Thread
Commits
-
Fix INSERT ON CONFLICT UPDATE through a view that isn't just SELECT *.
- 5ad143cda092 9.5.14 landed
- f6a124d019a4 10.5 landed
- e7154b6acfeb 11.0 landed
- b8a1247a34e2 12.0 landed
- b484bffe7d0e 9.6.10 landed
-
Problem with a "complex" upsert
Mario De Frutos Dieguez <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> — 2018-06-21T14:07:57Z
I'm trying to do an upsert to an updatable view with the following SQL query: INSERT INTO "acs2014_5yr"."b01003" (geoid, b01003001) SELECT (left(acs.geoid, 7) || bi.blockid) geoid, (b01003001 * (percentage*100.0)) b01003001 FROM "tiger2015".blocks_interpolation bi INNER JOIN "acs2014_5yr"."b01003" acs ON bi.blockgroupid = substr(acs.geoid,8) WHERE acs.geoid = '15000US020200001013' AND char_length(substr(acs.geoid, 8)) = 12 ON CONFLICT (geoid) DO UPDATE SET (b01003001) = ROW(EXCLUDED.b01003001); The View is: View "acs2014_5yr.b01003" Column | Type | Collation | Nullable | Default | Storage | Description -----------+-----------------------+-----------+----------+---------+----------+------------- geoid | character varying(40) | | | | extended | b01003001 | double precision | | | | plain | View definition: SELECT seq0003.geoid, seq0003.b01003001 FROM acs2014_5yr.seq0003; If I don't get any conflict everything works as intended but if we hit a conflict then I get the following error message: ERROR: attribute 2 of type record has the wrong type DETAIL: Table has type character varying, but query expects double precision. Looks like it's trying to use the geoid value in the b01003001 field. I've tried using the source insert table data but the server crashes: INSERT INTO "acs2014_5yr"."b01003" (geoid, b01003001) SELECT (left(acs.geoid, 7) || bi.blockid) geoid, (b01003001 * (percentage*100.0))::float b01003001 FROM "tiger2015".blocks_interpolation bi INNER JOIN "acs2014_5yr"."b01003" acs ON bi.blockgroupid = substr(acs.geoid,8) WHERE acs.geoid = '15000US020200001013' AND char_length(substr(acs.geoid, 8)) = 12 ON CONFLICT (geoid) DO UPDATE SET (b01003001) = ROW("acs2014_5yr"."b01003".b01003001); server closed the connection unexpectedly This probably means the server terminated abnormally before or while processing the request. The connection to the server was lost. Attempting reset: Failed. Any clues? Could be a bug? I see something similar here https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAEzk6fdzJ3xYQZGbcuYM2rBd2BuDkUksmK=mY9UYYDugg_GgZg@mail.gmail.com and it was a bug -
Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Mario De Frutos Dieguez <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> — 2018-06-21T14:11:09Z
I'm trying to do an upsert to an updatable view with the following SQL query: INSERT INTO "acs2014_5yr"."b01003" (geoid, b01003001) SELECT (left(acs.geoid, 7) || bi.blockid) geoid, (b01003001 * (percentage*100.0)) b01003001 FROM "tiger2015".blocks_interpolation bi INNER JOIN "acs2014_5yr"."b01003" acs ON bi.blockgroupid = substr(acs.geoid,8) WHERE acs.geoid = '15000US020200001013' AND char_length(substr(acs.geoid, 8)) = 12 ON CONFLICT (geoid) DO UPDATE SET (b01003001) = ROW(EXCLUDED.b01003001); The View is: View "acs2014_5yr.b01003" Column | Type | Collation | Nullable | Default | Storage | Description -----------+-----------------------+-----------+----------+- --------+----------+------------- geoid | character varying(40) | | | | extended | b01003001 | double precision | | | | plain | View definition: SELECT seq0003.geoid, seq0003.b01003001 FROM acs2014_5yr.seq0003; If I don't get any conflict everything works as intended but if we hit a conflict then I get the following error message: ERROR: attribute 2 of type record has the wrong type DETAIL: Table has type character varying, but query expects double precision. Looks like it's trying to use the geoid value in the b01003001 field. I've tried using the source insert table data but the server crashes: INSERT INTO "acs2014_5yr"."b01003" (geoid, b01003001) SELECT (left(acs.geoid, 7) || bi.blockid) geoid, (b01003001 * (percentage*100.0))::float b01003001 FROM "tiger2015".blocks_interpolation bi INNER JOIN "acs2014_5yr"."b01003" acs ON bi.blockgroupid = substr(acs.geoid,8) WHERE acs.geoid = '15000US020200001013' AND char_length(substr(acs.geoid, 8)) = 12 ON CONFLICT (geoid) DO UPDATE SET (b01003001) = ROW("acs2014_5yr"."b01003". b01003001); server closed the connection unexpectedly This probably means the server terminated abnormally before or while processing the request. The connection to the server was lost. Attempting reset: Failed. Any clues? Could be a bug? I see something similar here https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAEzk6fdzJ3xYQZGbcuYM2rBd2BuDk UksmK=mY9UYYDugg_GgZg@mail.gmail.com and it was a bug -
Re: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Geoff Winkless <pgsqladmin@geoff.dj> — 2018-06-21T14:40:51Z
On Thu, 21 Jun 2018 at 15:07, Mario De Frutos Dieguez < mariodefrutos@gmail.com> wrote: > ON CONFLICT (geoid) DO UPDATE SET (b01003001) = ROW(EXCLUDED.b01003001); > At first glance, shouldn't the query simply be SET b01003001 = EXCLUDED.b01003001; ? The second part of your email does suggest a bug though, syntax shouldn't cause a crash. Geoff
-
Re: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Mario De Frutos Dieguez <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> — 2018-06-21T14:46:12Z
In this case is just one column but in other queries I'm updating multiple columns thats why I set the ROW thing 2018-06-21 16:40 GMT+02:00 Geoff Winkless <pgsqladmin@geoff.dj>: > On Thu, 21 Jun 2018 at 15:07, Mario De Frutos Dieguez > <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> ON CONFLICT (geoid) DO UPDATE SET (b01003001) = ROW(EXCLUDED.b01003001); > > At first glance, shouldn't the query simply be > > SET b01003001 = EXCLUDED.b01003001; > > ? > > The second part of your email does suggest a bug though, syntax shouldn't > cause a crash. > > Geoff
-
