/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * parse_clause.c * handle clauses in parser * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2021, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * * IDENTIFICATION * src/backend/parser/parse_clause.c * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #include "postgres.h" #include "access/htup_details.h" #include "access/nbtree.h" #include "access/table.h" #include "access/tsmapi.h" #include "catalog/catalog.h" #include "catalog/heap.h" #include "catalog/pg_am.h" #include "catalog/pg_amproc.h" #include "catalog/pg_collation.h" #include "catalog/pg_constraint.h" #include "catalog/pg_type.h" #include "commands/defrem.h" #include "miscadmin.h" #include "nodes/makefuncs.h" #include "nodes/nodeFuncs.h" #include "optimizer/optimizer.h" #include "parser/analyze.h" #include "parser/parse_clause.h" #include "parser/parse_coerce.h" #include "parser/parse_collate.h" #include "parser/parse_expr.h" #include "parser/parse_func.h" #include "parser/parse_oper.h" #include "parser/parse_relation.h" #include "parser/parse_target.h" #include "parser/parse_type.h" #include "parser/parser.h" #include "parser/parsetree.h" #include "rewrite/rewriteManip.h" #include "utils/builtins.h" #include "utils/catcache.h" #include "utils/guc.h" #include "utils/lsyscache.h" #include "utils/rel.h" #include "utils/syscache.h" static int extractRemainingColumns(ParseNamespaceColumn *src_nscolumns, List *src_colnames, List **src_colnos, List **res_colnames, List **res_colvars, ParseNamespaceColumn *res_nscolumns); static Node *transformJoinUsingClause(ParseState *pstate, List *leftVars, List *rightVars); static Node *transformJoinOnClause(ParseState *pstate, JoinExpr *j, List *namespace); static ParseNamespaceItem *transformTableEntry(ParseState *pstate, RangeVar *r); static ParseNamespaceItem *transformRangeSubselect(ParseState *pstate, RangeSubselect *r); static ParseNamespaceItem *transformRangeFunction(ParseState *pstate, RangeFunction *r); static ParseNamespaceItem *transformRangeTableFunc(ParseState *pstate, RangeTableFunc *t); static TableSampleClause *transformRangeTableSample(ParseState *pstate, RangeTableSample *rts); static ParseNamespaceItem *getNSItemForSpecialRelationTypes(ParseState *pstate, RangeVar *rv); static Node *transformFromClauseItem(ParseState *pstate, Node *n, ParseNamespaceItem **top_nsitem, List **namespace); static Var *buildVarFromNSColumn(ParseNamespaceColumn *nscol); static Node *buildMergedJoinVar(ParseState *pstate, JoinType jointype, Var *l_colvar, Var *r_colvar); static void setNamespaceColumnVisibility(List *namespace, bool cols_visible); static void setNamespaceLateralState(List *namespace, bool lateral_only, bool lateral_ok); static void checkExprIsVarFree(ParseState *pstate, Node *n, const char *constructName); static TargetEntry *findTargetlistEntrySQL92(ParseState *pstate, Node *node, List **tlist, ParseExprKind exprKind); static TargetEntry *findTargetlistEntrySQL99(ParseState *pstate, Node *node, List **tlist, ParseExprKind exprKind); static int get_matching_location(int sortgroupref, List *sortgrouprefs, List *exprs); static List *resolve_unique_index_expr(ParseState *pstate, InferClause *infer, Relation heapRel); static List *addTargetToGroupList(ParseState *pstate, TargetEntry *tle, List *grouplist, List *targetlist, int location); static WindowClause *findWindowClause(List *wclist, const char *name); static Node *transformFrameOffset(ParseState *pstate, int frameOptions, Oid rangeopfamily, Oid rangeopcintype, Oid *inRangeFunc, Node *clause); /* * transformFromClause - * Process the FROM clause and add items to the query's range table, * joinlist, and namespace. * * Note: we assume that the pstate's p_rtable, p_joinlist, and p_namespace * lists were initialized to NIL when the pstate was created. * We will add onto any entries already present --- this is needed for rule * processing, as well as for UPDATE and DELETE. */ void transformFromClause(ParseState *pstate, List *frmList) { ListCell *fl; /* * The grammar will have produced a list of RangeVars, RangeSubselects, * RangeFunctions, and/or JoinExprs. Transform each one (possibly adding * entries to the rtable), check for duplicate refnames, and then add it * to the joinlist and namespace. * * Note we must process the items left-to-right for proper handling of * LATERAL references. */ foreach(fl, frmList) { Node *n = lfirst(fl); ParseNamespaceItem *nsitem; List *namespace; n = transformFromClauseItem(pstate, n, &nsitem, &namespace); checkNameSpaceConflicts(pstate, pstate->p_namespace, namespace); /* Mark the new namespace items as visible only to LATERAL */ setNamespaceLateralState(namespace, true, true); pstate->p_joinlist = lappend(pstate->p_joinlist, n); pstate->p_namespace = list_concat(pstate->p_namespace, namespace); } /* * We're done parsing the FROM list, so make all namespace items * unconditionally visible. Note that this will also reset lateral_only * for any namespace items that were already present when we were called; * but those should have been that way already. */ setNamespaceLateralState(pstate->p_namespace, false, true); } /* * setTargetTable * Add the target relation of INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE to the range table, * and make the special links to it in the ParseState. * * We also open the target relation and acquire a write lock on it. * This must be done before processing the FROM list, in case the target * is also mentioned as a source relation --- we want to be sure to grab * the write lock before any read lock. * * If alsoSource is true, add the target to the query's joinlist and * namespace. For INSERT, we don't want the target to be joined to; * it's a destination of tuples, not a source. For UPDATE/DELETE, * we do need to scan or join the target. (NOTE: we do not bother * to check for namespace conflict; we assume that the namespace was * initially empty in these cases.) * * Finally, we mark the relation as requiring the permissions specified * by requiredPerms. * * Returns the rangetable index of the target relation. */ int setTargetTable(ParseState *pstate, RangeVar *relation, bool inh, bool alsoSource, AclMode requiredPerms) { ParseNamespaceItem *nsitem; /* * ENRs hide tables of the same name, so we need to check for them first. * In contrast, CTEs don't hide tables (for this purpose). */ if (relation->schemaname == NULL && scanNameSpaceForENR(pstate, relation->relname)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED), errmsg("relation \"%s\" cannot be the target of a modifying statement", relation->relname))); /* Close old target; this could only happen for multi-action rules */ if (pstate->p_target_relation != NULL) table_close(pstate->p_target_relation, NoLock); /* * Open target rel and grab suitable lock (which we will hold till end of * transaction). * * free_parsestate() will eventually do the corresponding table_close(), * but *not* release the lock. */ pstate->p_target_relation = parserOpenTable(pstate, relation, RowExclusiveLock); /* * Now build an RTE and a ParseNamespaceItem. */ nsitem = addRangeTableEntryForRelation(pstate, pstate->p_target_relation, RowExclusiveLock, relation->alias, inh, false); /* remember the RTE/nsitem as being the query target */ pstate->p_target_nsitem = nsitem; /* * Override addRangeTableEntry's default ACL_SELECT permissions check, and * instead mark target table as requiring exactly the specified * permissions. * * If we find an explicit reference to the rel later during parse * analysis, we will add the ACL_SELECT bit back again; see * markVarForSelectPriv and its callers. */ nsitem->p_rte->requiredPerms = requiredPerms; /* * If UPDATE/DELETE, add table to joinlist and namespace. */ if (alsoSource) addNSItemToQuery(pstate, nsitem, true, true, true); return nsitem->p_rtindex; } /* * Extract all not-in-common columns from column lists of a source table * * src_nscolumns and src_colnames describe the source table. * * *src_colnos initially contains the column numbers of the already-merged * columns. We add to it the column number of each additional column. * Also append to *res_colnames the name of each additional column, * append to *res_colvars a Var for each additional column, and copy the * columns' nscolumns data into res_nscolumns[] (which is caller-allocated * space that had better be big enough). * * Returns the number of columns added. */ static int extractRemainingColumns(ParseNamespaceColumn *src_nscolumns, List *src_colnames, List **src_colnos, List **res_colnames, List **res_colvars, ParseNamespaceColumn *res_nscolumns) { int colcount = 0; Bitmapset *prevcols; int attnum; ListCell *lc; /* * While we could just test "list_member_int(*src_colnos, attnum)" to * detect already-merged columns in the loop below, that would be O(N^2) * for a wide input table. Instead build a bitmapset of just the merged * USING columns, which we won't add to within the main loop. */ prevcols = NULL; foreach(lc, *src_colnos) { prevcols = bms_add_member(prevcols, lfirst_int(lc)); } attnum = 0; foreach(lc, src_colnames) { char *colname = strVal(lfirst(lc)); attnum++; /* Non-dropped and not already merged? */ if (colname[0] != '\0' && !bms_is_member(attnum, prevcols)) { /* Yes, so emit it as next output column */ *src_colnos = lappend_int(*src_colnos, attnum); *res_colnames = lappend(*res_colnames, lfirst(lc)); *res_colvars = lappend(*res_colvars, buildVarFromNSColumn(src_nscolumns + attnum - 1)); /* Copy the input relation's nscolumn data for this column */ res_nscolumns[colcount] = src_nscolumns[attnum - 1]; colcount++; } } return colcount; } /* transformJoinUsingClause() * Build a complete ON clause from a partially-transformed USING list. * We are given lists of nodes representing left and right match columns. * Result is a transformed qualification expression. */ static Node * transformJoinUsingClause(ParseState *pstate, List *leftVars, List *rightVars) { Node *result; List *andargs = NIL; ListCell *lvars, *rvars; /* * We cheat a little bit here by building an untransformed operator tree * whose leaves are the already-transformed Vars. This requires collusion * from transformExpr(), which normally could be expected to complain * about already-transformed subnodes. However, this does mean that we * have to mark the columns as requiring SELECT privilege for ourselves; * transformExpr() won't do it. */ forboth(lvars, leftVars, rvars, rightVars) { Var *lvar = (Var *) lfirst(lvars); Var *rvar = (Var *) lfirst(rvars); A_Expr *e; /* Require read access to the join variables */ markVarForSelectPriv(pstate, lvar); markVarForSelectPriv(pstate, rvar); /* Now create the lvar = rvar join condition */ e = makeSimpleA_Expr(AEXPR_OP, "=", (Node *) copyObject(lvar), (Node *) copyObject(rvar), -1); /* Prepare to combine into an AND clause, if multiple join columns */ andargs = lappend(andargs, e); } /* Only need an AND if there's more than one join column */ if (list_length(andargs) == 1) result = (Node *) linitial(andargs); else result = (Node *) makeBoolExpr(AND_EXPR, andargs, -1); /* * Since the references are already Vars, and are certainly from the input * relations, we don't have to go through the same pushups that * transformJoinOnClause() does. Just invoke transformExpr() to fix up * the operators, and we're done. */ result = transformExpr(pstate, result, EXPR_KIND_JOIN_USING); result = coerce_to_boolean(pstate, result, "JOIN/USING"); return result; } /* transformJoinOnClause() * Transform the qual conditions for JOIN/ON. * Result is a transformed qualification expression. */ static Node * transformJoinOnClause(ParseState *pstate, JoinExpr *j, List *namespace) { Node *result; List *save_namespace; /* * The namespace that the join expression should see is just the two * subtrees of the JOIN plus any outer references from upper pstate * levels. Temporarily set this pstate's namespace accordingly. (We need * not check for refname conflicts, because transformFromClauseItem() * already did.) All namespace items are marked visible regardless of * LATERAL state. */ setNamespaceLateralState(namespace, false, true); save_namespace = pstate->p_namespace; pstate->p_namespace = namespace; result = transformWhereClause(pstate, j->quals, EXPR_KIND_JOIN_ON, "JOIN/ON"); pstate->p_namespace = save_namespace; return result; } /* * transformTableEntry --- transform a RangeVar (simple relation reference) */ static ParseNamespaceItem * transformTableEntry(ParseState *pstate, RangeVar *r) { /* addRangeTableEntry does all the work */ return addRangeTableEntry(pstate, r, r->alias, r->inh, true); } /* * transformRangeSubselect --- transform a sub-SELECT appearing in FROM */ static ParseNamespaceItem * transformRangeSubselect(ParseState *pstate, RangeSubselect *r) { Query *query; /* * We require user to supply an alias for a subselect, per SQL92. To relax * this, we'd have to be prepared to gin up a unique alias for an * unlabeled subselect. (This is just elog, not ereport, because the * grammar should have enforced it already. It'd probably be better to * report the error here, but we don't have a good error location here.) */ if (r->alias == NULL) elog(ERROR, "subquery in FROM must have an alias"); /* * Set p_expr_kind to show this parse level is recursing to a