Thread
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Re: [HACKERS] SIGSEGV on CREATE FUNCTION with plpgsql
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 1999-07-24T15:54:24Z
Wayne Piekarski <wayne@senet.com.au> writes: > So can someone give me some advice? Do you want me to provide a stack dump > or something? A stack trace might help --- I'm not sure why you are seeing this problem if there are no functions approaching 4k of text. > Right now I'm reluctant to play with my plpgsql functions because I'm > scared its going to die and I wont be able to reload them back in. You can play with them in a playpen installation... I wouldn't do that sort of testing on a production installation either. A playpen is always a good thing to have. Note you can put multiple playpens on one machine --- all you need is a separate data directory and socket number for each one. regards, tom lane
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Re: [HACKERS] SIGSEGV on CREATE FUNCTION with plpgsql
Jan Wieck <wieck@debis.com> — 1999-07-26T09:03:59Z
> > Wayne Piekarski <wayne@senet.com.au> writes: > > So can someone give me some advice? Do you want me to provide a stack dump > > or something? > > A stack trace might help --- I'm not sure why you are seeing this > problem if there are no functions approaching 4k of text. Would be interesting if the problem is index related. I still wonder (while looking at the code) what that ProcedureSrcIndex is really good for. I've tracked it down that it is only once used in pg_proc.c to check if an sql language function that implements a SET already exists (weired method to do IMHO). The code was already there in version 1.1 (initial load) of the code, so it might be an old Postgres 4.2 thing that's obsolete. Additionally, very doubtful, is the fact that we considered functions returning SET's as broken, so again I wonder if there's any code that automatically creates such functions (if not created automatically like the _RET rules of views are, identifying by this wouldn't allways work). The targetlists attached to SET functions don't work, so I assume removing the index wouldn't break anything. I'll dig out the 4.2 sources and search for a reason for that index there. If I find anything, I can check if that's still in our code. Jan -- #======================================================================# # It's easier to get forgiveness for being wrong than for being right. # # Let's break this rule - forgive me. # #========================================= wieck@debis.com (Jan Wieck) # -
Re: [HACKERS] SIGSEGV on CREATE FUNCTION with plpgsql
Wayne Piekarski <wayne@senet.com.au> — 1999-08-07T08:16:18Z
> Wayne Piekarski <wayne@senet.com.au> writes: > > So can someone give me some advice? Do you want me to provide a stack dump > > or something? > > A stack trace might help --- I'm not sure why you are seeing this > problem if there are no functions approaching 4k of text. Ok, I've got a test postgres set up which I used for my profiling so I'll have a play and get a stack dump and see if I can work out whats causing this. Been busy lately so haven't had a chance ... more later on this. > > Right now I'm reluctant to play with my plpgsql functions because I'm > > scared its going to die and I wont be able to reload them back in. > > You can play with them in a playpen installation... I wouldn't do that > sort of testing on a production installation either. A playpen is > always a good thing to have. Note you can put multiple playpens on > one machine --- all you need is a separate data directory and socket > number for each one. I've got multiple testing databases, but due to the random nature of the problem, the functions will reload normally, but when the pg_dump output reloads them, it does it in a different order and dies. So it is dependent on order and a bunch of other things, and so even with testing, I still can't be sure it won't break the real production database. I'll have a look through the code and see if I can spot something obvious. My functions are all <= 1k and so I'm miles away from 2k or 4k problems with btree indices. thanks, Wayne ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Wayne Piekarski Tel: (08) 8221 5221 Research & Development Manager Fax: (08) 8221 5220 SE Network Access Pty Ltd Mob: 0407 395 889 222 Grote Street Email: wayne@senet.com.au Adelaide SA 5000 WWW: http://www.senet.com.au