Thread
Commits
GET /api/v1/messages/:b64id/commits
the thread's linked commits as JSON, with link sources.
API reference →
-
Simplify creation of built-in functions with default arguments.
- 759b03b24ce9 19 (unreleased) cited
-
updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2025-12-09T23:28:59Z
Hi everyone, I noticed how it was preferred to define optional arguments with the system functions in system_functions.sql instead of defining them in pg_proc.dat. I took a gross stab at updating the ones that ended in _ext, which turned out to be 7 declarations across 6 system functions, and created a patch per system function, hoping it would be easier to review. Perhaps the most interesting thing to share is the total reduction of the lines of code, although system_functions.sql only grows: src/backend/catalog/system_functions.sql | 49 ++++++++ src/backend/utils/adt/ruleutils.c | 130 ---------------------- src/include/catalog/pg_proc.dat | 36 ++---- 3 files changed, 56 insertions(+), 159 deletions(-) Is that something we want? Regards, Mark -- Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> EDB https://enterprisedb.com
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> — 2025-12-10T09:33:05Z
> On 10 Dec 2025, at 00:28, Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> wrote: > Is that something we want? I have yet to study the patch, but conceptually I am favour of this. I find reading the code is easier when it's done this way. -- Daniel Gustafsson
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2026-01-20T18:15:13Z
Hi everyone, On Tue, Dec 09, 2025 at 03:28:59PM -0800, Mark Wong wrote: > Hi everyone, > > I noticed how it was preferred to define optional arguments with the > system functions in system_functions.sql instead of defining them in > pg_proc.dat. > > I took a gross stab at updating the ones that ended in _ext, which > turned out to be 7 declarations across 6 system functions, and created a > patch per system function, hoping it would be easier to review. > > Perhaps the most interesting thing to share is the total reduction of > the lines of code, although system_functions.sql only grows: > > src/backend/catalog/system_functions.sql | 49 ++++++++ > src/backend/utils/adt/ruleutils.c | 130 ---------------------- > src/include/catalog/pg_proc.dat | 36 ++---- > 3 files changed, 56 insertions(+), 159 deletions(-) > > > Is that something we want? I fixed an error caught by the address sanitizer in CI [1] and am uploading a new patchset. The only change is to 2 lines in v2-0005-Handle-pg_get_expr-default-args-in-system_functio.patch to update a call to pg_get_expr with the correct number of arguments in tablecmds.c. Regards, Mark [1] https://cirrus-ci.com/task/6109065824174080 -- Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> EDB https://enterprisedb.com
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com> — 2026-01-21T08:45:35Z
> On Jan 21, 2026, at 02:15, Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hi everyone, > > On Tue, Dec 09, 2025 at 03:28:59PM -0800, Mark Wong wrote: >> Hi everyone, >> >> I noticed how it was preferred to define optional arguments with the >> system functions in system_functions.sql instead of defining them in >> pg_proc.dat. >> >> I took a gross stab at updating the ones that ended in _ext, which >> turned out to be 7 declarations across 6 system functions, and created a >> patch per system function, hoping it would be easier to review. >> >> Perhaps the most interesting thing to share is the total reduction of >> the lines of code, although system_functions.sql only grows: >> >> src/backend/catalog/system_functions.sql | 49 ++++++++ >> src/backend/utils/adt/ruleutils.c | 130 ---------------------- >> src/include/catalog/pg_proc.dat | 36 ++---- >> 3 files changed, 56 insertions(+), 159 deletions(-) >> >> >> Is that something we want? > > I fixed an error caught by the address sanitizer in CI [1] and am uploading a > new patchset. The only change is to 2 lines in > v2-0005-Handle-pg_get_expr-default-args-in-system_functio.patch to update a > call to pg_get_expr with the correct number of arguments in tablecmds.c. > > Regards, > Mark > > [1] https://cirrus-ci.com/task/6109065824174080 > -- > Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> > EDB https://enterprisedb.com > <v2-0001-Handle-pg_get_ruledef-default-args-in-system_func.patch><v2-0002-Handle-pg_get_viewdef-default-args-in-system_func.patch><v2-0003-Handle-pg_get_indexdef-default-args-in-system_fun.patch><v2-0004-Handle-pg_get_constraintdef-default-args-in-syste.patch><v2-0005-Handle-pg_get_expr-default-args-in-system_functio.patch><v2-0006-Handle-pg_get_triggerdef-default-args-in-system_f.patch> Hi Mark, Thanks for the patch. After reviewing it, I have mixed feelings. From one side, it removes some redundant code, which is good. In the other side, I doubt if we should delete proc entries from pg_proc.c? Say, there is a view that uses a proc to be deleted, the proc OID is stored with the view, then after an upgrade, the view would be broken. From this perspective, should we retain the old proc entries and only point them to the new functions? Best regards, -- Chao Li (Evan) HighGo Software Co., Ltd. https://www.highgo.com/
