FROM clauses
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*
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* Also used to represent table names in utility statements; there, the alias
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* field is not used, and inh tells whether to apply the operation
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* recursively to child tables. In some contexts it is also useful to carry
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* a TEMP table indication here.
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*/
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typedef struct RangeVar
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{
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NodeTag type;
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/* the catalog (database) name, or NULL */
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char *catalogname;
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/* the schema name, or NULL */
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char *schemaname;
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/* the relation/sequence name */
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char *relname;
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/* expand rel by inheritance? recursively act on children? */
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bool inh;
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/* see RELPERSISTENCE_* in pg_class.h */
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char relpersistence;
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/* table alias & optional column aliases */
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Alias *alias;
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/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
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ParseLoc location;
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} RangeVar;
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typedef enum TableFuncType
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{
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TFT_XMLTABLE,
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TFT_JSON_TABLE,
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} TableFuncType;
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/*
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* TableFunc - node for a table function, such as XMLTABLE and JSON_TABLE.
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*
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* Entries in the ns_names list are either String nodes containing
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* literal namespace names, or NULL pointers to represent DEFAULT.
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*/
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typedef struct TableFunc
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{
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NodeTag type;
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/* XMLTABLE or JSON_TABLE */
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TableFuncType functype;
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/* list of namespace URI expressions */
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List *ns_uris pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* list of namespace names or NULL */
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List *ns_names pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* input document expression */
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Node *docexpr;
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/* row filter expression */
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Node *rowexpr;
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/* column names (list of String) */
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List *colnames pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* OID list of column type OIDs */
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List *coltypes pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* integer list of column typmods */
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List *coltypmods pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* OID list of column collation OIDs */
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List *colcollations pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* list of column filter expressions */
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List *colexprs;
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/* list of column default expressions */
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List *coldefexprs pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* JSON_TABLE: list of column value expressions */
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List *colvalexprs pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* JSON_TABLE: list of PASSING argument expressions */
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List *passingvalexprs pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* nullability flag for each output column */
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Bitmapset *notnulls pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* JSON_TABLE plan */
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Node *plan pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* counts from 0; -1 if none specified */
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int ordinalitycol pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
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ParseLoc location;
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} TableFunc;
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/*
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* IntoClause - target information for SELECT INTO, CREATE TABLE AS, and
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* CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW
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*
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* For CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW, viewQuery is the parsed-but-not-rewritten
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* SELECT Query for the view; otherwise it's NULL. This is irrelevant in
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* the query jumbling as CreateTableAsStmt already includes a reference to
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* its own Query, so ignore it. (We declare it as struct Query* to avoid a
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* forward reference.)
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*/
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typedef struct IntoClause
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{
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NodeTag type;
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RangeVar *rel; /* target relation name */
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List *colNames; /* column names to assign, or NIL */
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char *accessMethod; /* table access method */
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List *options; /* options from WITH clause */
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OnCommitAction onCommit; /* what do we do at COMMIT? */
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char *tableSpaceName; /* table space to use, or NULL */
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/* materialized view's SELECT query */
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struct Query *viewQuery pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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bool skipData; /* true for WITH NO DATA */
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} IntoClause;
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------
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* node types for executable expressions
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* ----------------------------------------------------------------
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*/
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/*
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* Expr - generic superclass for executable-expression nodes
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*
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* All node types that are used in executable expression trees should derive
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* from Expr (that is, have Expr as their first field). Since Expr only
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* contains NodeTag, this is a formality, but it is an easy form of
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* documentation. See also the ExprState node types in execnodes.h.
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*/
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typedef struct Expr
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{
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pg_node_attr(abstract)
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NodeTag type;
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} Expr;
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/*
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* Var - expression node representing a variable (ie, a table column)
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*
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* In the parser and planner, varno and varattno identify the semantic
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* referent, which is a base-relation column unless the reference is to a join
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* USING column that isn't semantically equivalent to either join input column
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* (because it is a FULL join or the input column requires a type coercion).
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* In those cases varno and varattno refer to the JOIN RTE. (Early in the
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* planner, we replace such join references by the implied expression; but up
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* till then we want join reference Vars to keep their original identity for
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* query-printing purposes.)
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*
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* At the end of planning, Var nodes appearing in upper-level plan nodes are
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* reassigned to point to the outputs of their subplans; for example, in a
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* join node varno becomes INNER_VAR or OUTER_VAR and varattno becomes the
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* index of the proper element of that subplan's target list. Similarly,
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* INDEX_VAR is used to identify Vars that reference an index column rather
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* than a heap column. (In ForeignScan and CustomScan plan nodes, INDEX_VAR
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* is abused to signify references to columns of a custom scan tuple type.)
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*
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* ROWID_VAR is used in the planner to identify nonce variables that carry
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* row identity information during UPDATE/DELETE/MERGE. This value should
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* never be seen outside the planner.
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*
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* varnullingrels is the set of RT indexes of outer joins that can force
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* the Var's value to null (at the point where it appears in the query).
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* See optimizer/README for discussion of that.
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*
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* varlevelsup is greater than zero in Vars that represent outer references.
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* Note that it affects the meaning of all of varno, varnullingrels, and
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* varnosyn, all of which refer to the range table of that query level.
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*
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* varreturningtype is used for Vars that refer to the target relation in the
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* RETURNING list of data-modifying queries. The default behavior is to
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* return old values for DELETE and new values for INSERT and UPDATE, but it
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* is also possible to explicitly request old or new values.
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*
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* In the parser, varnosyn and varattnosyn are either identical to
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* varno/varattno, or they specify the column's position in an aliased JOIN
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* RTE that hides the semantic referent RTE's refname. This is a syntactic
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* identifier as opposed to the semantic identifier; it tells ruleutils.c
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* how to print the Var properly. varnosyn/varattnosyn retain their values
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* throughout planning and execution, so they are particularly helpful to
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* identify Vars when debugging. Note, however, that a Var that is generated
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* in the planner and doesn't correspond to any simple relation column may
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* have varnosyn = varattnosyn = 0.
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*/
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#define INNER_VAR (-1) /* reference to inner subplan */
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#define OUTER_VAR (-2) /* reference to outer subplan */
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#define INDEX_VAR (-3) /* reference to index column */
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#define ROWID_VAR (-4) /* row identity column during planning */
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#define IS_SPECIAL_VARNO(varno) ((int) (varno) < 0)
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/* Symbols for the indexes of the special RTE entries in rules */
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#define PRS2_OLD_VARNO 1
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#define PRS2_NEW_VARNO 2
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/* Returning behavior for Vars in RETURNING list */
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typedef enum VarReturningType
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{
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VAR_RETURNING_DEFAULT, /* return OLD for DELETE, else return NEW */
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VAR_RETURNING_OLD, /* return OLD for DELETE/UPDATE, else NULL */
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VAR_RETURNING_NEW, /* return NEW for INSERT/UPDATE, else NULL */
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} VarReturningType;
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typedef struct Var
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{
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Expr xpr;
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/*
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* index of this var's relation in the range table, or
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* INNER_VAR/OUTER_VAR/etc
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*/
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int varno;
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/*
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* attribute number of this var, or zero for all attrs ("whole-row Var")
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*/
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AttrNumber varattno;
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/* pg_type OID for the type of this var */
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Oid vartype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* pg_attribute typmod value */
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int32 vartypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
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Oid varcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/*
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* RT indexes of outer joins that can replace the Var's value with null.
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* We can omit varnullingrels in the query jumble, because it's fully
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* determined by varno/varlevelsup plus the Var's query location.
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*/
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Bitmapset *varnullingrels pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/*
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* for subquery variables referencing outer relations; 0 in a normal var,
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* >0 means N levels up
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*/
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Index varlevelsup;
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/* returning type of this var (see above) */
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VarReturningType varreturningtype;
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/*
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* varnosyn/varattnosyn are ignored for equality, because Vars with
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* different syntactic identifiers are semantically the same as long as
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* their varno/varattno match.
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*/
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/* syntactic relation index (0 if unknown) */
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Index varnosyn pg_node_attr(equal_ignore, query_jumble_ignore);
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/* syntactic attribute number */
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AttrNumber varattnosyn pg_node_attr(equal_ignore, query_jumble_ignore);
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/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
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ParseLoc location;
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} Var;
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/*
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* Const
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*
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* Note: for varlena data types, we make a rule that a Const node's value
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* must be in non-extended form (4-byte header, no compression or external
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* references). This ensures that the Const node is self-contained and makes
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* it more likely that equal() will see logically identical values as equal.
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*
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* Only the constant type OID is relevant for the query jumbling.
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*/
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typedef struct Const
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{
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pg_node_attr(custom_copy_equal, custom_read_write)
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Expr xpr;
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/* pg_type OID of the constant's datatype */
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Oid consttype;
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/* typmod value, if any */
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int32 consttypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
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Oid constcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* typlen of the constant's datatype */
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int constlen pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* the constant's value */
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Datum constvalue pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* whether the constant is null (if true, constvalue is undefined) */
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bool constisnull pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/*
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* Whether this datatype is passed by value. If true, then all the
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* information is stored in the Datum. If false, then the Datum contains
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* a pointer to the information.
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*/
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bool constbyval pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/*
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* token location, or -1 if unknown. All constants are tracked as
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* locations in query jumbling, to be marked as parameters.
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*/
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ParseLoc location pg_node_attr(query_jumble_location);
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} Const;
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/*
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* Param
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*
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* paramkind specifies the kind of parameter. The possible values
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* for this field are:
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*
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* PARAM_EXTERN: The parameter value is supplied from outside the plan.
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* Such parameters are numbered from 1 to n.
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*
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* PARAM_EXEC: The parameter is an internal executor parameter, used
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* for passing values into and out of sub-queries or from
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* nestloop joins to their inner scans.
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* For historical reasons, such parameters are numbered from 0.
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* These numbers are independent of PARAM_EXTERN numbers.
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*
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* PARAM_SUBLINK: The parameter represents an output column of a SubLink
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* node's sub-select. The column number is contained in the
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* `paramid' field. (This type of Param is converted to
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* PARAM_EXEC during planning.)
