Mercurial > audlegacy
view sqlite/where.c @ 1695:3cf80d8a6d8d trunk
[svn] - Removed .cpp.o target since we don't have any .cpp files anymore.
- A test build then revealed that we still had two .cpp files in
Plugins/Input/musepack, fixed that.
- Moved nenolod's fix from init.mk to objective.mk.
- Removed call to ldconfig in Makefile and replaced it with a hint to
call ldconfig manually, since ldconfig without parameters breaks some
systems (mainly OpenBSD).
- I hope I did not forget to list a change I did ;)
author | js |
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date | Fri, 15 Sep 2006 06:36:26 -0700 |
parents | b6b61becdf4e |
children |
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/* ** 2001 September 15 ** ** The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of ** a legal notice, here is a blessing: ** ** May you do good and not evil. ** May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others. ** May you share freely, never taking more than you give. ** ************************************************************************* ** This module contains C code that generates VDBE code used to process ** the WHERE clause of SQL statements. This module is reponsible for ** generating the code that loops through a table looking for applicable ** rows. Indices are selected and used to speed the search when doing ** so is applicable. Because this module is responsible for selecting ** indices, you might also think of this module as the "query optimizer". ** ** $Id: where.c,v 1.209 2006/06/06 11:45:55 drh Exp $ */ #include "sqliteInt.h" /* ** The number of bits in a Bitmask. "BMS" means "BitMask Size". */ #define BMS (sizeof(Bitmask)*8) /* ** Determine the number of elements in an array. */ #define ARRAYSIZE(X) (sizeof(X)/sizeof(X[0])) /* ** Trace output macros */ #if defined(SQLITE_TEST) || defined(SQLITE_DEBUG) int sqlite3_where_trace = 0; # define TRACE(X) if(sqlite3_where_trace) sqlite3DebugPrintf X #else # define TRACE(X) #endif /* Forward reference */ typedef struct WhereClause WhereClause; /* ** The query generator uses an array of instances of this structure to ** help it analyze the subexpressions of the WHERE clause. Each WHERE ** clause subexpression is separated from the others by an AND operator. ** ** All WhereTerms are collected into a single WhereClause structure. ** The following identity holds: ** ** WhereTerm.pWC->a[WhereTerm.idx] == WhereTerm ** ** When a term is of the form: ** ** X <op> <expr> ** ** where X is a column name and <op> is one of certain operators, ** then WhereTerm.leftCursor and WhereTerm.leftColumn record the ** cursor number and column number for X. WhereTerm.operator records ** the <op> using a bitmask encoding defined by WO_xxx below. The ** use of a bitmask encoding for the operator allows us to search ** quickly for terms that match any of several different operators. ** ** prereqRight and prereqAll record sets of cursor numbers, ** but they do so indirectly. A single ExprMaskSet structure translates ** cursor number into bits and the translated bit is stored in the prereq ** fields. The translation is used in order to maximize the number of ** bits that will fit in a Bitmask. The VDBE cursor numbers might be ** spread out over the non-negative integers. For example, the cursor ** numbers might be 3, 8, 9, 10, 20, 23, 41, and 45. The ExprMaskSet ** translates these sparse cursor numbers into consecutive integers ** beginning with 0 in order to make the best possible use of the available ** bits in the Bitmask. So, in the example above, the cursor numbers ** would be mapped into integers 0 through 7. */ typedef struct WhereTerm WhereTerm; struct WhereTerm { Expr *pExpr; /* Pointer to the subexpression */ i16 iParent; /* Disable pWC->a[iParent] when this term disabled */ i16 leftCursor; /* Cursor number of X in "X <op> <expr>" */ i16 leftColumn; /* Column number of X in "X <op> <expr>" */ u16 eOperator; /* A WO_xx value describing <op> */ u8 flags; /* Bit flags. See below */ u8 nChild; /* Number of children that must disable us */ WhereClause *pWC; /* The clause this term is part of */ Bitmask prereqRight; /* Bitmask of tables used by pRight */ Bitmask prereqAll; /* Bitmask of tables referenced by p */ }; /* ** Allowed values of WhereTerm.flags */ #define TERM_DYNAMIC 0x01 /* Need to call sqlite3ExprDelete(pExpr) */ #define TERM_VIRTUAL 0x02 /* Added by the optimizer. Do not code */ #define TERM_CODED 0x04 /* This term is already coded */ #define TERM_COPIED 0x08 /* Has a child */ #define TERM_OR_OK 0x10 /* Used during OR-clause processing */ /* ** An instance of the following structure holds all information about a ** WHERE clause. Mostly this is a container for one or more WhereTerms. */ struct WhereClause { Parse *pParse; /* The parser context */ int nTerm; /* Number of terms */ int nSlot; /* Number of entries in a[] */ WhereTerm *a; /* Each a[] describes a term of the WHERE cluase */ WhereTerm aStatic[10]; /* Initial static space for a[] */ }; /* ** An instance of the following structure keeps track of a mapping ** between VDBE cursor numbers and bits of the bitmasks in WhereTerm. ** ** The VDBE cursor numbers are small integers contained in ** SrcList_item.iCursor and Expr.iTable fields. For any given WHERE ** clause, the cursor numbers might not begin with 0 and they might ** contain gaps in the numbering sequence. But we want to make maximum ** use of the bits in our bitmasks. This structure provides a mapping ** from the sparse cursor numbers into consecutive integers beginning ** with 0. ** ** If ExprMaskSet.ix[A]==B it means that The A-th bit of a Bitmask ** corresponds VDBE cursor number B. The A-th bit of a bitmask is 1<<A. ** ** For example, if the WHERE clause expression used these VDBE ** cursors: 4, 5, 8, 29, 57, 73. Then the ExprMaskSet structure ** would map those cursor numbers into bits 0 through 5. ** ** Note that the mapping is not necessarily ordered. In the example ** above, the mapping might go like this: 4->3, 5->1, 8->2, 29->0, ** 57->5, 73->4. Or one of 719 other combinations might be used. It ** does not really matter. What is important is that sparse cursor ** numbers all get mapped into bit numbers that begin with 0 and contain ** no gaps. */ typedef struct ExprMaskSet ExprMaskSet; struct ExprMaskSet { int n; /* Number of assigned cursor values */ int ix[sizeof(Bitmask)*8]; /* Cursor assigned to each bit */ }; /* ** Bitmasks for the operators that indices are able to exploit. An ** OR-ed combination of these values can be used when searching for ** terms in the where clause. */ #define WO_IN 1 #define WO_EQ 2 #define WO_LT (WO_EQ<<(TK_LT-TK_EQ)) #define WO_LE (WO_EQ<<(TK_LE-TK_EQ)) #define WO_GT (WO_EQ<<(TK_GT-TK_EQ)) #define WO_GE (WO_EQ<<(TK_GE-TK_EQ)) /* ** Value for flags returned by bestIndex() */ #define WHERE_ROWID_EQ 0x0001 /* rowid=EXPR or rowid IN (...) */ #define WHERE_ROWID_RANGE 0x0002 /* rowid<EXPR and/or rowid>EXPR */ #define WHERE_COLUMN_EQ 0x0010 /* x=EXPR or x IN (...) */ #define WHERE_COLUMN_RANGE 0x0020 /* x<EXPR and/or x>EXPR */ #define WHERE_COLUMN_IN 0x0040 /* x IN (...) */ #define WHERE_TOP_LIMIT 0x0100 /* x<EXPR or x<=EXPR constraint */ #define WHERE_BTM_LIMIT 0x0200 /* x>EXPR or x>=EXPR constraint */ #define WHERE_IDX_ONLY 0x0800 /* Use index only - omit table */ #define WHERE_ORDERBY 0x1000 /* Output will appear in correct order */ #define WHERE_REVERSE 0x2000 /* Scan in reverse order */ #define WHERE_UNIQUE 0x4000 /* Selects no more than one row */ /* ** Initialize a preallocated WhereClause structure. */ static void whereClauseInit(WhereClause *pWC, Parse *pParse){ pWC->pParse = pParse; pWC->nTerm = 0; pWC->nSlot = ARRAYSIZE(pWC->aStatic); pWC->a = pWC->aStatic; } /* ** Deallocate a WhereClause structure. The WhereClause structure ** itself is not freed. This routine is the inverse of whereClauseInit(). */ static void whereClauseClear(WhereClause *pWC){ int i; WhereTerm *a; for(i=pWC->nTerm-1, a=pWC->a; i>=0; i--, a++){ if( a->flags & TERM_DYNAMIC ){ sqlite3ExprDelete(a->pExpr); } } if( pWC->a!=pWC->aStatic ){ sqliteFree(pWC->a); } } /* ** Add a new entries to the WhereClause structure. Increase the allocated ** space as necessary. ** ** WARNING: This routine might reallocate the space used to store ** WhereTerms. All pointers to WhereTerms should be invalided after ** calling this routine. Such pointers may be reinitialized by referencing ** the pWC->a[] array. */ static int whereClauseInsert(WhereClause *pWC, Expr *p, int flags){ WhereTerm *pTerm; int idx; if( pWC->nTerm>=pWC->nSlot ){ WhereTerm *pOld = pWC->a; pWC->a = sqliteMalloc( sizeof(pWC->a[0])*pWC->nSlot*2 ); if( pWC->a==0 ) return 0; memcpy(pWC->a, pOld, sizeof(pWC->a[0])*pWC->nTerm); if( pOld!