Esempio n. 1
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  /** Variant of {@link #trimFields(RelNode, BitSet, Set)} for {@link SortRel}. */
  public TrimResult trimFields(SortRel sort, BitSet fieldsUsed, Set<RelDataTypeField> extraFields) {
    final RelDataType rowType = sort.getRowType();
    final int fieldCount = rowType.getFieldCount();
    final RelCollation collation = sort.getCollation();
    final RelNode input = sort.getChild();

    // We use the fields used by the consumer, plus any fields used as sort
    // keys.
    BitSet inputFieldsUsed = (BitSet) fieldsUsed.clone();
    for (RelFieldCollation field : collation.getFieldCollations()) {
      inputFieldsUsed.set(field.getFieldIndex());
    }

    // Create input with trimmed columns.
    final Set<RelDataTypeField> inputExtraFields = Collections.emptySet();
    TrimResult trimResult = trimChild(sort, input, inputFieldsUsed, inputExtraFields);
    RelNode newInput = trimResult.left;
    final Mapping inputMapping = trimResult.right;

    // If the input is unchanged, and we need to project all columns,
    // there's nothing we can do.
    if (newInput == input && inputMapping.isIdentity() && fieldsUsed.cardinality() == fieldCount) {
      return new TrimResult(sort, Mappings.createIdentity(fieldCount));
    }

    final SortRel newSort =
        sort.copy(sort.getTraitSet(), newInput, RexUtil.apply(inputMapping, collation));
    assert newSort.getClass() == sort.getClass();

    // The result has the same mapping as the input gave us. Sometimes we
    // return fields that the consumer didn't ask for, because the filter
    // needs them for its condition.
    return new TrimResult(newSort, inputMapping);
  }
 public Boolean areColumnsUnique(SortRel rel, BitSet columns, boolean ignoreNulls) {
   return RelMetadataQuery.areColumnsUnique(rel.getChild(), columns, ignoreNulls);
 }