Rethink the dependencies recorded for FieldSelect/FieldStore nodes.

On closer investigation, commits f3ea3e3e8 et al were a few bricks
shy of a load.  What we need is not so much to lock down the result
type of a FieldSelect, as to lock down the existence of the column
it's trying to extract.  Otherwise, we can break it by dropping that
column.  The dependency on the result type is then held indirectly
through the column, and doesn't need to be recorded explicitly.

Out of paranoia, I left in the code to record a dependency on the
result type, but it's used only if we can't identify the pg_class OID
for the column.  That shouldn't ever happen right now, AFAICS, but
it seems possible that in future the input node could be marked as
being of type RECORD rather than some specific composite type.

Likewise for FieldStore.

Like the previous patch, back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/22571.1509064146@sss.pgh.pa.us
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2017-10-27 12:18:57 -04:00
parent f39fc2b27d
commit adcfa7bd16
3 changed files with 55 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -1642,10 +1642,24 @@ find_expr_references_walker(Node *node,
else if (IsA(node, FieldSelect))
{
FieldSelect *fselect = (FieldSelect *) node;
Oid argtype = exprType((Node *) fselect->arg);
Oid reltype = get_typ_typrelid(argtype);
/* result type might not appear anywhere else in expression */
add_object_address(OCLASS_TYPE, fselect->resulttype, 0,
context->addrs);
/*
* We need a dependency on the specific column named in FieldSelect,
* assuming we can identify the pg_class OID for it. (Probably we
* always can at the moment, but in future it might be possible for
* argtype to be RECORDOID.) If we can make a column dependency then
* we shouldn't need a dependency on the column's type; but if we
* can't, make a dependency on the type, as it might not appear
* anywhere else in the expression.
*/
if (OidIsValid(reltype))
add_object_address(OCLASS_CLASS, reltype, fselect->fieldnum,
context->addrs);
else
add_object_address(OCLASS_TYPE, fselect->resulttype, 0,
context->addrs);
/* the collation might not be referenced anywhere else, either */
if (OidIsValid(fselect->resultcollid) &&
fselect->resultcollid != DEFAULT_COLLATION_OID)
@ -1655,10 +1669,20 @@ find_expr_references_walker(Node *node,
else if (IsA(node, FieldStore))
{
FieldStore *fstore = (FieldStore *) node;
Oid reltype = get_typ_typrelid(fstore->resulttype);
/* result type might not appear anywhere else in expression */
add_object_address(OCLASS_TYPE, fstore->resulttype, 0,
context->addrs);
/* similar considerations to FieldSelect, but multiple column(s) */
if (OidIsValid(reltype))
{
ListCell *l;
foreach(l, fstore->fieldnums)
add_object_address(OCLASS_CLASS, reltype, lfirst_int(l),
context->addrs);
}
else
add_object_address(OCLASS_TYPE, fstore->resulttype, 0,
context->addrs);
}
else if (IsA(node, RelabelType))
{

View File

@ -2488,6 +2488,23 @@ Table "public.test_tbl2_subclass"
Inherits: test_tbl2
DROP TABLE test_tbl2_subclass;
CREATE TYPE test_typex AS (a int, b text);
CREATE TABLE test_tblx (x int, y test_typex check ((y).a > 0));
ALTER TYPE test_typex DROP ATTRIBUTE a; -- fails
ERROR: cannot drop composite type test_typex column a because other objects depend on it
DETAIL: constraint test_tblx_y_check on table test_tblx depends on composite type test_typex column a
HINT: Use DROP ... CASCADE to drop the dependent objects too.
ALTER TYPE test_typex DROP ATTRIBUTE a CASCADE;
NOTICE: drop cascades to constraint test_tblx_y_check on table test_tblx
\d test_tblx
Table "public.test_tblx"
Column | Type | Modifiers
--------+------------+-----------
x | integer |
y | test_typex |
DROP TABLE test_tblx;
DROP TYPE test_typex;
-- This test isn't that interesting on its own, but the purpose is to leave
-- behind a table to test pg_upgrade with. The table has a composite type
-- column in it, and the composite type has a dropped attribute.

View File

@ -1558,6 +1558,14 @@ ALTER TYPE test_type2 RENAME ATTRIBUTE a TO aa CASCADE;
DROP TABLE test_tbl2_subclass;
CREATE TYPE test_typex AS (a int, b text);
CREATE TABLE test_tblx (x int, y test_typex check ((y).a > 0));
ALTER TYPE test_typex DROP ATTRIBUTE a; -- fails
ALTER TYPE test_typex DROP ATTRIBUTE a CASCADE;
\d test_tblx
DROP TABLE test_tblx;
DROP TYPE test_typex;
-- This test isn't that interesting on its own, but the purpose is to leave
-- behind a table to test pg_upgrade with. The table has a composite type
-- column in it, and the composite type has a dropped attribute.