Re: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Geoff Winkless <pgsqladmin@geoff.dj> — 2018-06-21T16:48:39Z
On Thu, 21 Jun 2018 at 15:46, Mario de Frutos Dieguez <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> wrote: > In this case is just one column but in other queries I'm updating > multiple columns thats why I set the ROW thing Hmm. The documentation isn't explicit that that's valid syntax. Choices are ({expression|DEFAULT} [,...] | ( sub-SELECT ) and although the docs do say row constructors are valid as sub-SELECT for comparisons I'm not sure that it fits here. It does seem like it's trying to work anyway but my guess is that "Table has type character varying". doesn't mean it's trying to use the geoid value, but rather that it's implying that the ROW() (which returns an anonymous type) is the same type as the target table of the main INSERT query (rather than the type of the column in brackets). Whether it counts as a bug or not (given that it's not explicitly defined as allowed syntax) is probably an esoteric argument. Are you using the ROW() syntax just because it's easier to build the query programmatically? Otherwise I can't see why you wouldn't just use SET col1=EXCLUDED.col1, col2=EXCLUDED.col2 [, ....] Does SET (b01003001) = (SELECT b01003001 FROM EXCLUDED) work? Geoff -
Re: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2018-06-21T16:55:11Z
On Thu, Jun 21, 2018 at 7:11 AM, Mario De Frutos Dieguez <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> wrote: > I've tried using the source insert table data but the server crashes: > > INSERT INTO "acs2014_5yr"."b01003" (geoid, b01003001) > SELECT (left(acs.geoid, 7) || bi.blockid) geoid, (b01003001 * > (percentage*100.0))::float b01003001 > FROM "tiger2015".blocks_interpolation bi > INNER JOIN "acs2014_5yr"."b01003" acs ON bi.blockgroupid = > substr(acs.geoid,8) > WHERE acs.geoid = '15000US020200001013' AND char_length(substr(acs.geoid, > 8)) = 12 > ON CONFLICT (geoid) DO UPDATE SET (b01003001) = > ROW("acs2014_5yr"."b01003".b01003001); > > server closed the connection unexpectedly > This probably means the server terminated abnormally > before or while processing the request. > The connection to the server was lost. Attempting reset: Failed. > > Any clues? Could be a bug? I see something similar here It would be very helpful if you could get a stack trace of the crashing backend: https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Getting_a_stack_trace_of_a_running_PostgreSQL_backend_on_Linux/BSD#Getting_a_trace_from_a_randomly_crashing_backend -- Peter Geoghegan -
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-06-21T17:05:53Z
Mario De Frutos Dieguez <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> writes: > I'm trying to do an upsert to an updatable view with the following SQL > query: > ... > If I don't get any conflict everything works as intended but if we hit a > conflict then I get the following error message: > ERROR: attribute 2 of type record has the wrong type > DETAIL: Table has type character varying, but query expects double > precision. When filing a bug report, it's a good idea to provide both a self- contained test case and a mention of what PG version you're using. I guess from the ROW() syntax you used here, which isn't accepted pre-v10, that you're using 10.0 or later, but that's not specific enough. I tried to duplicate this problem using the attached script, but it works for me. FWIW, that error message definitely looks like a bug, but I can't tell whether it's an already-fixed bug or there's some triggering detail you didn't mention. regards, tom lane
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Amit Langote <langote_amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2018-06-22T08:11:23Z
On 2018/06/22 2:05, Tom Lane wrote: > Mario De Frutos Dieguez <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> writes: >> I'm trying to do an upsert to an updatable view with the following SQL >> query: >> ... >> If I don't get any conflict everything works as intended but if we hit a >> conflict then I get the following error message: >> ERROR: attribute 2 of type record has the wrong type >> DETAIL: Table has type character varying, but query expects double >> precision. > > When filing a bug report, it's a good idea to provide both a self- > contained test case and a mention of what PG version you're using. > > I guess from the ROW() syntax you used here, which isn't accepted pre-v10, > that you're using 10.0 or later, but that's not specific enough. > > I tried to duplicate this problem using the attached script, but it > works for me. > > FWIW, that error message definitely looks like a bug, but I can't > tell whether it's an already-fixed bug or there's some triggering > detail you didn't mention. Having worked a little bit on the ON CONFLICT code recently, I was able to guess at the triggering detail. At least, I was able to reproduce the error and crash seen in the OP's report. Here's a minimal example: create table foo (a text unique, b float); insert into foo values ('xyxyxy', 1); -- note the different order of columns in the view create view foo_view as select b, a from foo; insert into foo_view values (1, 'xyxyxy') on conflict (a) do update set b = excluded.b; ERROR: attribute 1 of type record has wrong type DETAIL: Table has type text, but query expects double precision. -- crash occurs if, like OP, I change EXCLUDED reference to target table insert into foo_view values (1, 'xyxyxy') on conflict (a) do update set b = foo_view.b; server closed the connection unexpectedly This probably means the server terminated abnormally before or while processing the request. The connection to the server was lost. Attempting reset: Failed. I tried debugging why that happens and concluded that rewriteTargetView fails to *completely* account for the fact that the view's column's may have different attribute numbers than the underlying table that the DO UPDATE action will be applied to. Especially, even if the view's Vars are replaced with those corresponding underlying base table's columns, the TargetEntry's into which those Vars are contained are not refreshed, that is, their resnos don't match varattnos. I created a patch that seems to fix the issue, which also adds a representative test in updatable_view.sql. Thanks, Amit -