subselect. * We can't be nested within any expression, so don't need save-restore * logic here. */ Assert(pstate->p_expr_kind == EXPR_KIND_NONE); pstate->p_expr_kind = EXPR_KIND_FROM_SUBSELECT; /* * If the subselect is LATERAL, make lateral_only names of this level * visible to it. (LATERAL can't nest within a single pstate level, so we * don't need save/restore logic here.) */ Assert(!pstate->p_lateral_active); pstate->p_lateral_active = r->lateral; /* * Analyze and transform the subquery. */ query = parse_sub_analyze(r->subquery, pstate, NULL, isLockedRefname(pstate, r->alias->aliasname), true); /* Restore state */ pstate->p_lateral_active = false; pstate->p_expr_kind = EXPR_KIND_NONE; /* * Check that we got a SELECT. Anything else should be impossible given * restrictions of the grammar, but check anyway. */ if (!IsA(query, Query) || query->commandType != CMD_SELECT) elog(ERROR, "unexpected non-SELECT command in subquery in FROM"); /* * OK, build an RTE and nsitem for the subquery. */ return addRangeTableEntryForSubquery(pstate, query, r->alias, r->lateral, true); } /* * transformRangeFunction --- transform a function call appearing in FROM */ static ParseNamespaceItem * transformRangeFunction(ParseState *pstate, RangeFunction *r) { List *funcexprs = NIL; List *funcnames = NIL; List *coldeflists = NIL; bool is_lateral; ListCell *lc; /* * We make lateral_only names of this level visible, whether or not the * RangeFunction is explicitly marked LATERAL. This is needed for SQL * spec compliance in the case of UNNEST(), and seems useful on * convenience grounds for all functions in FROM. * * (LATERAL can't nest within a single pstate level, so we don't need * save/restore logic here.) */ Assert(!pstate->p_lateral_active); pstate->p_lateral_active = true; /* * Transform the raw expressions. * * While transforming, also save function names for possible use as alias * and column names. We use the same transformation rules as for a SELECT * output expression. For a FuncCall node, the result will be the * function name, but it is possible for the grammar to hand back other * node types. * * We have to get this info now, because FigureColname only works on raw * parsetrees. Actually deciding what to do with the names is left up to * addRangeTableEntryForFunction. * * Likewise, collect column definition lists if there were any. But * complain if we find one here and the RangeFunction has one too. */ foreach(lc, r->functions) { List *pair = (List *) lfirst(lc); Node *fexpr; List *coldeflist; Node *newfexpr; Node *last_srf; /* Disassemble the function-call/column-def-list pairs */ Assert(list_length(pair) == 2); fexpr = (Node *) linitial(pair); coldeflist = (List *) lsecond(pair); /* * If we find a function call unnest() with more than one argument and * no special decoration, transform it into separate unnest() calls on * each argument. This is a kluge, for sure, but it's less nasty than * other ways of implementing the SQL-standard UNNEST() syntax. * * If there is any decoration (including a coldeflist), we don't * transform, which probably means a no-such-function error later. We * could alternatively throw an error right now, but that doesn't seem * tremendously helpful. If someone is using any such decoration, * then they're not using the SQL-standard syntax, and they're more * likely expecting an un-tweaked function call. * * Note: the transformation changes a non-schema-qualified unnest() * function name into schema-qualified pg_catalog.unnest(). This * choice is also a bit debatable, but it seems reasonable to force * use of built-in unnest() when we make this transformation. */ if (IsA(fexpr, FuncCall)) { FuncCall *fc = (FuncCall *) fexpr; if (list_length(fc->funcname) == 1 && strcmp(strVal(linitial(fc->funcname)), "unnest") == 0 && list_length(fc->args) > 1 && fc->agg_order == NIL && fc->agg_filter == NULL && fc->over == NULL && !fc->agg_star && !fc->agg_distinct && !fc->func_variadic && coldeflist == NIL) { ListCell *lc; foreach(lc, fc->args) { Node *arg = (Node *) lfirst(lc); FuncCall *newfc; last_srf = pstate->p_last_srf; newfc = makeFuncCall(SystemFuncName("unnest"), list_make1(arg), COERCE_EXPLICIT_CALL, fc->location); newfexpr = transformExpr(pstate, (Node *) newfc, EXPR_KIND_FROM_FUNCTION); /* nodeFunctionscan.c requires SRFs to be at top level */ if (pstate->p_last_srf != last_srf && pstate->p_last_srf != newfexpr) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED), errmsg("set-returning functions must appear at top level of FROM"), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation(pstate->p_last_srf)))); funcexprs = lappend(funcexprs, newfexpr); funcnames = lappend(funcnames, FigureColname((Node *) newfc)); /* coldeflist is empty, so no error is possible */ coldeflists = lappend(coldeflists, coldeflist); } continue; /* done with this function item */ } } /* normal case ... */ last_srf = pstate->p_last_srf; newfexpr = transformExpr(pstate, fexpr, EXPR_KIND_FROM_FUNCTION); /* nodeFunctionscan.c requires SRFs to be at top level */ if (pstate->p_last_srf != last_srf && pstate->p_last_srf != newfexpr) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED), errmsg("set-returning functions must appear at top level of FROM"), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation(pstate->p_last_srf)))); funcexprs = lappend(funcexprs, newfexpr); funcnames = lappend(funcnames, FigureColname(fexpr)); if (coldeflist && r->coldeflist) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), errmsg("multiple column definition lists are not allowed for the same function"), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation((Node *) r->coldeflist)))); coldeflists = lappend(coldeflists, coldeflist); } pstate->p_lateral_active = false; /* * We must assign collations now so that the RTE exposes correct collation * info for Vars created from it. */ assign_list_collations(pstate, funcexprs); /* * Install the top-level coldeflist if there was one (we already checked * that there was no conflicting per-function coldeflist). * * We only allow this when there's a single function (even after UNNEST * expansion) and no WITH ORDINALITY. The reason for the latter * restriction is that it's not real clear whether the ordinality column * should be in the coldeflist, and users are too likely to make mistakes * in one direction or the other. Putting the coldeflist inside ROWS * FROM() is much clearer in this case. */ if (r->coldeflist) { if (list_length(funcexprs) != 1) { if (r->is_rowsfrom) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), errmsg("ROWS FROM() with multiple functions cannot have a column definition list"), errhint("Put a separate column definition list for each function inside ROWS FROM()."), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation((Node *) r->coldeflist)))); else ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), errmsg("UNNEST() with multiple arguments cannot have a column definition list"), errhint("Use separate UNNEST() calls inside ROWS FROM(), and attach a column definition list to each one."), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation((Node *) r->coldeflist)))); } if (r->ordinality) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), errmsg("WITH ORDINALITY cannot be used with a column definition list"), errhint("Put the column definition list inside ROWS FROM()."), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation((Node *) r->coldeflist)))); coldeflists = list_make1(r->coldeflist); } /* * Mark the RTE as LATERAL if the user said LATERAL explicitly, or if * there are any lateral cross-references in it. */ is_lateral = r->lateral || contain_vars_of_level((Node *) funcexprs, 0); /* * OK, build an RTE and nsitem for the function. */ return addRangeTableEntryForFunction(pstate, funcnames, funcexprs, coldeflists, r, is_lateral, true); } /* * transformRangeTableFunc - * Transform a raw RangeTableFunc into TableFunc. * * Transform the namespace clauses, the document-generating expression, the * row-generating expression, the column-generating expressions, and the * default value expressions. */ static ParseNamespaceItem * transformRangeTableFunc(ParseState *pstate, RangeTableFunc *rtf) { TableFunc *tf = makeNode(TableFunc); const char *constructName; Oid docType; bool is_lateral; ListCell *col; char **names; int colno; /* Currently only XMLTABLE is supported */ constructName = "XMLTABLE"; docType = XMLOID; /* * We make lateral_only names of this level visible, whether or not the * RangeTableFunc is explicitly marked LATERAL. This is needed for SQL * spec compliance and seems useful on convenience grounds for all * functions in FROM. * * (LATERAL can't nest within a single pstate level, so we don't need * save/restore logic here.) */ Assert(!pstate->p_lateral_active); pstate->p_lateral_active = true; /* Transform and apply typecast to the row-generating expression ... */ Assert(rtf->rowexpr != NULL); tf->rowexpr = coerce_to_specific_type(pstate, transformExpr(pstate, rtf->rowexpr, EXPR_KIND_FROM_FUNCTION), TEXTOID, constructName); assign_expr_collations(pstate, tf->rowexpr); /* ... and to the document itself */ Assert(rtf->docexpr != NULL); tf->docexpr = coerce_to_specific_type(pstate, transformExpr(pstate, rtf->docexpr, EXPR_KIND_FROM_FUNCTION), docType, constructName); assign_expr_collations(pstate, tf->docexpr); /* undef ordinality column number */ tf->ordinalitycol = -1; /* Process column specs */ names = palloc(sizeof(char *) * list_length(rtf->columns)); colno = 0; foreach(col, rtf->columns) { RangeTableFuncCol *rawc = (RangeTableFuncCol *) lfirst(col); Oid typid; int32 typmod; Node *colexpr; Node *coldefexpr; int j; tf->colnames = lappend(tf->colnames, makeString(pstrdup(rawc->colname))); /* * Determine the type and typmod for the new column. FOR ORDINALITY * columns are INTEGER per spec; the others are user-specified. */ if (rawc->for_ordinality) { if (tf->ordinalitycol != -1) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), errmsg("only one FOR ORDINALITY column is allowed"), parser_errposition(pstate, rawc->location))); typid = INT4OID; typmod = -1; tf->ordinalitycol = colno; } else { if (rawc->typeName->setof) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_TABLE_DEFINITION), errmsg("column \"%s\" cannot be declared SETOF", rawc->colname), parser_errposition(pstate, rawc->location))); typenameTypeIdAndMod(pstate, rawc->typeName, &typid, &typmod); } tf->coltypes = lappend_oid(tf->coltypes, typid); tf->coltypmods = lappend_int(tf->coltypmods, typmod); tf->colcollations = lappend_oid(tf->colcollations, get_typcollation(typid)); /* Transform the PATH and DEFAULT expressions */ if (rawc->colexpr) { colexpr = coerce_to_specific_type(pstate, transformExpr(pstate, rawc->colexpr, EXPR_KIND_FROM_FUNCTION), TEXTOID, constructName); assign_expr_collations(pstate, colexpr); } else colexpr = NULL; if (rawc->coldefexpr) { coldefexpr = coerce_to_specific_type_typmod(pstate, transformExpr(pstate, rawc->coldefexpr, EXPR_KIND_FROM_FUNCTION), typid, typmod, constructName); assign_expr_collations(pstate, coldefexpr); } else coldefexpr = NULL; tf->colexprs = lappend(tf->colexprs, colexpr); tf->coldefexprs = lappend(tf->coldefexprs, coldefexpr); if (rawc->is_not_null) tf->notnulls = bms_add_member(tf->notnulls, colno); /* make sure column names are unique */ for (j = 0; j < colno; j++) if (strcmp(names[j], rawc->colname) == 0) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), errmsg("column name \"%s\" is not unique", rawc->colname), parser_errposition(pstate, rawc->location))); names[colno] = rawc->colname; colno++; } pfree(names); /* Namespaces, if any, also need to be transformed */ if (rtf->namespaces != NIL) { ListCell *ns; ListCell *lc2; List *ns_uris = NIL; List *ns_names = NIL; bool default_ns_seen = false; foreach(ns, rtf->namespaces) { ResTarget *r = (ResTarget *) lfirst(ns); Node *ns_uri; Assert(IsA(r, ResTarget)); ns_uri = transformExpr(pstate, r->val, EXPR_KIND_FROM_FUNCTION); ns_uri = coerce_to_specific_type(pstate, ns_uri, TEXTOID, constructName); assign_expr_collations(pstate, ns_uri); ns_uris = lappend(ns_uris, ns_uri); /* Verify consistency of name list: no dupes, only one DEFAULT */ if (r->name != NULL) { foreach(lc2, ns_names) { Value *ns_node = (Value *) lfirst(lc2); if (ns_node == NULL) continue; if (strcmp(strVal(ns_node), r->name) == 0) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), errmsg("namespace name \"%s\" is not unique", r->name), parser_errposition(pstate, r->location))); } } else { if (default_ns_seen) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), errmsg("only one default namespace is allowed"), parser_errposition(pstate, r->location))); default_ns_seen = true; } /* We represent DEFAULT by a null pointer */ ns_names = lappend(ns_names, r->name ? makeString(r->name) : NULL); } tf->ns_uris = ns_uris; tf->ns_names = ns_names; } tf->location = rtf->location; pstate->p_lateral_active = false; /* * Mark the RTE as LATERAL if the user said LATERAL explicitly, or if * there are any lateral cross-references in it. */ is_lateral = rtf->lateral || contain_vars_of_level((Node *) tf, 0); return addRangeTableEntryForTableFunc(pstate, tf, rtf->alias, is_lateral, true); } /* * transformRangeTableSample --- transform a TABLESAMPLE clause * * Caller has