Thread
Commits
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Fix misevaluation of STABLE parameters in CALL within plpgsql.
- 2ad5f963e130 14.0 landed
- 4476bcb8773b 15.0 landed
- e8b0bcae63ff 12.9 landed
- 5f0a073cbbf8 13.5 landed
- 13921c511266 11.14 landed
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BUG #17199: Calling stored procedure with stable function as argument results in wrong result
The Post Office <noreply@postgresql.org> — 2021-09-21T12:52:14Z
The following bug has been logged on the website: Bug reference: 17199 Logged by: Alexander Nawratil Email address: notegihu@confused.at PostgreSQL version: 13.4 Operating system: Linux Description: Hello, we are facing some inconsistencies in one of our unit tests since the last upgrade of PostgreSQL to 11.13 and 13.4. When a function that returns just a row count of a table is marked as STABLE and is called from a stored procedure as argument, the result of the function is different than when the function is called beforehand and stored to a local variable. It's working fine when the function is marked as VOLATILE, or on PostgreSQL 11.12 / 13.3. Steps to reproduce: 1. Create an empty table 2. Create a function that is marked as STABLE and returns the row count of the table (RETURN SELECT COUNT(*) FROM table) 3. Create a procedure that takes an integer parameter and simply outputs it, e.g. RAISE NOTICE 4. In a single DO block: INSERT a row into the table, then CALL proc(func()); /* --> output: 0, instead of 1 */ 5. Storing the result of func() to a variable x, then CALL proc(x); /* --> output: 1, as expected */ Example SQL: CREATE TABLE tbl (col INT4); CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION stable_func() RETURNS INT4 STABLE AS $code$ BEGIN RETURN (SELECT COUNT(1) FROM tbl); END $code$ LANGUAGE plpgsql; CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION volatile_func() RETURNS INT4 VOLATILE AS $code$ BEGIN RETURN (SELECT COUNT(1) FROM tbl); END $code$ LANGUAGE plpgsql; CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE call_proc(t TEXT, cnt INT4) AS $code$ BEGIN RAISE NOTICE '%', (t || ' -- count: ' || cnt::TEXT); END $code$ LANGUAGE plpgsql; DO $$ DECLARE x INT4; BEGIN RAISE NOTICE '%', (VERSION()); INSERT INTO tbl(col) VALUES (1); x := volatile_func(); CALL call_proc('from_var_volatile_func', x); CALL call_proc('inline_volatile_func', volatile_func()); x := stable_func(); CALL call_proc('from_var_stable_func', x); CALL call_proc('inline_stable_func', stable_func()); END $$; I would expect that all calls output the same row count of 1. However, the actual value differs for the last call since the upgrade. Output on Postgres 13.3: PostgreSQL 13.3 (Debian 13.3-1.pgdg100+1) on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by gcc (Debian 8.3.0-6) 8.3.0, 64-bit from_var_volatile_func -- count: 1 inline_volatile_func -- count: 1 from_var_stable_func -- count: 1 inline_stable_func -- count: 1 Output on Postgres 13.4: PostgreSQL 13.4 (Debian 13.4-1.pgdg100+1) on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by gcc (Debian 8.3.0-6) 8.3.0, 64-bit from_var_volatile_func -- count: 1 inline_volatile_func -- count: 1 from_var_stable_func -- count: 1 inline_stable_func -- count: 0 The same change in behavior seems to be introduced in 12.8, not being present in 12.7. I ran the code above using official Docker Hub images. Best regards, Alexander Nawratil -
Re: BUG #17199: Calling stored procedure with stable function as argument results in wrong result
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-09-21T15:01:11Z
PG Bug reporting form <noreply@postgresql.org> writes: > When a function that returns just a row count of a table is marked as STABLE > and is called from a stored procedure as argument, the result of the > function is different than when the function is called beforehand and stored > to a local variable. Ugh. Looks like I broke this in 84f5c2908, by not thinking about the possibility that a CALL's argument expressions would need an up-to-date snapshot. Will fix, thanks for the report! regards, tom lane
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Re: BUG #17199: Calling stored procedure with stable function as argument results in wrong result
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-09-21T15:49:56Z
I wrote: > Ugh. Looks like I broke this in 84f5c2908, by not thinking about the > possibility that a CALL's argument expressions would need an up-to-date > snapshot. Concretely, the attached seems to take care of it. I'll refrain from pushing this till later, though, since v14 is frozen for rc1 for a few hours more. regards, tom lane