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Mario De Frutos Dieguez <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> — 2018-06-22T09:15:03Z
Wow, that's amazing news. Sorry for not being doing this in a proper way, it was my first time guessing if I'm confronting a bug or not. For the next time, I'll provide a more prepared answer :) Thank you very much to all :) 2018-06-22 10:11 GMT+02:00 Amit Langote <Langote_Amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp>: > On 2018/06/22 2:05, Tom Lane wrote: > > Mario De Frutos Dieguez <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> writes: > >> I'm trying to do an upsert to an updatable view with the following SQL > >> query: > >> ... > >> If I don't get any conflict everything works as intended but if we hit a > >> conflict then I get the following error message: > >> ERROR: attribute 2 of type record has the wrong type > >> DETAIL: Table has type character varying, but query expects double > >> precision. > > > > When filing a bug report, it's a good idea to provide both a self- > > contained test case and a mention of what PG version you're using. > > > > I guess from the ROW() syntax you used here, which isn't accepted > pre-v10, > > that you're using 10.0 or later, but that's not specific enough. > > > > I tried to duplicate this problem using the attached script, but it > > works for me. > > > > FWIW, that error message definitely looks like a bug, but I can't > > tell whether it's an already-fixed bug or there's some triggering > > detail you didn't mention. > > Having worked a little bit on the ON CONFLICT code recently, I was able to > guess at the triggering detail. At least, I was able to reproduce the > error and crash seen in the OP's report. Here's a minimal example: > > create table foo (a text unique, b float); > insert into foo values ('xyxyxy', 1); > > -- note the different order of columns in the view > create view foo_view as select b, a from foo; > > insert into foo_view values (1, 'xyxyxy') > on conflict (a) do update set b = excluded.b; > ERROR: attribute 1 of type record has wrong type > DETAIL: Table has type text, but query expects double precision. > > -- crash occurs if, like OP, I change EXCLUDED reference to target table > insert into foo_view values (1, 'xyxyxy') on conflict (a) do update set b > = foo_view.b; > server closed the connection unexpectedly > This probably means the server terminated abnormally > before or while processing the request. > The connection to the server was lost. Attempting reset: Failed. > > I tried debugging why that happens and concluded that rewriteTargetView > fails to *completely* account for the fact that the view's column's may > have different attribute numbers than the underlying table that the DO > UPDATE action will be applied to. Especially, even if the view's Vars are > replaced with those corresponding underlying base table's columns, the > TargetEntry's into which those Vars are contained are not refreshed, that > is, their resnos don't match varattnos. > > I created a patch that seems to fix the issue, which also adds a > representative test in updatable_view.sql. > > Thanks, > Amit > -
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-07-10T20:59:33Z
Amit Langote <Langote_Amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> writes: > Having worked a little bit on the ON CONFLICT code recently, I was able to > guess at the triggering detail. At least, I was able to reproduce the > error and crash seen in the OP's report. Here's a minimal example: > create table foo (a text unique, b float); > insert into foo values ('xyxyxy', 1); > -- note the different order of columns in the view > create view foo_view as select b, a from foo; Ah-hah. > I tried debugging why that happens and concluded that rewriteTargetView > fails to *completely* account for the fact that the view's column's may > have different attribute numbers than the underlying table that the DO > UPDATE action will be applied to. Especially, even if the view's Vars are > replaced with those corresponding underlying base table's columns, the > TargetEntry's into which those Vars are contained are not refreshed, that > is, their resnos don't match varattnos. > I created a patch that seems to fix the issue, which also adds a > representative test in updatable_view.sql. Hm. I looked at this patch a bit. While the onConflictSet change looks reasonable, I find the exclRelTlist change fishy. Shouldn't those resnos correspond to the exclRelTlist's *own* vars, independently of what is or isn't in the view_targetlist? And why is it OK to ignore failure to find a match? The provided test case doesn't seem to me to prove that that code is OK. AFAICS, exclRelTlist only gets used by EXPLAIN, and there's no EXPLAIN output in the test case. regards, tom lane -
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2018-07-30T22:53:00Z
On Tue, Jul 10, 2018 at 1:59 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: >> I tried debugging why that happens and concluded that rewriteTargetView >> fails to *completely* account for the fact that the view's column's may >> have different attribute numbers than the underlying table that the DO >> UPDATE action will be applied to. Especially, even if the view's Vars are >> replaced with those corresponding underlying base table's columns, the >> TargetEntry's into which those Vars are contained are not refreshed, that >> is, their resnos don't match varattnos. > >> I created a patch that seems to fix the issue, which also adds a >> representative test in updatable_view.sql. > > Hm. I looked at this patch a bit. While the onConflictSet change looks > reasonable, I find the exclRelTlist change fishy. Shouldn't those resnos > correspond to the exclRelTlist's *own* vars, independently of what is or > isn't in the view_targetlist? And why is it OK to ignore failure to find > a match? Any update on this, Amit? I would like to get this one out of the way soon. Thanks -- Peter Geoghegan
