| /*------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| * | |
| * primnodes.h | |
| * Definitions for "primitive" node types, those that are used in more | |
| * than one of the parse/plan/execute stages of the query pipeline. | |
| * Currently, these are mostly nodes for executable expressions | |
| * and join trees. | |
| * | |
| * | |
| * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2024, PostgreSQL Global Development Group | |
| * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California | |
| * | |
| * src/include/nodes/primnodes.h | |
| * | |
| *------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum OverridingKind | |
| { | |
| OVERRIDING_NOT_SET = 0, | |
| OVERRIDING_USER_VALUE, | |
| OVERRIDING_SYSTEM_VALUE, | |
| } OverridingKind; | |
| /* ---------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| * node definitions | |
| * ---------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| */ | |
| /* | |
| * Alias - | |
| * specifies an alias for a range variable; the alias might also | |
| * specify renaming of columns within the table. | |
| * | |
| * Note: colnames is a list of String nodes. In Alias structs | |
| * associated with RTEs, there may be entries corresponding to dropped | |
| * columns; these are normally empty strings (""). See parsenodes.h for info. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct Alias | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| char *aliasname; /* aliased rel name (never qualified) */ | |
| List *colnames; /* optional list of column aliases */ | |
| } Alias; | |
| /* What to do at commit time for temporary relations */ | |
| typedef enum OnCommitAction | |
| { | |
| ONCOMMIT_NOOP, /* No ON COMMIT clause (do nothing) */ | |
| ONCOMMIT_PRESERVE_ROWS, /* ON COMMIT PRESERVE ROWS (do nothing) */ | |
| ONCOMMIT_DELETE_ROWS, /* ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS */ | |
| ONCOMMIT_DROP, /* ON COMMIT DROP */ | |
| } OnCommitAction; | |
| /* | |
| * RangeVar - range variable, used in FROM clauses | |
| * | |
| * Also used to represent table names in utility statements; there, the alias | |
| * field is not used, and inh tells whether to apply the operation | |
| * recursively to child tables. In some contexts it is also useful to carry | |
| * a TEMP table indication here. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct RangeVar | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| /* the catalog (database) name, or NULL */ | |
| char *catalogname; | |
| /* the schema name, or NULL */ | |
| char *schemaname; | |
| /* the relation/sequence name */ | |
| char *relname; | |
| /* expand rel by inheritance? recursively act on children? */ | |
| bool inh; | |
| /* see RELPERSISTENCE_* in pg_class.h */ | |
| char relpersistence; | |
| /* table alias & optional column aliases */ | |
| Alias *alias; | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } RangeVar; | |
| typedef enum TableFuncType | |
| { | |
| TFT_XMLTABLE, | |
| TFT_JSON_TABLE, | |
| } TableFuncType; | |
| /* | |
| * TableFunc - node for a table function, such as XMLTABLE and JSON_TABLE. | |
| * | |
| * Entries in the ns_names list are either String nodes containing | |
| * literal namespace names, or NULL pointers to represent DEFAULT. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct TableFunc | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| /* XMLTABLE or JSON_TABLE */ | |
| TableFuncType functype; | |
| /* list of namespace URI expressions */ | |
| List *ns_uris pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* list of namespace names or NULL */ | |
| List *ns_names pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* input document expression */ | |
| Node *docexpr; | |
| /* row filter expression */ | |
| Node *rowexpr; | |
| /* column names (list of String) */ | |
| List *colnames pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID list of column type OIDs */ | |
| List *coltypes pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* integer list of column typmods */ | |
| List *coltypmods pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID list of column collation OIDs */ | |
| List *colcollations pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* list of column filter expressions */ | |
| List *colexprs; | |
| /* list of column default expressions */ | |
| List *coldefexprs pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* JSON_TABLE: list of column value expressions */ | |
| List *colvalexprs pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* JSON_TABLE: list of PASSING argument expressions */ | |
| List *passingvalexprs pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* nullability flag for each output column */ | |
| Bitmapset *notnulls pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* JSON_TABLE plan */ | |
| Node *plan pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* counts from 0; -1 if none specified */ | |
| int ordinalitycol pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } TableFunc; | |
| /* | |
| * IntoClause - target information for SELECT INTO, CREATE TABLE AS, and | |
| * CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW | |
| * | |
| * For CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW, viewQuery is the parsed-but-not-rewritten | |
| * SELECT Query for the view; otherwise it's NULL. This is irrelevant in | |
| * the query jumbling as CreateTableAsStmt already includes a reference to | |
| * its own Query, so ignore it. (Although it's actually Query*, we declare | |
| * it as Node* to avoid a forward reference.) | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct IntoClause | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| RangeVar *rel; /* target relation name */ | |
| List *colNames; /* column names to assign, or NIL */ | |
| char *accessMethod; /* table access method */ | |
| List *options; /* options from WITH clause */ | |
| OnCommitAction onCommit; /* what do we do at COMMIT? */ | |
| char *tableSpaceName; /* table space to use, or NULL */ | |
| /* materialized view's SELECT query */ | |
| Node *viewQuery pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| bool skipData; /* true for WITH NO DATA */ | |
| } IntoClause; | |
| /* ---------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| * node types for executable expressions | |
| * ---------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| */ | |
| /* | |
| * Expr - generic superclass for executable-expression nodes | |
| * | |
| * All node types that are used in executable expression trees should derive | |
| * from Expr (that is, have Expr as their first field). Since Expr only | |
| * contains NodeTag, this is a formality, but it is an easy form of | |
| * documentation. See also the ExprState node types in execnodes.h. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct Expr | |
| { | |
| pg_node_attr(abstract) | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| } Expr; | |
| /* | |
| * Var - expression node representing a variable (ie, a table column) | |
| * | |
| * In the parser and planner, varno and varattno identify the semantic | |
| * referent, which is a base-relation column unless the reference is to a join | |
| * USING column that isn't semantically equivalent to either join input column | |
| * (because it is a FULL join or the input column requires a type coercion). | |
| * In those cases varno and varattno refer to the JOIN RTE. (Early in the | |
| * planner, we replace such join references by the implied expression; but up | |
| * till then we want join reference Vars to keep their original identity for | |
| * query-printing purposes.) | |
| * | |
| * At the end of planning, Var nodes appearing in upper-level plan nodes are | |
| * reassigned to point to the outputs of their subplans; for example, in a | |
| * join node varno becomes INNER_VAR or OUTER_VAR and varattno becomes the | |
| * index of the proper element of that subplan's target list. Similarly, | |
| * INDEX_VAR is used to identify Vars that reference an index column rather | |
| * than a heap column. (In ForeignScan and CustomScan plan nodes, INDEX_VAR | |
| * is abused to signify references to columns of a custom scan tuple type.) | |
| * | |
| * ROWID_VAR is used in the planner to identify nonce variables that carry | |
| * row identity information during UPDATE/DELETE/MERGE. This value should | |
| * never be seen outside the planner. | |
| * | |
| * varnullingrels is the set of RT indexes of outer joins that can force | |
| * the Var's value to null (at the point where it appears in the query). | |
| * See optimizer/README for discussion of that. | |
| * | |
| * varlevelsup is greater than zero in Vars that represent outer references. | |
| * Note that it affects the meaning of all of varno, varnullingrels, and | |
| * varnosyn, all of which refer to the range table of that query level. | |
| * | |
| * In the parser, varnosyn and varattnosyn are either identical to | |
| * varno/varattno, or they specify the column's position in an aliased JOIN | |
| * RTE that hides the semantic referent RTE's refname. This is a syntactic | |
| * identifier as opposed to the semantic identifier; it tells ruleutils.c | |
| * how to print the Var properly. varnosyn/varattnosyn retain their values | |
| * throughout planning and execution, so they are particularly helpful to | |
| * identify Vars when debugging. Note, however, that a Var that is generated | |
| * in the planner and doesn't correspond to any simple relation column may | |
| * have varnosyn = varattnosyn = 0. | |
| */ | |
| /* Symbols for the indexes of the special RTE entries in rules */ | |
| typedef struct Var | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* | |
| * index of this var's relation in the range table, or | |
| * INNER_VAR/OUTER_VAR/etc | |
| */ | |
| int varno; | |
| /* | |
| * attribute number of this var, or zero for all attrs ("whole-row Var") | |
| */ | |
| AttrNumber varattno; | |
| /* pg_type OID for the type of this var */ | |
| Oid vartype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* pg_attribute typmod value */ | |
| int32 vartypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid varcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* | |
| * RT indexes of outer joins that can replace the Var's value with null. | |
| * We can omit varnullingrels in the query jumble, because it's fully | |
| * determined by varno/varlevelsup plus the Var's query location. | |
| */ | |
| Bitmapset *varnullingrels pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* | |
| * for subquery variables referencing outer relations; 0 in a normal var, | |
| * >0 means N levels up | |
| */ | |
| Index varlevelsup; | |
| /* | |
| * varnosyn/varattnosyn are ignored for equality, because Vars with | |
| * different syntactic identifiers are semantically the same as long as | |
| * their varno/varattno match. | |
| */ | |
| /* syntactic relation index (0 if unknown) */ | |
| Index varnosyn pg_node_attr(equal_ignore, query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* syntactic attribute number */ | |
| AttrNumber varattnosyn pg_node_attr(equal_ignore, query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } Var; | |
| /* | |
| * Const | |
| * | |
| * Note: for varlena data types, we make a rule that a Const node's value | |
| * must be in non-extended form (4-byte header, no compression or external | |
| * references). This ensures that the Const node is self-contained and makes | |
| * it more likely that equal() will see logically identical values as equal. | |
| * | |
| * Only the constant type OID is relevant for the query jumbling. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct Const | |
| { | |
| pg_node_attr(custom_copy_equal, custom_read_write) | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* pg_type OID of the constant's datatype */ | |
| Oid consttype; | |
| /* typmod value, if any */ | |
