Dmitry, Ignite mode in H2 is about parsing only, it does not address other issues pointed out by Vlad. Alas, implementing _parser_ surely won't take no years, whilst things like smart query optimization, etc, probably don't have and can't have proper "finished" state - it's something that you can improve again and again as there's never too much performance.
My opinion: we should use Ignite mode in H2 to extend classic commands with keywords of our own fashion while laying foundation for our own SQL engine by starting work on parser core to provide for processing of Ignite specific commands. I'll try to come up with some prototype in near future. - Alex 2017-08-03 4:43 GMT+03:00 Dmitriy Setrakyan <[email protected]>: > Vladimir, this sounds like a task that would take years to design, > implement, and polish. Can we just aim to improve the Ignite mode in H2, > which is much more feasible in my view? > > On Wed, Aug 2, 2017 at 2:59 PM, Vladimir Ozerov <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> Alex P., >> >> The very problem with non-SELECT and non-DML commands is that we do not >> support most of what is supported by H2, and vice versa - H2 doesn't >> support most things that we need, like cache properties, templates, inline >> indexes, etc.. Another important thing is that at some point we will add a >> kind of SQL-based command-line or scripting utility(es) for Ignite [1]. >> Mature products has rich set of commands, which are outside of SQL >> standard. E.g., we would like to manage transaction settings (concurrency, >> isolation) on per-session basis, grant and rewoke Ignite-specific roles, >> gather some metrics from the cluster, etc.. It doesn't make sense to >> develop it in H2. >> >> Actual H2 parsing logic takes about a dozen KLOCs. But parsing core is much >> smaller and most of overall parser's code relates to SELECT and DML >> statements, which are mostly not needed for DDL and administrative >> commands. That said, I think it is perfectly fine to move Ignite-specific >> commands to Ignite's own parser. >> >> Alex K., >> >> Having the whole own SQL engine is very cool thing, as it gives us >> unlimited capabilities in terms of performance and UX. But this is a very >> huge thing. H2's core which is used in Ignite is about as big as all >> existing Ignite's SQL logic in terms of lines of codes. So I would put this >> question out of scope for now. We should focus on new features, usability >> and documentation for now, and try getting as much as possible from the >> given architecture. >> >> [1] https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/IGNITE-5608 >> >> >> On Wed, Aug 2, 2017 at 3:38 PM, Alexey Kuznetsov <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> >> > From my opinion we could start investing in our own parser and SQL engine >> > step by step, little by little >> > and one day drop H2 at all. >> > >> > Having own parser and engine will give us a freedom to any optimizations >> > and any syntax we like. >> > >> > Also that will be for one dependency less and we could have SQL out of >> the >> > box with no third-party dependencies. >> > >> > >> > On Wed, Aug 2, 2017 at 7:25 PM, Alexander Paschenko < >> > [email protected]> wrote: >> > >> > > I'd like to point out that we already do have Ignite mode in H2 parser >> > > (thanks Sergi) and thus have AFFINITY keyword support. Is is suggested >> > > that we should abandon H2 way at all? Or should we suggest adding to >> > > H2 only rather minor stuff (like some keywords for existing commands) >> > > whilst introducing completely new commands for our own parser? >> > > >> > > - Alex >> > > >> > > 2017-08-02 9:01 GMT+03:00 Vladimir Ozerov <[email protected]>: >> > > > No, it will work as follows: >> > > > >> > > > Model parse(String sql) { >> > > > Model res = tryParseWithIgnite(sql); // Parse what we can >> > > > >> > > > if (res == null) >> > > > res = parseWithH2(sql); >> > > > >> > > > return res; >> > > > } >> > > > >> > > > We will need a number of custom commands which are not present in H2. >> > > > >> > > > On Wed, Aug 2, 2017 at 3:44 AM, Dmitriy Setrakyan < >> > [email protected] >> > > > >> > > > wrote: >> > > > >> > > >> On Tue, Aug 1, 2017 at 11:08 PM, Vladimir Ozerov < >> > [email protected]> >> > > >> wrote: >> > > >> >> > > >> > Own parser capable of processing non-SELECT and non-DML >> statements. >> > > >> > >> > > >> >> > > >> And how will it integrate with H2 parser? Or are you suggesting that >> > we >> > > get >> > > >> rid of H2 SQL parser? >> > > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> > >> > > >> > On Tue, Aug 1, 2017 at 9:44 PM, <[email protected]> wrote: >> > > >> > >> > > >> > > Vova, I am not sure what you are proposing... extending H2 >> parser >> > > with >> > > >> > new >> > > >> > > syntax or a brand new parser? >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > D. >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > On Aug 1, 2017, 4:26 PM, at 4:26 PM, Vladimir