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📁 PostgreSQL 8.1.4的源码 适用于Linux下的开源数据库系统
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<!--$PostgreSQL: pgsql/doc/src/sgml/gist.sgml,v 1.24 2005/11/04 23:14:00 petere Exp $--><chapter id="GiST"><title>GiST Indexes</title><sect1 id="gist-intro"> <title>Introduction</title> <para>   <indexterm>    <primary>index</primary>    <secondary>GiST</secondary>   </indexterm>   <indexterm>    <primary>GiST</primary>    <see>index</see>   </indexterm>   <acronym>GiST</acronym> stands for Generalized Search Tree.  It is a   balanced, tree-structured access method, that acts as a base template in   which to implement arbitrary indexing schemes. B+-trees, R-trees and many   other indexing schemes can be implemented in <acronym>GiST</acronym>. </para> <para>  One advantage of <acronym>GiST</acronym> is that it allows the development  of custom data types with the appropriate access methods, by  an expert in the domain of the data type, rather than a database expert. </para>  <para>    Some of the information here is derived from the University of California at    Berkeley's GiST Indexing Project    <ulink url="http://gist.cs.berkeley.edu/">web site</ulink> and     <ulink url="http://www.sai.msu.su/~megera/postgres/gist/papers/concurrency/access-methods-for-next-generation.pdf.gz">    Marcel Kornacker's thesis, Access Methods for Next-Generation Database Systems</ulink>.    The <acronym>GiST</acronym>    implementation in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> is primarily    maintained by Teodor Sigaev and Oleg Bartunov, and there is more    information on their    <ulink url="http://www.sai.msu.su/~megera/postgres/gist/">website</ulink>.  </para></sect1><sect1 id="gist-extensibility"> <title>Extensibility</title> <para>   Traditionally, implementing a new index access method meant a lot of   difficult work.  It was necessary to understand the inner workings of the   database, such as the lock manager and Write-Ahead Log.  The   <acronym>GiST</acronym> interface has a high level of abstraction,   requiring the access method implementer to only implement the semantics of   the data type being accessed.  The <acronym>GiST</acronym> layer itself   takes care of concurrency, logging and searching the tree structure. </para>  <para>   This extensibility should not be confused with the extensibility of the   other standard search trees in terms of the data they can handle.  For   example, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> supports extensible B+-trees   and R-trees. That means that you can use   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> to build a B+-tree or R-tree over any   data type you want. But B+-trees only support range predicates   (<literal>&lt;</literal>, <literal>=</literal>, <literal>&gt;</literal>),   and R-trees only support n-D range queries (contains, contained, equals). </para>  <para>   So if you index, say, an image collection with a   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> B+-tree, you can only issue queries   such as <quote>is imagex equal to imagey</quote>, <quote>is imagex less   than imagey</quote> and <quote>is imagex greater than imagey</quote>?   Depending on how you define <quote>equals</quote>, <quote>less than</quote>   and <quote>greater than</quote> in this context, this could be useful.   However, by using a <acronym>GiST</acronym> based index, you could create   ways to ask domain-specific questions, perhaps <quote>find all images of   horses</quote> or <quote>find all over-exposed images</quote>. </para> <para>   All it takes to get a <acronym>GiST</acronym> access method up and running   is to implement seven user-defined methods, which define the behavior of   keys in the tree. Of course these methods have to be pretty fancy to   support fancy queries, but for all the standard queries (B+-trees,   R-trees, etc.) they're relatively straightforward. In short,   <acronym>GiST</acronym> combines extensibility along with generality, code   reuse, and a clean interface.  </para></sect1><sect1 id="gist-implementation"> <title>Implementation</title>  <para>   There are seven methods that an index operator class for   <acronym>GiST</acronym> must provide: </para> <variablelist>    <varlistentry>     <term>consistent</term>     <listitem>      <para>       Given a predicate <literal>p</literal> on a tree page, and a user       query, <literal>q</literal>, this method will return false if it is       certain that both <literal>p</literal> and <literal>q</literal> cannot       be true for a given data item.      </para>     </listitem>    </varlistentry>    <varlistentry>     <term>union</term>     <listitem>      <para>       This method consolidates information in the tree.  Given a set of       entries, this function generates a new predicate that is true for all       the entries.      </para>     </listitem>    </varlistentry>    <varlistentry>     <term>compress</term>     <listitem>      <para>       Converts the data item into a format suitable for physical storage in       an index page.      </para>     </listitem>    </varlistentry>    <varlistentry>     <term>decompress</term>     <listitem>      <para>       The reverse of the <function>compress</function> method.  Converts the       index representation of the data item into a format that can be       manipulated by the database.      </para>     </listitem>    </varlistentry>    <varlistentry>     <term>penalty</term>     <listitem>      <para>       Returns a value indicating the <quote>cost</quote> of inserting the new       entry into a particular branch of the tree.  items will be inserted       down the path of least <function>penalty</function> in the tree.      </para>     </listitem>    </varlistentry>    <varlistentry>     <term>picksplit</term>     <listitem>      <para>       When a page split is necessary, this function decides which entries on       the page are to stay on the old page, and which are to move to the new       page.      </para>     </listitem>    </varlistentry>    <varlistentry>     <term>same</term>     <listitem>      <para>       Returns true if two entries are identical, false otherwise.      </para>     </listitem>    </varlistentry>  </variablelist></sect1><sect1 id="gist-examples"> <title>Examples</title> <para>  The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> source distribution includes  several examples of index methods implemented using  <acronym>GiST</acronym>.  The core system currently provides R-Tree  equivalent functionality for some of the built-in geometric data types  (see <filename>src/backend/access/gist/gistproc.c</>).  The following  <filename>contrib</> modules also contain <acronym>GiST</acronym>  operator classes:  </para>  <variablelist>  <varlistentry>   <term>btree_gist</term>   <listitem>    <para>B-Tree equivalent functionality for several data types</para>   </listitem>  </varlistentry>  <varlistentry>   <term>cube</term>   <listitem>    <para>Indexing for multi-dimensional cubes</para>   </listitem>  </varlistentry>  <varlistentry>   <term>intarray</term>   <listitem>    <para>RD-Tree for one-dimensional array of int4 values</para>   </listitem>  </varlistentry>  <varlistentry>   <term>ltree</term>   <listitem>    <para>Indexing for tree-like structures</para>   </listitem>  </varlistentry>  <varlistentry>   <term>pg_trgm</term>   <listitem>    <para>Text similarity using trigram matching</para>   </listitem>  </varlistentry>  <varlistentry>   <term>seg</term>   <listitem>    <para>Indexing for <quote>float ranges</quote></para>   </listitem>  </varlistentry>  <varlistentry>   <term>tsearch2</term>   <listitem>    <para>Full text indexing</para>   </listitem>  </varlistentry> </variablelist></sect1><sect1 id="gist-recovery"> <title>Crash Recovery</title> <para>  Usually, replay of the WAL log is sufficient to restore the integrity  of a GiST index following a database crash.  However, there are some  corner cases in which the index state is not fully rebuilt.  The index  will still be functionally correct, but there may be some performance  degradation.  When this occurs, the index can be repaired by  <command>VACUUM</>ing its table, or by rebuilding the index using  <command>REINDEX</>.  In some cases a plain <command>VACUUM</> is  not sufficient, and either <command>VACUUM FULL</> or <command>REINDEX</>  is needed.  The need for one of these procedures is indicated by occurrence  of this log message during crash recovery:<programlisting>LOG:  index NNN/NNN/NNN needs VACUUM or REINDEX to finish crash recovery</programlisting>  or this log message during routine index insertions:<programlisting>LOG:  index "FOO" needs VACUUM or REINDEX to finish crash recovery</programlisting>  If a plain <command>VACUUM</> finds itself unable to complete recovery  fully, it will return a notice:<programlisting>NOTICE:  index "FOO" needs VACUUM FULL or REINDEX to finish crash recovery</programlisting> </para></sect1></chapter>

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