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Amit Langote <langote_amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2018-07-31T01:11:51Z
On 2018/07/31 7:53, Peter Geoghegan wrote: > On Tue, Jul 10, 2018 at 1:59 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: >>> I tried debugging why that happens and concluded that rewriteTargetView >>> fails to *completely* account for the fact that the view's column's may >>> have different attribute numbers than the underlying table that the DO >>> UPDATE action will be applied to. Especially, even if the view's Vars are >>> replaced with those corresponding underlying base table's columns, the >>> TargetEntry's into which those Vars are contained are not refreshed, that >>> is, their resnos don't match varattnos. >> >>> I created a patch that seems to fix the issue, which also adds a >>> representative test in updatable_view.sql. >> >> Hm. I looked at this patch a bit. While the onConflictSet change looks >> reasonable, I find the exclRelTlist change fishy. Shouldn't those resnos >> correspond to the exclRelTlist's *own* vars, independently of what is or >> isn't in the view_targetlist? And why is it OK to ignore failure to find >> a match? > > Any update on this, Amit? I would like to get this one out of the way soon. This has slipped my mind. I will look into updating the patch today. Thanks, Amit
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Amit Langote <langote_amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2018-08-02T10:38:16Z
Thanks for looking at the patch and sorry I couldn't reply sooner. On 2018/07/11 5:59, Tom Lane wrote: > Amit Langote <Langote_Amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> writes: >> Having worked a little bit on the ON CONFLICT code recently, I was able to >> guess at the triggering detail. At least, I was able to reproduce the >> error and crash seen in the OP's report. Here's a minimal example: > >> create table foo (a text unique, b float); >> insert into foo values ('xyxyxy', 1); > >> -- note the different order of columns in the view >> create view foo_view as select b, a from foo; > > Ah-hah. > >> I tried debugging why that happens and concluded that rewriteTargetView >> fails to *completely* account for the fact that the view's column's may >> have different attribute numbers than the underlying table that the DO >> UPDATE action will be applied to. Especially, even if the view's Vars are >> replaced with those corresponding underlying base table's columns, the >> TargetEntry's into which those Vars are contained are not refreshed, that >> is, their resnos don't match varattnos. > >> I created a patch that seems to fix the issue, which also adds a >> representative test in updatable_view.sql. > > Hm. I looked at this patch a bit. While the onConflictSet change looks > reasonable, I find the exclRelTlist change fishy. Shouldn't those resnos > correspond to the exclRelTlist's *own* vars, independently of what is or > isn't in the view_targetlist? And why is it OK to ignore failure to find > a match? > > The provided test case doesn't seem to me to prove that that code is OK. > AFAICS, exclRelTlist only gets used by EXPLAIN, and there's no EXPLAIN > output in the test case. On further study, I have concluded that EXCLUDED pseudo-relation and any references to it in the sub-expressions of OnConflictExpr need to be revised after the rewriter has substituted target view relation with its underlying base relation. As things stand today, transformOnConflictClause creates the EXCLUDED pseudo-relation based on the original target relation of the query, which in this case is the view relation. rewriteTargetView replaces the view relation with its underlying base relation, subject to various restrictions on what the query can then do, such as not being able to update columns that are not present in the underlying base relation. On the same lines, I think OnConflictExpr shouldn't be allowed to contain references to view's own columns via the EXCLUDED pseudo-relation. That's because ON CONFLICT's execution machinery would be able to access only those columns of the EXCLUDED tuple that are present in the underlying physical relation. Hence, to account for the view relation's substitution with its underlying physical relation, we should discard the original EXCLUDED range table entry and target list (exclRelTlist) that parser created based on the view relation and recreate both based on the substituted base rel. Furthermore, any Vars contained in OnConflictExpr's sub-expressions that reference original EXCLUDED rte will need to be substituted with Vars based on the revised rte. Attaching the updated patch, which is quite heavily revised from the earlier patch, given the above findings. Thanks, Amit -
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> — 2018-08-03T06:52:38Z
On 2 August 2018 at 11:38, Amit Langote <Langote_Amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> wrote: > Attaching the updated patch, which is quite heavily revised from the > earlier patch, given the above findings. > This doesn't look right to me. It breaks the following case which currently works in HEAD: -- drop table if exists foo cascade; create table foo (a int unique, b text); create view foo_view as select a as aa, b as bb from foo; insert into foo_view (aa,bb) values (1,'x'); insert into foo_view (aa,bb) values (1,'y') on conflict (aa) do update set bb = excluded.bb; select * from foo_view; -- I also don't see why it should reject columns from the view that aren't in the base relation. Such columns need to remain unchanged in the UPDATE because they're non-updatable, but they're still logically part of the new excluded view tuple, and so it may still be useful to refer to them in other parts of the auxiliary UPDATE. Regards, Dean