| int32 consttypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid constcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* typlen of the constant's datatype */ | |
| int constlen pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* the constant's value */ | |
| Datum constvalue pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* whether the constant is null (if true, constvalue is undefined) */ | |
| bool constisnull pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* | |
| * Whether this datatype is passed by value. If true, then all the | |
| * information is stored in the Datum. If false, then the Datum contains | |
| * a pointer to the information. | |
| */ | |
| bool constbyval pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* | |
| * token location, or -1 if unknown. All constants are tracked as | |
| * locations in query jumbling, to be marked as parameters. | |
| */ | |
| ParseLoc location pg_node_attr(query_jumble_location); | |
| } Const; | |
| /* | |
| * Param | |
| * | |
| * paramkind specifies the kind of parameter. The possible values | |
| * for this field are: | |
| * | |
| * PARAM_EXTERN: The parameter value is supplied from outside the plan. | |
| * Such parameters are numbered from 1 to n. | |
| * | |
| * PARAM_EXEC: The parameter is an internal executor parameter, used | |
| * for passing values into and out of sub-queries or from | |
| * nestloop joins to their inner scans. | |
| * For historical reasons, such parameters are numbered from 0. | |
| * These numbers are independent of PARAM_EXTERN numbers. | |
| * | |
| * PARAM_SUBLINK: The parameter represents an output column of a SubLink | |
| * node's sub-select. The column number is contained in the | |
| * `paramid' field. (This type of Param is converted to | |
| * PARAM_EXEC during planning.) | |
| * | |
| * PARAM_MULTIEXPR: Like PARAM_SUBLINK, the parameter represents an | |
| * output column of a SubLink node's sub-select, but here, the | |
| * SubLink is always a MULTIEXPR SubLink. The high-order 16 bits | |
| * of the `paramid' field contain the SubLink's subLinkId, and | |
| * the low-order 16 bits contain the column number. (This type | |
| * of Param is also converted to PARAM_EXEC during planning.) | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum ParamKind | |
| { | |
| PARAM_EXTERN, | |
| PARAM_EXEC, | |
| PARAM_SUBLINK, | |
| PARAM_MULTIEXPR, | |
| } ParamKind; | |
| typedef struct Param | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| ParamKind paramkind; /* kind of parameter. See above */ | |
| int paramid; /* numeric ID for parameter */ | |
| Oid paramtype; /* pg_type OID of parameter's datatype */ | |
| /* typmod value, if known */ | |
| int32 paramtypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid paramcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } Param; | |
| /* | |
| * Aggref | |
| * | |
| * The aggregate's args list is a targetlist, ie, a list of TargetEntry nodes. | |
| * | |
| * For a normal (non-ordered-set) aggregate, the non-resjunk TargetEntries | |
| * represent the aggregate's regular arguments (if any) and resjunk TLEs can | |
| * be added at the end to represent ORDER BY expressions that are not also | |
| * arguments. As in a top-level Query, the TLEs can be marked with | |
| * ressortgroupref indexes to let them be referenced by SortGroupClause | |
| * entries in the aggorder and/or aggdistinct lists. This represents ORDER BY | |
| * and DISTINCT operations to be applied to the aggregate input rows before | |
| * they are passed to the transition function. The grammar only allows a | |
| * simple "DISTINCT" specifier for the arguments, but we use the full | |
| * query-level representation to allow more code sharing. | |
| * | |
| * For an ordered-set aggregate, the args list represents the WITHIN GROUP | |
| * (aggregated) arguments, all of which will be listed in the aggorder list. | |
| * DISTINCT is not supported in this case, so aggdistinct will be NIL. | |
| * The direct arguments appear in aggdirectargs (as a list of plain | |
| * expressions, not TargetEntry nodes). | |
| * | |
| * aggtranstype is the data type of the state transition values for this | |
| * aggregate (resolved to an actual type, if agg's transtype is polymorphic). | |
| * This is determined during planning and is InvalidOid before that. | |
| * | |
| * aggargtypes is an OID list of the data types of the direct and regular | |
| * arguments. Normally it's redundant with the aggdirectargs and args lists, | |
| * but in a combining aggregate, it's not because the args list has been | |
| * replaced with a single argument representing the partial-aggregate | |
| * transition values. | |
| * | |
| * aggpresorted is set by the query planner for ORDER BY and DISTINCT | |
| * aggregates where the chosen plan provides presorted input for this | |
| * aggregate during execution. | |
| * | |
| * aggsplit indicates the expected partial-aggregation mode for the Aggref's | |
| * parent plan node. It's always set to AGGSPLIT_SIMPLE in the parser, but | |
| * the planner might change it to something else. We use this mainly as | |
| * a crosscheck that the Aggrefs match the plan; but note that when aggsplit | |
| * indicates a non-final mode, aggtype reflects the transition data type | |
| * not the SQL-level output type of the aggregate. | |
| * | |
| * aggno and aggtransno are -1 in the parse stage, and are set in planning. | |
| * Aggregates with the same 'aggno' represent the same aggregate expression, | |
| * and can share the result. Aggregates with same 'transno' but different | |
| * 'aggno' can share the same transition state, only the final function needs | |
| * to be called separately. | |
| * | |
| * Information related to collations, transition types and internal states | |
| * are irrelevant for the query jumbling. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct Aggref | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* pg_proc Oid of the aggregate */ | |
| Oid aggfnoid; | |
| /* type Oid of result of the aggregate */ | |
| Oid aggtype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation of result */ | |
| Oid aggcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation that function should use */ | |
| Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* | |
| * type Oid of aggregate's transition value; ignored for equal since it | |
| * might not be set yet | |
| */ | |
| Oid aggtranstype pg_node_attr(equal_ignore, query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* type Oids of direct and aggregated args */ | |
| List *aggargtypes pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* direct arguments, if an ordered-set agg */ | |
| List *aggdirectargs; | |
| /* aggregated arguments and sort expressions */ | |
| List *args; | |
| /* ORDER BY (list of SortGroupClause) */ | |
| List *aggorder; | |
| /* DISTINCT (list of SortGroupClause) */ | |
| List *aggdistinct; | |
| /* FILTER expression, if any */ | |
| Expr *aggfilter; | |
| /* true if argument list was really '*' */ | |
| bool aggstar pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* | |
| * true if variadic arguments have been combined into an array last | |
| * argument | |
| */ | |
| bool aggvariadic pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* aggregate kind (see pg_aggregate.h) */ | |
| char aggkind pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* aggregate input already sorted */ | |
| bool aggpresorted pg_node_attr(equal_ignore, query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* > 0 if agg belongs to outer query */ | |
| Index agglevelsup pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* expected agg-splitting mode of parent Agg */ | |
| AggSplit aggsplit pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* unique ID within the Agg node */ | |
| int aggno pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* unique ID of transition state in the Agg */ | |
| int aggtransno pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } Aggref; | |
| /* | |
| * GroupingFunc | |
| * | |
| * A GroupingFunc is a GROUPING(...) expression, which behaves in many ways | |
| * like an aggregate function (e.g. it "belongs" to a specific query level, | |
| * which might not be the one immediately containing it), but also differs in | |
| * an important respect: it never evaluates its arguments, they merely | |
| * designate expressions from the GROUP BY clause of the query level to which | |
| * it belongs. | |
| * | |
| * The spec defines the evaluation of GROUPING() purely by syntactic | |
| * replacement, but we make it a real expression for optimization purposes so | |
| * that one Agg node can handle multiple grouping sets at once. Evaluating the | |
| * result only needs the column positions to check against the grouping set | |
| * being projected. However, for EXPLAIN to produce meaningful output, we have | |
| * to keep the original expressions around, since expression deparse does not | |
| * give us any feasible way to get at the GROUP BY clause. | |
| * | |
| * Also, we treat two GroupingFunc nodes as equal if they have equal arguments | |
| * lists and agglevelsup, without comparing the refs and cols annotations. | |
| * | |
| * In raw parse output we have only the args list; parse analysis fills in the | |
| * refs list, and the planner fills in the cols list. | |
| * | |
| * All the fields used as information for an internal state are irrelevant | |
| * for the query jumbling. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct GroupingFunc | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* arguments, not evaluated but kept for benefit of EXPLAIN etc. */ | |
| List *args pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* ressortgrouprefs of arguments */ | |
| List *refs pg_node_attr(equal_ignore); | |
| /* actual column positions set by planner */ | |
| List *cols pg_node_attr(equal_ignore, query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* same as Aggref.agglevelsup */ | |
| Index agglevelsup; | |
| /* token location */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } GroupingFunc; | |
| /* | |
| * WindowFunc | |
| * | |
| * Collation information is irrelevant for the query jumbling, as is the | |
| * internal state information of the node like "winstar" and "winagg". | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct WindowFunc | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* pg_proc Oid of the function */ | |
| Oid winfnoid; | |
| /* type Oid of result of the window function */ | |
| Oid wintype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation of result */ | |
| Oid wincollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation that function should use */ | |
| Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* arguments to the window function */ | |
| List *args; | |
| /* FILTER expression, if any */ | |
| Expr *aggfilter; | |
| /* List of WindowFuncRunConditions to help short-circuit execution */ | |
| List *runCondition pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* index of associated WindowClause */ | |
| Index winref; | |
| /* true if argument list was really '*' */ | |
| bool winstar pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* is function a simple aggregate? */ | |
| bool winagg pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } WindowFunc; | |
| /* | |
| * WindowFuncRunCondition | |
| * | |
| * Represents intermediate OpExprs which will be used by WindowAgg to | |
| * short-circuit execution. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct WindowFuncRunCondition | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* PG_OPERATOR OID of the operator */ | |
| Oid opno; | |
| /* OID of collation that operator should use */ | |
| Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* | |
| * true of WindowFunc belongs on the left of the resulting OpExpr or false | |
| * if the WindowFunc is on the right. | |
| */ | |
| bool wfunc_left; | |
| /* | |
| * The Expr being compared to the WindowFunc to use in the OpExpr in the | |
| * WindowAgg's runCondition | |
| */ | |
| Expr *arg; | |
| } WindowFuncRunCondition; | |
| /* | |
| * MergeSupportFunc | |
| * | |
| * A MergeSupportFunc is a merge support function expression that can only | |
| * appear in the RETURNING list of a MERGE command. It returns information | |
| * about the currently executing merge action. | |
| * | |
| * Currently, the only supported function is MERGE_ACTION(), which returns the | |
| * command executed ("INSERT", "UPDATE", or "DELETE"). | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct MergeSupportFunc | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* type Oid of result */ | |
| Oid msftype; | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid msfcollid; | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } MergeSupportFunc; | |
| /* | |
| * SubscriptingRef: describes a subscripting operation over a container | |
| * (array, etc). | |
| * | |
| * A SubscriptingRef can describe fetching a single element from a container, | |
| * fetching a part of a container (e.g. an array slice), storing a single | |
| * element into a container, or storing a slice. The "store" cases work with | |
| * an initial container value and a source value that is inserted into the | |
| * appropriate part of the container; the result of the operation is an | |
| * entire new modified container value. | |
| * | |
| * If reflowerindexpr = NIL, then we are fetching or storing a single container | |
| * element at the subscripts given by refupperindexpr. Otherwise we are | |
| * fetching or storing a container slice, that is a rectangular subcontainer | |
| * with lower and upper bounds given by the index expressions. | |
| * reflowerindexpr must be the same length as refupperindexpr when it | |
| * is not NIL. | |
| * | |
| * In the slice case, individual expressions in the subscript lists can be | |
| * NULL, meaning "substitute the array's current lower or upper bound". | |
| * (Non-array containers may or may not support this.) | |
| * | |
| * refcontainertype is the actual container type that determines the | |
| * subscripting semantics. (This will generally be either the exposed type of | |
| * refexpr, or the base type if that is a domain.) refelemtype is the type of | |
| * the container's elements; this is saved for the use of the subscripting | |
| * functions, but is not used by the core code. refrestype, reftypmod, and | |
| * refcollid describe the type of the SubscriptingRef's result. In a store | |
| * expression, refrestype will always match refcontainertype; in a fetch, | |
| * it could be refelemtype for an element fetch, or refcontainertype for a | |
| * slice fetch, or possibly something else as determined by type-specific | |
| * subscripting logic. Likewise, reftypmod and refcollid will match the | |
| * container's properties in a store, but could be different in a fetch. | |
| * | |
| * Any internal state data is ignored for the query jumbling. | |
| * | |
| * Note: for the cases where a container is returned, if refexpr yields a R/W | |
| * expanded container, then the implementation is allowed to modify that | |
| * object in-place and return the same object. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct SubscriptingRef | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* type of the container proper */ | |
| Oid refcontainertype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* the container type's pg_type.typelem */ | |
| Oid refelemtype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* type of the SubscriptingRef's result */ | |
| Oid refrestype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* typmod of the result */ | |
| int32 reftypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* collation of result, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid refcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* expressions that evaluate to upper container indexes */ | |
| List *refupperindexpr; | |
| /* | |
| * expressions that evaluate to lower container indexes, or NIL for single | |
| * container element. | |
| */ | |
| List *reflowerindexpr; | |
| /* the expression that evaluates to a container value */ | |
| Expr *refexpr; | |
| /* expression for the source value, or NULL if fetch */ | |
| Expr *refassgnexpr; | |
| } SubscriptingRef; | |
| /* | |
| * CoercionContext - distinguishes the allowed set of type casts | |
| * | |
| * NB: ordering of the alternatives is significant; later (larger) values | |
| * allow more casts than earlier ones. | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum CoercionContext | |
| { | |
| COERCION_IMPLICIT, /* coercion in context of expression */ | |
| COERCION_ASSIGNMENT, /* coercion in context of assignment */ | |
| COERCION_PLPGSQL, /* if no assignment cast, use CoerceViaIO */ | |
| COERCION_EXPLICIT, /* explicit cast operation */ | |
| } CoercionContext; | |
| /* | |
| * CoercionForm - how to display a FuncExpr or related node | |
| * | |
| * "Coercion" is a bit of a misnomer, since this value records other | |
| * special syntaxes besides casts, but for now we'll keep this naming. | |
| * | |
| * NB: equal() ignores CoercionForm fields, therefore this *must* not carry | |
| * any semantically significant information. We need that behavior so that | |
| * the planner will consider equivalent implicit and explicit casts to be | |
| * equivalent. In cases where those actually behave differently, the coercion | |
| * function's arguments will be different. | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum CoercionForm | |
| { | |
| COERCE_EXPLICIT_CALL, /* display as a function call */ | |
| COERCE_EXPLICIT_CAST, /* display as an explicit cast */ | |
| COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST, /* implicit cast, so hide it */ | |
| COERCE_SQL_SYNTAX, /* display with SQL-mandated special syntax */ | |
| } CoercionForm; | |
| /* | |
| * FuncExpr - expression node for a function call | |
| * | |
| * Collation information is irrelevant for the query jumbling, only the | |
| * arguments and the function OID matter. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct FuncExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* PG_PROC OID of the function */ | |
| Oid funcid; | |
| /* PG_TYPE OID of result value */ | |
| Oid funcresulttype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* true if function returns set */ | |
| bool funcretset pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* | |
| * true if variadic arguments have been combined into an array last | |
| * argument | |
| */ | |
| bool funcvariadic pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* how to display this function call */ | |
| CoercionForm funcformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation of result */ | |
| Oid funccollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation that function should use */ | |
| Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* arguments to the function */ | |
| List *args; | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } FuncExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * NamedArgExpr - a named argument of a function | |
| * | |
| * This node type can only appear in the args list of a FuncCall or FuncExpr | |
| * node. We support pure positional call notation (no named arguments), | |
| * named notation (all arguments are named), and mixed notation (unnamed | |
| * arguments followed by named ones). | |
| * | |
| * Parse analysis sets argnumber to the positional index of the argument, | |
| * but doesn't rearrange the argument list. | |
| * | |
| * The planner will convert argument lists to pure positional notation | |
| * during expression preprocessing, so execution never sees a NamedArgExpr. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct NamedArgExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* the argument expression */ | |
| Expr *arg; | |
| /* the name */ | |
| char *name pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* argument's number in positional notation */ | |
| int argnumber; | |
| /* argument name location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } NamedArgExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * OpExpr - expression node for an operator invocation | |
| * | |
| * Semantically, this is essentially the same as a function call. | |
| * | |
| * Note that opfuncid is not necessarily filled in immediately on creation | |
| * of the node. The planner makes sure it is valid before passing the node | |
| * tree to the executor, but during parsing/planning opfuncid can be 0. | |
| * Therefore, equal() will accept a zero value as being equal to other values. | |
| * | |
| * Internal state information and collation data is irrelevant for the query | |
| * jumbling. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct OpExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* PG_OPERATOR OID of the operator */ | |
| Oid opno; | |
| /* PG_PROC OID of underlying function */ | |
| Oid opfuncid pg_node_attr(equal_ignore_if_zero, query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* PG_TYPE OID of result value */ | |
| Oid opresulttype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* true if operator returns set */ | |
| bool opretset pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation of result */ | |
| Oid opcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation that operator should use */ | |
| Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* arguments to the operator (1 or 2) */ | |
| List *args; | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } OpExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * DistinctExpr - expression node for "x IS DISTINCT FROM y" | |
| * | |
| * Except for the nodetag, this is represented identically to an OpExpr | |
| * referencing the "=" operator for x and y. | |
| * We use "=", not the more obvious "<>", because more datatypes have "=" | |
| * than "<>". This means the executor must invert the operator result. | |
| * Note that the operator function won't be called at all if either input | |
| * is NULL, since then the result can be determined directly. | |
| */ | |
| typedef OpExpr DistinctExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * NullIfExpr - a NULLIF expression | |
| * | |
| * Like DistinctExpr, this is represented the same as an OpExpr referencing | |
| * the "=" operator for x and y. | |
| */ | |
| typedef OpExpr NullIfExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * ScalarArrayOpExpr - expression node for "scalar op ANY/ALL (array)" | |
| * | |
| * The operator must yield boolean. It is applied to the left operand | |
| * and each element of the righthand array, and the results are combined | |
| * with OR or AND (for ANY or ALL respectively). The node representation | |
| * is almost the same as for the underlying operator, but we need a useOr | |
| * flag to remember whether it's ANY or ALL, and we don't have to store | |
| * the result type (or the collation) because it must be boolean. | |
| * | |
| * A ScalarArrayOpExpr with a valid hashfuncid is evaluated during execution | |
| * by building a hash table containing the Const values from the RHS arg. | |
| * This table is probed during expression evaluation. The planner will set | |
| * hashfuncid to the hash function which must be used to build and probe the | |
| * hash table. The executor determines if it should use hash-based checks or | |
| * the more traditional means based on if the hashfuncid is set or not. | |
| * | |
| * When performing hashed NOT IN, the negfuncid will also be set to the | |
| * equality function which the hash table must use to build and probe the hash | |
| * table. opno and opfuncid will remain set to the <> operator and its | |
| * corresponding function and won't be used during execution. For | |
| * non-hashtable based NOT INs, negfuncid will be set to InvalidOid. See | |
| * convert_saop_to_hashed_saop(). | |
| * | |
| * Similar to OpExpr, opfuncid, hashfuncid, and negfuncid are not necessarily | |
| * filled in right away, so will be ignored for equality if they are not set | |
| * yet. | |
| * | |
| * OID entries of the internal function types are irrelevant for the query | |
| * jumbling, but the operator OID and the arguments are. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct ScalarArrayOpExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* PG_OPERATOR OID of the operator */ | |
| Oid opno; | |
| /* PG_PROC OID of comparison function */ | |
| Oid opfuncid pg_node_attr(equal_ignore_if_zero, query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* PG_PROC OID of hash func or InvalidOid */ | |
| Oid hashfuncid pg_node_attr(equal_ignore_if_zero, query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* PG_PROC OID of negator of opfuncid function or InvalidOid. See above */ | |
| Oid negfuncid pg_node_attr(equal_ignore_if_zero, query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* true for ANY, false for ALL */ | |
| bool useOr; | |
| /* OID of collation that operator should use */ | |
| Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* the scalar and array operands */ | |
| List *args; | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } ScalarArrayOpExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * BoolExpr - expression node for the basic Boolean operators AND, OR, NOT | |
| * | |
| * Notice the arguments are given as a List. For NOT, of course the list | |
| * must always have exactly one element. For AND and OR, there can be two | |
| * or more arguments. | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum BoolExprType | |
| { | |
| AND_EXPR, OR_EXPR, NOT_EXPR | |
| } BoolExprType; | |
| typedef struct BoolExpr | |
| { | |
| pg_node_attr(custom_read_write) | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| BoolExprType boolop; | |
| List *args; /* arguments to this expression */ | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } BoolExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * SubLink | |
| * | |
| * A SubLink represents a subselect appearing in an expression, and in some | |
| * cases also the combining operator(s) just above it. The subLinkType | |
| * indicates the form of the expression represented: | |
| * EXISTS_SUBLINK EXISTS(SELECT ...) | |
| * ALL_SUBLINK (lefthand) op ALL (SELECT ...) | |
| * ANY_SUBLINK (lefthand) op ANY (SELECT ...) | |
| * ROWCOMPARE_SUBLINK (lefthand) op (SELECT ...) | |
| * EXPR_SUBLINK (SELECT with single targetlist item ...) | |
| * MULTIEXPR_SUBLINK (SELECT with multiple targetlist items ...) | |
| * ARRAY_SUBLINK ARRAY(SELECT with single targetlist item ...) | |
| * CTE_SUBLINK WITH query (never actually part of an expression) | |
| * For ALL, ANY, and ROWCOMPARE, the lefthand is a list of expressions of the | |
| * same length as the subselect's targetlist. ROWCOMPARE will *always* have | |
| * a list with more than one entry; if the subselect has just one target | |
| * then the parser will create an EXPR_SUBLINK instead (and any operator | |
| * above the subselect will be represented separately). | |
| * ROWCOMPARE, EXPR, and MULTIEXPR require the subselect to deliver at most | |
| * one row (if it returns no rows, the result is NULL). | |
| * ALL, ANY, and ROWCOMPARE require the combining operators to deliver boolean | |
| * results. ALL and ANY combine the per-row results using AND and OR | |
| * semantics respectively. | |
| * ARRAY requires just one target column, and creates an array of the target | |
| * column's type using any number of rows resulting from the subselect. | |
| * | |
| * SubLink is classed as an Expr node, but it is not actually executable; | |
| * it must be replaced in the expression tree by a SubPlan node during | |
| * planning. | |
| * | |
| * NOTE: in the raw output of gram.y, testexpr contains just the raw form | |
| * of the lefthand expression (if any), and operName is the String name of | |
| * the combining operator. Also, subselect is a raw parsetree. During parse | |
| * analysis, the parser transforms testexpr into a complete boolean expression | |
| * that compares the lefthand value(s) to PARAM_SUBLINK nodes representing the | |
| * output columns of the subselect. And subselect is transformed to a Query. | |
| * This is the representation seen in saved rules and in the rewriter. | |
| * | |
| * In EXISTS, EXPR, MULTIEXPR, and ARRAY SubLinks, testexpr and operName | |
| * are unused and are always null. | |
| * | |
| * subLinkId is currently used only for MULTIEXPR SubLinks, and is zero in | |
| * other SubLinks. This number identifies different multiple-assignment | |
| * subqueries within an UPDATE statement's SET list. It is unique only | |
| * within a particular targetlist. The output column(s) of the MULTIEXPR | |
| * are referenced by PARAM_MULTIEXPR Params appearing elsewhere in the tlist. | |
| * | |
| * The CTE_SUBLINK case never occurs in actual SubLink nodes, but it is used | |
| * in SubPlans generated for WITH subqueries. | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum SubLinkType | |
| { | |
| EXISTS_SUBLINK, | |
| ALL_SUBLINK, | |
| ANY_SUBLINK, | |
| ROWCOMPARE_SUBLINK, | |
| EXPR_SUBLINK, | |
| MULTIEXPR_SUBLINK, | |
| ARRAY_SUBLINK, | |
| CTE_SUBLINK, /* for SubPlans only */ | |
| } SubLinkType; | |
| typedef struct SubLink | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| SubLinkType subLinkType; /* see above */ | |
| int subLinkId; /* ID (1..n); 0 if not MULTIEXPR */ | |
| Node *testexpr; /* outer-query test for ALL/ANY/ROWCOMPARE */ | |
| /* originally specified operator name */ | |
| List *operName pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* subselect as Query* or raw parsetree */ | |
| Node *subselect; | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } SubLink; | |
| /* | |
| * SubPlan - executable expression node for a subplan (sub-SELECT) | |
| * | |
| * The planner replaces SubLink nodes in expression trees with SubPlan | |
| * nodes after it has finished planning the subquery. SubPlan references | |
| * a sub-plantree stored in the subplans list of the toplevel PlannedStmt. | |
| * (We avoid a direct link to make it easier to copy expression trees | |
| * without causing multiple processing of the subplan.) | |
| * | |
| * In an ordinary subplan, testexpr points to an executable expression | |
| * (OpExpr, an AND/OR tree of OpExprs, or RowCompareExpr) for the combining | |
| * operator(s); the left-hand arguments are the original lefthand expressions, | |
| * and the right-hand arguments are PARAM_EXEC Param nodes representing the | |
| * outputs of the sub-select. (NOTE: runtime coercion functions may be | |
| * inserted as well.) This is just the same expression tree as testexpr in | |
| * the original SubLink node, but the PARAM_SUBLINK nodes are replaced by | |
| * suitably numbered PARAM_EXEC nodes. | |
| * | |
| * If the sub-select becomes an initplan rather than a subplan, the executable | |
| * expression is part of the outer plan's expression tree (and the SubPlan | |
| * node itself is not, but rather is found in the outer plan's initPlan | |
| * list). In this case testexpr is NULL to avoid duplication. | |
| * | |
| * The planner also derives lists of the values that need to be passed into | |
| * and out of the subplan. Input values are represented as a list "args" of | |
| * expressions to be evaluated in the outer-query context (currently these | |
| * args are always just Vars, but in principle they could be any expression). | |
| * The values are assigned to the global PARAM_EXEC params indexed by parParam | |
| * (the parParam and args lists must have the same ordering). setParam is a | |
| * list of the PARAM_EXEC params that are computed by the sub-select, if it | |
| * is an initplan or MULTIEXPR plan; they are listed in order by sub-select | |
| * output column position. (parParam and setParam are integer Lists, not | |
| * Bitmapsets, because their ordering is significant.) | |
| * | |
| * Also, the planner computes startup and per-call costs for use of the | |
| * SubPlan. Note that these include the cost of the subquery proper, | |
| * evaluation of the testexpr if any, and any hashtable management overhead. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct SubPlan | |
| { | |
| pg_node_attr(no_query_jumble) | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* Fields copied from original SubLink: */ | |
| SubLinkType subLinkType; /* see above */ | |
| /* The combining operators, transformed to an executable expression: */ | |
| Node *testexpr; /* OpExpr or RowCompareExpr expression tree */ | |
| List *paramIds; /* IDs of Params embedded in the above */ | |
| /* Identification of the Plan tree to use: */ | |
| int plan_id; /* Index (from 1) in PlannedStmt.subplans */ | |
| /* Identification of the SubPlan for EXPLAIN and debugging purposes: */ | |
| char *plan_name; /* A name assigned during planning */ | |
| /* Extra data useful for determining subplan's output type: */ | |
| Oid firstColType; /* Type of first column of subplan result */ | |
| int32 firstColTypmod; /* Typmod of first column of subplan result */ | |
| Oid firstColCollation; /* Collation of first column of subplan | |
| * result */ | |
| /* Information about execution strategy: */ | |
| bool useHashTable; /* true to store subselect output in a hash | |
| * table (implies we are doing "IN") */ | |
| bool unknownEqFalse; /* true if it's okay to return FALSE when the | |
| * spec result is UNKNOWN; this allows much | |
| * simpler handling of null values */ | |
| bool parallel_safe; /* is the subplan parallel-safe? */ | |
| /* Note: parallel_safe does not consider contents of testexpr or args */ | |
| /* Information for passing params into and out of the subselect: */ | |
| /* setParam and parParam are lists of integers (param IDs) */ | |
| List *setParam; /* initplan and MULTIEXPR subqueries have to | |
| * set these Params for parent plan */ | |
| List *parParam; /* indices of input Params from parent plan */ | |
| List *args; /* exprs to pass as parParam values */ | |
| /* Estimated execution costs: */ | |
| Cost startup_cost; /* one-time setup cost */ | |
| Cost per_call_cost; /* cost for each subplan evaluation */ | |
| } SubPlan; | |
| /* | |
| * AlternativeSubPlan - expression node for a choice among SubPlans | |
| * | |
| * This is used only transiently during planning: by the time the plan | |
| * reaches the executor, all AlternativeSubPlan nodes have been removed. | |
| * | |
| * The subplans are given as a List so that the node definition need not | |
| * change if there's ever more than two alternatives. For the moment, | |
| * though, there are always exactly two; and the first one is the fast-start | |
| * plan. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct AlternativeSubPlan | |
| { | |
| pg_node_attr(no_query_jumble) | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| List *subplans; /* SubPlan(s) with equivalent results */ | |
| } AlternativeSubPlan; | |
| /* ---------------- | |
| * FieldSelect | |
| * | |
| * FieldSelect represents the operation of extracting one field from a tuple | |
| * value. At runtime, the input expression is expected to yield a rowtype | |
| * Datum. The specified field number is extracted and returned as a Datum. | |
| * ---------------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct FieldSelect | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *arg; /* input expression */ | |
| AttrNumber fieldnum; /* attribute number of field to extract */ | |
| /* type of the field (result type of this node) */ | |
| Oid resulttype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* output typmod (usually -1) */ | |
| int32 resulttypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation of the field */ | |
| Oid resultcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| } FieldSelect; | |
| /* ---------------- | |