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2026-01-30T00:15:18Z
On Wed, Jan 21, 2026 at 04:45:35PM +0800, Chao Li wrote: > > > > On Jan 21, 2026, at 02:15, Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > Hi everyone, > > > > On Tue, Dec 09, 2025 at 03:28:59PM -0800, Mark Wong wrote: > >> Hi everyone, > >> > >> I noticed how it was preferred to define optional arguments with the > >> system functions in system_functions.sql instead of defining them in > >> pg_proc.dat. > >> > >> I took a gross stab at updating the ones that ended in _ext, which > >> turned out to be 7 declarations across 6 system functions, and created a > >> patch per system function, hoping it would be easier to review. > >> > >> Perhaps the most interesting thing to share is the total reduction of > >> the lines of code, although system_functions.sql only grows: > >> > >> src/backend/catalog/system_functions.sql | 49 ++++++++ > >> src/backend/utils/adt/ruleutils.c | 130 ---------------------- > >> src/include/catalog/pg_proc.dat | 36 ++---- > >> 3 files changed, 56 insertions(+), 159 deletions(-) > >> > >> > >> Is that something we want? > > > > I fixed an error caught by the address sanitizer in CI [1] and am uploading a > > new patchset. The only change is to 2 lines in > > v2-0005-Handle-pg_get_expr-default-args-in-system_functio.patch to update a > > call to pg_get_expr with the correct number of arguments in tablecmds.c. > > > > Regards, > > Mark > > > > [1] https://cirrus-ci.com/task/6109065824174080 > > Hi Mark, > > Thanks for the patch. After reviewing it, I have mixed feelings. From one side, it removes some redundant code, which is good. In the other side, I doubt if we should delete proc entries from pg_proc.c? Say, there is a view that uses a proc to be deleted, the proc OID is stored with the view, then after an upgrade, the view would be broken. From this perspective, should we retain the old proc entries and only point them to the new functions? I don't have a solution for the case of a view storing the OID, but Álvaro Herrera suggested to me to at least try preventing those OIDs from being reused. I've attached a v3 patch set that introduces src/include/catalog/pg_retired.dat to store previously used OIDs and procedure names that the scripts unused_oids and renumber_oids.pl can consume to prevent the reuse of retired OIDs. Maybe that can also be used towards finding that particular solution... Regards, Mark -- Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> EDB https://enterprisedb.com
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se> — 2026-02-18T21:56:56Z
On 1/30/26 1:15 AM, Mark Wong wrote: >> Thanks for the patch. After reviewing it, I have mixed feelings. From one side, it removes some redundant code, which is good. In the other side, I doubt if we should delete proc entries from pg_proc.c? Say, there is a view that uses a proc to be deleted, the proc OID is stored with the view, then after an upgrade, the view would be broken. From this perspective, should we retain the old proc entries and only point them to the new functions? > > I don't have a solution for the case of a view storing the OID, but Álvaro > Herrera suggested to me to at least try preventing those OIDs from being > reused. > > I've attached a v3 patch set that introduces src/include/catalog/pg_retired.dat > to store previously used OIDs and procedure names that the scripts unused_oids > and renumber_oids.pl can consume to prevent the reuse of retired OIDs. > > Maybe that can also be used towards finding that particular solution... I am not sure what can be done, breaking people's databases on pg_upgrade is certainly not nice and detecting that function oid has been used anywhere in a database sounds painful, especially since there are no references to system oids in pg_depend, right? That said this patch should be updated to use the new support for default values in BKI files.[1] https://git.postgresql.org/cgit/postgresql.git/commit/?id=759b03b24ce96f0ba6d734b570d1a6f4a0fb1177 Andreas