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*
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* PARAM_MULTIEXPR: Like PARAM_SUBLINK, the parameter represents an
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* output column of a SubLink node's sub-select, but here, the
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* SubLink is always a MULTIEXPR SubLink. The high-order 16 bits
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* of the `paramid' field contain the SubLink's subLinkId, and
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* the low-order 16 bits contain the column number. (This type
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* of Param is also converted to PARAM_EXEC during planning.)
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*/
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typedef enum ParamKind
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{
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PARAM_EXTERN,
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PARAM_EXEC,
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PARAM_SUBLINK,
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PARAM_MULTIEXPR,
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} ParamKind;
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typedef struct Param
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{
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Expr xpr;
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ParamKind paramkind; /* kind of parameter. See above */
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int paramid; /* numeric ID for parameter */
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Oid paramtype; /* pg_type OID of parameter's datatype */
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/* typmod value, if known */
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int32 paramtypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
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Oid paramcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
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/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
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ParseLoc location;
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} Param;
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/*
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* Aggref
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*
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* The aggregate's args list is a targetlist, ie, a list of TargetEntry nodes.
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*
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* For a normal (non-ordered-set) aggregate, the non-resjunk TargetEntries
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* represent the aggregate's regular arguments (if any) and resjunk TLEs can
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* be added at the end to represent ORDER BY expressions that are not also
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* arguments. As in a top-level Query, the TLEs can be marked with
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* ressortgroupref indexes to let them be referenced by SortGroupClause
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* entries in the aggorder and/or aggdistinct lists. This represents ORDER BY
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* and DISTINCT operations to be applied to the aggregate input rows before
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* they are passed to the transition function. The grammar only allows a
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* simple "DISTINCT" specifier for the arguments, but we use the full
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* query-level representation to allow more code sharing.
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*
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* For an ordered-set aggregate, the args list represents the WITHIN GROUP
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* (aggregated) arguments, all of which will be listed in the aggorder list.
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* DISTINCT is not supported in this case, so aggdistinct will be NIL.
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* The direct arguments appear in aggdirectargs (as a list of plain
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* expressions, not TargetEntry nodes).
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*
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* aggtranstype is the data type of the state transition values for this
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* aggregate (resolved to an actual type, if agg's transtype is polymorphic).
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* This is determined during planning and is InvalidOid before that.
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*
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* aggargtypes is an OID list of the data types of the direct and regular
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* arguments. Normally it's redundant with the aggdirectargs and args lists,
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* but in a combining aggregate, it's not because the args list has been
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* replaced with a single argument representing the partial-aggregate
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* transition values.
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*
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* aggpresorted is set by the query planner for ORDER BY and DISTINCT
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* aggregates where the chosen plan provides presorted input for this
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* aggregate during execution.
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*
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* aggsplit indicates the expected partial-aggregation mode for the Aggref's
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* parent plan node. It's always set to AGGSPLIT_SIMPLE in the parser, but
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* the planner might change it to something else. We use this mainly as
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* a crosscheck that the Aggrefs match the plan; but note that when aggsplit
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* indicates a non-final mode, aggtype reflects the transition data type
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* not the SQL-level output type of the aggregate.
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*
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* aggno and aggtransno are -1 in the parse stage, and are set in planning.
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* Aggregates with the same 'aggno' represent the same aggregate expression,
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* and can share the result. Aggregates with same 'transno' but different
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* 'aggno' can share the same transition state, only the final function needs
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* to be called separately.
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*
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* Information related to collations, transition types and internal states
|
|
* are irrelevant for the query jumbling.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct Aggref
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
|
|
/* pg_proc Oid of the aggregate */
|
|
Oid aggfnoid;
|
|
|
|
/* type Oid of result of the aggregate */
|
|
Oid aggtype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* OID of collation of result */
|
|
Oid aggcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* OID of collation that function should use */
|
|
Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* type Oid of aggregate's transition value; ignored for equal since it
|
|
* might not be set yet
|
|
*/
|
|
Oid aggtranstype pg_node_attr(equal_ignore, query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* type Oids of direct and aggregated args */
|
|
List *aggargtypes pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* direct arguments, if an ordered-set agg */
|
|
List *aggdirectargs;
|
|
|
|
/* aggregated arguments and sort expressions */
|
|
List *args;
|
|
|
|
/* ORDER BY (list of SortGroupClause) */
|
|
List *aggorder;
|
|
|
|
/* DISTINCT (list of SortGroupClause) */
|
|
List *aggdistinct;
|
|
|
|
/* FILTER expression, if any */
|
|
Expr *aggfilter;
|
|
|
|
/* true if argument list was really '*' */
|
|
bool aggstar pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* true if variadic arguments have been combined into an array last
|
|
* argument
|
|
*/
|
|
bool aggvariadic pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* aggregate kind (see pg_aggregate.h) */
|
|
char aggkind pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* aggregate input already sorted */
|
|
bool aggpresorted pg_node_attr(equal_ignore, query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* > 0 if agg belongs to outer query */
|
|
Index agglevelsup pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* expected agg-splitting mode of parent Agg */
|
|
AggSplit aggsplit pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* unique ID within the Agg node */
|
|
int aggno pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* unique ID of transition state in the Agg */
|
|
int aggtransno pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} Aggref;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* GroupingFunc
|
|
*
|
|
* A GroupingFunc is a GROUPING(...) expression, which behaves in many ways
|
|
* like an aggregate function (e.g. it "belongs" to a specific query level,
|
|
* which might not be the one immediately containing it), but also differs in
|
|
* an important respect: it never evaluates its arguments, they merely
|
|
* designate expressions from the GROUP BY clause of the query level to which
|
|
* it belongs.
|
|
*
|
|
* The spec defines the evaluation of GROUPING() purely by syntactic
|
|
* replacement, but we make it a real expression for optimization purposes so
|
|
* that one Agg node can handle multiple grouping sets at once. Evaluating the
|
|
* result only needs the column positions to check against the grouping set
|
|
* being projected. However, for EXPLAIN to produce meaningful output, we have
|
|
* to keep the original expressions around, since expression deparse does not
|
|
* give us any feasible way to get at the GROUP BY clause.
|
|
*
|
|
* Also, we treat two GroupingFunc nodes as equal if they have equal arguments
|
|
* lists and agglevelsup, without comparing the refs and cols annotations.
|
|
*
|
|
* In raw parse output we have only the args list; parse analysis fills in the
|
|
* refs list, and the planner fills in the cols list.
|
|
*
|
|
* All the fields used as information for an internal state are irrelevant
|
|
* for the query jumbling.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct GroupingFunc
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
|
|
/* arguments, not evaluated but kept for benefit of EXPLAIN etc. */
|
|
List *args pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* ressortgrouprefs of arguments */
|
|
List *refs pg_node_attr(equal_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* actual column positions set by planner */
|
|
List *cols pg_node_attr(equal_ignore, query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* same as Aggref.agglevelsup */
|
|
Index agglevelsup;
|
|
|
|
/* token location */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} GroupingFunc;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* WindowFunc
|
|
*
|
|
* Collation information is irrelevant for the query jumbling, as is the
|
|
* internal state information of the node like "winstar" and "winagg".
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct WindowFunc
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* pg_proc Oid of the function */
|
|
Oid winfnoid;
|
|
/* type Oid of result of the window function */
|
|
Oid wintype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation of result */
|
|
Oid wincollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation that function should use */
|
|
Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* arguments to the window function */
|
|
List *args;
|
|
/* FILTER expression, if any */
|
|
Expr *aggfilter;
|
|
/* List of WindowFuncRunConditions to help short-circuit execution */
|
|
List *runCondition pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* index of associated WindowClause */
|
|
Index winref;
|
|
/* true if argument list was really '*' */
|
|
bool winstar pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* is function a simple aggregate? */
|
|
bool winagg pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} WindowFunc;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* WindowFuncRunCondition
|
|
*
|
|
* Represents intermediate OpExprs which will be used by WindowAgg to
|
|
* short-circuit execution.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct WindowFuncRunCondition
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
|
|
/* PG_OPERATOR OID of the operator */
|
|
Oid opno;
|
|
/* OID of collation that operator should use */
|
|
Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* true of WindowFunc belongs on the left of the resulting OpExpr or false
|
|
* if the WindowFunc is on the right.
|
|
*/
|
|
bool wfunc_left;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* The Expr being compared to the WindowFunc to use in the OpExpr in the
|
|
* WindowAgg's runCondition
|
|
*/
|
|
Expr *arg;
|
|
} WindowFuncRunCondition;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* MergeSupportFunc
|
|
*
|
|
* A MergeSupportFunc is a merge support function expression that can only
|
|
* appear in the RETURNING list of a MERGE command. It returns information
|
|
* about the currently executing merge action.
|
|
*
|
|
* Currently, the only supported function is MERGE_ACTION(), which returns the
|
|
* command executed ("INSERT", "UPDATE", or "DELETE").
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct MergeSupportFunc
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* type Oid of result */
|
|
Oid msftype;
|
|
/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
|
|
Oid msfcollid;
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} MergeSupportFunc;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* SubscriptingRef: describes a subscripting operation over a container
|
|
* (array, etc).
|
|
*
|
|
* A SubscriptingRef can describe fetching a single element from a container,
|
|
* fetching a part of a container (e.g. an array slice), storing a single
|
|
* element into a container, or storing a slice. The "store" cases work with
|
|
* an initial container value and a source value that is inserted into the
|
|
* appropriate part of the container; the result of the operation is an
|
|
* entire new modified container value.
|
|
*
|
|
* If reflowerindexpr = NIL, then we are fetching or storing a single container
|
|
* element at the subscripts given by refupperindexpr. Otherwise we are
|
|
* fetching or storing a container slice, that is a rectangular subcontainer
|
|
* with lower and upper bounds given by the index expressions.
|
|
* reflowerindexpr must be the same length as refupperindexpr when it
|
|
* is not NIL.
|
|
*
|
|
* In the slice case, individual expressions in the subscript lists can be
|
|
* NULL, meaning "substitute the array's current lower or upper bound".
|
|
* (Non-array containers may or may not support this.)
