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|
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* cluster.c
* CLUSTER a table on an index.
*
* There is hardly anything left of Paul Brown's original implementation...
*
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2005, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994-5, Regents of the University of California
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/commands/cluster.c,v 1.139 2005/08/26 03:07:16 tgl Exp $
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include "access/genam.h"
#include "access/heapam.h"
#include "catalog/catalog.h"
#include "catalog/dependency.h"
#include "catalog/heap.h"
#include "catalog/index.h"
#include "catalog/indexing.h"
#include "catalog/namespace.h"
#include "commands/cluster.h"
#include "commands/tablecmds.h"
#include "miscadmin.h"
#include "utils/acl.h"
#include "utils/fmgroids.h"
#include "utils/inval.h"
#include "utils/lsyscache.h"
#include "utils/memutils.h"
#include "utils/syscache.h"
#include "utils/relcache.h"
/*
* This struct is used to pass around the information on tables to be
* clustered. We need this so we can make a list of them when invoked without
* a specific table/index pair.
*/
typedef struct
{
Oid tableOid;
Oid indexOid;
} RelToCluster;
static void cluster_rel(RelToCluster *rv, bool recheck);
static void rebuild_relation(Relation OldHeap, Oid indexOid);
static void copy_heap_data(Oid OIDNewHeap, Oid OIDOldHeap, Oid OIDOldIndex);
static List *get_tables_to_cluster(MemoryContext cluster_context);
/*---------------------------------------------------------------------------
* This cluster code allows for clustering multiple tables at once. Because
* of this, we cannot just run everything on a single transaction, or we
* would be forced to acquire exclusive locks on all the tables being
* clustered, simultaneously --- very likely leading to deadlock.
*
* To solve this we follow a similar strategy to VACUUM code,
* clustering each relation in a separate transaction. For this to work,
* we need to:
* - provide a separate memory context so that we can pass information in
* a way that survives across transactions
* - start a new transaction every time a new relation is clustered
* - check for validity of the information on to-be-clustered relations,
* as someone might have deleted a relation behind our back, or
* clustered one on a different index
* - end the transaction
*
* The single-relation case does not have any such overhead.
*
* We also allow a relation being specified without index. In that case,
* the indisclustered bit will be looked up, and an ERROR will be thrown
* if there is no index with the bit set.
*---------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
void
cluster(ClusterStmt *stmt)
{
if (stmt->relation != NULL)
{
/* This is the single-relation case. */
Oid tableOid,
indexOid = InvalidOid;
Relation rel;
RelToCluster rvtc;
/* Find and lock the table */
rel = heap_openrv(stmt->relation, AccessExclusiveLock);
tableOid = RelationGetRelid(rel);
/* Check permissions */
if (!pg_class_ownercheck(tableOid, GetUserId()))
aclcheck_error(ACLCHECK_NOT_OWNER, ACL_KIND_CLASS,
RelationGetRelationName(rel));
if (stmt->indexname == NULL)
{
ListCell *index;
/* We need to find the index that has indisclustered set. */
foreach(index, RelationGetIndexList(rel))
{
HeapTuple idxtuple;
Form_pg_index indexForm;
indexOid = lfirst_oid(index);
idxtuple = SearchSysCache(INDEXRELID,
ObjectIdGetDatum(indexOid),
0, 0, 0);
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(idxtuple))
elog(ERROR, "cache lookup failed for index %u", indexOid);
indexForm = (Form_pg_index) GETSTRUCT(idxtuple);
if (indexForm->indisclustered)
{
ReleaseSysCache(idxtuple);
break;
}
ReleaseSysCache(idxtuple);
indexOid = InvalidOid;
}
if (!OidIsValid(indexOid))
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_UNDEFINED_OBJECT),
errmsg("there is no previously clustered index for table \"%s\"",
stmt->relation->relname)));
}
else
{
/*
* The index is expected to be in the same namespace as the
* relation.
