====================================================================== __________ ____ ____ _________ / ____/ __ \/ __ \/ __ \/ ____/ | / / __/ /_/ / / / / / /_/ / / / /| | / /_/ / ____/ /_/ / _, _/ /___/ ___ | \____/_/ \____/_/ |_|\____/_/ |_| The Greenplum Query Optimizer Copyright (c) 2015, Pivotal Software, Inc. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 ======================================================================
Welcome to GPORCA, the Greenplum Next Generation Query Optimizer!
Want to Contribute?
GPORCA supports various build types: debug, release with debug info, release. On x86 systems, GPORCA can also be built as a 32-bit or 64-bit library. You'll need CMake 3.0 or higher to build GPORCA. Get it from cmake.org, or your operating system's package manager.
git clone https://github.com/greenplum-db/gporca.git
cd gporca
GPORCA uses the following library:
- GP-Xerces - Greenplum's patched version of Xerces-C 3.1.X
GP-XERCES is available here. The GP-XERCES README gives instructions for building and installing.
ORCA is built with CMake, so any build system supported by CMake can be used. The team uses Ninja because it's really really fast and convenient.
Go into gporca
directory:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -GNinja ../
ninja install
To run all GPORCA tests, simply use the ctest
command from the build directory
after build finishes.
ctest
Much like make
, ctest
has a -j option that allows running multiple tests in
parallel to save time. Using it is recommended for faster testing.
ctest -j7
By default, ctest
does not print the output of failed tests. To print the
output of failed tests, use the --output-on-failure
flag like so (this is
useful for debugging failed tests):
ctest -j7 --output-on-failure
To run a specific individual test, use the gporca_test
executable directly.
./server/gporca_test -U CAggTest
To run a specific minidump, for example for ../data/dxl/minidump/TVFRandom.mdp
:
./server/gporca_test -d ../data/dxl/minidump/TVFRandom.mdp
Note that some tests use assertions that are only enabled for DEBUG builds, so DEBUG-mode tests tend to be more rigorous.
Most of the regression tests come in the form of a "minidump" file. A minidump is an XML file that contains all the input needed to plan a query, including information about all tables, datatypes, and functions used, as well as statistics. It also contains the resulting plan.
A new minidump can be created by running a query on a live GPDB server:
- Run these in a psql session:
set client_min_messages='log';
set optimizer=on;
set optimizer_enumerate_plans=on;
set optimizer_minidump=always;
set optimizer_enable_constant_expression_evaluation=off;
- Run the query in the same psql session. It will create a minidump file under the "minidumps" directory, in the master's data directory:
$ ls -l ~/data-master/minidumps/
total 12
-rw------- 1 heikki heikki 10818 Jun 10 22:02 Minidump_20160610_220222_4_14.mdp
- Run xmllint on the minidump to format it better, and copy it under the data/dxl/minidump directory:
xmllint --format ~/data-master/minidumps/Minidump_20160610_220222_4_14.mdp > data/dxl/minidump/MyTest.xml
- Add it to the test suite, in server/src/unittest/gpopt/minidump/CICGTest.cpp
--- a/server/src/unittest/gpopt/minidump/CICGTest.cpp
+++ b/server/src/unittest/gpopt/minidump/CICGTest.cpp
@@ -217,6 +217,7 @@ const CHAR *rgszFileNames[] =
"../data/dxl/minidump/EffectsOfJoinFilter.mdp",
"../data/dxl/minidump/Join-IDF.mdp",
"../data/dxl/minidump/CoerceToDomain.mdp",
+ "../data/dxl/minidump/Mytest.mdp",
"../data/dxl/minidump/LeftOuter2InnerUnionAllAntiSemiJoin.mdp",
#ifndef GPOS_DEBUG
// TODO: - Jul 14 2015; disabling it for debug build to reduce testing time
GPORCA contains a series of pipeline and task files to run various sets of tests on concourse. You can learn more about deploying concourse with bosh at bosh.io.
Our concourse currently runs the following sets of tests:
- build and ctest on centos5
- build and ctest on debian8
We are currently working on adding support for the following sets of tests:
- build and ctest on centos6
- build GPDB with GPORCA and run
make installcheck-good
on centos6
All configuration files for our concourse pipelines can be found in the concourse/
directory.
Note: concourse jobs and pipelines for GPORCA are currently experimental and should not be considered ready for use in production-level CI environments.
Here are few build flavors:
# debug build
cmake -GNinja -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=DEBUG ../
# release build with debug info
cmake -GNinja -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo ../
# release build
cmake -GNinja -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RELEASE ../
It is recommended to use the --prefix
option to the Xerces-C configure script
to install GP-Xerces in a location other than the default under /usr/local/
,
because you may have other software that depends on Xerces-C, and the changes
introduced in the GP-Xerces patch make it incompatible with the upstream
version. Installing in a non-default prefix allows you to have GP-Xerces
installed side-by-side with unpatched Xerces without incompatibilities.
