* which is created on the second call and reset on later calls. Thus, in
* the common case where a scan is only rescan'd once, we just put the
* queue in scanCxt and don't pay the overhead of making a second memory
- * context. If we do rescan more than once, the first RBTree is just left
+ * context. If we do rescan more than once, the first queue is just left
* for dead until end of scan; this small wastage seems worth the savings
* in the common case.
*/
ALLOCSET_DEFAULT_SIZES);
}
- /* create new, empty RBTree for search queue */
+ /* create new, empty pairing heap for search queue */
oldCxt = MemoryContextSwitchTo(so->queueCxt);
so->queue = pairingheap_allocate(pairingheap_GISTSearchItem_cmp, scan);
MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldCxt);
* upper index pages; this rule avoids doing extra work during a search that
* ends early due to LIMIT.
*
- * To perform an ordered search, we use an RBTree to manage the distance-order
- * queue. Each GISTSearchTreeItem stores all unvisited items of the same
- * distance; they are GISTSearchItems chained together via their next fields.
- *
- * In a non-ordered search (no order-by operators), the RBTree degenerates
- * to a single item, which we use as a queue of unvisited index pages only.
- * In this case matched heap items from the current index leaf page are
- * remembered in GISTScanOpaqueData.pageData[] and returned directly from
- * there, instead of building a separate GISTSearchItem for each one.
+ * To perform an ordered search, we use a pairing heap to manage the
+ * distance-order queue. In a non-ordered search (no order-by operators),
+ * we use it to return heap tuples before unvisited index pages, to
+ * ensure depth-first order, but all entries are otherwise considered
+ * equal.
*/
/* Individual heap tuple to be visited */
#define GIST_ROOT_BLKNO 0
/*
- * Before PostgreSQL 9.1, we used rely on so-called "invalid tuples" on inner
- * pages to finish crash recovery of incomplete page splits. If a crash
+ * Before PostgreSQL 9.1, we used to rely on so-called "invalid tuples" on
+ * inner pages to finish crash recovery of incomplete page splits. If a crash
* happened in the middle of a page split, so that the downlink pointers were
* not yet inserted, crash recovery inserted a special downlink pointer. The
* semantics of an invalid tuple was that it if you encounter one in a scan,