From 5e45211a64149b3c659b90ff2de6fa982a5a93ed Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sat, 4 May 2024 14:17:33 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 15.5. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- src/include/catalog/pg_statistic.h | 282 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 282 insertions(+) create mode 100644 src/include/catalog/pg_statistic.h (limited to 'src/include/catalog/pg_statistic.h') diff --git a/src/include/catalog/pg_statistic.h b/src/include/catalog/pg_statistic.h new file mode 100644 index 0000000..cdf7448 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/include/catalog/pg_statistic.h @@ -0,0 +1,282 @@ +/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- + * + * pg_statistic.h + * definition of the "statistics" system catalog (pg_statistic) + * + * + * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2022, PostgreSQL Global Development Group + * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California + * + * src/include/catalog/pg_statistic.h + * + * NOTES + * The Catalog.pm module reads this file and derives schema + * information. + * + *------------------------------------------------------------------------- + */ +#ifndef PG_STATISTIC_H +#define PG_STATISTIC_H + +#include "catalog/genbki.h" +#include "catalog/pg_statistic_d.h" + +/* ---------------- + * pg_statistic definition. cpp turns this into + * typedef struct FormData_pg_statistic + * ---------------- + */ +CATALOG(pg_statistic,2619,StatisticRelationId) +{ + /* These fields form the unique key for the entry: */ + Oid starelid BKI_LOOKUP(pg_class); /* relation containing + * attribute */ + int16 staattnum; /* attribute (column) stats are for */ + bool stainherit; /* true if inheritance children are included */ + + /* the fraction of the column's entries that are NULL: */ + float4 stanullfrac; + + /* + * stawidth is the average width in bytes of non-null entries. For + * fixed-width datatypes this is of course the same as the typlen, but for + * var-width types it is more useful. Note that this is the average width + * of the data as actually stored, post-TOASTing (eg, for a + * moved-out-of-line value, only the size of the pointer object is + * counted). This is the appropriate definition for the primary use of + * the statistic, which is to estimate sizes of in-memory hash tables of + * tuples. + */ + int32 stawidth; + + /* ---------------- + * stadistinct indicates the (approximate) number of distinct non-null + * data values in the column. The interpretation is: + * 0 unknown or not computed + * > 0 actual number of distinct values + * < 0 negative of multiplier for number of rows + * The special negative case allows us to cope with columns that are + * unique (stadistinct = -1) or nearly so (for example, a column in which + * non-null values appear about twice on the average could be represented + * by stadistinct = -0.5 if there are no nulls, or -0.4 if 20% of the + * column is nulls). Because the number-of-rows statistic in pg_class may + * be updated more frequently than pg_statistic is, it's important to be + * able to describe such situations as a multiple of the number of rows, + * rather than a fixed number of distinct values. But in other cases a + * fixed number is correct (eg, a boolean column). + * ---------------- + */ + float4 stadistinct; + + /* ---------------- + * To allow keeping statistics on different kinds of datatypes, + * we do not hard-wire any particular meaning for the remaining + * statistical fields. Instead, we provide several "slots" in which + * statistical data can be placed. Each slot includes: + * kind integer code identifying kind of data (see below) + * op OID of associated operator, if needed + * coll OID of relevant collation, or 0 if none + * numbers float4 array (for statistical values) + * values anyarray (for representations of data values) + * The ID, operator, and collation fields are never NULL; they are zeroes + * in an unused slot. The numbers and values fields are NULL in an + * unused slot, and might also be NULL in a used slot if the slot kind + * has no need for one or the other. + * ---------------- + */ + + int16 stakind1; + int16 stakind2; + int16 stakind3; + int16 stakind4; + int16 stakind5; + + Oid staop1 BKI_LOOKUP_OPT(pg_operator); + Oid staop2 BKI_LOOKUP_OPT(pg_operator); + Oid staop3 BKI_LOOKUP_OPT(pg_operator); + Oid staop4 BKI_LOOKUP_OPT(pg_operator); + Oid