*/
indexOid = get_relname_relid(stmt->indexname,
rel->rd_rel->relnamespace);
if (!OidIsValid(indexOid))
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_UNDEFINED_OBJECT),
errmsg("index \"%s\" for table \"%s\" does not exist",
stmt->indexname, stmt->relation->relname)));
}
/* All other checks are done in cluster_rel() */
rvtc.tableOid = tableOid;
rvtc.indexOid = indexOid;
/* close relation, keep lock till commit */
heap_close(rel, NoLock);
/* Do the job */
cluster_rel(&rvtc, false);
}
else
{
/*
* This is the "multi relation" case. We need to cluster all
* tables that have some index with indisclustered set.
*/
MemoryContext cluster_context;
List *rvs;
ListCell *rv;
/*
* We cannot run this form of CLUSTER inside a user transaction
* block; we'd be holding locks way too long.
*/
PreventTransactionChain((void *) stmt, "CLUSTER");
/*
* Create special memory context for cross-transaction storage.
*
* Since it is a child of PortalContext, it will go away even in case
* of error.
*/
cluster_context = AllocSetContextCreate(PortalContext,
"Cluster",
ALLOCSET_DEFAULT_MINSIZE,
ALLOCSET_DEFAULT_INITSIZE,
ALLOCSET_DEFAULT_MAXSIZE);
/*
* Build the list of relations to cluster. Note that this lives
* in cluster_context.
*/
rvs = get_tables_to_cluster(cluster_context);
/* Commit to get out of starting transaction */
CommitTransactionCommand();
/* Ok, now that we've got them all, cluster them one by one */
foreach(rv, rvs)
{
RelToCluster *rvtc = (RelToCluster *) lfirst(rv);
/* Start a new transaction for each relation. */
StartTransactionCommand();
/* functions in indexes may want a snapshot set */
ActiveSnapshot = CopySnapshot(GetTransactionSnapshot());
cluster_rel(rvtc, true);
CommitTransactionCommand();
}
/* Start a new transaction for the cleanup work. */
StartTransactionCommand();
/* Clean up working storage */
MemoryContextDelete(cluster_context);
}
}
/*
* cluster_rel
*
* This clusters the table by creating a new, clustered table and
* swapping the relfilenodes of the new table and the old table, so
* the OID of the original table is preserved. Thus we do not lose
* GRANT, inheritance nor references to this table (this was a bug
* in releases thru 7.3).
*
* Also create new indexes and swap the filenodes with the old indexes the
* same way we do for the relation. Since we are effectively bulk-loading
* the new table, it's better to create the indexes afterwards than to fill
* them incrementally while we load the table.
*/
static void
cluster_rel(RelToCluster *rvtc, bool recheck)
{
Relation OldHeap;
/* Check for user-requested abort. */
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS();
/*
* Since we may open a new transaction for each relation, we have to
* check that the relation still is what we think it is.
*
* If this is a single-transaction CLUSTER, we can skip these tests. We
* *must* skip the one on indisclustered since it would reject an
* attempt to cluster a not-previously-clustered index.
*/
if (recheck)
{
HeapTuple tuple;
Form_pg_index indexForm;
/*
* Check if the relation and index still exist before opening them
*/
if (!SearchSysCacheExists(RELOID,
ObjectIdGetDatum(rvtc->tableOid),
0, 0, 0) ||
!SearchSysCacheExists(RELOID,
ObjectIdGetDatum(rvtc->indexOid),
0, 0, 0))
return;
/* Check that the user still owns the relation */
if (!pg_class_ownercheck(rvtc->tableOid, GetUserId()))
return;
/*
* Check that the index is still the one with indisclustered set.
*/
tuple = SearchSysCache(INDEXRELID,
ObjectIdGetDatum(rvtc->indexOid),
0, 0, 0);
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(tuple))
return; /* could have gone away... */
indexForm = (Form_pg_index) GETSTRUCT(tuple);
if (!indexForm->indisclustered)
{
ReleaseSysCache(tuple);
return;
}
ReleaseSysCache(tuple);
}
/*
* We grab exclusive access to the target rel and index for the
* duration of the transaction. (This is redundant for the single-
* transaction case, since cluster() already did it.) The index lock
* is taken inside check_index_is_clusterable.
