Craig Ringer <craig.rin...@enterprisedb.com> writes: > This morning for the the umpteenth time I saw: > some error message: [blank here] > output from a libpq program.
> That's because passing a NULL PGresult to PQgetResultErrorMessage() returns > "". But a NULL PGresult is a normal result from PQexec when it fails to > submit a query due to an invalid connection, when PQgetResult can't get a > result from an invalid connection, etc. How much of this is due to programmers not bothering to check whether PQconnectXXX succeeded? I do not think we need to go far out of our way to cope with that scenario. The idea of having a static PGresult that we can hand back to denote out-of-memory scenarios is kind of cute. But again, I wonder how often the situation comes up in the real world. It might be worth doing just to have a more consistent API spec, though. Particularly for PQgetResult, where a NULL result has a defined, non-error meaning. In general I doubt there's enough of a problem here to justify inventing new or different APIs. But if we can sand down some rough edges without doing that, let's have a look. regards, tom lane