/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * predtest.c * Routines to attempt to prove logical implications between predicate * expressions. * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2020, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * * IDENTIFICATION * src/backend/optimizer/util/predtest.c * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #include "postgres.h" #include "catalog/pg_proc.h" #include "catalog/pg_type.h" #include "executor/executor.h" #include "miscadmin.h" #include "nodes/makefuncs.h" #include "nodes/nodeFuncs.h" #include "nodes/pathnodes.h" #include "optimizer/optimizer.h" #include "utils/array.h" #include "utils/inval.h" #include "utils/lsyscache.h" #include "utils/syscache.h" /* * Proof attempts involving large arrays in ScalarArrayOpExpr nodes are * likely to require O(N^2) time, and more often than not fail anyway. * So we set an arbitrary limit on the number of array elements that * we will allow to be treated as an AND or OR clause. * XXX is it worth exposing this as a GUC knob? */ #define MAX_SAOP_ARRAY_SIZE 100 /* * To avoid redundant coding in predicate_implied_by_recurse and * predicate_refuted_by_recurse, we need to abstract out the notion of * iterating over the components of an expression that is logically an AND * or OR structure. There are multiple sorts of expression nodes that can * be treated as ANDs or ORs, and we don't want to code each one separately. * Hence, these types and support routines. */ typedef enum { CLASS_ATOM, /* expression that's not AND or OR */ CLASS_AND, /* expression with AND semantics */ CLASS_OR /* expression with OR semantics */ } PredClass; typedef struct PredIterInfoData *PredIterInfo; typedef struct PredIterInfoData { /* node-type-specific iteration state */ void *state; List *state_list; /* initialize to do the iteration */ void (*startup_fn) (Node *clause, PredIterInfo info); /* next-component iteration function */ Node *(*next_fn) (PredIterInfo info); /* release resources when done with iteration */ void (*cleanup_fn) (PredIterInfo info); } PredIterInfoData; #define iterate_begin(item, clause, info) \ do { \ Node *item; \ (info).startup_fn((clause), &(info)); \ while ((item = (info).next_fn(&(info))) != NULL) #define iterate_end(info) \ (info).cleanup_fn(&(info)); \ } while (0) static bool predicate_implied_by_recurse(Node *clause, Node *predicate, bool weak); static bool predicate_refuted_by_recurse(Node *clause, Node *predicate, bool weak); static PredClass predicate_classify(Node *clause, PredIterInfo info); static void list_startup_fn(Node *clause, PredIterInfo info); static Node *list_next_fn(PredIterInfo info); static void list_cleanup_fn(PredIterInfo info); static void boolexpr_startup_fn(Node *clause, PredIterInfo info); static void arrayconst_startup_fn(Node *clause, PredIterInfo info); static Node *arrayconst_next_fn(PredIterInfo info); static void arrayconst_cleanup_fn(PredIterInfo info); static void arrayexpr_startup_fn(Node *clause, PredIterInfo info); static Node *arrayexpr_next_fn(PredIterInfo info); static void arrayexpr_cleanup_fn(PredIterInfo info); static bool predicate_implied_by_simple_clause(Expr *predicate, Node *clause, bool weak); static bool predicate_refuted_by_simple_clause(Expr *predicate, Node *clause, bool weak); static Node *extract_not_arg(Node *clause); static Node *extract_strong_not_arg(Node *clause); static bool clause_is_strict_for(Node *clause, Node *subexpr, bool allow_false); static bool operator_predicate_proof(Expr *predicate, Node *clause, bool refute_it, bool weak); static bool operator_same_subexprs_proof(Oid pred_op, Oid clause_op, bool refute_it); static bool operator_same_subexprs_lookup(Oid pred_op, Oid clause_op, bool refute_it); static Oid get_btree_test_op(Oid pred_op, Oid clause_op, bool refute_it); static void InvalidateOprProofCacheCallBack(Datum arg, int cacheid, uint32 hashvalue); /* * predicate_implied_by * Recursively checks whether the clauses in clause_list imply that the * given predicate is true. * * We support two definitions of implication: * * "Strong" implication: A implies B means that truth of A implies truth of B. * We use this to prove that a row satisfying one WHERE clause or index * predicate must satisfy another one. * * "Weak" implication: A implies B means that non-falsity of A implies * non-falsity of B ("non-false" means "either true or NULL"). We use this to * prove that a row satisfying one CHECK constraint must satisfy another one. * * Strong implication can also be used to prove that a WHERE clause implies a * CHECK constraint, although it will fail to prove a few cases where we could * safely conclude that the implication holds. There's no support for proving * the converse case, since only a few kinds of CHECK constraint would allow * deducing anything. * * The top-level List structure of each list corresponds to an AND list. * We assume that eval_const_expressions() has been applied and so there * are no un-flattened ANDs or ORs (e.g., no AND immediately within an AND, * including AND just below the top-level List structure). * If this is not true we might fail to prove an implication that is * valid, but no worse consequences will ensue. * * We assume the predicate has already been checked to contain only * immutable functions and operators. (In many current uses this is known * true because the predicate is part of an index predicate that has passed * CheckPredicate(); otherwise, the caller must check it.) We dare not make * deductions based on non-immutable functions, because they might change * answers between the time we make the plan and the time we execute the plan. * Immutability of functions in the clause_list is checked here, if necessary. */ bool predicate_implied_by(List *predicate_list, List *clause_list, bool weak) { Node *p, *c; if (predicate_list == NIL) return true; /* no predicate: implication is vacuous */ if (clause_list == NIL) return false; /* no restriction: implication must fail */ /* * If either input is a single-element list, replace it with its lone * member; this avoids one useless level of AND-recursion. We only need * to worry about this at top level, since eval_const_expressions should * have gotten rid of any trivial ANDs or ORs below that. */ if (list_length(predicate_list) == 1) p = (Node *) linitial(predicate_list); else p = (Node *) predicate_list; if (list_length(clause_list) == 1) c = (Node *) linitial(clause_list); else c = (Node *) clause_list; /* And away we go ... */ return predicate_implied_by_recurse(c, p, weak); } /* * predicate_refuted_by * Recursively checks whether the clauses in clause_list refute the given * predicate (that is, prove it false). * * This is NOT the same as !(predicate_implied_by), though it is similar * in the technique and structure of the code. * * We support two definitions of refutation: * * "Strong" refutation: A refutes B means truth of A implies falsity of B. * We use this to disprove a CHECK constraint given a WHERE clause, i.e., * prove that any row satisfying the WHERE clause would violate the CHECK * constraint. (Observe we must prove B yields false, not just not-true.) * * "Weak" refutation: A refutes B means truth of A implies non-truth of B * (i.e., B must yield false or NULL). We use this to detect mutually * contradictory WHERE clauses. * * Weak refutation can be proven in some cases where strong refutation doesn't * hold, so it's useful to use it when possible. We don't currently have * support for disproving one CHECK constraint based on another one, nor for * disproving WHERE based on CHECK. (As with implication, the last case * doesn't seem very practical. CHECK-vs-CHECK might be useful, but isn't * currently needed anywhere.) * * The top-level List structure of each list corresponds to an AND list. * We assume that eval_const_expressions() has been applied and so there * are no un-flattened ANDs or ORs (e.g., no AND immediately