|
|
*
|
|
* refcontainertype is the actual container type that determines the
|
|
* subscripting semantics. (This will generally be either the exposed type of
|
|
* refexpr, or the base type if that is a domain.) refelemtype is the type of
|
|
* the container's elements; this is saved for the use of the subscripting
|
|
* functions, but is not used by the core code. refrestype, reftypmod, and
|
|
* refcollid describe the type of the SubscriptingRef's result. In a store
|
|
* expression, refrestype will always match refcontainertype; in a fetch,
|
|
* it could be refelemtype for an element fetch, or refcontainertype for a
|
|
* slice fetch, or possibly something else as determined by type-specific
|
|
* subscripting logic. Likewise, reftypmod and refcollid will match the
|
|
* container's properties in a store, but could be different in a fetch.
|
|
*
|
|
* Any internal state data is ignored for the query jumbling.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note: for the cases where a container is returned, if refexpr yields a R/W
|
|
* expanded container, then the implementation is allowed to modify that
|
|
* object in-place and return the same object.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct SubscriptingRef
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* type of the container proper */
|
|
Oid refcontainertype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* the container type's pg_type.typelem */
|
|
Oid refelemtype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* type of the SubscriptingRef's result */
|
|
Oid refrestype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* typmod of the result */
|
|
int32 reftypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* collation of result, or InvalidOid if none */
|
|
Oid refcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* expressions that evaluate to upper container indexes */
|
|
List *refupperindexpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* expressions that evaluate to lower container indexes, or NIL for single
|
|
* container element.
|
|
*/
|
|
List *reflowerindexpr;
|
|
/* the expression that evaluates to a container value */
|
|
Expr *refexpr;
|
|
/* expression for the source value, or NULL if fetch */
|
|
Expr *refassgnexpr;
|
|
} SubscriptingRef;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* CoercionContext - distinguishes the allowed set of type casts
|
|
*
|
|
* NB: ordering of the alternatives is significant; later (larger) values
|
|
* allow more casts than earlier ones.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum CoercionContext
|
|
{
|
|
COERCION_IMPLICIT, /* coercion in context of expression */
|
|
COERCION_ASSIGNMENT, /* coercion in context of assignment */
|
|
COERCION_PLPGSQL, /* if no assignment cast, use CoerceViaIO */
|
|
COERCION_EXPLICIT, /* explicit cast operation */
|
|
} CoercionContext;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* CoercionForm - how to display a FuncExpr or related node
|
|
*
|
|
* "Coercion" is a bit of a misnomer, since this value records other
|
|
* special syntaxes besides casts, but for now we'll keep this naming.
|
|
*
|
|
* NB: equal() ignores CoercionForm fields, therefore this *must* not carry
|
|
* any semantically significant information. We need that behavior so that
|
|
* the planner will consider equivalent implicit and explicit casts to be
|
|
* equivalent. In cases where those actually behave differently, the coercion
|
|
* function's arguments will be different.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum CoercionForm
|
|
{
|
|
COERCE_EXPLICIT_CALL, /* display as a function call */
|
|
COERCE_EXPLICIT_CAST, /* display as an explicit cast */
|
|
COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST, /* implicit cast, so hide it */
|
|
COERCE_SQL_SYNTAX, /* display with SQL-mandated special syntax */
|
|
} CoercionForm;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* FuncExpr - expression node for a function call
|
|
*
|
|
* Collation information is irrelevant for the query jumbling, only the
|
|
* arguments and the function OID matter.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct FuncExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* PG_PROC OID of the function */
|
|
Oid funcid;
|
|
/* PG_TYPE OID of result value */
|
|
Oid funcresulttype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* true if function returns set */
|
|
bool funcretset pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* true if variadic arguments have been combined into an array last
|
|
* argument
|
|
*/
|
|
bool funcvariadic pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* how to display this function call */
|
|
CoercionForm funcformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation of result */
|
|
Oid funccollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation that function should use */
|
|
Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* arguments to the function */
|
|
List *args;
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} FuncExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* NamedArgExpr - a named argument of a function
|
|
*
|
|
* This node type can only appear in the args list of a FuncCall or FuncExpr
|
|
* node. We support pure positional call notation (no named arguments),
|
|
* named notation (all arguments are named), and mixed notation (unnamed
|
|
* arguments followed by named ones).
|
|
*
|
|
* Parse analysis sets argnumber to the positional index of the argument,
|
|
* but doesn't rearrange the argument list.
|
|
*
|
|
* The planner will convert argument lists to pure positional notation
|
|
* during expression preprocessing, so execution never sees a NamedArgExpr.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct NamedArgExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* the argument expression */
|
|
Expr *arg;
|
|
/* the name */
|
|
char *name pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* argument's number in positional notation */
|
|
int argnumber;
|
|
/* argument name location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} NamedArgExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* OpExpr - expression node for an operator invocation
|
|
*
|
|
* Semantically, this is essentially the same as a function call.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that opfuncid is not necessarily filled in immediately on creation
|
|
* of the node. The planner makes sure it is valid before passing the node
|
|
* tree to the executor, but during parsing/planning opfuncid can be 0.
|
|
* Therefore, equal() will accept a zero value as being equal to other values.
|
|
*
|
|
* Internal state information and collation data is irrelevant for the query
|
|
* jumbling.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct OpExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
|
|
/* PG_OPERATOR OID of the operator */
|
|
Oid opno;
|
|
|
|
/* PG_PROC OID of underlying function */
|
|
Oid opfuncid pg_node_attr(equal_ignore_if_zero, query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* PG_TYPE OID of result value */
|
|
Oid opresulttype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* true if operator returns set */
|
|
bool opretset pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* OID of collation of result */
|
|
Oid opcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* OID of collation that operator should use */
|
|
Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* arguments to the operator (1 or 2) */
|
|
List *args;
|
|
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} OpExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* DistinctExpr - expression node for "x IS DISTINCT FROM y"
|
|
*
|
|
* Except for the nodetag, this is represented identically to an OpExpr
|
|
* referencing the "=" operator for x and y.
|
|
* We use "=", not the more obvious "<>", because more datatypes have "="
|
|
* than "<>". This means the executor must invert the operator result.
|
|
* Note that the operator function won't be called at all if either input
|
|
* is NULL, since then the result can be determined directly.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef OpExpr DistinctExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* NullIfExpr - a NULLIF expression
|
|
*
|
|
* Like DistinctExpr, this is represented the same as an OpExpr referencing
|
|
* the "=" operator for x and y.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef OpExpr NullIfExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* ScalarArrayOpExpr - expression node for "scalar op ANY/ALL (array)"
|
|
*
|
|
* The operator must yield boolean. It is applied to the left operand
|
|
* and each element of the righthand array, and the results are combined
|
|
* with OR or AND (for ANY or ALL respectively). The node representation
|
|
* is almost the same as for the underlying operator, but we need a useOr
|
|
* flag to remember whether it's ANY or ALL, and we don't have to store
|
|
* the result type (or the collation) because it must be boolean.
|
|
*
|
|
* A ScalarArrayOpExpr with a valid hashfuncid is evaluated during execution
|
|
* by building a hash table containing the Const values from the RHS arg.
|
|
* This table is probed during expression evaluation. The planner will set
|
|
* hashfuncid to the hash function which must be used to build and probe the
|
|
* hash table. The executor determines if it should use hash-based checks or
|
|
* the more traditional means based on if the hashfuncid is set or not.
|
|
*
|
|
* When performing hashed NOT IN, the negfuncid will also be set to the
|
|
* equality function which the hash table must use to build and probe the hash
|
|
* table. opno and opfuncid will remain set to the <> operator and its
|
|
* corresponding function and won't be used during execution. For
|
|
* non-hashtable based NOT INs, negfuncid will be set to InvalidOid. See
|
|
* convert_saop_to_hashed_saop().
|
|
*
|
|
* Similar to OpExpr, opfuncid, hashfuncid, and negfuncid are not necessarily
|
|
* filled in right away, so will be ignored for equality if they are not set
|
|
* yet.
|
|
*
|
|
* OID entries of the internal function types are irrelevant for the query
|
|
* jumbling, but the operator OID and the arguments are.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct ScalarArrayOpExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
|
|
/* PG_OPERATOR OID of the operator */
|
|
Oid opno;
|
|
|
|
/* PG_PROC OID of comparison function */
|
|
Oid opfuncid pg_node_attr(equal_ignore_if_zero, query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* PG_PROC OID of hash func or InvalidOid */
|
|
Oid hashfuncid pg_node_attr(equal_ignore_if_zero, query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* PG_PROC OID of negator of opfuncid function or InvalidOid. See above */
|
|
Oid negfuncid pg_node_attr(equal_ignore_if_zero, query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* true for ANY, false for ALL */
|
|
bool useOr;
|
|
|
|
/* OID of collation that operator should use */
|
|
Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* the scalar and array operands */
|
|
List *args;
|
|
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} ScalarArrayOpExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* BoolExpr - expression node for the basic Boolean operators AND, OR, NOT
|
|
*
|
|
* Notice the arguments are given as a List. For NOT, of course the list
|
|
* must always have exactly one element. For AND and OR, there can be two
|
|
* or more arguments.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum BoolExprType
|
|
{
|
|
AND_EXPR, OR_EXPR, NOT_EXPR
|
|
} BoolExprType;
|
|
|
|
typedef struct BoolExpr
|
|
{
|
|
pg_node_attr(custom_read_write)
|
|
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
BoolExprType boolop;
|
|
List *args; /* arguments to this expression */
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} BoolExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* SubLink
|
|
*
|
|
* A SubLink represents a subselect appearing in an expression, and in some
|
|
* cases also the combining operator(s) just above it. The subLinkType
|
|
* indicates the form of the expression represented:
|
|
* EXISTS_SUBLINK EXISTS(SELECT ...)
|
|
* ALL_SUBLINK (lefthand) op ALL (SELECT ...)
|
|
* ANY_SUBLINK (lefthand) op ANY (SELECT ...)
|
|
* ROWCOMPARE_SUBLINK (lefthand) op (SELECT ...)
|
|
* EXPR_SUBLINK (SELECT with single targetlist item ...)
|
|
* MULTIEXPR_SUBLINK (SELECT with multiple targetlist items ...)
|
|
* ARRAY_SUBLINK ARRAY(SELECT with single targetlist item ...)
|
|
* CTE_SUBLINK WITH query (never actually part of an expression)
|
|
* For ALL, ANY, and ROWCOMPARE, the lefthand is a list of expressions of the
|
|
* same length as the subselect's targetlist. ROWCOMPARE will *always* have
|
|
* a list with more than one entry; if the subselect has just one target
|
|
* then the parser will create an EXPR_SUBLINK instead (and any operator
|
|
* above the subselect will be represented separately).
