1 /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2  *
3  * tuptable.h
4  *	  tuple table support stuff
5  *
6  *
7  * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2021, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
8  * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
9  *
10  * src/include/executor/tuptable.h
11  *
12  *-------------------------------------------------------------------------
13  */
14 #ifndef TUPTABLE_H
15 #define TUPTABLE_H
16 
17 #include "access/htup.h"
18 #include "access/htup_details.h"
19 #include "access/sysattr.h"
20 #include "access/tupdesc.h"
21 #include "storage/buf.h"
22 
23 /*----------
24  * The executor stores tuples in a "tuple table" which is a List of
25  * independent TupleTableSlots.
26  *
27  * There's various different types of tuple table slots, each being able to
28  * store different types of tuples. Additional types of slots can be added
29  * without modifying core code. The type of a slot is determined by the
30  * TupleTableSlotOps* passed to the slot creation routine. The builtin types
31  * of slots are
32  *
33  * 1. physical tuple in a disk buffer page (TTSOpsBufferHeapTuple)
34  * 2. physical tuple constructed in palloc'ed memory (TTSOpsHeapTuple)
35  * 3. "minimal" physical tuple constructed in palloc'ed memory
36  *    (TTSOpsMinimalTuple)
37  * 4. "virtual" tuple consisting of Datum/isnull arrays (TTSOpsVirtual)
38  *
39  *
40  * The first two cases are similar in that they both deal with "materialized"
41  * tuples, but resource management is different.  For a tuple in a disk page
42  * we need to hold a pin on the buffer until the TupleTableSlot's reference
43  * to the tuple is dropped; while for a palloc'd tuple we usually want the
44  * tuple pfree'd when the TupleTableSlot's reference is dropped.
45  *
46  * A "minimal" tuple is handled similarly to a palloc'd regular tuple.
47  * At present, minimal tuples never are stored in buffers, so there is no
48  * parallel to case 1.  Note that a minimal tuple has no "system columns".
49  * (Actually, it could have an OID, but we have no need to access the OID.)
50  *
51  * A "virtual" tuple is an optimization used to minimize physical data copying
52  * in a nest of plan nodes.  Until materialized pass-by-reference Datums in
53  * the slot point to storage that is not directly associated with the
54  * TupleTableSlot; generally they will point to part of a tuple stored in a
55  * lower plan node's output TupleTableSlot, or to a function result
56  * constructed in a plan node's per-tuple econtext.  It is the responsibility
57  * of the generating plan node to be sure these resources are not released for
58  * as long as the virtual tuple needs to be valid or is materialized.  Note
59  * also that a virtual tuple does not have any "system columns".
60  *
61  * The Datum/isnull arrays of a TupleTableSlot serve double duty.  For virtual
62  * slots they are the authoritative data.  For the other builtin slots,
63  * the arrays contain data extracted from the tuple.  (In this state, any
64  * pass-by-reference Datums point into the physical tuple.)  The extracted
65  * information is built "lazily", ie, only as needed.  This serves to avoid
66  * repeated extraction of data from the physical tuple.
67  *
68  * A TupleTableSlot can also be "empty", indicated by flag TTS_FLAG_EMPTY set
69  * in tts_flags, holding no valid data.  This is the only valid state for a
70  * freshly-created slot that has not yet had a tuple descriptor assigned to
71  * it.  In this state, TTS_SHOULDFREE should not be set in tts_flags, tts_tuple
72  * must be NULL and tts_nvalid zero.
73  *
74  * The tupleDescriptor is simply referenced, not copied, by the TupleTableSlot
75  * code.  The caller of ExecSetSlotDescriptor() is responsible for providing
76  * a descriptor that will live as long as the slot does.  (Typically, both
77  * slots and descriptors are in per-query memory and are freed by memory
78  * context deallocation at query end; so it's not worth providing any extra
79  * mechanism to do more.  However, the slot will increment the tupdesc
80  * reference count if a reference-counted tupdesc is supplied.)
81  *
82  * When TTS_SHOULDFREE is set in tts_flags, the physical tuple is "owned" by
83  * the slot and should be freed when the slot's reference to the tuple is
84  * dropped.
85  *
86  * tts_values/tts_isnull are allocated either when the slot is created (when
87  * the descriptor is provided), or when a descriptor is assigned to the slot;
88  * they are of length equal to the descriptor's natts.
89  *
90  * The TTS_FLAG_SLOW flag is saved state for
91  * slot_deform_heap_tuple, and should not be touched by any other code.