within an AND, * including AND just below the top-level List structure). * If this is not true we might fail to prove an implication that is * valid, but no worse consequences will ensue. * * We assume the predicate has already been checked to contain only * immutable functions and operators. We dare not make deductions based on * non-immutable functions, because they might change answers between the * time we make the plan and the time we execute the plan. * Immutability of functions in the clause_list is checked here, if necessary. */ bool predicate_refuted_by(List *predicate_list, List *clause_list, bool weak) { Node *p, *c; if (predicate_list == NIL) return false; /* no predicate: no refutation is possible */ if (clause_list == NIL) return false; /* no restriction: refutation must fail */ /* * If either input is a single-element list, replace it with its lone * member; this avoids one useless level of AND-recursion. We only need * to worry about this at top level, since eval_const_expressions should * have gotten rid of any trivial ANDs or ORs below that. */ if (list_length(predicate_list) == 1) p = (Node *) linitial(predicate_list); else p = (Node *) predicate_list; if (list_length(clause_list) == 1) c = (Node *) linitial(clause_list); else c = (Node *) clause_list; /* And away we go ... */ return predicate_refuted_by_recurse(c, p, weak); } /*---------- * predicate_implied_by_recurse * Does the predicate implication test for non-NULL restriction and * predicate clauses. * * The logic followed here is ("=>" means "implies"): * atom A => atom B iff: predicate_implied_by_simple_clause says so * atom A => AND-expr B iff: A => each of B's components * atom A => OR-expr B iff: A => any of B's components * AND-expr A => atom B iff: any of A's components => B * AND-expr A => AND-expr B iff: A => each of B's components * AND-expr A => OR-expr B iff: A => any of B's components, * *or* any of A's components => B * OR-expr A => atom B iff: each of A's components => B * OR-expr A => AND-expr B iff: A => each of B's components * OR-expr A => OR-expr B iff: each of A's components => any of B's * * An "atom" is anything other than an AND or OR node. Notice that we don't * have any special logic to handle NOT nodes; these should have been pushed * down or eliminated where feasible during eval_const_expressions(). * * All of these rules apply equally to strong or weak implication. * * We can't recursively expand either side first, but have to interleave * the expansions per the above rules, to be sure we handle all of these * examples: * (x OR y) => (x OR y OR z) * (x AND y AND z) => (x AND y) * (x AND y) => ((x AND y) OR z) * ((x OR y) AND z) => (x OR y) * This is still not an exhaustive test, but it handles most normal cases * under the assumption that both inputs have been AND/OR flattened. * * We have to be prepared to handle RestrictInfo nodes in the restrictinfo * tree, though not in the predicate tree. *---------- */ static bool predicate_implied_by_recurse(Node *clause, Node *predicate, bool weak) { PredIterInfoData clause_info; PredIterInfoData pred_info; PredClass pclass; bool result; /* skip through RestrictInfo */ Assert(clause != NULL); if (IsA(clause, RestrictInfo)) clause = (Node *) ((RestrictInfo *) clause)->clause; pclass = predicate_classify(predicate, &pred_info); switch (predicate_classify(clause, &clause_info)) { case CLASS_AND: switch (pclass) { case CLASS_AND: /* * AND-clause => AND-clause if A implies each of B's items */ result = true; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (!predicate_implied_by_recurse(clause, pitem, weak)) { result = false; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); return result; case CLASS_OR: /* * AND-clause => OR-clause if A implies any of B's items * * Needed to handle (x AND y) => ((x AND y) OR z) */ result = false; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (predicate_implied_by_recurse(clause, pitem, weak)) { result = true; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); if (result) return result; /* * Also check if any of A's items implies B * * Needed to handle ((x OR y) AND z) => (x OR y) */ iterate_begin(citem, clause, clause_info) { if (predicate_implied_by_recurse(citem, predicate, weak)) { result = true; break; } } iterate_end(clause_info); return result; case CLASS_ATOM: /* * AND-clause => atom if any of A's items implies B */ result = false; iterate_begin(citem, clause, clause_info) { if (predicate_implied_by_recurse(citem, predicate, weak)) { result = true; break; } } iterate_end(clause_info); return result; } break; case CLASS_OR: switch (pclass) { case CLASS_OR: /* * OR-clause => OR-clause if each of A's items implies any * of B's items. Messy but can't do it any more simply. */ result = true; iterate_begin(citem, clause, clause_info) { bool presult = false; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (predicate_implied_by_recurse(citem, pitem, weak)) { presult = true; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); if (!presult) { result = false; /* doesn't imply any of B's */ break; } } iterate_end(clause_info); return result; case CLASS_AND: case CLASS_ATOM: /* * OR-clause => AND-clause if each of A's items implies B * * OR-clause => atom if each of A's items implies B */ result = true; iterate_begin(citem, clause, clause_info) { if (!predicate_implied_by_recurse(citem, predicate, weak)) { result = false; break; } } iterate_end(clause_info); return result; } break; case CLASS_ATOM: switch (pclass) { case CLASS_AND: /* * atom => AND-clause if A implies each of B's items */ result = true; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (!predicate_implied_by_recurse(clause, pitem, weak)) { result = false; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); return result; case CLASS_OR: /* * atom => OR-clause if A implies any of B's items */ result = false; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (predicate_implied_by_recurse(clause, pitem, weak)) { result = true; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); return result; case CLASS_ATOM: /* * atom => atom is the base case */ return predicate_implied_by_simple_clause((Expr *) predicate, clause, weak); } break; } /* can't get here */ elog(ERROR, "predicate_classify returned a bogus value"); return false; } /*---------- * predicate_refuted_by_recurse * Does the predicate refutation test for non-NULL restriction and * predicate clauses. * * The logic followed here is ("R=>" means "refutes"): * atom A R=> atom B iff: predicate_refuted_by_simple_clause says so * atom A R=> AND-expr B iff: A R=> any of B's components * atom A R=> OR-expr B iff: A R=> each of B's components * AND-expr A R=> atom B iff: any of A's components R=> B * AND-expr A R=> AND-expr B iff: A R=> any of B's components, * *or* any of A's components R=> B * AND-expr A R=> OR-expr B iff: A R=> each of B's components * OR-expr A R=> atom B iff: each of A's components R=> B * OR-expr A R=> AND-expr B iff: each of A's components R=> any of B's * OR-expr A R=> OR-expr B iff: A R=> each of B's components * * All of the above rules apply equally to strong or weak refutation. * * In addition, if the predicate is a NOT-clause then we can use * A R=> NOT B if: A => B * This works for several different SQL constructs that assert the non-truth * of their argument, ie NOT, IS FALSE, IS NOT TRUE, IS UNKNOWN, although some * of them require that we prove strong implication. Likewise, we can use * NOT A R=> B if: B => A * but here we must be careful about strong vs. weak refutation and make * the appropriate type of implication proof (weak or strong respectively). * * Other comments are as for predicate_implied_by_recurse(). *---------- */ static bool predicate_refuted_by_recurse(Node *clause, Node *predicate, bool weak) { PredIterInfoData clause_info; PredIterInfoData pred_info; PredClass pclass; Node *not_arg; bool result; /* skip through RestrictInfo */ Assert(clause != NULL); if (IsA(clause, RestrictInfo)) clause = (Node *) ((RestrictInfo *) clause)->clause; pclass = predicate_classify(predicate, &pred_info); switch (predicate_classify(clause, &clause_info)) { case CLASS_AND: switch (pclass) { case CLASS_AND: /* * AND-clause R=> AND-clause if A refutes any of B's items * * Needed to handle (x AND y) R=> ((!x OR !y) AND z) */ result = false; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (predicate_refuted_by_recurse(clause, pitem, weak)) { result = true; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); if (result) return result; /* * Also check if any of A's items refutes B * * Needed to handle ((x OR y) AND z) R=> (!x AND !y) */ iterate_begin(citem, clause, clause_info) { if (predicate_refuted_by_recurse(citem, predicate, weak)) { result = true; break; } } iterate_end(clause_info); return result; case CLASS_OR: /* * AND-clause R=> OR-clause if A refutes each of B's items */ result = true; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (!predicate_refuted_by_recurse(clause, pitem, weak)) { result = false; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); return result; case CLASS_ATOM: /* * If B is a NOT-type clause, A R=> B if A => B's arg * * Since, for either type of refutation, we are starting * with the premise that A is true, we can use a strong * implication test in all cases. That proves B's arg is * true, which is more than we need for weak refutation if * B is a simple NOT, but it allows not worrying about * exactly which kind of negation clause we have. */ not_arg = extract_not_arg(predicate); if (not_arg && predicate_implied_by_recurse(clause, not_arg, false)) return true; /* * AND-clause R=> atom if any of A's items refutes B */ result = false; iterate_begin(citem, clause, clause_info) { if (predicate_refuted_by_recurse(citem, predicate, weak)) { result = true; break; } } iterate_end(clause_info); return result; } break; case CLASS_OR: switch (pclass) { case CLASS_OR: /* * OR-clause R=> OR-clause if A refutes each of B's items */ result = true; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (!predicate_refuted_by_recurse(clause, pitem, weak)) { result = false; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); return result; case CLASS_AND: /* * OR-clause R=> AND-clause if each of A's items refutes * any of B's items. */ result = true; iterate_begin(citem, clause, clause_info) { bool presult = false; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (predicate_refuted_by_recurse(citem, pitem, weak)) { presult = true; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); if (!presult) { result = false; /* citem refutes nothing */ break; } } iterate_end(clause_info); return result; case CLASS_ATOM: /* * If B is a NOT-type clause, A R=> B if A => B's arg * * Same logic as for the AND-clause case above. */ not_arg = extract_not_arg(predicate); if (not_arg && predicate_implied_by_recurse(clause, not_arg, false)) return true; /* * OR-clause R=> atom if each of A's items refutes B */ result = true; iterate_begin(citem, clause, clause_info) { if (!predicate_refuted_by_recurse(citem, predicate, weak)) { result = false; break; } } iterate_end(clause_info); return result; } break; case CLASS_ATOM: /* * If A is a strong NOT-clause, A R=> B if B => A's arg * * Since A is strong, we may assume A's arg is false (not just * not-true). If B weakly implies A's arg, then B can be neither * true nor null, so that strong refutation is proven. If B * strongly implies A's arg, then B cannot be true, so that weak * refutation is proven. */ not_arg = extract_strong_not_arg(clause); if (not_arg && predicate_implied_by_recurse(predicate, not_arg, !weak)) return true; switch (pclass) { case CLASS_AND: /* * atom R=> AND-clause if A refutes any of B's items */ result = false; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (predicate_refuted_by_recurse(clause, pitem, weak)) { result = true; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); return result; case CLASS_OR: /* * atom R=> OR-clause if A refutes each of B's items */ result = true; iterate_begin(pitem, predicate, pred_info) { if (!predicate_refuted_by_recurse(clause, pitem, weak)) { result = false; break; } } iterate_end(pred_info); return result; case CLASS_ATOM: /* * If B is a NOT-type clause, A R=> B if A => B's arg * * Same logic as for the AND-clause case above. */ not_arg = extract_not_arg(predicate); if (not_arg && predicate_implied_by_recurse(clause, not_arg, false)) return true; /* * atom R=> atom is the base case */ return predicate_refuted_by_simple_clause((Expr *) predicate, clause, weak); } break; } /* can't get here */ elog(ERROR, "predicate_classify returned a bogus value"); return false; } /* * predicate_classify * Classify an expression node as AND-type, OR-type, or neither (an atom). * * If the expression is classified as AND- or OR-type, then *info is filled * in with the functions needed to iterate over its components. * * This function also implements enforcement of MAX_SAOP_ARRAY_SIZE: if a * ScalarArrayOpExpr's array has too many elements, we just classify it as an * atom. (This will result in its being passed as-is to the simple_clause * functions, many of which will fail to prove anything about it.) Note that we * cannot just stop after considering MAX_SAOP_ARRAY_SIZE elements; in general * that would result in wrong proofs, rather than failing to prove anything. */ static PredClass predicate_classify(Node *clause, PredIterInfo info) { /* Caller should not pass us NULL, nor a RestrictInfo clause */ Assert(clause != NULL); Assert(!IsA(clause, RestrictInfo)); /* * If we see a List, assume it's an implicit-AND list; this is the correct * semantics for lists of RestrictInfo nodes. */ if (IsA(clause, List)) { info->startup_fn = list_startup_fn; info->next_fn = list_next_fn; info->cleanup_fn = list_cleanup_fn; return CLASS_AND; } /* Handle normal AND and OR boolean clauses */ if (is_andclause(clause)) { info->startup_fn = boolexpr_startup_fn; info->next_fn = list_next_fn; info->cleanup_fn = list_cleanup_fn; return CLASS_AND; } if (is_orclause(clause)) { info->startup_fn = boolexpr_startup_fn; info->next_fn = list_next_fn; info->cleanup_fn = list_cleanup_fn; return CLASS_OR; } /* Handle ScalarArrayOpExpr */ if (IsA(clause, ScalarArrayOpExpr)) { ScalarArrayOpExpr *saop = (ScalarArrayOpExpr *) clause; Node *arraynode = (Node *) lsecond(saop->args); /* * We can break this down into an AND or OR structure, but only if we * know how to iterate through expressions for the array's elements. * We can do that if the array operand is a non-null constant or a * simple ArrayExpr. */ if (arraynode && IsA(arraynode, Const) && !((Const *) arraynode)->constisnull) { ArrayType *arrayval; int nelems; arrayval = DatumGetArrayTypeP(((Const *) arraynode)->constvalue); nelems = ArrayGetNItems(ARR_NDIM(arrayval), ARR_DIMS(arrayval)); if (nelems <= MAX_SAOP_ARRAY_SIZE) { info->startup_fn = arrayconst_startup_fn; info->next_fn = arrayconst_next_fn; info->cleanup_fn = arrayconst_cleanup_fn; return saop->useOr ? CLASS_OR : CLASS_AND; } } else if (arraynode && IsA(arraynode, ArrayExpr) && !