On May 27, 2011, at 7:14 PM, Alex Hunsaker wrote:
> On Mon, May 23, 2011 at 20:08, Greg Sabino Mullane <greg@endpoint.com> wr=
ote:
>> On Mon, May 23, 2011 at 05:04:40PM -0600, Alex Hunsaker wrote:
>> ...
>>> Greg, can you confirm the attached fixes it for you?
>>=20
>> Yes, seems to have done the job, thank you.
>=20
> Thanks for testing!
>=20
> [ Does a little dance to try and attract a -commiter ]
>=20
> This was broken as part of:
> commit 87bb2ade2ce646083f39d5ab3e3307490211ad04
> Author: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
> Date: Thu Feb 17 22:11:50 2011 -0300
>=20
> Convert Postgres arrays to Perl arrays on PL/perl input arguments
>=20
> More generally, arrays are turned in Perl array references, and row and
> composite types are turned into Perl hash references. This is done
> recursively, in a way that's natural to every Perl programmer.
>=20
> To avoid a backwards compatibility hit, the string representation of
> each structure is also available if the function requests it.
>=20
> Authors: Alexey Klyukin and Alex Hunsaker.
> Some code cleanups by me.
>=20
> Which also means it only breaks HEAD/9.1 (I did test and review 9.0 and d=
own.)
>=20
> Per http://search.cpan.org/~jesse/perl-5.14.0/pod/perlguts.pod#AVs,_HVs_a=
nd_undefined_values,
> we do not want to use &PL_sv_undef for undef values in hashes and
> arrays. I (inadvertently) broke this in the above commit. As perldoc
> mentions &PL_sv_undef seems like the intuitive thing to use. But its
> wrong in certain cases.
Yeah, per the link above the problem is evident and after a little testing
I think your patch fixed the problem. Thank you for tracking down this!
>=20
> We have 6 other uses of &PL_sv_undef, 2 &PL_sv_no and 1 &PL_sv_yes.
> These are all ok as none of them use the HV/AV store interface.
>=20
> I elected _not_ to add any regression tests. (If we forget about this
> in the future, it will likely be in other code paths). Instead I added
> comments to the places that used &PL_sv_undef noting that we
> explicitly avoid it on purpose.
+1.
--
Alexey Klyukin
The PostgreSQL Company - Command Prompt, Inc.