Ozerov < >> > > >> > [email protected]> >> > > >> > > wrote: >> > > >> > > >Andrey, >> > > >> > > > >> > > >> > > >Note that I am not proposing to remove H2 as a whole. Main >> point >> > > for >> > > >> > > >now is >> > > >> > > >to support missing pieces of DDL syntax and possibly and some >> > > >> > > >extensions. >> > > >> > > >Several examples: >> > > >> > > > >> > > >> > > >1) Currently CREATE TABLE command looks ugly: >> > > >> > > >CREATE TABLE Person (id LONG, name VARCHAR) WITH >> > > >> "template=PARTITIONED, >> > > >> > > >backups=1, ..." >> > > >> > > > >> > > >> > > >Commas typically treated in a special way in editors and IDEs, >> so >> > > user >> > > >> > > >will >> > > >> > > >have to escape them, making usability even worse. >> > > >> > > > >> > > >> > > >2) What if I need to introduce new template? Currently you have >> > to >> > > >> > > >restart >> > > >> > > >the node with new config. With our own parser you will do: >> > > >> > > >CREATE TEMPLATE my_template MODE=PARTITIONED, BACKUPS=1; >> > > >> > > >CREATE TABLE Person (...) TEMPLATE my_template; >> > > >> > > > >> > > >> > > >No restarts, everything is done dynamically. >> > > >> > > > >> > > >> > > > >> > > >> > > > >> > > >> > > >On Tue, Aug 1, 2017 at 4:18 PM, Andrey Mashenkov >> > > >> > > ><[email protected] >> > > >> > > >> wrote: >> > > >> > > > >> > > >> > > >> Vovan, >> > > >> > > >> >> > > >> > > >> 1. What about ANSI-xx compliant? Will new syntax brake it in >> > some >> > > >> > > >cases or >> > > >> > > >> just extend? >> > > >> > > >> >> > > >> > > >> 2. This would be great to have more ways for optimization. >> > > >> > > >> >> > > >> > > >> Does anyone know or may be have experience with some >> frameworks >> > > or >> > > >> > > >open >> > > >> > > >> projects which can be helpful? E.g. Apache Calcite? >> > > >> > > >> >> > > >> > > >> On Tue, Aug 1, 2017 at 3:25 PM, Vladimir Ozerov >> > > >> > > ><[email protected]> >> > > >> > > >> wrote: >> > > >> > > >> >> > > >> > > >> > Igniters, >> > > >> > > >> > >> > > >> > > >> > As you know, we rely on H2 for SQL query parsing. This has >> > > several >> > > >> > > >> > drawbacks: >> > > >> > > >> > >> > > >> > > >> > 1) Limited and ugly syntax >> > > >> > > >> > Ignite has lot's of unique concepts which are in no way >> > > supported >> > > >> > > >by >> > > >> > > >> > traditional RDBMS in general, or by H2 in particular. For >> > > example: >> > > >> > > >> > - query hints ("distributedJoins", "replicatedOnly", >> > > "colocated") >> > > >> > > >> > - index hints ("inline size") >> > > >> > > >> > - cache configuration (memory policy, affinity key, cache >> > mode, >> > > >> > > >etc) >> > > >> > > >> > - transaction mode (concurrency, isolation, timeouts) - not >> > > needed >> > > >> > > >now, >> > > >> > > >> but >> > > >> > > >> > will be required when transactional SQL is ready >> > > >> > > >> > >> > > >> > > >> > 2) Performance implications >> > > >> > > >> > Typical SQL processing flow looks as follows >> > > >> > > >> > - Parse String to H2 object form (prepared statement) >> > > >> > > >> > - Convert it to Ignite object form (AST) >> > > >> > > >> > - Then convert it back to map and reduce queries in String >> > form >> > > >> > > >> > - Convert map and reduce queries from String back to H2 >> > > >> > > >PreparedStatement >> > > >> > > >> > again for final execution >> > > >> > > >> > >> > > >> > > >> > This is way too much. Moreover, H2 optimizes query during >> > > parsing, >> > > >> > > >but >> > > >> > > >> it's >> > > >> > > >> > optimizer is not smart enough. E.g., Ignite "IN" clauses >> are >> > > not >> > > >> > > >> optimized >> > > >> > > >> > and hence doesn't use indexes, so we force users to use >> > > >> > > >intermediate >> > > >> > > >> tables >> > > >> > > >> > with very ugly syntax, while we should do that on our own >> > > instead. >> > > >> > > >> Another >> > > >> > > >> > example is common expression elimination - H2 cannot do >> that >> > > even >> > > >> > > >for >> > > >> > > >> > deterministic functions, what cause performance problems >> > > >> > > >frequently. >> > > >> > > >> > >> > > >> > > >> > I propose to start some work in direction of our own >> parser. >> > We >> > > >> can >> > > >> > > >start >> > > >> > > >> > with something very simple, e.g. DDL support, which is not >> > that >> > > >> > > >complex, >> > > >> > > >> > but will improve usability significantly. And then >> gradually >> > > >> extend >> > > >> > > >it to >> > > >> > > >> > more complex statements where both rich BNF and optimizer >> is >> > > >> > > >necessary. >> > > >> > > >> > >> > > >> > > >> > Thoughts? >> > > >> > > >> > >> > > >> > > >> > Vladimir. >> > > >> > > >> > >> > > >> > > >> >> > > >> > > >> >> > > >> > > >> >> > > >> > > >> -- >> > > >> > > >> Best regards, >> > > >> > > >> Andrey V. Mashenkov >> > > >> > > >> >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > >> > > >> >> > > >> > >> > >> > >> > -- >> > Alexey Kuznetsov >> > >>