=pWC->aStatic ){ sqliteFree(pOld); } pWC->nSlot *= 2; } pTerm = &pWC->a[idx = pWC->nTerm]; pWC->nTerm++; pTerm->pExpr = p; pTerm->flags = flags; pTerm->pWC = pWC; pTerm->iParent = -1; return idx; } /* ** This routine identifies subexpressions in the WHERE clause where ** each subexpression is separated by the AND operator or some other ** operator specified in the op parameter. The WhereClause structure ** is filled with pointers to subexpressions. For example: ** ** WHERE a=='hello' AND coalesce(b,11)<10 AND (c+12!=d OR c==22) ** \________/ \_______________/ \________________/ ** slot[0] slot[1] slot[2] ** ** The original WHERE clause in pExpr is unaltered. All this routine ** does is make slot[] entries point to substructure within pExpr. ** ** In the previous sentence and in the diagram, "slot[]" refers to ** the WhereClause.a[] array. This array grows as needed to contain ** all terms of the WHERE clause. */ static void whereSplit(WhereClause *pWC, Expr *pExpr, int op){ if( pExpr==0 ) return; if( pExpr->op!=op ){ whereClauseInsert(pWC, pExpr, 0); }else{ whereSplit(pWC, pExpr->pLeft, op); whereSplit(pWC, pExpr->pRight, op); } } /* ** Initialize an expression mask set */ #define initMaskSet(P) memset(P, 0, sizeof(*P)) /* ** Return the bitmask for the given cursor number. Return 0 if ** iCursor is not in the set. */ static Bitmask getMask(ExprMaskSet *pMaskSet, int iCursor){ int i; for(i=0; i<pMaskSet->n; i++){ if( pMaskSet->ix[i]==iCursor ){ return ((Bitmask)1)<<i; } } return 0; } /* ** Create a new mask for cursor iCursor. ** ** There is one cursor per table in the FROM clause. The number of ** tables in the FROM clause is limited by a test early in the ** sqlite3WhereBegin() routine. So we know that the pMaskSet->ix[] ** array will never overflow. */ static void createMask(ExprMaskSet *pMaskSet, int iCursor){ assert( pMaskSet->n < ARRAYSIZE(pMaskSet->ix) ); pMaskSet->ix[pMaskSet->n++] = iCursor; } /* ** This routine walks (recursively) an expression tree and generates ** a bitmask indicating which tables are used in that expression ** tree. ** ** In order for this routine to work, the calling function must have ** previously invoked sqlite3ExprResolveNames() on the expression. See ** the header comment on that routine for additional information. ** The sqlite3ExprResolveNames() routines looks for column names and ** sets their opcodes to TK_COLUMN and their Expr.iTable fields to ** the VDBE cursor number of the table. This routine just has to ** translate the cursor numbers into bitmask values and OR all ** the bitmasks together. */ static Bitmask exprListTableUsage(ExprMaskSet*, ExprList*); static Bitmask exprSelectTableUsage(ExprMaskSet*, Select*); static Bitmask exprTableUsage(ExprMaskSet *pMaskSet, Expr *p){ Bitmask mask = 0; if( p==0 ) return 0; if( p->op==TK_COLUMN ){ mask = getMask(pMaskSet, p->iTable); return mask; } mask = exprTableUsage(pMaskSet, p->pRight); mask |= exprTableUsage(pMaskSet, p->pLeft); mask |= exprListTableUsage(pMaskSet, p->pList); mask |= exprSelectTableUsage(pMaskSet, p->pSelect); return mask; } static Bitmask exprListTableUsage(ExprMaskSet *pMaskSet, ExprList *pList){ int i; Bitmask mask = 0; if( pList ){ for(i=0; i<pList->nExpr; i++){ mask |= exprTableUsage(pMaskSet, pList->a[i].pExpr); } } return mask; } static Bitmask exprSelectTableUsage(ExprMaskSet *pMaskSet, Select *pS){ Bitmask mask; if( pS==0 ){ mask = 0; }else{ mask = exprListTableUsage(pMaskSet, pS->pEList); mask |= exprListTableUsage(pMaskSet, pS->pGroupBy); mask |= exprListTableUsage(pMaskSet, pS->pOrderBy); mask |= exprTableUsage(pMaskSet, pS->pWhere); mask |= exprTableUsage(pMaskSet, pS->pHaving); } return mask; } /* ** Return TRUE if the given operator is one of the operators that is ** allowed for an indexable WHERE clause term. The allowed operators are ** "=", "<", ">", "<=", ">=", and "IN". */ static int allowedOp(int op){ assert( TK_GT>TK_EQ && TK_GT<TK_GE ); assert( TK_LT>TK_EQ && TK_LT<TK_GE ); assert( TK_LE>TK_EQ && TK_LE<TK_GE ); assert( TK_GE==TK_EQ+4 ); return op==TK_IN || (op>=TK_EQ && op<=TK_GE); } /* ** Swap two objects of type T. */ #define SWAP(TYPE,A,B) {TYPE t=A; A=B; B=t;} /* ** Commute a comparision operator. Expressions of the form "X op Y" ** are converted into "Y op X". */ static void exprCommute(Expr *pExpr){ assert( allowedOp(pExpr->op) && pExpr->op!=TK_IN ); SWAP(CollSeq*,pExpr->pRight->pColl,pExpr->pLeft->pColl); SWAP(Expr*,pExpr->pRight,pExpr->pLeft); if( pExpr->op>=TK_GT ){ assert( TK_LT==TK_GT+2 ); assert( TK_GE==TK_LE+2 ); assert( TK_GT>TK_EQ ); assert( TK_GT<TK_LE ); assert( pExpr->op>=TK_GT && pExpr->op<=TK_GE ); pExpr->op = ((pExpr->op-TK_GT)^2)+TK_GT; } } /* ** Translate from TK_xx operator to WO_xx bitmask. */ static int operatorMask(int op){ int c; assert( allowedOp(op) ); if( op==TK_IN ){ c = WO_IN; }else{ c = WO_EQ<<(op-TK_EQ); } assert( op!=TK_IN || c==WO_IN ); assert( op!=TK_EQ || c==WO_EQ ); assert( op!=TK_LT || c==WO_LT ); assert( op!=TK_LE || c==WO_LE ); assert( op!=TK_GT || c==WO_GT ); assert( op!=TK_GE || c==WO_GE ); return c; } /* ** Search for a term in the WHERE clause that is of the form "X <op> <expr>" ** where X is a reference to the iColumn of table iCur and <op> is one of ** the WO_xx operator codes specified by the op parameter. ** Return a pointer to the term. Return 0 if not found. */ static WhereTerm *findTerm( WhereClause *pWC, /* The WHERE clause to be searched */ int iCur, /* Cursor number of LHS */ int iColumn, /* Column number of LHS */ Bitmask notReady, /* RHS must not overlap with this mask */ u16 op, /* Mask of WO_xx values describing operator */ Index *pIdx /* Must be compatible with this index, if not NULL */ ){ WhereTerm *pTerm; int k; for(pTerm=pWC->a, k=pWC->nTerm; k; k--, pTerm++){ if( pTerm->leftCursor==iCur && (pTerm->prereqRight & notReady)==0 && pTerm->leftColumn==iColumn && (pTerm->eOperator & op)!=0 ){ if( iCur>=0 && pIdx ){ Expr *pX = pTerm->pExpr; CollSeq *pColl; char idxaff; int j; Parse *pParse = pWC->pParse; idxaff = pIdx->pTable->aCol[iColumn].affinity; if( !sqlite3IndexAffinityOk(pX, idxaff) ) continue; pColl = sqlite3ExprCollSeq(pParse, pX->pLeft); if( !pColl ){ if( pX->pRight ){ pColl = sqlite3ExprCollSeq(pParse, pX->pRight); } if( !pColl ){ pColl = pParse->db->pDfltColl; } } for(j=0; j<pIdx->nColumn && pIdx->aiColumn[j]!=iColumn; j++){} assert( j<pIdx->nColumn ); if( sqlite3StrICmp(pColl->zName, pIdx->azColl[j]) ) continue; } return pTerm; } } return 0; } /* Forward reference */ static void exprAnalyze(SrcList*, ExprMaskSet*, WhereClause*, int); /* ** Call exprAnalyze on all terms in a WHERE clause. ** ** */ static void exprAnalyzeAll( SrcList *pTabList, /* the FROM clause */ ExprMaskSet *pMaskSet, /* table masks */ WhereClause *pWC /* the WHERE clause to be analyzed */ ){ int i; for(i=pWC->nTerm-1; i>=0; i--){ exprAnalyze(pTabList, pMaskSet, pWC, i); } } #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_LIKE_OPTIMIZATION /* ** Check to see if the given expression is a LIKE or GLOB operator that ** can be optimized using inequality constraints. Return TRUE if it is ** so and false if not. ** ** In order for the operator to be optimizible, the RHS must be a string ** literal that does not begin with a wildcard. */ static int isLikeOrGlob( sqlite3 *db, /* The database */ Expr *pExpr, /* Test this expression */ int *pnPattern, /* Number of non-wildcard prefix characters */ int *pisComplete /* True if the only wildcard is % in the last character */ ){ const char *z; Expr *pRight, *pLeft; ExprList *pList; int c, cnt; int noCase; char wc[3]; CollSeq *pColl; if( !sqlite3IsLikeFunction(db, pExpr, &noCase, wc) ){ return 0; } pList = pExpr->pList; pRight = pList->a[0].pExpr; if( pRight->op!=TK_STRING ){ return 0; } pLeft = pList->a[1].pExpr; if( pLeft->op!=TK_COLUMN ){ return 0; } pColl = pLeft->pColl; if( pColl==0 ){ pColl = db->pDfltColl; } if( (pColl->type!=SQLITE_COLL_BINARY || noCase) && (pColl->type!=SQLITE_COLL_NOCASE || !noCase) ){ return 0; } sqlite3DequoteExpr(pRight); z = (char *)pRight->token.z; for(cnt=0; (c=z[cnt])!=0 && c!=wc[0] && c!=wc[1] && c!