I wrote: >> What it looks like to me is that the code for setting up run-time >> partition pruning has failed to consider the possibility of nested >> partitioning: it's expecting that every partitioned table will have >> at least one direct child that is a leaf. I'm not sure though >> whether just the Assert is wrong, or there's more fundamental >> issues here.
> After looking into the git history I realized that this assertion is > quite new, stemming from David's a929e17e5a8 of 2020-11-02. So there's > something not right about that. I took some more time to poke at this today, and I now think that the assertion in make_partitionedrel_pruneinfo is probably OK, and what it's pointing out is a bug upstream in path creation. Specifically, I noted that in select a from trigger_parted where pg_trigger_depth() <> a order by a; we arrive at make_partitionedrel_pruneinfo with partrelids equal to (b 1 2), which seems to be correct. The RTE list is RTE 1: trigger_parted RTE 2: trigger_parted_p1 RTE 3: trigger_parted_p1_1 Like so much else of the partitioning code, AppendPath.partitioned_rels is abysmally underdocumented, but what I think it means is the set of non-leaf partitioned tables that are notionally scanned by the AppendPath. The only table directly mentioned by the AppendPath's subpath is RTE 3, so that all seems fine. However, upon adding a LIMIT: select a from trigger_parted where pg_trigger_depth() <> a order by a limit 40; server closed the connection unexpectedly we arrive at make_partitionedrel_pruneinfo with partrelids equal to just (b 1); trigger_parted_p1 has been left out. The Path in this case has been made by generate_orderedappend_paths, which is what's responsible for computing AppendPath.partitioned_rels that eventually winds up as the argument to make_partitionedrel_pruneinfo. So I think that that code is somehow failing to account for nested partitioning, while the non-ordered-append code is doing it right. But I didn't spot exactly where the discrepancy is. regards, tom lane