92  *----------
93  */
94 
95 /* true = slot is empty */
96 #define			TTS_FLAG_EMPTY			(1 << 1)
97 #define TTS_EMPTY(slot)	(((slot)->tts_flags & TTS_FLAG_EMPTY) != 0)
98 
99 /* should pfree tuple "owned" by the slot? */
100 #define			TTS_FLAG_SHOULDFREE		(1 << 2)
101 #define TTS_SHOULDFREE(slot) (((slot)->tts_flags & TTS_FLAG_SHOULDFREE) != 0)
102 
103 /* saved state for slot_deform_heap_tuple */
104 #define			TTS_FLAG_SLOW		(1 << 3)
105 #define TTS_SLOW(slot) (((slot)->tts_flags & TTS_FLAG_SLOW) != 0)
106 
107 /* fixed tuple descriptor */
108 #define			TTS_FLAG_FIXED		(1 << 4)
109 #define TTS_FIXED(slot) (((slot)->tts_flags & TTS_FLAG_FIXED) != 0)
110 
111 struct TupleTableSlotOps;
112 typedef struct TupleTableSlotOps TupleTableSlotOps;
113 
114 /* base tuple table slot type */
115 typedef struct TupleTableSlot
116 {
117 	NodeTag		type;
118 #define FIELDNO_TUPLETABLESLOT_FLAGS 1
119 	uint16		tts_flags;		/* Boolean states */
120 #define FIELDNO_TUPLETABLESLOT_NVALID 2
121 	AttrNumber	tts_nvalid;		/* # of valid values in tts_values */
122 	const TupleTableSlotOps *const tts_ops; /* implementation of slot */
123 #define FIELDNO_TUPLETABLESLOT_TUPLEDESCRIPTOR 4
124 	TupleDesc	tts_tupleDescriptor;	/* slot's tuple descriptor */
125 #define FIELDNO_TUPLETABLESLOT_VALUES 5
126 	Datum	   *tts_values;		/* current per-attribute values */
127 #define FIELDNO_TUPLETABLESLOT_ISNULL 6
128 	bool	   *tts_isnull;		/* current per-attribute isnull flags */
129 	MemoryContext tts_mcxt;		/* slot itself is in this context */
130 	ItemPointerData tts_tid;	/* stored tuple's tid */
131 	Oid			tts_tableOid;	/* table oid of tuple */
132 } TupleTableSlot;
133 
134 /* routines for a TupleTableSlot implementation */
135 struct TupleTableSlotOps
136 {
137 	/* Minimum size of the slot */
138 	size_t		base_slot_size;
139 
140 	/* Initialization. */
141 	void		(*init) (TupleTableSlot *slot);
142 
143 	/* Destruction. */
144 	void		(*release) (TupleTableSlot *slot);
145 
146 	/*
147 	 * Clear the contents of the slot. Only the contents are expected to be
148 	 * cleared and not the tuple descriptor. Typically an implementation of
149 	 * this callback should free the memory allocated for the tuple contained
150 	 * in the slot.
151 	 */
152 	void		(*clear) (TupleTableSlot *slot);
153 
154 	/*
155 	 * Fill up first natts entries of tts_values and tts_isnull arrays with
156 	 * values from the tuple contained in the slot. The function may be called
157 	 * with natts more than the number of attributes available in the tuple,
158 	 * in which case it should set tts_nvalid to the number of returned
159 	 * columns.
160 	 */
161 	void		(*getsomeattrs) (TupleTableSlot *slot, int natts);
162 
163 	/*
164 	 * Returns value of the given system attribute as a datum and sets isnull
165 	 * to false, if it's not NULL. Throws an error if the slot type does not
166 	 * support system attributes.
167 	 */
168 	Datum		(*getsysattr) (TupleTableSlot *slot, int attnum, bool *isnull);
169 
170 	/*
171 	 * Make the contents of the slot solely depend on the slot, and not on
172 	 * underlying resources (like another memory context, buffers, etc).
173 	 */
174 	void		(*materialize) (TupleTableSlot *slot);
175 
176 	/*
177 	 * Copy the contents of the source slot into the destination slot's own
178 	 * context. Invoked using callback of the destination slot.
179 	 */
180 	void		(*copyslot) (TupleTableSlot *dstslot, TupleTableSlot *srcslot);
181 
182 	/*
183 	 * Return a heap tuple "owned" by the slot. It is slot's responsibility to
184 	 * free the memory consumed by the heap tuple. If the slot can not "own" a
185 	 * heap tuple, it should not implement this callback and should set it as
186 	 * NULL.