((ArrayExpr *) arraynode)->multidims && list_length(((ArrayExpr *) arraynode)->elements) <= MAX_SAOP_ARRAY_SIZE) { info->startup_fn = arrayexpr_startup_fn; info->next_fn = arrayexpr_next_fn; info->cleanup_fn = arrayexpr_cleanup_fn; return saop->useOr ? CLASS_OR : CLASS_AND; } } /* None of the above, so it's an atom */ return CLASS_ATOM; } /* * PredIterInfo routines for iterating over regular Lists. The iteration * state variable is the next ListCell to visit. */ static void list_startup_fn(Node *clause, PredIterInfo info) { info->state_list = (List *) clause; info->state = (void *) list_head(info->state_list); } static Node * list_next_fn(PredIterInfo info) { ListCell *l = (ListCell *) info->state; Node *n; if (l == NULL) return NULL; n = lfirst(l); info->state = (void *) lnext(info->state_list, l); return n; } static void list_cleanup_fn(PredIterInfo info) { /* Nothing to clean up */ } /* * BoolExpr needs its own startup function, but can use list_next_fn and * list_cleanup_fn. */ static void boolexpr_startup_fn(Node *clause, PredIterInfo info) { info->state_list = ((BoolExpr *) clause)->args; info->state = (void *) list_head(info->state_list); } /* * PredIterInfo routines for iterating over a ScalarArrayOpExpr with a * constant array operand. */ typedef struct { OpExpr opexpr; Const constexpr; int next_elem; int num_elems; Datum *elem_values; bool *elem_nulls; } ArrayConstIterState; static void arrayconst_startup_fn(Node *clause, PredIterInfo info) { ScalarArrayOpExpr *saop = (ScalarArrayOpExpr *) clause; ArrayConstIterState *state; Const *arrayconst; ArrayType *arrayval; int16 elmlen; bool elmbyval; char elmalign; /* Create working state struct */ state = (ArrayConstIterState *) palloc(sizeof(ArrayConstIterState)); info->state = (void *) state; /* Deconstruct the array literal */ arrayconst = (Const *) lsecond(saop->args); arrayval = DatumGetArrayTypeP(arrayconst->constvalue); get_typlenbyvalalign(ARR_ELEMTYPE(arrayval), &elmlen, &elmbyval, &elmalign); deconstruct_array(arrayval, ARR_ELEMTYPE(arrayval), elmlen, elmbyval, elmalign, &state->elem_values, &state->elem_nulls, &state->num_elems); /* Set up a dummy OpExpr to return as the per-item node */ state->opexpr.xpr.type = T_OpExpr; state->opexpr.opno = saop->opno; state->opexpr.opfuncid = saop->opfuncid; state->opexpr.opresulttype = BOOLOID; state->opexpr.opretset = false; state->opexpr.opcollid = InvalidOid; state->opexpr.inputcollid = saop->inputcollid; state->opexpr.args = list_copy(saop->args); /* Set up a dummy Const node to hold the per-element values */ state->constexpr.xpr.type = T_Const; state->constexpr.consttype = ARR_ELEMTYPE(arrayval); state->constexpr.consttypmod = -1; state->constexpr.constcollid = arrayconst->constcollid; state->constexpr.constlen = elmlen; state->constexpr.constbyval = elmbyval; lsecond(state->opexpr.args) = &state->constexpr; /* Initialize iteration state */ state->next_elem = 0; } static Node * arrayconst_next_fn(PredIterInfo info) { ArrayConstIterState *state = (ArrayConstIterState *) info->state; if (state->next_elem >= state->num_elems) return NULL; state->constexpr.constvalue = state->elem_values[state->next_elem]; state->constexpr.constisnull = state->elem_nulls[state->next_elem]; state->next_elem++; return (Node *) &(state->opexpr); } static void arrayconst_cleanup_fn(PredIterInfo info) { ArrayConstIterState *state = (ArrayConstIterState *) info->state; pfree(state->elem_values); pfree(state->elem_nulls); list_free(state->opexpr.args); pfree(state); } /* * PredIterInfo routines for iterating over a ScalarArrayOpExpr with a * one-dimensional ArrayExpr array operand. */ typedef struct { OpExpr opexpr; ListCell *next; } ArrayExprIterState; static void arrayexpr_startup_fn(Node *clause, PredIterInfo info) { ScalarArrayOpExpr *saop = (ScalarArrayOpExpr *) clause; ArrayExprIterState *state; ArrayExpr *arrayexpr; /* Create working state struct */ state = (ArrayExprIterState *) palloc(sizeof(ArrayExprIterState)); info->state = (void *) state; /* Set up a dummy OpExpr to return as the per-item node */ state->opexpr.xpr.type = T_OpExpr; state->opexpr.opno = saop->opno; state->opexpr.opfuncid = saop->opfuncid; state->opexpr.opresulttype = BOOLOID; state->opexpr.opretset = false; state->opexpr.opcollid = InvalidOid; state->opexpr.inputcollid = saop->inputcollid; state->opexpr.args = list_copy(saop->args); /* Initialize iteration variable to first member of ArrayExpr */ arrayexpr = (ArrayExpr *) lsecond(saop->args); info->state_list = arrayexpr->elements; state->next = list_head(arrayexpr->elements); } static Node * arrayexpr_next_fn(PredIterInfo info) { ArrayExprIterState *state = (ArrayExprIterState *) info->state; if (state->next == NULL) return NULL; lsecond(state->opexpr.args) = lfirst(state->next); state->next = lnext(info->state_list, state->next); return (Node *) &(state->opexpr); } static void arrayexpr_cleanup_fn(PredIterInfo info) { ArrayExprIterState *state = (ArrayExprIterState *) info->state; list_free(state->opexpr.args); pfree(state); } /*---------- * predicate_implied_by_simple_clause * Does the predicate implication test for a "simple clause" predicate * and a "simple clause" restriction. * * We return true if able to prove the implication, false if not. * * We have three strategies for determining whether one simple clause * implies another: * * A simple and general way is to see if they are equal(); this works for any * kind of expression, and for either implication definition. (Actually, * there is an implied assumption that the functions in the expression are * immutable --- but this was checked for the predicate by the caller.) * * If the predicate is of the form "foo IS NOT NULL", and we are considering * strong implication, we can conclude that the predicate is implied if the * clause is strict for "foo", i.e., it must yield false or NULL when "foo" * is NULL. In that case truth of the clause ensures that "foo" isn't NULL. * (Again, this is a safe conclusion because "foo" must be immutable.) * This doesn't work for weak implication, though. * * Finally, if both clauses are binary operator expressions, we may be able * to prove something using the system's knowledge about operators; those * proof rules are encapsulated in operator_predicate_proof(). *---------- */ static bool predicate_implied_by_simple_clause(Expr *predicate, Node *clause, bool weak) { /* Allow interrupting long proof attempts */ CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS(); /* First try the equal() test */ if (equal((Node *) predicate, clause)) return true; /* Next try the IS NOT NULL case */ if (!weak && predicate && IsA(predicate, NullTest)) { NullTest *ntest = (NullTest *) predicate; /* row IS NOT NULL does not act in the simple way we have in mind */ if (ntest->nulltesttype == IS_NOT_NULL && !ntest->argisrow) { /* strictness of clause for foo implies foo IS NOT NULL */ if (clause_is_strict_for(clause, (Node *) ntest->arg, true)) return true; } return false; /* we can't succeed below... */ } /* Else try operator-related knowledge */ return operator_predicate_proof(predicate, clause, false, weak); } /*---------- * predicate_refuted_by_simple_clause * Does the predicate refutation test for a "simple clause" predicate * and a "simple clause" restriction. * * We return true if able to prove the refutation, false if not. * * Unlike the implication case, checking for equal() clauses isn't helpful. * But relation_excluded_by_constraints() checks for self-contradictions in a * list of clauses, so that we may get here with predicate and clause being * actually pointer-equal, and that is worth eliminating quickly. * * When the predicate is of the form "foo IS NULL", we can conclude that * the predicate is refuted if the clause is strict for "foo" (see notes for * implication case), or is "foo IS NOT NULL". That works for either strong * or weak refutation. * * A clause "foo IS NULL" refutes a predicate "foo IS NOT NULL" in all cases. * If we are considering weak refutation, it also refutes a predicate that * is strict for "foo", since then the predicate must yield false or NULL * (and since "foo" appears in the predicate, it's known immutable). * * (The main motivation for covering these IS [NOT] NULL cases is to support * using IS NULL/IS NOT NULL as partition-defining constraints.) * * Finally, if both clauses are binary operator expressions, we may be able * to prove something using the system's knowledge about operators; those * proof rules are encapsulated in operator_predicate_proof(). *---------- */ static bool predicate_refuted_by_simple_clause(Expr *predicate, Node *clause, bool weak) { /* Allow interrupting long proof attempts */ CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS(); /* A simple clause can't refute itself */ /* Worth checking because of relation_excluded_by_constraints() */ if ((Node *) predicate == clause) return false; /* Try the predicate-IS-NULL case */ if (predicate && IsA(predicate, NullTest) && ((NullTest *) predicate)->nulltesttype == IS_NULL) { Expr *isnullarg = ((NullTest *) predicate)->arg; /* row IS NULL does not act in the simple way we have in mind */ if (((NullTest *) predicate)->argisrow) return false; /* strictness of clause for foo refutes foo IS NULL */ if (clause_is_strict_for(clause, (Node *) isnullarg, true)) return true; /* foo IS NOT NULL refutes foo IS NULL */ if (clause && IsA(clause, NullTest) && ((NullTest *) clause)->nulltesttype == IS_NOT_NULL && !