/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * giststrat.c-- * strategy map data for GiSTs. * * Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * * IDENTIFICATION * /usr/local/devel/pglite/cvs/src/backend/access/gist/giststrat.c,v 1.4 1995/06/14 00:10:05 jolly Exp * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #include "postgres.h" #include "utils/rel.h" #include "access/gist.h" #include "access/istrat.h" /* * Note: negate, commute, and negatecommute all assume that operators are * ordered as follows in the strategy map: * * contains, contained-by * * The negate, commute, and negatecommute arrays are used by the planner * to plan indexed scans over data that appears in the qualificiation in * a boolean negation, or whose operands appear in the wrong order. For * example, if the operator "<%" means "contains", and the user says * * where not rel.box <% "(10,10,20,20)"::box * * the planner can plan an index scan by noting that GiST indices have * an operator in their operator class for negating <%. * * Similarly, if the user says something like * * where "(10,10,20,20)"::box <% rel.box * * the planner can see that the GiST index on rel.box has an operator in * its opclass for commuting <%, and plan the scan using that operator. * This added complexity in the access methods makes the planner a lot easier * to write. */ /* if a op b, what operator tells us if (not a op b)? */ static StrategyNumber GISTNegate[GISTNStrategies] = { InvalidStrategy, InvalidStrategy, InvalidStrategy }; /* if a op_1 b, what is the operator op_2 such that b op_2 a? */ static StrategyNumber GISTCommute[GISTNStrategies] = { InvalidStrategy, InvalidStrategy, InvalidStrategy }; /* if a op_1 b, what is the operator op_2 such that (b !op_2 a)? */ static StrategyNumber GISTNegateCommute[GISTNStrategies] = { InvalidStrategy, InvalidStrategy, InvalidStrategy }; /* * GiSTs do not currently support TermData (see rtree/rtstrat.c for * discussion of * TermData) -- such logic must be encoded in the user's Consistent function. */ /* * If you were sufficiently attentive to detail, you would go through * the ExpressionData pain above for every one of the strategies * we defined. I am not. Now we declare the StrategyEvaluationData * structure that gets shipped around to help the planner and the access * method decide what sort of scan it should do, based on (a) what the * user asked for, (b) what operators are defined for a particular opclass, * and (c) the reams of information we supplied above. * * The idea of all of this initialized data is to make life easier on the * user when he defines a new operator class to use this access method. * By filling in all the data, we let him get away with leaving holes in his * operator class, and still let him use the index. The added complexity * in the access methods just isn't worth the trouble, though. */ static StrategyEvaluationData GISTEvaluationData = { GISTNStrategies, /* # of strategies */ (StrategyTransformMap) GISTNegate, /* how to do (not qual) */ (StrategyTransformMap) GISTCommute, /* how to swap operands */ (StrategyTransformMap) GISTNegateCommute, /* how to do both */ { NULL } }; StrategyNumber RelationGetGISTStrategy(Relation r, AttrNumber attnum, RegProcedure proc) { return (RelationGetStrategy(r, attnum, &GISTEvaluationData, proc)); } bool RelationInvokeGISTStrategy(Relation r, AttrNumber attnum, StrategyNumber s, Datum left, Datum right) { return (RelationInvokeStrategy(r, &GISTEvaluationData, attnum, s, left, right)); }