already transformed rts->relation, we just have to validate * the remaining fields and create a TableSampleClause node. */ static TableSampleClause * transformRangeTableSample(ParseState *pstate, RangeTableSample *rts) { TableSampleClause *tablesample; Oid handlerOid; Oid funcargtypes[1]; TsmRoutine *tsm; List *fargs; ListCell *larg, *ltyp; /* * To validate the sample method name, look up the handler function, which * has the same name, one dummy INTERNAL argument, and a result type of * tsm_handler. (Note: tablesample method names are not schema-qualified * in the SQL standard; but since they are just functions to us, we allow * schema qualification to resolve any potential ambiguity.) */ funcargtypes[0] = INTERNALOID; handlerOid = LookupFuncName(rts->method, 1, funcargtypes, true); /* we want error to complain about no-such-method, not no-such-function */ if (!OidIsValid(handlerOid)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_UNDEFINED_OBJECT), errmsg("tablesample method %s does not exist", NameListToString(rts->method)), parser_errposition(pstate, rts->location))); /* check that handler has correct return type */ if (get_func_rettype(handlerOid) != TSM_HANDLEROID) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_WRONG_OBJECT_TYPE), errmsg("function %s must return type %s", NameListToString(rts->method), "tsm_handler"), parser_errposition(pstate, rts->location))); /* OK, run the handler to get TsmRoutine, for argument type info */ tsm = GetTsmRoutine(handlerOid); tablesample = makeNode(TableSampleClause); tablesample->tsmhandler = handlerOid; /* check user provided the expected number of arguments */ if (list_length(rts->args) != list_length(tsm->parameterTypes)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_TABLESAMPLE_ARGUMENT), errmsg_plural("tablesample method %s requires %d argument, not %d", "tablesample method %s requires %d arguments, not %d", list_length(tsm->parameterTypes), NameListToString(rts->method), list_length(tsm->parameterTypes), list_length(rts->args)), parser_errposition(pstate, rts->location))); /* * Transform the arguments, typecasting them as needed. Note we must also * assign collations now, because assign_query_collations() doesn't * examine any substructure of RTEs. */ fargs = NIL; forboth(larg, rts->args, ltyp, tsm->parameterTypes) { Node *arg = (Node *) lfirst(larg); Oid argtype = lfirst_oid(ltyp); arg = transformExpr(pstate, arg, EXPR_KIND_FROM_FUNCTION); arg = coerce_to_specific_type(pstate, arg, argtype, "TABLESAMPLE"); assign_expr_collations(pstate, arg); fargs = lappend(fargs, arg); } tablesample->args = fargs; /* Process REPEATABLE (seed) */ if (rts->repeatable != NULL) { Node *arg; if (!tsm->repeatable_across_queries) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED), errmsg("tablesample method %s does not support REPEATABLE", NameListToString(rts->method)), parser_errposition(pstate, rts->location))); arg = transformExpr(pstate, rts->repeatable, EXPR_KIND_FROM_FUNCTION); arg = coerce_to_specific_type(pstate, arg, FLOAT8OID, "REPEATABLE"); assign_expr_collations(pstate, arg); tablesample->repeatable = (Expr *) arg; } else tablesample->repeatable = NULL; return tablesample; } /* * getNSItemForSpecialRelationTypes * * If given RangeVar refers to a CTE or an EphemeralNamedRelation, * build and return an appropriate ParseNamespaceItem, otherwise return NULL */ static ParseNamespaceItem * getNSItemForSpecialRelationTypes(ParseState *pstate, RangeVar *rv) { ParseNamespaceItem *nsitem; CommonTableExpr *cte; Index levelsup; /* * if it is a qualified name, it can't be a CTE or tuplestore reference */ if (rv->schemaname) return NULL; cte = scanNameSpaceForCTE(pstate, rv->relname, &levelsup); if (cte) nsitem = addRangeTableEntryForCTE(pstate, cte, levelsup, rv, true); else if (scanNameSpaceForENR(pstate, rv->relname)) nsitem = addRangeTableEntryForENR(pstate, rv, true); else nsitem = NULL; return nsitem; } /* * transformFromClauseItem - * Transform a FROM-clause item, adding any required entries to the * range table list being built in the ParseState, and return the * transformed item ready to include in the joinlist. Also build a * ParseNamespaceItem list describing the names exposed by this item. * This routine can recurse to handle SQL92 JOIN expressions. * * The function return value is the node to add to the jointree (a * RangeTblRef or JoinExpr). Additional output parameters are: * * *top_nsitem: receives the ParseNamespaceItem directly corresponding to the * jointree item. (This is only used during internal recursion, not by * outside callers.) * * *namespace: receives a List of ParseNamespaceItems for the RTEs exposed * as table/column names by this item. (The lateral_only flags in these items * are indeterminate and should be explicitly set by the caller before use.) */ static Node * transformFromClauseItem(ParseState *pstate, Node *n, ParseNamespaceItem **top_nsitem, List **namespace) { if (IsA(n, RangeVar)) { /* Plain relation reference, or perhaps a CTE reference */ RangeVar *rv = (RangeVar *) n; RangeTblRef *rtr; ParseNamespaceItem *nsitem; /* Check if it's a CTE or tuplestore reference */ nsitem = getNSItemForSpecialRelationTypes(pstate, rv); /* if not found above, must be a table reference */ if (!nsitem) nsitem = transformTableEntry(pstate, rv); *top_nsitem = nsitem; *namespace = list_make1(nsitem); rtr = makeNode(RangeTblRef); rtr->rtindex = nsitem->p_rtindex; return (Node *) rtr; } else if (IsA(n, RangeSubselect)) { /* sub-SELECT is like a plain relation */ RangeTblRef *rtr; ParseNamespaceItem *nsitem; nsitem = transformRangeSubselect(pstate, (RangeSubselect *) n); *top_nsitem = nsitem; *namespace = list_make1(nsitem); rtr = makeNode(RangeTblRef); rtr->rtindex = nsitem->p_rtindex; return (Node *) rtr; } else if (IsA(n, RangeFunction)) { /* function is like a plain relation */ RangeTblRef *rtr; ParseNamespaceItem *nsitem; nsitem = transformRangeFunction(pstate, (RangeFunction *) n); *top_nsitem = nsitem; *namespace = list_make1(nsitem); rtr = makeNode(RangeTblRef); rtr->rtindex = nsitem->p_rtindex; return (Node *) rtr; } else if (IsA(n, RangeTableFunc)) { /* table function is like a plain relation */ RangeTblRef *rtr; ParseNamespaceItem *nsitem; nsitem = transformRangeTableFunc(pstate, (RangeTableFunc *) n); *top_nsitem = nsitem; *namespace = list_make1(nsitem); rtr = makeNode(RangeTblRef); rtr->rtindex = nsitem->p_rtindex; return (Node *) rtr; } else if (IsA(n, RangeTableSample)) { /* TABLESAMPLE clause (wrapping some other valid FROM node) */ RangeTableSample *rts = (RangeTableSample *) n; Node *rel; RangeTblEntry *rte; /* Recursively transform the contained relation */ rel = transformFromClauseItem(pstate, rts->relation, top_nsitem, namespace); rte = (*top_nsitem)->p_rte; /* We only support this on plain relations and matviews */ if (rte->rtekind != RTE_RELATION || (rte->relkind != RELKIND_RELATION && rte->relkind != RELKIND_MATVIEW && rte->relkind != RELKIND_PARTITIONED_TABLE)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED), errmsg("TABLESAMPLE clause can only be applied to tables and materialized views"), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation(rts->relation)))); /* Transform TABLESAMPLE details and attach to the RTE */ rte->tablesample = transformRangeTableSample(pstate, rts); return rel; } else if (IsA(n, JoinExpr)) { /* A newfangled join expression */ JoinExpr *j = (JoinExpr *) n; ParseNamespaceItem *nsitem; ParseNamespaceItem *l_nsitem; ParseNamespaceItem *r_nsitem; List *l_namespace, *r_namespace, *my_namespace, *l_colnames, *r_colnames, *res_colnames, *l_colnos, *r_colnos, *res_colvars; ParseNamespaceColumn *l_nscolumns, *r_nscolumns, *res_nscolumns; int res_colindex; bool lateral_ok; int sv_namespace_length; int k; /* * Recursively process the left subtree, then the right. We must do * it in this order for correct visibility of LATERAL references. */ j->larg = transformFromClauseItem(pstate, j->larg, &l_nsitem, &l_namespace); /* * Make the left-side RTEs available for LATERAL access within the * right side, by temporarily adding them to the pstate's namespace * list. Per SQL:2008, if the join type is not INNER or LEFT then the * left-side names must still be exposed, but it's an error to * reference them. (Stupid design, but that's what it says.) Hence, * we always push them into the namespace, but mark them as not * lateral_ok if the jointype is wrong. * * Notice that we don't require the merged namespace list to be * conflict-free. See the comments for scanNameSpaceForRefname(). */ lateral_ok = (j->jointype == JOIN_INNER || j->jointype == JOIN_LEFT); setNamespaceLateralState(l_namespace, true, lateral_ok); sv_namespace_length = list_length(pstate->p_namespace); pstate->p_namespace = list_concat(pstate->p_namespace, l_namespace); /* And now we can process the RHS */ j->rarg = transformFromClauseItem(pstate, j->rarg, &r_nsitem, &r_namespace); /* Remove the left-side RTEs from the namespace list again */ pstate->p_namespace = list_truncate(pstate->p_namespace, sv_namespace_length); /* * Check for conflicting refnames in left and right subtrees. Must do * this because higher levels will assume I hand back a self- * consistent namespace list. */ checkNameSpaceConflicts(pstate, l_namespace, r_namespace); /* * Generate combined namespace info for possible use below. */ my_namespace = list_concat(l_namespace, r_namespace); /* * We'll work from the nscolumns data and eref alias column names for * each of the input nsitems. Note that these include dropped * columns, which is helpful because we can keep track of physical * input column numbers more easily. */ l_nscolumns = l_nsitem->p_nscolumns; l_colnames = l_nsitem->p_names->colnames; r_nscolumns = r_nsitem->p_nscolumns; r_colnames = r_nsitem->p_names->colnames; /* * Natural join does not explicitly specify columns; must generate * columns to join. Need to run through the list of columns from each * table or join result and match up the column names. Use the first * table, and check every column in the second table for a match. * (We'll check that the matches were unique later on.) The result of * this step is a list of column names just like an explicitly-written * USING list. */ if (j->isNatural) { List *rlist = NIL; ListCell *lx, *rx; Assert(j->usingClause == NIL); /* shouldn't have USING() too */ foreach(lx, l_colnames) { char *l_colname = strVal(lfirst(lx)); Value *m_name = NULL; if (l_colname[0] == '\0') continue; /* ignore dropped columns */ foreach(rx, r_colnames) { char *r_colname = strVal(lfirst(rx)); if (strcmp(l_colname, r_colname) == 0) { m_name = makeString(l_colname); break; } } /* matched a right column? then keep as join column... */ if (m_name != NULL) rlist = lappend(rlist, m_name); } j->usingClause = rlist; } /* * If a USING clause alias was specified, save the USING columns as * its column list. */ if (j->join_using_alias) j->join_using_alias->colnames = j->usingClause; /* * Now transform the join qualifications, if any. */ l_colnos = NIL; r_colnos = NIL; res_colnames = NIL; res_colvars = NIL; /* this may be larger than needed, but it's not worth being exact */ res_nscolumns = (ParseNamespaceColumn *) palloc0((list_length(l_colnames) + list_length(r_colnames)) * sizeof(ParseNamespaceColumn)); res_colindex = 0; if (j->usingClause) { /* * JOIN/USING (or NATURAL JOIN, as transformed above). Transform * the list into an explicit ON-condition, and generate a list of * merged result columns. */ List *ucols = j->usingClause; List *l_usingvars = NIL; List *r_usingvars = NIL; ListCell *ucol; Assert(j->quals == NULL); /* shouldn't have ON() too */ foreach(ucol, ucols) { char *u_colname = strVal(lfirst(ucol)); ListCell *col; int ndx; int l_index = -1; int r_index = -1; Var *l_colvar, *r_colvar; Node *u_colvar; ParseNamespaceColumn *res_nscolumn; Assert(u_colname[0] != '\0'); /* Check for USING(foo,foo) */ foreach(col, res_colnames) { char *res_colname = strVal(lfirst(col)); if (strcmp(res_colname, u_colname) == 0) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_DUPLICATE_COLUMN), errmsg("column name \"%s\" appears more than once in USING clause", u_colname))); } /* Find it in left input */ ndx = 0; foreach(col, l_colnames) { char *l_colname = strVal(lfirst(col)); if (strcmp(l_colname, u_colname) == 0) { if (l_index >= 0) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_AMBIGUOUS_COLUMN), errmsg("common column name \"%s\" appears more than once in left table", u_colname))); l_index = ndx; } ndx++; } if (l_index < 0) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_UNDEFINED_COLUMN), errmsg("column \"%s\" specified in USING clause does not exist in left table", u_colname))); l_colnos = lappend_int(l_colnos, l_index + 1); /* Find it in right input */ ndx = 0; foreach(col, r_colnames) { char *r_colname = strVal(lfirst(col)); if (strcmp(r_colname, u_colname) == 0) { if (r_index >= 0) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_AMBIGUOUS_COLUMN), errmsg("common column name \"%s\" appears more than once in right table", u_colname))); r_index = ndx; } ndx++; } if (r_index < 0) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_UNDEFINED_COLUMN), errmsg("column \"%s\" specified in USING clause does not exist in right table", u_colname))); r_colnos = lappend_int(r_colnos, r_index + 