*/
OldHeap = heap_open(rvtc->tableOid, AccessExclusiveLock);
/* Check index is valid to cluster on */
check_index_is_clusterable(OldHeap, rvtc->indexOid, recheck);
/* rebuild_relation does all the dirty work */
rebuild_relation(OldHeap, rvtc->indexOid);
/* NB: rebuild_relation does heap_close() on OldHeap */
}
/*
* Verify that the specified index is a legitimate index to cluster on
*
* Side effect: obtains exclusive lock on the index. The caller should
* already have exclusive lock on the table, so the index lock is likely
* redundant, but it seems best to grab it anyway to ensure the index
* definition can't change under us.
*/
void
check_index_is_clusterable(Relation OldHeap, Oid indexOid, bool recheck)
{
Relation OldIndex;
OldIndex = index_open(indexOid);
LockRelation(OldIndex, AccessExclusiveLock);
/*
* Check that index is in fact an index on the given relation
*/
if (OldIndex->rd_index == NULL ||
OldIndex->rd_index->indrelid != RelationGetRelid(OldHeap))
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_WRONG_OBJECT_TYPE),
errmsg("\"%s\" is not an index for table \"%s\"",
RelationGetRelationName(OldIndex),
RelationGetRelationName(OldHeap))));
/*
* Disallow clustering on incomplete indexes (those that might not
* index every row of the relation). We could relax this by making a
* separate seqscan pass over the table to copy the missing rows, but
* that seems expensive and tedious.
*/
if (!heap_attisnull(OldIndex->rd_indextuple, Anum_pg_index_indpred))
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("cannot cluster on partial index \"%s\"",
RelationGetRelationName(OldIndex))));
if (!OldIndex->rd_am->amindexnulls)
{
AttrNumber colno;
/*
* If the AM doesn't index nulls, then it's a partial index unless
* we can prove all the rows are non-null. Note we only need look
* at the first column; multicolumn-capable AMs are *required* to
* index nulls in columns after the first.
*/
colno = OldIndex->rd_index->indkey.values[0];
if (colno > 0)
{
/* ordinary user attribute */
if (!OldHeap->rd_att->attrs[colno - 1]->attnotnull)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("cannot cluster on index \"%s\" because access method\n"
"does not handle null values",
RelationGetRelationName(OldIndex)),
errhint("You may be able to work around this by marking column \"%s\" NOT NULL%s",
NameStr(OldHeap->rd_att->attrs[colno - 1]->attname),
recheck ? ",\nor use ALTER TABLE ... SET WITHOUT CLUSTER to remove the cluster\n"
"specification from the table." : ".")));
}
else if (colno < 0)
{
/* system column --- okay, always non-null */
}
else
/* index expression, lose... */
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("cannot cluster on expressional index \"%s\" because its index access\n"
"method does not handle null values",
RelationGetRelationName(OldIndex))));
}
/*
* Disallow clustering system relations. This will definitely NOT
* work for shared relations (we have no way to update pg_class rows
* in other databases), nor for nailed-in-cache relations (the
* relfilenode values for those are hardwired, see relcache.c). It
* might work for other system relations, but I ain't gonna risk it.
*/
if (IsSystemRelation(OldHeap))
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("\"%s\" is a system catalog",
RelationGetRelationName(OldHeap))));
/*
* Don't allow cluster on temp tables of other backends ... their
* local buffer manager is not going to cope.
*/
if (isOtherTempNamespace(RelationGetNamespace(OldHeap)))
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("cannot cluster temporary tables of other sessions")));
/* Drop relcache refcnt on OldIndex, but keep lock */
index_close(OldIndex);
}
/*
* mark_index_clustered: mark the specified index as the one clustered on
*
* With indexOid == InvalidOid, will mark all indexes of rel not-clustered.
