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diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/fdwhandler.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/fdwhandler.sgml new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d0b5951 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/src/sgml/fdwhandler.sgml @@ -0,0 +1,2139 @@ +<!-- doc/src/sgml/fdwhandler.sgml --> + + <chapter id="fdwhandler"> + <title>Writing a Foreign Data Wrapper</title> + + <indexterm zone="fdwhandler"> + <primary>foreign data wrapper</primary> + <secondary>handler for</secondary> + </indexterm> + + <para> + All operations on a foreign table are handled through its foreign data + wrapper, which consists of a set of functions that the core server + calls. The foreign data wrapper is responsible for fetching + data from the remote data source and returning it to the + <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> executor. If updating foreign + tables is to be supported, the wrapper must handle that, too. + This chapter outlines how to write a new foreign data wrapper. + </para> + + <para> + The foreign data wrappers included in the standard distribution are good + references when trying to write your own. Look into the + <filename>contrib</filename> subdirectory of the source tree. + The <xref linkend="sql-createforeigndatawrapper"/> reference page also has + some useful details. + </para> + + <note> + <para> + The SQL standard specifies an interface for writing foreign data wrappers. + However, PostgreSQL does not implement that API, because the effort to + accommodate it into PostgreSQL would be large, and the standard API hasn't + gained wide adoption anyway. + </para> + </note> + + <sect1 id="fdw-functions"> + <title>Foreign Data Wrapper Functions</title> + + <para> + The FDW author needs to implement a handler function, and optionally + a validator function. Both functions must be written in a compiled + language such as C, using the version-1 interface. + For details on C language calling conventions and dynamic loading, + see <xref linkend="xfunc-c"/>. + </para> + + <para> + The handler function simply returns a struct of function pointers to + callback functions that will be called by the planner, executor, and + various maintenance commands. + Most of the effort in writing an FDW is in implementing these callback + functions. + The handler function must be registered with + <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> as taking no arguments and + returning the special pseudo-type <type>fdw_handler</type>. The + callback functions are plain C functions and are not visible or + callable at the SQL level. The callback functions are described in + <xref linkend="fdw-callbacks"/>. + </para> + + <para> + The validator function is responsible for validating options given in + <command>CREATE</command> and <command>ALTER</command> commands for its + foreign data wrapper, as well as foreign servers, user mappings, and + foreign tables using the wrapper. + The validator function must be registered as taking two arguments, a + text array containing the options to be validated, and an OID + representing the type of object the options are associated with (in + the form of the OID of the system catalog the object would be stored + in, either + <literal>ForeignDataWrapperRelationId</literal>, + <literal>ForeignServerRelationId</literal>, + <literal>UserMappingRelationId</literal>, + or <literal>ForeignTableRelationId</literal>). + If no validator function is supplied, options are not checked at object + creation time or object alteration time. + </para> + + </sect1> + + <sect1 id="fdw-callbacks"> + <title>Foreign Data Wrapper Callback Routines</title> + + <para> + The FDW handler function returns a palloc'd <structname>FdwRoutine</structname> + struct containing pointers to the callback functions described below. + The scan-related functions are required, the rest are optional. + </para> + + <para> + The <structname>FdwRoutine</structname> struct type is declared in + <filename>src/include/foreign/fdwapi.h</filename>, which see for additional + details. + </para> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-scan"> + <title>FDW Routines for Scanning Foreign Tables</title> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +GetForeignRelSize(PlannerInfo *root, + RelOptInfo *baserel, + Oid foreigntableid); +</programlisting> + + Obtain relation size estimates for a foreign table. This is called + at the beginning of planning for a query that scans a foreign table. + <literal>root</literal> is the planner's global information about the query; + <literal>baserel</literal> is the planner's information about this table; and + <literal>foreigntableid</literal> is the <structname>pg_class</structname> OID of the + foreign table. (<literal>foreigntableid</literal> could be obtained from the + planner data structures, but it's passed explicitly to save effort.) + </para> + + <para> + This function should update <literal>baserel->rows</literal> to be the + expected number of rows returned by the table scan, after accounting for + the filtering done by the restriction quals. The initial value of + <literal>baserel->rows</literal> is just a constant default estimate, which + should be replaced if at all possible. The function may also choose to + update <literal>baserel->width</literal> if it can compute a better estimate + of the average result row width. + (The initial value is based on column data types and on column + average-width values measured by the last <command>ANALYZE</command>.) + Also, this function may update <literal>baserel->tuples</literal> if + it can compute a better estimate of the foreign table's total row count. + (The initial value is + from <structname>pg_class</structname>.<structfield>reltuples</structfield> + which represents the total row count seen by the + last <command>ANALYZE</command>; it will be <literal>-1</literal> if + no <command>ANALYZE</command> has been done on this foreign table.) + </para> + + <para> + See <xref linkend="fdw-planning"/> for additional information. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +GetForeignPaths(PlannerInfo *root, + RelOptInfo *baserel, + Oid foreigntableid); +</programlisting> + + Create possible access paths for a scan on a foreign table. + This is called during query planning. + The parameters are the same as for <function>GetForeignRelSize</function>, + which has already been called. + </para> + + <para> + This function must generate at least one access path + (<structname>ForeignPath</structname> node) for a scan on the foreign table and + must call <function>add_path</function> to add each such path to + <literal>baserel->pathlist</literal>. It's recommended to use + <function>create_foreignscan_path</function> to build the + <structname>ForeignPath</structname> nodes. The function can generate multiple + access paths, e.g., a path which has valid <literal>pathkeys</literal> to + represent a pre-sorted result. Each access path must contain cost + estimates, and can contain any FDW-private information that is needed to + identify the specific scan method intended. + </para> + + <para> + See <xref linkend="fdw-planning"/> for additional information. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +ForeignScan * +GetForeignPlan(PlannerInfo *root, + RelOptInfo *baserel, + Oid foreigntableid, + ForeignPath *best_path, + List *tlist, + List *scan_clauses, + Plan *outer_plan); +</programlisting> + + Create a <structname>ForeignScan</structname> plan node from the selected foreign + access path. This is called at the end of query planning. + The parameters are as for <function>GetForeignRelSize</function>, plus + the selected <structname>ForeignPath</structname> (previously produced by + <function>GetForeignPaths</function>, <function>GetForeignJoinPaths</function>, + or <function>GetForeignUpperPaths</function>), + the target list to be emitted by the plan node, + the restriction clauses to be enforced by the plan node, + and the outer subplan of the <structname>ForeignScan</structname>, + which is used for rechecks performed by <function>RecheckForeignScan</function>. + (If the path is for a join rather than a base + relation, <literal>foreigntableid</literal> is <literal>InvalidOid</literal>.) + </para> + + <para> + This function must create and return a <structname>ForeignScan</structname> plan + node; it's recommended to use <function>make_foreignscan</function> to build the + <structname>ForeignScan</structname> node. + </para> + + <para> + See <xref linkend="fdw-planning"/> for additional information. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +BeginForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node, + int eflags); +</programlisting> + + Begin executing a foreign scan. This is called during executor startup. + It should perform any initialization needed before the scan can start, + but not start executing the actual scan (that should be done upon the + first call to <function>IterateForeignScan</function>). + The <structname>ForeignScanState</structname> node has already been created, but + its <structfield>fdw_state</structfield> field is still NULL. Information about + the table to scan is accessible through the + <structname>ForeignScanState</structname> node (in particular, from the underlying + <structname>ForeignScan</structname> plan node, which contains any FDW-private + information provided by <function>GetForeignPlan</function>). + <literal>eflags</literal> contains flag bits describing the executor's + operating mode for this plan node. + </para> + + <para> + Note that when <literal>(eflags & EXEC_FLAG_EXPLAIN_ONLY)</literal> is + true, this function should not perform any externally-visible actions; + it should only do the minimum required to make the node state valid + for <function>ExplainForeignScan</function> and <function>EndForeignScan</function>. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +TupleTableSlot * +IterateForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node); +</programlisting> + + Fetch one row from the foreign source, returning it in a tuple table slot + (the node's <structfield>ScanTupleSlot</structfield> should be used for this + purpose). Return NULL if no more rows are available. The tuple table + slot infrastructure allows either a physical or virtual tuple to be + returned; in most cases the latter choice is preferable from a + performance standpoint. Note that this is called in a short-lived memory + context that will be reset between invocations. Create a memory context + in <function>BeginForeignScan</function> if you need longer-lived storage, or use + the <structfield>es_query_cxt</structfield> of the node's <structname>EState</structname>. + </para> + + <para> + The rows returned must match the <structfield>fdw_scan_tlist</structfield> target + list if one was supplied, otherwise they must match the row type of the + foreign table being scanned. If you choose to optimize away fetching + columns that are not needed, you should insert nulls in those column + positions, or else generate a <structfield>fdw_scan_tlist</structfield> list with + those columns omitted. + </para> + + <para> + Note that <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s executor doesn't care + whether the rows returned violate any constraints that were defined on + the foreign table — but the planner does care, and may optimize + queries incorrectly if there are rows visible in the foreign table that + do not satisfy a declared constraint. If a constraint is violated when + the user has declared that the constraint should hold true, it may be + appropriate to raise an error (just as you would need to do in the case + of a data type mismatch). + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +ReScanForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node); +</programlisting> + + Restart the scan from the beginning. Note that any parameters the + scan depends on may have changed value, so the new scan does not + necessarily return exactly the same rows. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +EndForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node); +</programlisting> + + End the scan and release resources. It is normally not important + to release palloc'd memory, but for example open files and connections + to remote servers should be cleaned up. + </para> + + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-join-scan"> + <title>FDW Routines for Scanning Foreign Joins</title> + + <para> + If an FDW supports performing foreign joins remotely (rather than + by fetching both tables' data and doing the join locally), it should + provide this callback function: + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +GetForeignJoinPaths(PlannerInfo *root, + RelOptInfo *joinrel, + RelOptInfo *outerrel, + RelOptInfo *innerrel, + JoinType jointype, + JoinPathExtraData *extra); +</programlisting> + Create possible access paths for a join of two (or more) foreign tables + that all belong to the same foreign server. This optional + function is called during query planning. As + with <function>GetForeignPaths</function>, this function should + generate <structname>ForeignPath</structname> path(s) for the + supplied <literal>joinrel</literal> + (use <function>create_foreign_join_path</function> to build them), + and call <function>add_path</function> to add these + paths to the set of paths considered for the join. But unlike + <function>GetForeignPaths</function>, it is not necessary that this function + succeed in creating at least one path, since paths involving local + joining are always possible. + </para> + + <para> + Note that this function will be invoked repeatedly for the same join + relation, with different combinations of inner and outer relations; it is + the responsibility of the FDW to minimize duplicated work. + </para> + + <para> + If a <structname>ForeignPath</structname> path is chosen for the join, it will + represent the entire join process; paths generated for the component + tables and subsidiary joins will not be used. Subsequent processing of + the join path proceeds much as it does for a path scanning a single + foreign table. One difference is that the <structfield>scanrelid</structfield> of + the resulting <structname>ForeignScan</structname> plan node should be set to zero, + since there is no single relation that it represents; instead, + the <structfield>fs_relids</structfield> field of the <structname>ForeignScan</structname> + node represents the set of relations that were joined. (The latter field + is set up automatically by the core planner code, and need not be filled + by the FDW.) Another difference is that, because the column list for a + remote join cannot be found from the system catalogs, the FDW must + fill <structfield>fdw_scan_tlist</structfield> with an appropriate list + of <structfield>TargetEntry</structfield> nodes, representing the set of columns + it will supply at run time in the tuples it returns. + </para> + + <para> + See <xref linkend="fdw-planning"/> for additional information. + </para> + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-upper-planning"> + <title>FDW Routines for Planning Post-Scan/Join Processing</title> + + <para> + If an FDW supports performing remote post-scan/join processing, such as + remote aggregation, it should provide this callback function: + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +GetForeignUpperPaths(PlannerInfo *root, + UpperRelationKind stage, + RelOptInfo *input_rel, + RelOptInfo *output_rel, + void *extra); +</programlisting> + Create possible access paths for <firstterm>upper relation</firstterm> processing, + which is the planner's term for all post-scan/join query processing, such + as aggregation, window functions, sorting, and table updates. This + optional function is called during query planning. Currently, it is + called only if all base relation(s) involved in the query belong to the + same FDW. This function should generate <structname>ForeignPath</structname> + path(s) for any post-scan/join processing that the FDW knows how to + perform remotely + (use <function>create_foreign_upper_path</function> to build them), + and call <function>add_path</function> to add these paths to + the indicated upper relation. As with <function>GetForeignJoinPaths</function>, + it is not necessary that this function succeed in creating any paths, + since paths involving local processing are always possible. + </para> + + <para> + The <literal>stage</literal> parameter identifies which post-scan/join step is + currently being considered. <literal>output_rel</literal> is the upper relation + that should receive paths representing computation of this step, + and <literal>input_rel</literal> is the relation representing the input to this + step. The <literal>extra</literal> parameter provides additional details, + currently, it is set only for <literal>UPPERREL_PARTIAL_GROUP_AGG</literal> + or <literal>UPPERREL_GROUP_AGG</literal>, in which case it points to a + <literal>GroupPathExtraData</literal> structure; + or for <literal>UPPERREL_FINAL</literal>, in which case it points to a + <literal>FinalPathExtraData</literal> structure. + (Note that <structname>ForeignPath</structname> paths added + to <literal>output_rel</literal> would typically not have any direct dependency + on paths of the <literal>input_rel</literal>, since their processing is expected + to be done externally. However, examining paths previously generated for + the previous processing step can be useful to avoid redundant planning + work.) + </para> + + <para> + See <xref linkend="fdw-planning"/> for additional information. + </para> + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-update"> + <title>FDW Routines for Updating Foreign Tables</title> + + <para> + If an FDW supports writable foreign tables, it should provide + some or all of the following callback functions depending on + the needs and capabilities of the FDW: + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +AddForeignUpdateTargets(PlannerInfo *root, + Index rtindex, + RangeTblEntry *target_rte, + Relation target_relation); +</programlisting> + + <command>UPDATE</command> and <command>DELETE</command> operations are performed + against rows previously fetched by the table-scanning functions. The + FDW may need extra information, such as a row ID or the values of + primary-key columns, to ensure that it can identify the exact row to + update or delete. To support that, this function can add extra hidden, + or <quote>junk</quote>, target columns to the list of columns that are to be + retrieved from the foreign table during an <command>UPDATE</command> or + <command>DELETE</command>. + </para> + + <para> + To do that, construct a <structname>Var</structname> representing + an extra value you need, and pass it + to <function>add_row_identity_var</function>, along with a name for + the junk column. (You can do this more than once if several columns + are needed.) You must choose a distinct junk column name for each + different <structname>Var</structname> you need, except + that <structname>Var</structname>s that are identical except for + the <structfield>varno</structfield> field can and should share a + column name. + The core system uses the junk column names + <literal>tableoid</literal> for a + table's <structfield>tableoid</structfield> column, + <literal>ctid</literal> + or <literal>ctid<replaceable>N</replaceable></literal> + for <structfield>ctid</structfield>, + <literal>wholerow</literal> + for a whole-row <structname>Var</structname> marked with + <structfield>vartype</structfield> = <type>RECORD</type>, + and <literal>wholerow<replaceable>N</replaceable></literal> + for a whole-row <structname>Var</structname> with + <structfield>vartype</structfield> equal to the table's declared row type. + Re-use these names when you can (the planner will combine duplicate + requests for identical junk columns). If you need another kind of + junk column besides these, it might be wise to choose a name prefixed + with your extension name, to avoid conflicts against other FDWs. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>AddForeignUpdateTargets</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no extra target expressions are added. + (This will make it impossible to implement <command>DELETE</command> + operations, though <command>UPDATE</command> may still be feasible if the FDW + relies on an unchanging primary key to identify rows.) + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +List * +PlanForeignModify(PlannerInfo *root, + ModifyTable *plan, + Index resultRelation, + int subplan_index); +</programlisting> + + Perform any additional planning actions needed for an insert, update, or + delete on a foreign table. This function generates the FDW-private + information that will be attached to the <structname>ModifyTable</structname> plan + node that performs the update action. This private information must + have the form of a <literal>List</literal>, and will be delivered to + <function>BeginForeignModify</function> during the execution stage. + </para> + + <para> + <literal>root</literal> is the planner's global information about the query. + <literal>plan</literal> is the <structname>ModifyTable</structname> plan node, which is + complete except for the <structfield>fdwPrivLists</structfield> field. + <literal>resultRelation</literal> identifies the target foreign table by its + range table index. <literal>subplan_index</literal> identifies which target of + the <structname>ModifyTable</structname> plan node this is, counting from zero; + use this if you want to index into per-target-relation substructures of the + <literal>plan</literal> node. + </para> + + <para> + See <xref linkend="fdw-planning"/> for additional information. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>PlanForeignModify</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no additional plan-time actions are taken, and the + <literal>fdw_private</literal> list delivered to + <function>BeginForeignModify</function> will be NIL. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +BeginForeignModify(ModifyTableState *mtstate, + ResultRelInfo *rinfo, + List *fdw_private, + int subplan_index, + int eflags); +</programlisting> + + Begin executing a foreign table modification operation. This routine is + called during executor startup. It should perform any initialization + needed prior to the actual table modifications. Subsequently, + <function>ExecForeignInsert/ExecForeignBatchInsert</function>, + <function>ExecForeignUpdate</function> or + <function>ExecForeignDelete</function> will be called for tuple(s) to be + inserted, updated, or deleted. + </para> + + <para> + <literal>mtstate</literal> is the overall state of the + <structname>ModifyTable</structname> plan node being executed; global data about + the plan and execution state is available via this structure. + <literal>rinfo</literal> is the <structname>ResultRelInfo</structname> struct describing + the target foreign table. (The <structfield>ri_FdwState</structfield> field of + <structname>ResultRelInfo</structname> is available for the FDW to store any + private state it needs for this operation.) + <literal>fdw_private</literal> contains the private data generated by + <function>PlanForeignModify</function>, if any. + <literal>subplan_index</literal> identifies which target of + the <structname>ModifyTable</structname> plan node this is. + <literal>eflags</literal> contains flag bits describing the executor's + operating mode for this plan node. + </para> + + <para> + Note that when <literal>(eflags & EXEC_FLAG_EXPLAIN_ONLY)</literal> is + true, this function should not perform any externally-visible actions; + it should only do the minimum required to make the node state valid + for <function>ExplainForeignModify</function> and <function>EndForeignModify</function>. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>BeginForeignModify</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no action is taken during executor startup. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +TupleTableSlot * +ExecForeignInsert(EState *estate, + ResultRelInfo *rinfo, + TupleTableSlot *slot, + TupleTableSlot *planSlot); +</programlisting> + + Insert one tuple into the foreign table. + <literal>estate</literal> is global execution state for the query. + <literal>rinfo</literal> is the <structname>ResultRelInfo</structname> struct describing + the target foreign table. + <literal>slot</literal> contains the tuple to be inserted; it will match the + row-type definition of the foreign table. + <literal>planSlot</literal> contains the tuple that was generated by the + <structname>ModifyTable</structname> plan node's subplan; it differs from + <literal>slot</literal> in possibly containing additional <quote>junk</quote> + columns. (The <literal>planSlot</literal> is typically of little interest + for <command>INSERT</command> cases, but is provided for completeness.) + </para> + + <para> + The return value is either a slot containing the data that was actually + inserted (this might differ from the data supplied, for example as a + result of trigger actions), or NULL if no row was actually inserted + (again, typically as a result of triggers). The passed-in + <literal>slot</literal> can be re-used for this purpose. + </para> + + <para> + The data in the returned slot is used only if the <command>INSERT</command> + statement has a <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause or involves a view + <literal>WITH CHECK OPTION</literal>; or if the foreign table has + an <literal>AFTER ROW</literal> trigger. Triggers require all columns, + but the FDW could choose to optimize away returning some or all columns + depending on the contents of the <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause or + <literal>WITH CHECK OPTION</literal> constraints. Regardless, some slot + must be returned to indicate success, or the query's reported row count + will be wrong. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>ExecForeignInsert</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, attempts to insert into the foreign table will fail + with an error message. + </para> + + <para> + Note that this function is also called when inserting routed tuples into + a foreign-table partition or executing <command>COPY FROM</command> on + a foreign table, in which case it is called in a different way than it + is in the <command>INSERT</command> case. See the callback functions + described below that allow the FDW to support that. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +TupleTableSlot ** +ExecForeignBatchInsert(EState *estate, + ResultRelInfo *rinfo, + TupleTableSlot **slots, + TupleTableSlot **planSlots, + int *numSlots); +</programlisting> + + Insert multiple tuples in bulk into the foreign table. + The parameters are the same for <function>ExecForeignInsert</function> + except <literal>slots</literal> and <literal>planSlots</literal> contain + multiple tuples and <literal>*numSlots</literal> specifies the number of + tuples in those arrays. + </para> + + <para> + The return value is an array of slots containing the data that was + actually inserted (this might differ from the data supplied, for + example as a result of trigger actions.) + The passed-in <literal>slots</literal> can be re-used for this purpose. + The number of successfully inserted tuples is returned in + <literal>*numSlots</literal>. + </para> + + <para> + The data in the returned slot is used only if the <command>INSERT</command> + statement involves a view + <literal>WITH CHECK OPTION</literal>; or if the foreign table has + an <literal>AFTER ROW</literal> trigger. Triggers require all columns, + but the FDW could choose to optimize away returning some or all columns + depending on the contents of the + <literal>WITH CHECK OPTION</literal> constraints. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>ExecForeignBatchInsert</function> or + <function>GetForeignModifyBatchSize</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, attempts to insert into the foreign table will + use <function>ExecForeignInsert</function>. + This function is not used if the <command>INSERT</command> has the + <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause. + </para> + + <para> + Note that this function is also called when inserting routed tuples into + a foreign-table partition. See the callback functions + described below that allow the FDW to support that. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +int +GetForeignModifyBatchSize(ResultRelInfo *rinfo); +</programlisting> + + Report the maximum number of tuples that a single + <function>ExecForeignBatchInsert</function> call can handle for + the specified foreign table. The executor passes at most + the given number of tuples to <function>ExecForeignBatchInsert</function>. + <literal>rinfo</literal> is the <structname>ResultRelInfo</structname> struct describing + the target foreign table. + The FDW is expected to provide a foreign server and/or foreign + table option for the user to set this value, or some hard-coded value. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>ExecForeignBatchInsert</function> or + <function>GetForeignModifyBatchSize</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, attempts to insert into the foreign table will + use <function>ExecForeignInsert</function>. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +TupleTableSlot * +ExecForeignUpdate(EState *estate, + ResultRelInfo *rinfo, + TupleTableSlot *slot, + TupleTableSlot *planSlot); +</programlisting> + + Update one tuple in the foreign table. + <literal>estate</literal> is global execution state for the query. + <literal>rinfo</literal> is the <structname>ResultRelInfo</structname> struct describing + the target foreign table. + <literal>slot</literal> contains the new data for the tuple; it will match the + row-type definition of the foreign table. + <literal>planSlot</literal> contains the tuple that was generated by the + <structname>ModifyTable</structname> plan node's subplan. Unlike + <literal>slot</literal>, this tuple contains only the new values for + columns changed by the query, so do not rely on attribute numbers of the + foreign table to index into <literal>planSlot</literal>. + Also, <literal>planSlot</literal> typically contains + additional <quote>junk</quote> columns. In particular, any junk columns + that were requested by <function>AddForeignUpdateTargets</function> will + be available from this slot. + </para> + + <para> + The return value is either a slot containing the row as it was actually + updated (this might differ from the data supplied, for example as a + result of trigger actions), or NULL if no row was actually updated + (again, typically as a result of triggers). The passed-in + <literal>slot</literal> can be re-used for this purpose. + </para> + + <para> + The data in the returned slot is used only if the <command>UPDATE</command> + statement has a <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause or involves a view + <literal>WITH CHECK OPTION</literal>; or if the foreign table has + an <literal>AFTER ROW</literal> trigger. Triggers require all columns, + but the FDW could choose to optimize away returning some or all columns + depending on the contents of the <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause or + <literal>WITH CHECK OPTION</literal> constraints. Regardless, some slot + must be returned to indicate success, or the query's reported row count + will be wrong. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>ExecForeignUpdate</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, attempts to update the foreign table will fail + with an error message. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +TupleTableSlot * +ExecForeignDelete(EState *estate, + ResultRelInfo *rinfo, + TupleTableSlot *slot, + TupleTableSlot *planSlot); +</programlisting> + + Delete one tuple from the foreign table. + <literal>estate</literal> is global execution state for the query. + <literal>rinfo</literal> is the <structname>ResultRelInfo</structname> struct describing + the target foreign table. + <literal>slot</literal> contains nothing useful upon call, but can be used to + hold the returned tuple. + <literal>planSlot</literal> contains the tuple that was generated by the + <structname>ModifyTable</structname> plan node's subplan; in particular, it will + carry any junk columns that were requested by + <function>AddForeignUpdateTargets</function>. The junk column(s) must be used + to identify the tuple to be deleted. + </para> + + <para> + The return value is either a slot containing the row that was deleted, + or NULL if no row was deleted (typically as a result of triggers). The + passed-in <literal>slot</literal> can be used to hold the tuple to be returned. + </para> + + <para> + The data in the returned slot is used only if the <command>DELETE</command> + query has a <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause or the foreign table has + an <literal>AFTER ROW</literal> trigger. Triggers require all columns, but the + FDW could choose to optimize away returning some or all columns depending + on the contents of the <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause. Regardless, some + slot must be returned to indicate success, or the query's reported row + count will be wrong. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>ExecForeignDelete</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, attempts to delete from the foreign table will fail + with an error message. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +EndForeignModify(EState *estate, + ResultRelInfo *rinfo); +</programlisting> + + End the table update and release resources. It is normally not important + to release palloc'd memory, but for example open files and connections + to remote servers should be cleaned up. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>EndForeignModify</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no action is taken during executor shutdown. + </para> + + <para> + Tuples inserted into a partitioned table by <command>INSERT</command> or + <command>COPY FROM</command> are routed to partitions. If an FDW + supports routable foreign-table partitions, it should also provide the + following callback functions. These functions are also called when + <command>COPY FROM</command> is executed on a foreign table. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +BeginForeignInsert(ModifyTableState *mtstate, + ResultRelInfo *rinfo); +</programlisting> + + Begin executing an insert operation on a foreign table. This routine is + called right before the first tuple is inserted into the foreign table + in both cases when it is the partition chosen for tuple routing and the + target specified in a <command>COPY FROM</command> command. It should + perform any initialization needed prior to the actual insertion. + Subsequently, <function>ExecForeignInsert</function> or + <function>ExecForeignBatchInsert</function> will be called for + tuple(s) to be inserted into the foreign table. + </para> + + <para> + <literal>mtstate</literal> is the overall state of the + <structname>ModifyTable</structname> plan node being executed; global data about + the plan and execution state is available via this structure. + <literal>rinfo</literal> is the <structname>ResultRelInfo</structname> struct describing + the target foreign table. (The <structfield>ri_FdwState</structfield> field of + <structname>ResultRelInfo</structname> is available for the FDW to store any + private state it needs for this operation.) + </para> + + <para> + When this is called by a <command>COPY FROM</command> command, the + plan-related global data in <literal>mtstate</literal> is not provided + and the <literal>planSlot</literal> parameter of + <function>ExecForeignInsert</function> subsequently called for each + inserted tuple is <literal>NULL</literal>, whether the foreign table is + the partition chosen for tuple routing or the target specified in the + command. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>BeginForeignInsert</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no action is taken for the initialization. + </para> + + <para> + Note that if the FDW does not support routable foreign-table partitions + and/or executing <command>COPY FROM</command> on foreign tables, this + function or <function>ExecForeignInsert/ExecForeignBatchInsert</function> + subsequently called must throw error as needed. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +EndForeignInsert(EState *estate, + ResultRelInfo *rinfo); +</programlisting> + + End the insert operation and release resources. It is normally not important + to release palloc'd memory, but for example open files and connections + to remote servers should be cleaned up. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>EndForeignInsert</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no action is taken for the termination. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +int +IsForeignRelUpdatable(Relation rel); +</programlisting> + + Report which update operations the specified foreign table supports. + The return value should be a bit mask of rule event numbers indicating + which operations are supported by the foreign table, using the + <literal>CmdType</literal> enumeration; that is, + <literal>(1 << CMD_UPDATE) = 4</literal> for <command>UPDATE</command>, + <literal>(1 << CMD_INSERT) = 8</literal> for <command>INSERT</command>, and + <literal>(1 << CMD_DELETE) = 16</literal> for <command>DELETE</command>. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>IsForeignRelUpdatable</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, foreign tables are assumed to be insertable, updatable, + or deletable if the FDW provides <function>ExecForeignInsert</function>, + <function>ExecForeignUpdate</function>, or <function>ExecForeignDelete</function> + respectively. This function is only needed if the FDW supports some + tables that are updatable and some that are not. (Even then, it's + permissible to throw an error in the execution routine instead of + checking in this function. However, this function is used to determine + updatability for display in the <literal>information_schema</literal> views.) + </para> + + <para> + Some inserts, updates, and deletes to foreign tables can be optimized + by implementing an alternative set of interfaces. The ordinary + interfaces for inserts, updates, and deletes fetch rows from the remote + server and then modify those rows one at a time. In some cases, this + row-by-row approach is necessary, but it can be inefficient. If it is + possible for the foreign server to determine which rows should be + modified without actually retrieving them, and if there are no local + structures which would affect the operation (row-level local triggers, + stored generated columns, or <literal>WITH CHECK OPTION</literal> + constraints from parent views), then it is possible to arrange things + so that the entire operation is performed on the remote server. The + interfaces described below make this possible. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +bool +PlanDirectModify(PlannerInfo *root, + ModifyTable *plan, + Index resultRelation, + int subplan_index); +</programlisting> + + Decide whether it is safe to execute a direct modification + on the remote server. If so, return <literal>true</literal> after performing + planning actions needed for that. Otherwise, return <literal>false</literal>. + This optional function is called during query planning. + If this function succeeds, <function>BeginDirectModify</function>, + <function>IterateDirectModify</function> and <function>EndDirectModify</function> will + be called at the execution stage, instead. Otherwise, the table + modification will be executed using the table-updating functions + described above. + The parameters are the same as for <function>PlanForeignModify</function>. + </para> + + <para> + To execute the direct modification on the remote server, this function + must rewrite the target subplan with a <structname>ForeignScan</structname> plan + node that executes the direct modification on the remote server. The + <structfield>operation</structfield> and <structfield>resultRelation</structfield> fields + of the <structname>ForeignScan</structname> must be set appropriately. + <structfield>operation</structfield> must be set to the <literal>CmdType</literal> + enumeration corresponding to the statement kind (that is, + <literal>CMD_UPDATE</literal> for <command>UPDATE</command>, + <literal>CMD_INSERT</literal> for <command>INSERT</command>, and + <literal>CMD_DELETE</literal> for <command>DELETE</command>), and the + <literal>resultRelation</literal> argument must be copied to the + <structfield>resultRelation</structfield> field. + </para> + + <para> + See <xref linkend="fdw-planning"/> for additional information. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>PlanDirectModify</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no attempts to execute a direct modification on the + remote server are taken. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +BeginDirectModify(ForeignScanState *node, + int eflags); +</programlisting> + + Prepare to execute a direct modification on the remote server. + This is called during executor startup. It should perform any + initialization needed prior to the direct modification (that should be + done upon the first call to <function>IterateDirectModify</function>). + The <structname>ForeignScanState</structname> node has already been created, but + its <structfield>fdw_state</structfield> field is still NULL. Information about + the table to modify is accessible through the + <structname>ForeignScanState</structname> node (in particular, from the underlying + <structname>ForeignScan</structname> plan node, which contains any FDW-private + information provided by <function>PlanDirectModify</function>). + <literal>eflags</literal> contains flag bits describing the executor's + operating mode for this plan node. + </para> + + <para> + Note that when <literal>(eflags & EXEC_FLAG_EXPLAIN_ONLY)</literal> is + true, this function should not perform any externally-visible actions; + it should only do the minimum required to make the node state valid + for <function>ExplainDirectModify</function> and <function>EndDirectModify</function>. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>BeginDirectModify</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no attempts to execute a direct modification on the + remote server are taken. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +TupleTableSlot * +IterateDirectModify(ForeignScanState *node); +</programlisting> + + When the <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command> or <command>DELETE</command> + query doesn't have a <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause, just return NULL + after a direct modification on the remote server. + When the query has the clause, fetch one result containing the data + needed for the <literal>RETURNING</literal> calculation, returning it in a + tuple table slot (the node's <structfield>ScanTupleSlot</structfield> should be + used for this purpose). The data that was actually inserted, updated + or deleted must be stored in + <literal>node->resultRelInfo->ri_projectReturning->pi_exprContext->ecxt_scantuple</literal>. + Return NULL if no more rows are available. + Note that this is called in a short-lived memory context that will be + reset between invocations. Create a memory context in + <function>BeginDirectModify</function> if you need longer-lived storage, or use + the <structfield>es_query_cxt</structfield> of the node's <structname>EState</structname>. + </para> + + <para> + The rows returned must match the <structfield>fdw_scan_tlist</structfield> target + list if one was supplied, otherwise they must match the row type of the + foreign table being updated. If you choose to optimize away fetching + columns that are not needed for the <literal>RETURNING</literal> calculation, + you should insert nulls in those column positions, or else generate a + <structfield>fdw_scan_tlist</structfield> list with those columns omitted. + </para> + + <para> + Whether the query has the clause or not, the query's reported row count + must be incremented by the FDW itself. When the query doesn't have the + clause, the FDW must also increment the row count for the + <structname>ForeignScanState</structname> node in the <command>EXPLAIN ANALYZE</command> + case. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>IterateDirectModify</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no attempts to execute a direct modification on the + remote server are taken. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +EndDirectModify(ForeignScanState *node); +</programlisting> + + Clean up following a direct modification on the remote server. It is + normally not important to release palloc'd memory, but for example open + files and connections to the remote server should be cleaned up. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>EndDirectModify</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no attempts to execute a direct modification on the + remote server are taken. + </para> + + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-truncate"> + <title>FDW Routines for <command>TRUNCATE</command></title> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +ExecForeignTruncate(List *rels, + DropBehavior behavior, + bool restart_seqs); +</programlisting> + + Truncate foreign tables. This function is called when + <xref linkend="sql-truncate"/> is executed on a foreign table. + <literal>rels</literal> is a list of <structname>Relation</structname> + data structures of foreign tables to truncate. + </para> + + <para> + <literal>behavior</literal> is either <literal>DROP_RESTRICT</literal> + or <literal>DROP_CASCADE</literal> indicating that the + <literal>RESTRICT</literal> or <literal>CASCADE</literal> option was + requested in the original <command>TRUNCATE</command> command, + respectively. + </para> + + <para> + If <literal>restart_seqs</literal> is <literal>true</literal>, + the original <command>TRUNCATE</command> command requested the + <literal>RESTART IDENTITY</literal> behavior, otherwise the + <literal>CONTINUE IDENTITY</literal> behavior was requested. + </para> + + <para> + Note that the <literal>ONLY</literal> options specified + in the original <command>TRUNCATE</command> command are not passed to + <function>ExecForeignTruncate</function>. This behavior is similar to + the callback functions of <command>SELECT</command>, + <command>UPDATE</command> and <command>DELETE</command> on + a foreign table. + </para> + + <para> + <function>ExecForeignTruncate</function> is invoked once per + foreign server for which foreign tables are to be truncated. + This means that all foreign tables included in <literal>rels</literal> + must belong to the same server. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>ExecForeignTruncate</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, attempts to truncate foreign tables will + fail with an error message. + </para> + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-row-locking"> + <title>FDW Routines for Row Locking</title> + + <para> + If an FDW wishes to support <firstterm>late row locking</firstterm> (as described + in <xref linkend="fdw-row-locking"/>), it must provide the following + callback functions: + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +RowMarkType +GetForeignRowMarkType(RangeTblEntry *rte, + LockClauseStrength strength); +</programlisting> + + Report which row-marking option to use for a foreign table. + <literal>rte</literal> is the <structname>RangeTblEntry</structname> node for the table + and <literal>strength</literal> describes the lock strength requested by the + relevant <literal>FOR UPDATE/SHARE</literal> clause, if any. The result must be + a member of the <literal>RowMarkType</literal> enum type. + </para> + + <para> + This function is called during query planning for each foreign table that + appears in an <command>UPDATE</command>, <command>DELETE</command>, or <command>SELECT + FOR UPDATE/SHARE</command> query and is not the target of <command>UPDATE</command> + or <command>DELETE</command>. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>GetForeignRowMarkType</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, the <literal>ROW_MARK_COPY</literal> option is always used. + (This implies that <function>RefetchForeignRow</function> will never be called, + so it need not be provided either.) + </para> + + <para> + See <xref linkend="fdw-row-locking"/> for more information. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +RefetchForeignRow(EState *estate, + ExecRowMark *erm, + Datum rowid, + TupleTableSlot *slot, + bool *updated); +</programlisting> + + Re-fetch one tuple slot from the foreign table, after locking it if required. + <literal>estate</literal> is global execution state for the query. + <literal>erm</literal> is the <structname>ExecRowMark</structname> struct describing + the target foreign table and the row lock type (if any) to acquire. + <literal>rowid</literal> identifies the tuple to be fetched. + <literal>slot</literal> contains nothing useful upon call, but can be used to + hold the returned tuple. <literal>updated</literal> is an output parameter. + </para> + + <para> + This function should store the tuple into the provided slot, or clear it if + the row lock couldn't be obtained. The row lock type to acquire is + defined by <literal>erm->markType</literal>, which is the value + previously returned by <function>GetForeignRowMarkType</function>. + (<literal>ROW_MARK_REFERENCE</literal> means to just re-fetch the tuple + without acquiring any lock, and <literal>ROW_MARK_COPY</literal> will + never be seen by this routine.) + </para> + + <para> + In addition, <literal>*updated</literal> should be set to <literal>true</literal> + if what was fetched was an updated version of the tuple rather than + the same version previously obtained. (If the FDW cannot be sure about + this, always returning <literal>true</literal> is recommended.) + </para> + + <para> + Note that by default, failure to acquire a row lock should result in + raising an error; returning with an empty slot is only appropriate if + the <literal>SKIP LOCKED</literal> option is specified + by <literal>erm->waitPolicy</literal>. + </para> + + <para> + The <literal>rowid</literal> is the <structfield>ctid</structfield> value previously read + for the row to be re-fetched. Although the <literal>rowid</literal> value is + passed as a <type>Datum</type>, it can currently only be a <type>tid</type>. The + function API is chosen in hopes that it may be possible to allow other + data types for row IDs in future. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>RefetchForeignRow</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, attempts to re-fetch rows will fail + with an error message. + </para> + + <para> + See <xref linkend="fdw-row-locking"/> for more information. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +bool +RecheckForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node, + TupleTableSlot *slot); +</programlisting> + Recheck that a previously-returned tuple still matches the relevant + scan and join qualifiers, and possibly provide a modified version of + the tuple. For foreign data wrappers which do not perform join pushdown, + it will typically be more convenient to set this to <literal>NULL</literal> and + instead set <structfield>fdw_recheck_quals</structfield> appropriately. + When outer joins are pushed down, however, it isn't sufficient to + reapply the checks relevant to all the base tables to the result tuple, + even if all needed attributes are present, because failure to match some + qualifier might result in some attributes going to NULL, rather than in + no tuple being returned. <literal>RecheckForeignScan</literal> can recheck + qualifiers and return true if they are still satisfied and false + otherwise, but it can also store a replacement tuple into the supplied + slot. + </para> + + <para> + To implement join pushdown, a foreign data wrapper will typically + construct an alternative local join plan which is used only for + rechecks; this will become the outer subplan of the + <literal>ForeignScan</literal>. When a recheck is required, this subplan + can be executed and the resulting tuple can be stored in the slot. + This plan need not be efficient since no base table will return more + than one row; for example, it may implement all joins as nested loops. + The function <literal>GetExistingLocalJoinPath</literal> may be used to search + existing paths for a suitable local join path, which can be used as the + alternative local join plan. <literal>GetExistingLocalJoinPath</literal> + searches for an unparameterized path in the path list of the specified + join relation. (If it does not find such a path, it returns NULL, in + which case a foreign data wrapper may build the local path by itself or + may choose not to create access paths for that join.) + </para> + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-explain"> + <title>FDW Routines for <command>EXPLAIN</command></title> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +ExplainForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node, + ExplainState *es); +</programlisting> + + Print additional <command>EXPLAIN</command> output for a foreign table scan. + This function can call <function>ExplainPropertyText</function> and + related functions to add fields to the <command>EXPLAIN</command> output. + The flag fields in <literal>es</literal> can be used to determine what to + print, and the state of the <structname>ForeignScanState</structname> node + can be inspected to provide run-time statistics in the <command>EXPLAIN + ANALYZE</command> case. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>ExplainForeignScan</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no additional information is printed during + <command>EXPLAIN</command>. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +ExplainForeignModify(ModifyTableState *mtstate, + ResultRelInfo *rinfo, + List *fdw_private, + int subplan_index, + struct ExplainState *es); +</programlisting> + + Print additional <command>EXPLAIN</command> output for a foreign table update. + This function can call <function>ExplainPropertyText</function> and + related functions to add fields to the <command>EXPLAIN</command> output. + The flag fields in <literal>es</literal> can be used to determine what to + print, and the state of the <structname>ModifyTableState</structname> node + can be inspected to provide run-time statistics in the <command>EXPLAIN + ANALYZE</command> case. The first four arguments are the same as for + <function>BeginForeignModify</function>. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>ExplainForeignModify</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no additional information is printed during + <command>EXPLAIN</command>. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +ExplainDirectModify(ForeignScanState *node, + ExplainState *es); +</programlisting> + + Print additional <command>EXPLAIN</command> output for a direct modification + on the remote server. + This function can call <function>ExplainPropertyText</function> and + related functions to add fields to the <command>EXPLAIN</command> output. + The flag fields in <literal>es</literal> can be used to determine what to + print, and the state of the <structname>ForeignScanState</structname> node + can be inspected to provide run-time statistics in the <command>EXPLAIN + ANALYZE</command> case. + </para> + + <para> + If the <function>ExplainDirectModify</function> pointer is set to + <literal>NULL</literal>, no additional information is printed during + <command>EXPLAIN</command>. + </para> + + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-analyze"> + <title>FDW Routines for <command>ANALYZE</command></title> + + <para> +<programlisting> +bool +AnalyzeForeignTable(Relation relation, + AcquireSampleRowsFunc *func, + BlockNumber *totalpages); +</programlisting> + + This function is called when <xref linkend="sql-analyze"/> is executed on + a foreign table. If the FDW can collect statistics for this + foreign table, it should return <literal>true</literal>, and provide a pointer + to a function that will collect sample rows from the table in + <parameter>func</parameter>, plus the estimated size of the table in pages in + <parameter>totalpages</parameter>. Otherwise, return <literal>false</literal>. + </para> + + <para> + If the FDW does not support collecting statistics for any tables, the + <function>AnalyzeForeignTable</function> pointer can be set to <literal>NULL</literal>. + </para> + + <para> + If provided, the sample collection function must have the signature +<programlisting> +int +AcquireSampleRowsFunc(Relation relation, + int elevel, + HeapTuple *rows, + int targrows, + double *totalrows, + double *totaldeadrows); +</programlisting> + + A random sample of up to <parameter>targrows</parameter> rows should be collected + from the table and stored into the caller-provided <parameter>rows</parameter> + array. The actual number of rows collected must be returned. In + addition, store estimates of the total numbers of live and dead rows in + the table into the output parameters <parameter>totalrows</parameter> and + <parameter>totaldeadrows</parameter>. (Set <parameter>totaldeadrows</parameter> to zero + if the FDW does not have any concept of dead rows.) + </para> + + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-import"> + <title>FDW Routines for <command>IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA</command></title> + + <para> +<programlisting> +List * +ImportForeignSchema(ImportForeignSchemaStmt *stmt, Oid serverOid); +</programlisting> + + Obtain a list of foreign table creation commands. This function is + called when executing <xref linkend="sql-importforeignschema"/>, and is + passed the parse tree for that statement, as well as the OID of the + foreign server to use. It should return a list of C strings, each of + which must contain a <xref linkend="sql-createforeigntable"/> command. + These strings will be parsed and executed by the core server. + </para> + + <para> + Within the <structname>ImportForeignSchemaStmt</structname> struct, + <structfield>remote_schema</structfield> is the name of the remote schema from + which tables are to be imported. + <structfield>list_type</structfield> identifies how to filter table names: + <literal>FDW_IMPORT_SCHEMA_ALL</literal> means that all tables in the remote + schema should be imported (in this case <structfield>table_list</structfield> is + empty), <literal>FDW_IMPORT_SCHEMA_LIMIT_TO</literal> means to include only + tables listed in <structfield>table_list</structfield>, + and <literal>FDW_IMPORT_SCHEMA_EXCEPT</literal> means to exclude the tables + listed in <structfield>table_list</structfield>. + <structfield>options</structfield> is a list of options used for the import process. + The meanings of the options are up to the FDW. + For example, an FDW could use an option to define whether the + <literal>NOT NULL</literal> attributes of columns should be imported. + These options need not have anything to do with those supported by the + FDW as database object options. + </para> + + <para> + The FDW may ignore the <structfield>local_schema</structfield> field of + the <structname>ImportForeignSchemaStmt</structname>, because the core server + will automatically insert that name into the parsed <command>CREATE + FOREIGN TABLE</command> commands. + </para> + + <para> + The FDW does not have to concern itself with implementing the filtering + specified by <structfield>list_type</structfield> and <structfield>table_list</structfield>, + either, as the core server will automatically skip any returned commands + for tables excluded according to those options. However, it's often + useful to avoid the work of creating commands for excluded tables in the + first place. The function <function>IsImportableForeignTable()</function> may be + useful to test whether a given foreign-table name will pass the filter. + </para> + + <para> + If the FDW does not support importing table definitions, the + <function>ImportForeignSchema</function> pointer can be set to <literal>NULL</literal>. + </para> + + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-parallel"> + <title>FDW Routines for Parallel Execution</title> + <para> + A <structname>ForeignScan</structname> node can, optionally, support parallel + execution. A parallel <structname>ForeignScan</structname> will be executed + in multiple processes and must return each row exactly once across + all cooperating processes. To do this, processes can coordinate through + fixed-size chunks of dynamic shared memory. This shared memory is not + guaranteed to be mapped at the same address in every process, so it + must not contain pointers. The following functions are all optional, + but most are required if parallel execution is to be supported. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +bool +IsForeignScanParallelSafe(PlannerInfo *root, RelOptInfo *rel, + RangeTblEntry *rte); +</programlisting> + Test whether a scan can be performed within a parallel worker. This + function will only be called when the planner believes that a parallel + plan might be possible, and should return true if it is safe for that scan + to run within a parallel worker. This will generally not be the case if + the remote data source has transaction semantics, unless the worker's + connection to the data can somehow be made to share the same transaction + context as the leader. + </para> + + <para> + If this function is not defined, it is assumed that the scan must take + place within the parallel leader. Note that returning true does not mean + that the scan itself can be done in parallel, only that the scan can be + performed within a parallel worker. Therefore, it can be useful to define + this method even when parallel execution is not supported. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +Size +EstimateDSMForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node, ParallelContext *pcxt); +</programlisting> + Estimate the amount of dynamic shared memory that will be required + for parallel operation. This may be higher than the amount that will + actually be used, but it must not be lower. The return value is in bytes. + This function is optional, and can be omitted if not needed; but if it + is omitted, the next three functions must be omitted as well, because + no shared memory will be allocated for the FDW's use. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +InitializeDSMForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node, ParallelContext *pcxt, + void *coordinate); +</programlisting> + Initialize the dynamic shared memory that will be required for parallel + operation. <literal>coordinate</literal> points to a shared memory area of + size equal to the return value of <function>EstimateDSMForeignScan</function>. + This function is optional, and can be omitted if not needed. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +ReInitializeDSMForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node, ParallelContext *pcxt, + void *coordinate); +</programlisting> + Re-initialize the dynamic shared memory required for parallel operation + when the foreign-scan plan node is about to be re-scanned. + This function is optional, and can be omitted if not needed. + Recommended practice is that this function reset only shared state, + while the <function>ReScanForeignScan</function> function resets only local + state. Currently, this function will be called + before <function>ReScanForeignScan</function>, but it's best not to rely on + that ordering. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +InitializeWorkerForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node, shm_toc *toc, + void *coordinate); +</programlisting> + Initialize a parallel worker's local state based on the shared state + set up by the leader during <function>InitializeDSMForeignScan</function>. + This function is optional, and can be omitted if not needed. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +ShutdownForeignScan(ForeignScanState *node); +</programlisting> + Release resources when it is anticipated the node will not be executed + to completion. This is not called in all cases; sometimes, + <literal>EndForeignScan</literal> may be called without this function having + been called first. Since the DSM segment used by parallel query is + destroyed just after this callback is invoked, foreign data wrappers that + wish to take some action before the DSM segment goes away should implement + this method. + </para> + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-async"> + <title>FDW Routines for Asynchronous Execution</title> + <para> + A <structname>ForeignScan</structname> node can, optionally, support + asynchronous execution as described in + <filename>src/backend/executor/README</filename>. The following + functions are all optional, but are all required if asynchronous + execution is to be supported. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +bool +IsForeignPathAsyncCapable(ForeignPath *path); +</programlisting> + Test whether a given <structname>ForeignPath</structname> path can scan + the underlying foreign relation asynchronously. + This function will only be called at the end of query planning when the + given path is a direct child of an <structname>AppendPath</structname> + path and when the planner believes that asynchronous execution improves + performance, and should return true if the given path is able to scan the + foreign relation asynchronously. + </para> + + <para> + If this function is not defined, it is assumed that the given path scans + the foreign relation using <function>IterateForeignScan</function>. + (This implies that the callback functions described below will never be + called, so they need not be provided either.) + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +ForeignAsyncRequest(AsyncRequest *areq); +</programlisting> + Produce one tuple asynchronously from the + <structname>ForeignScan</structname> node. <literal>areq</literal> is + the <structname>AsyncRequest</structname> struct describing the + <structname>ForeignScan</structname> node and the parent + <structname>Append</structname> node that requested the tuple from it. + This function should store the tuple into the slot specified by + <literal>areq->result</literal>, and set + <literal>areq->request_complete</literal> to <literal>true</literal>; + or if it needs to wait on an event external to the core server such as + network I/O, and cannot produce any tuple immediately, set the flag to + <literal>false</literal>, and set + <literal>areq->callback_pending</literal> to <literal>true</literal> + for the <structname>ForeignScan</structname> node to get a callback from + the callback functions described below. If no more tuples are available, + set the slot to NULL or an empty slot, and the + <literal>areq->request_complete</literal> flag to + <literal>true</literal>. It's recommended to use + <function>ExecAsyncRequestDone</function> or + <function>ExecAsyncRequestPending</function> to set the output parameters + in the <literal>areq</literal>. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +ForeignAsyncConfigureWait(AsyncRequest *areq); +</programlisting> + Configure a file descriptor event for which the + <structname>ForeignScan</structname> node wishes to wait. + This function will only be called when the + <structname>ForeignScan</structname> node has the + <literal>areq->callback_pending</literal> flag set, and should add + the event to the <structfield>as_eventset</structfield> of the parent + <structname>Append</structname> node described by the + <literal>areq</literal>. See the comments for + <function>ExecAsyncConfigureWait</function> in + <filename>src/backend/executor/execAsync.c</filename> for additional + information. When the file descriptor event occurs, + <function>ForeignAsyncNotify</function> will be called. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +void +ForeignAsyncNotify(AsyncRequest *areq); +</programlisting> + Process a relevant event that has occurred, then produce one tuple + asynchronously from the <structname>ForeignScan</structname> node. + This function should set the output parameters in the + <literal>areq</literal> in the same way as + <function>ForeignAsyncRequest</function>. + </para> + </sect2> + + <sect2 id="fdw-callbacks-reparameterize-paths"> + <title>FDW Routines for Reparameterization of Paths</title> + + <para> +<programlisting> +List * +ReparameterizeForeignPathByChild(PlannerInfo *root, List *fdw_private, + RelOptInfo *child_rel); +</programlisting> + This function is called while converting a path parameterized by the + top-most parent of the given child relation <literal>child_rel</literal> to be + parameterized by the child relation. The function is used to reparameterize + any paths or translate any expression nodes saved in the given + <literal>fdw_private</literal> member of a <structname>ForeignPath</structname>. The + callback may use <literal>reparameterize_path_by_child</literal>, + <literal>adjust_appendrel_attrs</literal> or + <literal>adjust_appendrel_attrs_multilevel</literal> as required. + </para> + </sect2> + + </sect1> + + <sect1 id="fdw-helpers"> + <title>Foreign Data Wrapper Helper Functions</title> + + <para> + Several helper functions are exported from the core server so that + authors of foreign data wrappers can get easy access to attributes of + FDW-related objects, such as FDW options. + To use any of these functions, you need to include the header file + <filename>foreign/foreign.h</filename> in your source file. + That header also defines the struct types that are returned by + these functions. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +ForeignDataWrapper * +GetForeignDataWrapperExtended(Oid fdwid, bits16 flags); +</programlisting> + + This function returns a <structname>ForeignDataWrapper</structname> + object for the foreign-data wrapper with the given OID. A + <structname>ForeignDataWrapper</structname> object contains properties + of the FDW (see <filename>foreign/foreign.h</filename> for details). + <structfield>flags</structfield> is a bitwise-or'd bit mask indicating + an extra set of options. It can take the value + <literal>FDW_MISSING_OK</literal>, in which case a <literal>NULL</literal> + result is returned to the caller instead of an error for an undefined + object. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +ForeignDataWrapper * +GetForeignDataWrapper(Oid fdwid); +</programlisting> + + This function returns a <structname>ForeignDataWrapper</structname> + object for the foreign-data wrapper with the given OID. A + <structname>ForeignDataWrapper</structname> object contains properties + of the FDW (see <filename>foreign/foreign.h</filename> for details). + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +ForeignServer * +GetForeignServerExtended(Oid serverid, bits16 flags); +</programlisting> + + This function returns a <structname>ForeignServer</structname> object + for the foreign server with the given OID. A + <structname>ForeignServer</structname> object contains properties + of the server (see <filename>foreign/foreign.h</filename> for details). + <structfield>flags</structfield> is a bitwise-or'd bit mask indicating + an extra set of options. It can take the value + <literal>FSV_MISSING_OK</literal>, in which case a <literal>NULL</literal> + result is returned to the caller instead of an error for an undefined + object. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +ForeignServer * +GetForeignServer(Oid serverid); +</programlisting> + + This function returns a <structname>ForeignServer</structname> object + for the foreign server with the given OID. A + <structname>ForeignServer</structname> object contains properties + of the server (see <filename>foreign/foreign.h</filename> for details). + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +UserMapping * +GetUserMapping(Oid userid, Oid serverid); +</programlisting> + + This function returns a <structname>UserMapping</structname> object for + the user mapping of the given role on the given server. (If there is no + mapping for the specific user, it will return the mapping for + <literal>PUBLIC</literal>, or throw error if there is none.) A + <structname>UserMapping</structname> object contains properties of the + user mapping (see <filename>foreign/foreign.h</filename> for details). + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +ForeignTable * +GetForeignTable(Oid relid); +</programlisting> + + This function returns a <structname>ForeignTable</structname> object for + the foreign table with the given OID. A + <structname>ForeignTable</structname> object contains properties of the + foreign table (see <filename>foreign/foreign.h</filename> for details). + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +List * +GetForeignColumnOptions(Oid relid, AttrNumber attnum); +</programlisting> + + This function returns the per-column FDW options for the column with the + given foreign table OID and attribute number, in the form of a list of + <structname>DefElem</structname>. NIL is returned if the column has no + options. + </para> + + <para> + Some object types have name-based lookup functions in addition to the + OID-based ones: + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +ForeignDataWrapper * +GetForeignDataWrapperByName(const char *name, bool missing_ok); +</programlisting> + + This function returns a <structname>ForeignDataWrapper</structname> + object for the foreign-data wrapper with the given name. If the wrapper + is not found, return NULL if missing_ok is true, otherwise raise an + error. + </para> + + <para> +<programlisting> +ForeignServer * +GetForeignServerByName(const char *name, bool missing_ok); +</programlisting> + + This function returns a <structname>ForeignServer</structname> object + for the foreign server with the given name. If the server is not found, + return NULL if missing_ok is true, otherwise raise an error. + </para> + + </sect1> + + <sect1 id="fdw-planning"> + <title>Foreign Data Wrapper Query Planning</title> + + <para> + The FDW callback functions <function>GetForeignRelSize</function>, + <function>GetForeignPaths</function>, <function>GetForeignPlan</function>, + <function>PlanForeignModify</function>, <function>GetForeignJoinPaths</function>, + <function>GetForeignUpperPaths</function>, and <function>PlanDirectModify</function> + must fit into the workings of the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> planner. + Here are some notes about what they must do. + </para> + + <para> + The information in <literal>root</literal> and <literal>baserel</literal> can be used + to reduce the amount of information that has to be fetched from the + foreign table (and therefore reduce the cost). + <literal>baserel->baserestrictinfo</literal> is particularly interesting, as + it contains restriction quals (<literal>WHERE</literal> clauses) that should be + used to filter the rows to be fetched. (The FDW itself is not required + to enforce these quals, as the core executor can check them instead.) + <literal>baserel->reltarget->exprs</literal> can be used to determine which + columns need to be fetched; but note that it only lists columns that + have to be emitted by the <structname>ForeignScan</structname> plan node, not + columns that are used in qual evaluation but not output by the query. + </para> + + <para> + Various private fields are available for the FDW planning functions to + keep information in. Generally, whatever you store in FDW private fields + should be palloc'd, so that it will be reclaimed at the end of planning. + </para> + + <para> + <literal>baserel->fdw_private</literal> is a <type>void</type> pointer that is + available for FDW planning functions to store information relevant to + the particular foreign table. The core planner does not touch it except + to initialize it to NULL when the <literal>RelOptInfo</literal> node is created. + It is useful for passing information forward from + <function>GetForeignRelSize</function> to <function>GetForeignPaths</function> and/or + <function>GetForeignPaths</function> to <function>GetForeignPlan</function>, thereby + avoiding recalculation. + </para> + + <para> + <function>GetForeignPaths</function> can identify the meaning of different + access paths by storing private information in the + <structfield>fdw_private</structfield> field of <structname>ForeignPath</structname> nodes. + <structfield>fdw_private</structfield> is declared as a <type>List</type> pointer, but + could actually contain anything since the core planner does not touch + it. However, best practice is to use a representation that's dumpable + by <function>nodeToString</function>, for use with debugging support available + in the backend. + </para> + + <para> + <function>GetForeignPlan</function> can examine the <structfield>fdw_private</structfield> + field of the selected <structname>ForeignPath</structname> node, and can generate + <structfield>fdw_exprs</structfield> and <structfield>fdw_private</structfield> lists to be + placed in the <structname>ForeignScan</structname> plan node, where they will be + available at execution time. Both of these lists must be + represented in a form that <function>copyObject</function> knows how to copy. + The <structfield>fdw_private</structfield> list has no other restrictions and is + not interpreted by the core backend in any way. The + <structfield>fdw_exprs</structfield> list, if not NIL, is expected to contain + expression trees that are intended to be executed at run time. These + trees will undergo post-processing by the planner to make them fully + executable. + </para> + + <para> + In <function>GetForeignPlan</function>, generally the passed-in target list can + be copied into the plan node as-is. The passed <literal>scan_clauses</literal> list + contains the same clauses as <literal>baserel->baserestrictinfo</literal>, + but may be re-ordered for better execution efficiency. In simple cases + the FDW can just strip <structname>RestrictInfo</structname> nodes from the + <literal>scan_clauses</literal> list (using <function>extract_actual_clauses</function>) and put + all the clauses into the plan node's qual list, which means that all the + clauses will be checked by the executor at run time. More complex FDWs + may be able to check some of the clauses internally, in which case those + clauses can be removed from the plan node's qual list so that the + executor doesn't waste time rechecking them. + </para> + + <para> + As an example, the FDW might identify some restriction clauses of the + form <replaceable>foreign_variable</replaceable> <literal>=</literal> + <replaceable>sub_expression</replaceable>, which it determines can be executed on + the remote server given the locally-evaluated value of the + <replaceable>sub_expression</replaceable>. The actual identification of such a + clause should happen during <function>GetForeignPaths</function>, since it would + affect the cost estimate for the path. The path's + <structfield>fdw_private</structfield> field would probably include a pointer to + the identified clause's <structname>RestrictInfo</structname> node. Then + <function>GetForeignPlan</function> would remove that clause from <literal>scan_clauses</literal>, + but add the <replaceable>sub_expression</replaceable> to <structfield>fdw_exprs</structfield> + to ensure that it gets massaged into executable form. It would probably + also put control information into the plan node's + <structfield>fdw_private</structfield> field to tell the execution functions what + to do at run time. The query transmitted to the remote server would + involve something like <literal>WHERE <replaceable>foreign_variable</replaceable> = + $1</literal>, with the parameter value obtained at run time from + evaluation of the <structfield>fdw_exprs</structfield> expression tree. + </para> + + <para> + Any clauses removed from the plan node's qual list must instead be added + to <literal>fdw_recheck_quals</literal> or rechecked by + <literal>RecheckForeignScan</literal> in order to ensure correct behavior + at the <literal>READ COMMITTED</literal> isolation level. When a concurrent + update occurs for some other table involved in the query, the executor + may need to verify that all of the original quals are still satisfied for + the tuple, possibly against a different set of parameter values. Using + <literal>fdw_recheck_quals</literal> is typically easier than implementing checks + inside <literal>RecheckForeignScan</literal>, but this method will be + insufficient when outer joins have been pushed down, since the join tuples + in that case might have some fields go to NULL without rejecting the + tuple entirely. + </para> + + <para> + Another <structname>ForeignScan</structname> field that can be filled by FDWs + is <structfield>fdw_scan_tlist</structfield>, which describes the tuples returned by + the FDW for this plan node. For simple foreign table scans this can be + set to <literal>NIL</literal>, implying that the returned tuples have the + row type declared for the foreign table. A non-<symbol>NIL</symbol> value must be a + target list (list of <structname>TargetEntry</structname>s) containing Vars and/or + expressions representing the returned columns. This might be used, for + example, to show that the FDW has omitted some columns that it noticed + won't be needed for the query. Also, if the FDW can compute expressions + used by the query more cheaply than can be done locally, it