Refactoring the filtering conditions in the current ExecNode from an expression tree to an array can simplify the process of adding runtime filters. It eliminates the need for complex merge operations and removes the requirement for the frontend to combine expressions into a single entity.
By representing the filtering conditions as an array, each condition can be treated individually, making it easier to add runtime filters without the need for complex merging logic. The array can store the individual conditions, and the runtime filter logic can iterate through the array to apply the filters as needed.
This refactoring simplifies the codebase, improves readability, and reduces the complexity associated with handling filtering conditions and adding runtime filters. It separates the conditions into discrete entities, enabling more straightforward manipulation and management within the execution node.
Co-authored-by: yiguolei <yiguolei@gmail.com>
Currently, exec node save exprcontext**, but the object is in object pool, the code is very unclear. we could just use exprcontext*.
Currently, there are some useless includes in the codebase. We can use a tool named include-what-you-use to optimize these includes. By using a strict include-what-you-use policy, we can get lots of benefits from it.
The origin scan pools are in exec_env.
But after enable new_load_scan_node by default, the scan pool in exec_env is no longer used.
All scan task will be submitted to the scan pool in scanner_scheduler.
BTW, reorganize the scan pool into 3 kinds:
local scan pool
For olap scan node
remote scan pool
For file scan node
limited scan pool
For query which set cpu resource limit or with small limit clause
TODO:
Use bthread to unify all IO task.
Some trivial issues:
fix bug that the memtable flush size printed in log is not right
Add RuntimeProfile param in VScanner