187 	 */
188 	HeapTuple	(*get_heap_tuple) (TupleTableSlot *slot);
189 
190 	/*
191 	 * Return a minimal tuple "owned" by the slot. It is slot's responsibility
192 	 * to free the memory consumed by the minimal tuple. If the slot can not
193 	 * "own" a minimal tuple, it should not implement this callback and should
194 	 * set it as NULL.
195 	 */
196 	MinimalTuple (*get_minimal_tuple) (TupleTableSlot *slot);
197 
198 	/*
199 	 * Return a copy of heap tuple representing the contents of the slot. The
200 	 * copy needs to be palloc'd in the current memory context. The slot
201 	 * itself is expected to remain unaffected. It is *not* expected to have
202 	 * meaningful "system columns" in the copy. The copy is not be "owned" by
203 	 * the slot i.e. the caller has to take responsibility to free memory
204 	 * consumed by the slot.
205 	 */
206 	HeapTuple	(*copy_heap_tuple) (TupleTableSlot *slot);
207 
208 	/*
209 	 * Return a copy of minimal tuple representing the contents of the slot.
210 	 * The copy needs to be palloc'd in the current memory context. The slot
211 	 * itself is expected to remain unaffected. It is *not* expected to have
212 	 * meaningful "system columns" in the copy. The copy is not be "owned" by
213 	 * the slot i.e. the caller has to take responsibility to free memory
214 	 * consumed by the slot.
215 	 */
216 	MinimalTuple (*copy_minimal_tuple) (TupleTableSlot *slot);
217 };
218 
219 /*
220  * Predefined TupleTableSlotOps for various types of TupleTableSlotOps. The
221  * same are used to identify the type of a given slot.
222  */
223 extern PGDLLIMPORT const TupleTableSlotOps TTSOpsVirtual;
224 extern PGDLLIMPORT const TupleTableSlotOps TTSOpsHeapTuple;
225 extern PGDLLIMPORT const TupleTableSlotOps TTSOpsMinimalTuple;
226 extern PGDLLIMPORT const TupleTableSlotOps TTSOpsBufferHeapTuple;
227 
228 #define TTS_IS_VIRTUAL(slot) ((slot)->tts_ops == &TTSOpsVirtual)
229 #define TTS_IS_HEAPTUPLE(slot) ((slot)->tts_ops == &TTSOpsHeapTuple)
230 #define TTS_IS_MINIMALTUPLE(slot) ((slot)->tts_ops == &TTSOpsMinimalTuple)
231 #define TTS_IS_BUFFERTUPLE(slot) ((slot)->tts_ops == &TTSOpsBufferHeapTuple)
232 
233 
234 /*
235  * Tuple table slot implementations.
236  */
237 
238 typedef struct VirtualTupleTableSlot
239 {
240 	TupleTableSlot base;
241 
242 	char	   *data;			/* data for materialized slots */
243 } VirtualTupleTableSlot;
244 
245 typedef struct HeapTupleTableSlot
246 {
247 	TupleTableSlot base;
248 
249 #define FIELDNO_HEAPTUPLETABLESLOT_TUPLE 1
250 	HeapTuple	tuple;			/* physical tuple */
251 #define FIELDNO_HEAPTUPLETABLESLOT_OFF 2
252 	uint32		off;			/* saved state for slot_deform_heap_tuple */
253 	HeapTupleData tupdata;		/* optional workspace for storing tuple */
254 } HeapTupleTableSlot;
255 
256 /* heap tuple residing in a buffer */
257 typedef struct BufferHeapTupleTableSlot
258 {
259 	HeapTupleTableSlot base;
260 
261 	/*
262 	 * If buffer is not InvalidBuffer, then the slot is holding a pin on the
263 	 * indicated buffer page; drop the pin when we release the slot's
264 	 * reference to that buffer.  (TTS_FLAG_SHOULDFREE should not be set in
265 	 * such a case, since presumably tts_tuple is pointing into the buffer.)
266 	 */
267 	Buffer		buffer;			/* tuple's buffer, or InvalidBuffer */
268 } BufferHeapTupleTableSlot;
269 
270 typedef struct MinimalTupleTableSlot
271 {
272 	TupleTableSlot base;
273 
274 	/*
275 	 * In a minimal slot tuple points at minhdr and the fields of that struct
276 	 * are set correctly for access to the minimal tuple; in particular,
277 	 * minhdr.t_data points MINIMAL_TUPLE_OFFSET bytes before mintuple.  This
278 	 * allows column extraction to treat the case identically to regular
279 	 * physical tuples.
