Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota....@gmail.com> writes: > At Thu, 22 Oct 2020 15:23:04 -0400, Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote in >> ... The only real objection I can see is that it could >> hold a server connection open when the user thinks there is none; >> but that could only happen in a non-interactive script, and it does >> not seem like a big problem in that case. We could alternatively >> not stash the "dead" connection after a non-interactive \connect >> failure, but I doubt that's better.
> Agreed. Thanks! After further thought I decided we *must* do it as per my "alternative" idea. Consider a script containing \c db1 user1 live_server \c db2 user2 dead_server \c db3 The script would be expecting to connect to db3 at dead_server, but if we re-use parameters from the first connection then it might successfully connect to db3 at live_server. This'd defeat the goal of not letting a script accidentally execute commands against the wrong database. So we have to not save the connection after a failed script \connect. However, it seems OK to save after a connection loss whether we're in a script or not; that is, \c db1 user1 server1 ... (connection dies here) ... --- these commands will fail \c db2 The script will be expecting the second \c to re-use parameters from the first one, and that will still work as expected. I went ahead and pushed it after adjusting that. regards, tom lane