On Fri, Dec 11, 2020 at 03:03:46PM +0530, Bharath Rupireddy wrote: > I may not have got your above scenario correctly(it will be good if > you can provide the use case in case I want to check something there).
It is possible to have DML queries in WITH clauses, as long as they use RETURNING to feed tuples to the outer query. Just imagine something like that: =# explain analyze create table if not exists aa as with insert_query as (insert into aa values (1) returning a) select * from insert_query; Please note that this case fails with your patch, but the presence of IF NOT EXISTS should ensure that we don't fail and issue a NOTICE instead, no? Taking this case specifically (OK, I am playing with the rules a bit to insert data into the relation itself, still), this query may finish by adding tuples to the table whose creation should have been bypassed but the query got executed and inserted tuples. That's one example of behavior that may be confusing. There may be others, but it seems to me that it may be simpler to execute or even plan the query at all if the relation already exists. -- Michael
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