|
|
* ROWCOMPARE, EXPR, and MULTIEXPR require the subselect to deliver at most
|
|
* one row (if it returns no rows, the result is NULL).
|
|
* ALL, ANY, and ROWCOMPARE require the combining operators to deliver boolean
|
|
* results. ALL and ANY combine the per-row results using AND and OR
|
|
* semantics respectively.
|
|
* ARRAY requires just one target column, and creates an array of the target
|
|
* column's type using any number of rows resulting from the subselect.
|
|
*
|
|
* SubLink is classed as an Expr node, but it is not actually executable;
|
|
* it must be replaced in the expression tree by a SubPlan node during
|
|
* planning.
|
|
*
|
|
* NOTE: in the raw output of gram.y, testexpr contains just the raw form
|
|
* of the lefthand expression (if any), and operName is the String name of
|
|
* the combining operator. Also, subselect is a raw parsetree. During parse
|
|
* analysis, the parser transforms testexpr into a complete boolean expression
|
|
* that compares the lefthand value(s) to PARAM_SUBLINK nodes representing the
|
|
* output columns of the subselect. And subselect is transformed to a Query.
|
|
* This is the representation seen in saved rules and in the rewriter.
|
|
*
|
|
* In EXISTS, EXPR, MULTIEXPR, and ARRAY SubLinks, testexpr and operName
|
|
* are unused and are always null.
|
|
*
|
|
* subLinkId is currently used only for MULTIEXPR SubLinks, and is zero in
|
|
* other SubLinks. This number identifies different multiple-assignment
|
|
* subqueries within an UPDATE statement's SET list. It is unique only
|
|
* within a particular targetlist. The output column(s) of the MULTIEXPR
|
|
* are referenced by PARAM_MULTIEXPR Params appearing elsewhere in the tlist.
|
|
*
|
|
* The CTE_SUBLINK case never occurs in actual SubLink nodes, but it is used
|
|
* in SubPlans generated for WITH subqueries.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum SubLinkType
|
|
{
|
|
EXISTS_SUBLINK,
|
|
ALL_SUBLINK,
|
|
ANY_SUBLINK,
|
|
ROWCOMPARE_SUBLINK,
|
|
EXPR_SUBLINK,
|
|
MULTIEXPR_SUBLINK,
|
|
ARRAY_SUBLINK,
|
|
CTE_SUBLINK, /* for SubPlans only */
|
|
} SubLinkType;
|
|
|
|
|
|
typedef struct SubLink
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
SubLinkType subLinkType; /* see above */
|
|
int subLinkId; /* ID (1..n); 0 if not MULTIEXPR */
|
|
Node *testexpr; /* outer-query test for ALL/ANY/ROWCOMPARE */
|
|
/* originally specified operator name */
|
|
List *operName pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* subselect as Query* or raw parsetree */
|
|
Node *subselect;
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} SubLink;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* SubPlan - executable expression node for a subplan (sub-SELECT)
|
|
*
|
|
* The planner replaces SubLink nodes in expression trees with SubPlan
|
|
* nodes after it has finished planning the subquery. SubPlan references
|
|
* a sub-plantree stored in the subplans list of the toplevel PlannedStmt.
|
|
* (We avoid a direct link to make it easier to copy expression trees
|
|
* without causing multiple processing of the subplan.)
|
|
*
|
|
* In an ordinary subplan, testexpr points to an executable expression
|
|
* (OpExpr, an AND/OR tree of OpExprs, or RowCompareExpr) for the combining
|
|
* operator(s); the left-hand arguments are the original lefthand expressions,
|
|
* and the right-hand arguments are PARAM_EXEC Param nodes representing the
|
|
* outputs of the sub-select. (NOTE: runtime coercion functions may be
|
|
* inserted as well.) This is just the same expression tree as testexpr in
|
|
* the original SubLink node, but the PARAM_SUBLINK nodes are replaced by
|
|
* suitably numbered PARAM_EXEC nodes.
|
|
*
|
|
* If the sub-select becomes an initplan rather than a subplan, the executable
|
|
* expression is part of the outer plan's expression tree (and the SubPlan
|
|
* node itself is not, but rather is found in the outer plan's initPlan
|
|
* list). In this case testexpr is NULL to avoid duplication.
|
|
*
|
|
* The planner also derives lists of the values that need to be passed into
|
|
* and out of the subplan. Input values are represented as a list "args" of
|
|
* expressions to be evaluated in the outer-query context (currently these
|
|
* args are always just Vars, but in principle they could be any expression).
|
|
* The values are assigned to the global PARAM_EXEC params indexed by parParam
|
|
* (the parParam and args lists must have the same ordering). setParam is a
|
|
* list of the PARAM_EXEC params that are computed by the sub-select, if it
|
|
* is an initplan or MULTIEXPR plan; they are listed in order by sub-select
|
|
* output column position. (parParam and setParam are integer Lists, not
|
|
* Bitmapsets, because their ordering is significant.)
|
|
*
|
|
* Also, the planner computes startup and per-call costs for use of the
|
|
* SubPlan. Note that these include the cost of the subquery proper,
|
|
* evaluation of the testexpr if any, and any hashtable management overhead.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct SubPlan
|
|
{
|
|
pg_node_attr(no_query_jumble)
|
|
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* Fields copied from original SubLink: */
|
|
SubLinkType subLinkType; /* see above */
|
|
/* The combining operators, transformed to an executable expression: */
|
|
Node *testexpr; /* OpExpr or RowCompareExpr expression tree */
|
|
List *paramIds; /* IDs of Params embedded in the above */
|
|
/* Identification of the Plan tree to use: */
|
|
int plan_id; /* Index (from 1) in PlannedStmt.subplans */
|
|
/* Identification of the SubPlan for EXPLAIN and debugging purposes: */
|
|
char *plan_name; /* A name assigned during planning */
|
|
/* Extra data useful for determining subplan's output type: */
|
|
Oid firstColType; /* Type of first column of subplan result */
|
|
int32 firstColTypmod; /* Typmod of first column of subplan result */
|
|
Oid firstColCollation; /* Collation of first column of subplan
|
|
* result */
|
|
/* Information about execution strategy: */
|
|
bool useHashTable; /* true to store subselect output in a hash
|
|
* table (implies we are doing "IN") */
|
|
bool unknownEqFalse; /* true if it's okay to return FALSE when the
|
|
* spec result is UNKNOWN; this allows much
|
|
* simpler handling of null values */
|
|
bool parallel_safe; /* is the subplan parallel-safe? */
|
|
/* Note: parallel_safe does not consider contents of testexpr or args */
|
|
/* Information for passing params into and out of the subselect: */
|
|
/* setParam and parParam are lists of integers (param IDs) */
|
|
List *setParam; /* initplan and MULTIEXPR subqueries have to
|
|
* set these Params for parent plan */
|
|
List *parParam; /* indices of input Params from parent plan */
|
|
List *args; /* exprs to pass as parParam values */
|
|
/* Estimated execution costs: */
|
|
Cost startup_cost; /* one-time setup cost */
|
|
Cost per_call_cost; /* cost for each subplan evaluation */
|
|
} SubPlan;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* AlternativeSubPlan - expression node for a choice among SubPlans
|
|
*
|
|
* This is used only transiently during planning: by the time the plan
|
|
* reaches the executor, all AlternativeSubPlan nodes have been removed.
|
|
*
|
|
* The subplans are given as a List so that the node definition need not
|
|
* change if there's ever more than two alternatives. For the moment,
|
|
* though, there are always exactly two; and the first one is the fast-start
|
|
* plan.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct AlternativeSubPlan
|
|
{
|
|
pg_node_attr(no_query_jumble)
|
|
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
List *subplans; /* SubPlan(s) with equivalent results */
|
|
} AlternativeSubPlan;
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------
|
|
* FieldSelect
|
|
*
|
|
* FieldSelect represents the operation of extracting one field from a tuple
|
|
* value. At runtime, the input expression is expected to yield a rowtype
|
|
* Datum. The specified field number is extracted and returned as a Datum.
|
|
* ----------------
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct FieldSelect
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *arg; /* input expression */
|
|
AttrNumber fieldnum; /* attribute number of field to extract */
|
|
/* type of the field (result type of this node) */
|
|
Oid resulttype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* output typmod (usually -1) */
|
|
int32 resulttypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation of the field */
|
|
Oid resultcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
} FieldSelect;
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------
|
|
* FieldStore
|
|
*
|
|
* FieldStore represents the operation of modifying one field in a tuple
|
|
* value, yielding a new tuple value (the input is not touched!). Like
|
|
* the assign case of SubscriptingRef, this is used to implement UPDATE of a
|
|
* portion of a column.
|
|
*
|
|
* resulttype is always a named composite type (not a domain). To update
|
|
* a composite domain value, apply CoerceToDomain to the FieldStore.
|
|
*
|
|
* A single FieldStore can actually represent updates of several different
|
|
* fields. The parser only generates FieldStores with single-element lists,
|
|
* but the planner will collapse multiple updates of the same base column
|
|
* into one FieldStore.
|
|
* ----------------
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct FieldStore
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *arg; /* input tuple value */
|
|
List *newvals; /* new value(s) for field(s) */
|
|
/* integer list of field attnums */
|
|
List *fieldnums pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* type of result (same as type of arg) */
|
|
Oid resulttype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* Like RowExpr, we deliberately omit a typmod and collation here */
|
|
} FieldStore;
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------
|
|
* RelabelType
|
|
*
|
|
* RelabelType represents a "dummy" type coercion between two binary-
|
|
* compatible datatypes, such as reinterpreting the result of an OID
|
|
* expression as an int4. It is a no-op at runtime; we only need it
|
|
* to provide a place to store the correct type to be attributed to
|
|
* the expression result during type resolution. (We can't get away
|
|
* with just overwriting the type field of the input expression node,
|
|
* so we need a separate node to show the coercion's result type.)
