Tom Lane writes: > More generally, this example makes me fearful that NaN coordinates in > geometric values are likely to cause all sorts of issues. It's too late > to disallow them, probably, but I wonder how can we identify other bugs > of this ilk.
Sounds like some fuzz testing with nan/infinity is in order. sqlsmith doesn't generate any float literals, but it calls functions to satisfy its need for values of specific types. Adding suitable functions[1] to the regression db, I made the following observations: The infinite loop from the bug report was triggered. Further, two previously unseen errors are logged: ERROR: timestamp cannot be NaN ERROR: getQuadrant: impossible case The first is porbably as boring as it gets, the second one is from the getQuadrant() in spgquadtreeproc.c. Curiously, the getQuadrant()s in geo_spgist.c and rangetypes_spgist.c do not have such a check. I guess the boxes will just end up in an undefined position in the index for these. regards Andreas Footnotes: [1] create function smith_double_inf() returns float as $$select 'infinity'::float$$ language sql immutable; create function smith_double_ninf() returns float as $$select '-infinity'::float$$ language sql immutable; create function smith_double_nan() returns float as $$select 'nan'::float$$ language sql immutable; create function smith_real_nan() returns real as $$select 'nan'::real$$ language sql immutable; create function smith_real_inf() returns real as $$select 'infinity'::real$$ language sql immutable; create function smith_real_ninf() returns real as $$select '-infinity'::real$$ language sql immutable; -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers