Commit Graph

8 Commits (51e607878b375c2860e2dd75f36de8cce246da50)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nils Dijk 0620c8f9a6
Sort includes (#7326)
This change adds a script to programatically group all includes in a
specific order. The script was used as a one time invocation to group
and sort all includes throught our formatted code. The grouping is as
follows:

 - System includes (eg. `#include<...>`)
 - Postgres.h (eg. `#include "postgres.h"`)
- Toplevel imports from postgres, not contained in a directory (eg.
`#include "miscadmin.h"`)
 - General postgres includes (eg . `#include "nodes/..."`)
- Toplevel citus includes, not contained in a directory (eg. `#include
"citus_verion.h"`)
 - Columnar includes (eg. `#include "columnar/..."`)
 - Distributed includes (eg. `#include "distributed/..."`)

Because it is quite hard to understand the difference between toplevel
citus includes and toplevel postgres includes it hardcodes the list of
toplevel citus includes. In the same manner it assumes anything not
prefixed with `columnar/` or `distributed/` as a postgres include.

The sorting/grouping is enforced by CI. Since we do so with our own
script there are not changes required in our uncrustify configuration.
2023-11-23 18:19:54 +01:00
Naisila Puka b36c431abb
PG16 compatibility - Rework PlannedStmt and Query's Permission Info (#7098)
PG16 compatibility - Part 6

Check out part 1 42d956888d
part 2 0d503dd5ac
part 3 907d72e60d
part 4 7c6b4ce103
part 5 6056cb2c29

This commit is in the series of PG16 compatibility commits.
It handles the Permission Info changes in PG16. See below:

The main issue lies in the following entries of PlannedStmt: {
   rtable
   permInfos
}

Each rtable has an int perminfoindex, and its actual permission info is
obtained through the following:
permInfos[perminfoindex]
We had crashes because perminfoindexes were not updated in the finalized
planned statement after distributed planner hook.
So, basically, everywhere we set a query's or planned statement's rtable
entry, we need to set the rteperminfos/permInfos accordingly.

Relevant PG commits:
a61b1f7482
a61b1f74823c9c4f79c95226a461f1e7a367764b
b803b7d132
b803b7d132e3505ab77c29acf91f3d1caa298f95

More PG16 compatibility commits are coming soon ...
2023-08-09 15:23:00 +03:00
Sait Talha Nisanci 7951273f74 Refactor WrapRteRelationIntoSubquery 2020-12-15 18:18:36 +03:00
Sait Talha Nisanci 1d82972ff4 Increase the performance with a trick
Instead of sending NULL's over a network, we now convert the subqueries
in the form of:

SELECT t.a, NULL, NULL FROM (SELECT a FROM table)t;

And we recursively plan the inner part so that we don't send the NULL's
over network. We still need the NULLs in the outer subquery because we
currently don't have an easy way of updating all the necessary places in
the query.

Add some documentation for how the conversion is done
2020-12-15 18:18:36 +03:00
Onder Kalaci 3f4952cc2b Pushdown projections when relations are recursively planned
This is important to limit the data transfer size.
2020-12-15 18:17:10 +03:00
Onder Kalaci 8f8390ed6e Recursively plan local table joins
The logical planner cannot handle joins between local and distributed table.
Instead, we can recursively plan one side of the join and let the logical
planner handle the rest.

Our algorithm is a little smart, trying not to recursively plan distributed
tables, but favors local tables.
2020-12-15 18:17:10 +03:00
SaitTalhaNisanci 94a7e6475c
Remove copyright years (#2918)
* Update year as 2012-2019

* Remove copyright years
2019-10-15 17:44:30 +03:00
Onder Kalaci 1c930c96a3 Support non-co-located joins between subqueries
With #1804 (and related PRs), Citus gained the ability to
plan subqueries that are not safe to pushdown.

There are two high-level requirements for pushing down subqueries:

   * Individual subqueries that require a merge step (i.e., GROUP BY
     on non-distribution key, or LIMIT in the subquery etc). We've
     handled such subqueries via #1876.

    * Combination of subqueries that are not joined on distribution keys.
      This commit aims to recursively plan some of such subqueries to make
      the whole query safe to pushdown.

The main logic behind non colocated subquery joins is that we pick
an anchor range table entry and check for distribution key equality
of any  other subqueries in the given query. If for a given subquery,
we cannot find distribution key equality with the anchor rte, we
recursively plan that subquery.

We also used a hacky solution for picking relations as the anchor range
table entries. The hack is that we wrap them into a subquery. This is only
necessary since some of the attribute equivalance checks are based on
queries rather than range table entries.
2018-02-26 13:50:37 +02:00