staop5 BKI_LOOKUP_OPT(pg_operator); + + Oid stacoll1 BKI_LOOKUP_OPT(pg_collation); + Oid stacoll2 BKI_LOOKUP_OPT(pg_collation); + Oid stacoll3 BKI_LOOKUP_OPT(pg_collation); + Oid stacoll4 BKI_LOOKUP_OPT(pg_collation); + Oid stacoll5 BKI_LOOKUP_OPT(pg_collation); + +#ifdef CATALOG_VARLEN /* variable-length fields start here */ + float4 stanumbers1[1]; + float4 stanumbers2[1]; + float4 stanumbers3[1]; + float4 stanumbers4[1]; + float4 stanumbers5[1]; + + /* + * Values in these arrays are values of the column's data type, or of some + * related type such as an array element type. We presently have to cheat + * quite a bit to allow polymorphic arrays of this kind, but perhaps + * someday it'll be a less bogus facility. + */ + anyarray stavalues1; + anyarray stavalues2; + anyarray stavalues3; + anyarray stavalues4; + anyarray stavalues5; +#endif +} FormData_pg_statistic; + +#define STATISTIC_NUM_SLOTS 5 + + +/* ---------------- + * Form_pg_statistic corresponds to a pointer to a tuple with + * the format of pg_statistic relation. + * ---------------- + */ +typedef FormData_pg_statistic *Form_pg_statistic; + +DECLARE_TOAST(pg_statistic, 2840, 2841); + +DECLARE_UNIQUE_INDEX_PKEY(pg_statistic_relid_att_inh_index, 2696, StatisticRelidAttnumInhIndexId, on pg_statistic using btree(starelid oid_ops, staattnum int2_ops, stainherit bool_ops)); + +DECLARE_FOREIGN_KEY((starelid, staattnum), pg_attribute, (attrelid, attnum)); + +#ifdef EXPOSE_TO_CLIENT_CODE + +/* + * Several statistical slot "kinds" are defined by core PostgreSQL, as + * documented below. Also, custom data types can define their own "kind" + * codes by mutual agreement between a custom typanalyze routine and the + * selectivity estimation functions of the type's operators. + * + * Code reading the pg_statistic relation should not assume that a particular + * data "kind" will appear in any particular slot. Instead, search the + * stakind fields to see if the desired data is available. (The standard + * function get_attstatsslot() may be used for this.) + */ + +/* + * The present allocation of "kind" codes is: + * + * 1-99: reserved for assignment by the core PostgreSQL project + * (values in this range will be documented in this file) + * 100-199: reserved for assignment by the PostGIS project + * (values to be documented in PostGIS documentation) + * 200-299: reserved for assignment by the ESRI ST_Geometry project + * (values to be documented in ESRI ST_Geometry documentation) + * 300-9999: reserved for future public assignments + * + * For private use you may choose a "kind" code at random in the range + * 10000-30000. However, for code that is to be widely disseminated it is + * better to obtain a publicly defined "kind" code by request from the + * PostgreSQL Global Development Group. + */ + +/* + * In a "most common values" slot, staop is the OID of the "=" operator + * used to decide whether values are the same or not, and stacoll is the + * collation used (same as column's collation). stavalues contains + * the K most common non-null values appearing in the column, and stanumbers + * contains their frequencies (fractions of total row count). The values + * shall be ordered in decreasing frequency. Note that since the arrays are + * variable-size, K may be chosen by the statistics collector. Values should + * not appear in MCV unless they have been observed to occur more than once; + * a unique column will have no MCV slot. + */ +#define STATISTIC_KIND_MCV 1 + +/* + * A "histogram" slot describes the distribution of scalar data. staop is + * the OID of the "<" operator that describes the sort ordering, and stacoll + * is the relevant collation. (In theory more than one histogram could appear, + * if a datatype has more than one useful sort operator or we care about more + * than one collation. Currently the collation will always be that of the + * underlying column.) stavalues contains M (>=2) non-null values that + * divide the non-null column data values into M-1 bins of approximately equal + * population. The first stavalues item is the MIN and the last is the MAX. + * stanumbers is not used and should be NULL. IMPORTANT POINT: if an MCV + * slot is also provided, then the histogram describes the data distribution + * *after removing the values listed in MCV* (thus, it's a "compressed + * histogram" in the technical parlance). This allows a more accurate + * representation of the