1); l_colvar = buildVarFromNSColumn(l_nscolumns + l_index); l_usingvars = lappend(l_usingvars, l_colvar); r_colvar = buildVarFromNSColumn(r_nscolumns + r_index); r_usingvars = lappend(r_usingvars, r_colvar); res_colnames = lappend(res_colnames, lfirst(ucol)); u_colvar = buildMergedJoinVar(pstate, j->jointype, l_colvar, r_colvar); res_colvars = lappend(res_colvars, u_colvar); res_nscolumn = res_nscolumns + res_colindex; res_colindex++; if (u_colvar == (Node *) l_colvar) { /* Merged column is equivalent to left input */ *res_nscolumn = l_nscolumns[l_index]; } else if (u_colvar == (Node *) r_colvar) { /* Merged column is equivalent to right input */ *res_nscolumn = r_nscolumns[r_index]; } else { /* * Merged column is not semantically equivalent to either * input, so it needs to be referenced as the join output * column. We don't know the join's varno yet, so we'll * replace these zeroes below. */ res_nscolumn->p_varno = 0; res_nscolumn->p_varattno = res_colindex; res_nscolumn->p_vartype = exprType(u_colvar); res_nscolumn->p_vartypmod = exprTypmod(u_colvar); res_nscolumn->p_varcollid = exprCollation(u_colvar); res_nscolumn->p_varnosyn = 0; res_nscolumn->p_varattnosyn = res_colindex; } } j->quals = transformJoinUsingClause(pstate, l_usingvars, r_usingvars); } else if (j->quals) { /* User-written ON-condition; transform it */ j->quals = transformJoinOnClause(pstate, j, my_namespace); } else { /* CROSS JOIN: no quals */ } /* Add remaining columns from each side to the output columns */ res_colindex += extractRemainingColumns(l_nscolumns, l_colnames, &l_colnos, &res_colnames, &res_colvars, res_nscolumns + res_colindex); res_colindex += extractRemainingColumns(r_nscolumns, r_colnames, &r_colnos, &res_colnames, &res_colvars, res_nscolumns + res_colindex); /* * Now build an RTE and nsitem for the result of the join. * res_nscolumns isn't totally done yet, but that's OK because * addRangeTableEntryForJoin doesn't examine it, only store a pointer. */ nsitem = addRangeTableEntryForJoin(pstate, res_colnames, res_nscolumns, j->jointype, list_length(j->usingClause), res_colvars, l_colnos, r_colnos, j->join_using_alias, j->alias, true); j->rtindex = nsitem->p_rtindex; /* * Now that we know the join RTE's rangetable index, we can fix up the * res_nscolumns data in places where it should contain that. */ Assert(res_colindex == list_length(nsitem->p_names->colnames)); for (k = 0; k < res_colindex; k++) { ParseNamespaceColumn *nscol = res_nscolumns + k; /* fill in join RTI for merged columns */ if (nscol->p_varno == 0) nscol->p_varno = j->rtindex; if (nscol->p_varnosyn == 0) nscol->p_varnosyn = j->rtindex; /* if join has an alias, it syntactically hides all inputs */ if (j->alias) { nscol->p_varnosyn = j->rtindex; nscol->p_varattnosyn = k + 1; } } /* make a matching link to the JoinExpr for later use */ for (k = list_length(pstate->p_joinexprs) + 1; k < j->rtindex; k++) pstate->p_joinexprs = lappend(pstate->p_joinexprs, NULL); pstate->p_joinexprs = lappend(pstate->p_joinexprs, j); Assert(list_length(pstate->p_joinexprs) == j->rtindex); /* * If the join has a USING alias, build a ParseNamespaceItem for that * and add it to the list of nsitems in the join's input. */ if (j->join_using_alias) { ParseNamespaceItem *jnsitem; jnsitem = (ParseNamespaceItem *) palloc(sizeof(ParseNamespaceItem)); jnsitem->p_names = j->join_using_alias; jnsitem->p_rte = nsitem->p_rte; jnsitem->p_rtindex = nsitem->p_rtindex; /* no need to copy the first N columns, just use res_nscolumns */ jnsitem->p_nscolumns = res_nscolumns; /* set default visibility flags; might get changed later */ jnsitem->p_rel_visible = true; jnsitem->p_cols_visible = true; jnsitem->p_lateral_only = false; jnsitem->p_lateral_ok = true; /* Per SQL, we must check for alias conflicts */ checkNameSpaceConflicts(pstate, list_make1(jnsitem), my_namespace); my_namespace = lappend(my_namespace, jnsitem); } /* * Prepare returned namespace list. If the JOIN has an alias then it * hides the contained RTEs completely; otherwise, the contained RTEs * are still visible as table names, but are not visible for * unqualified column-name access. * * Note: if there are nested alias-less JOINs, the lower-level ones * will remain in the list although they have neither p_rel_visible * nor p_cols_visible set. We could delete such list items, but it's * unclear that it's worth expending cycles to do so. */ if (j->alias != NULL) my_namespace = NIL; else setNamespaceColumnVisibility(my_namespace, false); /* * The join RTE itself is always made visible for unqualified column * names. It's visible as a relation name only if it has an alias. */ nsitem->p_rel_visible = (j->alias != NULL); nsitem->p_cols_visible = true; nsitem->p_lateral_only = false; nsitem->p_lateral_ok = true; *top_nsitem = nsitem; *namespace = lappend(my_namespace, nsitem); return (Node *) j; } else elog(ERROR, "unrecognized node type: %d", (int) nodeTag(n)); return NULL; /* can't get here, keep compiler quiet */ } /* * buildVarFromNSColumn - * build a Var node using ParseNamespaceColumn data * * We assume varlevelsup should be 0, and no location is specified */ static Var * buildVarFromNSColumn(ParseNamespaceColumn *nscol) { Var *var; Assert(nscol->p_varno > 0); /* i.e., not deleted column */ var = makeVar(nscol->p_varno, nscol->p_varattno, nscol->p_vartype, nscol->p_vartypmod, nscol->p_varcollid, 0); /* makeVar doesn't offer parameters for these, so set by hand: */ var->varnosyn = nscol->p_varnosyn; var->varattnosyn = nscol->p_varattnosyn; return var; } /* * buildMergedJoinVar - * generate a suitable replacement expression for a merged join column */ static Node * buildMergedJoinVar(ParseState *pstate, JoinType jointype, Var *l_colvar, Var *r_colvar) { Oid outcoltype; int32 outcoltypmod; Node *l_node, *r_node, *res_node; outcoltype = select_common_type(pstate, list_make2(l_colvar, r_colvar), "JOIN/USING", NULL); outcoltypmod = select_common_typmod(pstate, list_make2(l_colvar, r_colvar), outcoltype); /* * Insert coercion functions if needed. Note that a difference in typmod * can only happen if input has typmod but outcoltypmod is -1. In that * case we insert a RelabelType to clearly mark that result's typmod is * not same as input. We never need coerce_type_typmod. */ if (l_colvar->vartype != outcoltype) l_node = coerce_type(pstate, (Node *) l_colvar, l_colvar->vartype, outcoltype, outcoltypmod, COERCION_IMPLICIT, COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST, -1); else if (l_colvar->vartypmod != outcoltypmod) l_node = (Node *) makeRelabelType((Expr *) l_colvar, outcoltype, outcoltypmod, InvalidOid, /* fixed below */ COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST); else l_node = (Node *) l_colvar; if (r_colvar->vartype != outcoltype) r_node = coerce_type(pstate, (Node *) r_colvar, r_colvar->vartype, outcoltype, outcoltypmod, COERCION_IMPLICIT, COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST, -1); else if (r_colvar->vartypmod != outcoltypmod) r_node = (Node *) makeRelabelType((Expr *) r_colvar, outcoltype, outcoltypmod, InvalidOid, /* fixed below */ COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST); else r_node = (Node *) r_colvar; /* * Choose what to emit */ switch (jointype) { case JOIN_INNER: /* * We can use either var; prefer non-coerced one if available. */ if (IsA(l_node, Var)) res_node = l_node; else if (IsA(r_node, Var)) res_node = r_node; else res_node = l_node; break; case JOIN_LEFT: /* Always use left var */ res_node = l_node; break; case JOIN_RIGHT: /* Always use right var */ res_node = r_node; break; case JOIN_FULL: { /* * Here we must build a COALESCE expression to ensure that the * join output is non-null if either input is. */ CoalesceExpr *c = makeNode(CoalesceExpr); c->coalescetype = outcoltype; /* coalescecollid will get set below */ c->args = list_make2(l_node, r_node); c->location = -1; res_node = (Node *) c; break; } default: elog(ERROR, "unrecognized join type: %d", (int) jointype); res_node = NULL; /* keep compiler quiet */ break; } /* * Apply assign_expr_collations to fix up the collation info in the * coercion and CoalesceExpr nodes, if we made any. This must be done now * so that the join node's alias vars show correct collation info. */ assign_expr_collations(pstate, res_node); return res_node; } /* * setNamespaceColumnVisibility - * Convenience subroutine to update cols_visible flags in a namespace list. */ static void setNamespaceColumnVisibility(List *namespace, bool cols_visible) { ListCell *lc; foreach(lc, namespace) { ParseNamespaceItem *nsitem = (ParseNamespaceItem *) lfirst(lc); nsitem->p_cols_visible = cols_visible; } } /* * setNamespaceLateralState - * Convenience subroutine to update LATERAL flags in a namespace list. */ static void setNamespaceLateralState(List *namespace, bool lateral_only, bool lateral_ok) { ListCell *lc; foreach(lc, namespace) { ParseNamespaceItem *nsitem = (ParseNamespaceItem *) lfirst(lc); nsitem->p_lateral_only = lateral_only; nsitem->p_lateral_ok = lateral_ok; } } /* * transformWhereClause - * Transform the qualification and make sure it is of type boolean. * Used for WHERE and allied clauses. * * constructName does not affect the semantics, but is used in error messages */ Node * transformWhereClause(ParseState *pstate, Node *clause, ParseExprKind exprKind, const char *constructName) { Node *qual; if (clause == NULL) return NULL; qual = transformExpr(pstate, clause, exprKind); qual = coerce_to_boolean(pstate, qual, constructName); return qual; } /* * transformLimitClause - * Transform the expression and make sure it is of type bigint. * Used for LIMIT and allied clauses. * * Note: as of Postgres 8.2, LIMIT expressions are expected to yield int8, * rather than int4 as before. * * constructName does not affect the semantics, but is used in error messages */ Node * transformLimitClause(ParseState *pstate, Node *clause, ParseExprKind exprKind, const char *constructName, LimitOption limitOption) { Node *qual; if (clause == NULL) return NULL; qual = transformExpr(pstate, clause, exprKind); qual = coerce_to_specific_type(pstate, qual, INT8OID, constructName); /* LIMIT can't refer to any variables of the current query */ checkExprIsVarFree(pstate, qual, constructName); /* * Don't allow NULLs in FETCH FIRST .. WITH TIES. This test is ugly and * extremely simplistic, in that you can pass a NULL anyway by hiding it * inside an expression -- but this protects ruleutils against emitting an * unadorned NULL that's not accepted back by the grammar. */ if (exprKind == EXPR_KIND_LIMIT && limitOption == LIMIT_OPTION_WITH_TIES && IsA(clause, A_Const) && ((A_Const *) clause)->val.type == T_Null) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_ROW_COUNT_IN_LIMIT_CLAUSE), errmsg("row count cannot be null in FETCH FIRST ... WITH TIES clause"))); return qual; } /* * checkExprIsVarFree * Check that given expr has no Vars of the current query level * (aggregates and window functions should have been rejected already). * * This is used to check expressions that have to have a consistent value * across all rows of the query, such as a LIMIT. Arguably it should reject * volatile functions, too, but we don't do that --- whatever value the * function gives on first execution is what you get. * * constructName does not affect the semantics, but is used in error messages */ static void checkExprIsVarFree(ParseState *pstate, Node *n, const char *constructName) { if (contain_vars_of_level(n, 0)) { ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_COLUMN_REFERENCE), /* translator: %s is name of a SQL construct, eg LIMIT */ errmsg("argument of %s must not contain variables", constructName), parser_errposition(pstate, locate_var_of_level(n, 0)))); } } /* * checkTargetlistEntrySQL92 - * Validate a targetlist entry found by findTargetlistEntrySQL92 * * When we select a pre-existing tlist entry as a result of syntax such * as "GROUP BY 1", we have to make sure it is acceptable for use in the * indicated clause type; transformExpr() will have treated it as a regular * targetlist item. */ static void checkTargetlistEntrySQL92(ParseState *pstate, TargetEntry *tle, ParseExprKind exprKind) { switch (exprKind) { case EXPR_KIND_GROUP_BY: /* reject aggregates and window functions */ if (pstate->p_hasAggs && contain_aggs_of_level((Node *) tle->expr, 0)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_GROUPING_ERROR), /* translator: %s is name of a SQL construct, eg GROUP BY */ errmsg("aggregate functions are not allowed in %s", ParseExprKindName(exprKind)), parser_errposition(pstate, locate_agg_of_level((Node *) tle->expr, 0)))); if (pstate->p_hasWindowFuncs && contain_windowfuncs((Node *) tle->expr)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_WINDOWING_ERROR), /* translator: %s is name of a SQL construct, eg GROUP BY */ errmsg("window functions are not allowed in %s", ParseExprKindName(exprKind)), parser_errposition(pstate, locate_windowfunc((Node *) tle->expr)))); break; case EXPR_KIND_ORDER_BY: /* no extra checks needed */ break; case EXPR_KIND_DISTINCT_ON: /* no extra checks needed */ break; default: elog(ERROR, "unexpected exprKind in checkTargetlistEntrySQL92"); break; } } /* * findTargetlistEntrySQL92 - * Returns the targetlist entry matching the given (untransformed) node. * If no matching entry exists, one