|
|
* ----------------
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct RelabelType
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *arg; /* input expression */
|
|
Oid resulttype; /* output type of coercion expression */
|
|
/* output typmod (usually -1) */
|
|
int32 resulttypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
|
|
Oid resultcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* how to display this node */
|
|
CoercionForm relabelformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} RelabelType;
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------
|
|
* CoerceViaIO
|
|
*
|
|
* CoerceViaIO represents a type coercion between two types whose textual
|
|
* representations are compatible, implemented by invoking the source type's
|
|
* typoutput function then the destination type's typinput function.
|
|
* ----------------
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct CoerceViaIO
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *arg; /* input expression */
|
|
Oid resulttype; /* output type of coercion */
|
|
/* output typmod is not stored, but is presumed -1 */
|
|
/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
|
|
Oid resultcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* how to display this node */
|
|
CoercionForm coerceformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} CoerceViaIO;
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------
|
|
* ArrayCoerceExpr
|
|
*
|
|
* ArrayCoerceExpr represents a type coercion from one array type to another,
|
|
* which is implemented by applying the per-element coercion expression
|
|
* "elemexpr" to each element of the source array. Within elemexpr, the
|
|
* source element is represented by a CaseTestExpr node. Note that even if
|
|
* elemexpr is a no-op (that is, just CaseTestExpr + RelabelType), the
|
|
* coercion still requires some effort: we have to fix the element type OID
|
|
* stored in the array header.
|
|
* ----------------
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct ArrayCoerceExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *arg; /* input expression (yields an array) */
|
|
Expr *elemexpr; /* expression representing per-element work */
|
|
Oid resulttype; /* output type of coercion (an array type) */
|
|
/* output typmod (also element typmod) */
|
|
int32 resulttypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
|
|
Oid resultcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* how to display this node */
|
|
CoercionForm coerceformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} ArrayCoerceExpr;
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------
|
|
* ConvertRowtypeExpr
|
|
*
|
|
* ConvertRowtypeExpr represents a type coercion from one composite type
|
|
* to another, where the source type is guaranteed to contain all the columns
|
|
* needed for the destination type plus possibly others; the columns need not
|
|
* be in the same positions, but are matched up by name. This is primarily
|
|
* used to convert a whole-row value of an inheritance child table into a
|
|
* valid whole-row value of its parent table's rowtype. Both resulttype
|
|
* and the exposed type of "arg" must be named composite types (not domains).
|
|
* ----------------
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef struct ConvertRowtypeExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *arg; /* input expression */
|
|
Oid resulttype; /* output type (always a composite type) */
|
|
/* Like RowExpr, we deliberately omit a typmod and collation here */
|
|
/* how to display this node */
|
|
CoercionForm convertformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} ConvertRowtypeExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*----------
|
|
* CollateExpr - COLLATE
|
|
*
|
|
* The planner replaces CollateExpr with RelabelType during expression
|
|
* preprocessing, so execution never sees a CollateExpr.
|
|
*----------
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct CollateExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *arg; /* input expression */
|
|
Oid collOid; /* collation's OID */
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} CollateExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*----------
|
|
* CaseExpr - a CASE expression
|
|
*
|
|
* We support two distinct forms of CASE expression:
|
|
* CASE WHEN boolexpr THEN expr [ WHEN boolexpr THEN expr ... ]
|
|
* CASE testexpr WHEN compexpr THEN expr [ WHEN compexpr THEN expr ... ]
|
|
* These are distinguishable by the "arg" field being NULL in the first case
|
|
* and the testexpr in the second case.
|
|
*
|
|
* In the raw grammar output for the second form, the condition expressions
|
|
* of the WHEN clauses are just the comparison values. Parse analysis
|
|
* converts these to valid boolean expressions of the form
|
|
* CaseTestExpr '=' compexpr
|
|
* where the CaseTestExpr node is a placeholder that emits the correct
|
|
* value at runtime. This structure is used so that the testexpr need be
|
|
* evaluated only once. Note that after parse analysis, the condition
|
|
* expressions always yield boolean.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note: we can test whether a CaseExpr has been through parse analysis
|
|
* yet by checking whether casetype is InvalidOid or not.
|
|
*----------
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct CaseExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* type of expression result */
|
|
Oid casetype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
|
|
Oid casecollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
Expr *arg; /* implicit equality comparison argument */
|
|
List *args; /* the arguments (list of WHEN clauses) */
|
|
Expr *defresult; /* the default result (ELSE clause) */
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} CaseExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* CaseWhen - one arm of a CASE expression
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct CaseWhen
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *expr; /* condition expression */
|
|
Expr *result; /* substitution result */
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} CaseWhen;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Placeholder node for the test value to be processed by a CASE expression.
|
|
* This is effectively like a Param, but can be implemented more simply
|
|
* since we need only one replacement value at a time.
|
|
*
|
|
* We also abuse this node type for some other purposes, including:
|
|
* * Placeholder for the current array element value in ArrayCoerceExpr;
|
|
* see build_coercion_expression().
|
|
* * Nested FieldStore/SubscriptingRef assignment expressions in INSERT/UPDATE;
|
|
* see transformAssignmentIndirection().
|
|
* * Placeholder for intermediate results in some SQL/JSON expression nodes,
|
|
* such as JsonConstructorExpr.
|
|
*
|
|
* The uses in CaseExpr and ArrayCoerceExpr are safe only to the extent that
|
|
* there is not any other CaseExpr or ArrayCoerceExpr between the value source
|
|
* node and its child CaseTestExpr(s). This is true in the parse analysis
|
|
* output, but the planner's function-inlining logic has to be careful not to
|
|
* break it.
|
|
*
|
|
* The nested-assignment-expression case is safe because the only node types
|
|
* that can be above such CaseTestExprs are FieldStore and SubscriptingRef.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct CaseTestExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Oid typeId; /* type for substituted value */
|
|
/* typemod for substituted value */
|
|
int32 typeMod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* collation for the substituted value */
|
|
Oid collation pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
} CaseTestExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* ArrayExpr - an ARRAY[] expression
|
|
*
|
|
* Note: if multidims is false, the constituent expressions all yield the
|
|
* scalar type identified by element_typeid. If multidims is true, the
|
|
* constituent expressions all yield arrays of element_typeid (ie, the same
|
|
* type as array_typeid); at runtime we must check for compatible subscripts.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct ArrayExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* type of expression result */
|
|
Oid array_typeid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
|
|
Oid array_collid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* common type of array elements */
|
|
Oid element_typeid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* the array elements or sub-arrays */
|
|
List *elements;
|
|
/* true if elements are sub-arrays */
|
|
bool multidims pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} ArrayExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* RowExpr - a ROW() expression
|
|
*
|
|
* Note: the list of fields must have a one-for-one correspondence with
|
|
* physical fields of the associated rowtype, although it is okay for it
|
|
* to be shorter than the rowtype. That is, the N'th list element must
|
|
* match up with the N'th physical field. When the N'th physical field
|
|
* is a dropped column (attisdropped) then the N'th list element can just
|
|
* be a NULL constant. (This case can only occur for named composite types,
|
|
* not RECORD types, since those are built from the RowExpr itself rather
|
|
* than vice versa.) It is important not to assume that length(args) is
|
|
* the same as the number of columns logically present in the rowtype.
|
|
*
|
|
* colnames provides field names if the ROW() result is of type RECORD.
|
|
* Names *must* be provided if row_typeid is RECORDOID; but if it is a
|
|
* named composite type, colnames will be ignored in favor of using the
|
|
* type's cataloged field names, so colnames should be NIL. Like the
|
|
* args list, colnames is defined to be one-for-one with physical fields
|
|
* of the rowtype (although dropped columns shouldn't appear in the
|
|
* RECORD case, so this fine point is currently moot).
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct RowExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
List *args; /* the fields */
|
|
|
|
/* RECORDOID or a composite type's ID */
|
|
Oid row_typeid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* row_typeid cannot be a domain over composite, only plain composite. To
|
|
* create a composite domain value, apply CoerceToDomain to the RowExpr.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note: we deliberately do NOT store a typmod. Although a typmod will be
|
|
* associated with specific RECORD types at runtime, it will differ for
|
|
* different backends, and so cannot safely be stored in stored
|
|
* parsetrees. We must assume typmod -1 for a RowExpr node.
|
|
*
|
|
* We don't need to store a collation either. The result type is
|
|
* necessarily composite, and composite types never have a collation.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/* how to display this node */
|
|
CoercionForm row_format pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
/* list of String, or NIL */
|
|
List *colnames pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} RowExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* RowCompareExpr - row-wise comparison, such as (a, b) <= (1, 2)
|
|
*
|
|
* We support row comparison for any operator that can be determined to
|
|
* act like =, <>, <, <=, >, or >= (we determine this by looking for the
|
|
* operator in btree opfamilies). Note that the same operator name might
|
|
* map to a different operator for each pair of row elements, since the
|
|
* element datatypes can vary.
|
|
*
|
|
* A RowCompareExpr node is only generated for the < <= > >= cases;
|
|
* the = and <> cases are translated to simple AND or OR combinations
|
|
* of the pairwise comparisons.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct RowCompareExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
|
|
/* LT LE GE or GT, never EQ or NE */
|
|
CompareType cmptype;
|
|
/* OID list of pairwise comparison ops */
|
|
List *opnos pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID list of containing operator families */
|
|
List *opfamilies pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID list of collations for comparisons */
|
|
List *inputcollids pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* the left-hand input arguments */
|
|
List *largs;
|
|
/* the right-hand input arguments */
|
|
List *rargs;
|
|
} RowCompareExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* CoalesceExpr - a COALESCE expression
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct CoalesceExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* type of expression result */
|
|
Oid coalescetype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
|
|
Oid coalescecollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* the arguments */
|
|
List *args;
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} CoalesceExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* MinMaxExpr - a GREATEST or LEAST function
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum MinMaxOp
|
|
{
|
|
IS_GREATEST,
|
|
IS_LEAST
|
|
} MinMaxOp;
|
|
|
|
typedef struct MinMaxExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* common type of arguments and result */
|
|
Oid minmaxtype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation of result */
|
|
Oid minmaxcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation that function should use */
|
|
Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* function to execute */
|
|
MinMaxOp op;
|
|
/* the arguments */
|
|
List *args;
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} MinMaxExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* SQLValueFunction - parameterless functions with special grammar productions
|
|
*
|
|
* The SQL standard categorizes some of these as <datetime value function>
|
|
* and others as <general value specification>. We call 'em SQLValueFunctions
|
|
* for lack of a better term. We store type and typmod of the result so that
|
|
* some code doesn't need to know each function individually, and because
|
|
* we would need to store typmod anyway for some of the datetime functions.
