> On Thu, Aug 31, 2023 at 5:34 PM Richard Guo <guofengli...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > While working on a bug in expandRecordVariable() I noticed that in the > > switch statement for case RTE_SUBQUERY we initialize struct ParseState > > with {0} while for case RTE_CTE we do that with MemSet. I understand > > that there is nothing wrong with this, just cannot get away with the > > inconsistency inside the same function (sorry for the nitpicking). > > > > Do we have a preference for how to initialize structures? From 9fd45870 > > it seems that we prefer to {0}. So here is a trivial patch doing that.
It seems to have been deliberately left that way in the wake of that commit, see: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/87d2e5f8-3c37-d185-4bbc-1de163ac4b10%40enterprisedb.com (If so, it deserves a comment to keep people from trying to change it...) > > And with a rough scan the MemSet calls in pg_stat_get_backend_subxact() > > can also be replaced with {0}, so include that in the patch too. I _believe_ that's harmless to change. On Thu, Aug 31, 2023 at 4:57 PM Junwang Zhao <zhjw...@gmail.com> wrote: > If the struct has padding or aligned, {0} only guarantee the struct > members initialized to 0, while memset sets the alignment/padding > to 0 as well, but since we will not access the alignment/padding, so > they give the same effect. See above -- if it's used as a hash key, for example, you must clear everything. > I bet {0} should be faster since there is no function call, but I'm not > 100% sure ;) Neither has a function call. MemSet is a PG macro. You're thinking of memset, the libc library function, but a decent compiler can easily turn that into something else for fixed-size inputs. -- John Naylor EDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com