distribution of a column with some very-common + * values. In a column with only a few distinct values, it's possible that + * the MCV list describes the entire data population; in this case the + * histogram reduces to empty and should be omitted. + */ +#define STATISTIC_KIND_HISTOGRAM 2 + +/* + * A "correlation" slot describes the correlation between the physical order + * of table tuples and the ordering of data values of this column, as seen + * by the "<" operator identified by staop with the collation identified by + * stacoll. (As with the histogram, more than one entry could theoretically + * appear.) stavalues is not used and should be NULL. stanumbers contains + * a single entry, the correlation coefficient between the sequence of data + * values and the sequence of their actual tuple positions. The coefficient + * ranges from +1 to -1. + */ +#define STATISTIC_KIND_CORRELATION 3 + +/* + * A "most common elements" slot is similar to a "most common values" slot, + * except that it stores the most common non-null *elements* of the column + * values. This is useful when the column datatype is an array or some other + * type with identifiable elements (for instance, tsvector). staop contains + * the equality operator appropriate to the element type, and stacoll + * contains the collation to use with it. stavalues contains + * the most common element values, and stanumbers their frequencies. Unlike + * MCV slots, frequencies are measured as the fraction of non-null rows the + * element value appears in, not the frequency of all rows. Also unlike + * MCV slots, the values are sorted into the element type's default order + * (to support binary search for a particular value). Since this puts the + * minimum and maximum frequencies at unpredictable spots in stanumbers, + * there are two extra members of stanumbers, holding copies of the minimum + * and maximum frequencies. Optionally, there can be a third extra member, + * which holds the frequency of null elements (expressed in the same terms: + * the fraction of non-null rows that contain at least one null element). If + * this member is omitted, the column is presumed to contain no null elements. + * + * Note: in current usage for tsvector columns, the stavalues elements are of + * type text, even though their representation within tsvector is not + * exactly text. + */ +#define STATISTIC_KIND_MCELEM 4 + +/* + * A "distinct elements count histogram" slot describes the distribution of + * the number of distinct element values present in each row of an array-type + * column. Only non-null rows are considered, and only non-null elements. + * staop contains the equality operator appropriate to the element type, + * and stacoll contains the collation to use with it. + * stavalues is not used and should be NULL. The last member of stanumbers is + * the average count of distinct element values over all non-null rows. The + * preceding M (>=2) members form a histogram that divides the population of + * distinct-elements counts into M-1 bins of approximately equal population. + * The first of these is the minimum observed count, and the last the maximum. + */ +#define STATISTIC_KIND_DECHIST 5 + +/* + * A "length histogram" slot describes the distribution of range lengths in + * rows of a range-type column. stanumbers contains a single entry, the + * fraction of empty ranges. stavalues is a histogram of non-empty lengths, in + * a format similar to STATISTIC_KIND_HISTOGRAM: it contains M (>=2) range + * values that divide the column data values into M-1 bins of approximately + * equal population. The lengths are stored as float8s, as measured by the + * range type's subdiff function. Only non-null rows are considered. + */ +#define STATISTIC_KIND_RANGE_LENGTH_HISTOGRAM 6 + +/* + * A "bounds histogram" slot is similar to STATISTIC_KIND_HISTOGRAM, but for + * a range-type column. stavalues contains M (>=2) range values that divide + * the column data values into M-1 bins of approximately equal population. + * Unlike a regular scalar histogram, this is actually two histograms combined + * into a single array, with the lower bounds of each value forming a + * histogram of lower bounds, and the upper bounds a histogram of upper + * bounds. Only non-NULL, non-empty ranges are included. + */ +#define STATISTIC_KIND_BOUNDS_HISTOGRAM 7 + +#endif /* EXPOSE_TO_CLIENT_CODE */ + +#endif /* PG_STATISTIC_H */ -- cgit v1.2.3