=wc[2]; cnt++){} if( cnt==0 || 255==(u8)z[cnt] ){ return 0; } *pisComplete = z[cnt]==wc[0] && z[cnt+1]==0; *pnPattern = cnt; return 1; } #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_LIKE_OPTIMIZATION */ /* ** If the pBase expression originated in the ON or USING clause of ** a join, then transfer the appropriate markings over to derived. */ static void transferJoinMarkings(Expr *pDerived, Expr *pBase){ pDerived->flags |= pBase->flags & EP_FromJoin; pDerived->iRightJoinTable = pBase->iRightJoinTable; } /* ** The input to this routine is an WhereTerm structure with only the ** "pExpr" field filled in. The job of this routine is to analyze the ** subexpression and populate all the other fields of the WhereTerm ** structure. ** ** If the expression is of the form "<expr> <op> X" it gets commuted ** to the standard form of "X <op> <expr>". If the expression is of ** the form "X <op> Y" where both X and Y are columns, then the original ** expression is unchanged and a new virtual expression of the form ** "Y <op> X" is added to the WHERE clause and analyzed separately. */ static void exprAnalyze( SrcList *pSrc, /* the FROM clause */ ExprMaskSet *pMaskSet, /* table masks */ WhereClause *pWC, /* the WHERE clause */ int idxTerm /* Index of the term to be analyzed */ ){ WhereTerm *pTerm = &pWC->a[idxTerm]; Expr *pExpr = pTerm->pExpr; Bitmask prereqLeft; Bitmask prereqAll; int nPattern; int isComplete; if( sqlite3MallocFailed() ) return; prereqLeft = exprTableUsage(pMaskSet, pExpr->pLeft); if( pExpr->op==TK_IN ){ assert( pExpr->pRight==0 ); pTerm->prereqRight = exprListTableUsage(pMaskSet, pExpr->pList) | exprSelectTableUsage(pMaskSet, pExpr->pSelect); }else{ pTerm->prereqRight = exprTableUsage(pMaskSet, pExpr->pRight); } prereqAll = exprTableUsage(pMaskSet, pExpr); if( ExprHasProperty(pExpr, EP_FromJoin) ){ prereqAll |= getMask(pMaskSet, pExpr->iRightJoinTable); } pTerm->prereqAll = prereqAll; pTerm->leftCursor = -1; pTerm->iParent = -1; pTerm->eOperator = 0; if( allowedOp(pExpr->op) && (pTerm->prereqRight & prereqLeft)==0 ){ Expr *pLeft = pExpr->pLeft; Expr *pRight = pExpr->pRight; if( pLeft->op==TK_COLUMN ){ pTerm->leftCursor = pLeft->iTable; pTerm->leftColumn = pLeft->iColumn; pTerm->eOperator = operatorMask(pExpr->op); } if( pRight && pRight->op==TK_COLUMN ){ WhereTerm *pNew; Expr *pDup; if( pTerm->leftCursor>=0 ){ int idxNew; pDup = sqlite3ExprDup(pExpr); idxNew = whereClauseInsert(pWC, pDup, TERM_VIRTUAL|TERM_DYNAMIC); if( idxNew==0 ) return; pNew = &pWC->a[idxNew]; pNew->iParent = idxTerm; pTerm = &pWC->a[idxTerm]; pTerm->nChild = 1; pTerm->flags |= TERM_COPIED; }else{ pDup = pExpr; pNew = pTerm; } exprCommute(pDup); pLeft = pDup->pLeft; pNew->leftCursor = pLeft->iTable; pNew->leftColumn = pLeft->iColumn; pNew->prereqRight = prereqLeft; pNew->prereqAll = prereqAll; pNew->eOperator = operatorMask(pDup->op); } } #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_BETWEEN_OPTIMIZATION /* If a term is the BETWEEN operator, create two new virtual terms ** that define the range that the BETWEEN implements. */ else if( pExpr->op==TK_BETWEEN ){ ExprList *pList = pExpr->pList; int i; static const u8 ops[] = {TK_GE, TK_LE}; assert( pList!=0 ); assert( pList->nExpr==2 ); for(i=0; i<2; i++){ Expr *pNewExpr; int idxNew; pNewExpr = sqlite3Expr(ops[i], sqlite3ExprDup(pExpr->pLeft), sqlite3ExprDup(pList->a[i].pExpr), 0); idxNew = whereClauseInsert(pWC, pNewExpr, TERM_VIRTUAL|TERM_DYNAMIC); exprAnalyze(pSrc, pMaskSet, pWC, idxNew); pTerm = &pWC->a[idxTerm]; pWC->a[idxNew].iParent = idxTerm; } pTerm->nChild = 2; } #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_BETWEEN_OPTIMIZATION */ #if !defined(SQLITE_OMIT_OR_OPTIMIZATION) && !defined(SQLITE_OMIT_SUBQUERY) /* Attempt to convert OR-connected terms into an IN operator so that ** they can make use of indices. Example: ** ** x = expr1 OR expr2 = x OR x = expr3 ** ** is converted into ** ** x IN (expr1,expr2,expr3) ** ** This optimization must be omitted if OMIT_SUBQUERY is defined because ** the compiler for the the IN operator is part of sub-queries. */ else if( pExpr->op==TK_OR ){ int ok; int i, j; int iColumn, iCursor; WhereClause sOr; WhereTerm *pOrTerm; assert( (pTerm->flags & TERM_DYNAMIC)==0 ); whereClauseInit(&sOr, pWC->pParse); whereSplit(&sOr, pExpr, TK_OR); exprAnalyzeAll(pSrc, pMaskSet, &sOr); assert( sOr.nTerm>0 ); j = 0; do{ iColumn = sOr.a[j].leftColumn; iCursor = sOr.a[j].leftCursor; ok = iCursor>=0; for(i=sOr.nTerm-1, pOrTerm=sOr.a; i>=0 && ok; i--, pOrTerm++){ if( pOrTerm->eOperator!=WO_EQ ){ goto or_not_possible; } if( pOrTerm->leftCursor==iCursor && pOrTerm->leftColumn==iColumn ){ pOrTerm->flags |= TERM_OR_OK; }else if( (pOrTerm->flags & TERM_COPIED)!=0 || ((pOrTerm->flags & TERM_VIRTUAL)!=0 && (sOr.a[pOrTerm->iParent].flags & TERM_OR_OK)!=0) ){ pOrTerm->flags &= ~TERM_OR_OK; }else{ ok = 0; } } }while( !ok && (sOr.a[j++].flags & TERM_COPIED)!=0 && j<sOr.nTerm ); if( ok ){ ExprList *pList = 0; Expr *pNew, *pDup; for(i=sOr.nTerm-1, pOrTerm=sOr.a; i>=0 && ok; i--, pOrTerm++){ if( (pOrTerm->flags & TERM_OR_OK)==0 ) continue; pDup = sqlite3ExprDup(pOrTerm->pExpr->pRight); pList = sqlite3ExprListAppend(pList, pDup, 0); } pDup = sqlite3Expr(TK_COLUMN, 0, 0, 0); if( pDup ){ pDup->iTable = iCursor; pDup->iColumn = iColumn; } pNew = sqlite3Expr(TK_IN, pDup, 0, 0); if( pNew ){ int idxNew; transferJoinMarkings(pNew, pExpr); pNew->pList = pList; idxNew = whereClauseInsert(pWC, pNew, TERM_VIRTUAL|TERM_DYNAMIC); exprAnalyze(pSrc, pMaskSet, pWC, idxNew); pTerm = &pWC->a[idxTerm]; pWC->a[idxNew].iParent = idxTerm; pTerm->nChild = 1; }else{ sqlite3ExprListDelete(pList); } } or_not_possible: whereClauseClear(&sOr); } #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_OR_OPTIMIZATION */ #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_LIKE_OPTIMIZATION /* Add constraints to reduce the search space on a LIKE or GLOB ** operator. */ if( isLikeOrGlob(pWC->pParse->db, pExpr, &nPattern, &isComplete) ){ Expr *pLeft, *pRight; Expr *pStr1, *pStr2; Expr *pNewExpr1, *pNewExpr2; int idxNew1, idxNew2; pLeft = pExpr->pList->a[1].pExpr; pRight = pExpr->pList->a[0].pExpr; pStr1 = sqlite3Expr(TK_STRING, 0, 0, 0); if( pStr1 ){ sqlite3TokenCopy(&pStr1->token, &pRight->token); pStr1->token.n = nPattern; } pStr2 = sqlite3ExprDup(pStr1); if( pStr2 ){ assert( pStr2->token.dyn ); ++*(u8*)&pStr2->token.z[nPattern-1]; } pNewExpr1 = sqlite3Expr(TK_GE, sqlite3ExprDup(pLeft), pStr1, 0); idxNew1 = whereClauseInsert(pWC, pNewExpr1, TERM_VIRTUAL|TERM_DYNAMIC); exprAnalyze(pSrc, pMaskSet, pWC, idxNew1); pNewExpr2 = sqlite3Expr(TK_LT, sqlite3ExprDup(pLeft), pStr2, 0); idxNew2 = whereClauseInsert(pWC, pNewExpr2, TERM_VIRTUAL|TERM_DYNAMIC); exprAnalyze(pSrc, pMaskSet, pWC, idxNew2); pTerm = &pWC->a[idxTerm]; if( isComplete ){ pWC->a[idxNew1].iParent = idxTerm; pWC->a[idxNew2].iParent = idxTerm; pTerm->nChild = 2; } } #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_LIKE_OPTIMIZATION */ } /* ** This routine decides if pIdx can be used to satisfy the ORDER BY ** clause. If it can, it returns 1. If pIdx cannot satisfy the ** ORDER BY clause, this routine returns 0. ** ** pOrderBy is an ORDER BY clause from a SELECT statement. pTab is the ** left-most table in the FROM clause of that same SELECT statement and ** the table has a cursor number of "base". pIdx is an index on pTab. ** ** nEqCol is the number of columns of pIdx that are used as equality ** constraints. Any of these columns may be missing from the ORDER BY ** clause and the match can still be a success. ** ** All terms of the ORDER BY that match against the index must be either ** ASC or DESC. (Terms of the ORDER BY clause past the end of a UNIQUE ** index do not need to satisfy this constraint.) The *pbRev value is ** set to 1 if the ORDER BY clause is all DESC and it is set to 0 if ** the ORDER BY clause is all ASC. */ static int isSortingIndex( Parse *pParse, /* Parsing context */ Index *pIdx, /* The index we are testing */ int base, /* Cursor number for the table to be sorted */ ExprList *pOrderBy, /* The ORDER BY clause */ int nEqCol, /* Number of index columns with == constraints */ int *pbRev /* Set to 1 if ORDER BY is DESC */ ){ int i, j; /* Loop counters */ int sortOrder = 0; /* XOR of index and ORDER BY sort direction */ int nTerm; /* Number of ORDER BY terms */ struct ExprList_item *pTerm; /* A term of the ORDER BY clause */ sqlite3 *db = pParse->db; assert( pOrderBy!=0 ); nTerm = pOrderBy->nExpr; assert( nTerm>0 ); /* Match terms of the ORDER BY clause against columns of ** the index. */ for(i=j=0, pTerm=pOrderBy->a; j<nTerm && i<pIdx->nColumn; i++){ Expr *pExpr; /* The expression of the ORDER BY pTerm */ CollSeq *pColl; /* The collating sequence of pExpr */ int termSortOrder; /* Sort order for this term */ pExpr = pTerm->pExpr; if( pExpr->op!=TK_COLUMN || pExpr->iTable!=base ){ /* Can not use an index sort on anything that is not a column in the ** left-most table of the FROM clause */ return 0; } pColl = sqlite3ExprCollSeq(pParse, pExpr); if( !pColl ) pColl = db->pDfltColl; if( pExpr->iColumn!=pIdx->aiColumn[i] || sqlite3StrICmp(pColl->zName, pIdx->azColl[i]) ){ /* Term j of the ORDER BY clause does not match column i of the index */ if( i<nEqCol ){ /* If an index column that is constrained by == fails to match an ** ORDER BY term, that is OK. Just ignore that column of the index */ continue; }else{ /* If an index column fails to match and is not constrained by == ** then the index cannot satisfy the ORDER BY constraint. */ return 0; } } assert( pIdx->aSortOrder!=0 ); assert( pTerm->sortOrder==0 || pTerm->sortOrder==1 ); assert( pIdx->aSortOrder[i]==0 || pIdx->aSortOrder[i]==1 ); termSortOrder = pIdx->aSortOrder[i] ^ pTerm->sortOrder; if( i>nEqCol ){ if( termSortOrder!=sortOrder ){ /* Indices can only be used if all ORDER BY terms past the ** equality constraints are all either DESC or ASC. */ return 0; } }else{ sortOrder = termSortOrder; } j++; pTerm++; } /* The index can be used for sorting if all terms of the ORDER BY clause ** are covered. */ if( j>=nTerm ){ *pbRev = sortOrder!=0; return 1; } return 0; } /* ** Check table to see if the ORDER BY clause in pOrderBy can be satisfied ** by sorting in order of ROWID. Return true if so and set *pbRev to be ** true for reverse ROWID and false for forward ROWID order. */ static int sortableByRowid( int base, /* Cursor number for table to be sorted */ ExprList *pOrderBy, /* The ORDER BY clause */ int *pbRev /* Set to 1 if ORDER BY is DESC */ ){ Expr *p; assert( pOrderBy!=0 ); assert( pOrderBy->nExpr>0 ); p = pOrderBy->a[0].pExpr; if( pOrderBy->nExpr==1 && p->op==TK_COLUMN && p->iTable==base && p->iColumn==-1 ){ *pbRev = pOrderBy->a[0].sortOrder; return 1; } return 0; } /* ** Prepare a crude estimate of the logarithm of the input value. ** The results need not be exact. This is only used for estimating ** the total cost of performing operatings with O(logN) or O(NlogN) ** complexity. Because N is just a guess, it is no great tragedy if ** logN is a little off. */ static double estLog(double N){ double logN = 1; double x = 10; while( N>x ){ logN += 1; x *= 10; } return logN; } /* ** Find the best index for accessing a particular table. Return a pointer ** to the index, flags that describe how the index should be used, the ** number of equality constraints, and the "cost" for this index. ** ** The lowest cost index wins. The cost is an estimate of the amount of ** CPU and disk I/O need to process the request using the selected index. ** Factors that influence cost include: ** ** * The estimated number of rows that will be retrieved. (The ** fewer the better.) ** ** * Whether or not sorting must occur. ** ** * Whether or not there must be separate lookups in the ** index and in the main table. ** */ static double bestIndex( Parse *pParse, /* The parsing context */ WhereClause *pWC, /* The WHERE clause */ struct SrcList_item *pSrc, /* The FROM clause term to search */ Bitmask notReady, /* Mask of cursors that are not available */ ExprList *pOrderBy, /* The order by clause */ Index **ppIndex, /* Make *ppIndex point to the best index */ int *pFlags, /* Put flags describing this choice in *pFlags */ int *pnEq /* Put the number of == or IN constraints here */ ){ WhereTerm *pTerm; Index *bestIdx = 0; /* Index that gives the lowest cost */ double lowestCost; /* The cost of using bestIdx */ int bestFlags = 0; /* Flags associated with bestIdx */ int bestNEq = 0; /* Best value for nEq */ int iCur = pSrc->iCursor; /* The cursor of the table to be accessed */ Index *pProbe; /* An index we are evaluating */ int rev; /* True to scan in reverse order */ int flags; /* Flags associated with pProbe */ int nEq; /* Number of == or IN constraints */ double cost; /* Cost of using pProbe */ TRACE(("bestIndex: tbl=%s notReady=%x\n", pSrc->pTab->zName, notReady)); lowestCost = SQLITE_BIG_DBL; pProbe = pSrc->pTab->pIndex; /* If the table has no indices and there are no terms in the where ** clause that refer to the ROWID, then we will never be able to do ** anything other than a full table scan on this table. We might as ** well put it first in the join order. That way, perhaps it can be ** referenced by other tables in the join. */ if( pProbe==0 && findTerm(pWC, iCur, -1, 0, WO_EQ|WO_IN|WO_LT|WO_LE|WO_GT|WO_GE,0)==0 && (pOrderBy==0 || !sortableByRowid(iCur, pOrderBy, &rev)) ){ *pFlags = 0; *ppIndex = 0; *pnEq = 0; return 0.0; } /* Check for a rowid=EXPR or rowid IN (...) constraints */ pTerm = findTerm(pWC, iCur, -1, notReady, WO_EQ|WO_IN, 0); if( pTerm ){ Expr *pExpr; *ppIndex = 0; bestFlags = WHERE_ROWID_EQ; if( pTerm->eOperator & WO_EQ ){ /* Rowid== is always the best pick. Look no further. Because only ** a single row is generated, output is always in sorted order */ *pFlags = WHERE_ROWID_EQ | WHERE_UNIQUE; *pnEq = 1; TRACE(("... best is rowid\n")); return 0.0; }else if( (pExpr = pTerm->pExpr)->pList!=0 ){ /* Rowid IN (LIST): cost is NlogN where N is the number of list ** elements. */ lowestCost = pExpr->pList->nExpr; lowestCost *= estLog(lowestCost); }else{ /* Rowid IN (SELECT): cost is NlogN where N is the number of rows ** in the result of the inner select. We have no way to estimate ** that value so make a wild guess. */ lowestCost = 200; } TRACE(("... rowid IN cost: %.9g\n", lowestCost)); } /* Estimate the cost of a table scan. If we do not know how many ** entries are in the table, use 1 million as a guess. */ cost = pProbe ? pProbe->aiRowEst[0] : 1000000; TRACE(("... table scan base cost: %.9g\n", cost)); flags = WHERE_ROWID_RANGE; /* Check for constraints on a range of rowids in a table scan. */ pTerm = findTerm(pWC, iCur, -1, notReady, WO_LT|WO_LE|WO_GT|WO_GE, 0); if( pTerm ){ if( findTerm(pWC, iCur, -1, notReady, WO_LT|WO_LE, 0) ){ flags |= WHERE_TOP_LIMIT; cost /= 3; /* Guess that rowid<EXPR eliminates two-thirds or rows */ } if( findTerm(pWC, iCur, -1, notReady, WO_GT|WO_GE, 0) ){ flags |= WHERE_BTM_LIMIT; cost /= 3; /* Guess that rowid>EXPR eliminates two-thirds of rows */ } TRACE(("... rowid range reduces cost to %.9g\n", cost)); }else{ flags = 0; } /* If the table scan does not satisfy the ORDER BY clause, increase ** the cost by NlogN to cover the expense of sorting. */ if( pOrderBy ){ if( sortableByRowid(iCur, pOrderBy, &rev) ){ flags |= WHERE_ORDERBY|WHERE_ROWID_RANGE; if( rev ){ flags |= WHERE_REVERSE; } }else{ cost += cost*estLog(cost); TRACE(("... sorting increases cost to %.9g\n", cost)); } } if( cost<lowestCost ){ lowestCost = cost; bestFlags = flags; } /* Look at each index. */ for(; pProbe; pProbe=pProbe->pNext){ int i; /* Loop counter */ double inMultiplier = 1; TRACE(("... index %s:\n", pProbe->zName)); /* Count the number of columns in the index that are satisfied ** by x=EXPR constraints or x IN (...) constraints. */ flags = 0; for(i=0; i<pProbe->nColumn; i++){ int j = pProbe->aiColumn[i]; pTerm = findTerm(pWC, iCur, j, notReady, WO_EQ|WO_IN, pProbe); if( pTerm==0 ) break; flags |= WHERE_COLUMN_EQ; if( pTerm->eOperator & WO_IN ){ Expr *pExpr = pTerm->pExpr; flags |= WHERE_COLUMN_IN; if( pExpr->pSelect!=0 ){ inMultiplier *= 25; }else if( pExpr->pList!=0 ){ inMultiplier *= pExpr->pList->nExpr + 1; } } } cost = pProbe->aiRowEst[i] * inMultiplier * estLog(inMultiplier); nEq = i; if( pProbe->onError!=OE_None && (flags & WHERE_COLUMN_IN)==0 && nEq==pProbe->nColumn ){ flags |= WHERE_UNIQUE; } TRACE(("...... nEq=%d inMult=%.9g cost=%.9g\n", nEq, inMultiplier, cost)); /* Look for range constraints */ if( nEq<pProbe->nColumn ){ int j = pProbe->aiColumn[nEq]; pTerm = findTerm(pWC, iCur, j, notReady, WO_LT|WO_LE|WO_GT|WO_GE, pProbe); if( pTerm ){ flags |= WHERE_COLUMN_RANGE; if( findTerm(pWC, iCur, j, notReady, WO_LT|WO_LE, pProbe) ){ flags |= WHERE_TOP_LIMIT; cost /= 3; } if( findTerm(pWC, iCur, j, notReady, WO_GT|WO_GE, pProbe) ){ flags |= WHERE_BTM_LIMIT; cost /= 3; } TRACE(("...... range reduces cost to %.9g\n", cost)); } } /* Add the additional cost of sorting if that is a factor. */ if( pOrderBy ){ if( (flags & WHERE_COLUMN_IN)==0 && isSortingIndex(pParse,pProbe,iCur,pOrderBy,nEq,&rev) ){ if( flags==0 ){ flags = WHERE_COLUMN_RANGE; } flags |= WHERE_ORDERBY; if( rev ){ flags |= WHERE_REVERSE; } }else{ cost += cost*estLog(cost); TRACE(("...... orderby increases cost to %.9g\n", cost)); } } /* Check to see if we can get away with using just the index without ** ever reading the table. If that is the case, then halve the ** cost of this index. */ if( flags && pSrc->colUsed < (((Bitmask)1)<<(BMS-1)) ){ Bitmask m = pSrc->colUsed; int j; for(j=0; j<pProbe->nColumn; j++){ int x = pProbe->aiColumn[j]; if( x<BMS-1 ){ m &= ~(((Bitmask)1)<<x); } } if( m==0 ){ flags |= WHERE_IDX_ONLY; cost /= 2; TRACE(("...... idx-only reduces cost to %.9g\n", cost)); } } /* If this index has achieved the lowest cost so far, then use it. */ if( cost < lowestCost ){ bestIdx = pProbe; lowestCost = cost; assert( flags!