Commit f338dd75 authored by Tom Lane's avatar Tom Lane

Refactor join_is_removable() to separate out distinctness-proving logic.

Extracted from pending unique-join patch, since this is a rather large
delta but it's simply moving code out into separately-accessible
subroutines.

I (tgl) did choose to add a bit more logic to rel_supports_distinctness,
so that it verifies that there's at least one potentially usable unique
index rather than just checking indexlist != NIL.  Otherwise there's
no functional change here.

David Rowley
parent a7ace3b6
......@@ -37,6 +37,9 @@ static bool join_is_removable(PlannerInfo *root, SpecialJoinInfo *sjinfo);
static void remove_rel_from_query(PlannerInfo *root, int relid,
Relids joinrelids);
static List *remove_rel_from_joinlist(List *joinlist, int relid, int *nremoved);
static bool rel_supports_distinctness(PlannerInfo *root, RelOptInfo *rel);
static bool rel_is_distinct_for(PlannerInfo *root, RelOptInfo *rel,
List *clause_list);
static Oid distinct_col_search(int colno, List *colnos, List *opids);
......@@ -152,7 +155,6 @@ join_is_removable(PlannerInfo *root, SpecialJoinInfo *sjinfo)
{
int innerrelid;
RelOptInfo *innerrel;
Query *subquery = NULL;
Relids joinrelids;
List *clause_list = NIL;
ListCell *l;
......@@ -171,38 +173,13 @@ join_is_removable(PlannerInfo *root, SpecialJoinInfo *sjinfo)
innerrel = find_base_rel(root, innerrelid);
if (innerrel->reloptkind != RELOPT_BASEREL)
return false;
/*
* Before we go to the effort of checking whether any innerrel variables
* are needed above the join, make a quick check to eliminate cases in
* which we will surely be unable to prove uniqueness of the innerrel.
*/
if (innerrel->rtekind == RTE_RELATION)
{
/*
* For a plain-relation innerrel, we only know how to prove uniqueness
* by reference to unique indexes. If there are no indexes then
* there's certainly no unique indexes so there's no point in going
* further.
*/
if (innerrel->indexlist == NIL)
return false;
}
else if (innerrel->rtekind == RTE_SUBQUERY)
{
subquery = root->simple_rte_array[innerrelid]->subquery;
/*
* If the subquery has no qualities that support distinctness proofs
* then there's no point in going further.
*/
if (!query_supports_distinctness(subquery))
return false;
}
else
return false; /* unsupported rtekind */
if (!rel_supports_distinctness(root, innerrel))
return false;
/* Compute the relid set for the join we are considering */
joinrelids = bms_union(sjinfo->min_lefthand, sjinfo->min_righthand);
......@@ -291,7 +268,8 @@ join_is_removable(PlannerInfo *root, SpecialJoinInfo *sjinfo)
continue; /* not mergejoinable */
/*
* Check if clause has the form "outer op inner" or "inner op outer".
* Check if clause has the form "outer op inner" or "inner op outer",
* and if so mark which side is inner.
*/
if (!clause_sides_match_join(restrictinfo, sjinfo->min_lefthand,
innerrel->relids))
......@@ -302,65 +280,11 @@ join_is_removable(PlannerInfo *root, SpecialJoinInfo *sjinfo)
}
/*
* relation_has_unique_index_for automatically adds any usable restriction
* clauses for the innerrel, so we needn't do that here. (XXX we are not
* considering restriction clauses for subqueries; is that worth doing?)
* Now that we have the relevant equality join clauses, try to prove the
* innerrel distinct.
*/
if (innerrel->rtekind == RTE_RELATION)
{
/* Now examine the indexes to see if we have a matching unique index */
if (relation_has_unique_index_for(root, innerrel, clause_list, NIL, NIL))
return true;
}
else /* innerrel->rtekind == RTE_SUBQUERY */
{
List *colnos = NIL;
List *opids = NIL;
/*
* Build the argument lists for query_is_distinct_for: a list of
* output column numbers that the query needs to be distinct over, and
* a list of equality operators that the output columns need to be
* distinct according to.
*/
foreach(l, clause_list)
{
RestrictInfo *rinfo = (RestrictInfo *) lfirst(l);
Oid op;
Var *var;
/*
* Get the equality operator we need uniqueness according to.
* (This might be a cross-type operator and thus not exactly the
* same operator the subquery would consider; that's all right
* since query_is_distinct_for can resolve such cases.) The
* mergejoinability test above should have selected only OpExprs.
*/
Assert(IsA(rinfo->clause, OpExpr));
op = ((OpExpr *) rinfo->clause)->opno;
/* clause_sides_match_join identified the inner side for us */
if (rinfo->outer_is_left)
var = (Var *) get_rightop(rinfo->clause);
else
var = (Var *) get_leftop(rinfo->clause);
/*
* If inner side isn't a Var referencing a subquery output column,
* this clause doesn't help us.
*/
if (!var || !IsA(var, Var) ||
var->varno != innerrelid || var->varlevelsup != 0)
continue;
colnos = lappend_int(colnos, var->varattno);
opids = lappend_oid(opids, op);
}
if (query_is_distinct_for(subquery, colnos, opids))
return true;
}
if (rel_is_distinct_for(root, innerrel, clause_list))