280 	 */
281 #define FIELDNO_MINIMALTUPLETABLESLOT_TUPLE 1
282 	HeapTuple	tuple;			/* tuple wrapper */
283 	MinimalTuple mintuple;		/* minimal tuple, or NULL if none */
284 	HeapTupleData minhdr;		/* workspace for minimal-tuple-only case */
285 #define FIELDNO_MINIMALTUPLETABLESLOT_OFF 4
286 	uint32		off;			/* saved state for slot_deform_heap_tuple */
287 } MinimalTupleTableSlot;
288 
289 /*
290  * TupIsNull -- is a TupleTableSlot empty?
291  */
292 #define TupIsNull(slot) \
293 	((slot) == NULL || TTS_EMPTY(slot))
294 
295 /* in executor/execTuples.c */
296 extern TupleTableSlot *MakeTupleTableSlot(TupleDesc tupleDesc,
297 										  const TupleTableSlotOps *tts_ops);
298 extern TupleTableSlot *ExecAllocTableSlot(List **tupleTable, TupleDesc desc,
299 										  const TupleTableSlotOps *tts_ops);
300 extern void ExecResetTupleTable(List *tupleTable, bool shouldFree);
301 extern TupleTableSlot *MakeSingleTupleTableSlot(TupleDesc tupdesc,
302 												const TupleTableSlotOps *tts_ops);
303 extern void ExecDropSingleTupleTableSlot(TupleTableSlot *slot);
304 extern void ExecSetSlotDescriptor(TupleTableSlot *slot, TupleDesc tupdesc);
305 extern TupleTableSlot *ExecStoreHeapTuple(HeapTuple tuple,
306 										  TupleTableSlot *slot,
307 										  bool shouldFree);
308 extern void ExecForceStoreHeapTuple(HeapTuple tuple,
309 									TupleTableSlot *slot,
310 									bool shouldFree);
311 extern TupleTableSlot *ExecStoreBufferHeapTuple(HeapTuple tuple,
312 												TupleTableSlot *slot,
313 												Buffer buffer);
314 extern TupleTableSlot *ExecStorePinnedBufferHeapTuple(HeapTuple tuple,
315 													  TupleTableSlot *slot,
316 													  Buffer buffer);
317 extern TupleTableSlot *ExecStoreMinimalTuple(MinimalTuple mtup,
318 											 TupleTableSlot *slot,
319 											 bool shouldFree);
320 extern void ExecForceStoreMinimalTuple(MinimalTuple mtup, TupleTableSlot *slot,
321 									   bool shouldFree);
322 extern TupleTableSlot *ExecStoreVirtualTuple(TupleTableSlot *slot);
323 extern TupleTableSlot *ExecStoreAllNullTuple(TupleTableSlot *slot);
324 extern void ExecStoreHeapTupleDatum(Datum data, TupleTableSlot *slot);
325 extern HeapTuple ExecFetchSlotHeapTuple(TupleTableSlot *slot, bool materialize, bool *shouldFree);
326 extern MinimalTuple ExecFetchSlotMinimalTuple(TupleTableSlot *slot,
327 											  bool *shouldFree);
328 extern Datum ExecFetchSlotHeapTupleDatum(TupleTableSlot *slot);
329 extern void slot_getmissingattrs(TupleTableSlot *slot, int startAttNum,
330 								 int lastAttNum);
331 extern void slot_getsomeattrs_int(TupleTableSlot *slot, int attnum);
332 
333 
334 #ifndef FRONTEND
335 
336 /*
337  * This function forces the entries of the slot's Datum/isnull arrays to be
338  * valid at least up through the attnum'th entry.
339  */
340 static inline void
slot_getsomeattrs(TupleTableSlot * slot,int attnum)341 slot_getsomeattrs(TupleTableSlot *slot, int attnum)
342 {
343 	if (slot->tts_nvalid < attnum)
344 		slot_getsomeattrs_int(slot, attnum);
345 }
346 
347 /*
348  * slot_getallattrs
349  *		This function forces all the entries of the slot's Datum/isnull
350  *		arrays to be valid.  The caller may then extract data directly
351  *		from those arrays instead of using slot_getattr.
352  */
353 static inline void
slot_getallattrs(TupleTableSlot * slot)354 slot_getallattrs(TupleTableSlot *slot)
355 {
356 	slot_getsomeattrs(slot, slot->tts_tupleDescriptor->natts);
357 }
358 
359 
360 /*
361  * slot_attisnull
362  *
363  * Detect whether an attribute of the slot is null, without actually fetching
364  * it.
