Commit Graph

9 Commits (77efec04a0afc6ff121681db09df5c37bcef294a)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Marco Slot bc1cc419e1 Fix could not receive query results error in regression test ouput 2018-06-14 23:33:07 +02:00
mehmet furkan şahin ef90122cd3 shard count for some of the tests are increased 2018-05-03 10:44:43 +03:00
Murat Tuncer 76f6883d5d
Add support for window functions that can be pushed down to worker (#2008)
This is the first of series of window function work.

We can now support window functions that can be pushed down to workers.
Window function must have distribution column in the partition clause
 to be pushed down.
2018-03-01 19:07:07 +03:00
Marco Slot 09c09f650f Recursively plan set operations when leaf nodes recur 2017-12-26 13:46:55 +02:00
Murat Tuncer 87c6f306f1
Fix join clause eq restrictions (#1884)
We used to error out if the join clause includes filters like
t1.a < t2.a even if other filter like t1.key = t2.key exists.

Recently we lifted that restriction in subquery planning by
not lifting that restriction and focusing on equivalance classes
provided by postgres.

This checkin forwards previously erroring out real-time queries
due to join clauses to subquery planner and let it handle the
join even if the query does not have a subquery.

We are now pushing down queries that do not have any
subqueries in it. Error message looked misleading, changed to a more descriptive one.
2017-12-22 12:16:14 +03:00
Murat Tuncer a9cf0c3e66
Fix CTE column alias issue (#1893)
We were creating intermediate query result's target
names from subquery target list. Now we also check
if cte re-defines its column name aliases, and create
intermediate result query accordingly.
2017-12-22 09:39:40 +03:00
Onder Kalaci e2a5124830 Add regression tests for recursive subquery planning 2017-12-21 08:37:40 +02:00
Onder Kalaci 0d5a4b9c72 Recursively plan subqueries that are not safe to pushdown
With this commit, Citus recursively plans subqueries that
are not safe to pushdown, in other words, requires a merge
step.

The algorithm is simple: Recursively traverse the query from bottom
up (i.e., bottom meaning the leaf queries). On each level, check
whether the query is safe to pushdown (or a single repartition
subquery). If the answer is yes, do not touch that subquery. If the
answer is no, plan the subquery seperately (i.e., create a subPlan
for it) and replace the subquery with a call to
`read_intermediate_results(planId, subPlanId)`. During the the
execution, run the subPlans first, and make them avaliable to the
next query executions.

Some of the queries hat this change allows us:

   * Subqueries with LIMIT
   * Subqueries with GROUP BY/DISTINCT on non-partition keys
   * Subqueries involving re-partition joins, router queries
   * Mixed usage of subqueries and CTEs (i.e., use CTEs in
     subqueries as well). Nested subqueries as long as we
     support the subquery inside the nested subquery.
   * Subqueries with local tables (i.e., those subqueries
     has the limitation that they have to be leaf subqueries)

   * VIEWs on the distributed tables just works (i.e., the
     limitations mentioned below still applies to views)

Some of the queries that is still NOT supported:

  * Corrolated subqueries that are not safe to pushdown
  * Window function on non-partition keys
  * Recursively planned subqueries or CTEs on the outer
    side of an outer join
  * Only recursively planned subqueries and CTEs in the FROM
    (i.e., not any distributed tables in the FROM) and subqueries
    in WHERE clause
  * Subquery joins that are not on the partition columns (i.e., each
    subquery is individually joined on partition keys but not the upper
    level subquery.)
  * Any limitation that logical planner applies such as aggregate
    distincts (except for count) when GROUP BY is on non-partition key,
    or array_agg with ORDER BY
2017-12-21 08:37:40 +02:00
mehmet furkan şahin 5851f71bfb Add CTE regression tests 2017-12-14 09:32:55 +01:00