Re: [HACKERS] Allow INSTEAD OF DELETE triggers to modify the tuplefor RETURNING - Mailing list pgsql-hackers
From | Haribabu Kommi |
---|---|
Subject | Re: [HACKERS] Allow INSTEAD OF DELETE triggers to modify the tuplefor RETURNING |
Date | |
Msg-id | CAJrrPGdH2SPO3H+H0=fgcPNF1buxSKbusfyAWyP3qG5=Do+75g@mail.gmail.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: [HACKERS] Allow INSTEAD OF DELETE triggers to modify the tuple for RETURNING (Marko Tiikkaja <marko@joh.to>) |
Responses |
Re: [HACKERS] Allow INSTEAD OF DELETE triggers to modify the tuple for RETURNING
Re: [HACKERS] Allow INSTEAD OF DELETE triggers to modify the tuple for RETURNING |
List | pgsql-hackers |
On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 6:48 AM, Marko Tiikkaja <marko@joh.to> wrote:
On Fri, Jul 1, 2016 at 2:12 AM, I wrote:Currently the tuple returned by INSTEAD OF triggers on DELETEs is only used to determine whether to pretend that the DELETE happened or not, which is often not helpful enough; for example, the actual tuple might have been concurrently UPDATEd by another transaction and one or more of the columns now hold values different from those in the planSlot tuple. Attached is an example case which is impossible to properly implement under the current behavior. For what it's worth, the current behavior seems to be an accident; before INSTEAD OF triggers either the tuple was already locked (in case of BEFORE triggers) or the actual pre-DELETE version of the tuple was fetched from the heap.
So I'm suggesting to change this behavior and allow INSTEAD OF DELETE triggers to modify the OLD tuple and use that for RETURNING instead of returning the tuple in planSlot. Attached is a WIP patch implementing that.
Is there any reason why we wouldn't want to change the current behavior?Since nobody seems to have came up with a reason, here's a patch for that with test cases and some documentation changes. I'll also be adding this to the open commit fest, as is customary.
clause with the actual row.
Compilation and tests are passed. I have some review comments.
! that was provided. Likewise, for <command>DELETE</> operations the
! <varname>OLD</> variable can be modified before returning it, and
! the changes will be reflected in the output data.
The above explanation is not very clear, how about the following?
Likewise, for <command>DELETE</> operations the trigger may
modify the <varname>OLD</> row before returning it, and the
change will be reflected in the output data of <command>DELETE RETURNING</>.
! TupleTableSlot *
ExecIRDeleteTriggers(EState *estate, ResultRelInfo *relinfo,
! HeapTuple trigtuple, TupleTableSlot *slot)
! oldtuple = ExecMaterializeSlot(slot); --nodeModifyTable.c
The trigtuple is part of the slot anyway, I feel there is no need to pass
the trigtuple seperately. The tuple can be formed internaly by Materializing
slot.
Or
Don't materialize the slot before the ExecIRDeleteTriggers function
call.
! /*
! * Return the modified tuple using the es_trig_tuple_slot. We assume
! * the tuple was allocated in per-tuple memory context, and therefore
! * will go away by itself. The tuple table slot should not try to
! * clear it.
! */
! TupleTableSlot *newslot = estate->es_trig_tuple_slot;
The input slot that is passed to the function ExecIRDeleteTriggers
is same as estate->es_trig_tuple_slot. And also the tuple descriptor
is same. Instead of using the newslot, directly use the slot is fine.
+ /* trigger might have changed tuple */
+ oldtuple = ExecMaterializeSlot(slot);
+ if (resultRelInfo->ri_TrigDesc &&
+ resultRelInfo->ri_TrigDesc->trig_delete_instead_row)
+ return ExecProcessReturning(resultRelInfo, slot, planSlot);
Views cannot have before/after triggers, Once the call enters into
Instead of triggers flow, the oldtuple is used to frame the slot, if the
returning clause is present. But in case of instead of triggers, the call
is returned early as above and the framed old tuple is not used.
Either change the logic of returning for instead of triggers, or remove
the generation of oldtuple after instead triggers call execution.
Regards,
Hari Babu
Fujitsu Australia
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