Collect dependency information for parsed CallStmts.

Parse analysis of a CallStmt will inject mutable information,
for instance the OID of the called procedure, so that subsequent
DDL may create a need to re-parse the CALL.  We failed to detect
this for CALLs in plpgsql routines, because no dependency information
was collected when putting a CallStmt into the plan cache.  That
could lead to misbehavior or strange errors such as "cache lookup
failed".

Before commit ee895a655, the issue would only manifest for CALLs
appearing in atomic contexts, because we re-planned non-atomic
CALLs every time through anyway.

It is now apparent that extract_query_dependencies() probably
needs a special case for every utility statement type for which
stmt_requires_parse_analysis() returns true.  I wanted to add
something like Assert(!stmt_requires_parse_analysis(...)) when
falling out of extract_query_dependencies_walker without doing
anything, but there are API issues as well as a more fundamental
point: stmt_requires_parse_analysis is supposed to be applied to
raw parser output, so it'd be cheating to assume it will give the
correct answer for post-parse-analysis trees.  I contented myself
with adding a comment.

Per bug #18131 from Christian Stork.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18131-576854e79c5cd264@postgresql.org
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2023-09-25 14:41:57 -04:00
parent a2c2fbf740
commit dc8d72c1c2
3 changed files with 106 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -3565,8 +3565,27 @@ extract_query_dependencies_walker(Node *node, PlannerInfo *context)
if (query->commandType == CMD_UTILITY)
{
/*
* Ignore utility statements, except those (such as EXPLAIN) that
* contain a parsed-but-not-planned query.
* This logic must handle any utility command for which parse
* analysis was nontrivial (cf. stmt_requires_parse_analysis).
*
* Notably, CALL requires its own processing.
*/
if (IsA(query->utilityStmt, CallStmt))
{
CallStmt *callstmt = (CallStmt *) query->utilityStmt;
/* We need not examine funccall, just the transformed exprs */
(void) extract_query_dependencies_walker((Node *) callstmt->funcexpr,
context);
(void) extract_query_dependencies_walker((Node *) callstmt->outargs,
context);
return false;
}
/*
* Ignore other utility statements, except those (such as EXPLAIN)
* that contain a parsed-but-not-planned query. For those, we
* just need to transfer our attention to the contained query.
*/
query = UtilityContainsQuery(query->utilityStmt);
if (query == NULL)

View File

@ -483,3 +483,50 @@ BEGIN
END;
$$;
NOTICE: <NULL>
-- check that we detect change of dependencies in CALL
-- atomic and non-atomic call sites used to do this differently, so check both
CREATE PROCEDURE inner_p (f1 int)
AS $$
BEGIN
RAISE NOTICE 'inner_p(%)', f1;
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CREATE FUNCTION f(int) RETURNS int AS $$ SELECT $1 + 1 $$ LANGUAGE sql;
CREATE PROCEDURE outer_p (f1 int)
AS $$
BEGIN
RAISE NOTICE 'outer_p(%)', f1;
CALL inner_p(f(f1));
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CREATE FUNCTION outer_f (f1 int) RETURNS void
AS $$
BEGIN
RAISE NOTICE 'outer_f(%)', f1;
CALL inner_p(f(f1));
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CALL outer_p(42);
NOTICE: outer_p(42)
NOTICE: inner_p(43)
SELECT outer_f(42);
NOTICE: outer_f(42)
NOTICE: inner_p(43)
outer_f
---------
(1 row)
DROP FUNCTION f(int);
CREATE FUNCTION f(int) RETURNS int AS $$ SELECT $1 + 2 $$ LANGUAGE sql;
CALL outer_p(42);
NOTICE: outer_p(42)
NOTICE: inner_p(44)
SELECT outer_f(42);
NOTICE: outer_f(42)
NOTICE: inner_p(44)
outer_f
---------
(1 row)

View File

@ -454,3 +454,41 @@ BEGIN
RAISE NOTICE '%', v_Text;
END;
$$;
-- check that we detect change of dependencies in CALL
-- atomic and non-atomic call sites used to do this differently, so check both
CREATE PROCEDURE inner_p (f1 int)
AS $$
BEGIN
RAISE NOTICE 'inner_p(%)', f1;
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CREATE FUNCTION f(int) RETURNS int AS $$ SELECT $1 + 1 $$ LANGUAGE sql;
CREATE PROCEDURE outer_p (f1 int)
AS $$
BEGIN
RAISE NOTICE 'outer_p(%)', f1;
CALL inner_p(f(f1));
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CREATE FUNCTION outer_f (f1 int) RETURNS void
AS $$
BEGIN
RAISE NOTICE 'outer_f(%)', f1;
CALL inner_p(f(f1));
END
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CALL outer_p(42);
SELECT outer_f(42);
DROP FUNCTION f(int);
CREATE FUNCTION f(int) RETURNS int AS $$ SELECT $1 + 2 $$ LANGUAGE sql;
CALL outer_p(42);
SELECT outer_f(42);