| * FieldStore | |
| * | |
| * FieldStore represents the operation of modifying one field in a tuple | |
| * value, yielding a new tuple value (the input is not touched!). Like | |
| * the assign case of SubscriptingRef, this is used to implement UPDATE of a | |
| * portion of a column. | |
| * | |
| * resulttype is always a named composite type (not a domain). To update | |
| * a composite domain value, apply CoerceToDomain to the FieldStore. | |
| * | |
| * A single FieldStore can actually represent updates of several different | |
| * fields. The parser only generates FieldStores with single-element lists, | |
| * but the planner will collapse multiple updates of the same base column | |
| * into one FieldStore. | |
| * ---------------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct FieldStore | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *arg; /* input tuple value */ | |
| List *newvals; /* new value(s) for field(s) */ | |
| /* integer list of field attnums */ | |
| List *fieldnums pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* type of result (same as type of arg) */ | |
| Oid resulttype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* Like RowExpr, we deliberately omit a typmod and collation here */ | |
| } FieldStore; | |
| /* ---------------- | |
| * RelabelType | |
| * | |
| * RelabelType represents a "dummy" type coercion between two binary- | |
| * compatible datatypes, such as reinterpreting the result of an OID | |
| * expression as an int4. It is a no-op at runtime; we only need it | |
| * to provide a place to store the correct type to be attributed to | |
| * the expression result during type resolution. (We can't get away | |
| * with just overwriting the type field of the input expression node, | |
| * so we need a separate node to show the coercion's result type.) | |
| * ---------------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct RelabelType | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *arg; /* input expression */ | |
| Oid resulttype; /* output type of coercion expression */ | |
| /* output typmod (usually -1) */ | |
| int32 resulttypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid resultcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* how to display this node */ | |
| CoercionForm relabelformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } RelabelType; | |
| /* ---------------- | |
| * CoerceViaIO | |
| * | |
| * CoerceViaIO represents a type coercion between two types whose textual | |
| * representations are compatible, implemented by invoking the source type's | |
| * typoutput function then the destination type's typinput function. | |
| * ---------------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct CoerceViaIO | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *arg; /* input expression */ | |
| Oid resulttype; /* output type of coercion */ | |
| /* output typmod is not stored, but is presumed -1 */ | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid resultcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* how to display this node */ | |
| CoercionForm coerceformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } CoerceViaIO; | |
| /* ---------------- | |
| * ArrayCoerceExpr | |
| * | |
| * ArrayCoerceExpr represents a type coercion from one array type to another, | |
| * which is implemented by applying the per-element coercion expression | |
| * "elemexpr" to each element of the source array. Within elemexpr, the | |
| * source element is represented by a CaseTestExpr node. Note that even if | |
| * elemexpr is a no-op (that is, just CaseTestExpr + RelabelType), the | |
| * coercion still requires some effort: we have to fix the element type OID | |
| * stored in the array header. | |
| * ---------------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct ArrayCoerceExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *arg; /* input expression (yields an array) */ | |
| Expr *elemexpr; /* expression representing per-element work */ | |
| Oid resulttype; /* output type of coercion (an array type) */ | |
| /* output typmod (also element typmod) */ | |
| int32 resulttypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid resultcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* how to display this node */ | |
| CoercionForm coerceformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } ArrayCoerceExpr; | |
| /* ---------------- | |
| * ConvertRowtypeExpr | |
| * | |
| * ConvertRowtypeExpr represents a type coercion from one composite type | |
| * to another, where the source type is guaranteed to contain all the columns | |
| * needed for the destination type plus possibly others; the columns need not | |
| * be in the same positions, but are matched up by name. This is primarily | |
| * used to convert a whole-row value of an inheritance child table into a | |
| * valid whole-row value of its parent table's rowtype. Both resulttype | |
| * and the exposed type of "arg" must be named composite types (not domains). | |
| * ---------------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct ConvertRowtypeExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *arg; /* input expression */ | |
| Oid resulttype; /* output type (always a composite type) */ | |
| /* Like RowExpr, we deliberately omit a typmod and collation here */ | |
| /* how to display this node */ | |
| CoercionForm convertformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } ConvertRowtypeExpr; | |
| /*---------- | |
| * CollateExpr - COLLATE | |
| * | |
| * The planner replaces CollateExpr with RelabelType during expression | |
| * preprocessing, so execution never sees a CollateExpr. | |
| *---------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct CollateExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *arg; /* input expression */ | |
| Oid collOid; /* collation's OID */ | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } CollateExpr; | |
| /*---------- | |
| * CaseExpr - a CASE expression | |
| * | |
| * We support two distinct forms of CASE expression: | |
| * CASE WHEN boolexpr THEN expr [ WHEN boolexpr THEN expr ... ] | |
| * CASE testexpr WHEN compexpr THEN expr [ WHEN compexpr THEN expr ... ] | |
| * These are distinguishable by the "arg" field being NULL in the first case | |
| * and the testexpr in the second case. | |
| * | |
| * In the raw grammar output for the second form, the condition expressions | |
| * of the WHEN clauses are just the comparison values. Parse analysis | |
| * converts these to valid boolean expressions of the form | |
| * CaseTestExpr '=' compexpr | |
| * where the CaseTestExpr node is a placeholder that emits the correct | |
| * value at runtime. This structure is used so that the testexpr need be | |
| * evaluated only once. Note that after parse analysis, the condition | |
| * expressions always yield boolean. | |
| * | |
| * Note: we can test whether a CaseExpr has been through parse analysis | |
| * yet by checking whether casetype is InvalidOid or not. | |
| *---------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct CaseExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* type of expression result */ | |
| Oid casetype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid casecollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| Expr *arg; /* implicit equality comparison argument */ | |
| List *args; /* the arguments (list of WHEN clauses) */ | |
| Expr *defresult; /* the default result (ELSE clause) */ | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } CaseExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * CaseWhen - one arm of a CASE expression | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct CaseWhen | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *expr; /* condition expression */ | |
| Expr *result; /* substitution result */ | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } CaseWhen; | |
| /* | |
| * Placeholder node for the test value to be processed by a CASE expression. | |
| * This is effectively like a Param, but can be implemented more simply | |
| * since we need only one replacement value at a time. | |
| * | |
| * We also abuse this node type for some other purposes, including: | |
| * * Placeholder for the current array element value in ArrayCoerceExpr; | |
| * see build_coercion_expression(). | |
| * * Nested FieldStore/SubscriptingRef assignment expressions in INSERT/UPDATE; | |
| * see transformAssignmentIndirection(). | |
| * * Placeholder for intermediate results in some SQL/JSON expression nodes, | |
| * such as JsonConstructorExpr. | |
| * | |
| * The uses in CaseExpr and ArrayCoerceExpr are safe only to the extent that | |
| * there is not any other CaseExpr or ArrayCoerceExpr between the value source | |
| * node and its child CaseTestExpr(s). This is true in the parse analysis | |
| * output, but the planner's function-inlining logic has to be careful not to | |
| * break it. | |
| * | |
| * The nested-assignment-expression case is safe because the only node types | |
| * that can be above such CaseTestExprs are FieldStore and SubscriptingRef. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct CaseTestExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Oid typeId; /* type for substituted value */ | |
| /* typemod for substituted value */ | |
| int32 typeMod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* collation for the substituted value */ | |
| Oid collation pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| } CaseTestExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * ArrayExpr - an ARRAY[] expression | |
| * | |
| * Note: if multidims is false, the constituent expressions all yield the | |
| * scalar type identified by element_typeid. If multidims is true, the | |
| * constituent expressions all yield arrays of element_typeid (ie, the same | |
| * type as array_typeid); at runtime we must check for compatible subscripts. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct ArrayExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* type of expression result */ | |
| Oid array_typeid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid array_collid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* common type of array elements */ | |
| Oid element_typeid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* the array elements or sub-arrays */ | |
| List *elements; | |
| /* true if elements are sub-arrays */ | |
| bool multidims pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } ArrayExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * RowExpr - a ROW() expression | |
| * | |
| * Note: the list of fields must have a one-for-one correspondence with | |
| * physical fields of the associated rowtype, although it is okay for it | |
| * to be shorter than the rowtype. That is, the N'th list element must | |
| * match up with the N'th physical field. When the N'th physical field | |
| * is a dropped column (attisdropped) then the N'th list element can just | |
| * be a NULL constant. (This case can only occur for named composite types, | |
| * not RECORD types, since those are built from the RowExpr itself rather | |
| * than vice versa.) It is important not to assume that length(args) is | |
| * the same as the number of columns logically present in the rowtype. | |
| * | |
| * colnames provides field names if the ROW() result is of type RECORD. | |
| * Names *must* be provided if row_typeid is RECORDOID; but if it is a | |
| * named composite type, colnames will be ignored in favor of using the | |
| * type's cataloged field names, so colnames should be NIL. Like the | |
| * args list, colnames is defined to be one-for-one with physical fields | |
| * of the rowtype (although dropped columns shouldn't appear in the | |
| * RECORD case, so this fine point is currently moot). | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct RowExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| List *args; /* the fields */ | |