|
|
* Note that currently, all variants return non-collating datatypes, so we do
|
|
* not need a collation field; also, all these functions are stable.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum SQLValueFunctionOp
|
|
{
|
|
SVFOP_CURRENT_DATE,
|
|
SVFOP_CURRENT_TIME,
|
|
SVFOP_CURRENT_TIME_N,
|
|
SVFOP_CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
|
|
SVFOP_CURRENT_TIMESTAMP_N,
|
|
SVFOP_LOCALTIME,
|
|
SVFOP_LOCALTIME_N,
|
|
SVFOP_LOCALTIMESTAMP,
|
|
SVFOP_LOCALTIMESTAMP_N,
|
|
SVFOP_CURRENT_ROLE,
|
|
SVFOP_CURRENT_USER,
|
|
SVFOP_USER,
|
|
SVFOP_SESSION_USER,
|
|
SVFOP_CURRENT_CATALOG,
|
|
SVFOP_CURRENT_SCHEMA,
|
|
} SQLValueFunctionOp;
|
|
|
|
typedef struct SQLValueFunction
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
SQLValueFunctionOp op; /* which function this is */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Result type/typmod. Type is fully determined by "op", so no need to
|
|
* include this Oid in the query jumbling.
|
|
*/
|
|
Oid type pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
int32 typmod;
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} SQLValueFunction;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* XmlExpr - various SQL/XML functions requiring special grammar productions
|
|
*
|
|
* 'name' carries the "NAME foo" argument (already XML-escaped).
|
|
* 'named_args' and 'arg_names' represent an xml_attribute list.
|
|
* 'args' carries all other arguments.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note: result type/typmod/collation are not stored, but can be deduced
|
|
* from the XmlExprOp. The type/typmod fields are just used for display
|
|
* purposes, and are NOT necessarily the true result type of the node.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum XmlExprOp
|
|
{
|
|
IS_XMLCONCAT, /* XMLCONCAT(args) */
|
|
IS_XMLELEMENT, /* XMLELEMENT(name, xml_attributes, args) */
|
|
IS_XMLFOREST, /* XMLFOREST(xml_attributes) */
|
|
IS_XMLPARSE, /* XMLPARSE(text, is_doc, preserve_ws) */
|
|
IS_XMLPI, /* XMLPI(name [, args]) */
|
|
IS_XMLROOT, /* XMLROOT(xml, version, standalone) */
|
|
IS_XMLSERIALIZE, /* XMLSERIALIZE(is_document, xmlval, indent) */
|
|
IS_DOCUMENT, /* xmlval IS DOCUMENT */
|
|
} XmlExprOp;
|
|
|
|
typedef enum XmlOptionType
|
|
{
|
|
XMLOPTION_DOCUMENT,
|
|
XMLOPTION_CONTENT,
|
|
} XmlOptionType;
|
|
|
|
typedef struct XmlExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* xml function ID */
|
|
XmlExprOp op;
|
|
/* name in xml(NAME foo ...) syntaxes */
|
|
char *name pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* non-XML expressions for xml_attributes */
|
|
List *named_args;
|
|
/* parallel list of String values */
|
|
List *arg_names pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* list of expressions */
|
|
List *args;
|
|
/* DOCUMENT or CONTENT */
|
|
XmlOptionType xmloption pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* INDENT option for XMLSERIALIZE */
|
|
bool indent;
|
|
/* target type/typmod for XMLSERIALIZE */
|
|
Oid type pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
int32 typmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} XmlExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonEncoding -
|
|
* representation of JSON ENCODING clause
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum JsonEncoding
|
|
{
|
|
JS_ENC_DEFAULT, /* unspecified */
|
|
JS_ENC_UTF8,
|
|
JS_ENC_UTF16,
|
|
JS_ENC_UTF32,
|
|
} JsonEncoding;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonFormatType -
|
|
* enumeration of JSON formats used in JSON FORMAT clause
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum JsonFormatType
|
|
{
|
|
JS_FORMAT_DEFAULT, /* unspecified */
|
|
JS_FORMAT_JSON, /* FORMAT JSON [ENCODING ...] */
|
|
JS_FORMAT_JSONB, /* implicit internal format for RETURNING
|
|
* jsonb */
|
|
} JsonFormatType;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonFormat -
|
|
* representation of JSON FORMAT clause
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonFormat
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
JsonFormatType format_type; /* format type */
|
|
JsonEncoding encoding; /* JSON encoding */
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} JsonFormat;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonReturning -
|
|
* transformed representation of JSON RETURNING clause
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonReturning
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
JsonFormat *format; /* output JSON format */
|
|
Oid typid; /* target type Oid */
|
|
int32 typmod; /* target type modifier */
|
|
} JsonReturning;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonValueExpr -
|
|
* representation of JSON value expression (expr [FORMAT JsonFormat])
|
|
*
|
|
* raw_expr is the user-specified value, while formatted_expr is the value
|
|
* obtained by coercing raw_expr to the type required by either the FORMAT
|
|
* clause or an enclosing node's RETURNING clause.
|
|
*
|
|
* When deparsing a JsonValueExpr, get_rule_expr() prints raw_expr. However,
|
|
* during the evaluation of a JsonValueExpr, the value of formatted_expr
|
|
* takes precedence over that of raw_expr.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonValueExpr
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
Expr *raw_expr; /* user-specified expression */
|
|
Expr *formatted_expr; /* coerced formatted expression */
|
|
JsonFormat *format; /* FORMAT clause, if specified */
|
|
} JsonValueExpr;
|
|
|
|
typedef enum JsonConstructorType
|
|
{
|
|
JSCTOR_JSON_OBJECT = 1,
|
|
JSCTOR_JSON_ARRAY = 2,
|
|
JSCTOR_JSON_OBJECTAGG = 3,
|
|
JSCTOR_JSON_ARRAYAGG = 4,
|
|
JSCTOR_JSON_PARSE = 5,
|
|
JSCTOR_JSON_SCALAR = 6,
|
|
JSCTOR_JSON_SERIALIZE = 7,
|
|
} JsonConstructorType;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonConstructorExpr -
|
|
* wrapper over FuncExpr/Aggref/WindowFunc for SQL/JSON constructors
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonConstructorExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
JsonConstructorType type; /* constructor type */
|
|
List *args;
|
|
Expr *func; /* underlying json[b]_xxx() function call */
|
|
Expr *coercion; /* coercion to RETURNING type */
|
|
JsonReturning *returning; /* RETURNING clause */
|
|
bool absent_on_null; /* ABSENT ON NULL? */
|
|
bool unique; /* WITH UNIQUE KEYS? (JSON_OBJECT[AGG] only) */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} JsonConstructorExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonValueType -
|
|
* representation of JSON item type in IS JSON predicate
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum JsonValueType
|
|
{
|
|
JS_TYPE_ANY, /* IS JSON [VALUE] */
|
|
JS_TYPE_OBJECT, /* IS JSON OBJECT */
|
|
JS_TYPE_ARRAY, /* IS JSON ARRAY */
|
|
JS_TYPE_SCALAR, /* IS JSON SCALAR */
|
|
} JsonValueType;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonIsPredicate -
|
|
* representation of IS JSON predicate
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonIsPredicate
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
Node *expr; /* subject expression */
|
|
JsonFormat *format; /* FORMAT clause, if specified */
|
|
JsonValueType item_type; /* JSON item type */
|
|
bool unique_keys; /* check key uniqueness? */
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} JsonIsPredicate;
|
|
|
|
/* Nodes used in SQL/JSON query functions */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonWrapper -
|
|
* representation of WRAPPER clause for JSON_QUERY()
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum JsonWrapper
|
|
{
|
|
JSW_UNSPEC,
|
|
JSW_NONE,
|
|
JSW_CONDITIONAL,
|
|
JSW_UNCONDITIONAL,
|
|
} JsonWrapper;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonBehaviorType -
|
|
* enumeration of behavior types used in SQL/JSON ON ERROR/EMPTY clauses
|
|
*
|
|
* If enum members are reordered, get_json_behavior() from ruleutils.c
|
|
* must be updated accordingly.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum JsonBehaviorType
|
|
{
|
|
JSON_BEHAVIOR_NULL = 0,
|
|
JSON_BEHAVIOR_ERROR,
|
|
JSON_BEHAVIOR_EMPTY,
|
|
JSON_BEHAVIOR_TRUE,
|
|
JSON_BEHAVIOR_FALSE,
|
|
JSON_BEHAVIOR_UNKNOWN,
|
|
JSON_BEHAVIOR_EMPTY_ARRAY,
|
|
JSON_BEHAVIOR_EMPTY_OBJECT,
|
|
JSON_BEHAVIOR_DEFAULT,
|
|
} JsonBehaviorType;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonBehavior
|
|
* Specifications for ON ERROR / ON EMPTY behaviors of SQL/JSON
|
|
* query functions specified by a JsonExpr
|
|
*
|
|
* 'expr' is the expression to emit when a given behavior (EMPTY or ERROR)
|
|
* occurs on evaluating the SQL/JSON query function. 'coerce' is set to true
|
|
* if 'expr' isn't already of the expected target type given by
|
|
* JsonExpr.returning.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonBehavior
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
|
|
JsonBehaviorType btype;
|
|
Node *expr;
|
|
bool coerce;
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} JsonBehavior;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonExprOp -
|
|
* enumeration of SQL/JSON query function types
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef enum JsonExprOp
|
|
{
|
|
JSON_EXISTS_OP, /* JSON_EXISTS() */
|
|
JSON_QUERY_OP, /* JSON_QUERY() */
|
|
JSON_VALUE_OP, /* JSON_VALUE() */
|
|
JSON_TABLE_OP, /* JSON_TABLE() */
|
|
} JsonExprOp;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonExpr -
|
|
* Transformed representation of JSON_VALUE(), JSON_QUERY(), and
|
|
* JSON_EXISTS()
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
|
|
JsonExprOp op;
|
|
|
|
char *column_name; /* JSON_TABLE() column name or NULL if this is
|
|
* not for a JSON_TABLE() */
|
|
|
|
/* jsonb-valued expression to query */
|
|
Node *formatted_expr;
|
|
|
|
/* Format of the above expression needed by ruleutils.c */
|
|
JsonFormat *format;
|
|
|
|
/* jsonpath-valued expression containing the query pattern */
|
|
Node *path_spec;
|
|
|
|
/* Expected type/format of the output. */
|
|
JsonReturning *returning;
|
|
|
|
/* Information about the PASSING argument expressions */
|
|
List *passing_names;
|
|
List *passing_values;
|
|
|
|
/* User-specified or default ON EMPTY and ON ERROR behaviors */
|
|
JsonBehavior *on_empty;
|
|
JsonBehavior *on_error;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Information about converting the result of jsonpath functions
|
|
* JsonPathQuery() and JsonPathValue() to the RETURNING type.
