On May 25, 2009, at 0:47 , Joshua Tolley wrote:
On Sun, May 24, 2009 at 06:53:29PM -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
Greg Smith <gsm...@gregsmith.com> writes:
On Sun, 24 May 2009, Pavel Stehule wrote:
we should have a secondary function explain_query(query_string,
option) that returns setof some.
+1. The incremental approach here should first be adding
functions that
actually do the work required. Then, if there's a set of those
that look
to be extremely useful, maybe at that point it's worth talking
about how
to integrate them into the parser. Starting with the parser changes
rather than the parts that actually do the work is backwards. If
you do
it the other way around, at all times you have a patch that actually
provides immediate useful value were it to be committed.
Something that returns a setof can also be easily used to
implement the
"dump EXPLAIN to a table" feature Josh Tolley brought up (which is
another
common request in this area).
A serious problem with EXPLAIN via a function returning set, or with
putting the result into a table, is that set results are logically
unordered, just as table contents are. So from a strict point of
view
this only makes sense when the output format is designed to not
depend
on row ordering to convey information. We could certainly invent
such
a format, but I think it's a mistake to go in this direction for
EXPLAIN output that is similar to the current output.
The Oracle version, as it fills the table of explain results, gives
each number
an id and the id of its parent row, which behavior we could
presumably copy.
Or some other schema that allows us to preserve the tree.
Michael Glaesemann
grzm seespotcode net
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