On Tue, Jun 21, 2016 at 4:36 PM, Amit Langote <langote_amit...@lab.ntt.co.jp > wrote:
> On 2016/06/21 16:27, Rushabh Lathia wrote: > > Now I was under impression the IS NOT NULL should be always in inverse of > > IS NULL, but clearly here its not the case with wholerow. But further > > looking at > > the document its saying different thing for wholerow: > > > > https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.5/static/functions-comparison.html > > > > Note: If the expression is row-valued, then IS NULL is true when the row > > expression > > itself is null or when all the row's fields are null, while IS NOT NULL > is > > true > > when the row expression itself is non-null and all the row's fields are > > non-null. > > Because of this behavior, IS NULL and IS NOT NULL do not always return > > inverse > > results for row-valued expressions, i.e., a row-valued expression that > > contains > > both NULL and non-null values will return false for both tests. This > > definition > > conforms to the SQL standard, and is a change from the inconsistent > behavior > > exhibited by PostgreSQL versions prior to 8.2. > > > > > > And as above documentation clearly says that IS NULL and IS NOT NULL do > not > > always return inverse results for row-valued expressions. So need to > change > > the > > deparse logic into postgres_fdw - how ? May be to use IS NULL rather > then IS > > NOT NULL? > > > > Input/thought? > > Perhaps - NOT expr IS NULL? Like in the attached. > > As the documentation describes row is NULL is going to return true when all the columns in a row are NULL, even though row itself is not null. So, with your patch a row (null, null, null) is going to be output as a NULL row. Is that right? In an outer join we have to differentiate between a row being null (because there was no joining row on nullable side) and a non-null row with all column values being null. If we cast the whole-row expression to a text e.g. r.*::text and test the resultant value for nullness, it gives us what we want. A null row casted to text is null and a row with all null values casted to text is not null. postgres=# select (null, null, null)::text is not null; ?column? ---------- t (1 row) postgres=# select null::record::text is not null; ?column? ---------- f (1 row) In find_coercion_pathway(), we resort to IO coercion for record::text explicit coercion. This should always work the way we want as record_out is a strict function and for non-null values it outputs at least the parenthesis which will be treated as non-null text. 2253 /* 2254 * If we still haven't found a possibility, consider automatic casting 2255 * using I/O functions. We allow assignment casts to string types and 2256 * explicit casts from string types to be handled this way. (The 2257 * CoerceViaIO mechanism is a lot more general than that, but this is 2258 * all we want to allow in the absence of a pg_cast entry.) It would 2259 * probably be better to insist on explicit casts in both directions, 2260 * but this is a compromise to preserve something of the pre-8.3 2261 * behavior that many types had implicit (yipes!) casts to text. 2262 */ PFA the patch with the cast to text. This is probably uglier than expected, but I don't know any better test to find nullness of a record, the way we want here. The patch also includes the expected output changes in the EXPLAIN output. -- Best Wishes, Ashutosh Bapat EnterpriseDB Corporation The Postgres Database Company
pg_null_wr.patch
Description: application/download
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