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> — 2018-08-03T09:40:50Z
On 3 August 2018 at 07:52, Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> wrote: > This doesn't look right to me. It breaks the following case ... Here's an updated patch that fixes this. > I also don't see why it should reject columns from the view that > aren't in the base relation. This patch also allows access to view columns that aren't in the underlying base relation. The rationale for the result in the new test case where it attempts to insert (1,'y') into columns (aa,bb) of the view is that the new view row that would have resulted if the insert had succeeded is ('y',1,(1,'y')), hence that's what excluded.* should be for the view in the "on conflict" action, and there should be no problem referring to any part of that excluded view tuple. Regards, Dean -
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Amit Langote <langote_amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2018-08-03T10:17:05Z
Thanks Dean for taking a look. On 2018/08/03 18:40, Dean Rasheed wrote: > On 3 August 2018 at 07:52, Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> wrote: >> This doesn't look right to me. It breaks the following case ... Hmm yeah, matching view and base relation names like that was silly. > Here's an updated patch that fixes this. > >> I also don't see why it should reject columns from the view that >> aren't in the base relation. > > This patch also allows access to view columns that aren't in the > underlying base relation. The rationale for the result in the new test > case where it attempts to insert (1,'y') into columns (aa,bb) of the > view is that the new view row that would have resulted if the insert > had succeeded is ('y',1,(1,'y')), hence that's what excluded.* should > be for the view in the "on conflict" action, and there should be no > problem referring to any part of that excluded view tuple. Ah, I see what you did there with converting EXCLUDED column references. I had tried to do the coversion from view attnos to base rel attnos using tupconvert.c. When fiddling with that, I had to install that restriction of not allowing accessing view's own columns via EXCLUDED, *because of* trying to convert using tupconvert.c. Somehow, I had also became convinced that restricting it like that made sense semantically, which as you've shown, it doesn't. After seeing your first email, I had started replacing the tupconvert.c based conversion (which wouldn't even be readily backpatchable to 9.5) to ReplaceVarsFromTargetList one, but you beat me to it. Your updated version looks good and also nice that it has more tests. One thing that stood out to me was how column references via EXCLUDED now refer to base rel column names, but I guess that's fine. create table foo (a int unique, b int); create view foo_view as select b as bb, a + 1 as cc, a as aa from foo; explain insert into foo_view (aa, bb) select 1, 1 on conflict (aa) do update set bb = excluded.bb where excluded.cc > 1; QUERY PLAN ───────────────────────────────────────────────── Insert on foo (cost=0.00..0.01 rows=1 width=8) Conflict Resolution: UPDATE Conflict Arbiter Indexes: foo_a_key Conflict Filter: ((excluded.a + 1) > 1) -> Result (cost=0.00..0.01 rows=1 width=8) (5 rows) explain insert into foo_view (aa, bb) select 1, 1 on conflict (aa) do update set bb = excluded.bb where excluded.aa > 1; QUERY PLAN ───────────────────────────────────────────────── Insert on foo (cost=0.00..0.01 rows=1 width=8) Conflict Resolution: UPDATE Conflict Arbiter Indexes: foo_a_key Conflict Filter: (excluded.a > 1) -> Result (cost=0.00..0.01 rows=1 width=8) (5 rows) Thanks again. Regards, Amit -
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2018-08-03T18:46:38Z
Hi Dean, On 2018-08-03 10:40:50 +0100, Dean Rasheed wrote: > On 3 August 2018 at 07:52, Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> wrote: > > This doesn't look right to me. It breaks the following case ... > > Here's an updated patch that fixes this. Are you planning to push a version of this soon? It'd be good to get this included in the next set of releases... - Andres
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> — 2018-08-03T21:26:11Z
On 3 August 2018 at 19:46, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > Are you planning to push a version of this soon? It'd be good to > get this included in the next set of releases... > Yes, agreed. I'll try to do it this weekend. Regards, Dean
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-08-03T22:32:57Z
Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> writes: > On 3 August 2018 at 19:46, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: >> Are you planning to push a version of this soon? It'd be good to >> get this included in the next set of releases... > Yes, agreed. I'll try to do it this weekend. Keep in mind that we are hard up against the release deadline. This is a bad weekend to be pushing anything you are not 100.00% sure of; the later, the more so, as by Sunday you will probably not get a complete set of buildfarm reports before the wrap happens. Balance the risks of shipping a broken release vs. waiting one more quarter to ship the fix. After a quick look at the size of the patch, my own inclination if I were the committer would be to wait till after the releases are out. Or you might consider pushing only to 11+HEAD, with the expectation of back-patching later after we've gotten some beta results. regards, tom lane
