Propagate CTE property flags when copying a CTE list into a rule.

rewriteRuleAction() neglected this step, although it was careful to
propagate other similar flags such as hasSubLinks or hasRowSecurity.
Omitting to transfer hasRecursive is just cosmetic at the moment,
but omitting hasModifyingCTE is a live bug, since the executor
certainly looks at that.

The proposed test case only fails back to v10, but since the executor
examines hasModifyingCTE in 9.x as well, I suspect that a test case
could be devised that fails in older branches.  Given the nearness
of the release deadline, though, I'm not going to spend time looking
for a better test.

Report and patch by Greg Nancarrow, cosmetic changes by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJcOf-fAdj=nDKMsRhQzndm-O13NY4dL6xGcEvdX5Xvbbi0V7g@mail.gmail.com
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2021-02-06 19:28:39 -05:00
parent 5ad03374bf
commit 4384eccb15
1 changed files with 6 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -504,6 +504,9 @@ rewriteRuleAction(Query *parsetree,
*
* This could possibly be fixed by using some sort of internally
* generated ID, instead of names, to link CTE RTEs to their CTEs.
* However, decompiling the results would be quite confusing; note the
* merge of hasRecursive flags below, which could change the apparent
* semantics of such redundantly-named CTEs.
*/
foreach(lc, parsetree->cteList)
{
@ -525,6 +528,9 @@ rewriteRuleAction(Query *parsetree,
/* OK, it's safe to combine the CTE lists */
sub_action->cteList = list_concat(sub_action->cteList,
copyObject(parsetree->cteList));
/* ... and don't forget about the associated flags */
sub_action->hasRecursive |= parsetree->hasRecursive;
sub_action->hasModifyingCTE |= parsetree->hasModifyingCTE;
}
/*