As shown in Table 37.9, btree defines one required and four optional support functions. The five user-defined methods are:
order
For each combination of data types that a btree operator family
provides comparison operators for, it must provide a comparison
support function, registered in
pg_amproc
with support function number 1
and
amproclefttype
/amprocrighttype
equal to the left and right data types for the comparison (i.e.,
the same data types that the matching operators are registered
with in pg_amop
). The comparison
function must take two non-null values
A
and B
and
return an int32
value that is
<
0
,
0
, or >
0
when A
<
B
,
A
=
B
, or A
>
B
,
respectively. A null result is disallowed: all values of the
data type must be comparable. See
src/backend/access/nbtree/nbtcompare.c
for
examples.
If the compared values are of a collatable data type, the
appropriate collation OID will be passed to the comparison
support function, using the standard
PG_GET_COLLATION()
mechanism.
sortsupport
Optionally, a btree operator family may provide sort
support function(s), registered under support
function number 2. These functions allow implementing
comparisons for sorting purposes in a more efficient way than
naively calling the comparison support function. The APIs
involved in this are defined in
src/include/utils/sortsupport.h
.
in_range
Optionally, a btree operator family may provide
in_range support function(s), registered
under support function number 3. These are not used during btree
index operations; rather, they extend the semantics of the
operator family so that it can support window clauses containing
the RANGE
offset
PRECEDING
and RANGE
offset
FOLLOWING
frame bound types (see Section 4.2.8). Fundamentally, the extra
information provided is how to add or subtract an
offset
value in a way that is
compatible with the family's data ordering.
An in_range
function must have the signature
in_range(val
type1,base
type1,offset
type2,sub
bool,less
bool) returns bool
val
and
base
must be of the same type, which
is one of the types supported by the operator family (i.e., a
type for which it provides an ordering). However,
offset
could be of a different type,
which might be one otherwise unsupported by the family. An
example is that the built-in time_ops
family
provides an in_range
function that has
offset
of type interval
.
A family can provide in_range
functions for
any of its supported types and one or more
offset
types. Each
in_range
function should be entered in
pg_amproc
with
amproclefttype
equal to
type1
and amprocrighttype
equal to type2
.
The essential semantics of an in_range
function depend on the two Boolean flag parameters. It should
add or subtract base
and
offset
, then compare
val
to the result, as follows:
if !
sub
and
!
less
, return
val
>=
(base
+
offset
)
if !
sub
and
less
, return
val
<=
(base
+
offset
)
if sub
and
!
less
, return
val
>=
(base
-
offset
)
if sub
and
less
, return
val
<=
(base
-
offset
)
Before doing so, the function should check the sign of
offset
: if it is less than zero, raise
error
ERRCODE_INVALID_PRECEDING_OR_FOLLOWING_SIZE
(22013) with error text like “invalid preceding or
following size in window function”. (This is required by
the SQL standard, although nonstandard operator families might
perhaps choose to ignore this restriction, since there seems to
be little semantic necessity for it.) This requirement is
delegated to the in_range
function so that
the core code needn't understand what “less than
zero” means for a particular data type.
An additional expectation is that in_range
functions should, if practical, avoid throwing an error if
base
+
offset
or
base
-
offset
would overflow. The correct
comparison result can be determined even if that value would be
out of the data type's range. Note that if the data type
includes concepts such as “infinity” or
“NaN”, extra care may be needed to ensure that
in_range
's results agree with the normal
sort order of the operator family.
The results of the in_range
function must be
consistent with the sort ordering imposed by the operator family.
To be precise, given any fixed values of
offset
and
sub
, then:
If in_range
with
less
= true is true for some
val1
and
base
, it must be true for every
val2
<=
val1
with the same
base
.
If in_range
with
less
= true is false for some
val1
and
base
, it must be false for every
val2
>=
val1
with the same
base
.