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2026-02-26T19:43:30Z
On Wed, Feb 18, 2026 at 10:56:56PM +0100, Andreas Karlsson wrote: > On 1/30/26 1:15 AM, Mark Wong wrote: > > > Thanks for the patch. After reviewing it, I have mixed feelings. From one side, it removes some redundant code, which is good. In the other side, I doubt if we should delete proc entries from pg_proc.c? Say, there is a view that uses a proc to be deleted, the proc OID is stored with the view, then after an upgrade, the view would be broken. From this perspective, should we retain the old proc entries and only point them to the new functions? > > > > I don't have a solution for the case of a view storing the OID, but Álvaro > > Herrera suggested to me to at least try preventing those OIDs from being > > reused. > > > > I've attached a v3 patch set that introduces src/include/catalog/pg_retired.dat > > to store previously used OIDs and procedure names that the scripts unused_oids > > and renumber_oids.pl can consume to prevent the reuse of retired OIDs. > > > > Maybe that can also be used towards finding that particular solution... > I am not sure what can be done, breaking people's databases on pg_upgrade is > certainly not nice and detecting that function oid has been used anywhere in > a database sounds painful, especially since there are no references to > system oids in pg_depend, right? > > That said this patch should be updated to use the new support for default > values in BKI files.[1] > > https://git.postgresql.org/cgit/postgresql.git/commit/?id=759b03b24ce96f0ba6d734b570d1a6f4a0fb1177 I have attached a new set of patches. v4 is now using the new support for default values. Summary of additional changes: * I've removed the retired OID tracking, but can certainly add that back if we decide it will be useful * Caught a bug where I wasn't using BoolGetDatum() with DirectFunctionCall3 with pg_get_expr() Regards, Mark -- Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> EDB https://enterprisedb.com
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@kurilemu.de> — 2026-03-03T16:23:58Z
On 2026-Jan-29, Mark Wong wrote: > I don't have a solution for the case of a view storing the OID, but Álvaro > Herrera suggested to me to at least try preventing those OIDs from being > reused. > > I've attached a v3 patch set that introduces src/include/catalog/pg_retired.dat > to store previously used OIDs and procedure names that the scripts unused_oids > and renumber_oids.pl can consume to prevent the reuse of retired OIDs. Thinking about this again, I wonder where did we get the idea that reusing OIDs would be a problem. How exactly would this happen? When you pg_upgrade, your views are taken from a `pg_dump --binary-upgrade` of the original server, and then recreated using the text representation of the DDL. We don't pass the function OIDs in any way from the old server to the new server. And there's no other way (than pg_upgrade) to go from one major version to the next one where the OID has been reused. So why did we think this was an actual problem? -- Álvaro Herrera 48°01'N 7°57'E — https://www.EnterpriseDB.com/ Syntax error: function hell() needs an argument. Please choose what hell you want to involve.
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2026-03-12T03:28:14Z
On Tue, Mar 03, 2026 at 05:23:58PM +0100, Álvaro Herrera wrote: > On 2026-Jan-29, Mark Wong wrote: > > > I don't have a solution for the case of a view storing the OID, but Álvaro > > Herrera suggested to me to at least try preventing those OIDs from being > > reused. > > > > I've attached a v3 patch set that introduces src/include/catalog/pg_retired.dat > > to store previously used OIDs and procedure names that the scripts unused_oids > > and renumber_oids.pl can consume to prevent the reuse of retired OIDs. > > Thinking about this again, I wonder where did we get the idea that > reusing OIDs would be a problem. How exactly would this happen? When > you pg_upgrade, your views are taken from a `pg_dump --binary-upgrade` > of the original server, and then recreated using the text > representation of the DDL. We don't pass the function OIDs in any way > from the old server to the new server. And there's no other way (than > pg_upgrade) to go from one major version to the next one where the OID > has been reused. > > So why did we think this was an actual problem? I'm not sure. I think I see the OID of a function get used in some places likes rewriteDefine.c and parse_funcs.c, but I'm not sure if I see a function OID get written out and re-read for a function name lookup in an upgrade code path, yet... Regards, Mark -- Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> EDB https://enterprisedb.com
