From: | Pavel Stehule <pavel(dot)stehule(at)gmail(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | chris travers <chris(at)2ndquadrant(dot)com> |
Cc: | Marko Tiikkaja <marko(at)joh(dot)to>, PostgreSQL-development <pgsql-hackers(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
Subject: | Re: Proposal: PL/PgSQL strict_mode |
Date: | 2013-09-14 06:29:05 |
Message-ID: | CAFj8pRALS-P5izr8PCsmeRGkkPF=RfCy9chAJdM8YUgmfgfBvw@mail.gmail.com |
Views: | Raw Message | Whole Thread | Download mbox | Resend email |
Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-hackers |
2013/9/14 chris travers <chris(at)2ndquadrant(dot)com>
> **
> A few thoughts about this.
>
> > On 14 September 2013 at 05:28 Marko Tiikkaja <marko(at)joh(dot)to> wrote:
> >
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > After my previous suggestion for adding a STRICT keyword got shot
> > down[1], I've been thinking about an idea Andrew Gierth tossed out:
> > adding a new "strict mode" into PL/PgSQL. In this mode, any query which
> > processes more than one row will raise an exception. This is a bit
> > similar to specifying INTO STRICT .. for every statement, except
> > processing no rows does not trigger the exception. The need for this
> > mode comes from a few observations I make almost every day:
> > 1) The majority of statements only deal with exactly 0 or 1 rows.
> > 2) Checking row_count for a statement is ugly and cumbersome, so
> > often it just isn't checked. I often use RETURNING TRUE INTO STRICT _OK
> > for DML, but that a) requires an extra variable, and b) isn't possible
> > if 0 rows affected is not an error in the application logic.
> > 3) SELECT .. INTO only fetches one row and ignores the rest. Even
> > row_count is always set to 0 or 1, so there's no way to fetch a value
> > *and* to check that there would not have been more rows. This creates
> > bugs which make your queries return wrong results and which could go
> > undetected for a long time.
>
> I am going to suggest that STRICT is semantically pretty far from what is
> meant here in common speech. I think STRICT here would be confusing. This
> would be really pretty severe for people coming from Perl or MySQL
> backgrounds.
>
> May I suggest SINGLE as a key word instead? It might be worth having
> attached to a INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE statements.
>
I don't think so SINGLE is better. There is a risk of confusing with LIMIT
clause. (More - we use a STRICT now, so new keyword increase a possible
confusing)
When I look on translation of "STRICT" to Czech language, I am thinging so
STRICT is good enough.
If we do some change, then I propose a little bit Cobol solution CHECK ONE
ROW EXPECTED" clause.
instead DELETE FROM foo WHERE f1 < 1000
do
DELETE FROM foo WHERE f1 < 1000 CHECK ONE ROW EXPECTED;
Regards
Pavel
> I am thinking something like:
>
> DELETE SINGLE FROM foo WHERE f1 < 1000;
>
> would be more clearer. Similarly one could have:
>
> INSERT SINGLE INTO foo SELECT * from foo2;
>
> and
>
> UPDATE SINGLE foo
>
> You could even use SELECT SINGLE but not sure where the use case is there
> where unique indexes are not sufficient.
>
>
> >
> > Attached is a proof-of-concept patch (no docs, probably some actual code
> > problems too) to implement this as a compile option:
> >
> > =# create or replace function footest() returns void as $$
> > $# #strict_mode strict
> > $# begin
> > $# -- not allowed to delete more than one row
> > $# delete from foo where f1 < 100;
> > $# end$$ language plpgsql;
> > CREATE FUNCTION
> > =# select footest();
> > ERROR: query processed more than one row
> > CONTEXT: PL/pgSQL function footest() line 5 at SQL statement
> >
> > Now while I think this is a step into the right direction, I do have a
> > couple of problems with this patch:
> > 1) I'm not sure what would be the correct behaviour with EXECUTE.
> > I'm tempted to just leave EXECUTE alone, as it has slightly different
> > rules anyway.
> > 2) If you're running in strict mode and you want to
> > insert/update/delete more than one row, things get a bit uglier; a wCTE
> > would work for some cases. If strict mode doesn't affect EXECUTE (see
> > point 1 above), that could work too. Or maybe there could be a new
> > command which runs a query, discards the results and ignores the number
> > of rows processed.
>
> Yeah, I am worried about this one. I am concerned that if you can't
> disable on a statement by statement basis, then you have a problem where
> you end up removing the mode from the function and then it becomes a lot
> harder for everyone maintaining the function to have a clear picture of
> what is going on. I am further worried that hacked ugly code ways around
> it will introduce plenty of other maintenance pain points that will be
> worse than what you are solving.
> >
> > I'll be adding this to the open commitfest in hopes of getting some
> > feedback on this idea (I'm prepared to hear a lot of "you're crazy!"),
> > but feel free to comment away any time you please.
>
> Well, I don't know if my feedback above is helpful, but there it is ;-)
> >
> >
> > Regards,
> > Marko Tiikkaja
> >
> > [1]: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/510BF731.5020802@gmx.net
> >
> > --
> > Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers(at)postgresql(dot)org)
> > To make changes to your subscription:
> > http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers
> Best Wishes,
> Chris Travers
> http://www.2ndquadrant.com
> PostgreSQL Services, Training, and Support
>
From | Date | Subject | |
---|---|---|---|
Next Message | Amit Kapila | 2013-09-14 07:03:23 | Re: Review: Patch to compute Max LSN of Data Pages |
Previous Message | chris travers | 2013-09-14 04:53:52 | Re: Proposal: PL/PgSQL strict_mode |