В письме от среда, 17 июля 2024 г. 22:36:19 MSK пользователь Alexander Korotkov написал:
Hi All! I am continue reading the patch, now it's newer version First main question: As far a I can get, the entry point for OR->ANY convertation have been moved to match_clause_to_indexcol funtion, that checks if some restriction can use index for performance. The thing I do not understand what match_clause_to_indexcol actually received as arguments. Should this be set of expressions with OR in between grouped by one of the expression argument? If not I do not understand how this ever should work. The rest is about code readability > + if (bms_is_member(index->rel->relid, rinfo->right_relids)) > + return NULL; This check it totally not obvious for person who is not deep into postgres code. There should go comment explaining what are we checking for, and why it does not suit our purposes > + foreach(lc, orclause->args) > + { Being no great expert in postgres code, I am confused what are we iterating on here? Two arguments of OR statement? (a>1) OR (b>2) those in brackets? Or what? Comment explaining that would be a great help here. > +if (sub_rinfo->is_pushed_down != rinfo->is_pushed_down || > + sub_rinfo->is_clone != rinfo->is_clone || > + sub_rinfo->security_level != rinfo->security_level || > + !bms_equal(sub_rinfo->required_relids, rinfo->required_relids) || > + !bms_equal(sub_rinfo->incompatible_relids, rinfo- incompatible_relids) || > + !bms_equal(sub_rinfo->outer_relids, rinfo->outer_relids)) > + { This check it totally mind-blowing... What in the name of existence is going on here? I would suggest to split these checks into parts (compiler optimizer should take care about overhead) and give each part a sane explanation. -- Nikolay Shaplov aka Nataraj Fuzzing Engineer at Postgres Professional Matrix IM: @dhyan:nataraj.su
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