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2026-04-02T18:36:11Z
Hi everyone, I've attached v5, simply a needed rebase due to some other churn in pg_proc.dat. Regards, Mark
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se> — 2026-04-07T22:26:05Z
On 4/2/26 8:36 PM, Mark Wong wrote: > I've attached v5, simply a needed rebase due to some other churn in > pg_proc.dat. Nice, I like the patch. The code changes looks good and I like the removal of these duplicate functions and use of default arguments. But I think the names of the arguments should be aligned with the names we have in the documentation. And that may mean that we should change the documentation. For example: = Code pg_get_ruledef(rule, pretty) = Docs pg_get_ruledef(rule_oid, pretty_bool) = Should docs maybe be updated to the following? pg_get_ruledef(rule oid, pretty bool) -- Andreas Karlsson Percona
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se> — 2026-04-07T23:28:29Z
On 4/8/26 12:26 AM, Andreas Karlsson wrote: > On 4/2/26 8:36 PM, Mark Wong wrote: >> I've attached v5, simply a needed rebase due to some other churn in >> pg_proc.dat. > > Nice, I like the patch. The code changes looks good and I like the > removal of these duplicate functions and use of default arguments. But I > think the names of the arguments should be aligned with the names we > have in the documentation. And that may mean that we should change the > documentation. Forgot to attach rebased patches. -- Andreas Karlsson Percona
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2026-04-07T23:42:23Z
On Wed, Apr 08, 2026 at 12:26:05AM +0200, Andreas Karlsson wrote: > On 4/2/26 8:36 PM, Mark Wong wrote: > > I've attached v5, simply a needed rebase due to some other churn in > > pg_proc.dat. > > Nice, I like the patch. The code changes looks good and I like the > removal of these duplicate functions and use of default arguments. But I > think the names of the arguments should be aligned with the names we > have in the documentation. And that may mean that we should change the > documentation. Thanks! > For example: > > = Code > > pg_get_ruledef(rule, pretty) > > = Docs > > pg_get_ruledef(rule_oid, pretty_bool) > > = Should docs maybe be updated to the following? > > pg_get_ruledef(rule oid, pretty bool) I agree with the aligning the names, but maybe I was looking in a different place? In the doc/src/sgml/func/func-info.sgml (a4f774cf1c7e) I think I see pg_get_ruledef(rule oid, pretty bool) already: <function>pg_get_ruledef</function> ( <parameter>rule</parameter> <type>oid</type> <optional>, <parameter>pretty</parameter> <type>boolean</type> </optional> ) I don't see any matches when I grep for rule_oid or pretty_bool... Regards, Mark
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2026-04-07T23:44:05Z
On Wed, Apr 08, 2026 at 01:28:29AM +0200, Andreas Karlsson wrote: > On 4/8/26 12:26 AM, Andreas Karlsson wrote: > > On 4/2/26 8:36 PM, Mark Wong wrote: > >> I've attached v5, simply a needed rebase due to some other churn in > >> pg_proc.dat. > > > > Nice, I like the patch. The code changes looks good and I like the > > removal of these duplicate functions and use of default arguments. But I > > think the names of the arguments should be aligned with the names we > > have in the documentation. And that may mean that we should change the > > documentation. > Forgot to attach rebased patches. Another rebase needed so quickly? :) Thanks for the assist! Regards, Mark
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se> — 2026-04-07T23:51:30Z
On 4/8/26 1:42 AM, Mark Wong wrote: > I don't see any matches when I grep for rule_oid or pretty_bool... Sorry for the noise, I was looking at an old version of the docs. The parameters do indeed match the docs. But now that I looked at the patches again I found a real issue which I think should be fixed. I think the following: "select statement of a view with pretty-print option" should likely just be: "select statement of a view" Andreas
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com> — 2026-04-08T01:33:56Z
