So, any insights on these problems? They might not be critical, but might be silently corrupting someone's data.
2013/6/23 Rok Kralj <rok.kr...@gmail.com> > Hi, after studying ITERVAL and having a long chat with RhoidumToad and > StuckMojo on #postgresql, I am presenting you 3 bugs regarding INTERVAL. > > As far as I understand, the Interval struct (binary internal > representation) consists of: > > int32 months > int32 days > int64 microseconds > > 1. OUTPUT ERRORS: Since 2^63 microseconds equals 2,562,047,788 > 2^31 > hours, the overflow in pg_tm when displaying the value causes overflow. The > value of Interval struct is actually correct, error happens only on > displaying it. > > SELECT INTERVAL '2147483647 hours' + INTERVAL '5 hours' > "-2147483644:00:00" > > Even wireder: > > SELECT INTERVAL '2147483647 hours' + '1 hour' > "--2147483648:00:00" > > notice the double minus? Don't ask how I came across this two bugs. > > 2. OPERATION ERRORS: When summing two intervals, the user is not notified > when overflow occurs: > > SELECT INT '2147483647' + INT '1' > ERROR: integer out of range > > SELECT INTERVAL '2147483647 days' + INTERVAL '1 day' > "-2147483648 days" > > This should be analogous. > > 3. PARSER / INPUT ERRORS: > > This is perhaps the hardest one to explain, since this is an architectural > flaw. You are checking the overflows when parsing string -> pg_tm struct. > However, at this point, the parser doesn't know, that weeks and days are > going to get combined, or years are going to get converted to months, for > example. > > Unawarness of underlying Interval struct causes two types of suberrors: > > a) False positive > > SELECT INTERVAL '2147483648 microseconds' > ERROR: interval field value out of range: "2147483648 microseconds" > > This is not right. Microseconds are internally stored as 64 bit signed > integer. The catch is: this amount of microseconds is representable in > Interval data structure, this shouldn't be an error. > > b) False negative > > SELECT INTERVAL '1000000000 years' > "-73741824 years" > > We don't catch errors like this, because parser only checks for overflow > in pg_tm. If overflow laters happens in Interval, we don't seem to care. > > 4. POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS: > > a) Move the overflow checking just after the conversion of pg_tm -> > Interval is made. This way, you can accurately predict if the result is > really not store-able. > > b) Because of 1), you have to declare tm_hour as int64, if you want to use > that for the output. But, why not use Interval struct for printing > directly, without intermediate pg_tm? > > 5. Offtopic: Correct the documentation, INTERVAL data size is 16 bytes, > not 12. > > Rok Kralj > > -- > eMail: rok.kr...@gmail.com > -- eMail: rok.kr...@gmail.com