((NullTest *) clause)->argisrow && equal(((NullTest *) clause)->arg, isnullarg)) return true; return false; /* we can't succeed below... */ } /* Try the clause-IS-NULL case */ if (clause && IsA(clause, NullTest) && ((NullTest *) clause)->nulltesttype == IS_NULL) { Expr *isnullarg = ((NullTest *) clause)->arg; /* row IS NULL does not act in the simple way we have in mind */ if (((NullTest *) clause)->argisrow) return false; /* foo IS NULL refutes foo IS NOT NULL */ if (predicate && IsA(predicate, NullTest) && ((NullTest *) predicate)->nulltesttype == IS_NOT_NULL && !((NullTest *) predicate)->argisrow && equal(((NullTest *) predicate)->arg, isnullarg)) return true; /* foo IS NULL weakly refutes any predicate that is strict for foo */ if (weak && clause_is_strict_for((Node *) predicate, (Node *) isnullarg, true)) return true; return false; /* we can't succeed below... */ } /* Else try operator-related knowledge */ return operator_predicate_proof(predicate, clause, true, weak); } /* * If clause asserts the non-truth of a subclause, return that subclause; * otherwise return NULL. */ static Node * extract_not_arg(Node *clause) { if (clause == NULL) return NULL; if (IsA(clause, BoolExpr)) { BoolExpr *bexpr = (BoolExpr *) clause; if (bexpr->boolop == NOT_EXPR) return (Node *) linitial(bexpr->args); } else if (IsA(clause, BooleanTest)) { BooleanTest *btest = (BooleanTest *) clause; if (btest->booltesttype == IS_NOT_TRUE || btest->booltesttype == IS_FALSE || btest->booltesttype == IS_UNKNOWN) return (Node *) btest->arg; } return NULL; } /* * If clause asserts the falsity of a subclause, return that subclause; * otherwise return NULL. */ static Node * extract_strong_not_arg(Node *clause) { if (clause == NULL) return NULL; if (IsA(clause, BoolExpr)) { BoolExpr *bexpr = (BoolExpr *) clause; if (bexpr->boolop == NOT_EXPR) return (Node *) linitial(bexpr->args); } else if (IsA(clause, BooleanTest)) { BooleanTest *btest = (BooleanTest *) clause; if (btest->booltesttype == IS_FALSE) return (Node *) btest->arg; } return NULL; } /* * Can we prove that "clause" returns NULL (or FALSE) if "subexpr" is * assumed to yield NULL? * * In most places in the planner, "strictness" refers to a guarantee that * an expression yields NULL output for a NULL input, and that's mostly what * we're looking for here. However, at top level where the clause is known * to yield boolean, it may be sufficient to prove that it cannot return TRUE * when "subexpr" is NULL. The caller should pass allow_false = true when * this weaker property is acceptable. (When this function recurses * internally, we pass down allow_false = false since we need to prove actual * nullness of the subexpression.) * * We assume that the caller checked that least one of the input expressions * is immutable. All of the proof rules here involve matching "subexpr" to * some portion of "clause", so that this allows assuming that "subexpr" is * immutable without a separate check. * * The base case is that clause and subexpr are equal(). * * We can also report success if the subexpr appears as a subexpression * of "clause" in a place where it'd force nullness of the overall result. */ static bool clause_is_strict_for(Node *clause, Node *subexpr, bool allow_false) { ListCell *lc; /* safety checks */ if (clause == NULL || subexpr == NULL) return false; /* * Look through any RelabelType nodes, so that we can match, say, * varcharcol with lower(varcharcol::text). (In general we could recurse * through any nullness-preserving, immutable operation.) We should not * see stacked RelabelTypes here. */ if (IsA(clause, RelabelType)) clause = (Node *) ((RelabelType *) clause)->arg; if (IsA(subexpr, RelabelType)) subexpr = (Node *) ((RelabelType *) subexpr)->arg; /* Base case */ if (equal(clause, subexpr)) return true; /* * If we have a strict operator or function, a NULL result is guaranteed * if any input is forced NULL by subexpr. This is OK even if the op or * func isn't immutable, since it won't even be called on NULL input. */ if (is_opclause(clause) && op_strict(((OpExpr *) clause)->opno)) { foreach(lc, ((OpExpr *) clause)->args) { if (clause_is_strict_for((Node *) lfirst(lc), subexpr, false)) return true; } return false; } if (is_funcclause(clause) && func_strict(((FuncExpr *) clause)->funcid)) { foreach(lc, ((FuncExpr *) clause)->args) { if (clause_is_strict_for((Node *) lfirst(lc), subexpr, false)) return true; } return false; } /* * CoerceViaIO is strict (whether or not the I/O functions it calls are). * Likewise, ArrayCoerceExpr is strict for its array argument (regardless * of what the per-element expression is), ConvertRowtypeExpr is strict at * the row level, and CoerceToDomain is strict too. These are worth * checking mainly because it saves us having to explain to users why some * type coercions are known strict and others aren't. */ if (IsA(clause, CoerceViaIO)) return clause_is_strict_for((Node *) ((CoerceViaIO *) clause)->arg, subexpr, false); if (IsA(clause, ArrayCoerceExpr)) return clause_is_strict_for((Node *) ((ArrayCoerceExpr *) clause)->arg, subexpr, false); if (IsA(clause, ConvertRowtypeExpr)) return clause_is_strict_for((Node *) ((ConvertRowtypeExpr *) clause)->arg, subexpr, false); if (IsA(clause, CoerceToDomain)) return clause_is_strict_for((Node *) ((CoerceToDomain *) clause)->arg, subexpr, false); /* * ScalarArrayOpExpr is a special case. Note that we'd only reach here * with a ScalarArrayOpExpr clause if we failed to deconstruct it into an * AND or OR tree, as for example if it has too many array elements. */ if (IsA(clause, ScalarArrayOpExpr)) { ScalarArrayOpExpr *saop = (ScalarArrayOpExpr *) clause; Node *scalarnode = (Node *) linitial(saop->args); Node *arraynode = (Node *) lsecond(saop->args); /* * If we can prove the scalar input to be null, and the operator is * strict, then the SAOP result has to be null --- unless the array is * empty. For an empty array, we'd get either false (for ANY) or true * (for ALL). So if allow_false = true then the proof succeeds anyway * for the ANY case; otherwise we can only make the proof if we can * prove the array non-empty. */ if (clause_is_strict_for(scalarnode, subexpr, false) && op_strict(saop->opno)) { int nelems = 0; if (allow_false && saop->useOr) return true; /* can succeed even if array is empty */ if (arraynode && IsA(arraynode, Const)) { Const *arrayconst = (Const *) arraynode; ArrayType *arrval; /* * If array is constant NULL then we can succeed, as in the * case below. */ if (arrayconst->constisnull) return true; /* Otherwise, we can compute the number of elements. */ arrval = DatumGetArrayTypeP(arrayconst->constvalue); nelems = ArrayGetNItems(ARR_NDIM(arrval), ARR_DIMS(arrval)); } else if (arraynode && IsA(arraynode, ArrayExpr) && !