return true;
/*
* Some day it would be nice to check for other methods of establishing
......@@ -561,6 +485,152 @@ remove_rel_from_joinlist(List *joinlist, int relid, int *nremoved)
}
/*
* rel_supports_distinctness
* Could the relation possibly be proven distinct on some set of columns?
*
* This is effectively a pre-checking function for rel_is_distinct_for().
* It must return TRUE if rel_is_distinct_for() could possibly return TRUE
* with this rel, but it should not expend a lot of cycles. The idea is
* that callers can avoid doing possibly-expensive processing to compute
* rel_is_distinct_for()'s argument lists if the call could not possibly
* succeed.
*/
static bool
rel_supports_distinctness(PlannerInfo *root, RelOptInfo *rel)
{
/* We only know about baserels ... */
if (rel->reloptkind != RELOPT_BASEREL)
return false;
if (rel->rtekind == RTE_RELATION)
{
/*
* For a plain relation, we only know how to prove uniqueness by
* reference to unique indexes. Make sure there's at least one
* suitable unique index. It must be immediately enforced, and if
* it's a partial index, it must match the query. (Keep these
* conditions in sync with relation_has_unique_index_for!)
*/
ListCell *lc;
foreach(lc, rel->indexlist)
{
IndexOptInfo *ind = (IndexOptInfo *) lfirst(lc);
if (ind->unique && ind->immediate &&
(ind->indpred == NIL || ind->predOK))
return true;
}
}
else if (rel->rtekind == RTE_SUBQUERY)
{
Query *subquery = root->simple_rte_array[rel->relid]->subquery;
/* Check if the subquery has any qualities that support distinctness */
if (query_supports_distinctness(subquery))
return true;
}
/* We have no proof rules for any other rtekinds. */
return false;
}
/*
* rel_is_distinct_for
* Does the relation return only distinct rows according to clause_list?
*
* clause_list is a list of join restriction clauses involving this rel and
* some other one. Return true if no two rows emitted by this rel could
* possibly join to the same row of the other rel.
*
* The caller must have already determined that each condition is a
* mergejoinable equality with an expression in this relation on one side, and
* an expression not involving this relation on the other. The transient
* outer_is_left flag is used to identify which side references this relation:
* left side if outer_is_left is false, right side if it is true.
*
* Note that the passed-in clause_list may be destructively modified! This
* is OK for current uses, because the clause_list is built by the caller for
* the sole purpose of passing to this function.
*/
static bool
rel_is_distinct_for(PlannerInfo *root, RelOptInfo *rel, List *clause_list)
{
/*
* We could skip a couple of tests here if we assume all callers checked
* rel_supports_distinctness first, but it doesn't seem worth taking any
* risk for.
*/
if (rel->reloptkind != RELOPT_BASEREL)
return false;
if (rel->rtekind == RTE_RELATION)
{
/*
* Examine the indexes to see if we have a matching unique index.
* relation_has_unique_index_for automatically adds any usable
* restriction clauses for the rel, so we needn't do that here.
*/
if (relation_has_unique_index_for(root, rel, clause_list, NIL, NIL))
return true;
}
else if (rel->rtekind == RTE_SUBQUERY)
{
Index relid = rel->relid;
Query *subquery = root->simple_rte_array[relid]->subquery;
List *colnos = NIL;
List *opids = NIL;
ListCell *l;
/*
* Build the argument lists for query_is_distinct_for: a list of
* output column numbers that the query needs to be distinct over, and
* a list of equality operators that the output columns need to be
* distinct according to.
*
* (XXX we are not considering restriction clauses attached to the
* subquery; is that worth doing?)
*/
foreach(l, clause_list)
{
RestrictInfo *rinfo = (RestrictInfo *) lfirst(l);
Oid op;
Var *var;
/*
* Get the equality operator we need uniqueness according to.
* (This might be a cross-type operator and thus not exactly the
* same operator the subquery would consider; that's all right
* since query_is_distinct_for can resolve such cases.) The
* caller's mergejoinability test should have selected only
* OpExprs.
*/
Assert(IsA(rinfo->clause, OpExpr));
op = ((OpExpr *) rinfo->clause)->opno;
/* caller identified the inner side for us */
if (rinfo->outer_is_left)
var = (Var *) get_rightop(rinfo->clause);
else
var = (Var *) get_leftop(rinfo->clause);
/*
* If inner side isn't a Var referencing a subquery output column,
* this clause doesn't help us.
*/
if (!var || !IsA(var, Var) ||
var->varno != relid || var->varlevelsup != 0)
continue;
colnos = lappend_int(colnos, var->varattno);
opids = lappend_oid(opids, op);
}
if (query_is_distinct_for(subquery, colnos, opids))
return true;
}
return false;
}
/*
* query_supports_distinctness - could the query possibly be proven distinct
* on some set of output columns?
......
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