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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CALCITE-849?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15020607#comment-15020607
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Julian Hyde commented on CALCITE-849:
-------------------------------------
It makes me sad that such work in stream processing in programming languages
does not build on the work done by the database community. Calcite (and indeed
any query optimizer) achieves that paper's goal of substituting in a different
physical implementation of an algebraic operator.
Java streams (and our own Enumerable) are hugely inefficient because they work
on heap objects, one at a time. The current Interpreter does also, but it could
evolve into something that works on batches of rows represented in a
memory-efficient format.
> Streams/Slow iterators dont close on statement close
> ----------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: CALCITE-849
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CALCITE-849
> Project: Calcite
> Issue Type: Bug
> Reporter: Jesse Yates
> Assignee: Julian Hyde
> Fix For: 1.5.0
>
> Attachments: calcite-849-bug.patch
>
>
> This is easily seen when querying an infinite stream with a clause that
> cannot be matched
> {code}
> select stream PRODUCT from orders where PRODUCT LIKE 'noMatch';
> select stream * from orders where PRODUCT LIKE 'noMatch';
> {code}
> The issue arises when accessing the results in a multi-threaded context. Yes,
> its not a good idea (and things will break, like here). However, this case
> feels like it ought to be an exception.
> Suppose you are accessing a stream and have a query that doesn't match
> anything on the stream for a long time. Because of the way a ResultSet is
> built, the call to executeQuery() will hang until the first matching result
> is received. In that case, you might want to cancel the query because its
> taking so long. You also want the thing that's accessing the stream (the
> StreamTable implementation) to cancel the querying/collection - via a call to
> close on the passed iterator/enumerable.
> Since the first result was never generated, the ResultSet was never returned
> to the caller. You can get around this by using a second thread and keeping a
> handle to the creating statement. When you go to close that statement though,
> you end up not closing the cursor (and the underlying iterables/enumberables)
> because it never finished getting created.
> It gets even more problematic if you are use select * as the iterable doesn't
> finish getting created in the AvaticaResultSet.
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