=0 ); bestFlags = flags; bestNEq = nEq; } } /* Report the best result */ *ppIndex = bestIdx; TRACE(("best index is %s, cost=%.9g, flags=%x, nEq=%d\n", bestIdx ? bestIdx->zName : "(none)", lowestCost, bestFlags, bestNEq)); *pFlags = bestFlags; *pnEq = bestNEq; return lowestCost; } /* ** Disable a term in the WHERE clause. Except, do not disable the term ** if it controls a LEFT OUTER JOIN and it did not originate in the ON ** or USING clause of that join. ** ** Consider the term t2.z='ok' in the following queries: ** ** (1) SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 ON t1.a=t2.x WHERE t2.z='ok' ** (2) SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 ON t1.a=t2.x AND t2.z='ok' ** (3) SELECT * FROM t1, t2 WHERE t1.a=t2.x AND t2.z='ok' ** ** The t2.z='ok' is disabled in the in (2) because it originates ** in the ON clause. The term is disabled in (3) because it is not part ** of a LEFT OUTER JOIN. In (1), the term is not disabled. ** ** Disabling a term causes that term to not be tested in the inner loop ** of the join. Disabling is an optimization. When terms are satisfied ** by indices, we disable them to prevent redundant tests in the inner ** loop. We would get the correct results if nothing were ever disabled, ** but joins might run a little slower. The trick is to disable as much ** as we can without disabling too much. If we disabled in (1), we'd get ** the wrong answer. See ticket #813. */ static void disableTerm(WhereLevel *pLevel, WhereTerm *pTerm){ if( pTerm && (pTerm->flags & TERM_CODED)==0 && (pLevel->iLeftJoin==0 || ExprHasProperty(pTerm->pExpr, EP_FromJoin)) ){ pTerm->flags |= TERM_CODED; if( pTerm->iParent>=0 ){ WhereTerm *pOther = &pTerm->pWC->a[pTerm->iParent]; if( (--pOther->nChild)==0 ){ disableTerm(pLevel, pOther); } } } } /* ** Generate code that builds a probe for an index. Details: ** ** * Check the top nColumn entries on the stack. If any ** of those entries are NULL, jump immediately to brk, ** which is the loop exit, since no index entry will match ** if any part of the key is NULL. Pop (nColumn+nExtra) ** elements from the stack. ** ** * Construct a probe entry from the top nColumn entries in ** the stack with affinities appropriate for index pIdx. ** Only nColumn elements are popped from the stack in this case ** (by OP_MakeRecord). ** */ static void buildIndexProbe( Vdbe *v, int nColumn, int nExtra, int brk, Index *pIdx ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_NotNull, -nColumn, sqlite3VdbeCurrentAddr(v)+3); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Pop, nColumn+nExtra, 0); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Goto, 0, brk); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MakeRecord, nColumn, 0); sqlite3IndexAffinityStr(v, pIdx); } /* ** Generate code for a single equality term of the WHERE clause. An equality ** term can be either X=expr or X IN (...). pTerm is the term to be ** coded. ** ** The current value for the constraint is left on the top of the stack. ** ** For a constraint of the form X=expr, the expression is evaluated and its ** result is left on the stack. For constraints of the form X IN (...) ** this routine sets up a loop that will iterate over all values of X. */ static void codeEqualityTerm( Parse *pParse, /* The parsing context */ WhereTerm *pTerm, /* The term of the WHERE clause to be coded */ int brk, /* Jump here to abandon the loop */ WhereLevel *pLevel /* When level of the FROM clause we are working on */ ){ Expr *pX = pTerm->pExpr; if( pX->op!=TK_IN ){ assert( pX->op==TK_EQ ); sqlite3ExprCode(pParse, pX->pRight); #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_SUBQUERY }else{ int iTab; int *aIn; Vdbe *v = pParse->pVdbe; sqlite3CodeSubselect(pParse, pX); iTab = pX->iTable; sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Rewind, iTab, 0); VdbeComment((v, "# %.*s", pX->span.n, pX->span.z)); pLevel->nIn++; sqliteReallocOrFree((void**)&pLevel->aInLoop, sizeof(pLevel->aInLoop[0])*2*pLevel->nIn); aIn = pLevel->aInLoop; if( aIn ){ aIn += pLevel->nIn*2 - 2; aIn[0] = iTab; aIn[1] = sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Column, iTab, 0); }else{ pLevel->nIn = 0; } #endif } disableTerm(pLevel, pTerm); } /* ** Generate code that will evaluate all == and IN constraints for an ** index. The values for all constraints are left on the stack. ** ** For example, consider table t1(a,b,c,d,e,f) with index i1(a,b,c). ** Suppose the WHERE clause is this: a==5 AND b IN (1,2,3) AND c>5 AND c<10 ** The index has as many as three equality constraints, but in this ** example, the third "c" value is an inequality. So only two ** constraints are coded. This routine will generate code to evaluate ** a==5 and b IN (1,2,3). The current values for a and b will be left ** on the stack - a is the deepest and b the shallowest. ** ** In the example above nEq==2. But this subroutine works for any value ** of nEq including 0. If nEq==0, this routine is nearly a no-op. ** The only thing it does is allocate the pLevel->iMem memory cell. ** ** This routine always allocates at least one memory cell and puts ** the address of that memory cell in pLevel->iMem. The code that ** calls this routine will use pLevel->iMem to store the termination ** key value of the loop. If one or more IN operators appear, then ** this routine allocates an additional nEq memory cells for internal ** use. */ static void codeAllEqualityTerms( Parse *pParse, /* Parsing context */ WhereLevel *pLevel, /* Which nested loop of the FROM we are coding */ WhereClause *pWC, /* The WHERE clause */ Bitmask notReady, /* Which parts of FROM have not yet been coded */ int brk /* Jump here to end the loop */ ){ int nEq = pLevel->nEq; /* The number of == or IN constraints to code */ int termsInMem = 0; /* If true, store value in mem[] cells */ Vdbe *v = pParse->pVdbe; /* The virtual machine under construction */ Index *pIdx = pLevel->pIdx; /* The index being used for this loop */ int iCur = pLevel->iTabCur; /* The cursor of the table */ WhereTerm *pTerm; /* A single constraint term */ int j; /* Loop counter */ /* Figure out how many memory cells we will need then allocate them. ** We always need at least one used to store the loop terminator ** value. If there are IN operators we'll need one for each == or ** IN constraint. */ pLevel->iMem = pParse->nMem++; if( pLevel->flags & WHERE_COLUMN_IN ){ pParse->nMem += pLevel->nEq; termsInMem = 1; } /* Evaluate the equality constraints */ for(j=0; j<pIdx->nColumn; j++){ int k = pIdx->aiColumn[j]; pTerm = findTerm(pWC, iCur, k, notReady, WO_EQ|WO_IN, pIdx); if( pTerm==0 ) break; assert( (pTerm->flags & TERM_CODED)==0 ); codeEqualityTerm(pParse, pTerm, brk, pLevel); if( termsInMem ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemStore, pLevel->iMem+j+1, 1); } } assert( j==nEq ); /* Make sure all the constraint values are on the top of the stack */ if( termsInMem ){ for(j=0; j<nEq; j++){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemLoad, pLevel->iMem+j+1, 0); } } } #if defined(SQLITE_TEST) /* ** The following variable holds a text description of query plan generated ** by the most recent call to sqlite3WhereBegin(). Each call to WhereBegin ** overwrites the previous. This information is used for testing and ** analysis only. */ char sqlite3_query_plan[BMS*2*40]; /* Text of the join */ static int nQPlan = 0; /* Next free slow in _query_plan[] */ #endif /* SQLITE_TEST */ /* ** Generate the beginning of the loop used for WHERE clause processing. ** The return value is a pointer to an opaque structure that contains ** information needed to terminate the loop. Later, the calling routine ** should invoke sqlite3WhereEnd() with the return value of this function ** in order to complete the WHERE clause processing. ** ** If an error occurs, this routine returns NULL. ** ** The basic idea is to do a nested loop, one loop for each table in ** the FROM clause of a select. (INSERT and UPDATE statements are the ** same as a SELECT with only a single table in the FROM clause.) For ** example, if the SQL is this: ** ** SELECT * FROM t1, t2, t3 WHERE ...; ** ** Then the code generated is conceptually like the following: ** ** foreach row1 in t1 do \ Code generated ** foreach row2 in t2 do |-- by sqlite3WhereBegin() ** foreach row3 in t3 do / ** ... ** end \ Code generated ** end |-- by sqlite3WhereEnd() ** end / ** ** Note that the loops might not be nested in the order in which they ** appear in the FROM clause if a different order is better able to make ** use of indices. Note also that when the IN operator appears in ** the WHERE clause, it might result in additional nested loops for ** scanning through all values on the