*/
void
mark_index_clustered(Relation rel, Oid indexOid)
{
HeapTuple indexTuple;
Form_pg_index indexForm;
Relation pg_index;
ListCell *index;
/*
* If the index is already marked clustered, no need to do anything.
*/
if (OidIsValid(indexOid))
{
indexTuple = SearchSysCache(INDEXRELID,
ObjectIdGetDatum(indexOid),
0, 0, 0);
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(indexTuple))
elog(ERROR, "cache lookup failed for index %u", indexOid);
indexForm = (Form_pg_index) GETSTRUCT(indexTuple);
if (indexForm->indisclustered)
{
ReleaseSysCache(indexTuple);
return;
}
ReleaseSysCache(indexTuple);
}
/*
* Check each index of the relation and set/clear the bit as needed.
*/
pg_index = heap_open(IndexRelationId, RowExclusiveLock);
foreach(index, RelationGetIndexList(rel))
{
Oid thisIndexOid = lfirst_oid(index);
indexTuple = SearchSysCacheCopy(INDEXRELID,
ObjectIdGetDatum(thisIndexOid),
0, 0, 0);
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(indexTuple))
elog(ERROR, "cache lookup failed for index %u", thisIndexOid);
indexForm = (Form_pg_index) GETSTRUCT(indexTuple);
/*
* Unset the bit if set. We know it's wrong because we checked
* this earlier.
*/
if (indexForm->indisclustered)
{
indexForm->indisclustered = false;
simple_heap_update(pg_index, &indexTuple->t_self, indexTuple);
CatalogUpdateIndexes(pg_index, indexTuple);
/* Ensure we see the update in the index's relcache entry */
CacheInvalidateRelcacheByRelid(thisIndexOid);
}
else if (thisIndexOid == indexOid)
{
indexForm->indisclustered = true;
simple_heap_update(pg_index, &indexTuple->t_self, indexTuple);
CatalogUpdateIndexes(pg_index, indexTuple);
/* Ensure we see the update in the index's relcache entry */
CacheInvalidateRelcacheByRelid(thisIndexOid);
}
heap_freetuple(indexTuple);
}
heap_close(pg_index, RowExclusiveLock);
}
/*
* rebuild_relation: rebuild an existing relation in index order
*
* OldHeap: table to rebuild --- must be opened and exclusive-locked!
* indexOid: index to cluster by
*
* NB: this routine closes OldHeap at the right time; caller should not.
*/
static void
rebuild_relation(Relation OldHeap, Oid indexOid)
{
Oid tableOid = RelationGetRelid(OldHeap);
Oid tableSpace = OldHeap->rd_rel->reltablespace;
Oid OIDNewHeap;
char NewHeapName[NAMEDATALEN];
ObjectAddress object;
/* Mark the correct index as clustered */
mark_index_clustered(OldHeap, indexOid);
/* Close relcache entry, but keep lock until transaction commit */
heap_close(OldHeap, NoLock);
/*
* Create the new heap, using a temporary name in the same namespace
* as the existing table. NOTE: there is some risk of collision with
* user relnames. Working around this seems more trouble than it's
* worth; in particular, we can't create the new heap in a different
* namespace from the old, or we will have problems with the TEMP
* status of temp tables.
*/
snprintf(NewHeapName, sizeof(NewHeapName), "pg_temp_%u", tableOid);
OIDNewHeap = make_new_heap(tableOid, NewHeapName, tableSpace);
/*
* We don't need CommandCounterIncrement() because make_new_heap did
* it.
*/
/*
* Copy the heap data into the new table in the desired order.
*/
copy_heap_data(OIDNewHeap, tableOid, indexOid);
/* To make the new heap's data visible (probably not needed?). */
CommandCounterIncrement();
/* Swap the physical files of the old and new heaps. */
swap_relation_files(tableOid, OIDNewHeap);
CommandCounterIncrement();
/* Destroy new heap with old filenode */
object.classId = RelationRelationId;
object.objectId = OIDNewHeap;
object.objectSubId = 0;
/*
* The new relation is local to our transaction and we know nothing
* depends on it, so DROP_RESTRICT should be OK.