| /* RECORDOID or a composite type's ID */ | |
| Oid row_typeid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* | |
| * row_typeid cannot be a domain over composite, only plain composite. To | |
| * create a composite domain value, apply CoerceToDomain to the RowExpr. | |
| * | |
| * Note: we deliberately do NOT store a typmod. Although a typmod will be | |
| * associated with specific RECORD types at runtime, it will differ for | |
| * different backends, and so cannot safely be stored in stored | |
| * parsetrees. We must assume typmod -1 for a RowExpr node. | |
| * | |
| * We don't need to store a collation either. The result type is | |
| * necessarily composite, and composite types never have a collation. | |
| */ | |
| /* how to display this node */ | |
| CoercionForm row_format pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* list of String, or NIL */ | |
| List *colnames pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } RowExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * RowCompareExpr - row-wise comparison, such as (a, b) <= (1, 2) | |
| * | |
| * We support row comparison for any operator that can be determined to | |
| * act like =, <>, <, <=, >, or >= (we determine this by looking for the | |
| * operator in btree opfamilies). Note that the same operator name might | |
| * map to a different operator for each pair of row elements, since the | |
| * element datatypes can vary. | |
| * | |
| * A RowCompareExpr node is only generated for the < <= > >= cases; | |
| * the = and <> cases are translated to simple AND or OR combinations | |
| * of the pairwise comparisons. However, we include = and <> in the | |
| * RowCompareType enum for the convenience of parser logic. | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum RowCompareType | |
| { | |
| /* Values of this enum are chosen to match btree strategy numbers */ | |
| ROWCOMPARE_LT = 1, /* BTLessStrategyNumber */ | |
| ROWCOMPARE_LE = 2, /* BTLessEqualStrategyNumber */ | |
| ROWCOMPARE_EQ = 3, /* BTEqualStrategyNumber */ | |
| ROWCOMPARE_GE = 4, /* BTGreaterEqualStrategyNumber */ | |
| ROWCOMPARE_GT = 5, /* BTGreaterStrategyNumber */ | |
| ROWCOMPARE_NE = 6, /* no such btree strategy */ | |
| } RowCompareType; | |
| typedef struct RowCompareExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* LT LE GE or GT, never EQ or NE */ | |
| RowCompareType rctype; | |
| /* OID list of pairwise comparison ops */ | |
| List *opnos pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID list of containing operator families */ | |
| List *opfamilies pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID list of collations for comparisons */ | |
| List *inputcollids pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* the left-hand input arguments */ | |
| List *largs; | |
| /* the right-hand input arguments */ | |
| List *rargs; | |
| } RowCompareExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * CoalesceExpr - a COALESCE expression | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct CoalesceExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* type of expression result */ | |
| Oid coalescetype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid coalescecollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* the arguments */ | |
| List *args; | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } CoalesceExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * MinMaxExpr - a GREATEST or LEAST function | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum MinMaxOp | |
| { | |
| IS_GREATEST, | |
| IS_LEAST | |
| } MinMaxOp; | |
| typedef struct MinMaxExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* common type of arguments and result */ | |
| Oid minmaxtype pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation of result */ | |
| Oid minmaxcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation that function should use */ | |
| Oid inputcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* function to execute */ | |
| MinMaxOp op; | |
| /* the arguments */ | |
| List *args; | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } MinMaxExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * SQLValueFunction - parameterless functions with special grammar productions | |
| * | |
| * The SQL standard categorizes some of these as <datetime value function> | |
| * and others as <general value specification>. We call 'em SQLValueFunctions | |
| * for lack of a better term. We store type and typmod of the result so that | |
| * some code doesn't need to know each function individually, and because | |
| * we would need to store typmod anyway for some of the datetime functions. | |
| * Note that currently, all variants return non-collating datatypes, so we do | |
| * not need a collation field; also, all these functions are stable. | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum SQLValueFunctionOp | |
| { | |
| SVFOP_CURRENT_DATE, | |
| SVFOP_CURRENT_TIME, | |
| SVFOP_CURRENT_TIME_N, | |
| SVFOP_CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, | |
| SVFOP_CURRENT_TIMESTAMP_N, | |
| SVFOP_LOCALTIME, | |
| SVFOP_LOCALTIME_N, | |
| SVFOP_LOCALTIMESTAMP, | |
| SVFOP_LOCALTIMESTAMP_N, | |
| SVFOP_CURRENT_ROLE, | |
| SVFOP_CURRENT_USER, | |
| SVFOP_USER, | |
| SVFOP_SESSION_USER, | |
| SVFOP_CURRENT_CATALOG, | |
| SVFOP_CURRENT_SCHEMA, | |
| } SQLValueFunctionOp; | |
| typedef struct SQLValueFunction | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| SQLValueFunctionOp op; /* which function this is */ | |
| /* | |
| * Result type/typmod. Type is fully determined by "op", so no need to | |
| * include this Oid in the query jumbling. | |
| */ | |
| Oid type pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| int32 typmod; | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } SQLValueFunction; | |
| /* | |
| * XmlExpr - various SQL/XML functions requiring special grammar productions | |
| * | |
| * 'name' carries the "NAME foo" argument (already XML-escaped). | |
| * 'named_args' and 'arg_names' represent an xml_attribute list. | |
| * 'args' carries all other arguments. | |
| * | |
| * Note: result type/typmod/collation are not stored, but can be deduced | |
| * from the XmlExprOp. The type/typmod fields are just used for display | |
| * purposes, and are NOT necessarily the true result type of the node. | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum XmlExprOp | |
| { | |
| IS_XMLCONCAT, /* XMLCONCAT(args) */ | |
| IS_XMLELEMENT, /* XMLELEMENT(name, xml_attributes, args) */ | |
| IS_XMLFOREST, /* XMLFOREST(xml_attributes) */ | |
| IS_XMLPARSE, /* XMLPARSE(text, is_doc, preserve_ws) */ | |
| IS_XMLPI, /* XMLPI(name [, args]) */ | |
| IS_XMLROOT, /* XMLROOT(xml, version, standalone) */ | |
| IS_XMLSERIALIZE, /* XMLSERIALIZE(is_document, xmlval, indent) */ | |
| IS_DOCUMENT, /* xmlval IS DOCUMENT */ | |
| } XmlExprOp; | |
| typedef enum XmlOptionType | |
| { | |
| XMLOPTION_DOCUMENT, | |
| XMLOPTION_CONTENT, | |
| } XmlOptionType; | |
| typedef struct XmlExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* xml function ID */ | |
| XmlExprOp op; | |
| /* name in xml(NAME foo ...) syntaxes */ | |
| char *name pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* non-XML expressions for xml_attributes */ | |
| List *named_args; | |
| /* parallel list of String values */ | |
| List *arg_names pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* list of expressions */ | |
| List *args; | |
| /* DOCUMENT or CONTENT */ | |
| XmlOptionType xmloption pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* INDENT option for XMLSERIALIZE */ | |
| bool indent; | |
| /* target type/typmod for XMLSERIALIZE */ | |
| Oid type pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| int32 typmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } XmlExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonEncoding - | |
| * representation of JSON ENCODING clause | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum JsonEncoding | |
| { | |
| JS_ENC_DEFAULT, /* unspecified */ | |
| JS_ENC_UTF8, | |
| JS_ENC_UTF16, | |
| JS_ENC_UTF32, | |
| } JsonEncoding; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonFormatType - | |
| * enumeration of JSON formats used in JSON FORMAT clause | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum JsonFormatType | |
| { | |
| JS_FORMAT_DEFAULT, /* unspecified */ | |
| JS_FORMAT_JSON, /* FORMAT JSON [ENCODING ...] */ | |
| JS_FORMAT_JSONB, /* implicit internal format for RETURNING | |
| * jsonb */ | |
| } JsonFormatType; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonFormat - | |
| * representation of JSON FORMAT clause | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonFormat | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| JsonFormatType format_type; /* format type */ | |
| JsonEncoding encoding; /* JSON encoding */ | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } JsonFormat; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonReturning - | |
| * transformed representation of JSON RETURNING clause | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonReturning | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| JsonFormat *format; /* output JSON format */ | |
| Oid typid; /* target type Oid */ | |
| int32 typmod; /* target type modifier */ | |
| } JsonReturning; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonValueExpr - | |
| * representation of JSON value expression (expr [FORMAT JsonFormat]) | |
| * | |
| * raw_expr is the user-specified value, while formatted_expr is the value | |
| * obtained by coercing raw_expr to the type required by either the FORMAT | |
| * clause or an enclosing node's RETURNING clause. | |
| * | |
| * When deparsing a JsonValueExpr, get_rule_expr() prints raw_expr. However, | |
| * during the evaluation of a JsonValueExpr, the value of formatted_expr | |
| * takes precedence over that of raw_expr. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonValueExpr | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| Expr *raw_expr; /* user-specified expression */ | |
| Expr *formatted_expr; /* coerced formatted expression */ | |
| JsonFormat *format; /* FORMAT clause, if specified */ | |
| } JsonValueExpr; | |
| typedef enum JsonConstructorType | |
| { | |
| JSCTOR_JSON_OBJECT = 1, | |
| JSCTOR_JSON_ARRAY = 2, | |
| JSCTOR_JSON_OBJECTAGG = 3, | |
| JSCTOR_JSON_ARRAYAGG = 4, | |
| JSCTOR_JSON_PARSE = 5, | |
| JSCTOR_JSON_SCALAR = 6, | |
| JSCTOR_JSON_SERIALIZE = 7, | |
| } JsonConstructorType; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonConstructorExpr - | |
| * wrapper over FuncExpr/Aggref/WindowFunc for SQL/JSON constructors | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonConstructorExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| JsonConstructorType type; /* constructor type */ | |
| List *args; | |
| Expr *func; /* underlying json[b]_xxx() function call */ | |
| Expr *coercion; /* coercion to RETURNING type */ | |
| JsonReturning *returning; /* RETURNING clause */ | |
| bool absent_on_null; /* ABSENT ON NULL? */ | |
| bool unique; /* WITH UNIQUE KEYS? (JSON_OBJECT[AGG] only) */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } JsonConstructorExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonValueType - | |
| * representation of JSON item type in IS JSON predicate | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum JsonValueType | |
| { | |
| JS_TYPE_ANY, /* IS JSON [VALUE] */ | |
| JS_TYPE_OBJECT, /* IS JSON OBJECT */ | |
| JS_TYPE_ARRAY, /* IS JSON ARRAY */ | |
| JS_TYPE_SCALAR, /* IS JSON SCALAR */ | |
| } JsonValueType; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonIsPredicate - | |
| * representation of IS JSON predicate | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonIsPredicate | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| Node *expr; /* subject expression */ | |
| JsonFormat *format; /* FORMAT clause, if specified */ | |
| JsonValueType item_type; /* JSON item type */ | |
