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Adventures in PostgreSQL
Josh Berkus <josh@agliodbs.com> — 2002-07-19T15:26:37Z
Folks, I've recently started a new series of articles at TechDocs ( http://techdocs.postgresql.org ). This will be a biweekly (or triweekly if I'm busy) column, with articles covering an entire range of issues around my professional support of PostgreSQL. Currently there are two articles up, both oriented toward beginning-intermediate PostgreSQL users: 1. Restoring a corrupted Template 1 Database 2. Part I of "The Joy Of Index" There will be a few articles oriented toward advanced users, but most will keep the focus of the first two. Please take a look, and check back regularly for new columns. -Josh Berkus Aglio Database Solutions San Francisco P.S. I'm posting this because the articles were inspired by questions I was asked on these lists. P.P.S. I still need book review submissions for the PostgreSQL Book Review page at TechDocs!
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date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?
D. Duccini <duccini@backpack.com> — 2004-09-28T00:14:09Z
I'm trying to create a index from a timestamp+tz field and want the index to be date_trunc'd down to just the date when i try to do a create idxfoo on foo (date(footime)); i get a ERROR: DefineIndex: index function must be marked IMMUTABLE and it chokes on when i try to use the date_trunc() function as well create idxfoo on foo (date_trunc('day',footime)); ERROR: parser: parse error at or near "'day'" at character 53 Any suggestions/workarounds (other than creating additional date-only columns in the schema and indexing those???) -d -
Re: date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?
Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to> — 2004-10-01T18:28:30Z
On Mon, Sep 27, 2004 at 19:14:09 -0500, "D. Duccini" <duccini@backpack.com> wrote: > > I'm trying to create a index from a timestamp+tz field and want the index > to be date_trunc'd down to just the date > > when i try to do a > > create idxfoo on foo (date(footime)); > > i get a > > ERROR: DefineIndex: index function must be marked IMMUTABLE > > and it chokes on when i try to use the date_trunc() function as well > > create idxfoo on foo (date_trunc('day',footime)); > > ERROR: parser: parse error at or near "'day'" at character 53 > > Any suggestions/workarounds (other than creating additional date-only > columns in the schema and indexing those???) The reason this doesn't work is that the timestamp to date conversion depends on the time zone setting. In theory you should be able to avoid this by specifying the time zone to check the date in. I tried something like the following which I think should work, but doesn't: create idxfoo on foo (date(timezone('UTC',footime))); The conversion of the timestamp stored in footime should be immutable and then taking the date should work. I did find that date of a timestamp without time zone is treated as immutable. I am not sure how to check if the supplied function for converting a timestamp with time zone to a timestamp without timezone using a specified time zone is immutable. I think this function should be immutable, but that it probably isn't. -
Re: date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?
D. Duccini <duccini@backpack.com> — 2004-10-01T18:28:47Z
> The reason this doesn't work is that the timestamp to date conversion > depends on the time zone setting. In theory you should be able to avoid > this by specifying the time zone to check the date in. I tried something > like the following which I think should work, but doesn't: > create idxfoo on foo (date(timezone('UTC',footime))); > > The conversion of the timestamp stored in footime should be immutable > and then taking the date should work. I did find that date of a timestamp > without time zone is treated as immutable. > > I am not sure how to check if the supplied function for converting > a timestamp with time zone to a timestamp without timezone using a > specified time zone is immutable. I think this function should be > immutable, but that it probably isn't. I think we found a way around it! CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION date_immutable( timestamptz ) RETURNS date AS 'SELECT date( $1 ) ;' LANGUAGE 'sql' IMMUTABLE ; CREATE INDEX "new_event_dt" ON "the_events" USING btree ( date_immutable( "event_dt_tm" ) ) ; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- david@backpack.com BackPack Software, Inc. www.backpack.com +1 651.645.7550 voice "Life is an Adventure. +1 651.645.9798 fax Don't forget your BackPack!" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -
Re: date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?
Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to> — 2004-10-01T18:44:37Z
On Fri, Oct 01, 2004 at 13:28:30 -0500, Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to> wrote: > > I am not sure how to check if the supplied function for converting > a timestamp with time zone to a timestamp without timezone using a > specified time zone is immutable. I think this function should be > immutable, but that it probably isn't. I found that most of the various timezone functions are marked as stable instead of immutable. I think at least a couple of these should be marked as immutable and I will try reporting this as a bug.