You can point cmake at your patched GP-Xerces installation using the
XERCES_INCLUDE_DIR
and XERCES_LIBRARY
options like so:
However, to use the current build scripts in GPDB, Xerces with the gp_xerces patch will need to be placed on the /usr path.
cmake -GNinja -D XERCES_INCLUDE_DIR=/opt/gp_xerces/include -D XERCES_LIBRARY=/opt/gp_xerces/lib/libxerces-c.so ..
Again, on Mac OS X, the library name will end with .dylib
instead of .so
.
Unless you intend to cross-compile a 32 or 64-bit version of GP-Orca, you can ignore these
instructions. If you need to explicitly compile for the 32 or 64-bit version of
your architecture, you need to set the CFLAGS
and CXXFLAGS
environment
variables for the configure script like so (use -m32
for 32-bit, -m64
for
64-bit):
CFLAGS="-m32" CXXFLAGS="-m32" ../configure --prefix=/opt/gp_xerces_32
For the most part you should not need to explicitly compile a 32-bit or 64-bit version of the optimizer libraries. By default, a "native" version for your host platform will be compiled. However, if you are on x86 and want to, for example, build a 32-bit version of Optimizer libraries on a 64-bit machine, you can do so as described below. Note that you will need a "multilib" C++ compiler that supports the -m32/-m64 switches, and you may also need to install 32-bit ("i386") versions of the C and C++ standard libraries for your OS. Finally, you will need to build 32-bit or 64-bit versions of GP-Xerces as appropriate.
Toolchain files for building 32 or 64-bit x86 libraries are located in the cmake directory. Here is an example of building for 32-bit x86:
cmake -GNinja -D CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=../cmake/i386.toolchain.cmake ../
And for 64-bit x86:
cmake -GNinja -D CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=../cmake/x86_64.toolchain.cmake ../
For faster build use the -j option of make. For instance, the following command runs make on 7 job slots
make -j7
Show all commands being run as part of make (for debugging purpose)
make VERBOSE=1
Debug builds of GPORCA include a couple of "extended" tests for features like
fault-simulation and time-slicing that work by running the entire test suite
in combination with the feature being tested. These tests can take a long time
to run and are not enabled by default. To turn extended tests on, add the cmake
arguments -D ENABLE_EXTENDED_TESTS=1
.
GPORCA has four libraries:
- libnaucrates --- has all DXL related classes, and statistics related classes
- libgpopt --- has all the code related to the optimization engine, meta-data accessor, logical / physical operators, transformation rules, and translators (DXL to expression and vice versa).
- libgpdbcost --- cost model for GPDB.
- libgpos --- abstraction of memory allocation, scheduling, error handling, and testing framework.
By default, GPORCA will be installed under /usr/local. You can change this by setting CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX when running cmake, for example:
cmake -GNinja -D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/user/gporca ../
By default, the header files are located in:
/usr/local/include/naucrates
/usr/local/include/gpdbcost
/usr/local/include/gpopt
/usr/local/include/gpos
the library is located at:
/usr/local/lib/libnaucrates.so*
/usr/local/lib/libgpdbcost.so*
/usr/local/lib/libgpopt.so*
/usr/local/lib/libgpos.so*
Build and install:
make install
Build and install with verbose output
make VERBOSE=1 install
Remove the cmake
files generated under build
folder of gporca
repo:
rm -fr build/*
Remove gporca header files and library, (assuming the default install prefix /usr/local)
rm -rf /usr/local/include/naucrates
rm -rf /usr/local/include/gpdbcost
rm -rf /usr/local/include/gpopt
rm -rf /usr/local/include/gpos
rm -rf /usr/local/lib/libnaucrates.so*
rm -rf /usr/local/lib/libgpdbcost.so*
rm -rf /usr/local/lib/libgpopt.so*
rm -rf /usr/local/lib/libgpos.so*
We accept contributions via Github Pull requests only.
Follow the steps below to open a PR:
- Fork the project’s repository
- Create your own feature branch (e.g.
git checkout -b better_orca
) and make changes on this branch.- Follow the previous sections on this page to setup and build in your environment.
- Run through all the tests in your feature branch and ensure they are successful.
- Follow the Add tests section to add new tests.
- Push your local branch to your fork (e.g.
git push origin better_orca
) and submit a pull request
Your contribution will be analyzed for product fit and engineering quality prior to merging.
Note: All contributions must be sent using GitHub Pull Requests.
Your pull request is much more likely to be accepted if it is small and focused with a clear message that conveys the intent of your change.
Overall we follow GPDB's comprehensive contribution policy. Please refer to it here for details.