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2018-08-03T22:44:55Z
On 2018-08-03 18:32:57 -0400, Tom Lane wrote: > Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> writes: > > On 3 August 2018 at 19:46, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > >> Are you planning to push a version of this soon? It'd be good to > >> get this included in the next set of releases... > > > Yes, agreed. I'll try to do it this weekend. > > Keep in mind that we are hard up against the release deadline. Right. > This is a bad weekend to be pushing anything you are not 100.00% > sure of; the later, the more so, as by Sunday you will probably not > get a complete set of buildfarm reports before the wrap happens. > > Balance the risks of shipping a broken release vs. waiting one > more quarter to ship the fix. After a quick look at the size > of the patch, my own inclination if I were the committer would > be to wait till after the releases are out. Or you might > consider pushing only to 11+HEAD, with the expectation of > back-patching later after we've gotten some beta results. This results in clearly inserting wrong data and/or crashing the server. And it's not a huge effect outside of already broken scenarios. I think we definitely should try to get this in. Greetings, Andres Freund
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-08-03T22:58:39Z
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> writes: > On 2018-08-03 18:32:57 -0400, Tom Lane wrote: >> Balance the risks of shipping a broken release vs. waiting one >> more quarter to ship the fix. After a quick look at the size >> of the patch, my own inclination if I were the committer would >> be to wait till after the releases are out. Or you might >> consider pushing only to 11+HEAD, with the expectation of >> back-patching later after we've gotten some beta results. > This results in clearly inserting wrong data and/or crashing the > server. And it's not a huge effect outside of already broken scenarios. > I think we definitely should try to get this in. Well, if you're excited about it, help Dean review it. My own feeling is that this case has been broken for several years with no one noticing, so it can't be all that critical. regards, tom lane
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2018-08-03T23:14:17Z
On Fri, Aug 3, 2018 at 3:44 PM, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > This results in clearly inserting wrong data and/or crashing the > server. And it's not a huge effect outside of already broken scenarios. > I think we definitely should try to get this in. I tend to agree. You told me privately that you had a customer that had the same issue, so we know that it has affected multiple users. I think that the surface area for new bugs from the fix has a lot of overlap with cases that are already probably quite broken. I'm concerned that existing affected users could suffer pernicious logical corruption, that goes unnoticed for a long time but ultimately does a lot of damage. In the end, it's a matter for Dean, but there is definitely a good case for proceeding with a full backpatch now, in my view. -- Peter Geoghegan
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2018-08-03T23:34:11Z
On Fri, Aug 3, 2018 at 2:40 AM, Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> wrote: > This patch also allows access to view columns that aren't in the > underlying base relation. The rationale for the result in the new test > case where it attempts to insert (1,'y') into columns (aa,bb) of the > view is that the new view row that would have resulted if the insert > had succeeded is ('y',1,(1,'y')), hence that's what excluded.* should > be for the view in the "on conflict" action, and there should be no > problem referring to any part of that excluded view tuple. I agree with your rationale. And, I don't think that it's just a theoretical point; it actually really matters to affected users. -- Peter Geoghegan -
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2018-08-03T23:51:49Z
Hi, On 2018-08-03 10:40:50 +0100, Dean Rasheed wrote: > On 3 August 2018 at 07:52, Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> wrote: > > This doesn't look right to me. It breaks the following case ... > > Here's an updated patch that fixes this. Looking through the patch. > diff --git a/src/backend/parser/analyze.c b/src/backend/parser/analyze.c > new file mode 100644 > index 05f5759..87e084b > --- a/src/backend/parser/analyze.c > +++ b/src/backend/parser/analyze.c > @@ -1022,9 +1022,6 @@ transformOnConflictClause(ParseState *ps > if (onConflictClause->action == ONCONFLICT_UPDATE) > { > Relation targetrel = pstate->p_target_relation; > - Var *var; > - TargetEntry *te; > - int attno; > > /* > * All INSERT expressions have been parsed, get ready for potentially > @@ -1043,56 +1040,8 @@ transformOnConflictClause(ParseState *ps > false, false); > exclRte->relkind = RELKIND_COMPOSITE_TYPE; > exclRelIndex = list_length(pstate->p_rtable); > - > - /* > - * Build a targetlist representing the columns of the EXCLUDED pseudo > - * relation. Have to be careful to use resnos that correspond to > - * attnos of the underlying relation. > - */ > - for (attno = 0; attno < RelationGetNumberOfAttributes(targetrel); attno++) > - { > - Form_pg_attribute attr = TupleDescAttr(targetrel->rd_att, attno); > - char *name; > - > - if (attr->attisdropped) > - { > - /* > - * can't use atttypid here, but it doesn't really matter what > - * type the Const claims to be. > - */ > - var = (Var *) makeNullConst(INT4OID, -1, InvalidOid); > - name = ""; > - } > - else > - { > - var = makeVar(exclRelIndex, attno + 1, > - attr->atttypid, attr->atttypmod, > - attr->attcollation, > - 0); > - name = pstrdup(NameStr(attr->attname)); > - } > - > - te = makeTargetEntry((Expr *) var, > - attno + 1, > - name, > - false); > - > - /* don't require select access yet */ > - exclRelTlist = lappend(exclRelTlist, te); > - } > - > - /* > - * Add a whole-row-Var entry to support references to "EXCLUDED.