| bool unique_keys; /* check key uniqueness? */ | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } JsonIsPredicate; | |
| /* Nodes used in SQL/JSON query functions */ | |
| /* | |
| * JsonWrapper - | |
| * representation of WRAPPER clause for JSON_QUERY() | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum JsonWrapper | |
| { | |
| JSW_UNSPEC, | |
| JSW_NONE, | |
| JSW_CONDITIONAL, | |
| JSW_UNCONDITIONAL, | |
| } JsonWrapper; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonBehaviorType - | |
| * enumeration of behavior types used in SQL/JSON ON ERROR/EMPTY clauses | |
| * | |
| * If enum members are reordered, get_json_behavior() from ruleutils.c | |
| * must be updated accordingly. | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum JsonBehaviorType | |
| { | |
| JSON_BEHAVIOR_NULL = 0, | |
| JSON_BEHAVIOR_ERROR, | |
| JSON_BEHAVIOR_EMPTY, | |
| JSON_BEHAVIOR_TRUE, | |
| JSON_BEHAVIOR_FALSE, | |
| JSON_BEHAVIOR_UNKNOWN, | |
| JSON_BEHAVIOR_EMPTY_ARRAY, | |
| JSON_BEHAVIOR_EMPTY_OBJECT, | |
| JSON_BEHAVIOR_DEFAULT, | |
| } JsonBehaviorType; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonBehavior | |
| * Specifications for ON ERROR / ON EMPTY behaviors of SQL/JSON | |
| * query functions specified by a JsonExpr | |
| * | |
| * 'expr' is the expression to emit when a given behavior (EMPTY or ERROR) | |
| * occurs on evaluating the SQL/JSON query function. 'coerce' is set to true | |
| * if 'expr' isn't already of the expected target type given by | |
| * JsonExpr.returning. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonBehavior | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| JsonBehaviorType btype; | |
| Node *expr; | |
| bool coerce; | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } JsonBehavior; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonExprOp - | |
| * enumeration of SQL/JSON query function types | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum JsonExprOp | |
| { | |
| JSON_EXISTS_OP, /* JSON_EXISTS() */ | |
| JSON_QUERY_OP, /* JSON_QUERY() */ | |
| JSON_VALUE_OP, /* JSON_VALUE() */ | |
| JSON_TABLE_OP, /* JSON_TABLE() */ | |
| } JsonExprOp; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonExpr - | |
| * Transformed representation of JSON_VALUE(), JSON_QUERY(), and | |
| * JSON_EXISTS() | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| JsonExprOp op; | |
| char *column_name; /* JSON_TABLE() column name or NULL if this is | |
| * not for a JSON_TABLE() */ | |
| /* jsonb-valued expression to query */ | |
| Node *formatted_expr; | |
| /* Format of the above expression needed by ruleutils.c */ | |
| JsonFormat *format; | |
| /* jsonpath-valued expression containing the query pattern */ | |
| Node *path_spec; | |
| /* Expected type/format of the output. */ | |
| JsonReturning *returning; | |
| /* Information about the PASSING argument expressions */ | |
| List *passing_names; | |
| List *passing_values; | |
| /* User-specified or default ON EMPTY and ON ERROR behaviors */ | |
| JsonBehavior *on_empty; | |
| JsonBehavior *on_error; | |
| /* | |
| * Information about converting the result of jsonpath functions | |
| * JsonPathQuery() and JsonPathValue() to the RETURNING type. | |
| */ | |
| bool use_io_coercion; | |
| bool use_json_coercion; | |
| /* WRAPPER specification for JSON_QUERY */ | |
| JsonWrapper wrapper; | |
| /* KEEP or OMIT QUOTES for singleton scalars returned by JSON_QUERY() */ | |
| bool omit_quotes; | |
| /* JsonExpr's collation. */ | |
| Oid collation; | |
| /* Original JsonFuncExpr's location */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } JsonExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonTablePath | |
| * A JSON path expression to be computed as part of evaluating | |
| * a JSON_TABLE plan node | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonTablePath | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| Const *value; | |
| char *name; | |
| } JsonTablePath; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonTablePlan - | |
| * Abstract class to represent different types of JSON_TABLE "plans". | |
| * A plan is used to generate a "row pattern" value by evaluating a JSON | |
| * path expression against an input JSON document, which is then used for | |
| * populating JSON_TABLE() columns | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonTablePlan | |
| { | |
| pg_node_attr(abstract) | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| } JsonTablePlan; | |
| /* | |
| * JSON_TABLE plan to evaluate a JSON path expression and NESTED paths, if | |
| * any. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonTablePathScan | |
| { | |
| JsonTablePlan plan; | |
| /* JSON path to evaluate */ | |
| JsonTablePath *path; | |
| /* | |
| * ERROR/EMPTY ON ERROR behavior; only significant in the plan for the | |
| * top-level path. | |
| */ | |
| bool errorOnError; | |
| /* Plan(s) for nested columns, if any. */ | |
| JsonTablePlan *child; | |
| /* | |
| * 0-based index in TableFunc.colvalexprs of the 1st and the last column | |
| * covered by this plan. Both are -1 if all columns are nested and thus | |
| * computed by the child plan(s). | |
| */ | |
| int colMin; | |
| int colMax; | |
| } JsonTablePathScan; | |
| /* | |
| * JsonTableSiblingJoin - | |
| * Plan to join rows of sibling NESTED COLUMNS clauses in the same parent | |
| * COLUMNS clause | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JsonTableSiblingJoin | |
| { | |
| JsonTablePlan plan; | |
| JsonTablePlan *lplan; | |
| JsonTablePlan *rplan; | |
| } JsonTableSiblingJoin; | |
| /* ---------------- | |
| * NullTest | |
| * | |
| * NullTest represents the operation of testing a value for NULLness. | |
| * The appropriate test is performed and returned as a boolean Datum. | |
| * | |
| * When argisrow is false, this simply represents a test for the null value. | |
| * | |
| * When argisrow is true, the input expression must yield a rowtype, and | |
| * the node implements "row IS [NOT] NULL" per the SQL standard. This | |
| * includes checking individual fields for NULLness when the row datum | |
| * itself isn't NULL. | |
| * | |
| * NOTE: the combination of a rowtype input and argisrow==false does NOT | |
| * correspond to the SQL notation "row IS [NOT] NULL"; instead, this case | |
| * represents the SQL notation "row IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM NULL". | |
| * ---------------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum NullTestType | |
| { | |
| IS_NULL, IS_NOT_NULL | |
| } NullTestType; | |
| typedef struct NullTest | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *arg; /* input expression */ | |
| NullTestType nulltesttype; /* IS NULL, IS NOT NULL */ | |
| /* T to perform field-by-field null checks */ | |
| bool argisrow pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } NullTest; | |
| /* | |
| * BooleanTest | |
| * | |
| * BooleanTest represents the operation of determining whether a boolean | |
| * is TRUE, FALSE, or UNKNOWN (ie, NULL). All six meaningful combinations | |
| * are supported. Note that a NULL input does *not* cause a NULL result. | |
| * The appropriate test is performed and returned as a boolean Datum. | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum BoolTestType | |
| { | |
| IS_TRUE, IS_NOT_TRUE, IS_FALSE, IS_NOT_FALSE, IS_UNKNOWN, IS_NOT_UNKNOWN | |
| } BoolTestType; | |
| typedef struct BooleanTest | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *arg; /* input expression */ | |
| BoolTestType booltesttype; /* test type */ | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } BooleanTest; | |
| /* | |
| * MergeAction | |
| * | |
| * Transformed representation of a WHEN clause in a MERGE statement | |
| */ | |
| typedef enum MergeMatchKind | |
| { | |
| MERGE_WHEN_MATCHED, | |
| MERGE_WHEN_NOT_MATCHED_BY_SOURCE, | |
| MERGE_WHEN_NOT_MATCHED_BY_TARGET | |
| } MergeMatchKind; | |
| typedef struct MergeAction | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| MergeMatchKind matchKind; /* MATCHED/NOT MATCHED BY SOURCE/TARGET */ | |
| CmdType commandType; /* INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE/DO NOTHING */ | |
| /* OVERRIDING clause */ | |
| OverridingKind override pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| Node *qual; /* transformed WHEN conditions */ | |
| List *targetList; /* the target list (of TargetEntry) */ | |
| /* target attribute numbers of an UPDATE */ | |
| List *updateColnos pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| } MergeAction; | |
| /* | |
| * CoerceToDomain | |
| * | |
| * CoerceToDomain represents the operation of coercing a value to a domain | |
| * type. At runtime (and not before) the precise set of constraints to be | |
| * checked will be determined. If the value passes, it is returned as the | |
| * result; if not, an error is raised. Note that this is equivalent to | |
| * RelabelType in the scenario where no constraints are applied. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct CoerceToDomain | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Expr *arg; /* input expression */ | |
| Oid resulttype; /* domain type ID (result type) */ | |
| /* output typmod (currently always -1) */ | |
| int32 resulttypmod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid if none */ | |
| Oid resultcollid pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* how to display this node */ | |
| CoercionForm coercionformat pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| ParseLoc location; /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| } CoerceToDomain; | |
| /* | |
| * Placeholder node for the value to be processed by a domain's check | |
| * constraint. This is effectively like a Param, but can be implemented more | |
| * simply since we need only one replacement value at a time. | |
| * | |
| * Note: the typeId/typeMod/collation will be set from the domain's base type, | |
| * not the domain itself. This is because we shouldn't consider the value | |
| * to be a member of the domain if we haven't yet checked its constraints. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct CoerceToDomainValue | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* type for substituted value */ | |
| Oid typeId; | |
| /* typemod for substituted value */ | |
| int32 typeMod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* collation for the substituted value */ | |
| Oid collation pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } CoerceToDomainValue; | |
| /* | |
| * Placeholder node for a DEFAULT marker in an INSERT or UPDATE command. | |
| * | |
| * This is not an executable expression: it must be replaced by the actual | |
| * column default expression during rewriting. But it is convenient to | |
| * treat it as an expression node during parsing and rewriting. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct SetToDefault | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* type for substituted value */ | |
| Oid typeId; | |
| /* typemod for substituted value */ | |
| int32 typeMod pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* collation for the substituted value */ | |
| Oid collation pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* token location, or -1 if unknown */ | |
| ParseLoc location; | |
| } SetToDefault; | |
| /* | |
| * Node representing [WHERE] CURRENT OF cursor_name | |
| * | |
| * CURRENT OF is a bit like a Var, in that it carries the rangetable index | |
| * of the target relation being constrained; this aids placing the expression | |
| * correctly during planning. We can assume however that its "levelsup" is | |
| * always zero, due to the syntactic constraints on where it can appear. | |
| * Also, cvarno will always be a true RT index, never INNER_VAR etc. | |
| * | |
| * The referenced cursor can be represented either as a hardwired string | |
| * or as a reference to a run-time parameter of type REFCURSOR. The latter | |