*/
performDeletion(&object, DROP_RESTRICT);
/* performDeletion does CommandCounterIncrement at end */
/*
* Rebuild each index on the relation (but not the toast table, which
* is all-new at this point). We do not need
* CommandCounterIncrement() because reindex_relation does it.
*/
reindex_relation(tableOid, false);
}
/*
* Create the new table that we will fill with correctly-ordered data.
*/
Oid
make_new_heap(Oid OIDOldHeap, const char *NewName, Oid NewTableSpace)
{
TupleDesc OldHeapDesc,
tupdesc;
Oid OIDNewHeap;
Relation OldHeap;
OldHeap = heap_open(OIDOldHeap, AccessExclusiveLock);
OldHeapDesc = RelationGetDescr(OldHeap);
/*
* Need to make a copy of the tuple descriptor, since
* heap_create_with_catalog modifies it.
*/
tupdesc = CreateTupleDescCopyConstr(OldHeapDesc);
OIDNewHeap = heap_create_with_catalog(NewName,
RelationGetNamespace(OldHeap),
NewTableSpace,
InvalidOid,
OldHeap->rd_rel->relowner,
tupdesc,
OldHeap->rd_rel->relkind,
OldHeap->rd_rel->relisshared,
true,
0,
ONCOMMIT_NOOP,
allowSystemTableMods);
/*
* Advance command counter so that the newly-created relation's
* catalog tuples will be visible to heap_open.
*/
CommandCounterIncrement();
/*
* If necessary, create a TOAST table for the new relation. Note that
* AlterTableCreateToastTable ends with CommandCounterIncrement(), so
* that the TOAST table will be visible for insertion.
*/
AlterTableCreateToastTable(OIDNewHeap, true);
heap_close(OldHeap, NoLock);
return OIDNewHeap;
}
/*
* Do the physical copying of heap data.
*/
static void
copy_heap_data(Oid OIDNewHeap, Oid OIDOldHeap, Oid OIDOldIndex)
{
Relation NewHeap,
OldHeap,
OldIndex;
TupleDesc oldTupDesc;
TupleDesc newTupDesc;
int natts;
Datum *values;
char *nulls;
IndexScanDesc scan;
HeapTuple tuple;
/*
* Open the relations we need.
*/
NewHeap = heap_open(OIDNewHeap, AccessExclusiveLock);
OldHeap = heap_open(OIDOldHeap, AccessExclusiveLock);
OldIndex = index_open(OIDOldIndex);
/*
* Their tuple descriptors should be exactly alike, but here we only
* need assume that they have the same number of columns.
*/
oldTupDesc = RelationGetDescr(OldHeap);
newTupDesc = RelationGetDescr(NewHeap);
Assert(newTupDesc->natts == oldTupDesc->natts);
/* Preallocate values/nulls arrays */
natts = newTupDesc->natts;
values = (Datum *) palloc0(natts * sizeof(Datum));
nulls = (char *) palloc(natts * sizeof(char));
memset(nulls, 'n', natts * sizeof(char));
/*
* Scan through the OldHeap on the OldIndex and copy each tuple into the
* NewHeap.
*/
scan = index_beginscan(OldHeap, OldIndex, SnapshotNow, 0, (ScanKey) NULL);
while ((tuple = index_getnext(scan, ForwardScanDirection)) != NULL)
{
/*
* We cannot simply pass the tuple to heap_insert(), for several
* reasons:
*
* 1. heap_insert() will overwrite the commit-status fields of the
* tuple it's handed. This would trash the source relation, which is
* bad news if we abort later on. (This was a bug in releases thru
* 7.0)
*
* 2. We'd like to squeeze out the values of any dropped columns,
* both to save space and to ensure we have no corner-case failures.
* (It's possible for example that the new table hasn't got a TOAST
* table and so is unable to store any large values of dropped cols.)
*
* 3. The tuple might not even be legal for the new table; this is
* currently only known to happen as an after-effect of ALTER TABLE
* SET WITHOUT OIDS.
*
* So, we must reconstruct the tuple from component Datums.
*/
HeapTuple copiedTuple;
int i;
heap_deformtuple(tuple, oldTupDesc, values, nulls);
/* Be sure to null out any dropped columns */
for (i = 0; i < natts; i++)
{
if (newTupDesc->attrs[i]->attisdropped)
nulls[i] = 'n';
}
copiedTuple = heap_formtuple(newTupDesc, values, nulls);
/* Preserve OID, if any */
if (NewHeap->rd_rel->relhasoids)
HeapTupleSetOid(copiedTuple, HeapTupleGetOid(tuple));
simple_heap_insert(NewHeap, copiedTuple);
heap_freetuple(copiedTuple);
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS();
}
index_endscan(scan);
pfree(values);
pfree(nulls);
index_close(OldIndex);
heap_close(OldHeap, NoLock);
heap_close(NewHeap, NoLock);
}
/*
* Swap the physical files of two given relations.
*
* We swap the physical identity (reltablespace and relfilenode) while
* keeping the same logical identities of the two relations.
*
* Also swap any TOAST links, so that the toast data moves along with
* the main-table data.
*/
void
swap_relation_files(Oid r1, Oid r2)
{
Relation relRelation;
HeapTuple reltup1,
reltup2;
Form_pg_class relform1,
relform2;
Oid swaptemp;
CatalogIndexState indstate;
/* We need writable copies of both pg_class tuples. */
relRelation = heap_open(RelationRelationId, RowExclusiveLock);
reltup1 = SearchSysCacheCopy(RELOID,
ObjectIdGetDatum(r1),
0, 0, 0);
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(reltup1))
elog(ERROR, "cache lookup failed for relation %u", r1);
relform1 = (Form_pg_class) GETSTRUCT(reltup1);
reltup2 = SearchSysCacheCopy(RELOID,
ObjectIdGetDatum(r2),
0, 0, 0);
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(reltup2))
elog(ERROR, "cache lookup failed for relation %u", r2);
relform2 = (Form_pg_class) GETSTRUCT(reltup2);
/*
* Actually swap the fields in the two tuples
*/
swaptemp = relform1->relfilenode;
relform1->relfilenode = relform2->relfilenode;
relform2->relfilenode = swaptemp;
swaptemp = relform1->reltablespace;
relform1->reltablespace = relform2->reltablespace;
relform2->reltablespace = swaptemp;
swaptemp = relform1->reltoastrelid;
relform1->reltoastrelid = relform2->reltoastrelid;
relform2->reltoastrelid = swaptemp;
/* we should not swap reltoastidxid */
/* swap size statistics too, since new rel has freshly-updated stats */
{
int4 swap_pages;
float4 swap_tuples;
swap_pages = relform1->relpages;
relform1->relpages = relform2->relpages;
relform2->relpages = swap_pages;
swap_tuples = relform1->reltuples;
relform1->reltuples = relform2->reltuples;
relform2->reltuples = swap_tuples;
}
/* Update the tuples in pg_class */
simple_heap_update(relRelation, &reltup1->t_self, reltup1);
simple_heap_update(relRelation, &reltup2->t_self, reltup2);
/* Keep system catalogs current */
indstate = CatalogOpenIndexes(relRelation);
CatalogIndexInsert(indstate, reltup1);
CatalogIndexInsert(indstate, reltup2);
CatalogCloseIndexes(indstate);
/*
* If we have toast tables associated with the relations being
* swapped, change their dependency links to re-associate them with
* their new owning relations. Otherwise the wrong one will get
* dropped ...
*
* NOTE: it is possible that only one table has a toast table; this can
* happen in CLUSTER if there were dropped columns in the old table,
* and in ALTER TABLE when adding or changing type of columns.
*
* NOTE: at present, a TOAST table's only dependency is the one on its
* owning table. If more are ever created, we'd need to use something
* more selective than deleteDependencyRecordsFor() to get rid of only
* the link we want.