*". > - * Like the other entries in exclRelTlist, its resno must match the > - * Var's varattno, else the wrong things happen while resolving > - * references in setrefs.c. This is against normal conventions for > - * targetlists, but it's okay since we don't use this as a real tlist. > - */ > - var = makeVar(exclRelIndex, InvalidAttrNumber, > - targetrel->rd_rel->reltype, > - -1, InvalidOid, 0); > - te = makeTargetEntry((Expr *) var, InvalidAttrNumber, NULL, true); > - exclRelTlist = lappend(exclRelTlist, te); > + exclRelTlist = BuildOnConflictExcludedTargetlist(targetrel, > + exclRelIndex); > > /* > * Add EXCLUDED and the target RTE to the namespace, so that they can > @@ -1124,6 +1073,75 @@ transformOnConflictClause(ParseState *ps > > return result; > } > + > + > +/* > + * BuildOnConflictExcludedTargetlist > + * Create the target list of EXCLUDED pseudo-relation of ON CONFLICT > + * > + * Note: Exported for use in the rewriter. > + */ > +List * > +BuildOnConflictExcludedTargetlist(Relation targetrel, > + Index exclRelIndex) > +{ > + List *result = NIL; > + int attno; > + Var *var; > + TargetEntry *te; > + > + /* > + * Build a targetlist representing the columns of the EXCLUDED pseudo > + * relation. Have to be careful to use resnos that correspond to attnos > + * of the underlying relation. > + */ > + for (attno = 0; attno < RelationGetNumberOfAttributes(targetrel); attno++) > + { > + Form_pg_attribute attr = TupleDescAttr(targetrel->rd_att, attno); > + char *name; > + > + if (attr->attisdropped) > + { > + /* > + * can't use atttypid here, but it doesn't really matter what type > + * the Const claims to be. > + */ > + var = (Var *) makeNullConst(INT4OID, -1, InvalidOid); > + name = ""; > + } > + else > + { > + var = makeVar(exclRelIndex, attno + 1, > + attr->atttypid, attr->atttypmod, > + attr->attcollation, > + 0); > + name = pstrdup(NameStr(attr->attname)); > + } > + > + te = makeTargetEntry((Expr *) var, > + attno + 1, > + name, > + false); > + > + /* don't require select access yet */ > + result = lappend(result, te); > + } > + > + /* > + * Add a whole-row-Var entry to support references to "EXCLUDED.*". Like > + * the other entries in exclRelTlist, its resno must match the Var's > + * varattno, else the wrong things happen while resolving references in > + * setrefs.c. This is against normal conventions for targetlists, but > + * it's okay since we don't use this as a real tlist. > + */ > + var = makeVar(exclRelIndex, InvalidAttrNumber, > + targetrel->rd_rel->reltype, > + -1, InvalidOid, 0); > + te = makeTargetEntry((Expr *) var, InvalidAttrNumber, NULL, true); > + result = lappend(result, te); > + > + return result; > +} On a skim this purely is moving code around - no functional changes, right? > +-- Check INSERT .. ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE works correctly when the view's > +-- columns are named and ordered differently than the underlying table's. > +create table uv_iocu_tab (a text unique, b float); > +insert into uv_iocu_tab values ('xyxyxy', 1); > +create view uv_iocu_view as select b, b+1 as c, a from uv_iocu_tab; > +insert into uv_iocu_view (a, b) values ('xyxyxy', 2) > + on conflict (a) do update set b = uv_iocu_view.b; > + > +-- OK to access view columns that are not present in underlying base > +-- relation in the ON CONFLICT portion of the query > +explain (costs off) > +insert into uv_iocu_view (a, b) values ('xyxyxy', 3) > + on conflict (a) do update set b = excluded.b where excluded.c > 0; > + > +insert into uv_iocu_view (a, b) values ('xyxyxy', 3) > + on conflict (a) do update set b = excluded.b where excluded.c > 0; > +-- should display 'xyxyxy, 3' > +select * from uv_iocu_tab; > +drop view uv_iocu_view; > +drop table uv_iocu_tab; > + > +-- Example with whole-row references to the view > +create table uv_iocu_tab (a int unique, b text); > +create view uv_iocu_view as > + select b as bb, a as aa, uv_iocu_tab::text as cc from uv_iocu_tab; > + > +insert into uv_iocu_view (aa,bb) values (1,'x'); > +explain (costs off) > +insert into uv_iocu_view (aa,bb) values (1,'y') > + on conflict (aa) do update set bb = 'Rejected: '||excluded.* > + where excluded.aa > 0 > + and excluded.bb != '' > + and excluded.cc is not null; > +insert into uv_iocu_view (aa,bb) values (1,'y') > + on conflict (aa) do update set bb = 'Rejected: '||excluded.* > + where excluded.aa > 0 > + and excluded.bb != '' > + and excluded.cc is not null; > +select * from uv_iocu_view; > + > +-- Test omiting a column of the base relation > +delete from uv_iocu_view; > +insert into uv_iocu_view (aa,bb) values (1,'x'); > +insert into uv_iocu_view (aa) values (1) > + on conflict (aa) do update set bb = 'Rejected: '||excluded.*; > +select * from uv_iocu_view; > + > +-- Should fail to update non-updatable columns > +insert into uv_iocu_view (aa) values (1) > + on conflict (aa) do update set cc = 'XXX'; > + > +drop view uv_iocu_view; > +drop table uv_iocu_tab; Could you add a column that's just a const and one that that's now() or something? And based on those add a test that makes sure we don't do stupid thinks when they're referred to via EXCLUDED? AFAICS that currently should work correctly, but it'd be good to test that. Peter, I think, independent of this bug, I think it'd be good to add a few tests around arbiter expression for ON CONFLICT over a view. Greetings, Andres Freund -
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> — 2018-08-04T00:01:01Z
On Fri, Aug 3, 2018 at 4:51 PM, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > Peter, I think, independent of this bug, I think it'd be good to add a > few tests around arbiter expression for ON CONFLICT over a view. I'll look at this tomorrow. -- Peter Geoghegan
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-08-04T22:37:09Z