365  */
366 static inline bool
slot_attisnull(TupleTableSlot * slot,int attnum)367 slot_attisnull(TupleTableSlot *slot, int attnum)
368 {
369 	AssertArg(attnum > 0);
370 
371 	if (attnum > slot->tts_nvalid)
372 		slot_getsomeattrs(slot, attnum);
373 
374 	return slot->tts_isnull[attnum - 1];
375 }
376 
377 /*
378  * slot_getattr - fetch one attribute of the slot's contents.
379  */
380 static inline Datum
slot_getattr(TupleTableSlot * slot,int attnum,bool * isnull)381 slot_getattr(TupleTableSlot *slot, int attnum,
382 			 bool *isnull)
383 {
384 	AssertArg(attnum > 0);
385 
386 	if (attnum > slot->tts_nvalid)
387 		slot_getsomeattrs(slot, attnum);
388 
389 	*isnull = slot->tts_isnull[attnum - 1];
390 
391 	return slot->tts_values[attnum - 1];
392 }
393 
394 /*
395  * slot_getsysattr - fetch a system attribute of the slot's current tuple.
396  *
397  *  If the slot type does not contain system attributes, this will throw an
398  *  error.  Hence before calling this function, callers should make sure that
399  *  the slot type is the one that supports system attributes.
400  */
401 static inline Datum
slot_getsysattr(TupleTableSlot * slot,int attnum,bool * isnull)402 slot_getsysattr(TupleTableSlot *slot, int attnum, bool *isnull)
403 {
404 	AssertArg(attnum < 0);		/* caller error */
405 
406 	if (attnum == TableOidAttributeNumber)
407 	{
408 		*isnull = false;
409 		return ObjectIdGetDatum(slot->tts_tableOid);
410 	}
411 	else if (attnum == SelfItemPointerAttributeNumber)
412 	{
413 		*isnull = false;
414 		return PointerGetDatum(&slot->tts_tid);
415 	}
416 
417 	/* Fetch the system attribute from the underlying tuple. */
418 	return slot->tts_ops->getsysattr(slot, attnum, isnull);
419 }
420 
421 /*
422  * ExecClearTuple - clear the slot's contents
423  */
424 static inline TupleTableSlot *
ExecClearTuple(TupleTableSlot * slot)425 ExecClearTuple(TupleTableSlot *slot)
426 {
427 	slot->tts_ops->clear(slot);
428 
429 	return slot;
430 }
431 
432 /* ExecMaterializeSlot - force a slot into the "materialized" state.
433  *
434  * This causes the slot's tuple to be a local copy not dependent on any
435  * external storage (i.e. pointing into a Buffer, or having allocations in
436  * another memory context).
437  *
438  * A typical use for this operation is to prepare a computed tuple for being
439  * stored on disk.  The original data may or may not be virtual, but in any
440  * case we need a private copy for heap_insert to scribble on.
441  */
442 static inline void
ExecMaterializeSlot(TupleTableSlot * slot)443 ExecMaterializeSlot(TupleTableSlot *slot)
444 {
445 	slot->tts_ops->materialize(slot);
446 }
447 
448 /*
449  * ExecCopySlotHeapTuple - return HeapTuple allocated in caller's context
450  */
451 static inline HeapTuple
ExecCopySlotHeapTuple(TupleTableSlot * slot)452 ExecCopySlotHeapTuple(TupleTableSlot *slot)
453 {
454 	Assert(!TTS_EMPTY(slot));
455 
456 	return slot->tts_ops->copy_heap_tuple(slot);
457 }
458 
459 /*
460  * ExecCopySlotMinimalTuple - return MinimalTuple allocated in caller's context
461  */
462 static inline MinimalTuple
ExecCopySlotMinimalTuple(TupleTableSlot * slot)463 ExecCopySlotMinimalTuple(TupleTableSlot *slot)
464 {
465 	return slot->tts_ops->copy_minimal_tuple(slot);
466 }
467 
468 /*
469  * ExecCopySlot - copy one slot's contents into another.
470  *
471  * If a source's system attributes are supposed to be accessed in the target
472  * slot, the target slot and source slot types need to match.
473  */
474 static inline TupleTableSlot *
ExecCopySlot(TupleTableSlot * dstslot,TupleTableSlot * srcslot)475 ExecCopySlot(TupleTableSlot *dstslot, TupleTableSlot *srcslot)
476 {
477 	Assert(!TTS_EMPTY(srcslot));
478 	AssertArg(srcslot != dstslot);
479 
480 	dstslot->tts_ops->copyslot(dstslot, srcslot);
481 
482 	return dstslot;
483 }
484 
485 #endif							/* FRONTEND */
486 
487 #endif							/* TUPTABLE_H */
488