⭐ 欢迎来到虫虫下载站! | 📦 资源下载 📁 资源专辑 ℹ️ 关于我们
⭐ 虫虫下载站

📄 planmain.c

📁 postgresql8.3.4源码,开源数据库
💻 C
字号:
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * planmain.c *	  Routines to plan a single query * * What's in a name, anyway?  The top-level entry point of the planner/ * optimizer is over in planner.c, not here as you might think from the * file name.  But this is the main code for planning a basic join operation, * shorn of features like subselects, inheritance, aggregates, grouping, * and so on.  (Those are the things planner.c deals with.) * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2008, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * * IDENTIFICATION *	  $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/optimizer/plan/planmain.c,v 1.106 2008/01/11 04:02:18 tgl Exp $ * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */#include "postgres.h"#include "optimizer/cost.h"#include "optimizer/pathnode.h"#include "optimizer/paths.h"#include "optimizer/planmain.h"#include "optimizer/tlist.h"#include "utils/selfuncs.h"/* * query_planner *	  Generate a path (that is, a simplified plan) for a basic query, *	  which may involve joins but not any fancier features. * * Since query_planner does not handle the toplevel processing (grouping, * sorting, etc) it cannot select the best path by itself.	It selects * two paths: the cheapest path that produces all the required tuples, * independent of any ordering considerations, and the cheapest path that * produces the expected fraction of the required tuples in the required * ordering, if there is a path that is cheaper for this than just sorting * the output of the cheapest overall path.  The caller (grouping_planner) * will make the final decision about which to use. * * Input parameters: * root describes the query to plan * tlist is the target list the query should produce *		(this is NOT necessarily root->parse->targetList!) * tuple_fraction is the fraction of tuples we expect will be retrieved * limit_tuples is a hard limit on number of tuples to retrieve, *		or -1 if no limit * * Output parameters: * *cheapest_path receives the overall-cheapest path for the query * *sorted_path receives the cheapest presorted path for the query, *				if any (NULL if there is no useful presorted path) * *num_groups receives the estimated number of groups, or 1 if query *				does not use grouping * * Note: the PlannerInfo node also includes a query_pathkeys field, which is * both an input and an output of query_planner().	The input value signals * query_planner that the indicated sort order is wanted in the final output * plan.  But this value has not yet been "canonicalized", since the needed * info does not get computed until we scan the qual clauses.  We canonicalize * it as soon as that task is done.  (The main reason query_pathkeys is a * PlannerInfo field and not a passed parameter is that the low-level routines * in indxpath.c need to see it.) * * Note: the PlannerInfo node also includes group_pathkeys and sort_pathkeys, * which like query_pathkeys need to be canonicalized once the info is * available. * * tuple_fraction is interpreted as follows: *	  0: expect all tuples to be retrieved (normal case) *	  0 < tuple_fraction < 1: expect the given fraction of tuples available *		from the plan to be retrieved *	  tuple_fraction >= 1: tuple_fraction is the absolute number of tuples *		expected to be retrieved (ie, a LIMIT specification) * Note that a nonzero tuple_fraction could come from outer context; it is * therefore not redundant with limit_tuples.  We use limit_tuples to determine * whether a bounded sort can be used at runtime. */voidquery_planner(PlannerInfo *root, List *tlist,			  double tuple_fraction, double limit_tuples,			  Path **cheapest_path, Path **sorted_path,			  double *num_groups){	Query	   *parse = root->parse;	List	   *joinlist;	RelOptInfo *final_rel;	Path	   *cheapestpath;	Path	   *sortedpath;	Index		rti;	ListCell   *lc;	double		total_pages;	/* Make tuple_fraction accessible to lower-level routines */	root->tuple_fraction = tuple_fraction;	*num_groups = 1;			/* default result */	/*	 * If the query has an empty join tree, then it's something easy like	 * "SELECT 2+2;" or "INSERT ... VALUES()".	Fall through quickly.	 */	if (parse->jointree->fromlist == NIL)	{		/* We need a trivial path result */		*cheapest_path = (Path *)			create_result_path((List *) parse->jointree->quals);		*sorted_path = NULL;		/*		 * We still are required to canonicalize any pathkeys, in case it's		 * something like "SELECT 2+2 ORDER BY 1".		 */		root->canon_pathkeys = NIL;		root->query_pathkeys = canonicalize_pathkeys(root,													 root->query_pathkeys);		root->group_pathkeys = canonicalize_pathkeys(root,													 root->group_pathkeys);		root->sort_pathkeys = canonicalize_pathkeys(root,													root->sort_pathkeys);		return;	}	/*	 * Init planner lists to empty, and set up the array to hold RelOptInfos	 * for "simple" rels.	 *	 * NOTE: in_info_list and append_rel_list were set up by subquery_planner,	 * do not touch here; eq_classes may contain data already, too.	 */	root->simple_rel_array_size = list_length(parse->rtable) + 1;	root->simple_rel_array = (RelOptInfo **)		palloc0(root->simple_rel_array_size * sizeof(RelOptInfo *));	root->join_rel_list = NIL;	root->join_rel_hash = NULL;	root->canon_pathkeys = NIL;	root->left_join_clauses = NIL;	root->right_join_clauses = NIL;	root->full_join_clauses = NIL;	root->oj_info_list = NIL;	root->initial_rels = NIL;	/*	 * Make a flattened version of the rangetable for faster access (this is	 * OK because the rangetable won't change any more).	 */	root->simple_rte_array = (RangeTblEntry **)		palloc0(root->simple_rel_array_size * sizeof(RangeTblEntry *));	rti = 1;	foreach(lc, parse->rtable)	{		RangeTblEntry *rte = (RangeTblEntry *) lfirst(lc);		root->simple_rte_array[rti++] = rte;	}	/*	 * Construct RelOptInfo nodes for all base relations in query, and	 * indirectly for all appendrel member relations ("other rels").  This	 * will give us a RelOptInfo for every "simple" (non-join) rel involved in	 * the query.	 *	 * Note: the reason we find the rels by searching the jointree and	 * appendrel list, rather than just scanning the rangetable, is that the	 * rangetable may contain RTEs for rels not actively part of the query,	 * for example views.  We don't want to make RelOptInfos for them.	 */	add_base_rels_to_query(root, (Node *) parse->jointree);	/*	 * We should now have size estimates for every actual table involved in	 * the query, so we can compute total_table_pages.	Note that appendrels	 * are not double-counted here, even though we don't bother to distinguish	 * RelOptInfos for appendrel parents, because the parents will still have	 * size zero.	 *	 * XXX if a table is self-joined, we will count it once per appearance,	 * which perhaps is the wrong thing ... but that's not completely clear,	 * and detecting self-joins here is difficult, so ignore it for now.	 */	total_pages = 0;	for (rti = 1; rti < root->simple_rel_array_size; rti++)	{		RelOptInfo *brel = root->simple_rel_array[rti];		if (brel == NULL)			continue;		Assert(brel->relid == rti);		/* sanity check on array */		total_pages += (double) brel->pages;	}	root->total_table_pages = total_pages;	/*	 * Examine the targetlist and qualifications, adding entries to baserel	 * targetlists for all referenced Vars.  Restrict and join clauses are	 * added to appropriate lists belonging to the mentioned relations.  We	 * also build EquivalenceClasses for provably equivalent expressions, and	 * form a target joinlist for make_one_rel() to work from.	 *	 * Note: all subplan nodes will have "flat" (var-only) tlists. This	 * implies that all expression evaluations are done at the root of the	 * plan tree. Once upon a time there was code to try to push expensive	 * function calls down to lower plan nodes, but that's dead code and has	 * been for a long time...	 */	build_base_rel_tlists(root, tlist);	joinlist = deconstruct_jointree(root);	/*	 * Vars mentioned in InClauseInfo items also have to be added to baserel	 * targetlists.  Nearly always, they'd have got there from the original	 * WHERE qual, but in corner cases maybe not.	 */	add_IN_vars_to_tlists(root);	/*	 * Reconsider any postponed outer-join quals now that we have built up	 * equivalence classes.  (This could result in further additions or	 * mergings of classes.)	 */	reconsider_outer_join_clauses(root);	/*	 * If we formed any equivalence classes, generate additional restriction	 * clauses as appropriate.	(Implied join clauses are formed on-the-fly	 * later.)	 */	generate_base_implied_equalities(root);	/*	 * We have completed merging equivalence sets, so it's now possible to	 * convert the requested query_pathkeys to canonical form.	Also	 * canonicalize the groupClause and sortClause pathkeys for use later.	 */	root->query_pathkeys = canonicalize_pathkeys(root, root->query_pathkeys);	root->group_pathkeys = canonicalize_pathkeys(root, root->group_pathkeys);	root->sort_pathkeys = canonicalize_pathkeys(root, root->sort_pathkeys);	/*	 * Ready to do the primary planning.	 */	final_rel = make_one_rel(root, joinlist);	if (!final_rel || !final_rel->cheapest_total_path)		elog(ERROR, "failed to construct the join relation");	/*	 * If there's grouping going on, estimate the number of result groups. We	 * couldn't do this any earlier because it depends on relation size	 * estimates that were set up above.	 *	 * Then convert tuple_fraction to fractional form if it is absolute, and	 * adjust it based on the knowledge that grouping_planner will be doing	 * grouping or aggregation work with our result.	 *	 * This introduces some undesirable coupling between this code and	 * grouping_planner, but the alternatives seem even uglier; we couldn't	 * pass back completed paths without making these decisions here.	 */	if (parse->groupClause)	{		List	   *groupExprs;		groupExprs = get_sortgrouplist_exprs(parse->groupClause,											 parse->targetList);		*num_groups = estimate_num_groups(root,										  groupExprs,										  final_rel->rows);		/*		 * In GROUP BY mode, an absolute LIMIT is relative to the number of		 * groups not the number of tuples.  If the caller gave us a fraction,		 * keep it as-is.  (In both cases, we are effectively assuming that		 * all the groups are about the same size.)		 */		if (tuple_fraction >= 1.0)			tuple_fraction /= *num_groups;		/*		 * If both GROUP BY and ORDER BY are specified, we will need two		 * levels of sort --- and, therefore, certainly need to read all the		 * tuples --- unless ORDER BY is a subset of GROUP BY.		 */		if (parse->groupClause && parse->sortClause &&			!pathkeys_contained_in(root->sort_pathkeys, root->group_pathkeys))			tuple_fraction = 0.0;	}	else if (parse->hasAggs || root->hasHavingQual)	{		/*		 * Ungrouped aggregate will certainly want to read all the tuples, and		 * it will deliver a single result row (so leave *num_groups 1).		 */		tuple_fraction = 0.0;	}	else if (parse->distinctClause)	{		/*		 * Since there was no grouping or aggregation, it's reasonable to		 * assume the UNIQUE filter has effects comparable to GROUP BY. Return		 * the estimated number of output rows for use by caller. (If DISTINCT		 * is used with grouping, we ignore its effects for rowcount		 * estimation purposes; this amounts to assuming the grouped rows are		 * distinct already.)		 */		List	   *distinctExprs;		distinctExprs = get_sortgrouplist_exprs(parse->distinctClause,												parse->targetList);		*num_groups = estimate_num_groups(root,										  distinctExprs,										  final_rel->rows);		/*		 * Adjust tuple_fraction the same way as for GROUP BY, too.		 */		if (tuple_fraction >= 1.0)			tuple_fraction /= *num_groups;	}	else	{		/*		 * Plain non-grouped, non-aggregated query: an absolute tuple fraction		 * can be divided by the number of tuples.		 */		if (tuple_fraction >= 1.0)			tuple_fraction /= final_rel->rows;	}	/*	 * Pick out the cheapest-total path and the cheapest presorted path for	 * the requested pathkeys (if there is one).  We should take the tuple	 * fraction into account when selecting the cheapest presorted path, but	 * not when selecting the cheapest-total path, since if we have to sort	 * then we'll have to fetch all the tuples.  (But there's a special case:	 * if query_pathkeys is NIL, meaning order doesn't matter, then the	 * "cheapest presorted" path will be the cheapest overall for the tuple	 * fraction.)	 *	 * The cheapest-total path is also the one to use if grouping_planner	 * decides to use hashed aggregation, so we return it separately even if	 * this routine thinks the presorted path is the winner.	 */	cheapestpath = final_rel->cheapest_total_path;	sortedpath =		get_cheapest_fractional_path_for_pathkeys(final_rel->pathlist,												  root->query_pathkeys,												  tuple_fraction);	/* Don't return same path in both guises; just wastes effort */	if (sortedpath == cheapestpath)		sortedpath = NULL;	/*	 * Forget about the presorted path if it would be cheaper to sort the	 * cheapest-total path.  Here we need consider only the behavior at the	 * tuple fraction point.	 */	if (sortedpath)	{		Path		sort_path;	/* dummy for result of cost_sort */		if (root->query_pathkeys == NIL ||			pathkeys_contained_in(root->query_pathkeys,								  cheapestpath->pathkeys))		{			/* No sort needed for cheapest path */			sort_path.startup_cost = cheapestpath->startup_cost;			sort_path.total_cost = cheapestpath->total_cost;		}		else		{			/* Figure cost for sorting */			cost_sort(&sort_path, root, root->query_pathkeys,					  cheapestpath->total_cost,					  final_rel->rows, final_rel->width,					  limit_tuples);		}		if (compare_fractional_path_costs(sortedpath, &sort_path,										  tuple_fraction) > 0)		{			/* Presorted path is a loser */			sortedpath = NULL;		}	}	*cheapest_path = cheapestpath;	*sorted_path = sortedpath;}

⌨️ 快捷键说明

复制代码 Ctrl + C
搜索代码 Ctrl + F
全屏模式 F11
切换主题 Ctrl + Shift + D
显示快捷键 ?
增大字号 Ctrl + =
减小字号 Ctrl + -