((ArrayExpr *) arraynode)->multidims) { /* * We can also reliably count the number of array elements if * the input is a non-multidim ARRAY[] expression. */ nelems = list_length(((ArrayExpr *) arraynode)->elements); } /* Proof succeeds if array is definitely non-empty */ if (nelems > 0) return true; } /* * If we can prove the array input to be null, the proof succeeds in * all cases, since ScalarArrayOpExpr will always return NULL for a * NULL array. Otherwise, we're done here. */ return clause_is_strict_for(arraynode, subexpr, false); } /* * When recursing into an expression, we might find a NULL constant. * That's certainly NULL, whether it matches subexpr or not. */ if (IsA(clause, Const)) return ((Const *) clause)->constisnull; return false; } /* * Define "operator implication tables" for btree operators ("strategies"), * and similar tables for refutation. * * The strategy numbers defined by btree indexes (see access/stratnum.h) are: * 1 < 2 <= 3 = 4 >= 5 > * and in addition we use 6 to represent <>. <> is not a btree-indexable * operator, but we assume here that if an equality operator of a btree * opfamily has a negator operator, the negator behaves as <> for the opfamily. * (This convention is also known to get_op_btree_interpretation().) * * BT_implies_table[] and BT_refutes_table[] are used for cases where we have * two identical subexpressions and we want to know whether one operator * expression implies or refutes the other. That is, if the "clause" is * EXPR1 clause_op EXPR2 and the "predicate" is EXPR1 pred_op EXPR2 for the * same two (immutable) subexpressions: * BT_implies_table[clause_op-1][pred_op-1] * is true if the clause implies the predicate * BT_refutes_table[clause_op-1][pred_op-1] * is true if the clause refutes the predicate * where clause_op and pred_op are strategy numbers (from 1 to 6) in the * same btree opfamily. For example, "x < y" implies "x <= y" and refutes * "x > y". * * BT_implic_table[] and BT_refute_table[] are used where we have two * constants that we need to compare. The interpretation of: * * test_op = BT_implic_table[clause_op-1][pred_op-1] * * where test_op, clause_op and pred_op are strategy numbers (from 1 to 6) * of btree operators, is as follows: * * If you know, for some EXPR, that "EXPR clause_op CONST1" is true, and you * want to determine whether "EXPR pred_op CONST2" must also be true, then * you can use "CONST2 test_op CONST1" as a test. If this test returns true, * then the predicate expression must be true; if the test returns false, * then the predicate expression may be false. * * For example, if clause is "Quantity > 10" and pred is "Quantity > 5" * then we test "5 <= 10" which evals to true, so clause implies pred. * * Similarly, the interpretation of a BT_refute_table entry is: * * If you know, for some EXPR, that "EXPR clause_op CONST1" is true, and you * want to determine whether "EXPR pred_op CONST2" must be false, then * you can use "CONST2 test_op CONST1" as a test. If this test returns true, * then the predicate expression must be false; if the test returns false, * then the predicate expression may be true. * * For example, if clause is "Quantity > 10" and pred is "Quantity < 5" * then we test "5 <= 10" which evals to true, so clause refutes pred. * * An entry where test_op == 0 means the implication cannot be determined. */ #define BTLT BTLessStrategyNumber #define BTLE BTLessEqualStrategyNumber #define BTEQ BTEqualStrategyNumber #define BTGE BTGreaterEqualStrategyNumber #define BTGT BTGreaterStrategyNumber #define BTNE ROWCOMPARE_NE /* We use "none" for 0/false to make the tables align nicely */ #define none 0 static const bool BT_implies_table[6][6] = { /* * The predicate operator: * LT LE EQ GE GT NE */ {true, true, none, none, none, true}, /* LT */ {none, true, none, none, none, none}, /* LE */ {none, true, true, true, none, none}, /* EQ */ {none, none, none, true, none, none}, /* GE */ {none, none, none, true, true, true}, /* GT */ {none, none, none, none, none, true} /* NE */ }; static const bool BT_refutes_table[6][6] = { /* * The predicate operator: * LT LE EQ GE GT NE */ {none, none, true, true, true, none}, /* LT */ {none, none, none, none, true, none}, /* LE */ {true, none, none, none, true, true}, /* EQ */ {true, none, none, none, none, none}, /* GE */ {true, true, true, none, none, none}, /* GT */ {none, none, true, none, none, none} /* NE */ }; static const StrategyNumber BT_implic_table[6][6] = { /* * The predicate operator: * LT LE EQ GE GT NE */ {BTGE, BTGE, none, none, none, BTGE}, /* LT */ {BTGT, BTGE, none, none, none, BTGT}, /* LE */ {BTGT, BTGE, BTEQ, BTLE, BTLT, BTNE}, /* EQ */ {none, none, none, BTLE, BTLT, BTLT}, /* GE */ {none, none, none, BTLE, BTLE, BTLE}, /* GT */ {none, none, none, none, none, BTEQ} /* NE */ }; static const StrategyNumber BT_refute_table[6][6] = { /* * The predicate operator: * LT LE EQ GE GT NE */ {none, none, BTGE, BTGE, BTGE, none}, /* LT */ {none, none, BTGT, BTGT, BTGE, none}, /* LE */ {BTLE, BTLT, BTNE, BTGT, BTGE, BTEQ}, /* EQ */ {BTLE, BTLT, BTLT, none, none, none}, /* GE */ {BTLE, BTLE, BTLE, none, none, none}, /* GT */ {none, none, BTEQ, none, none, none} /* NE */ }; /* * operator_predicate_proof * Does the predicate implication or refutation test for a "simple clause" * predicate and a "simple clause" restriction, when both are operator * clauses using related operators and identical input expressions. * * When refute_it == false, we want to prove the predicate true; * when refute_it == true, we want to prove the predicate false. * (There is enough common code to justify handling these two cases * in one routine.) We return true if able to make the proof, false * if not able to prove it. * * We mostly need not distinguish strong vs. weak implication/refutation here. * This depends on the assumption that a pair of related operators (i.e., * commutators, negators, or btree opfamily siblings) will not return one NULL * and one non-NULL result for the same inputs. Then, for the proof types * where we start with an assumption of truth of the clause, the predicate * operator could not return NULL either, so it doesn't matter whether we are * trying to make a strong or weak proof. For weak implication, it could be * that the clause operator returned NULL, but then the predicate operator * would as well, so that the weak implication still holds. This argument * doesn't apply in the case where we are considering two different constant * values, since then the operators aren't being given identical inputs. But * we only support that for btree operators, for which we can assume that all * non-null inputs result in non-null outputs, so that it doesn't matter which * two non-null constants we consider. If either constant is NULL, we have * to think harder, but sometimes the proof still works, as explained below. * * We can make proofs involving several expression forms (here "foo" and "bar" * represent subexpressions that are identical according to equal()): * "foo op1 bar" refutes "foo op2 bar" if op1 is op2's negator * "foo op1 bar" implies "bar op2 foo" if op1 is op2's commutator * "foo op1 bar" refutes "bar op2 foo" if op1 is negator of op2's commutator * "foo op1 bar" can imply/refute "foo op2 bar" based on btree semantics * "foo op1 bar" can imply/refute "bar op2 foo" based on btree semantics * "foo op1 const1" can imply/refute "foo op2 const2" based on btree semantics * * For the last three cases, op1 and op2 have to be members of the same btree * operator family. When both subexpressions are identical, the idea is that, * for instance, x < y implies x <= y, independently of exactly what x and y * are. If we have two different constants compared to the same expression * foo, we have to execute a comparison between the two constant values * in order to determine the result; for instance, foo < c1 implies foo < c2 * if c1 <= c2. We assume it's safe to compare the constants at plan time * if the comparison operator is immutable. * * Note: all the operators and subexpressions have to be immutable for the * proof to be safe. We assume the predicate expression is entirely immutable, * so no explicit check on the subexpressions is needed here, but in some * cases we need an extra check of operator immutability. In particular, * btree opfamilies can contain cross-type operators that are merely stable, * and we dare not make deductions with