could add + those expressions to <structfield>fdw_scan_tlist</structfield>. Note that join + plans (created from paths made by <function>GetForeignJoinPaths</function>) must + always supply <structfield>fdw_scan_tlist</structfield> to describe the set of + columns they will return. + </para> + + <para> + The FDW should always construct at least one path that depends only on + the table's restriction clauses. In join queries, it might also choose + to construct path(s) that depend on join clauses, for example + <replaceable>foreign_variable</replaceable> <literal>=</literal> + <replaceable>local_variable</replaceable>. Such clauses will not be found in + <literal>baserel->baserestrictinfo</literal> but must be sought in the + relation's join lists. A path using such a clause is called a + <quote>parameterized path</quote>. It must identify the other relations + used in the selected join clause(s) with a suitable value of + <literal>param_info</literal>; use <function>get_baserel_parampathinfo</function> + to compute that value. In <function>GetForeignPlan</function>, the + <replaceable>local_variable</replaceable> portion of the join clause would be added + to <structfield>fdw_exprs</structfield>, and then at run time the case works the + same as for an ordinary restriction clause. + </para> + + <para> + If an FDW supports remote joins, <function>GetForeignJoinPaths</function> should + produce <structname>ForeignPath</structname>s for potential remote joins in much + the same way as <function>GetForeignPaths</function> works for base tables. + Information about the intended join can be passed forward + to <function>GetForeignPlan</function> in the same ways described above. + However, <structfield>baserestrictinfo</structfield> is not relevant for join + relations; instead, the relevant join clauses for a particular join are + passed to <function>GetForeignJoinPaths</function> as a separate parameter + (<literal>extra->restrictlist</literal>). + </para> + + <para> + An FDW might additionally support direct execution of some plan actions + that are above the level of scans and joins, such as grouping or + aggregation. To offer such options, the FDW should generate paths and + insert them into the appropriate <firstterm>upper relation</firstterm>. For + example, a path representing remote aggregation should be inserted into + the <literal>UPPERREL_GROUP_AGG</literal> relation, using <function>add_path</function>. + This path will be compared on a cost basis with local aggregation + performed by reading a simple scan path for the foreign relation (note + that such a path must also be supplied, else there will be an error at + plan time). If the remote-aggregation path wins, which it usually would, + it will be converted into a plan in the usual way, by + calling <function>GetForeignPlan</function>. The recommended place to generate + such paths is in the <function>GetForeignUpperPaths</function> + callback function, which is called for each upper relation (i.e., each + post-scan/join processing step), if all the base relations of the query + come from the same FDW. + </para> + + <para> + <function>PlanForeignModify</function> and the other callbacks described in + <xref linkend="fdw-callbacks-update"/> are designed around the assumption + that the foreign relation will be scanned in the usual way and then + individual row updates will be driven by a local <literal>ModifyTable</literal> + plan node. This approach is necessary for the general case where an + update requires reading local tables as well as foreign tables. + However, if the operation could be executed entirely by the foreign + server, the FDW could generate a path representing that and insert it + into the <literal>UPPERREL_FINAL</literal> upper relation, where it would + compete against the <literal>ModifyTable</literal> approach. This approach + could also be used to implement remote <literal>SELECT FOR UPDATE</literal>, + rather than using the row locking callbacks described in + <xref linkend="fdw-callbacks-row-locking"/>. Keep in mind that a path + inserted into <literal>UPPERREL_FINAL</literal> is responsible for + implementing <emphasis>all</emphasis> behavior of the query. + </para> + + <para> + When planning an <command>UPDATE</command> or <command>DELETE</command>, + <function>PlanForeignModify</function> and <function>PlanDirectModify</function> + can look up the <structname>RelOptInfo</structname> + struct for the foreign table and make use of the + <literal>baserel->fdw_private</literal> data previously created by the + scan-planning functions. However, in <command>INSERT</command> the target + table is not scanned so there is no <structname>RelOptInfo</structname> for it. + The <structname>List</structname> returned by <function>PlanForeignModify</function> has + the same restrictions as the <structfield>fdw_private</structfield> list of a + <structname>ForeignScan</structname> plan node, that is it must contain only + structures that <function>copyObject</function> knows how to copy. + </para> + + <para> + <command>INSERT</command> with an <literal>ON CONFLICT</literal> clause does not + support specifying the conflict target, as unique constraints or + exclusion constraints on remote tables are not locally known. This + in turn implies that <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal> is not supported, + since the specification is mandatory there. + </para> + + </sect1> + + <sect1 id="fdw-row-locking"> + <title>Row Locking in Foreign Data Wrappers</title> + + <para> + If an FDW's underlying storage mechanism has a concept of locking + individual rows to prevent concurrent updates of those rows, it is + usually worthwhile for the FDW to perform row-level locking with as + close an approximation as practical to the semantics used in + ordinary <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> tables. There are multiple + considerations involved in this. + </para> + + <para> + One key decision to be made is whether to perform <firstterm>early + locking</firstterm> or <firstterm>late locking</firstterm>. In early locking, a row is + locked when it is first retrieved from the underlying store, while in + late locking, the row is locked only when it is known that it needs to + be locked. (The difference arises because some rows may be discarded by + locally-checked restriction or join conditions.) Early locking is much + simpler and avoids extra round trips to a remote store, but it can cause + locking of rows that need not have been locked, resulting in reduced + concurrency or even unexpected deadlocks. Also, late locking is only + possible if the row to be locked can be uniquely re-identified later. + Preferably the row identifier should identify a specific version of the + row, as <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> TIDs do. + </para> + + <para> + By default, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> ignores locking considerations + when interfacing to FDWs, but an FDW can perform early locking without + any explicit support from the core code. The API functions described + in <xref linkend="fdw-callbacks-row-locking"/>, which were added + in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.5, allow an FDW to use late locking if + it wishes. + </para> + + <para> + An additional consideration is that in <literal>READ COMMITTED</literal> + isolation mode, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> may need to re-check + restriction and join conditions against an updated version of some + target tuple. Rechecking join conditions requires re-obtaining copies + of the non-target rows that were previously joined to the target tuple. + When working with standard <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> tables, this is + done by including the TIDs of the non-target tables in the column list + projected through the join, and then re-fetching non-target rows when + required. This approach keeps the join data set compact, but it + requires inexpensive re-fetch capability, as well as a TID that can + uniquely identify the row version to be re-fetched. By default, + therefore, the approach used with foreign tables is to include a copy of + the entire row fetched from a foreign table in the column list projected + through the join. This puts no special demands on the FDW but can + result in reduced performance of merge and hash joins. An FDW that is + capable of meeting the re-fetch requirements can choose to do it the + first way. + </para> + + <para> + For an <command>UPDATE</command> or <command>DELETE</command> on a foreign table, it + is recommended that the <literal>ForeignScan</literal> operation on the target + table perform early locking on the rows that it fetches, perhaps via the + equivalent of <command>SELECT FOR UPDATE</command>. An FDW can detect whether + a table is an <command>UPDATE</command>/<command>DELETE</command> target at plan time + by comparing its relid to <literal>root->parse->resultRelation</literal>, + or at execution time by using <function>ExecRelationIsTargetRelation()</function>. + An alternative possibility is to perform late locking within the + <function>ExecForeignUpdate</function> or <function>ExecForeignDelete</function> + callback, but no special support is provided for this. + </para> + + <para> + For foreign tables that are specified to be locked by a <command>SELECT + FOR UPDATE/SHARE</command> command, the <literal>ForeignScan</literal> operation can + again perform early locking by fetching tuples with the equivalent + of <command>SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE</command>. To perform late locking + instead, provide the callback functions defined + in <xref linkend="fdw-callbacks-row-locking"/>. + In <function>GetForeignRowMarkType</function>, select rowmark option + <literal>ROW_MARK_EXCLUSIVE</literal>, <literal>ROW_MARK_NOKEYEXCLUSIVE</literal>, + <literal>ROW_MARK_SHARE</literal>, or <literal>ROW_MARK_KEYSHARE</literal> depending + on the requested lock strength. (The core code will act the same + regardless of which of these four options you choose.) + Elsewhere, you can detect whether a foreign table was specified to be + locked by this type of command by using <function>get_plan_rowmark</function> at + plan time, or <function>ExecFindRowMark</function> at execution time; you must + check not only whether a non-null rowmark struct is returned, but that + its <structfield>strength</structfield> field is not <literal>LCS_NONE</literal>. + </para> + + <para> + Lastly, for foreign tables that are used in an <command>UPDATE</command>, + <command>DELETE</command> or <command>SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE</command> command but + are not specified to be row-locked, you can override the default choice + to copy entire rows by having <function>GetForeignRowMarkType</function> select + option <literal>ROW_MARK_REFERENCE</literal> when it sees lock strength + <literal>LCS_NONE</literal>. This will cause <function>RefetchForeignRow</function> to + be called with that value for <structfield>markType</structfield>; it should then + re-fetch the row without acquiring any new lock. (If you have + a <function>GetForeignRowMarkType</function> function but don't wish to re-fetch + unlocked rows, select option <literal>ROW_MARK_COPY</literal> + for <literal>LCS_NONE</literal>.) + </para> + + <para> + See <filename>src/include/nodes/lockoptions.h</filename>, the comments + for <type>RowMarkType</type> and <type>PlanRowMark</type> + in <filename>src/include/nodes/plannodes.h</filename>, and the comments for + <type>ExecRowMark</type> in <filename>src/include/nodes/execnodes.h</filename> for + additional information. + </para> + + </sect1> + + </chapter> |