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- /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
- *
- * expandeddatum.h
- * Declarations for access to "expanded" value representations.
- *
- * Complex data types, particularly container types such as arrays and
- * records, usually have on-disk representations that are compact but not
- * especially convenient to modify. What's more, when we do modify them,
- * having to recopy all the rest of the value can be extremely inefficient.
- * Therefore, we provide a notion of an "expanded" representation that is used
- * only in memory and is optimized more for computation than storage.
- * The format appearing on disk is called the data type's "flattened"
- * representation, since it is required to be a contiguous blob of bytes --
- * but the type can have an expanded representation that is not. Data types
- * must provide means to translate an expanded representation back to
- * flattened form.
- *
- * An expanded object is meant to survive across multiple operations, but
- * not to be enormously long-lived; for example it might be a local variable
- * in a PL/pgSQL procedure. So its extra bulk compared to the on-disk format
- * is a worthwhile trade-off.
- *
- * References to expanded objects are a type of TOAST pointer.
- * Because of longstanding conventions in Postgres, this means that the
- * flattened form of such an object must always be a varlena object.
- * Fortunately that's no restriction in practice.
- *
- * There are actually two kinds of TOAST pointers for expanded objects:
- * read-only and read-write pointers. Possession of one of the latter
- * authorizes a function to modify the value in-place rather than copying it
- * as would normally be required. Functions should always return a read-write
- * pointer to any new expanded object they create. Functions that modify an
- * argument value in-place must take care that they do not corrupt the old
- * value if they fail partway through.
- *
- *
- * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2022, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
- * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
- *
- * src/include/utils/expandeddatum.h
- *
- *-------------------------------------------------------------------------
- */
- #ifndef EXPANDEDDATUM_H
- #define EXPANDEDDATUM_H
- /* Size of an EXTERNAL datum that contains a pointer to an expanded object */
- #define EXPANDED_POINTER_SIZE (VARHDRSZ_EXTERNAL + sizeof(varatt_expanded))
- /*
- * "Methods" that must be provided for any expanded object.
- *
- * get_flat_size: compute space needed for flattened representation (total,
- * including header).
- *
- * flatten_into: construct flattened representation in the caller-allocated
- * space at *result, of size allocated_size (which will always be the result
- * of a preceding get_flat_size call; it's passed for cross-checking).
- *
- * The flattened representation must be a valid in-line, non-compressed,
- * 4-byte-header varlena object.
- *
- * Note: construction of a heap tuple from an expanded datum calls
- * get_flat_size twice, so it's worthwhile to make sure that that doesn't
- * incur too much overhead.
- */
- typedef Size (*EOM_get_flat_size_method) (ExpandedObjectHeader *eohptr);
- typedef void (*EOM_flatten_into_method) (ExpandedObjectHeader *eohptr,
- void *result, Size allocated_size);
- /* Struct of function pointers for an expanded object's methods */
- typedef struct ExpandedObjectMethods
- {
- EOM_get_flat_size_method get_flat_size;
- EOM_flatten_into_method flatten_into;
- } ExpandedObjectMethods;
- /*
- * Every expanded object must contain this header; typically the header
- * is embedded in some larger struct that adds type-specific fields.
- *
- * It is presumed that the header object and all subsidiary data are stored
- * in eoh_context, so that the object can be freed by deleting that context,
- * or its storage lifespan can be altered by reparenting the context.
- * (In principle the object could own additional resources, such as malloc'd
- * storage, and use a memory context reset callback to free them upon reset or
- * deletion of eoh_context.)
- *
- * We set up two TOAST pointers within the standard header, one read-write
- * and one read-only. This allows functions to return either kind of pointer
- * without making an additional allocation, and in particular without worrying
- * whether a separately palloc'd object would have sufficient lifespan.
- * But note that these pointers are just a convenience; a pointer object
- * appearing somewhere else would still be legal.
- *
- * The typedef declaration for this appears in postgres.h.
- */
- struct ExpandedObjectHeader
- {
- /* Phony varlena header */
- int32 vl_len_; /* always EOH_HEADER_MAGIC, see below */
- /* Pointer to methods required for object type */
- const ExpandedObjectMethods *eoh_methods;
- /* Memory context containing this header and subsidiary data */
- MemoryContext eoh_context;
- /* Standard R/W TOAST pointer for this object is kept here */
- char eoh_rw_ptr[EXPANDED_POINTER_SIZE];
- /* Standard R/O TOAST pointer for this object is kept here */
- char eoh_ro_ptr[EXPANDED_POINTER_SIZE];
- };
- /*
- * Particularly for read-only functions, it is handy to be able to work with
- * either regular "flat" varlena inputs or expanded inputs of the same data
- * type. To allow determining which case an argument-fetching function has
- * returned, the first int32 of an ExpandedObjectHeader always contains -1
- * (EOH_HEADER_MAGIC to the code). This works since no 4-byte-header varlena
- * could have that as its first 4 bytes. Caution: we could not reliably tell
- * the difference between an ExpandedObjectHeader and a short-header object
- * with this trick. However, it works fine if the argument fetching code
- * always returns either a 4-byte-header flat object or an expanded object.
- */
- #define EOH_HEADER_MAGIC (-1)
- #define VARATT_IS_EXPANDED_HEADER(PTR) \
- (((varattrib_4b *) (PTR))->va_4byte.va_header == (uint32) EOH_HEADER_MAGIC)
- /*
- * Generic support functions for expanded objects.
- * (More of these might be worth inlining later.)
- */
- #define EOHPGetRWDatum(eohptr) PointerGetDatum((eohptr)->eoh_rw_ptr)
- #define EOHPGetRODatum(eohptr) PointerGetDatum((eohptr)->eoh_ro_ptr)
- /* Does the Datum represent a writable expanded object? */
- #define DatumIsReadWriteExpandedObject(d, isnull, typlen) \
- (((isnull) || (typlen) != -1) ? false : \
- VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL_EXPANDED_RW(DatumGetPointer(d)))
- #define MakeExpandedObjectReadOnly(d, isnull, typlen) \
- (((isnull) || (typlen) != -1) ? (d) : \
- MakeExpandedObjectReadOnlyInternal(d))
- extern ExpandedObjectHeader *DatumGetEOHP(Datum d);
- extern void EOH_init_header(ExpandedObjectHeader *eohptr,
- const ExpandedObjectMethods *methods,
- MemoryContext obj_context);
- extern Size EOH_get_flat_size(ExpandedObjectHeader *eohptr);
- extern void EOH_flatten_into(ExpandedObjectHeader *eohptr,
- void *result, Size allocated_size);
- extern Datum MakeExpandedObjectReadOnlyInternal(Datum d);
- extern Datum TransferExpandedObject(Datum d, MemoryContext new_parent);
- extern void DeleteExpandedObject(Datum d);
- #endif /* EXPANDEDDATUM_H */
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