> On Apr 8, 2026, at 07:44, Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Wed, Apr 08, 2026 at 01:28:29AM +0200, Andreas Karlsson wrote: >> On 4/8/26 12:26 AM, Andreas Karlsson wrote: >>> On 4/2/26 8:36 PM, Mark Wong wrote: >>>> I've attached v5, simply a needed rebase due to some other churn in >>>> pg_proc.dat. >>> >>> Nice, I like the patch. The code changes looks good and I like the >>> removal of these duplicate functions and use of default arguments. But I >>> think the names of the arguments should be aligned with the names we >>> have in the documentation. And that may mean that we should change the >>> documentation. >> Forgot to attach rebased patches. > > Another rebase needed so quickly? :) Thanks for the assist! > > Regards, > Mark I still have the question as I raised previously. Let’s use 0001 as an example. 0001 removes function 1573. Say, an existing view depends on 1573: ``` evantest=# CREATE VIEW v_ruledef AS evantest-# SELECT pg_get_ruledef(oid) AS ruledef evantest-# FROM pg_rewrite evantest-# WHERE rulename = '_RETURN'; CREATE VIEW ``` The view is stored as: ``` _RETURN | v_ruledef | ({QUERY :commandType 1 :querySource 0 :canSetTag true :utilityStmt <> :resultRelation 0 :forPortionOf <> :hasAggs false :hasWindowFuncs false :hasTargetSRFs false :hasSubLinks false :hasDistinctOn false :hasRecursive false :hasModifyingCTE false :hasForUpdate false :hasRowSecurity false :hasGroupRTE false :isReturn false :cteList <> :rtable ({RANGETBLENTRY :alias <> :eref {ALIAS :aliasname pg_rewrite :colnames ("oid" "rulename" "ev_class" "ev_type" "ev_enabled" "is_instead" "ev_qual" "ev_action")} :rtekind 0 :relid 2618 :inh true :relkind r :rellockmode 1 :perminfoindex 1 :tablesample <> :lateral false :inFromCl true :securityQuals <>}) :rteperminfos ({RTEPERMISSIONINFO :relid 2618 :inh true :requiredPerms 2 :checkAsUser 0 :selectedCols (b 8 9) :insertedCols (b) :updatedCols (b)}) :jointree {FROMEXPR :fromlist ({RANGETBLREF :rtindex 1}) :quals {OPEXPR :opno 93 :opfuncid 62 :opresulttype 16 :opretset false :opcollid 0 :inputcollid 950 :args ({VAR :varno 1 :varattno 2 :vartype 19 :vartypmod -1 :varcollid 950 :varnullingrels (b) :varlevelsup 0 :varreturningtype 0 :varnosyn 1 :varattnosyn 2 :location -1} {CONST :consttype 19 :consttypmod -1 :constcollid 950 :constlen 64 :constbyval false :constisnull false :location -1 :constvalue 64 [ 95 82 69 84 85 82 78 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ]}) :location -1}} :mergeActionList <> :mergeTargetRelation 0 :mergeJoinCondition <> :targetList ({TARGETENTRY :expr {FUNCEXPR :funcid 1573 :funcresulttype 25 :funcretset false :funcvariadic false :funcformat 0 :funccollid 100 :inputcollid 0 :args ({VAR :varno 1 :varattno 1 :vartype 26 :vartypmod -1 :varcollid 0 :varnullingrels (b) :varlevelsup 0 :varreturningtype 0 :varnosyn 1 :varattnosyn 1 :location -1}) :location -1} :resno 1 :resname ruledef :ressortgroupref 0 :resorigtbl 0 :resorigcol 0 :resjunk false}) :override 0 :onConflict <> :returningOldAlias <> :returningNewAlias <> :returningList <> :groupClause <> :groupDistinct false :groupByAll false :groupingSets <> :havingQual <> :windowClause <> :distinctClause <> :sortClause <> :limitOffset <> :limitCount <> :limitOption 0 :rowMarks <> :setOperations <> :constraintDeps <> :withCheckOptions <> :stmt_location -1 :stmt_len -1}) ``` We can clearly see ":expr {FUNCEXPR :funcid 1573 “. With this patch, will that view break? How would users find all such broken views? Maybe PostgreSQL already has some recommended way to handle this kind of situation that I am not aware of? Best regards, -- Chao Li (Evan) HighGo Software Co., Ltd. https://www.highgo.com/ -
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
David G. Johnston <david.g.johnston@gmail.com> — 2026-04-08T01:46:17Z
On Tuesday, April 7, 2026, Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com> wrote: > > We can clearly see ":expr {FUNCEXPR :funcid 1573 “. > > With this patch, will that view break? How would users find all such > broken views? Maybe PostgreSQL already has some recommended way to handle > this kind of situation that I am not aware of? > pg_dump resolves oid=1573 and produces a textual SQL representation, which is then executed during pg_restore. This happens manually, and also automatically by pg_upgrade. Since the text form hasn’t changed the view is still valid in v19. You would see the new oid if inspecting the rule after the upgrade. So yes, the public serialization format being SQL and thus mandatory new object creation during upgrade is the way PostgreSQL handles implementation detail isolation. David J. -
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com> — 2026-04-08T02:09:51Z