those. */ static bool operator_predicate_proof(Expr *predicate, Node *clause, bool refute_it, bool weak) { OpExpr *pred_opexpr, *clause_opexpr; Oid pred_collation, clause_collation; Oid pred_op, clause_op, test_op; Node *pred_leftop, *pred_rightop, *clause_leftop, *clause_rightop; Const *pred_const, *clause_const; Expr *test_expr; ExprState *test_exprstate; Datum test_result; bool isNull; EState *estate; MemoryContext oldcontext; /* * Both expressions must be binary opclauses, else we can't do anything. * * Note: in future we might extend this logic to other operator-based * constructs such as DistinctExpr. But the planner isn't very smart * about DistinctExpr in general, and this probably isn't the first place * to fix if you want to improve that. */ if (!is_opclause(predicate)) return false; pred_opexpr = (OpExpr *) predicate; if (list_length(pred_opexpr->args) != 2) return false; if (!is_opclause(clause)) return false; clause_opexpr = (OpExpr *) clause; if (list_length(clause_opexpr->args) != 2) return false; /* * If they're marked with different collations then we can't do anything. * This is a cheap test so let's get it out of the way early. */ pred_collation = pred_opexpr->inputcollid; clause_collation = clause_opexpr->inputcollid; if (pred_collation != clause_collation) return false; /* Grab the operator OIDs now too. We may commute these below. */ pred_op = pred_opexpr->opno; clause_op = clause_opexpr->opno; /* * We have to match up at least one pair of input expressions. */ pred_leftop = (Node *) linitial(pred_opexpr->args); pred_rightop = (Node *) lsecond(pred_opexpr->args); clause_leftop = (Node *) linitial(clause_opexpr->args); clause_rightop = (Node *) lsecond(clause_opexpr->args); if (equal(pred_leftop, clause_leftop)) { if (equal(pred_rightop, clause_rightop)) { /* We have x op1 y and x op2 y */ return operator_same_subexprs_proof(pred_op, clause_op, refute_it); } else { /* Fail unless rightops are both Consts */ if (pred_rightop == NULL || !IsA(pred_rightop, Const)) return false; pred_const = (Const *) pred_rightop; if (clause_rightop == NULL || !IsA(clause_rightop, Const)) return false; clause_const = (Const *) clause_rightop; } } else if (equal(pred_rightop, clause_rightop)) { /* Fail unless leftops are both Consts */ if (pred_leftop == NULL || !IsA(pred_leftop, Const)) return false; pred_const = (Const *) pred_leftop; if (clause_leftop == NULL || !IsA(clause_leftop, Const)) return false; clause_const = (Const *) clause_leftop; /* Commute both operators so we can assume Consts are on the right */ pred_op = get_commutator(pred_op); if (!OidIsValid(pred_op)) return false; clause_op = get_commutator(clause_op); if (!OidIsValid(clause_op)) return false; } else if (equal(pred_leftop, clause_rightop)) { if (equal(pred_rightop, clause_leftop)) { /* We have x op1 y and y op2 x */ /* Commute pred_op that we can treat this like a straight match */ pred_op = get_commutator(pred_op); if (!OidIsValid(pred_op)) return false; return operator_same_subexprs_proof(pred_op, clause_op, refute_it); } else { /* Fail unless pred_rightop/clause_leftop are both Consts */ if (pred_rightop == NULL || !IsA(pred_rightop, Const)) return false; pred_const = (Const *) pred_rightop; if (clause_leftop == NULL || !IsA(clause_leftop, Const)) return false; clause_const = (Const *) clause_leftop; /* Commute clause_op so we can assume Consts are on the right */ clause_op = get_commutator(clause_op); if (!OidIsValid(clause_op)) return false; } } else if (equal(pred_rightop, clause_leftop)) { /* Fail unless pred_leftop/clause_rightop are both Consts */ if (pred_leftop == NULL || !IsA(pred_leftop, Const)) return false; pred_const = (Const *) pred_leftop; if (clause_rightop == NULL || !IsA(clause_rightop, Const)) return false; clause_const = (Const *) clause_rightop; /* Commute pred_op so we can assume Consts are on the right */ pred_op = get_commutator(pred_op); if (!OidIsValid(pred_op)) return false; } else { /* Failed to match up any of the subexpressions, so we lose */ return false; } /* * We have two identical subexpressions, and two other subexpressions that * are not identical but are both Consts; and we have commuted the * operators if necessary so that the Consts are on the right. We'll need * to compare the Consts' values. If either is NULL, we can't do that, so * usually the proof fails ... but in some cases we can claim success. */ if (clause_const->constisnull) { /* If clause_op isn't strict, we can't prove anything */ if (!op_strict(clause_op)) return false; /* * At this point we know that the clause returns NULL. For proof * types that assume truth of the clause, this means the proof is * vacuously true (a/k/a "false implies anything"). That's all proof * types except weak implication. */ if (!(weak && !refute_it)) return true; /* * For weak implication, it's still possible for the proof to succeed, * if the predicate can also be proven NULL. In that case we've got * NULL => NULL which is valid for this proof type. */ if (pred_const->constisnull && op_strict(pred_op)) return true; /* Else the proof fails */ return false; } if (pred_const->constisnull) { /* * If the pred_op is strict, we know the predicate yields NULL, which * means the proof succeeds for either weak implication or weak * refutation. */ if (weak && op_strict(pred_op)) return true; /* Else the proof fails */ return false; } /* * Lookup the constant-comparison operator using the system catalogs and * the operator implication tables. */ test_op = get_btree_test_op(pred_op, clause_op, refute_it); if (!OidIsValid(test_op)) { /* couldn't find a suitable comparison operator */ return false; } /* * Evaluate the test. For this we need an EState. */ estate = CreateExecutorState(); /* We can use the estate's working context to avoid memory leaks. */ oldcontext = MemoryContextSwitchTo(estate->es_query_cxt); /* Build expression tree */ test_expr = make_opclause(test_op, BOOLOID, false, (Expr *) pred_const, (Expr *) clause_const, InvalidOid, pred_collation); /* Fill in opfuncids */ fix_opfuncids((Node *) test_expr); /* Prepare it for execution */ test_exprstate = ExecInitExpr(test_expr, NULL); /* And execute it. */ test_result = ExecEvalExprSwitchContext(test_exprstate, GetPerTupleExprContext(estate), &isNull); /* Get back to outer memory context */ MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldcontext); /* Release all the junk we just created */ FreeExecutorState(estate); if (isNull) { /* Treat a null result as non-proof ... but it's a tad fishy ... */ elog(DEBUG2, "null predicate test result"); return false; } return DatumGetBool(test_result); } /* * operator_same_subexprs_proof * Assuming that EXPR1 clause_op EXPR2 is true, try to prove or refute * EXPR1 pred_op EXPR2. * * Return true if able to make the proof, false if not able to prove it. */ static bool operator_same_subexprs_proof(Oid pred_op, Oid clause_op, bool refute_it) { /* * A simple and general rule is that the predicate is proven if clause_op * and pred_op are the same, or refuted if they are each other's negators. * We need not check immutability since the pred_op is already known * immutable. (Actually, by this point we may have the commutator of a * known-immutable pred_op, but that should certainly be immutable too. * Likewise we don't worry whether the pred_op's negator is immutable.) * * Note: the "same" case won't get here if we actually had EXPR1 clause_op * EXPR2 and EXPR1 pred_op EXPR2, because the overall-expression-equality * test in predicate_implied_by_simple_clause would have caught it. But * we can see the same operator after having commuted the pred_op. */ if (refute_it) { if (get_negator(pred_op) == clause_op) return true; } else { if (pred_op == clause_op) return true; } /* * Otherwise, see if we can determine the implication by finding the * operators' relationship via some btree opfamily. */ return operator_same_subexprs_lookup(pred_op, clause_op, refute_it); } /* * We