| * case is for the convenience of plpgsql. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct CurrentOfExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Index cvarno; /* RT index of target relation */ | |
| char *cursor_name; /* name of referenced cursor, or NULL */ | |
| int cursor_param; /* refcursor parameter number, or 0 */ | |
| } CurrentOfExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * NextValueExpr - get next value from sequence | |
| * | |
| * This has the same effect as calling the nextval() function, but it does not | |
| * check permissions on the sequence. This is used for identity columns, | |
| * where the sequence is an implicit dependency without its own permissions. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct NextValueExpr | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Oid seqid; | |
| Oid typeId; | |
| } NextValueExpr; | |
| /* | |
| * InferenceElem - an element of a unique index inference specification | |
| * | |
| * This mostly matches the structure of IndexElems, but having a dedicated | |
| * primnode allows for a clean separation between the use of index parameters | |
| * by utility commands, and this node. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct InferenceElem | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| Node *expr; /* expression to infer from, or NULL */ | |
| Oid infercollid; /* OID of collation, or InvalidOid */ | |
| Oid inferopclass; /* OID of att opclass, or InvalidOid */ | |
| } InferenceElem; | |
| /*-------------------- | |
| * TargetEntry - | |
| * a target entry (used in query target lists) | |
| * | |
| * Strictly speaking, a TargetEntry isn't an expression node (since it can't | |
| * be evaluated by ExecEvalExpr). But we treat it as one anyway, since in | |
| * very many places it's convenient to process a whole query targetlist as a | |
| * single expression tree. | |
| * | |
| * In a SELECT's targetlist, resno should always be equal to the item's | |
| * ordinal position (counting from 1). However, in an INSERT or UPDATE | |
| * targetlist, resno represents the attribute number of the destination | |
| * column for the item; so there may be missing or out-of-order resnos. | |
| * It is even legal to have duplicated resnos; consider | |
| * UPDATE table SET arraycol[1] = ..., arraycol[2] = ..., ... | |
| * In an INSERT, the rewriter and planner will normalize the tlist by | |
| * reordering it into physical column order and filling in default values | |
| * for any columns not assigned values by the original query. In an UPDATE, | |
| * after the rewriter merges multiple assignments for the same column, the | |
| * planner extracts the target-column numbers into a separate "update_colnos" | |
| * list, and then renumbers the tlist elements serially. Thus, tlist resnos | |
| * match ordinal position in all tlists seen by the executor; but it is wrong | |
| * to assume that before planning has happened. | |
| * | |
| * resname is required to represent the correct column name in non-resjunk | |
| * entries of top-level SELECT targetlists, since it will be used as the | |
| * column title sent to the frontend. In most other contexts it is only | |
| * a debugging aid, and may be wrong or even NULL. (In particular, it may | |
| * be wrong in a tlist from a stored rule, if the referenced column has been | |
| * renamed by ALTER TABLE since the rule was made. Also, the planner tends | |
| * to store NULL rather than look up a valid name for tlist entries in | |
| * non-toplevel plan nodes.) In resjunk entries, resname should be either | |
| * a specific system-generated name (such as "ctid") or NULL; anything else | |
| * risks confusing ExecGetJunkAttribute! | |
| * | |
| * ressortgroupref is used in the representation of ORDER BY, GROUP BY, and | |
| * DISTINCT items. Targetlist entries with ressortgroupref=0 are not | |
| * sort/group items. If ressortgroupref>0, then this item is an ORDER BY, | |
| * GROUP BY, and/or DISTINCT target value. No two entries in a targetlist | |
| * may have the same nonzero ressortgroupref --- but there is no particular | |
| * meaning to the nonzero values, except as tags. (For example, one must | |
| * not assume that lower ressortgroupref means a more significant sort key.) | |
| * The order of the associated SortGroupClause lists determine the semantics. | |
| * | |
| * resorigtbl/resorigcol identify the source of the column, if it is a | |
| * simple reference to a column of a base table (or view). If it is not | |
| * a simple reference, these fields are zeroes. | |
| * | |
| * If resjunk is true then the column is a working column (such as a sort key) | |
| * that should be removed from the final output of the query. Resjunk columns | |
| * must have resnos that cannot duplicate any regular column's resno. Also | |
| * note that there are places that assume resjunk columns come after non-junk | |
| * columns. | |
| *-------------------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct TargetEntry | |
| { | |
| Expr xpr; | |
| /* expression to evaluate */ | |
| Expr *expr; | |
| /* attribute number (see notes above) */ | |
| AttrNumber resno; | |
| /* name of the column (could be NULL) */ | |
| char *resname pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* nonzero if referenced by a sort/group clause */ | |
| Index ressortgroupref; | |
| /* OID of column's source table */ | |
| Oid resorigtbl pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* column's number in source table */ | |
| AttrNumber resorigcol pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* set to true to eliminate the attribute from final target list */ | |
| bool resjunk pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| } TargetEntry; | |
| /* ---------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| * node types for join trees | |
| * | |
| * The leaves of a join tree structure are RangeTblRef nodes. Above | |
| * these, JoinExpr nodes can appear to denote a specific kind of join | |
| * or qualified join. Also, FromExpr nodes can appear to denote an | |
| * ordinary cross-product join ("FROM foo, bar, baz WHERE ..."). | |
| * FromExpr is like a JoinExpr of jointype JOIN_INNER, except that it | |
| * may have any number of child nodes, not just two. | |
| * | |
| * NOTE: the top level of a Query's jointree is always a FromExpr. | |
| * Even if the jointree contains no rels, there will be a FromExpr. | |
| * | |
| * NOTE: the qualification expressions present in JoinExpr nodes are | |
| * *in addition to* the query's main WHERE clause, which appears as the | |
| * qual of the top-level FromExpr. The reason for associating quals with | |
| * specific nodes in the jointree is that the position of a qual is critical | |
| * when outer joins are present. (If we enforce a qual too soon or too late, | |
| * that may cause the outer join to produce the wrong set of NULL-extended | |
| * rows.) If all joins are inner joins then all the qual positions are | |
| * semantically interchangeable. | |
| * | |
| * NOTE: in the raw output of gram.y, a join tree contains RangeVar, | |
| * RangeSubselect, and RangeFunction nodes, which are all replaced by | |
| * RangeTblRef nodes during the parse analysis phase. Also, the top-level | |
| * FromExpr is added during parse analysis; the grammar regards FROM and | |
| * WHERE as separate. | |
| * ---------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| */ | |
| /* | |
| * RangeTblRef - reference to an entry in the query's rangetable | |
| * | |
| * We could use direct pointers to the RT entries and skip having these | |
| * nodes, but multiple pointers to the same node in a querytree cause | |
| * lots of headaches, so it seems better to store an index into the RT. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct RangeTblRef | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| int rtindex; | |
| } RangeTblRef; | |
| /*---------- | |
| * JoinExpr - for SQL JOIN expressions | |
| * | |
| * isNatural, usingClause, and quals are interdependent. The user can write | |
| * only one of NATURAL, USING(), or ON() (this is enforced by the grammar). | |
| * If he writes NATURAL then parse analysis generates the equivalent USING() | |
| * list, and from that fills in "quals" with the right equality comparisons. | |
| * If he writes USING() then "quals" is filled with equality comparisons. | |
| * If he writes ON() then only "quals" is set. Note that NATURAL/USING | |
| * are not equivalent to ON() since they also affect the output column list. | |
| * | |
| * alias is an Alias node representing the AS alias-clause attached to the | |
| * join expression, or NULL if no clause. NB: presence or absence of the | |
| * alias has a critical impact on semantics, because a join with an alias | |
| * restricts visibility of the tables/columns inside it. | |
| * | |
| * join_using_alias is an Alias node representing the join correlation | |
| * name that SQL:2016 and later allow to be attached to JOIN/USING. | |
| * Its column alias list includes only the common column names from USING, | |
| * and it does not restrict visibility of the join's input tables. | |
| * | |
| * During parse analysis, an RTE is created for the Join, and its index | |
| * is filled into rtindex. This RTE is present mainly so that Vars can | |
| * be created that refer to the outputs of the join. The planner sometimes | |
| * generates JoinExprs internally; these can have rtindex = 0 if there are | |
| * no join alias variables referencing such joins. | |
| *---------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct JoinExpr | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| JoinType jointype; /* type of join */ | |
| bool isNatural; /* Natural join? Will need to shape table */ | |
| Node *larg; /* left subtree */ | |
| Node *rarg; /* right subtree */ | |
| /* USING clause, if any (list of String) */ | |
| List *usingClause pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* alias attached to USING clause, if any */ | |
| Alias *join_using_alias pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* qualifiers on join, if any */ | |
| Node *quals; | |
| /* user-written alias clause, if any */ | |
| Alias *alias pg_node_attr(query_jumble_ignore); | |
| /* RT index assigned for join, or 0 */ | |
| int rtindex; | |
| } JoinExpr; | |
| /*---------- | |
| * FromExpr - represents a FROM ... WHERE ... construct | |
| * | |
| * This is both more flexible than a JoinExpr (it can have any number of | |
| * children, including zero) and less so --- we don't need to deal with | |
| * aliases and so on. The output column set is implicitly just the union | |
| * of the outputs of the children. | |
| *---------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct FromExpr | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| List *fromlist; /* List of join subtrees */ | |
| Node *quals; /* qualifiers on join, if any */ | |
| } FromExpr; | |
| /*---------- | |
| * OnConflictExpr - represents an ON CONFLICT DO ... expression | |
| * | |
| * The optimizer requires a list of inference elements, and optionally a WHERE | |
| * clause to infer a unique index. The unique index (or, occasionally, | |
| * indexes) inferred are used to arbitrate whether or not the alternative ON | |
| * CONFLICT path is taken. | |
| *---------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct OnConflictExpr | |
| { | |
| NodeTag type; | |
| OnConflictAction action; /* DO NOTHING or UPDATE? */ | |
| /* Arbiter */ | |
| List *arbiterElems; /* unique index arbiter list (of | |
| * InferenceElem's) */ | |
| Node *arbiterWhere; /* unique index arbiter WHERE clause */ | |
| Oid constraint; /* pg_constraint OID for arbiter */ | |
| /* ON CONFLICT UPDATE */ | |
| List *onConflictSet; /* List of ON CONFLICT SET TargetEntrys */ | |
| Node *onConflictWhere; /* qualifiers to restrict UPDATE to */ | |
| int exclRelIndex; /* RT index of 'excluded' relation */ | |
| List *exclRelTlist; /* tlist of the EXCLUDED pseudo relation */ | |
| } OnConflictExpr; | |