> On Apr 8, 2026, at 09:46, David G. Johnston <david.g.johnston@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Tuesday, April 7, 2026, Chao Li <li.evan.chao@gmail.com> wrote: > > We can clearly see ":expr {FUNCEXPR :funcid 1573 “. > > With this patch, will that view break? How would users find all such broken views? Maybe PostgreSQL already has some recommended way to handle this kind of situation that I am not aware of? > > pg_dump resolves oid=1573 and produces a textual SQL representation, which is then executed during pg_restore. This happens manually, and also automatically by pg_upgrade. Since the text form hasn’t changed the view is still valid in v19. You would see the new oid if inspecting the rule after the upgrade. > > So yes, the public serialization format being SQL and thus mandatory new object creation during upgrade is the way PostgreSQL handles implementation detail isolation. > > David J. > Hi David, thanks for the explanation, I really didn’t know that. Then, the patch looks good to me. GET_PRETTY_FLAGS(false) returns PRETTYFLAG_INDENT, so no behavior change either. Best regards, -- Chao Li (Evan) HighGo Software Co., Ltd. https://www.highgo.com/ -
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2026-04-08T18:10:55Z
On Wed, Apr 08, 2026 at 01:51:30AM +0200, Andreas Karlsson wrote: > On 4/8/26 1:42 AM, Mark Wong wrote: > > I don't see any matches when I grep for rule_oid or pretty_bool... > > Sorry for the noise, I was looking at an old version of the docs. The > parameters do indeed match the docs. But now that I looked at the > patches again I found a real issue which I think should be fixed. No worries. > I think the following: > > "select statement of a view with pretty-print option" > > should likely just be: > > "select statement of a view" Yeah, I agree with that considering that other functions like the recent get_*_ddl functions have options like that aren't detailed in pg_proc.dat. What I pondered over a little bit was whether to flip-flop and remove the original _ext definitions instead and modify their respective counterparts that I originally removed. I opted to continue editing what I started because of the comment that reads "System-view support functions with pretty-print option", but I don't have any strong opinions either way. I've attached v7 with the more succinct descriptions. Regards, Mark
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se> — 2026-04-08T19:18:34Z
On 4/8/26 8:10 PM, Mark Wong wrote: > What I pondered over a little bit was whether to flip-flop and remove > the original _ext definitions instead and modify their respective > counterparts that I originally removed. I opted to continue editing what > I started because of the comment that reads "System-view support > functions with pretty-print option", but I don't have any strong > opinions either way. > > I've attached v7 with the more succinct descriptions. I would be fine with either too. The comment feels a bit less useful now so it too could either stay or go. I have no strong feelings about it. Setting this as ready for committer since I think the patch is fine as-is and an improvement over the current no matter what is done about the comment or which oids we decide to use. Andreas
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2026-06-05T20:14:12Z
I noticed a rebase was needed so I've attached v8. Regards, Mark
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Tristan Partin <tristan@partin.io> — 2026-06-05T21:04:34Z
> Patch 1 > > - proargtypes => 'oid bool', prosrc => 'pg_get_ruledef_ext' }, > + proargtypes => 'oid bool', proargnames => '{rule,pretty}', > + proargdefaults => '{false}',prosrc => 'pg_get_ruledef' }, There is a space missing before prosrc in the added line. Other than that one comment, this looks good to me. I am a little confused how proargdefaults works given the function takes two arguments, but you only defined one default, so how does the parser know that the false default is in reference to "pretty". I do see there is other precedent for this pattern, so it is correct. -- Tristan Partin PostgreSQL Contributors Team AWS (https://aws.amazon.com) -
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Mark Wong <markwkm@gmail.com> — 2026-06-11T14:47:37Z
On Fri, Jun 05, 2026 at 09:04:34PM +0000, Tristan Partin wrote: > > Patch 1 > > > > - proargtypes => 'oid bool', prosrc => 'pg_get_ruledef_ext' }, > > + proargtypes => 'oid bool', proargnames => '{rule,pretty}', > > + proargdefaults => '{false}',prosrc => 'pg_get_ruledef' }, > > There is a space missing before prosrc in the added line. > > Other than that one comment, this looks good to me. Oops, v8.1 attached to correct that white space. > I am a little confused how proargdefaults works given the function takes > two arguments, but you only defined one default, so how does the parser > know that the false default is in reference to "pretty". I do see there > is other precedent for this pattern, so it is correct. I believe that's handled in InsertOneProargdefaultsValue() in src/backend/bootstrap/bootstrap.c, right below the comment: /* The values should correspond to the last N argtypes */ Regards, Mark -