use a lookaside table to cache the result of btree proof operator * lookups, since the actual lookup is pretty expensive and doesn't change * for any given pair of operators (at least as long as pg_amop doesn't * change). A single hash entry stores both implication and refutation * results for a given pair of operators; but note we may have determined * only one of those sets of results as yet. */ typedef struct OprProofCacheKey { Oid pred_op; /* predicate operator */ Oid clause_op; /* clause operator */ } OprProofCacheKey; typedef struct OprProofCacheEntry { /* the hash lookup key MUST BE FIRST */ OprProofCacheKey key; bool have_implic; /* do we know the implication result? */ bool have_refute; /* do we know the refutation result? */ bool same_subexprs_implies; /* X clause_op Y implies X pred_op Y? */ bool same_subexprs_refutes; /* X clause_op Y refutes X pred_op Y? */ Oid implic_test_op; /* OID of the test operator, or 0 if none */ Oid refute_test_op; /* OID of the test operator, or 0 if none */ } OprProofCacheEntry; static HTAB *OprProofCacheHash = NULL; /* * lookup_proof_cache * Get, and fill in if necessary, the appropriate cache entry. */ static OprProofCacheEntry * lookup_proof_cache(Oid pred_op, Oid clause_op, bool refute_it) { OprProofCacheKey key; OprProofCacheEntry *cache_entry; bool cfound; bool same_subexprs = false; Oid test_op = InvalidOid; bool found = false; List *pred_op_infos, *clause_op_infos; ListCell *lcp, *lcc; /* * Find or make a cache entry for this pair of operators. */ if (OprProofCacheHash == NULL) { /* First time through: initialize the hash table */ HASHCTL ctl; MemSet(&ctl, 0, sizeof(ctl)); ctl.keysize = sizeof(OprProofCacheKey); ctl.entrysize = sizeof(OprProofCacheEntry); OprProofCacheHash = hash_create("Btree proof lookup cache", 256, &ctl, HASH_ELEM | HASH_BLOBS); /* Arrange to flush cache on pg_amop changes */ CacheRegisterSyscacheCallback(AMOPOPID, InvalidateOprProofCacheCallBack, (Datum) 0); } key.pred_op = pred_op; key.clause_op = clause_op; cache_entry = (OprProofCacheEntry *) hash_search(OprProofCacheHash, (void *) &key, HASH_ENTER, &cfound); if (!cfound) { /* new cache entry, set it invalid */ cache_entry->have_implic = false; cache_entry->have_refute = false; } else { /* pre-existing cache entry, see if we know the answer yet */ if (refute_it ? cache_entry->have_refute : cache_entry->have_implic) return cache_entry; } /* * Try to find a btree opfamily containing the given operators. * * We must find a btree opfamily that contains both operators, else the * implication can't be determined. Also, the opfamily must contain a * suitable test operator taking the operators' righthand datatypes. * * If there are multiple matching opfamilies, assume we can use any one to * determine the logical relationship of the two operators and the correct * corresponding test operator. This should work for any logically * consistent opfamilies. * * Note that we can determine the operators' relationship for * same-subexprs cases even from an opfamily that lacks a usable test * operator. This can happen in cases with incomplete sets of cross-type * comparison operators. */ clause_op_infos = get_op_btree_interpretation(clause_op); if (clause_op_infos) pred_op_infos = get_op_btree_interpretation(pred_op); else /* no point in looking */ pred_op_infos = NIL; foreach(lcp, pred_op_infos) { OpBtreeInterpretation *pred_op_info = lfirst(lcp); Oid opfamily_id = pred_op_info->opfamily_id; foreach(lcc, clause_op_infos) { OpBtreeInterpretation *clause_op_info = lfirst(lcc); StrategyNumber pred_strategy, clause_strategy, test_strategy; /* Must find them in same opfamily */ if (opfamily_id != clause_op_info->opfamily_id) continue; /* Lefttypes should match */ Assert(clause_op_info->oplefttype == pred_op_info->oplefttype); pred_strategy = pred_op_info->strategy; clause_strategy = clause_op_info->strategy; /* * Check to see if we can make a proof for same-subexpressions * cases based on the operators' relationship in this opfamily. */ if (refute_it) same_subexprs |= BT_refutes_table[clause_strategy - 1][pred_strategy - 1]; else same_subexprs |= BT_implies_table[clause_strategy - 1][pred_strategy - 1]; /* * Look up the "test" strategy number in the implication table */ if (refute_it) test_strategy = BT_refute_table[clause_strategy - 1][pred_strategy - 1]; else test_strategy = BT_implic_table[clause_strategy - 1][pred_strategy - 1]; if (test_strategy == 0) { /* Can't determine implication using this interpretation */ continue; } /* * See if opfamily has an operator for the test strategy and the * datatypes. */ if (test_strategy == BTNE) { test_op = get_opfamily_member(opfamily_id, pred_op_info->oprighttype, clause_op_info->oprighttype, BTEqualStrategyNumber); if (OidIsValid(test_op)) test_op = get_negator(test_op); } else { test_op = get_opfamily_member(opfamily_id, pred_op_info->oprighttype, clause_op_info->oprighttype, test_strategy); } if (!OidIsValid(test_op)) continue; /* * Last check: test_op must be immutable. * * Note that we require only the test_op to be immutable, not the * original clause_op. (pred_op is assumed to have been checked * immutable by the caller.) Essentially we are assuming that the * opfamily is consistent even if it contains operators that are * merely stable. */ if (op_volatile(test_op) == PROVOLATILE_IMMUTABLE) { found = true; break; } } if (found) break; } list_free_deep(pred_op_infos); list_free_deep(clause_op_infos); if (!found) { /* couldn't find a suitable comparison operator */ test_op = InvalidOid; } /* * If we think we were able to prove something about same-subexpressions * cases, check to make sure the clause_op is immutable before believing * it completely. (Usually, the clause_op would be immutable if the * pred_op is, but it's not entirely clear that this must be true in all * cases, so let's check.) */ if (same_subexprs && op_volatile(clause_op) != PROVOLATILE_IMMUTABLE) same_subexprs = false; /* Cache the results, whether positive or negative */ if (refute_it) { cache_entry->refute_test_op = test_op; cache_entry->same_subexprs_refutes = same_subexprs; cache_entry->have_refute = true; } else { cache_entry->implic_test_op = test_op; cache_entry->same_subexprs_implies = same_subexprs; cache_entry->have_implic = true; } return cache_entry; } /* * operator_same_subexprs_lookup * Convenience subroutine to look up the cached answer for * same-subexpressions cases. */ static bool operator_same_subexprs_lookup(Oid pred_op, Oid clause_op, bool refute_it) { OprProofCacheEntry *cache_entry; cache_entry = lookup_proof_cache(pred_op, clause_op, refute_it); if (refute_it) return cache_entry->same_subexprs_refutes; else return cache_entry->same_subexprs_implies; } /* * get_btree_test_op * Identify the comparison operator needed for a btree-operator * proof or refutation involving comparison of constants. * * Given the truth of a clause "var clause_op const1", we are attempting to * prove or refute a predicate "var pred_op const2". The identities of the * two operators are sufficient to determine the operator (if any) to compare * const2 to const1 with. * * Returns the OID of the operator to use, or InvalidOid if no proof is * possible. */ static Oid get_btree_test_op(Oid pred_op, Oid clause_op, bool refute_it) { OprProofCacheEntry *cache_entry; cache_entry = lookup_proof_cache(pred_op, clause_op, refute_it); if (refute_it) return cache_entry->refute_test_op; else return cache_entry->implic_test_op; } /* * Callback for pg_amop inval events */ static void InvalidateOprProofCacheCallBack(Datum arg, int cacheid, uint32 hashvalue) { HASH_SEQ_STATUS status; OprProofCacheEntry *hentry; Assert(OprProofCacheHash != NULL); /* Currently we just reset all entries; hard to be smarter ... */ hash_seq_init(&status, OprProofCacheHash); while ((hentry = (OprProofCacheEntry *) hash_seq_search(&status)) != NULL) { hentry->have_implic = false; hentry->have_refute = false; } }