right-hand side of the IN. ** ** There are Btree cursors associated with each table. t1 uses cursor ** number pTabList->a[0].iCursor. t2 uses the cursor pTabList->a[1].iCursor. ** And so forth. This routine generates code to open those VDBE cursors ** and sqlite3WhereEnd() generates the code to close them. ** ** The code that sqlite3WhereBegin() generates leaves the cursors named ** in pTabList pointing at their appropriate entries. The [...] code ** can use OP_Column and OP_Rowid opcodes on these cursors to extract ** data from the various tables of the loop. ** ** If the WHERE clause is empty, the foreach loops must each scan their ** entire tables. Thus a three-way join is an O(N^3) operation. But if ** the tables have indices and there are terms in the WHERE clause that ** refer to those indices, a complete table scan can be avoided and the ** code will run much faster. Most of the work of this routine is checking ** to see if there are indices that can be used to speed up the loop. ** ** Terms of the WHERE clause are also used to limit which rows actually ** make it to the "..." in the middle of the loop. After each "foreach", ** terms of the WHERE clause that use only terms in that loop and outer ** loops are evaluated and if false a jump is made around all subsequent ** inner loops (or around the "..." if the test occurs within the inner- ** most loop) ** ** OUTER JOINS ** ** An outer join of tables t1 and t2 is conceptally coded as follows: ** ** foreach row1 in t1 do ** flag = 0 ** foreach row2 in t2 do ** start: ** ... ** flag = 1 ** end ** if flag==0 then ** move the row2 cursor to a null row ** goto start ** fi ** end ** ** ORDER BY CLAUSE PROCESSING ** ** *ppOrderBy is a pointer to the ORDER BY clause of a SELECT statement, ** if there is one. If there is no ORDER BY clause or if this routine ** is called from an UPDATE or DELETE statement, then ppOrderBy is NULL. ** ** If an index can be used so that the natural output order of the table ** scan is correct for the ORDER BY clause, then that index is used and ** *ppOrderBy is set to NULL. This is an optimization that prevents an ** unnecessary sort of the result set if an index appropriate for the ** ORDER BY clause already exists. ** ** If the where clause loops cannot be arranged to provide the correct ** output order, then the *ppOrderBy is unchanged. */ WhereInfo *sqlite3WhereBegin( Parse *pParse, /* The parser context */ SrcList *pTabList, /* A list of all tables to be scanned */ Expr *pWhere, /* The WHERE clause */ ExprList **ppOrderBy /* An ORDER BY clause, or NULL */ ){ int i; /* Loop counter */ WhereInfo *pWInfo; /* Will become the return value of this function */ Vdbe *v = pParse->pVdbe; /* The virtual database engine */ int brk, cont = 0; /* Addresses used during code generation */ Bitmask notReady; /* Cursors that are not yet positioned */ WhereTerm *pTerm; /* A single term in the WHERE clause */ ExprMaskSet maskSet; /* The expression mask set */ WhereClause wc; /* The WHERE clause is divided into these terms */ struct SrcList_item *pTabItem; /* A single entry from pTabList */ WhereLevel *pLevel; /* A single level in the pWInfo list */ int iFrom; /* First unused FROM clause element */ int andFlags; /* AND-ed combination of all wc.a[].flags */ /* The number of tables in the FROM clause is limited by the number of ** bits in a Bitmask */ if( pTabList->nSrc>BMS ){ sqlite3ErrorMsg(pParse, "at most %d tables in a join", BMS); return 0; } /* Split the WHERE clause into separate subexpressions where each ** subexpression is separated by an AND operator. */ initMaskSet(&maskSet); whereClauseInit(&wc, pParse); whereSplit(&wc, pWhere, TK_AND); /* Allocate and initialize the WhereInfo structure that will become the ** return value. */ pWInfo = sqliteMalloc( sizeof(WhereInfo) + pTabList->nSrc*sizeof(WhereLevel)); if( sqlite3MallocFailed() ){ goto whereBeginNoMem; } pWInfo->pParse = pParse; pWInfo->pTabList = pTabList; pWInfo->iBreak = sqlite3VdbeMakeLabel(v); /* Special case: a WHERE clause that is constant. Evaluate the ** expression and either jump over all of the code or fall thru. */ if( pWhere && (pTabList->nSrc==0 || sqlite3ExprIsConstant(pWhere)) ){ sqlite3ExprIfFalse(pParse, pWhere, pWInfo->iBreak, 1); pWhere = 0; } /* Analyze all of the subexpressions. Note that exprAnalyze() might ** add new virtual terms onto the end of the WHERE clause. We do not ** want to analyze these virtual terms, so start analyzing at the end ** and work forward so that the added virtual terms are never processed. */ for(i=0; i<pTabList->nSrc; i++){ createMask(&maskSet, pTabList->a[i].iCursor); } exprAnalyzeAll(pTabList, &maskSet, &wc); if( sqlite3MallocFailed() ){ goto whereBeginNoMem; } /* Chose the best index to use for each table in the FROM clause. ** ** This loop fills in the following fields: ** ** pWInfo->a[].pIdx The index to use for this level of the loop. ** pWInfo->a[].flags WHERE_xxx flags associated with pIdx ** pWInfo->a[].nEq The number of == and IN constraints ** pWInfo->a[].iFrom When term of the FROM clause is being coded ** pWInfo->a[].iTabCur The VDBE cursor for the database table ** pWInfo->a[].iIdxCur The VDBE cursor for the index ** ** This loop also figures out the nesting order of tables in the FROM ** clause. */ notReady = ~(Bitmask)0; pTabItem = pTabList->a; pLevel = pWInfo->a; andFlags = ~0; TRACE(("*** Optimizer Start ***\n")); for(i=iFrom=0, pLevel=pWInfo->a; i<pTabList->nSrc; i++, pLevel++){ Index *pIdx; /* Index for FROM table at pTabItem */ int flags; /* Flags asssociated with pIdx */ int nEq; /* Number of == or IN constraints */ double cost; /* The cost for pIdx */ int j; /* For looping over FROM tables */ Index *pBest = 0; /* The best index seen so far */ int bestFlags = 0; /* Flags associated with pBest */ int bestNEq = 0; /* nEq associated with pBest */ double lowestCost; /* Cost of the pBest */ int bestJ = 0; /* The value of j */ Bitmask m; /* Bitmask value for j or bestJ */ int once = 0; /* True when first table is seen */ lowestCost = SQLITE_BIG_DBL; for(j=iFrom, pTabItem=&pTabList->a[j]; j<pTabList->nSrc; j++, pTabItem++){ int doNotReorder; /* True if this table should not be reordered */ doNotReorder = (pTabItem->jointype & (JT_LEFT|JT_CROSS))!=0 || (j>0 && (pTabItem[-1].jointype & (JT_LEFT|JT_CROSS))!=0); if( once && doNotReorder ) break; m = getMask(&maskSet, pTabItem->iCursor); if( (m & notReady)==0 ){ if( j==iFrom ) iFrom++; continue; } cost = bestIndex(pParse, &wc, pTabItem, notReady, (i==0 && ppOrderBy) ? *ppOrderBy : 0, &pIdx, &flags, &nEq); if( cost<lowestCost ){ once = 1; lowestCost = cost; pBest = pIdx; bestFlags = flags; bestNEq = nEq; bestJ = j; } if( doNotReorder ) break; } TRACE(("*** Optimizer choose table %d for loop %d\n", bestJ, pLevel-pWInfo->a)); if( (bestFlags & WHERE_ORDERBY)!=0 ){ *ppOrderBy = 0; } andFlags &= bestFlags; pLevel->flags = bestFlags; pLevel->pIdx = pBest; pLevel->nEq = bestNEq; pLevel->aInLoop = 0; pLevel->nIn = 0; if( pBest ){ pLevel->iIdxCur = pParse->nTab++; }else{ pLevel->iIdxCur = -1; } notReady &= ~getMask(&maskSet, pTabList->a[bestJ].iCursor); pLevel->iFrom = bestJ; } TRACE(("*** Optimizer Finished ***\n")); /* If the total query only selects a single row, then the ORDER BY ** clause is irrelevant. */ if( (andFlags & WHERE_UNIQUE)!=0 && ppOrderBy ){ *ppOrderBy = 0; } /* Open all tables in the pTabList and any indices selected for ** searching those tables. */ sqlite3CodeVerifySchema(pParse, -1); /* Insert the cookie verifier Goto */ pLevel = pWInfo->a; for(i=0, pLevel=pWInfo->a; i<pTabList->nSrc; i++, pLevel++){ Table *pTab; /* Table to open */ Index *pIx; /* Index used to access pTab (if any) */ int iDb; /* Index of database containing table/index */ int iIdxCur = pLevel->iIdxCur; #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_EXPLAIN if( pParse->explain==2 ){ char *zMsg; struct SrcList_item *pItem = &pTabList->a[pLevel->iFrom]; zMsg = sqlite3MPrintf("TABLE %s", pItem->zName); if( pItem->zAlias ){ zMsg = sqlite3MPrintf("%z AS %s", zMsg, pItem->zAlias); } if( (pIx = pLevel->pIdx)!=0 ){ zMsg = sqlite3MPrintf("%z WITH INDEX %s", zMsg, pIx->zName); }else if( pLevel->flags & (WHERE_ROWID_EQ|WHERE_ROWID_RANGE) ){ zMsg = sqlite3MPrintf("%z USING PRIMARY KEY", zMsg); } if( pLevel->flags & WHERE_ORDERBY ){ zMsg = sqlite3MPrintf("%z ORDER BY", zMsg); } sqlite3VdbeOp3(v, OP_Explain, i, pLevel->iFrom, zMsg, P3_DYNAMIC); } #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_EXPLAIN */ pTabItem = &pTabList->a[pLevel->iFrom]; pTab = pTabItem->pTab; iDb = sqlite3SchemaToIndex(pParse->db, pTab->pSchema); if( pTab->isTransient || pTab->pSelect ) continue; if( (pLevel->flags & WHERE_IDX_ONLY)==0 ){ sqlite3OpenTable(pParse, pTabItem->iCursor, iDb, pTab, OP_OpenRead); if( pTab->nCol<(sizeof(Bitmask)*8) ){ Bitmask b = pTabItem->colUsed; int n = 0; for(; b; b=b>>1, n++){} sqlite3VdbeChangeP2(v, sqlite3VdbeCurrentAddr(v)-1, n); assert( n<=pTab->nCol ); } }else{ sqlite3TableLock(pParse, iDb, pTab->tnum, 0, pTab->zName); } pLevel->iTabCur = pTabItem->iCursor; if( (pIx = pLevel->pIdx)!