Thread: proposal: use errcontext for custom exception too
Hello There are small issue in PL/pgSQL and custom exceptions. Custom exception doesn't set a CONTEXT field. I propose change this behave for WARNING or EXCEPTION level. The goal is same behave for custom exception and builtin exception and it can help to identify a RAISE statement that is responsible to exception. ./pl_exec.c *** ./pl_exec.c.orig 2011-11-24 17:29:08.000000000 +0100 --- ./pl_exec.c 2011-11-24 18:23:51.513136718 +0100 *************** *** 2827,2833 **** /* * Throw the error (may or may not come back) */ ! estate->err_text = raise_skip_msg; /* suppress traceback of raise */ ereport(stmt->elog_level, (err_code ? errcode(err_code) : 0, --- 2827,2834 ---- /* * Throw the error (may or may not come back) */ ! if (stmt->elog_level < WARNING) ! estate->err_text = raise_skip_msg; /* suppress traceback of raise notice */ ereport(stmt->elog_level, (err_code ? errcode(err_code) : 0, Regards Pavel Stehule
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On Thu, Nov 24, 2011 at 12:30 PM, Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> wrote: > There are small issue in PL/pgSQL and custom exceptions. Custom > exception doesn't set a CONTEXT field. I propose change this behave > for WARNING or EXCEPTION level. The goal is same behave for custom > exception and builtin exception and it can help to identify a RAISE > statement that is responsible to exception. That seems completely arbitrary. I think we discussed before providing an option to allow the user to control this, which seems better than implementing some hardcoded rule that may or may not be what a given user wants. -- Robert Haas EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
2011/11/25 Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>: > On Thu, Nov 24, 2011 at 12:30 PM, Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> wrote: >> There are small issue in PL/pgSQL and custom exceptions. Custom >> exception doesn't set a CONTEXT field. I propose change this behave >> for WARNING or EXCEPTION level. The goal is same behave for custom >> exception and builtin exception and it can help to identify a RAISE >> statement that is responsible to exception. > > That seems completely arbitrary. I think we discussed before > providing an option to allow the user to control this, which seems > better than implementing some hardcoded rule that may or may not be > what a given user wants. A some option via #option or GUC has sense for lower levels like NOTICE or WARNING. For exception level CONTEXT should be filled every time - usually you have a stack of CONTEXT calls, because exception must not be on direct call, but the last CONTEXT (where exception was created missing). It is confusing. When a advanced developer see a exception without CONTEXT, then he know so exception is related to RAISE statement, but still is not simple find a statement, that raised exception - the line number is missing. Compromise solution can be GUC where CONTEXT is default for ERROR level like plpgsql.log_context_error_level = ERROR A new option on RAISE STATEMENT is not well, usually you want to same behave on complete application. Regards Pavel > > -- > Robert Haas > EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com > The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company >
On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 1:14 AM, Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> wrote: > A some option via #option or GUC has sense for lower levels like > NOTICE or WARNING. I think what we discussed before was adding some bit of optional syntax to RAISE that would indicate that the user wants CONTEXT suppressed. -- Robert Haas EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> writes: > On Thu, Nov 24, 2011 at 12:30 PM, Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> wrote: >> There are small issue in PL/pgSQL and custom exceptions. Custom >> exception doesn't set a CONTEXT field. I propose change this behave >> for WARNING or EXCEPTION level. The goal is same behave for custom >> exception and builtin exception and it can help to identify a RAISE >> statement that is responsible to exception. > That seems completely arbitrary. I think we discussed before > providing an option to allow the user to control this, which seems > better than implementing some hardcoded rule that may or may not be > what a given user wants. Note also that the current behavior *is* what people want; at least, we have seen no field complaints about the lack of first-level CONTEXT for RAISE notices, and plenty of complaints from people who think there's still too much cruft automatically attached to RAISE output. If anything, what's been requested is a way to suppress even more context, not a policy decision to force more of it. regards, tom lane
2011/11/25 Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>: > Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> writes: >> On Thu, Nov 24, 2011 at 12:30 PM, Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com> wrote: >>> There are small issue in PL/pgSQL and custom exceptions. Custom >>> exception doesn't set a CONTEXT field. I propose change this behave >>> for WARNING or EXCEPTION level. The goal is same behave for custom >>> exception and builtin exception and it can help to identify a RAISE >>> statement that is responsible to exception. > >> That seems completely arbitrary. I think we discussed before >> providing an option to allow the user to control this, which seems >> better than implementing some hardcoded rule that may or may not be >> what a given user wants. > > Note also that the current behavior *is* what people want; at least, > we have seen no field complaints about the lack of first-level CONTEXT > for RAISE notices, and plenty of complaints from people who think > there's still too much cruft automatically attached to RAISE output. > If anything, what's been requested is a way to suppress even more > context, not a policy decision to force more of it. > People usually don't like verbose output in interactive mode in console. CONTEXT for RAISE NOTICE is not necessary. If you have a small functions, then CONTEXT for RAISE EXCEPTION is not necessary too. But if you have a functions with hundreds lines, then more informations about origin of exception is welcome. There is workaround - with one statement function (RAISE stmt wrapper) I have a expected behave - but it's not clean RAISE EXCEPTION 'some message' is more readable than PERFORM elog('some message', ..) and log is not too readable too. postgres=# SELECT yyy(); CONTEXT: SQL statement "SELECT xxx()" PL/pgSQL function "yyy" line 3 at PERFORM I can understand to motivation decrease verbosity, but there is clean request "simply identification a source of exception (exception, not notification)". Some RAISE stmt option should be - but for NOTICE level NO_CONTEXT is optimal, and for EXCEPTION NO_CONTEXT is suboptimal. It has sense just for WARNING level. Regards Pavel