*/
if (relform1->reltoastrelid || relform2->reltoastrelid)
{
ObjectAddress baseobject,
toastobject;
long count;
/* Delete old dependencies */
if (relform1->reltoastrelid)
{
count = deleteDependencyRecordsFor(RelationRelationId,
relform1->reltoastrelid);
if (count != 1)
elog(ERROR, "expected one dependency record for TOAST table, found %ld",
count);
}
if (relform2->reltoastrelid)
{
count = deleteDependencyRecordsFor(RelationRelationId,
relform2->reltoastrelid);
if (count != 1)
elog(ERROR, "expected one dependency record for TOAST table, found %ld",
count);
}
/* Register new dependencies */
baseobject.classId = RelationRelationId;
baseobject.objectSubId = 0;
toastobject.classId = RelationRelationId;
toastobject.objectSubId = 0;
if (relform1->reltoastrelid)
{
baseobject.objectId = r1;
toastobject.objectId = relform1->reltoastrelid;
recordDependencyOn(&toastobject, &baseobject, DEPENDENCY_INTERNAL);
}
if (relform2->reltoastrelid)
{
baseobject.objectId = r2;
toastobject.objectId = relform2->reltoastrelid;
recordDependencyOn(&toastobject, &baseobject, DEPENDENCY_INTERNAL);
}
}
/*
* Blow away the old relcache entries now. We need this kluge because
* relcache.c keeps a link to the smgr relation for the physical file,
* and that will be out of date as soon as we do
* CommandCounterIncrement. Whichever of the rels is the second to be
* cleared during cache invalidation will have a dangling reference to
* an already-deleted smgr relation. Rather than trying to avoid this
* by ordering operations just so, it's easiest to not have the
* relcache entries there at all. (Fortunately, since one of the
* entries is local in our transaction, it's sufficient to clear out
* our own relcache this way; the problem cannot arise for other
* backends when they see our update on the non-local relation.)
*/
RelationForgetRelation(r1);
RelationForgetRelation(r2);
/* Clean up. */
heap_freetuple(reltup1);
heap_freetuple(reltup2);
heap_close(relRelation, RowExclusiveLock);
}
/*
* Get a list of tables that the current user owns and
* have indisclustered set. Return the list in a List * of rvsToCluster
* with the tableOid and the indexOid on which the table is already
* clustered.
*/
static List *
get_tables_to_cluster(MemoryContext cluster_context)
{
Relation indRelation;
HeapScanDesc scan;
ScanKeyData entry;
HeapTuple indexTuple;
Form_pg_index index;
MemoryContext old_context;
RelToCluster *rvtc;
List *rvs = NIL;
/*
* Get all indexes that have indisclustered set and are owned by
* appropriate user. System relations or nailed-in relations cannot
* ever have indisclustered set, because CLUSTER will refuse to set it
* when called with one of them as argument.
*/
indRelation = heap_open(IndexRelationId, AccessShareLock);
ScanKeyInit(&entry,
Anum_pg_index_indisclustered,
BTEqualStrategyNumber, F_BOOLEQ,
BoolGetDatum(true));
scan = heap_beginscan(indRelation, SnapshotNow, 1, &entry);
while ((indexTuple = heap_getnext(scan, ForwardScanDirection)) != NULL)
{
index = (Form_pg_index) GETSTRUCT(indexTuple);
if (!pg_class_ownercheck(index->indrelid, GetUserId()))
continue;
/*
* We have to build the list in a different memory context so it
* will survive the cross-transaction processing
*/
old_context = MemoryContextSwitchTo(cluster_context);
rvtc = (RelToCluster *) palloc(sizeof(RelToCluster));
rvtc->tableOid = index->indrelid;
rvtc->indexOid = index->indexrelid;
rvs = lcons(rvtc, rvs);
MemoryContextSwitchTo(old_context);
}
heap_endscan(scan);
relation_close(indRelation, AccessShareLock);
return rvs;
}
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