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📄 xtypes.sgml

📁 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/xtypes.sgml,v 1.25 2005/01/10 00:04:38 tgl Exp $--> <sect1 id="xtypes">  <title>User-Defined Types</title>  <indexterm zone="xtypes">   <primary>data type</primary>   <secondary>user-defined</secondary>  </indexterm>  <para>   As described in <xref linkend="extend-type-system">,   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> can be extended to support new   data types.  This section describes how to define new base types,   which are data types defined below the level of the <acronym>SQL</>   language.  Creating a new base type requires implementing functions   to operate on the type in a low-level language, usually C.  </para>  <para>   The examples in this section can be found in   <filename>complex.sql</filename> and <filename>complex.c</filename>   in the <filename>src/tutorial</> directory of the source distribution.   See the <filename>README</> file in that directory for instructions   about running the examples.  </para> <para>  <indexterm>   <primary>input function</primary>  </indexterm>  <indexterm>   <primary>output function</primary>  </indexterm>  A user-defined type must always have input and output  functions.<indexterm><primary>input function</primary><secondary>of  a data type</secondary></indexterm><indexterm><primary>output  function</primary><secondary>of a data type</secondary></indexterm>  These functions determine how the type appears in strings (for input  by the user and output to the user) and how the type is organized in  memory.  The input function takes a null-terminated character string  as its argument and returns the internal (in memory) representation  of the type.  The output function takes the internal representation  of the type as argument and returns a null-terminated character  string.  If we want to do anything more with the type than merely  store it, we must provide additional functions to implement whatever  operations we'd like to have for the type. </para> <para>  Suppose we want to define a type <type>complex</> that represents  complex numbers. A natural way to represent a complex number in  memory would be the following C structure:<programlisting>typedef struct Complex {    double      x;    double      y;} Complex;</programlisting>  We will need to make this a pass-by-reference type, since it's too  large to fit into a single <type>Datum</> value. </para> <para>  As the external string representation of the type, we choose a  string of the form <literal>(x,y)</literal>. </para> <para>  The input and output functions are usually not hard to write,  especially the output function.  But when defining the external  string representation of the type, remember that you must eventually  write a complete and robust parser for that representation as your  input function.  For instance:<programlisting>PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(complex_in);Datumcomplex_in(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS){    char       *str = PG_GETARG_CSTRING(0);    double      x,                y;    Complex    *result;    if (sscanf(str, " ( %lf , %lf )", &amp;x, &amp;y) != 2)        ereport(ERROR,                (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_TEXT_REPRESENTATION),                 errmsg("invalid input syntax for complex: \"%s\"",                        str)));    result = (Complex *) palloc(sizeof(Complex));    result-&gt;x = x;    result-&gt;y = y;    PG_RETURN_POINTER(result);}</programlisting>  The output function can simply be:<programlisting>PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(complex_out);Datumcomplex_out(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS){    Complex    *complex = (Complex *) PG_GETARG_POINTER(0);    char       *result;    result = (char *) palloc(100);    snprintf(result, 100, "(%g,%g)", complex-&gt;x, complex-&gt;y);    PG_RETURN_CSTRING(result);}</programlisting> </para> <para>  You should be careful to make the input and output functions inverses of  each other.  If you do not, you will have severe problems when you  need to dump your data into a file and then read it back in.  This  is a particularly common problem when floating-point numbers are  involved. </para> <para>  Optionally, a user-defined type can provide binary input and output  routines.  Binary I/O is normally faster but less portable than textual  I/O.  As with textual I/O, it is up to you to define exactly what the  external binary representation is.  Most of the built-in data types  try to provide a machine-independent binary representation.  For  <type>complex</type>, we will piggy-back on the binary I/O converters  for type <type>float8</>:<programlisting>PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(complex_recv);Datumcomplex_recv(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS){    StringInfo  buf = (StringInfo) PG_GETARG_POINTER(0);    Complex    *result;    result = (Complex *) palloc(sizeof(Complex));    result-&gt;x = pq_getmsgfloat8(buf);    result-&gt;y = pq_getmsgfloat8(buf);    PG_RETURN_POINTER(result);}PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(complex_send);Datumcomplex_send(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS){    Complex    *complex = (Complex *) PG_GETARG_POINTER(0);    StringInfoData buf;    pq_begintypsend(&amp;buf);    pq_sendfloat8(&amp;buf, complex-&gt;x);    pq_sendfloat8(&amp;buf, complex-&gt;y);    PG_RETURN_BYTEA_P(pq_endtypsend(&amp;buf));}</programlisting> </para> <para>  To define the <type>complex</type> type, we need to create the  user-defined I/O functions before creating the type:<programlisting>CREATE FUNCTION complex_in(cstring)    RETURNS complex    AS '<replaceable>filename</replaceable>'    LANGUAGE C IMMUTABLE STRICT;CREATE FUNCTION complex_out(complex)    RETURNS cstring    AS '<replaceable>filename</replaceable>'    LANGUAGE C IMMUTABLE STRICT;CREATE FUNCTION complex_recv(internal)   RETURNS complex   AS '<replaceable>filename</replaceable>'   LANGUAGE C IMMUTABLE STRICT;CREATE FUNCTION complex_send(complex)   RETURNS bytea   AS '<replaceable>filename</replaceable>'   LANGUAGE C IMMUTABLE STRICT;</programlisting>  Notice that the declarations of the input and output functions must  reference the not-yet-defined type.  This is allowed, but will draw  warning messages that may be ignored.  The input function must  appear first. </para> <para>  Finally, we can declare the data type:<programlisting>CREATE TYPE complex (   internallength = 16,    input = complex_in,   output = complex_out,   receive = complex_recv,   send = complex_send,   alignment = double);</programlisting> </para> <para>  When you define a new base type,  <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> automatically provides support  for arrays of that  type.<indexterm><primary>array</primary><secondary>of user-defined  type</secondary></indexterm> For historical reasons, the array type  has the same name as the base type with the underscore character  (<literal>_</>) prepended. </para> <para>  Once the data type exists, we can declare additional functions to  provide useful operations on the data type.  Operators can then be  defined atop the functions, and if needed, operator classes can be  created to support indexing of the data type.  These additional  layers are discussed in following sections. </para> <para>   <indexterm>    <primary>TOAST</primary>    <secondary>and user-defined types</secondary>   </indexterm>  If the values of your data type might exceed a few hundred bytes in  size (in internal form), you should make the data type  <acronym>TOAST</>-able (see <xref linkend="storage-toast">).  To do this, the internal  representation must follow the standard layout for variable-length  data: the first four bytes must be an <type>int32</type> containing  the total length in bytes of the datum (including itself).  The C  functions operating on the data type must be careful to unpack any  toasted values they are handed, by using <function>PG_DETOAST_DATUM</>.  (This detail is customarily hidden by defining type-specific  <function>GETARG</function> macros.) Then,   when running the <command>CREATE TYPE</command> command, specify the  internal length as <literal>variable</> and select the appropriate  storage option. </para> <para>  For further details see the description of the  <xref linkend="sql-createtype" endterm="sql-createtype-title"> command. </para></sect1><!-- Keep this comment at the end of the fileLocal variables:mode:sgmlsgml-omittag:nilsgml-shorttag:tsgml-minimize-attributes:nilsgml-always-quote-attributes:tsgml-indent-step:1sgml-indent-data:tsgml-parent-document:nilsgml-default-dtd-file:"./reference.ced"sgml-exposed-tags:nilsgml-local-catalogs:("/usr/lib/sgml/catalog")sgml-local-ecat-files:nilEnd:-->

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