=0 ){ KeyInfo *pKey = sqlite3IndexKeyinfo(pParse, pIx); assert( pIx->pSchema==pTab->pSchema ); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Integer, iDb, 0); VdbeComment((v, "# %s", pIx->zName)); sqlite3VdbeOp3(v, OP_OpenRead, iIdxCur, pIx->tnum, (char*)pKey, P3_KEYINFO_HANDOFF); } if( (pLevel->flags & WHERE_IDX_ONLY)!=0 ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_SetNumColumns, iIdxCur, pIx->nColumn+1); } sqlite3CodeVerifySchema(pParse, iDb); } pWInfo->iTop = sqlite3VdbeCurrentAddr(v); /* Generate the code to do the search. Each iteration of the for ** loop below generates code for a single nested loop of the VM ** program. */ notReady = ~(Bitmask)0; for(i=0, pLevel=pWInfo->a; i<pTabList->nSrc; i++, pLevel++){ int j; int iCur = pTabItem->iCursor; /* The VDBE cursor for the table */ Index *pIdx; /* The index we will be using */ int iIdxCur; /* The VDBE cursor for the index */ int omitTable; /* True if we use the index only */ int bRev; /* True if we need to scan in reverse order */ pTabItem = &pTabList->a[pLevel->iFrom]; iCur = pTabItem->iCursor; pIdx = pLevel->pIdx; iIdxCur = pLevel->iIdxCur; bRev = (pLevel->flags & WHERE_REVERSE)!=0; omitTable = (pLevel->flags & WHERE_IDX_ONLY)!=0; /* Create labels for the "break" and "continue" instructions ** for the current loop. Jump to brk to break out of a loop. ** Jump to cont to go immediately to the next iteration of the ** loop. */ brk = pLevel->brk = sqlite3VdbeMakeLabel(v); cont = pLevel->cont = sqlite3VdbeMakeLabel(v); /* If this is the right table of a LEFT OUTER JOIN, allocate and ** initialize a memory cell that records if this table matches any ** row of the left table of the join. */ if( pLevel->iFrom>0 && (pTabItem[-1].jointype & JT_LEFT)!=0 ){ if( !pParse->nMem ) pParse->nMem++; pLevel->iLeftJoin = pParse->nMem++; sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemInt, 0, pLevel->iLeftJoin); VdbeComment((v, "# init LEFT JOIN no-match flag")); } if( pLevel->flags & WHERE_ROWID_EQ ){ /* Case 1: We can directly reference a single row using an ** equality comparison against the ROWID field. Or ** we reference multiple rows using a "rowid IN (...)" ** construct. */ pTerm = findTerm(&wc, iCur, -1, notReady, WO_EQ|WO_IN, 0); assert( pTerm!=0 ); assert( pTerm->pExpr!=0 ); assert( pTerm->leftCursor==iCur ); assert( omitTable==0 ); codeEqualityTerm(pParse, pTerm, brk, pLevel); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MustBeInt, 1, brk); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_NotExists, iCur, brk); VdbeComment((v, "pk")); pLevel->op = OP_Noop; }else if( pLevel->flags & WHERE_ROWID_RANGE ){ /* Case 2: We have an inequality comparison against the ROWID field. */ int testOp = OP_Noop; int start; WhereTerm *pStart, *pEnd; assert( omitTable==0 ); pStart = findTerm(&wc, iCur, -1, notReady, WO_GT|WO_GE, 0); pEnd = findTerm(&wc, iCur, -1, notReady, WO_LT|WO_LE, 0); if( bRev ){ pTerm = pStart; pStart = pEnd; pEnd = pTerm; } if( pStart ){ Expr *pX; pX = pStart->pExpr; assert( pX!=0 ); assert( pStart->leftCursor==iCur ); sqlite3ExprCode(pParse, pX->pRight); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_ForceInt, pX->op==TK_LE || pX->op==TK_GT, brk); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, bRev ? OP_MoveLt : OP_MoveGe, iCur, brk); VdbeComment((v, "pk")); disableTerm(pLevel, pStart); }else{ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, bRev ? OP_Last : OP_Rewind, iCur, brk); } if( pEnd ){ Expr *pX; pX = pEnd->pExpr; assert( pX!=0 ); assert( pEnd->leftCursor==iCur ); sqlite3ExprCode(pParse, pX->pRight); pLevel->iMem = pParse->nMem++; sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemStore, pLevel->iMem, 1); if( pX->op==TK_LT || pX->op==TK_GT ){ testOp = bRev ? OP_Le : OP_Ge; }else{ testOp = bRev ? OP_Lt : OP_Gt; } disableTerm(pLevel, pEnd); } start = sqlite3VdbeCurrentAddr(v); pLevel->op = bRev ? OP_Prev : OP_Next; pLevel->p1 = iCur; pLevel->p2 = start; if( testOp!=OP_Noop ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Rowid, iCur, 0); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemLoad, pLevel->iMem, 0); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, testOp, SQLITE_AFF_NUMERIC, brk); } }else if( pLevel->flags & WHERE_COLUMN_RANGE ){ /* Case 3: The WHERE clause term that refers to the right-most ** column of the index is an inequality. For example, if ** the index is on (x,y,z) and the WHERE clause is of the ** form "x=5 AND y<10" then this case is used. Only the ** right-most column can be an inequality - the rest must ** use the "==" and "IN" operators. ** ** This case is also used when there are no WHERE clause ** constraints but an index is selected anyway, in order ** to force the output order to conform to an ORDER BY. */ int start; int nEq = pLevel->nEq; int topEq=0; /* True if top limit uses ==. False is strictly < */ int btmEq=0; /* True if btm limit uses ==. False if strictly > */ int topOp, btmOp; /* Operators for the top and bottom search bounds */ int testOp; int nNotNull; /* Number of rows of index that must be non-NULL */ int topLimit = (pLevel->flags & WHERE_TOP_LIMIT)!=0; int btmLimit = (pLevel->flags & WHERE_BTM_LIMIT)!=0; /* Generate code to evaluate all constraint terms using == or IN ** and level the values of those terms on the stack. */ codeAllEqualityTerms(pParse, pLevel, &wc, notReady, brk); /* Duplicate the equality term values because they will all be ** used twice: once to make the termination key and once to make the ** start key. */ for(j=0; j<nEq; j++){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Dup, nEq-1, 0); } /* Figure out what comparison operators to use for top and bottom ** search bounds. For an ascending index, the bottom bound is a > or >= ** operator and the top bound is a < or <= operator. For a descending ** index the operators are reversed. */ nNotNull = nEq + topLimit; if( pIdx->aSortOrder[nEq]==SQLITE_SO_ASC ){ topOp = WO_LT|WO_LE; btmOp = WO_GT|WO_GE; }else{ topOp = WO_GT|WO_GE; btmOp = WO_LT|WO_LE; SWAP(int, topLimit, btmLimit); } /* Generate the termination key. This is the key value that ** will end the search. There is no termination key if there ** are no equality terms and no "X<..." term. ** ** 2002-Dec-04: On a reverse-order scan, the so-called "termination" ** key computed here really ends up being the start key. */ if( topLimit ){ Expr *pX; int k = pIdx->aiColumn[j]; pTerm = findTerm(&wc, iCur, k, notReady, topOp, pIdx); assert( pTerm!=0 ); pX = pTerm->pExpr; assert( (pTerm->flags & TERM_CODED)==0 ); sqlite3ExprCode(pParse, pX->pRight); topEq = pTerm->eOperator & (WO_LE|WO_GE); disableTerm(pLevel, pTerm); testOp = OP_IdxGE; }else{ testOp = nEq>0 ? OP_IdxGE : OP_Noop; topEq = 1; } if( testOp!=OP_Noop ){ int nCol = nEq + topLimit; pLevel->iMem = pParse->nMem++; buildIndexProbe(v, nCol, nEq, brk, pIdx); if( bRev ){ int op = topEq ? OP_MoveLe : OP_MoveLt; sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, op, iIdxCur, brk); }else{ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemStore, pLevel->iMem, 1); } }else if( bRev ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Last, iIdxCur, brk); } /* Generate the start key. This is the key that defines the lower ** bound on the search. There is no start key if there are no ** equality terms and if there is no "X>..." term. In ** that case, generate a "Rewind" instruction in place of the ** start key search. ** ** 2002-Dec-04: In the case of a reverse-order search, the so-called ** "start" key really ends up being used as the termination key. */ if( btmLimit ){ Expr *pX; int k = pIdx->aiColumn[j]; pTerm = findTerm(&wc, iCur, k, notReady, btmOp, pIdx); assert( pTerm!=0 ); pX = pTerm->pExpr; assert( (pTerm->flags & TERM_CODED)==0 ); sqlite3ExprCode(pParse, pX->pRight); btmEq = pTerm->eOperator & (WO_LE|WO_GE); disableTerm(pLevel, pTerm); }else{ btmEq = 1; } if( nEq>0 || btmLimit ){ int nCol = nEq + btmLimit; buildIndexProbe(v, nCol, 0, brk, pIdx); if( bRev ){ pLevel->iMem = pParse->nMem++; sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemStore, pLevel->iMem, 1); testOp = OP_IdxLT; }else{ int op = btmEq ? OP_MoveGe : OP_MoveGt; sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, op, iIdxCur, brk); } }else if( bRev ){ testOp = OP_Noop; }else{ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Rewind, iIdxCur, brk); } /* Generate the the top of the loop. If there is a termination ** key we have to test for that key and abort at the top of the ** loop. */ start = sqlite3VdbeCurrentAddr(v); if( testOp!