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Re: [SQL] date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2004-10-01T18:49:34Z
Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to> writes: > I am not sure how to check if the supplied function for converting > a timestamp with time zone to a timestamp without timezone using a > specified time zone is immutable. I think this function should be > immutable, but that it probably isn't. Yup. In 7.4: regression=# select provolatile from pg_proc where oid = 'timezone(text,timestamptz)'::regprocedure; provolatile ------------- s (1 row) regression=# This is a thinko that's already been corrected for 8.0: regression=# select provolatile from pg_proc where oid = 'timezone(text,timestamptz)'::regprocedure; provolatile ------------- i (1 row) regression=# If you wanted you could just UPDATE pg_proc to correct this mistake. Another possibility is to create a function that's an IMMUTABLE wrapper around the standard function. Looking at this, I realize that date_trunc() is mismarked: the timestamptz variant is strongly dependent on the timezone setting and so should be STABLE not IMMUTABLE. Ooops. regards, tom lane
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Re: date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2004-10-01T21:17:28Z
"D. Duccini" <duccini@backpack.com> writes: > I think we found a way around it! > CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION date_immutable( timestamptz ) RETURNS date AS > 'SELECT date( $1 ) ;' LANGUAGE 'sql' IMMUTABLE ; No, you just found a way to corrupt your index. Pretending that date(timestamptz) is immutable does not make it so. The above *will* break the first time someone uses the table with a different timezone setting. What you can do safely is date(footime AT TIME ZONE 'something'), since this nails down the zone in which the date is interpreted. regards, tom lane
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Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?)
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2004-10-01T22:53:03Z
I wrote: > Looking at this, I realize that date_trunc() is mismarked: the > timestamptz variant is strongly dependent on the timezone setting > and so should be STABLE not IMMUTABLE. Ooops. On looking more closely, I think that all of these functions are mislabeled: oid | prorettype | prosrc | provolatile should be stable not immutable: date_trunc(text,timestamptz) | timestamptz | timestamptz_trunc | i interval_pl_timestamptz(interval,timestamptz) | timestamptz | select $2 + $1 | i timestamptz_pl_interval(timestamptz,interval) | timestamptz | timestamptz_pl_interval | i timestamptz_mi_interval(timestamptz,interval) | timestamptz | timestamptz_mi_interval | i "overlaps"(timestamptz,timestamptz,timestamptz,interval) | boolean | select ($1, $2) overlaps ($3, ($3 + $4)) | i "overlaps"(timestamptz,interval,timestamptz,timestamptz) | boolean | select ($1, ($1 + $2)) overlaps ($3, $4) | i "overlaps"(timestamptz,interval,timestamptz,interval) | boolean | select ($1, ($1 + $2)) overlaps ($3, ($3 + $4)) | i should be immutable not stable: to_char(timestamp,text) | text | timestamp_to_char | s timestamptz(abstime) | timestamptz | abstime_timestamptz | s abstime(timestamptz) | abstime | timestamptz_abstime | s It's easy to demonstrate that timestamptz+interval is dependent on the timezone setting: regression=# set timezone = 'EST5EDT'; SET regression=# select '2004-03-31 00:00-05'::timestamptz + '1 month'::interval; ?column? ------------------------ 2004-04-30 00:00:00-04 (1 row) regression=# set timezone = 'GMT'; SET regression=# select '2004-03-31 00:00-05'::timestamptz + '1 month'::interval; ?column? ------------------------ 2004-04-30 05:00:00+00 (1 row) and then the overlaps variants have to follow along. On the other side of the coin, I don't think that to_char has any dependency on timezone when it is dealing with a timestamp without time zone. (If you ask it for TZ you always get an empty string.) Likewise there's no such dependency in abstime/timestamptz conversions. Do you see any other mislabelings? What I'm inclined to do with these is change pg_proc.h but not force an initdb. Does anyone want to argue for an initdb to force it to be fixed in 8.0? We've lived with the wrong labelings for some time now without noticing, so it doesn't seem like a serious enough bug to force a post-beta initdb ... to me anyway. regards, tom lane -
Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?)
Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to> — 2004-10-02T00:50:08Z
On Fri, Oct 01, 2004 at 18:53:03 -0400, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > > What I'm inclined to do with these is change pg_proc.h but not force an > initdb. Does anyone want to argue for an initdb to force it to be fixed > in 8.0? We've lived with the wrong labelings for some time now without > noticing, so it doesn't seem like a serious enough bug to force a > post-beta initdb ... to me anyway. As long as it is mentioned in the release notes, it doesn't seem worth forcing an initdb.
