Commit Graph

12 Commits (fc74b8f445ae5caced4d5460843e135a1acb19cc)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Naisila Puka 6bd3474804 Rename foreach_ macros to foreach_declared_ macros (#7700)
This is prep work for successful compilation with PG17

PG17added foreach_ptr, foreach_int and foreach_oid macros
Relevant PG commit
14dd0f27d7cd56ffae9ecdbe324965073d01a9ff

14dd0f27d7

We already have these macros, but they are different with the
PG17 ones because our macros take a DECLARED variable, whereas
the PG16 macros declare a locally-scoped loop variable themselves.

Hence I am renaming our macros to foreach_declared_

I am separating this into its own PR since it touches many files. The
main compilation PR is https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/7699
2025-03-12 11:01:49 +03:00
Nils Dijk ea86f9f94e
Add support for TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION objects (#5685)
DESCRIPTION: Implement TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION propagation

The change adds support to Citus for propagating TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION objects. TSConfig objects cannot always be created in one create statement, and instead require a create statement followed by many alter statements to get turned into the object they should represent.

To support this we add functionality to the worker to create or replace objects based on a list of statements. When the lists of the local object and the remote object correspond 1:1 we skip the creation of the object and simply mark it distributed. This is especially important for TSConfig objects as initdb pre-populates databases with a dozen configurations (for many different languages).

When the user creates a new TSConfig based on the copy of an existing configuration there is no direct link to the object copied from. Since there is no link we can't simply rely on propagating the dependencies to the worker and send a qualified
2022-02-17 13:12:46 +01:00
Philip Dubé 73c06fae3b Introduce GetDistributeObjectOps to organize dispatch of logic dependent on node/object type 2020-01-09 18:24:29 +00:00
SaitTalhaNisanci 13204487e9
remove copyright years (#3286) 2019-12-11 21:14:08 +03:00
Philip Dubé d138bb89bf Support creating collations as part of dependency resolution. Propagate ALTER/DROP on distributed collations
Propagate CREATE COLLATION when outside transaction
2019-12-09 04:42:51 +00:00
Philip Dubé b7fef5c31a Miscellaneous cleanup in prep for collation propagation 2019-11-19 17:28:59 +00:00
Onur TIRTIR 26c306d188
Add extensions to distributed object propagation infrastructure (#3185) 2019-11-19 17:56:28 +03:00
Halil Ozan Akgul 5ae7b219ff Create the ALTER ROLE propagation 2019-11-18 18:31:28 +03:00
Philip Dubé 2fc45e5897 create_distributed_function: accept aggregates
Adds support for OCLASS_PROC to worker_create_or_replace_object
2019-11-06 18:23:37 +00:00
Philip Dubé 74cb168205 Remove Postgres 10 support 2019-10-11 21:56:56 +00:00
Hanefi Onaldi 66b9f2e887 Deparsing and qualifiying for FUNCTION/PROCEDURE statements (#3014)
This PR aims to add all the necessary logic to qualify and deparse all possible `{ALTER|DROP} .. {FUNCTION|PROCEDURE}` queries.

As Procedures are introduced in PG11, the code contains many PG version checks. I tried my best to make it easy to clean up once we drop PG10 support.


Here are some caveats:
- I assumed that the parse tree is a valid one. There are some queries that are not allowed, but still are parsed successfully by postgres planner. Such queries will result in errors in execution time. (e.g. `ALTER PROCEDURE p STRICT` -> `STRICT` action is valid for functions but not procedures. Postgres decides to parse them nevertheless.)
2019-09-27 19:02:52 +02:00
Nils Dijk 2879689441
Distribute Types to worker nodes (#2893)
DESCRIPTION: Distribute Types to worker nodes

When to propagate
==============

There are two logical moments that types could be distributed to the worker nodes
 - When they get used ( just in time distribution )
 - When they get created ( proactive distribution )

The just in time distribution follows the model used by how schema's get created right before we are going to create a table in that schema, for types this would be when the table uses a type as its column.

The proactive distribution is suitable for situations where it is benificial to have the type on the worker nodes directly. They can later on be used in queries where an intermediate result gets created with a cast to this type.

Just in time creation is always the last resort, you cannot create a distributed table before the type gets created. A good example use case is; you have an existing postgres server that needs to scale out. By adding the citus extension, add some nodes to the cluster, and distribute the table. The type got created before citus existed. There was no moment where citus could have propagated the creation of a type.

Proactive is almost always a good option. Types are not resource intensive objects, there is no performance overhead of having 100's of types. If you want to use them in a query to represent an intermediate result (which happens in our test suite) they just work.

There is however a moment when proactive type distribution is not beneficial; in transactions where the type is used in a distributed table.

Lets assume the following transaction:

```sql
BEGIN;
CREATE TYPE tt1 AS (a int, b int);
CREATE TABLE t1 AS (a int PRIMARY KEY, b tt1);
SELECT create_distributed_table('t1', 'a');
\copy t1 FROM bigdata.csv
```

Types are node scoped objects; meaning the type exists once per worker. Shards however have best performance when they are created over their own connection. For the type to be visible on all connections it needs to be created and committed before we try to create the shards. Here the just in time situation is most beneficial and follows how we create schema's on the workers. Outside of a transaction block we will just use 1 connection to propagate the creation.

How propagation works
=================

Just in time
-----------

Just in time propagation hooks into the infrastructure introduced in #2882. It adds types as a supported object in `SupportedDependencyByCitus`. This will make sure that any object being distributed by citus that depends on types will now cascade into types. When types are depending them self on other objects they will get created first.

Creation later works by getting the ddl commands to create the object by its `ObjectAddress` in `GetDependencyCreateDDLCommands` which will dispatch types to `CreateTypeDDLCommandsIdempotent`.

For the correct walking of the graph we follow array types, when later asked for the ddl commands for array types we return `NIL` (empty list) which makes that the object will not be recorded as distributed, (its an internal type, dependant on the user type).

Proactive distribution
---------------------

When the user creates a type (composite or enum) we will have a hook running in `multi_ProcessUtility` after the command has been applied locally. Running after running locally makes that we already have an `ObjectAddress` for the type. This is required to mark the type as being distributed.

Keeping the type up to date
====================

For types that are recorded in `pg_dist_object` (eg. `IsObjectDistributed` returns true for the `ObjectAddress`) we will intercept the utility commands that alter the type.
 - `AlterTableStmt` with `relkind` set to `OBJECT_TYPE` encapsulate changes to the fields of a composite type.
 - `DropStmt` with removeType set to `OBJECT_TYPE` encapsulate `DROP TYPE`.
 - `AlterEnumStmt` encapsulates changes to enum values.
    Enum types can not be changed transactionally. When the execution on a worker fails a warning will be shown to the user the propagation was incomplete due to worker communication failure. An idempotent command is shown for the user to re-execute when the worker communication is fixed.

Keeping types up to date is done via the executor. Before the statement is executed locally we create a plan on how to apply it on the workers. This plan is executed after we have applied the statement locally.

All changes to types need to be done in the same transaction for types that have already been distributed and will fail with an error if parallel queries have already been executed in the same transaction. Much like foreign keys to reference tables.
2019-09-13 17:46:07 +02:00