> > Attached is the second one, with more tests coverage with attribute > > aliases (these being ignored exists in stable branches, but why not > > while on it) and table aliases, and the fixes for the issues pointed > > out by Christoph. I'll double-check all that again tomorrow. Please > > find an updated version attached for now.
There are several parts of the doc that may no longer hold true. 1/ "Since the queryid hash value is computed on the post-parse-analysis representation of the queries, the opposite is also possible: queries with identical texts might appear as separate entries, if they have different meanings as a result of factors such as different search_path settings." I think this text could remain as is, because search_path still matters for things like functions, etc. """ postgres=# SET SEARCH_PATH=a; SET postgres=# explain verbose select * from test(); QUERY PLAN ------------------------------------------ Result (cost=0.00..0.01 rows=1 width=4) Output: 1 Query Identifier: -1813735303617154554 (3 rows) postgres=# SET SEARCH_PATH=b; SET postgres=# explain verbose select * from test(); QUERY PLAN ------------------------------------------ Result (cost=0.00..0.01 rows=1 width=4) Output: 1 Query Identifier: -3896107319863686763 (3 rows) """ 2/ "For example, pg_stat_statements will consider two apparently-identical queries to be distinct, if they reference a table that was dropped and recreated between the executions of the two queries." This is no longer true for relations, but is still true for functions. I think we should mention the caveats in a bit more detail as this change will have impact on the most common case. What about something like this? "For example, pg_stat_statements will consider two apparently-identical queries to be distinct, if they reference a function that was dropped and recreated between the executions of the two queries. Conversely, if a table is dropped and recreated between the executions of queries, two apparently-identical queries will be considered the same. However, if the alias for a table is different for semantically similar queries, these queries will be considered distinct" -- Sami Imseih Amazon Web Services (AWS)