is created and appended to the target * list as a "resjunk" node. * * This function supports the old SQL92 ORDER BY interpretation, where the * expression is an output column name or number. If we fail to find a * match of that sort, we fall through to the SQL99 rules. For historical * reasons, Postgres also allows this interpretation for GROUP BY, though * the standard never did. However, for GROUP BY we prefer a SQL99 match. * This function is *not* used for WINDOW definitions. * * node the ORDER BY, GROUP BY, or DISTINCT ON expression to be matched * tlist the target list (passed by reference so we can append to it) * exprKind identifies clause type being processed */ static TargetEntry * findTargetlistEntrySQL92(ParseState *pstate, Node *node, List **tlist, ParseExprKind exprKind) { ListCell *tl; /*---------- * Handle two special cases as mandated by the SQL92 spec: * * 1. Bare ColumnName (no qualifier or subscripts) * For a bare identifier, we search for a matching column name * in the existing target list. Multiple matches are an error * unless they refer to identical values; for example, * we allow SELECT a, a FROM table ORDER BY a * but not SELECT a AS b, b FROM table ORDER BY b * If no match is found, we fall through and treat the identifier * as an expression. * For GROUP BY, it is incorrect to match the grouping item against * targetlist entries: according to SQL92, an identifier in GROUP BY * is a reference to a column name exposed by FROM, not to a target * list column. However, many implementations (including pre-7.0 * PostgreSQL) accept this anyway. So for GROUP BY, we look first * to see if the identifier matches any FROM column name, and only * try for a targetlist name if it doesn't. This ensures that we * adhere to the spec in the case where the name could be both. * DISTINCT ON isn't in the standard, so we can do what we like there; * we choose to make it work like ORDER BY, on the rather flimsy * grounds that ordinary DISTINCT works on targetlist entries. * * 2. IntegerConstant * This means to use the n'th item in the existing target list. * Note that it would make no sense to order/group/distinct by an * actual constant, so this does not create a conflict with SQL99. * GROUP BY column-number is not allowed by SQL92, but since * the standard has no other behavior defined for this syntax, * we may as well accept this common extension. * * Note that pre-existing resjunk targets must not be used in either case, * since the user didn't write them in his SELECT list. * * If neither special case applies, fall through to treat the item as * an expression per SQL99. *---------- */ if (IsA(node, ColumnRef) && list_length(((ColumnRef *) node)->fields) == 1 && IsA(linitial(((ColumnRef *) node)->fields), String)) { char *name = strVal(linitial(((ColumnRef *) node)->fields)); int location = ((ColumnRef *) node)->location; if (exprKind == EXPR_KIND_GROUP_BY) { /* * In GROUP BY, we must prefer a match against a FROM-clause * column to one against the targetlist. Look to see if there is * a matching column. If so, fall through to use SQL99 rules. * NOTE: if name could refer ambiguously to more than one column * name exposed by FROM, colNameToVar will ereport(ERROR). That's * just what we want here. * * Small tweak for 7.4.3: ignore matches in upper query levels. * This effectively changes the search order for bare names to (1) * local FROM variables, (2) local targetlist aliases, (3) outer * FROM variables, whereas before it was (1) (3) (2). SQL92 and * SQL99 do not allow GROUPing BY an outer reference, so this * breaks no cases that are legal per spec, and it seems a more * self-consistent behavior. */ if (colNameToVar(pstate, name, true, location) != NULL) name = NULL; } if (name != NULL) { TargetEntry *target_result = NULL; foreach(tl, *tlist) { TargetEntry *tle = (TargetEntry *) lfirst(tl); if (!tle->resjunk && strcmp(tle->resname, name) == 0) { if (target_result != NULL) { if (!equal(target_result->expr, tle->expr)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_AMBIGUOUS_COLUMN), /*------ translator: first %s is name of a SQL construct, eg ORDER BY */ errmsg("%s \"%s\" is ambiguous", ParseExprKindName(exprKind), name), parser_errposition(pstate, location))); } else target_result = tle; /* Stay in loop to check for ambiguity */ } } if (target_result != NULL) { /* return the first match, after suitable validation */ checkTargetlistEntrySQL92(pstate, target_result, exprKind); return target_result; } } } if (IsA(node, A_Const)) { Value *val = &((A_Const *) node)->val; int location = ((A_Const *) node)->location; int targetlist_pos = 0; int target_pos; if (!IsA(val, Integer)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), /* translator: %s is name of a SQL construct, eg ORDER BY */ errmsg("non-integer constant in %s", ParseExprKindName(exprKind)), parser_errposition(pstate, location))); target_pos = intVal(val); foreach(tl, *tlist) { TargetEntry *tle = (TargetEntry *) lfirst(tl); if (!tle->resjunk) { if (++targetlist_pos == target_pos) { /* return the unique match, after suitable validation */ checkTargetlistEntrySQL92(pstate, tle, exprKind); return tle; } } } ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_COLUMN_REFERENCE), /* translator: %s is name of a SQL construct, eg ORDER BY */ errmsg("%s position %d is not in select list", ParseExprKindName(exprKind), target_pos), parser_errposition(pstate, location))); } /* * Otherwise, we have an expression, so process it per SQL99 rules. */ return findTargetlistEntrySQL99(pstate, node, tlist, exprKind); } /* * findTargetlistEntrySQL99 - * Returns the targetlist entry matching the given (untransformed) node. * If no matching entry exists, one is created and appended to the target * list as a "resjunk" node. * * This function supports the SQL99 interpretation, wherein the expression * is just an ordinary expression referencing input column names. * * node the ORDER BY, GROUP BY, etc expression to be matched * tlist the target list (passed by reference so we can append to it) * exprKind identifies clause type being processed */ static TargetEntry * findTargetlistEntrySQL99(ParseState *pstate, Node *node, List **tlist, ParseExprKind exprKind) { TargetEntry *target_result; ListCell *tl; Node *expr; /* * Convert the untransformed node to a transformed expression, and search * for a match in the tlist. NOTE: it doesn't really matter whether there * is more than one match. Also, we are willing to match an existing * resjunk target here, though the SQL92 cases above must ignore resjunk * targets. */ expr = transformExpr(pstate, node, exprKind); foreach(tl, *tlist) { TargetEntry *tle = (TargetEntry *) lfirst(tl); Node *texpr; /* * Ignore any implicit cast on the existing tlist expression. * * This essentially allows the ORDER/GROUP/etc item to adopt the same * datatype previously selected for a textually-equivalent tlist item. * There can't be any implicit cast at top level in an ordinary SELECT * tlist at this stage, but the case does arise with ORDER BY in an * aggregate function. */ texpr = strip_implicit_coercions((Node *) tle->expr); if (equal(expr, texpr)) return tle; } /* * If no matches, construct a new target entry which is appended to the * end of the target list. This target is given resjunk = true so that it * will not be projected into the final tuple. */ target_result = transformTargetEntry(pstate, node, expr, exprKind, NULL, true); *tlist = lappend(*tlist, target_result); return target_result; } /*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Flatten out parenthesized sublists in grouping lists, and some cases * of nested grouping sets. * * Inside a grouping set (ROLLUP, CUBE, or GROUPING SETS), we expect the * content to be nested no more than 2 deep: i.e. ROLLUP((a,b),(c,d)) is * ok, but ROLLUP((a,(b,c)),d) is flattened to ((a,b,c),d), which we then * (later) normalize to ((a,b,c),(d)). * * CUBE or ROLLUP can be nested inside GROUPING SETS (but not the reverse), * and we leave that alone if we find it. But if we see GROUPING SETS inside * GROUPING SETS, we can flatten and normalize as follows: * GROUPING SETS (a, (b,c), GROUPING SETS ((c,d),(e)), (f,g)) * becomes * GROUPING SETS ((a), (b,c), (c,d), (e), (f,g)) * * This is per the spec's syntax transformations, but these are the only such * transformations we do in parse analysis, so that queries retain the * originally specified grouping set syntax for CUBE and ROLLUP as much as * possible when deparsed. (Full expansion of the result into a list of * grouping sets is left to the planner.) * * When we're done, the resulting list should contain only these possible * elements: * - an expression * - a CUBE or ROLLUP with a list of expressions nested 2 deep * - a GROUPING SET containing any of: * - expression lists * - empty grouping sets * - CUBE or ROLLUP nodes with lists nested 2 deep * The return is a new list, but doesn't deep-copy the old nodes except for * GroupingSet nodes. * * As a side effect, flag whether the list has any GroupingSet nodes. *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static Node * flatten_grouping_sets(Node *expr, bool toplevel, bool *hasGroupingSets) { /* just in case of pathological input */ check_stack_depth(); if (expr == (Node *) NIL) return (Node *) NIL; switch (expr->type) { case T_RowExpr: { RowExpr *r = (RowExpr *) expr; if (r->row_format == COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST) return flatten_grouping_sets((Node *) r->args, false, NULL); } break; case T_GroupingSet: { GroupingSet *gset = (GroupingSet *) expr; ListCell *l2; List *result_set = NIL; if (hasGroupingSets) *hasGroupingSets = true; /* * at the top level, we skip over all empty grouping sets; the * caller can supply the canonical GROUP BY () if nothing is * left. */ if (toplevel && gset->kind == GROUPING_SET_EMPTY) return (Node *) NIL; foreach(l2, gset->content) { Node *n1 = lfirst(l2); Node *n2 = flatten_grouping_sets(n1, false, NULL); if (IsA(n1, GroupingSet) && ((GroupingSet *) n1)->kind == GROUPING_SET_SETS) result_set = list_concat(result_set, (List *) n2); else result_set = lappend(result_set, n2); } /* * At top level, keep the grouping set node; but if we're in a * nested grouping set, then we need to concat the flattened * result into the outer list if it's simply nested. */ if (toplevel || (gset->kind != GROUPING_SET_SETS)) { return (Node *) makeGroupingSet(gset->kind, result_set, gset->location); } else return (Node *) result_set; } case T_List: { List *result = NIL; ListCell *l; foreach(l, (List *) expr) { Node *n = flatten_grouping_sets(lfirst(l), toplevel, hasGroupingSets); if (n != (Node *) NIL) { if (IsA(n, List)) result = list_concat(result, (List *) n); else result = lappend(result, n); } } return (Node *) result; } default: break; } return expr; } /* * Transform a single expression within a GROUP BY clause or grouping set. * * The expression is added to the targetlist if not already present, and to the * flatresult list (which will become the groupClause) if not already present * there. The sortClause is consulted for operator and sort order hints. * * Returns the ressortgroupref of the expression. * * flatresult reference to flat list of SortGroupClause nodes * seen_local bitmapset of sortgrouprefs already seen at the local level * pstate ParseState * gexpr node to transform * targetlist reference to TargetEntry list * sortClause ORDER BY clause (SortGroupClause nodes) * exprKind expression kind * useSQL99 SQL99 rather than SQL92 syntax * toplevel false if within any grouping set */ static Index transformGroupClauseExpr(List **flatresult, Bitmapset *seen_local, ParseState *pstate, Node *gexpr, List **targetlist, List *sortClause, ParseExprKind exprKind, bool useSQL99, bool toplevel) { TargetEntry *tle; bool found = false; if (useSQL99) tle = findTargetlistEntrySQL99(pstate, gexpr, targetlist, exprKind); else tle = findTargetlistEntrySQL92(pstate, gexpr, targetlist, exprKind); if (tle->ressortgroupref > 0) { ListCell *sl; /* * Eliminate duplicates (GROUP BY x, x) but only at local level. * (Duplicates in grouping sets can affect the number of returned * rows, so can't be dropped indiscriminately.) * * Since we don't care about anything except the sortgroupref, we can * use a bitmapset rather than scanning lists. */ if (bms_is_member(tle->ressortgroupref, seen_local)) return 0; /* * If we're already in the flat clause list, we don't need to consider * adding ourselves again. */ found = targetIsInSortList(tle, InvalidOid, *flatresult); if (found) return tle->ressortgroupref; /* * If the GROUP BY tlist entry also appears in ORDER BY, copy operator * info from the (first) matching ORDER BY item. This means that if * you write something like "GROUP BY foo ORDER BY foo USING <<<", the * GROUP BY operation silently takes on the equality semantics implied * by the ORDER BY. There are two reasons to do this: it improves the * odds that we can implement both GROUP BY and ORDER BY with a single * sort step, and it allows the user to choose the equality semantics * used by GROUP BY, should she be working with a datatype that has * more than one equality operator. * * If we're in a grouping set, though, we force our requested ordering * to be NULLS LAST, because if we have any hope of using