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Tristan Partin <tristan@partin.io> — 2026-06-18T16:50:13Z
On Thu Jun 11, 2026 at 2:47 PM UTC, Mark Wong wrote: > On Fri, Jun 05, 2026 at 09:04:34PM +0000, Tristan Partin wrote: >> > Patch 1 >> > >> > - proargtypes => 'oid bool', prosrc => 'pg_get_ruledef_ext' }, >> > + proargtypes => 'oid bool', proargnames => '{rule,pretty}', >> > + proargdefaults => '{false}',prosrc => 'pg_get_ruledef' }, >> >> There is a space missing before prosrc in the added line. >> >> Other than that one comment, this looks good to me. > > Oops, v8.1 attached to correct that white space. Patches look great Mark! -- Tristan Partin PostgreSQL Contributors Team AWS (https://aws.amazon.com) -
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com> — 2026-07-03T13:59:19Z
On Fri, Jun 19, 2026 at 1:50 AM Tristan Partin <tristan@partin.io> wrote: > > Oops, v8.1 attached to correct that white space. > > Patches look great Mark! Some patches no longer apply cleanly on HEAD, so they'll need to be rebased. I have one question, though. Suppose a user executes GRANT or REVOKE on pg_get_ruledef(oid), then creates a dump with pg_dump. If that dump is restored into a newer server where these patches have been applied, the restore would fail because pg_get_ruledef(oid) no longer exists. Is that acceptable (this means that users need to handle the restore failure), or should pg_dump handle this case specially? I suspect we've had similar situations before when system functions changed between major versions, and I don't recall adding special handling to pg_dump... Thought? Regards, -- Fujii Masao
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2026-07-03T14:15:02Z
Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com> writes: > I have one question, though. > Suppose a user executes GRANT or REVOKE on pg_get_ruledef(oid), then > creates a dump with pg_dump. If that dump is restored into a newer > server where these patches have been applied, the restore would fail > because pg_get_ruledef(oid) no longer exists. > Is that acceptable (this means that users need to handle the restore > failure), or should pg_dump handle this case specially? I wouldn't blink an eye at that. There's no obvious use-case for someone to mess with the permissions on that function. Even if there were, I don't think it'd be reasonable for pg_dump to try to patch it up. (I'm not sure that pg_dump would dump such grants in the first place.) regards, tom lane
-
Re: updates for handling optional argument in system functions
Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com> — 2026-07-03T15:01:57Z
On Fri, Jul 3, 2026 at 11:15 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > > Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com> writes: > > I have one question, though. > > > Suppose a user executes GRANT or REVOKE on pg_get_ruledef(oid), then > > creates a dump with pg_dump. If that dump is restored into a newer > > server where these patches have been applied, the restore would fail > > because pg_get_ruledef(oid) no longer exists. > > > Is that acceptable (this means that users need to handle the restore > > failure), or should pg_dump handle this case specially? > > I wouldn't blink an eye at that. There's no obvious use-case for > someone to mess with the permissions on that function. Even > if there were, I don't think it'd be reasonable for pg_dump to > try to patch it up. (I'm not sure that pg_dump would dump such > grants in the first place.) pg_dump seems to dump such grants. For example: $ createuser foo $ psql -c "REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION pg_get_ruledef(oid) FROM public" REVOKE $ psql -c "GRANT ALL ON FUNCTION pg_get_ruledef(oid) TO foo" GRANT $ pg_dump | grep pg_get_ruledef -- Name: FUNCTION pg_get_ruledef(oid); Type: ACL; Schema: pg_catalog; Owner: postgres REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION pg_catalog.pg_get_ruledef(oid) FROM PUBLIC; GRANT ALL ON FUNCTION pg_catalog.pg_get_ruledef(oid) TO foo; My concern was simply that restoring such a dump into a newer server could fail because the single-argument function like pg_get_ruledef(oid) no longer exists. This could affect not only GRANT/REVOKE, but also commands such as ALTER FUNCTION and COMMENT, etc. So I just asked that question. If we agree that these are fairly unlikely use cases, so no special handling for such restore failures is necessary, I'm ok with that. Regards, -- Fujii Masao