If in_range
with
less
= true is true for some
val
and
base1
, it must be true for every
base2
>=
base1
with the same
val
.
If in_range
with
less
= true is false for some
val
and
base1
, it must be false for every
base2
<=
base1
with the same
val
.
Analogous statements with inverted conditions hold when
less
= false.
If the type being ordered (type1
) is collatable, the
appropriate collation OID will be passed to the
in_range
function, using the standard
PG_GET_COLLATION() mechanism.
in_range
functions need not handle NULL
inputs, and typically will be marked strict.
equalimage
Optionally, a btree operator family may provide
equalimage
(“equality implies image
equality”) support functions, registered under support
function number 4. These functions allow the core code to
determine when it is safe to apply the btree deduplication
optimization. Currently, equalimage
functions are only called when building or rebuilding an index.
An equalimage
function must have the
signature
equalimage(opcintype
oid
) returns bool
The return value is static information about an operator class
and collation. Returning true
indicates that
the order
function for the operator class is
guaranteed to only return 0
(“arguments
are equal”) when its A
and
B
arguments are also interchangeable
without any loss of semantic information. Not registering an
equalimage
function or returning
false
indicates that this condition cannot be
assumed to hold.
The opcintype
argument is the
of the
data type that the operator class indexes. This is a convenience
that allows reuse of the same underlying
pg_type
.oidequalimage
function across operator classes.
If opcintype
is a collatable data
type, the appropriate collation OID will be passed to the
equalimage
function, using the standard
PG_GET_COLLATION()
mechanism.
As far as the operator class is concerned, returning
true
indicates that deduplication is safe (or
safe for the collation whose OID was passed to its
equalimage
function). However, the core
code will only deem deduplication safe for an index when
every indexed column uses an operator class
that registers an equalimage
function, and
each function actually returns true
when
called.
Image equality is almost the same condition
as simple bitwise equality. There is one subtle difference: When
indexing a varlena data type, the on-disk representation of two
image equal datums may not be bitwise equal due to inconsistent
application of TOAST compression on input.
Formally, when an operator class's
equalimage
function returns
true
, it is safe to assume that the
datum_image_eq()
C function will always agree
with the operator class's order
function
(provided that the same collation OID is passed to both the
equalimage
and order
functions).
The core code is fundamentally unable to deduce anything about
the “equality implies image equality” status of an
operator class within a multiple-data-type family based on
details from other operator classes in the same family. Also, it
is not sensible for an operator family to register a cross-type
equalimage
function, and attempting to do so
will result in an error. This is because “equality implies
image equality” status does not just depend on
sorting/equality semantics, which are more or less defined at the
operator family level. In general, the semantics that one
particular data type implements must be considered separately.
The convention followed by the operator classes included with the
core PostgreSQL distribution is to
register a stock, generic equalimage
function. Most operator classes register
btequalimage()
, which indicates that
deduplication is safe unconditionally. Operator classes for
collatable data types such as text
register
btvarstrequalimage()
, which indicates that
deduplication is safe with deterministic collations. Best
practice for third-party extensions is to register their own
custom function to retain control.
options
Optionally, a B-tree operator family may provide
options
(“operator class specific
options”) support functions, registered under support
function number 5. These functions define a set of user-visible
parameters that control operator class behavior.
An options
support function must have the
signature
options(relopts
local_relopts *
) returns void
The function is passed a pointer to a local_relopts
struct, which needs to be filled with a set of operator class
specific options. The options can be accessed from other support
functions using the PG_HAS_OPCLASS_OPTIONS()
and
PG_GET_OPCLASS_OPTIONS()
macros.
Currently, no B-Tree operator class has an options
support function. B-tree doesn't allow flexible representation of keys
like GiST, SP-GiST, GIN and BRIN do. So, options
probably doesn't have much application in the current B-tree index
access method. Nevertheless, this support function was added to B-tree
for uniformity, and will probably find uses during further
evolution of B-tree in PostgreSQL.