I wrote: > Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> writes: >> I think we definitely should try to get this in. > Well, if you're excited about it, help Dean review it. So, in the spirit of "put your money where your mouth is", I've been working off-list with Dean today to review this patch. We found a couple additional minor issues: * We noticed that the rewriter was expanding the EXCLUDED pseudo-relation's RTE into an RTE_SUBQUERY RTE, rather than leaving it in the intended form as an RTE_RELATION RTE with a nonstandard rtekind. (This happens basically always with a view target rel in the existing code, but only in corner cases after Dean's patch.) While this doesn't seem to have obvious bad effects, it's both unintended and a waste of cycles. Also, the fact that this area seems rather undertested leaves me not wanting to have weird data structure differences that happen only in corner cases. So we added a check to fireRIRrules to prevent that from happening. * We happened across some unexpected permissions failures while checking the patch in cases where the calling user is not the view owner. This turned out to be because of a pre-existing oversight: the replacement EXCLUDED RTE is initially manufactured with requiredPerms = ACL_SELECT, and nothing was getting done to change that, leading to failure if the calling user doesn't have SELECT on the underlying table. (The desired behavior is that the view owner needs permissions on the underlying table, but the calling user only needs permissions on the view.) So that's easily fixed by zeroing out requiredPerms in the EXCLUDED RTE; nothing is lost because other code was already adding the required permission check flags to the query's actual target relation. But out of paranoia we added a bunch of permissions-checking test cases to updatable_views.sql. Attached is our finished patch against HEAD. This is pretty much all Dean's work, but I'm posting it on his behalf because it's late in the UK and he's gone offline for the day. In the interests of getting a full set of buildfarm testing on the patch before Monday's wrap deadline, I'm going to finish up back-porting the patch and push it tonight. regards, tom lane
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2018-08-06T16:41:21Z
I wrote: > Attached is our finished patch against HEAD. This is pretty much all > Dean's work, but I'm posting it on his behalf because it's late in the UK > and he's gone offline for the day. In the interests of getting a > full set of buildfarm testing on the patch before Monday's wrap deadline, > I'm going to finish up back-porting the patch and push it tonight. Final(?) note on this thread --- the security team realized over the weekend that this bug constitutes a security issue, because you can do more than crash the server. We don't normally consider simple crashes as being CVE-worthy problems, but in this case, there's potential for datatype confusion, which can be leveraged to allow disclosure of server memory (as we've seen in other bugs before). We also realized that it's possible to update a column you supposedly don't have privilege to update, as long as there's some other column you do. We've retroactively obtained a CVE number and will be describing this as a security problem in the release notes. regards, tom lane
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Mario De Frutos Dieguez <mariodefrutos@gmail.com> — 2018-08-06T16:48:19Z
Wow glad to have discovered it by chance! Great news to have it fixed :)))) 2018-08-06 18:41 GMT+02:00 Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>: > I wrote: >> Attached is our finished patch against HEAD. This is pretty much all >> Dean's work, but I'm posting it on his behalf because it's late in the UK >> and he's gone offline for the day. In the interests of getting a >> full set of buildfarm testing on the patch before Monday's wrap deadline, >> I'm going to finish up back-porting the patch and push it tonight. > > Final(?) note on this thread --- the security team realized over the > weekend that this bug constitutes a security issue, because you can do > more than crash the server. We don't normally consider simple crashes > as being CVE-worthy problems, but in this case, there's potential for > datatype confusion, which can be leveraged to allow disclosure of server > memory (as we've seen in other bugs before). We also realized that it's > possible to update a column you supposedly don't have privilege to update, > as long as there's some other column you do. > > We've retroactively obtained a CVE number and will be describing this as > a security problem in the release notes. > > regards, tom lane >
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Amit Langote <langote_amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> — 2018-08-07T00:50:53Z
On 2018/08/05 7:37, Tom Lane wrote: > Attached is our finished patch against HEAD. This is pretty much all > Dean's work, but I'm posting it on his behalf because it's late in the UK > and he's gone offline for the day. In the interests of getting a > full set of buildfarm testing on the patch before Monday's wrap deadline, > I'm going to finish up back-porting the patch and push it tonight. Thank you. Regards, Amit
-
Re: Fwd: Problem with a "complex" upsert
Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com> — 2018-08-07T06:31:26Z
On 7 August 2018 at 01:50, Amit Langote <Langote_Amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp> wrote: > On 2018/08/05 7:37, Tom Lane wrote: >> Attached is our finished patch against HEAD. This is pretty much all >> Dean's work, but I'm posting it on his behalf because it's late in the UK >> and he's gone offline for the day. In the interests of getting a >> full set of buildfarm testing on the patch before Monday's wrap deadline, >> I'm going to finish up back-porting the patch and push it tonight. > > Thank you. Indeed. Thank you Tom for reviewing and sorting out all the back-patches. Regards, Dean