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Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd
Gaetano Mendola <mendola@bigfoot.com> — 2004-10-02T08:43:01Z
Tom Lane wrote: > I wrote: > Do you see any other mislabelings? I don't but I think that the concept of immutable shall be expanded. I mean I can use safely a date_trunc immutable in a query ( I think this is a sort of "immutable per statement" ) but not in a index definition ( the index mantainance is affected by the current timezonesettings ). So may be another modifier shall be introduced that reflect the "immutable per statement" > What I'm inclined to do with these is change pg_proc.h but not force an > initdb. Does anyone want to argue for an initdb to force it to be fixed > in 8.0? We've lived with the wrong labelings for some time now without > noticing, so it doesn't seem like a serious enough bug to force a > post-beta initdb ... to me anyway. I think that an initdb is not required but at least a script, released only with the 8.0, that will update the catalogs could be usefull. Regards Gaetano Mendola
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Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?)
Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> — 2004-10-02T17:41:29Z
Tom Lane wrote: > What I'm inclined to do with these is change pg_proc.h but not force > an initdb. Does anyone want to argue for an initdb to force it to be > fixed in 8.0? We've lived with the wrong labelings for some time now > without noticing, so it doesn't seem like a serious enough bug to > force a post-beta initdb ... to me anyway. I'd prefer if all users of 8.0 were guaranteed to have the same catalog. I don't want to ask users, "what version, and when did you last initdb". We're still in beta; no one purchased any stability guarantees. -- Peter Eisentraut http://developer.postgresql.org/~petere/
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Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?)
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2004-10-02T18:22:50Z
Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes: > Tom Lane wrote: >> What I'm inclined to do with these is change pg_proc.h but not force >> an initdb. Does anyone want to argue for an initdb to force it to be >> fixed in 8.0? We've lived with the wrong labelings for some time now >> without noticing, so it doesn't seem like a serious enough bug to >> force a post-beta initdb ... to me anyway. > I'd prefer if all users of 8.0 were guaranteed to have the same catalog. Well, there's something to be said for that viewpoint too. Anyone else feel the same? If we do go for an initdb, I'd like at the same time to do something I had intended to do but forgotten, which is to yank the functions and operators for basic arithmetic on type "char", and instead put in (explicit) conversions between "char" and integer. See for instance http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-sql/2002-11/msg00116.php http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-general/2004-08/msg01562.php http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-general/2004-09/msg01209.php Specifically I want to remove these operators: oid | oid | oprresult -----+-------------------+----------- 635 | +("char","char") | "char" 636 | -("char","char") | "char" 637 | *("char","char") | "char" 638 | /("char","char") | "char" and their underlying functions: oid | oid | prorettype | prosrc ------+--------------------------+------------+------------- 1248 | charpl("char","char") | "char" | charpl 1250 | charmi("char","char") | "char" | charmi 77 | charmul("char","char") | "char" | charmul 78 | chardiv("char","char") | "char" | chardiv The following operators on "char" will remain: oid | oid | oprresult -----+-------------------+----------- 92 | =("char","char") | boolean 630 | <>("char","char") | boolean 631 | <("char","char") | boolean 632 | <=("char","char") | boolean 633 | >("char","char") | boolean 634 | >=("char","char") | boolean These are not as dangerous as the arithmetic operators, because in a situation where the parser is having difficulty resolving types, it will prefer the "text" comparison operators over these. The reason the "char" arithmetic operators are dangerous is that they are the only ones of those names in the STRING type category. regards, tom lane -
Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd
Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to> — 2004-10-02T20:04:51Z
On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 10:43:01 +0200, Gaetano Mendola <mendola@bigfoot.com> wrote: > Tom Lane wrote: > >I wrote: > >Do you see any other mislabelings? > > I don't but I think that the concept of immutable shall be expanded. > I mean I can use safely a date_trunc immutable in a query ( I think this > is a sort of "immutable per statement" ) but not in a index definition > ( the index mantainance is affected by the current timezonesettings ). > So may be another modifier shall be introduced that reflect the "immutable > per statement" There has been such a distinction for a major release or two. "Stable" is how you mark a function that will return the same value within a single transaction.
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Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd
Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to> — 2004-10-03T01:16:41Z
On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 15:04:51 -0500, Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to> wrote: > On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 10:43:01 +0200, > > There has been such a distinction for a major release or two. "Stable" > is how you mark a function that will return the same value within a > single transaction. I should have said within a single statement instead of within a single transaction.
