>Вторник, 5 июля 2022, 18:29 +03:00 от Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us>:
>
>=?UTF-8?B?U3ZldGxhbmEgRGVyZXZ5YW5rbw==?= < s.derevya...@postgrespro.ru >
>writes:
>> It seems useful to have [OR REPLACE] option in CREATE OPERATOR statement, as
>> in CREATE FUNCTION. This option may be good for writing extension update
>> scripts, to avoid errors with re-creating the same operator.
>No, that's not acceptable. CREATE OR REPLACE should always produce
>exactly the same final state of the object, but in this case we cannot
>change the underlying function if the operator already exists.
>
>(At least, not without writing a bunch of infrastructure to update
>existing views/rules that might use the operator; which among other
>things would create a lot of deadlock risks.)
>
>regards, tom lane
Hello,
> CREATE OR REPLACE should always produce exactly the same final state of the
> object,
> but in this case we cannot change the underlying function if the operator
> already exists.
Do you mean that for existing operator CREATE OR REPLACE should be the same as
DROP OPERATOR and CREATE OPERATOR, with relevant re-creation of existing
view/rules/..., using this operator? If yes, what exactly is wrong with
changing only RESTRICT and JOIN parameters (or is the problem in possible
user`s confusion with attempts to change something more?). If no, could you,
please, clarify what "final state" here means?
Also, if OR REPLACE is unacceptable, then what do you think about IF NOT EXISTS
option?
Thanks,
--
Svetlana Derevyanko
Postgres Professional: http://www.postgrespro.com
The Russian Postgres Company