a sorted agg * for the job, we're going to be tacking on generated NULL values * after the corresponding groups. If the user demands nulls first, * another sort step is going to be inevitable, but that's the * planner's problem. */ foreach(sl, sortClause) { SortGroupClause *sc = (SortGroupClause *) lfirst(sl); if (sc->tleSortGroupRef == tle->ressortgroupref) { SortGroupClause *grpc = copyObject(sc); if (!toplevel) grpc->nulls_first = false; *flatresult = lappend(*flatresult, grpc); found = true; break; } } } /* * If no match in ORDER BY, just add it to the result using default * sort/group semantics. */ if (!found) *flatresult = addTargetToGroupList(pstate, tle, *flatresult, *targetlist, exprLocation(gexpr)); /* * _something_ must have assigned us a sortgroupref by now... */ return tle->ressortgroupref; } /* * Transform a list of expressions within a GROUP BY clause or grouping set. * * The list of expressions belongs to a single clause within which duplicates * can be safely eliminated. * * Returns an integer list of ressortgroupref values. * * flatresult reference to flat list of SortGroupClause nodes * pstate ParseState * list nodes to transform * targetlist reference to TargetEntry list * sortClause ORDER BY clause (SortGroupClause nodes) * exprKind expression kind * useSQL99 SQL99 rather than SQL92 syntax * toplevel false if within any grouping set */ static List * transformGroupClauseList(List **flatresult, ParseState *pstate, List *list, List **targetlist, List *sortClause, ParseExprKind exprKind, bool useSQL99, bool toplevel) { Bitmapset *seen_local = NULL; List *result = NIL; ListCell *gl; foreach(gl, list) { Node *gexpr = (Node *) lfirst(gl); Index ref = transformGroupClauseExpr(flatresult, seen_local, pstate, gexpr, targetlist, sortClause, exprKind, useSQL99, toplevel); if (ref > 0) { seen_local = bms_add_member(seen_local, ref); result = lappend_int(result, ref); } } return result; } /* * Transform a grouping set and (recursively) its content. * * The grouping set might be a GROUPING SETS node with other grouping sets * inside it, but SETS within SETS have already been flattened out before * reaching here. * * Returns the transformed node, which now contains SIMPLE nodes with lists * of ressortgrouprefs rather than expressions. * * flatresult reference to flat list of SortGroupClause nodes * pstate ParseState * gset grouping set to transform * targetlist reference to TargetEntry list * sortClause ORDER BY clause (SortGroupClause nodes) * exprKind expression kind * useSQL99 SQL99 rather than SQL92 syntax * toplevel false if within any grouping set */ static Node * transformGroupingSet(List **flatresult, ParseState *pstate, GroupingSet *gset, List **targetlist, List *sortClause, ParseExprKind exprKind, bool useSQL99, bool toplevel) { ListCell *gl; List *content = NIL; Assert(toplevel || gset->kind != GROUPING_SET_SETS); foreach(gl, gset->content) { Node *n = lfirst(gl); if (IsA(n, List)) { List *l = transformGroupClauseList(flatresult, pstate, (List *) n, targetlist, sortClause, exprKind, useSQL99, false); content = lappend(content, makeGroupingSet(GROUPING_SET_SIMPLE, l, exprLocation(n))); } else if (IsA(n, GroupingSet)) { GroupingSet *gset2 = (GroupingSet *) lfirst(gl); content = lappend(content, transformGroupingSet(flatresult, pstate, gset2, targetlist, sortClause, exprKind, useSQL99, false)); } else { Index ref = transformGroupClauseExpr(flatresult, NULL, pstate, n, targetlist, sortClause, exprKind, useSQL99, false); content = lappend(content, makeGroupingSet(GROUPING_SET_SIMPLE, list_make1_int(ref), exprLocation(n))); } } /* Arbitrarily cap the size of CUBE, which has exponential growth */ if (gset->kind == GROUPING_SET_CUBE) { if (list_length(content) > 12) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_TOO_MANY_COLUMNS), errmsg("CUBE is limited to 12 elements"), parser_errposition(pstate, gset->location))); } return (Node *) makeGroupingSet(gset->kind, content, gset->location); } /* * transformGroupClause - * transform a GROUP BY clause * * GROUP BY items will be added to the targetlist (as resjunk columns) * if not already present, so the targetlist must be passed by reference. * * This is also used for window PARTITION BY clauses (which act almost the * same, but are always interpreted per SQL99 rules). * * Grouping sets make this a lot more complex than it was. Our goal here is * twofold: we make a flat list of SortGroupClause nodes referencing each * distinct expression used for grouping, with those expressions added to the * targetlist if needed. At the same time, we build the groupingSets tree, * which stores only ressortgrouprefs as integer lists inside GroupingSet nodes * (possibly nested, but limited in depth: a GROUPING_SET_SETS node can contain * nested SIMPLE, CUBE or ROLLUP nodes, but not more sets - we flatten that * out; while CUBE and ROLLUP can contain only SIMPLE nodes). * * We skip much of the hard work if there are no grouping sets. * * One subtlety is that the groupClause list can end up empty while the * groupingSets list is not; this happens if there are only empty grouping * sets, or an explicit GROUP BY (). This has the same effect as specifying * aggregates or a HAVING clause with no GROUP BY; the output is one row per * grouping set even if the input is empty. * * Returns the transformed (flat) groupClause. * * pstate ParseState * grouplist clause to transform * groupingSets reference to list to contain the grouping set tree * targetlist reference to TargetEntry list * sortClause ORDER BY clause (SortGroupClause nodes) * exprKind expression kind * useSQL99 SQL99 rather than SQL92 syntax */ List * transformGroupClause(ParseState *pstate, List *grouplist, List **groupingSets, List **targetlist, List *sortClause, ParseExprKind exprKind, bool useSQL99) { List *result = NIL; List *flat_grouplist; List *gsets = NIL; ListCell *gl; bool hasGroupingSets = false; Bitmapset *seen_local = NULL; /* * Recursively flatten implicit RowExprs. (Technically this is only needed * for GROUP BY, per the syntax rules for grouping sets, but we do it * anyway.) */ flat_grouplist = (List *) flatten_grouping_sets((Node *) grouplist, true, &hasGroupingSets); /* * If the list is now empty, but hasGroupingSets is true, it's because we * elided redundant empty grouping sets. Restore a single empty grouping * set to leave a canonical form: GROUP BY () */ if (flat_grouplist == NIL && hasGroupingSets) { flat_grouplist = list_make1(makeGroupingSet(GROUPING_SET_EMPTY, NIL, exprLocation((Node *) grouplist))); } foreach(gl, flat_grouplist) { Node *gexpr = (Node *) lfirst(gl); if (IsA(gexpr, GroupingSet)) { GroupingSet *gset = (GroupingSet *) gexpr; switch (gset->kind) { case GROUPING_SET_EMPTY: gsets = lappend(gsets, gset); break; case GROUPING_SET_SIMPLE: /* can't happen */ Assert(false); break; case GROUPING_SET_SETS: case GROUPING_SET_CUBE: case GROUPING_SET_ROLLUP: gsets = lappend(gsets, transformGroupingSet(&result, pstate, gset, targetlist, sortClause, exprKind, useSQL99, true)); break; } } else { Index ref = transformGroupClauseExpr(&result, seen_local, pstate, gexpr, targetlist, sortClause, exprKind, useSQL99, true); if (ref > 0) { seen_local = bms_add_member(seen_local, ref); if (hasGroupingSets) gsets = lappend(gsets, makeGroupingSet(GROUPING_SET_SIMPLE, list_make1_int(ref), exprLocation(gexpr))); } } } /* parser should prevent this */ Assert(gsets == NIL || groupingSets != NULL); if (groupingSets) *groupingSets = gsets; return result; } /* * transformSortClause - * transform an ORDER BY clause * * ORDER BY items will be added to the targetlist (as resjunk columns) * if not already present, so the targetlist must be passed by reference. * * This is also used for window and aggregate ORDER BY clauses (which act * almost the same, but are always interpreted per SQL99 rules). */ List * transformSortClause(ParseState *pstate, List *orderlist, List **targetlist, ParseExprKind exprKind, bool useSQL99) { List *sortlist = NIL; ListCell *olitem; foreach(olitem, orderlist) { SortBy *sortby = (SortBy *) lfirst(olitem); TargetEntry *tle; if (useSQL99) tle = findTargetlistEntrySQL99(pstate, sortby->node, targetlist, exprKind); else tle = findTargetlistEntrySQL92(pstate, sortby->node, targetlist, exprKind); sortlist = addTargetToSortList(pstate, tle, sortlist, *targetlist, sortby); } return sortlist; } /* * transformWindowDefinitions - * transform window definitions (WindowDef to WindowClause) */ List * transformWindowDefinitions(ParseState *pstate, List *windowdefs, List **targetlist) { List *result = NIL; Index winref = 0; ListCell *lc; foreach(lc, windowdefs) { WindowDef *windef = (WindowDef *) lfirst(lc); WindowClause *refwc = NULL; List *partitionClause; List *orderClause; Oid rangeopfamily = InvalidOid; Oid rangeopcintype = InvalidOid; WindowClause *wc; winref++; /* * Check for duplicate window names. */ if (windef->name && findWindowClause(result, windef->name) != NULL) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_WINDOWING_ERROR), errmsg("window \"%s\" is already defined", windef->name), parser_errposition(pstate, windef->location))); /* * If it references a previous window, look that up. */ if (windef->refname) { refwc = findWindowClause(result, windef->refname); if (refwc == NULL) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_UNDEFINED_OBJECT), errmsg("window \"%s\" does not exist", windef->refname), parser_errposition(pstate, windef->location))); } /* * Transform PARTITION and ORDER specs, if any. These are treated * almost exactly like top-level GROUP BY and ORDER BY clauses, * including the special handling of nondefault operator semantics. */ orderClause = transformSortClause(pstate, windef->orderClause, targetlist, EXPR_KIND_WINDOW_ORDER, true /* force SQL99 rules */ ); partitionClause = transformGroupClause(pstate, windef->partitionClause, NULL, targetlist, orderClause, EXPR_KIND_WINDOW_PARTITION, true /* force SQL99 rules */ ); /* * And prepare the new WindowClause. */ wc = makeNode(WindowClause); wc->name = windef->name; wc->refname = windef->refname; /* * Per spec, a windowdef that references a previous one copies the * previous partition clause (and mustn't specify its own). It can * specify its own ordering clause, but only if the previous one had * none. It always specifies its own frame clause, and the previous * one must not have a frame clause. Yeah, it's bizarre that each of * these cases works differently, but SQL:2008 says so; see 7.11 * syntax rule 10 and general rule 1. The frame * clause rule is especially bizarre because it makes "OVER foo" * different from "OVER (foo)", and requires the latter to throw an * error if foo has a nondefault frame clause. Well, ours not to * reason why, but we do go out of our way to throw a useful error * message for such cases. */ if (refwc) { if (partitionClause) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_WINDOWING_ERROR), errmsg("cannot override PARTITION BY clause of window \"%s\"", windef->refname), parser_errposition(pstate, windef->location))); wc->partitionClause = copyObject(refwc->partitionClause); } else wc->partitionClause = partitionClause; if (refwc) { if (orderClause && refwc->orderClause) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_WINDOWING_ERROR), errmsg("cannot override ORDER BY clause of window \"%s\"", windef->refname), parser_errposition(pstate, windef->location))); if (orderClause) { wc->orderClause = orderClause; wc->copiedOrder = false; } else { wc->orderClause = copyObject(refwc->orderClause); wc->copiedOrder = true; } } else { wc->orderClause = orderClause; wc->copiedOrder = false; } if (refwc && refwc->frameOptions != FRAMEOPTION_DEFAULTS) { /* * Use this message if this is a WINDOW clause, or if it's an OVER * clause that includes ORDER BY or framing clauses. (We already * rejected PARTITION BY above, so no need to check that.) */ if (windef->name || orderClause || windef->frameOptions != FRAMEOPTION_DEFAULTS) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_WINDOWING_ERROR), errmsg("cannot copy window \"%s\" because it has a frame clause", windef->refname), parser_errposition(pstate, windef->location))); /* Else this clause is just OVER (foo), so say this: */ ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_WINDOWING_ERROR), errmsg("cannot copy window \"%s\" because it has a frame clause", windef->refname), errhint("Omit the parentheses in this OVER clause."), parser_errposition(pstate, windef->location))); } wc->frameOptions = windef->frameOptions; /* * RANGE offset PRECEDING/FOLLOWING requires exactly one ORDER BY * column; check that and get its sort opfamily info. */ if ((wc->frameOptions & FRAMEOPTION_RANGE) && (wc->frameOptions & (FRAMEOPTION_START_OFFSET | FRAMEOPTION_END_OFFSET))) { SortGroupClause *sortcl; Node *sortkey; int16 rangestrategy; if (list_length(wc->orderClause) != 1) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_WINDOWING_ERROR), errmsg("RANGE with offset PRECEDING/FOLLOWING requires exactly one ORDER BY column"), parser_errposition(pstate, windef->location))); sortcl = castNode(SortGroupClause, linitial(wc->orderClause)); sortkey = get_sortgroupclause_expr(sortcl, *targetlist); /* Find the sort operator in pg_amop */ if (!get_ordering_op_properties(sortcl->sortop, &rangeopfamily, &rangeopcintype, &rangestrategy)) elog(ERROR, "operator %u is not a valid ordering operator", sortcl->sortop); /* Record properties of sort ordering */ wc->inRangeColl = exprCollation(sortkey); wc->inRangeAsc = (rangestrategy == BTLessStrategyNumber); wc->inRangeNullsFirst = sortcl->nulls_first; } /* Per spec, GROUPS mode requires an ORDER BY clause */ if (wc->frameOptions & FRAMEOPTION_GROUPS) { if (wc->orderClause == NIL) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_WINDOWING_ERROR), errmsg("GROUPS mode requires an ORDER BY clause"), parser_errposition(pstate, windef->location))); } /* Process frame offset expressions */ wc->startOffset = transformFrameOffset(pstate, wc->frameOptions, rangeopfamily, rangeopcintype, &wc->startInRangeFunc, windef->startOffset); wc->endOffset = transformFrameOffset(pstate, wc->frameOptions, rangeopfamily, rangeopcintype, &wc->endInRangeFunc, windef->endOffset); wc->winref = winref; result = lappend(result, wc); } return result; } /* * transformDistinctClause - * transform a DISTINCT clause * * Since we may need to add items to the query's targetlist, that list * is passed by reference. * * As with GROUP BY, we absorb the sorting semantics of ORDER BY as much as * possible into the distinctClause. This avoids a possible need to re-sort, * and allows the user to choose the equality semantics used by DISTINCT, * should she be working with a datatype that has more than one equality * operator. * * is_agg is true if we are transforming an aggregate(DISTINCT ...) * function call. This does not affect any behavior, only the phrasing * of error messages. */ List * transformDistinctClause(ParseState *pstate, List **targetlist, List *sortClause, bool is_agg) { List *result = NIL; ListCell *slitem; ListCell *tlitem; /* * The distinctClause should consist of all ORDER BY items followed by all * other non-resjunk targetlist items. There must not be any resjunk * ORDER BY items --- that would imply that we are sorting by a value that * isn't necessarily unique within a DISTINCT group, so the results * wouldn't be well-defined. This construction ensures we follow the rule * that sortClause and distinctClause match; in fact the sortClause will * always be a prefix of distinctClause. * * Note a corner case: the same TLE could be in the ORDER BY list multiple * times with different sortops. We have to include it in the * distinctClause the same way to preserve the prefix property. The net * effect will be that the TLE value will be made unique according to both * sortops. */ foreach(slitem, sortClause) { SortGroupClause *scl = (SortGroupClause *) lfirst(slitem); TargetEntry *tle = get_sortgroupclause_tle(scl, *targetlist); if (tle->resjunk) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_COLUMN_REFERENCE), is_agg ? errmsg("in an aggregate with DISTINCT, ORDER BY expressions must appear in argument list") : errmsg("for SELECT DISTINCT, ORDER BY expressions must appear in select list"), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation((Node *) tle->expr)))); result = lappend(result, copyObject(scl)); } /* * Now add any remaining non-resjunk tlist items, using default sort/group * semantics for their data types. */ foreach(tlitem, *targetlist) { TargetEntry *tle = (TargetEntry *) lfirst(tlitem); if (tle->resjunk) continue; /* ignore junk */ result = addTargetToGroupList(pstate, tle, result, *targetlist, exprLocation((Node *) tle->expr)); } /* * Complain if we found nothing to make DISTINCT. Returning an empty list * would cause the parsed Query to look like it didn't have DISTINCT, with * results that would probably surprise the user. Note: this case is * presently impossible for aggregates because of grammar restrictions, * but we check anyway. */ if (result == NIL) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), is_agg ? errmsg("an aggregate with DISTINCT must have at least one argument") : errmsg("SELECT DISTINCT must have at least one column"))); return result; } /* * transformDistinctOnClause - * transform a DISTINCT ON clause * * Since we may need to add items to the query's targetlist, that list * is passed by reference. * * As with GROUP BY, we absorb the sorting semantics of ORDER BY as much as * possible into the distinctClause. This avoids a possible need to re-sort, * and allows the user to choose the equality semantics used by DISTINCT, * should she be working with a datatype that has more than one equality * operator. */ List * transformDistinctOnClause(ParseState *pstate, List *distinctlist, List **targetlist, List *sortClause) { List *result = NIL; List *sortgrouprefs = NIL; bool skipped_sortitem; ListCell *lc; ListCell *lc2; /* * Add all the DISTINCT ON expressions to the tlist (if not already * present, they are added as resjunk items). Assign sortgroupref numbers * to them, and make a list of these numbers. (NB: we rely below on the * sortgrouprefs list being one-for-one with the original distinctlist. * Also notice that we could have duplicate DISTINCT ON expressions and * hence duplicate entries in sortgrouprefs.) */ foreach(lc, distinctlist) { Node *dexpr = (Node *) lfirst(lc); int sortgroupref; TargetEntry *tle; tle = findTargetlistEntrySQL92(pstate, dexpr, targetlist, EXPR_KIND_DISTINCT_ON); sortgroupref = assignSortGroupRef(tle, *targetlist); sortgrouprefs = lappend_int(sortgrouprefs, sortgroupref); } /* * If the user writes both DISTINCT ON and ORDER BY, adopt the sorting * semantics from ORDER BY items that match DISTINCT ON items, and also * adopt their column sort order. We insist that the distinctClause and * sortClause match, so throw error if we find the need to add any more * distinctClause items after we've skipped an ORDER BY item that wasn't * in DISTINCT ON. */ skipped_sortitem = false; foreach(lc, sortClause) { SortGroupClause *scl = (SortGroupClause *) lfirst(lc); if (list_member_int(sortgrouprefs, scl->tleSortGroupRef)) { if (skipped_sortitem) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_COLUMN_REFERENCE), errmsg("SELECT DISTINCT ON expressions must match initial ORDER BY expressions"), parser_errposition(pstate, get_matching_location(scl->tleSortGroupRef, sortgrouprefs, distinctlist)))); else result = lappend(result, copyObject(scl)); } else skipped_sortitem = true; } /* * Now add any remaining DISTINCT ON items, using default sort/group * semantics for their data types. (Note: this is pretty questionable; if * the ORDER BY list doesn't include all the DISTINCT ON items and more * besides, you certainly aren't using DISTINCT ON in the intended way, * and you probably aren't going to get consistent results. It might be * better to throw an error or warning here. But historically we've * allowed it, so keep doing so.) */ forboth(lc, distinctlist, lc2, sortgrouprefs) { Node *dexpr = (Node *) lfirst(lc); int sortgroupref = lfirst_int(lc2); TargetEntry *tle = get_sortgroupref_tle(sortgroupref, *targetlist); if (targetIsInSortList(tle, InvalidOid, result)) continue; /* already in list (with some semantics) */ if (skipped_sortitem) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_COLUMN_REFERENCE), errmsg("SELECT DISTINCT ON expressions must match initial ORDER BY expressions"), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation(dexpr)))); result = addTargetToGroupList(pstate, tle, result, *targetlist, exprLocation(dexpr)); } /* * An empty result list is impossible here because of grammar * restrictions. */ Assert(result != NIL); return result; } /* * get_matching_location * Get the exprLocation of the exprs member corresponding to the * (first) member of sortgrouprefs that equals sortgroupref. * * This is used so that we can point at a troublesome DISTINCT ON entry. * (Note that we need to use the original untransformed DISTINCT ON list * item, as whatever TLE it corresponds to will very possibly have a * parse location pointing to some matching entry in the SELECT list * or ORDER BY list.) */ static int get_matching_location(int sortgroupref, List *sortgrouprefs, List *exprs) { ListCell *lcs; ListCell *lce; forboth(lcs, sortgrouprefs, lce, exprs) { if (lfirst_int(lcs) == sortgroupref) return exprLocation((Node *) lfirst(lce)); } /* if no match, caller blew it */ elog(ERROR, "get_matching_location: no matching sortgroupref"); return -1; /* keep compiler quiet */ } /* * resolve_unique_index_expr * Infer a unique index from a list of indexElems, for ON * CONFLICT clause * * Perform parse analysis of expressions and columns appearing within ON * CONFLICT clause. During planning, the returned list of expressions is used * to infer which unique index to use. */ static List * resolve_unique_index_expr(ParseState *pstate, InferClause *infer, Relation heapRel) { List *result = NIL; ListCell *l; foreach(l, infer->indexElems) { IndexElem *ielem = (IndexElem *) lfirst(l); InferenceElem *pInfer = makeNode(InferenceElem); Node *parse; /* * Raw grammar re-uses CREATE INDEX infrastructure for unique index * inference clause, and so will accept opclasses by name and so on. * * Make no attempt to match ASC or DESC ordering or NULLS FIRST/NULLS * LAST ordering, since those are not significant for inference * purposes (any unique index matching the inference specification in * other regards is accepted indifferently). Actively reject this as * wrong-headed. */ if (ielem->ordering != SORTBY_DEFAULT) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_COLUMN_REFERENCE), errmsg("ASC/DESC is not allowed in ON CONFLICT clause"), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation((Node *) infer)))); if (ielem->nulls_ordering != SORTBY_NULLS_DEFAULT) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_COLUMN_REFERENCE), errmsg("NULLS FIRST/LAST is not allowed in ON CONFLICT clause"), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation((Node *) infer)))); if (!ielem->expr) { /* Simple index attribute */ ColumnRef *n; /* * Grammar won't have built raw expression for us in event of * plain column reference. Create one directly, and perform * expression transformation. Planner expects this, and performs * its own normalization for the purposes of matching against * pg_index. */ n = makeNode(ColumnRef); n->fields = list_make1(makeString(ielem->name)); /* Location is approximately that of inference specification */ n->location = infer->location; parse = (Node *) n; } else { /* Do parse transformation of the raw expression */ parse = (Node *) ielem->expr; } /* * transformExpr() will reject subqueries, aggregates, window * functions, and SRFs, based on being passed * EXPR_KIND_INDEX_EXPRESSION. So we needn't worry about those * further ... not that they would match any available index * expression anyway. */ pInfer->expr = transformExpr(pstate, parse, EXPR_KIND_INDEX_EXPRESSION); /* Perform lookup of collation and operator class as required */ if (!ielem->collation) pInfer->infercollid = InvalidOid; else pInfer->infercollid = LookupCollation(pstate, ielem->collation, exprLocation(pInfer->expr)); if (!ielem->opclass) pInfer->inferopclass = InvalidOid; else pInfer->inferopclass = get_opclass_oid(BTREE_AM_OID, ielem->opclass, false); result = lappend(result, pInfer); } return result; } /* * transformOnConflictArbiter - * transform arbiter expressions in an ON CONFLICT clause. * * Transformed expressions used to infer one unique index relation to serve as * an ON CONFLICT arbiter. Partial unique indexes may be inferred using WHERE * clause from inference specification clause. */ void transformOnConflictArbiter(ParseState *pstate, OnConflictClause *onConflictClause, List **arbiterExpr, Node **arbiterWhere, Oid *constraint) { InferClause *infer = onConflictClause->infer; *arbiterExpr = NIL; *arbiterWhere = NULL; *constraint = InvalidOid; if (onConflictClause->action == ONCONFLICT_UPDATE && !infer) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_SYNTAX_ERROR), errmsg("ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE requires inference specification or constraint name"), errhint("For example, ON CONFLICT (column_name)."), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation((Node *) onConflictClause)))); /* * To simplify certain aspects of its design, speculative insertion into * system catalogs is disallowed */ if (IsCatalogRelation(pstate->p_target_relation)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED), errmsg("ON CONFLICT is not supported with system catalog tables"), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation((Node *) onConflictClause)))); /* Same applies to table used by logical decoding as catalog table */ if (RelationIsUsedAsCatalogTable(pstate->p_target_relation)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED), errmsg("ON CONFLICT is not supported on table \"%s\" used as a catalog table", RelationGetRelationName(pstate->p_target_relation)), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation((Node *) onConflictClause)))); /* ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING does not require an inference clause */ if (infer) { if (infer->indexElems) *arbiterExpr = resolve_unique_index_expr(pstate, infer, pstate->p_target_relation); /* * Handling inference WHERE clause (for partial unique index * inference) */ if (infer->whereClause) *arbiterWhere = transformExpr(pstate, infer->whereClause, EXPR_KIND_INDEX_PREDICATE); /* * If