SQL test framework extensions
* Capture planner artifacts: logical plan, etc.
* Planner test builder validates the logical plan
* Validation for the SQL resut schema (we already have
validation for the Druid row signature)
* Better Guice integration: properties, reuse Guice modules
* Avoid need for hand-coded expr, macro tables
* Retire some of the test-specific query component creation
* Fix query log hook race condition
We added compression to the latest/first pair storage, but
the code change was forcing new things to be persisted
with the new format, meaning that any segment created with
the new code cannot be read by the old code. Instead, we
need to default to creating the old format and then remove that default in a future version.
* Refactor Calcite test "framework" for planner tests
Refactors the current Calcite tests to make it a bit easier
to adjust the set of runtime objects used within a test.
* Move data creation out of CalciteTests into TestDataBuilder
* Move "framework" creation out of CalciteTests into
a QueryFramework
* Move injector-dependent functions from CalciteTests
into QueryFrameworkUtils
* Wrapper around the planner factory, etc. to allow
customization.
* Bulk of the "framework" created once per class rather
than once per test.
* Refactor tests to use a test builder
* Change all testQuery() methods to use the test builder.
Move test execution & verification into a test runner.
This adds min/max functions for CompressedBigDecimal. It exposes these
functions via sql (BIG_MAX, BIG_MIN--see the SqlAggFunction
implementations).
It also includes various bug fixes and cleanup to the original
CompressedBigDecimal code include the AggregatorFactories. Various null
handling was improved.
Additional test cases were added for both new and existing code
including a base test case for AggregationFactories. Other tests common
across sum,min,max may be refactored also to share the varoius cases in
the future.
This adds a sql function, "BIG_SUM", that uses
CompressedBigDecimal to do a sum. Other misc changes:
1. handle NumberFormatExceptions when parsing a string (default to set
to 0, configurable in agg factory to be strict and throw on error)
2. format pom file (whitespace) + add dependency
3. scaleUp -> scale and always require scale as a parameter
Optimizes the compareTo() function in
CompressedBigDecimal. It directly compares the int[] rather than
creating BigDecimal objects and using its compareTo.
It handles unequal sized CBDs, but does require
the scales to match.
1. remove unnecessary generic type from CompressedBigDecimal
2. support Number input types
3. support aggregator reading supported input types directly (uningested
data)
4. fix scaling bug in buffer aggregator
Compressed Big Decimal is an extension which provides support for
Mutable big decimal value that can be used to accumulate values
without losing precision or reallocating memory. This type helps in
absolute precision arithmetic on large numbers in applications,
where greater level of accuracy is required, such as financial
applications, currency based transactions. This helps avoid rounding
issues where in potentially large amount of money can be lost.
Accumulation requires that the two numbers have the same scale,
but does not require that they are of the same size. If the value
being accumulated has a larger underlying array than this value
(the result), then the higher order bits are dropped, similar to what
happens when adding a long to an int and storing the result in an
int. A compressed big decimal that holds its data with an embedded
array.
Compressed big decimal is an absolute number based complex type
based on big decimal in Java. This supports all the functionalities
supported by Java Big Decimal. Java Big Decimal is not mutable in
order to avoid big garbage collection issues. Compressed big decimal
is needed to mutate the value in the accumulator.