|
|
*/
|
|
bool use_io_coercion;
|
|
bool use_json_coercion;
|
|
|
|
/* WRAPPER specification for JSON_QUERY */
|
|
JsonWrapper wrapper;
|
|
|
|
/* KEEP or OMIT QUOTES for singleton scalars returned by JSON_QUERY() */
|
|
bool omit_quotes;
|
|
|
|
/* JsonExpr's collation. */
|
|
Oid collation;
|
|
|
|
/* Original JsonFuncExpr's location */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} JsonExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonTablePath
|
|
* A JSON path expression to be computed as part of evaluating
|
|
* a JSON_TABLE plan node
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonTablePath
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
|
|
Const *value;
|
|
char *name;
|
|
} JsonTablePath;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonTablePlan -
|
|
* Abstract class to represent different types of JSON_TABLE "plans".
|
|
* A plan is used to generate a "row pattern" value by evaluating a JSON
|
|
* path expression against an input JSON document, which is then used for
|
|
* populating JSON_TABLE() columns
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonTablePlan
|
|
{
|
|
pg_node_attr(abstract)
|
|
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
} JsonTablePlan;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JSON_TABLE plan to evaluate a JSON path expression and NESTED paths, if
|
|
* any.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonTablePathScan
|
|
{
|
|
JsonTablePlan plan;
|
|
|
|
/* JSON path to evaluate */
|
|
JsonTablePath *path;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* ERROR/EMPTY ON ERROR behavior; only significant in the plan for the
|
|
* top-level path.
|
|
*/
|
|
bool errorOnError;
|
|
|
|
/* Plan(s) for nested columns, if any. */
|
|
JsonTablePlan *child;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* 0-based index in TableFunc.colvalexprs of the 1st and the last column
|
|
* covered by this plan. Both are -1 if all columns are nested and thus
|
|
* computed by the child plan(s).
|
|
*/
|
|
int colMin;
|
|
int colMax;
|
|
} JsonTablePathScan;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* JsonTableSiblingJoin -
|
|
* Plan to join rows of sibling NESTED COLUMNS clauses in the same parent
|
|
* COLUMNS clause
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JsonTableSiblingJoin
|
|
{
|
|
JsonTablePlan plan;
|
|
|
|
JsonTablePlan *lplan;
|
|
JsonTablePlan *rplan;
|
|
} JsonTableSiblingJoin;
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------
|
|
* NullTest
|
|
*
|
|
* NullTest represents the operation of testing a value for NULLness.
|
|
* The appropriate test is performed and returned as a boolean Datum.
|
|
*
|
|
* When argisrow is false, this simply represents a test for the null value.
|
|
*
|
|
* When argisrow is true, the input expression must yield a rowtype, and
|
|
* the node implements "row IS [NOT] NULL" per the SQL standard. This
|
|
* includes checking individual fields for NULLness when the row datum
|
|
* itself isn't NULL.
|
|
*
|
|
* NOTE: the combination of a rowtype input and argisrow==false does NOT
|
|
* correspond to the SQL notation "row IS [NOT] NULL"; instead, this case
|
|
* represents the SQL notation "row IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM NULL".
|
|
* ----------------
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef enum NullTestType
|
|
{
|
|
IS_NULL, IS_NOT_NULL
|
|
} NullTestType;
|
|
|
|
typedef struct NullTest
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *arg; /* input expression */
|
|
NullTestType nulltesttype; /* IS NULL, IS NOT NULL */
|
|
/* T to perform field-by-field null checks */
|
|
bool argisrow pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} NullTest;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* BooleanTest
|
|
*
|
|
* BooleanTest represents the operation of determining whether a boolean
|
|
* is TRUE, FALSE, or UNKNOWN (ie, NULL). All six meaningful combinations
|
|
* are supported. Note that a NULL input does *not* cause a NULL result.
|
|
* The appropriate test is performed and returned as a boolean Datum.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef enum BoolTestType
|
|
{
|
|
IS_TRUE, IS_NOT_TRUE, IS_FALSE, IS_NOT_FALSE, IS_UNKNOWN, IS_NOT_UNKNOWN
|
|
} BoolTestType;
|
|
|
|
typedef struct BooleanTest
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *arg; /* input expression */
|
|
BoolTestType booltesttype; /* test type */
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} BooleanTest;
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* MergeAction
|
|
*
|
|
* Transformed representation of a WHEN clause in a MERGE statement
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
typedef enum MergeMatchKind
|
|
{
|
|
MERGE_WHEN_MATCHED,
|
|
MERGE_WHEN_NOT_MATCHED_BY_SOURCE,
|
|
MERGE_WHEN_NOT_MATCHED_BY_TARGET
|
|
} MergeMatchKind;
|
|
|
|
#define NUM_MERGE_MATCH_KINDS (MERGE_WHEN_NOT_MATCHED_BY_TARGET + 1)
|
|
|
|
typedef struct MergeAction
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
MergeMatchKind matchKind; /* MATCHED/NOT MATCHED BY SOURCE/TARGET */
|
|
CmdType commandType; /* INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE/DO NOTHING */
|
|
/* OVERRIDING clause */
|
|
OverridingKind override pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
Node *qual; /* transformed WHEN conditions */
|
|
List *targetList; /* the target list (of TargetEntry) */
|
|
/* target attribute numbers of an UPDATE */
|
|
List *updateColnos pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
} MergeAction;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* CoerceToDomain
|
|
*
|
|
* CoerceToDomain represents the operation of coercing a value to a domain
|
|
* type. At runtime (and not before) the precise set of constraints to be
|
|
* checked will be determined. If the value passes, it is returned as the
|
|
* result; if not, an error is raised. Note that this is equivalent to
|
|
* RelabelType in the scenario where no constraints are applied.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct CoerceToDomain
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Expr *arg; /* input expression */
|
|
Oid resulttype; /* domain type ID (result type) */
|
|
/* output typmod (currently always -1) */
|
|
int32 resulttypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */
|
|
Oid resultcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* how to display this node */
|
|
CoercionForm coercionformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
} CoerceToDomain;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Placeholder node for the value to be processed by a domain's check
|
|
* constraint. This is effectively like a Param, but can be implemented more
|
|
* simply since we need only one replacement value at a time.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note: the typeId/typeMod/collation will be set from the domain's base type,
|
|
* not the domain itself. This is because we shouldn't consider the value
|
|
* to be a member of the domain if we haven't yet checked its constraints.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct CoerceToDomainValue
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* type for substituted value */
|
|
Oid typeId;
|
|
/* typemod for substituted value */
|
|
int32 typeMod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* collation for the substituted value */
|
|
Oid collation pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} CoerceToDomainValue;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Placeholder node for a DEFAULT marker in an INSERT or UPDATE command.
|
|
*
|
|
* This is not an executable expression: it must be replaced by the actual
|
|
* column default expression during rewriting. But it is convenient to
|
|
* treat it as an expression node during parsing and rewriting.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct SetToDefault
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* type for substituted value */
|
|
Oid typeId;
|
|
/* typemod for substituted value */
|
|
int32 typeMod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* collation for the substituted value */
|
|
Oid collation pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* token location, or -1 if unknown */
|
|
ParseLoc location;
|
|
} SetToDefault;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Node representing [WHERE] CURRENT OF cursor_name
|
|
*
|
|
* CURRENT OF is a bit like a Var, in that it carries the rangetable index
|
|
* of the target relation being constrained; this aids placing the expression
|
|
* correctly during planning. We can assume however that its "levelsup" is
|
|
* always zero, due to the syntactic constraints on where it can appear.
|
|
* Also, cvarno will always be a true RT index, never INNER_VAR etc.
|
|
*
|
|
* The referenced cursor can be represented either as a hardwired string
|
|
* or as a reference to a run-time parameter of type REFCURSOR. The latter
|
|
* case is for the convenience of plpgsql.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct CurrentOfExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Index cvarno; /* RT index of target relation */
|
|
char *cursor_name; /* name of referenced cursor, or NULL */
|
|
int cursor_param; /* refcursor parameter number, or 0 */
|
|
} CurrentOfExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* NextValueExpr - get next value from sequence
|
|
*
|
|
* This has the same effect as calling the nextval() function, but it does not
|
|
* check permissions on the sequence. This is used for identity columns,
|
|
* where the sequence is an implicit dependency without its own permissions.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct NextValueExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Oid seqid;
|
|
Oid typeId;
|
|
} NextValueExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* InferenceElem - an element of a unique index inference specification
|
|
*
|
|
* This mostly matches the structure of IndexElems, but having a dedicated
|
|
* primnode allows for a clean separation between the use of index parameters
|
|
* by utility commands, and this node.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct InferenceElem
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
Node *expr; /* expression to infer from, or NULL */
|
|
Oid infercollid; /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid */
|
|
Oid inferopclass; /* OID of att opclass, or InvalidOid */
|
|
} InferenceElem;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* ReturningExpr - return OLD/NEW.(expression) in RETURNING list
|
|
*
|
|
* This is used when updating an auto-updatable view and returning a view
|
|
* column that is not simply a Var referring to the base relation. In such
|
|
* cases, OLD/NEW.viewcol can expand to an arbitrary expression, but the
|
|
* result is required to be NULL if the OLD/NEW row doesn't exist. To handle
|
|
* this, the rewriter wraps the expanded expression in a ReturningExpr, which
|
|
* is equivalent to "CASE WHEN (OLD/NEW row exists) THEN (expr) ELSE NULL".