the arbiter is specified by constraint name, get the constraint * OID and mark the constrained columns as requiring SELECT privilege, * in the same way as would have happened if the arbiter had been * specified by explicit reference to the constraint's index columns. */ if (infer->conname) { Oid relid = RelationGetRelid(pstate->p_target_relation); RangeTblEntry *rte = pstate->p_target_nsitem->p_rte; Bitmapset *conattnos; conattnos = get_relation_constraint_attnos(relid, infer->conname, false, constraint); /* Make sure the rel as a whole is marked for SELECT access */ rte->requiredPerms |= ACL_SELECT; /* Mark the constrained columns as requiring SELECT access */ rte->selectedCols = bms_add_members(rte->selectedCols, conattnos); } } /* * It's convenient to form a list of expressions based on the * representation used by CREATE INDEX, since the same restrictions are * appropriate (e.g. on subqueries). However, from here on, a dedicated * primnode representation is used for inference elements, and so * assign_query_collations() can be trusted to do the right thing with the * post parse analysis query tree inference clause representation. */ } /* * addTargetToSortList * If the given targetlist entry isn't already in the SortGroupClause * list, add it to the end of the list, using the given sort ordering * info. * * Returns the updated SortGroupClause list. */ List * addTargetToSortList(ParseState *pstate, TargetEntry *tle, List *sortlist, List *targetlist, SortBy *sortby) { Oid restype = exprType((Node *) tle->expr); Oid sortop; Oid eqop; bool hashable; bool reverse; int location; ParseCallbackState pcbstate; /* if tlist item is an UNKNOWN literal, change it to TEXT */ if (restype == UNKNOWNOID) { tle->expr = (Expr *) coerce_type(pstate, (Node *) tle->expr, restype, TEXTOID, -1, COERCION_IMPLICIT, COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST, -1); restype = TEXTOID; } /* * Rather than clutter the API of get_sort_group_operators and the other * functions we're about to use, make use of error context callback to * mark any error reports with a parse position. We point to the operator * location if present, else to the expression being sorted. (NB: use the * original untransformed expression here; the TLE entry might well point * at a duplicate expression in the regular SELECT list.) */ location = sortby->location; if (location < 0) location = exprLocation(sortby->node); setup_parser_errposition_callback(&pcbstate, pstate, location); /* determine the sortop, eqop, and directionality */ switch (sortby->sortby_dir) { case SORTBY_DEFAULT: case SORTBY_ASC: get_sort_group_operators(restype, true, true, false, &sortop, &eqop, NULL, &hashable); reverse = false; break; case SORTBY_DESC: get_sort_group_operators(restype, false, true, true, NULL, &eqop, &sortop, &hashable); reverse = true; break; case SORTBY_USING: Assert(sortby->useOp != NIL); sortop = compatible_oper_opid(sortby->useOp, restype, restype, false); /* * Verify it's a valid ordering operator, fetch the corresponding * equality operator, and determine whether to consider it like * ASC or DESC. */ eqop = get_equality_op_for_ordering_op(sortop, &reverse); if (!OidIsValid(eqop)) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_WRONG_OBJECT_TYPE), errmsg("operator %s is not a valid ordering operator", strVal(llast(sortby->useOp))), errhint("Ordering operators must be \"<\" or \">\" members of btree operator families."))); /* * Also see if the equality operator is hashable. */ hashable = op_hashjoinable(eqop, restype); break; default: elog(ERROR, "unrecognized sortby_dir: %d", sortby->sortby_dir); sortop = InvalidOid; /* keep compiler quiet */ eqop = InvalidOid; hashable = false; reverse = false; break; } cancel_parser_errposition_callback(&pcbstate); /* avoid making duplicate sortlist entries */ if (!targetIsInSortList(tle, sortop, sortlist)) { SortGroupClause *sortcl = makeNode(SortGroupClause); sortcl->tleSortGroupRef = assignSortGroupRef(tle, targetlist); sortcl->eqop = eqop; sortcl->sortop = sortop; sortcl->hashable = hashable; switch (sortby->sortby_nulls) { case SORTBY_NULLS_DEFAULT: /* NULLS FIRST is default for DESC; other way for ASC */ sortcl->nulls_first = reverse; break; case SORTBY_NULLS_FIRST: sortcl->nulls_first = true; break; case SORTBY_NULLS_LAST: sortcl->nulls_first = false; break; default: elog(ERROR, "unrecognized sortby_nulls: %d", sortby->sortby_nulls); break; } sortlist = lappend(sortlist, sortcl); } return sortlist; } /* * addTargetToGroupList * If the given targetlist entry isn't already in the SortGroupClause * list, add it to the end of the list, using default sort/group * semantics. * * This is very similar to addTargetToSortList, except that we allow the * case where only a grouping (equality) operator can be found, and that * the TLE is considered "already in the list" if it appears there with any * sorting semantics. * * location is the parse location to be fingered in event of trouble. Note * that we can't rely on exprLocation(tle->expr), because that might point * to a SELECT item that matches the GROUP BY item; it'd be pretty confusing * to report such a location. * * Returns the updated SortGroupClause list. */ static List * addTargetToGroupList(ParseState *pstate, TargetEntry *tle, List *grouplist, List *targetlist, int location) { Oid restype = exprType((Node *) tle->expr); /* if tlist item is an UNKNOWN literal, change it to TEXT */ if (restype == UNKNOWNOID) { tle->expr = (Expr *) coerce_type(pstate, (Node *) tle->expr, restype, TEXTOID, -1, COERCION_IMPLICIT, COERCE_IMPLICIT_CAST, -1); restype = TEXTOID; } /* avoid making duplicate grouplist entries */ if (!targetIsInSortList(tle, InvalidOid, grouplist)) { SortGroupClause *grpcl = makeNode(SortGroupClause); Oid sortop; Oid eqop; bool hashable; ParseCallbackState pcbstate; setup_parser_errposition_callback(&pcbstate, pstate, location); /* determine the eqop and optional sortop */ get_sort_group_operators(restype, false, true, false, &sortop, &eqop, NULL, &hashable); cancel_parser_errposition_callback(&pcbstate); grpcl->tleSortGroupRef = assignSortGroupRef(tle, targetlist); grpcl->eqop = eqop; grpcl->sortop = sortop; grpcl->nulls_first = false; /* OK with or without sortop */ grpcl->hashable = hashable; grouplist = lappend(grouplist, grpcl); } return grouplist; } /* * assignSortGroupRef * Assign the targetentry an unused ressortgroupref, if it doesn't * already have one. Return the assigned or pre-existing refnumber. * * 'tlist' is the targetlist containing (or to contain) the given targetentry. */ Index assignSortGroupRef(TargetEntry *tle, List *tlist) { Index maxRef; ListCell *l; if (tle->ressortgroupref) /* already has one? */ return tle->ressortgroupref; /* easiest way to pick an unused refnumber: max used + 1 */ maxRef = 0; foreach(l, tlist) { Index ref = ((TargetEntry *) lfirst(l))->ressortgroupref; if (ref > maxRef) maxRef = ref; } tle->ressortgroupref = maxRef + 1; return tle->ressortgroupref; } /* * targetIsInSortList * Is the given target item already in the sortlist? * If sortop is not InvalidOid, also test for a match to the sortop. * * It is not an oversight that this function ignores the nulls_first flag. * We check sortop when determining if an ORDER BY item is redundant with * earlier ORDER BY items, because it's conceivable that "ORDER BY * foo USING <, foo USING <<<" is not redundant, if <<< distinguishes * values that < considers equal. We need not check nulls_first * however, because a lower-order column with the same sortop but * opposite nulls direction is redundant. Also, we can consider * ORDER BY foo ASC, foo DESC redundant, so check for a commutator match. * * Works for both ordering and grouping lists (sortop would normally be * InvalidOid when considering grouping). Note that the main reason we need * this routine (and not just a quick test for nonzeroness of ressortgroupref) * is that a TLE might be in only one of the lists. */ bool targetIsInSortList(TargetEntry *tle, Oid sortop, List *sortList) { Index ref = tle->ressortgroupref; ListCell *l; /* no need to scan list if tle has no marker */ if (ref == 0) return false; foreach(l, sortList) { SortGroupClause *scl = (SortGroupClause *) lfirst(l); if (scl->tleSortGroupRef == ref && (sortop == InvalidOid || sortop == scl->sortop || sortop == get_commutator(scl->sortop))) return true; } return false; } /* * findWindowClause * Find the named WindowClause in the list, or return NULL if not there */ static WindowClause * findWindowClause(List *wclist, const char *name) { ListCell *l; foreach(l, wclist) { WindowClause *wc = (WindowClause *) lfirst(l); if (wc->name && strcmp(wc->name, name) == 0) return wc; } return NULL; } /* * transformFrameOffset * Process a window frame offset expression * * In RANGE mode, rangeopfamily is the sort opfamily for the input ORDER BY * column, and rangeopcintype is the input data type the sort operator is * registered with. We expect the in_range function to be registered with * that same type. (In binary-compatible cases, it might be different from * the input column's actual type, so we can't use that for the lookups.) * We'll return the OID of the in_range function to *inRangeFunc. */ static Node * transformFrameOffset(ParseState *pstate, int frameOptions, Oid rangeopfamily, Oid rangeopcintype, Oid *inRangeFunc, Node *clause) { const char *constructName = NULL; Node *node; *inRangeFunc = InvalidOid; /* default result */ /* Quick exit if no offset expression */ if (clause == NULL) return NULL; if (frameOptions & FRAMEOPTION_ROWS) { /* Transform the raw expression tree */ node = transformExpr(pstate, clause, EXPR_KIND_WINDOW_FRAME_ROWS); /* * Like LIMIT clause, simply coerce to int8 */ constructName = "ROWS"; node = coerce_to_specific_type(pstate, node, INT8OID, constructName); } else if (frameOptions & FRAMEOPTION_RANGE) { /* * We must look up the in_range support function that's to be used, * possibly choosing one of several, and coerce the "offset" value to * the appropriate input type. */ Oid nodeType; Oid preferredType; int nfuncs = 0; int nmatches = 0; Oid selectedType = InvalidOid; Oid selectedFunc = InvalidOid; CatCList *proclist; int i; /* Transform the raw expression tree */ node = transformExpr(pstate, clause, EXPR_KIND_WINDOW_FRAME_RANGE); nodeType = exprType(node); /* * If there are multiple candidates, we'll prefer the one that exactly * matches nodeType; or if nodeType is as yet unknown, prefer the one * that exactly matches the sort column type. (The second rule is * like what we do for "known_type operator unknown".) */ preferredType = (nodeType != UNKNOWNOID) ? nodeType : rangeopcintype; /* Find the in_range support functions applicable to this case */ proclist = SearchSysCacheList2(AMPROCNUM, ObjectIdGetDatum(rangeopfamily), ObjectIdGetDatum(rangeopcintype)); for (i = 0; i < proclist->n_members; i++) { HeapTuple proctup = &proclist->members[i]->tuple; Form_pg_amproc procform = (Form_pg_amproc) GETSTRUCT(proctup); /* The search will find all support proc types; ignore others */ if (procform->amprocnum != BTINRANGE_PROC) continue; nfuncs++; /* Ignore function if given value can't be coerced to that type */ if (!can_coerce_type(1, &nodeType, &procform->amprocrighttype, COERCION_IMPLICIT)) continue; nmatches++; /* Remember preferred match, or any match if didn't find that */ if (selectedType != preferredType) { selectedType = procform->amprocrighttype; selectedFunc = procform->amproc; } } ReleaseCatCacheList(proclist); /* * Throw error if needed. It seems worth taking the trouble to * distinguish "no support at all" from "you didn't match any * available offset type". */ if (nfuncs == 0) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED), errmsg("RANGE with offset PRECEDING/FOLLOWING is not supported for column type %s", format_type_be(rangeopcintype)), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation(node)))); if (nmatches == 0) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED), errmsg("RANGE with offset PRECEDING/FOLLOWING is not supported for column type %s and offset type %s", format_type_be(rangeopcintype), format_type_be(nodeType)), errhint("Cast the offset value to an appropriate type."), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation(node)))); if (nmatches != 1 && selectedType != preferredType) ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED), errmsg("RANGE with offset PRECEDING/FOLLOWING has multiple interpretations for column type %s and offset type %s", format_type_be(rangeopcintype), format_type_be(nodeType)), errhint("Cast the offset value to the exact intended type."), parser_errposition(pstate, exprLocation(node)))); /* OK, coerce the offset to the right type */ constructName = "RANGE"; node = coerce_to_specific_type(pstate, node, selectedType, constructName); *inRangeFunc = selectedFunc; } else if (frameOptions & FRAMEOPTION_GROUPS) { /* Transform the raw expression tree */ node = transformExpr(pstate, clause, EXPR_KIND_WINDOW_FRAME_GROUPS); /* * Like LIMIT clause, simply coerce to int8 */ constructName = "GROUPS"; node = coerce_to_specific_type(pstate, node, INT8OID, constructName); } else { Assert(false); node = NULL; } /* Disallow variables in frame offsets */ checkExprIsVarFree(pstate, node, constructName); return node; }