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Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd
Gaetano Mendola <mendola@bigfoot.com> — 2004-10-03T11:18:27Z
Bruno Wolff III wrote: > On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 15:04:51 -0500, > Bruno Wolff III <bruno@wolff.to> wrote: > >>On Sat, Oct 02, 2004 at 10:43:01 +0200, >> >>There has been such a distinction for a major release or two. "Stable" >>is how you mark a function that will return the same value within a >>single transaction. > > > I should have said within a single statement instead of within a single > transaction. I know that but a stable function is not called once inside the same query, instead an immutable is: sp_immutable() is a simple immutable function sp_stable() is a simple stable function sp_foo() is a simple function test is a table with two rows in it. regression=# select sp_stable(), sp_immutable(), sp_foo() from test; NOTICE: sp_immutable called NOTICE: sp_stable called NOTICE: sp_foo called NOTICE: sp_stable called NOTICE: sp_foo called sp_stable | sp_immutable | sp_foo -----------+--------------+-------- 0 | 0 | 0 0 | 0 | 0 (2 rows) so now do you see what do I mean ? The stable function is threated "stable" only if inserted inside a filter: regression=# select * from test where sp_stable() = 3; NOTICE: sp_stable called a --- (0 rows) and from this point of view immutable is not immutable enough: regression=# select sp_immutable() from test where sp_immutable() = 3; NOTICE: sp_immutable called NOTICE: sp_immutable called sp_immutable -------------- (0 rows) Regards Gaetano Mendola -
Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?)
Mike Rylander <mrylander@gmail.com> — 2004-10-03T14:49:12Z
Not that my 2c is worth 1c, but I second this. I'd rather initdb now than get bitten by some catalog difference when I move my DB into production. :) --miker On Sat, 02 Oct 2004 14:22:50 -0400, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: [...] > > > I'd prefer if all users of 8.0 were guaranteed to have the same catalog. > > Well, there's something to be said for that viewpoint too. Anyone else > feel the same? [...]
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Re: Stable function semantics (was Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions)
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2004-10-03T21:27:25Z
Oliver Jowett <oliver@opencloud.com> writes: > Bruno Wolff III wrote: >> I should have said within a single statement instead of within a single >> transaction. > As I understand Tom's earlier explanation of this, the definition is > even more narrow: stable functions only need to return the same value > across a single tablescan. > It might be useful to have some variant of stable (or perhaps just a > change in semantics) such that the function returns the same value for > identical parameters until the next CommandCounterIncrement. In practice I think these are equivalent definitions. regards, tom lane
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Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?)
Greg Stark <gsstark@mit.edu> — 2004-10-03T21:49:32Z
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> writes: > Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net> writes: > > Tom Lane wrote: > >> What I'm inclined to do with these is change pg_proc.h but not force > >> an initdb. Does anyone want to argue for an initdb to force it to be > >> fixed in 8.0? We've lived with the wrong labelings for some time now > >> without noticing, so it doesn't seem like a serious enough bug to > >> force a post-beta initdb ... to me anyway. > > > I'd prefer if all users of 8.0 were guaranteed to have the same catalog. > > Well, there's something to be said for that viewpoint too. Anyone else > feel the same? I would wonder about any users that are happily using beta3 with test data and upgrade to 8.0 without any problems but at some point later have trouble restoring from a pg_dump. > Specifically I want to remove these operators: > > oid | oid | oprresult > -----+-------------------+----------- > 635 | +("char","char") | "char" > 636 | -("char","char") | "char" > 637 | *("char","char") | "char" > 638 | /("char","char") | "char" > ... > The reason the "char" arithmetic operators are dangerous is that they are > the only ones of those names in the STRING type category. What would happen if "char" were just removed from the STRING type category? Or alternatively if it were broken out into two data types, "char" which didn't have these operators, and int1 which only had these operators and not all the string operators? It does seem like having a fixed size 1 byte integer data type would be something appealing. Personally I find a lot of demand in my database models for status flags that have very few possible states (often only two but I don't want to limit myself with a boolean and booleans don't behave nicely with any other application language since they return 't' and 'f'). I could easily see some very large table where someone wants to store lots of small integers that need some arithmetic capabilities. -- greg -
Re: Mislabeled timestamp functions (was Re: [SQL] [NOVICE] date_trunc'd timestamp index possible?)
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2004-10-03T22:37:44Z
Greg Stark <gsstark@mit.edu> writes: > Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> writes: >> The reason the "char" arithmetic operators are dangerous is that they are >> the only ones of those names in the STRING type category. > What would happen if "char" were just removed from the STRING type category? What other category would you put it in? The I/O behavior of "char" is certainly not very conducive to thinking of it as storing integral values, anyway. > Or alternatively if it were broken out into two data types, "char" which > didn't have these operators, and int1 which only had these operators and not > all the string operators? I don't have an objection in principle to an int1 datatype, but there are a couple of practical objections; primarily that that looks way too much like a new feature for this point in the 8.0 cycle. (I seem to recall having once had concerns about unexpected side effects from adding another set of overloaded operators to the NUMERIC category, too; but I'm not sure if that's still relevant given the resolution-rule changes we've made in the last couple releases.) Even with an int1 datatype, I'm not sure it makes sense to provide arithmetic operators specifically for the type, as opposed to providing implicit coercions to "integer" and letting the actual arithmetic happen at integer width. regards, tom lane