50.6. Executor
The executor takes the plan created by the planner/optimizer and recursively processes it to extract the required set of rows. This is essentially a demand-pull pipeline mechanism. Each time a plan node is called, it must deliver one more row, or report that it is done delivering rows.
To provide a concrete example, assume that the top
node is a
MergeJoin
node.
Before any merge can be done two rows have to be fetched (one from
each subplan). So the executor recursively calls itself to
process the subplans (it starts with the subplan attached to
lefttree
). The new top node (the top node of the left
subplan) is, let's say, a
Sort
node and again recursion is needed to obtain
an input row. The child node of the
Sort
might
be a
SeqScan
node, representing actual reading of a table.
Execution of this node causes the executor to fetch a row from the
table and return it up to the calling node. The
Sort
node will repeatedly call its child to obtain all the rows to be sorted.
When the input is exhausted (as indicated by the child node returning
a NULL instead of a row), the
Sort
code performs
the sort, and finally is able to return its first output row, namely
the first one in sorted order. It keeps the remaining rows stored so
that it can deliver them in sorted order in response to later demands.
The
MergeJoin
node similarly demands the first row
from its right subplan. Then it compares the two rows to see if they
can be joined; if so, it returns a join row to its caller. On the next
call, or immediately if it cannot join the current pair of inputs,
it advances to the next row of one table
or the other (depending on how the comparison came out), and again
checks for a match. Eventually, one subplan or the other is exhausted,
and the
MergeJoin
node returns NULL to indicate that
no more join rows can be formed.
Complex queries can involve many levels of plan nodes, but the general approach is the same: each node computes and returns its next output row each time it is called. Each node is also responsible for applying any selection or projection expressions that were assigned to it by the planner.
The executor mechanism is used to evaluate all five basic SQL query
types:
SELECT
,
INSERT
,
UPDATE
,
DELETE
, and
MERGE
.
For
SELECT
, the top-level executor code
only needs to send each row returned by the query plan tree
off to the client.
INSERT ... SELECT
,
UPDATE
,
DELETE
, and
MERGE
are effectively
SELECT
s under a special
top-level plan node called
ModifyTable
.
INSERT ... SELECT
feeds the rows up
to
ModifyTable
for insertion. For
UPDATE
, the planner arranges that each
computed row includes all the updated column values, plus the
TID
(tuple ID, or row ID) of the original
target row; this data is fed up to the
ModifyTable
node, which uses the information to create a new updated row and
mark the old row deleted. For
DELETE
, the only
column that is actually returned by the plan is the TID, and the
ModifyTable
node simply uses the TID to visit each
target row and mark it deleted. For
MERGE
, the
planner joins the source and target relations, and includes all
column values required by any of the
WHEN
clauses,
plus the TID of the target row; this data is fed up to the
ModifyTable
node, which uses the information to
work out which
WHEN
clause to execute, and then
inserts, updates or deletes the target row, as required.
A simple
INSERT ... VALUES
command creates a
trivial plan tree consisting of a single
Result
node, which computes just one result row, feeding that up
to
ModifyTable
to perform the insertion.