=OP_Noop ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemLoad, pLevel->iMem, 0); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, testOp, iIdxCur, brk); if( (topEq && !bRev) || (!btmEq && bRev) ){ sqlite3VdbeChangeP3(v, -1, "+", P3_STATIC); } } sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_RowKey, iIdxCur, 0); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_IdxIsNull, nNotNull, cont); if( !omitTable ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_IdxRowid, iIdxCur, 0); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MoveGe, iCur, 0); } /* Record the instruction used to terminate the loop. */ pLevel->op = bRev ? OP_Prev : OP_Next; pLevel->p1 = iIdxCur; pLevel->p2 = start; }else if( pLevel->flags & WHERE_COLUMN_EQ ){ /* Case 4: There is an index and all terms of the WHERE clause that ** refer to the index using the "==" or "IN" operators. */ int start; int nEq = pLevel->nEq; /* Generate code to evaluate all constraint terms using == or IN ** and leave the values of those terms on the stack. */ codeAllEqualityTerms(pParse, pLevel, &wc, notReady, brk); /* Generate a single key that will be used to both start and terminate ** the search */ buildIndexProbe(v, nEq, 0, brk, pIdx); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemStore, pLevel->iMem, 0); /* Generate code (1) to move to the first matching element of the table. ** Then generate code (2) that jumps to "brk" after the cursor is past ** the last matching element of the table. The code (1) is executed ** once to initialize the search, the code (2) is executed before each ** iteration of the scan to see if the scan has finished. */ if( bRev ){ /* Scan in reverse order */ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MoveLe, iIdxCur, brk); start = sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemLoad, pLevel->iMem, 0); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_IdxLT, iIdxCur, brk); pLevel->op = OP_Prev; }else{ /* Scan in the forward order */ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MoveGe, iIdxCur, brk); start = sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemLoad, pLevel->iMem, 0); sqlite3VdbeOp3(v, OP_IdxGE, iIdxCur, brk, "+", P3_STATIC); pLevel->op = OP_Next; } sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_RowKey, iIdxCur, 0); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_IdxIsNull, nEq, cont); if( !omitTable ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_IdxRowid, iIdxCur, 0); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MoveGe, iCur, 0); } pLevel->p1 = iIdxCur; pLevel->p2 = start; }else{ /* Case 5: There is no usable index. We must do a complete ** scan of the entire table. */ assert( omitTable==0 ); assert( bRev==0 ); pLevel->op = OP_Next; pLevel->p1 = iCur; pLevel->p2 = 1 + sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Rewind, iCur, brk); } notReady &= ~getMask(&maskSet, iCur); /* Insert code to test every subexpression that can be completely ** computed using the current set of tables. */ for(pTerm=wc.a, j=wc.nTerm; j>0; j--, pTerm++){ Expr *pE; if( pTerm->flags & (TERM_VIRTUAL|TERM_CODED) ) continue; if( (pTerm->prereqAll & notReady)!=0 ) continue; pE = pTerm->pExpr; assert( pE!=0 ); if( pLevel->iLeftJoin && !ExprHasProperty(pE, EP_FromJoin) ){ continue; } sqlite3ExprIfFalse(pParse, pE, cont, 1); pTerm->flags |= TERM_CODED; } /* For a LEFT OUTER JOIN, generate code that will record the fact that ** at least one row of the right table has matched the left table. */ if( pLevel->iLeftJoin ){ pLevel->top = sqlite3VdbeCurrentAddr(v); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_MemInt, 1, pLevel->iLeftJoin); VdbeComment((v, "# record LEFT JOIN hit")); for(pTerm=wc.a, j=0; j<wc.nTerm; j++, pTerm++){ if( pTerm->flags & (TERM_VIRTUAL|TERM_CODED) ) continue; if( (pTerm->prereqAll & notReady)!=0 ) continue; assert( pTerm->pExpr ); sqlite3ExprIfFalse(pParse, pTerm->pExpr, cont, 1); pTerm->flags |= TERM_CODED; } } } #ifdef SQLITE_TEST /* For testing and debugging use only */ /* Record in the query plan information about the current table ** and the index used to access it (if any). If the table itself ** is not used, its name is just '{}'. If no index is used ** the index is listed as "{}". If the primary key is used the ** index name is '*'. */ for(i=0; i<pTabList->nSrc; i++){ char *z; int n; pLevel = &pWInfo->a[i]; pTabItem = &pTabList->a[pLevel->iFrom]; z = pTabItem->zAlias; if( z==0 ) z = pTabItem->pTab->zName; n = strlen(z); if( n+nQPlan < sizeof(sqlite3_query_plan)-10 ){ if( pLevel->flags & WHERE_IDX_ONLY ){ strcpy(&sqlite3_query_plan[nQPlan], "{}"); nQPlan += 2; }else{ strcpy(&sqlite3_query_plan[nQPlan], z); nQPlan += n; } sqlite3_query_plan[nQPlan++] = ' '; } if( pLevel->flags & (WHERE_ROWID_EQ|WHERE_ROWID_RANGE) ){ strcpy(&sqlite3_query_plan[nQPlan], "* "); nQPlan += 2; }else if( pLevel->pIdx==0 ){ strcpy(&sqlite3_query_plan[nQPlan], "{} "); nQPlan += 3; }else{ n = strlen(pLevel->pIdx->zName); if( n+nQPlan < sizeof(sqlite3_query_plan)-2 ){ strcpy(&sqlite3_query_plan[nQPlan], pLevel->pIdx->zName); nQPlan += n; sqlite3_query_plan[nQPlan++] = ' '; } } } while( nQPlan>0 && sqlite3_query_plan[nQPlan-1]==' ' ){ sqlite3_query_plan[--nQPlan] = 0; } sqlite3_query_plan[nQPlan] = 0; nQPlan = 0; #endif /* SQLITE_TEST // Testing and debugging use only */ /* Record the continuation address in the WhereInfo structure. Then ** clean up and return. */ pWInfo->iContinue = cont; whereClauseClear(&wc); return pWInfo; /* Jump here if malloc fails */ whereBeginNoMem: whereClauseClear(&wc); sqliteFree(pWInfo); return 0; } /* ** Generate the end of the WHERE loop. See comments on ** sqlite3WhereBegin() for additional information. */ void sqlite3WhereEnd(WhereInfo *pWInfo){ Vdbe *v = pWInfo->pParse->pVdbe; int i; WhereLevel *pLevel; SrcList *pTabList = pWInfo->pTabList; /* Generate loop termination code. */ for(i=pTabList->nSrc-1; i>=0; i--){ pLevel = &pWInfo->a[i]; sqlite3VdbeResolveLabel(v, pLevel->cont); if( pLevel->op!=OP_Noop ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, pLevel->op, pLevel->p1, pLevel->p2); } sqlite3VdbeResolveLabel(v, pLevel->brk); if( pLevel->nIn ){ int *a; int j; for(j=pLevel->nIn, a=&pLevel->aInLoop[j*2-2]; j>0; j--, a-=2){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Next, a[0], a[1]); sqlite3VdbeJumpHere(v, a[1]-1); } sqliteFree(pLevel->aInLoop); } if( pLevel->iLeftJoin ){ int addr; addr = sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_IfMemPos, pLevel->iLeftJoin, 0); sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_NullRow, pTabList->a[i].iCursor, 0); if( pLevel->iIdxCur>=0 ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_NullRow, pLevel->iIdxCur, 0); } sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Goto, 0, pLevel->top); sqlite3VdbeJumpHere(v, addr); } } /* The "break" point is here, just past the end of the outer loop. ** Set it. */ sqlite3VdbeResolveLabel(v, pWInfo->iBreak); /* Close all of the cursors that were opened by sqlite3WhereBegin. */ for(i=0, pLevel=pWInfo->a; i<pTabList->nSrc; i++, pLevel++){ struct SrcList_item *pTabItem = &pTabList->a[pLevel->iFrom]; Table *pTab = pTabItem->pTab; assert( pTab!=0 ); if( pTab->isTransient || pTab->pSelect ) continue; if( (pLevel->flags & WHERE_IDX_ONLY)==0 ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Close, pTabItem->iCursor, 0); } if( pLevel->pIdx!=0 ){ sqlite3VdbeAddOp(v, OP_Close, pLevel->iIdxCur, 0); } /* Make cursor substitutions for cases where we want to use ** just the index and never reference the table. ** ** Calls to the code generator in between sqlite3WhereBegin and ** sqlite3WhereEnd will have created code that references the table ** directly. This loop scans all that code looking for opcodes ** that reference the table and converts them into opcodes that ** reference the index. */ if( pLevel->flags & WHERE_IDX_ONLY ){ int k, j, last; VdbeOp *pOp; Index *pIdx = pLevel->pIdx; assert( pIdx!=0 ); pOp = sqlite3VdbeGetOp(v, pWInfo->iTop); last = sqlite3VdbeCurrentAddr(v); for(k=pWInfo->iTop; k<last; k++, pOp++){ if( pOp->p1!=pLevel->iTabCur ) continue; if( pOp->opcode==OP_Column ){ pOp->p1 = pLevel->iIdxCur; for(j=0; j<pIdx->nColumn; j++){ if( pOp->p2==pIdx->aiColumn[j] ){ pOp->p2 = j; break; } } }else if( pOp->opcode==OP_Rowid ){ pOp->p1 = pLevel->iIdxCur; pOp->opcode = OP_IdxRowid; }else if( pOp->opcode==OP_NullRow ){ pOp->opcode = OP_Noop; } } } } /* Final cleanup */ sqliteFree(pWInfo); return; }