|
|
*
|
|
* A similar situation can arise when rewriting the RETURNING clause of a
|
|
* rule, which may also contain arbitrary expressions.
|
|
*
|
|
* ReturningExpr nodes never appear in a parsed Query --- they are only ever
|
|
* inserted by the rewriter and the planner.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct ReturningExpr
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
int retlevelsup; /* > 0 if it belongs to outer query */
|
|
bool retold; /* true for OLD, false for NEW */
|
|
Expr *retexpr; /* expression to be returned */
|
|
} ReturningExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*--------------------
|
|
* TargetEntry -
|
|
* a target entry (used in query target lists)
|
|
*
|
|
* Strictly speaking, a TargetEntry isn't an expression node (since it can't
|
|
* be evaluated by ExecEvalExpr). But we treat it as one anyway, since in
|
|
* very many places it's convenient to process a whole query targetlist as a
|
|
* single expression tree.
|
|
*
|
|
* In a SELECT's targetlist, resno should always be equal to the item's
|
|
* ordinal position (counting from 1). However, in an INSERT or UPDATE
|
|
* targetlist, resno represents the attribute number of the destination
|
|
* column for the item; so there may be missing or out-of-order resnos.
|
|
* It is even legal to have duplicated resnos; consider
|
|
* UPDATE table SET arraycol[1] = ..., arraycol[2] = ..., ...
|
|
* In an INSERT, the rewriter and planner will normalize the tlist by
|
|
* reordering it into physical column order and filling in default values
|
|
* for any columns not assigned values by the original query. In an UPDATE,
|
|
* after the rewriter merges multiple assignments for the same column, the
|
|
* planner extracts the target-column numbers into a separate "update_colnos"
|
|
* list, and then renumbers the tlist elements serially. Thus, tlist resnos
|
|
* match ordinal position in all tlists seen by the executor; but it is wrong
|
|
* to assume that before planning has happened.
|
|
*
|
|
* resname is required to represent the correct column name in non-resjunk
|
|
* entries of top-level SELECT targetlists, since it will be used as the
|
|
* column title sent to the frontend. In most other contexts it is only
|
|
* a debugging aid, and may be wrong or even NULL. (In particular, it may
|
|
* be wrong in a tlist from a stored rule, if the referenced column has been
|
|
* renamed by ALTER TABLE since the rule was made. Also, the planner tends
|
|
* to store NULL rather than look up a valid name for tlist entries in
|
|
* non-toplevel plan nodes.) In resjunk entries, resname should be either
|
|
* a specific system-generated name (such as "ctid") or NULL; anything else
|
|
* risks confusing ExecGetJunkAttribute!
|
|
*
|
|
* ressortgroupref is used in the representation of ORDER BY, GROUP BY, and
|
|
* DISTINCT items. Targetlist entries with ressortgroupref=0 are not
|
|
* sort/group items. If ressortgroupref>0, then this item is an ORDER BY,
|
|
* GROUP BY, and/or DISTINCT target value. No two entries in a targetlist
|
|
* may have the same nonzero ressortgroupref --- but there is no particular
|
|
* meaning to the nonzero values, except as tags. (For example, one must
|
|
* not assume that lower ressortgroupref means a more significant sort key.)
|
|
* The order of the associated SortGroupClause lists determine the semantics.
|
|
*
|
|
* resorigtbl/resorigcol identify the source of the column, if it is a
|
|
* simple reference to a column of a base table (or view). If it is not
|
|
* a simple reference, these fields are zeroes.
|
|
*
|
|
* If resjunk is true then the column is a working column (such as a sort key)
|
|
* that should be removed from the final output of the query. Resjunk columns
|
|
* must have resnos that cannot duplicate any regular column's resno. Also
|
|
* note that there are places that assume resjunk columns come after non-junk
|
|
* columns.
|
|
*--------------------
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct TargetEntry
|
|
{
|
|
Expr xpr;
|
|
/* expression to evaluate */
|
|
Expr *expr;
|
|
/* attribute number (see notes above) */
|
|
AttrNumber resno;
|
|
/* name of the column (could be NULL) */
|
|
char *resname pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* nonzero if referenced by a sort/group clause */
|
|
Index ressortgroupref;
|
|
/* OID of column's source table */
|
|
Oid resorigtbl pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* column's number in source table */
|
|
AttrNumber resorigcol pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* set to true to eliminate the attribute from final target list */
|
|
bool resjunk pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
} TargetEntry;
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
* node types for join trees
|
|
*
|
|
* The leaves of a join tree structure are RangeTblRef nodes. Above
|
|
* these, JoinExpr nodes can appear to denote a specific kind of join
|
|
* or qualified join. Also, FromExpr nodes can appear to denote an
|
|
* ordinary cross-product join ("FROM foo, bar, baz WHERE ...").
|
|
* FromExpr is like a JoinExpr of jointype JOIN_INNER, except that it
|
|
* may have any number of child nodes, not just two.
|
|
*
|
|
* NOTE: the top level of a Query's jointree is always a FromExpr.
|
|
* Even if the jointree contains no rels, there will be a FromExpr.
|
|
*
|
|
* NOTE: the qualification expressions present in JoinExpr nodes are
|
|
* *in addition to* the query's main WHERE clause, which appears as the
|
|
* qual of the top-level FromExpr. The reason for associating quals with
|
|
* specific nodes in the jointree is that the position of a qual is critical
|
|
* when outer joins are present. (If we enforce a qual too soon or too late,
|
|
* that may cause the outer join to produce the wrong set of NULL-extended
|
|
* rows.) If all joins are inner joins then all the qual positions are
|
|
* semantically interchangeable.
|
|
*
|
|
* NOTE: in the raw output of gram.y, a join tree contains RangeVar,
|
|
* RangeSubselect, and RangeFunction nodes, which are all replaced by
|
|
* RangeTblRef nodes during the parse analysis phase. Also, the top-level
|
|
* FromExpr is added during parse analysis; the grammar regards FROM and
|
|
* WHERE as separate.
|
|
* ----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* RangeTblRef - reference to an entry in the query's rangetable
|
|
*
|
|
* We could use direct pointers to the RT entries and skip having these
|
|
* nodes, but multiple pointers to the same node in a querytree cause
|
|
* lots of headaches, so it seems better to store an index into the RT.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct RangeTblRef
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
int rtindex;
|
|
} RangeTblRef;
|
|
|
|
/*----------
|
|
* JoinExpr - for SQL JOIN expressions
|
|
*
|
|
* isNatural, usingClause, and quals are interdependent. The user can write
|
|
* only one of NATURAL, USING(), or ON() (this is enforced by the grammar).
|
|
* If he writes NATURAL then parse analysis generates the equivalent USING()
|
|
* list, and from that fills in "quals" with the right equality comparisons.
|
|
* If he writes USING() then "quals" is filled with equality comparisons.
|
|
* If he writes ON() then only "quals" is set. Note that NATURAL/USING
|
|
* are not equivalent to ON() since they also affect the output column list.
|
|
*
|
|
* alias is an Alias node representing the AS alias-clause attached to the
|
|
* join expression, or NULL if no clause. NB: presence or absence of the
|
|
* alias has a critical impact on semantics, because a join with an alias
|
|
* restricts visibility of the tables/columns inside it.
|
|
*
|
|
* join_using_alias is an Alias node representing the join correlation
|
|
* name that SQL:2016 and later allow to be attached to JOIN/USING.
|
|
* Its column alias list includes only the common column names from USING,
|
|
* and it does not restrict visibility of the join's input tables.
|
|
*
|
|
* During parse analysis, an RTE is created for the Join, and its index
|
|
* is filled into rtindex. This RTE is present mainly so that Vars can
|
|
* be created that refer to the outputs of the join. The planner sometimes
|
|
* generates JoinExprs internally; these can have rtindex = 0 if there are
|
|
* no join alias variables referencing such joins.
|
|
*----------
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct JoinExpr
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
JoinType jointype; /* type of join */
|
|
bool isNatural; /* Natural join? Will need to shape table */
|
|
Node *larg; /* left subtree */
|
|
Node *rarg; /* right subtree */
|
|
/* USING clause, if any (list of String) */
|
|
List *usingClause pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* alias attached to USING clause, if any */
|
|
Alias *join_using_alias pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* qualifiers on join, if any */
|
|
Node *quals;
|
|
/* user-written alias clause, if any */
|
|
Alias *alias pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore);
|
|
/* RT index assigned for join, or 0 */
|
|
int rtindex;
|
|
} JoinExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*----------
|
|
* FromExpr - represents a FROM ... WHERE ... construct
|
|
*
|
|
* This is both more flexible than a JoinExpr (it can have any number of
|
|
* children, including zero) and less so --- we don't need to deal with
|
|
* aliases and so on. The output column set is implicitly just the union
|
|
* of the outputs of the children.
|
|
*----------
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct FromExpr
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
List *fromlist; /* List of join subtrees */
|
|
Node *quals; /* qualifiers on join, if any */
|
|
} FromExpr;
|
|
|
|
/*----------
|
|
* OnConflictExpr - represents an ON CONFLICT DO ... expression
|
|
*
|
|
* The optimizer requires a list of inference elements, and optionally a WHERE
|
|
* clause to infer a unique index. The unique index (or, occasionally,
|
|
* indexes) inferred are used to arbitrate whether or not the alternative ON
|
|
* CONFLICT path is taken.
|
|
*----------
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct OnConflictExpr
|
|
{
|
|
NodeTag type;
|
|
OnConflictAction action; /* DO NOTHING or UPDATE? */
|
|
|
|
/* Arbiter */
|
|
List *arbiterElems; /* unique index arbiter list (of
|
|
* InferenceElem's) */
|
|
Node *arbiterWhere; /* unique index arbiter WHERE clause */
|
|
Oid constraint; /* pg_constraint OID for arbiter */
|
|
|
|
/* ON CONFLICT UPDATE */
|
|
List *onConflictSet; /* List of ON CONFLICT SET TargetEntrys */
|
|
Node *onConflictWhere; /* qualifiers to restrict UPDATE to */
|
|
int exclRelIndex; /* RT index of 'excluded' relation */
|
|
List *exclRelTlist; /* tlist of the EXCLUDED pseudo relation */
|
|
} OnConflictExpr;
|
|
|
|
#endif /* PRIMNODES_H */
|