Thread
Commits
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Be more consistent about errors for opfamily member lookup failures.
- 278cb4341103 10.0 landed
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cache lookup failed error for partition key with custom opclass
Rushabh Lathia <rushabh.lathia@gmail.com> — 2017-07-24T11:36:49Z
Hi, Consider the following test: CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION dummy_binaryint4(a int4, b int4) RETURNS int4 AS $$ BEGIN RETURN a; END; $$ LANGUAGE 'plpgsql' IMMUTABLE; CREATE OPERATOR CLASS custom_opclass2 FOR TYPE int2 USING BTREE AS OPERATOR 1 = , FUNCTION 1 dummy_binaryint4(int4, int4); t=# CREATE TABLE list_tab(a int2, b int) PARTITION BY LIST (a custom_opclass2); *ERROR: cache lookup failed for function 0* In the above test creating OP class type int2, but passing the function of int4 type. During CREATE PARTITION, ComputePartitionAttrs() able to resolve the opclass for the partition key (partition key type is int2), but while looking for a method for the int2 - it unable to find the proper function and end up with the cache lookup failed error. Error coming from RelationBuildPartitionKey(). I think overall this is expected but still error can be better - like all the other places where get_opfamily_proc() unable to find valid function oid. PFA patch, where added elog() to add the error message same as all other places. Thanks, Rushabh Lathia www.EnterpriseDB.com
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Re: cache lookup failed error for partition key with custom opclass
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2017-07-24T13:53:06Z
Rushabh Lathia <rushabh.lathia@gmail.com> writes: > PFA patch, where added elog() to add the error message same as all other > places. Some looking around says that this *isn't* the only place that just blithely assumes that it will find an opfamily entry. But I agree that not checking for that isn't up to project standards. regards, tom lane
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Re: cache lookup failed error for partition key with custom opclass
Rushabh Lathia <rushabh.lathia@gmail.com> — 2017-07-25T05:41:09Z
On Mon, Jul 24, 2017 at 7:23 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > Rushabh Lathia <rushabh.lathia@gmail.com> writes: > > PFA patch, where added elog() to add the error message same as all other > > places. > > Some looking around says that this *isn't* the only place that just > blithely assumes that it will find an opfamily entry. But I agree > that not checking for that isn't up to project standards. > Thanks Tom. I go thorough the get_opfamily_proc() in the system and added the check for InvalidOid. Thanks, Rushabh Lathia www.EnterpriseDB.com
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Re: cache lookup failed error for partition key with custom opclass
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2017-07-25T14:13:47Z
Rushabh Lathia <rushabh.lathia@gmail.com> writes: > On Mon, Jul 24, 2017 at 7:23 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: >> Some looking around says that this *isn't* the only place that just >> blithely assumes that it will find an opfamily entry. But I agree >> that not checking for that isn't up to project standards. > I go thorough the get_opfamily_proc() in the system and added the > check for InvalidOid. Think I did that already, please compare your results with 278cb4341103e967189997985b09981a73e23a34 regards, tom lane
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Re: cache lookup failed error for partition key with custom opclass
Rushabh Lathia <rushabh.lathia@gmail.com> — 2017-07-26T06:31:44Z
On Tue, Jul 25, 2017 at 7:43 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > Rushabh Lathia <rushabh.lathia@gmail.com> writes: > > On Mon, Jul 24, 2017 at 7:23 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > >> Some looking around says that this *isn't* the only place that just > >> blithely assumes that it will find an opfamily entry. But I agree > >> that not checking for that isn't up to project standards. > > > I go thorough the get_opfamily_proc() in the system and added the > > check for InvalidOid. > > Think I did that already, please compare your results with > 278cb4341103e967189997985b09981a73e23a34 > Thanks Tom. > > regards, tom lane > -- Rushabh Lathia