On Wed, Jan 19, 2022 at 6:26 PM Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> wrote:
> On 2022-Jan-19, Amit Langote wrote:
> > BTW, your tweaks patch added this:
> >
> > + * *inserted_tuple is the tuple that's effectively inserted;
> > + * *inserted_destrel is the relation where it was inserted.
> > + * These are only set on success. FIXME -- see what happens on
> > the "do nothing" cases.
> >
> > If by "do nothing cases" you mean INSERT ON CONFLICT ... DO NOTHING,
> > then I don't think it matters, because the caller in that case would
> > be ExecModifyTable() which doesn't care about inserted_tuple and
> > inserted_destrel.
>
> No, I meant a FOR EACH ROW trigger that does RETURN NULL to "abort" the
> insertion.
Ah, gotcha.
> IIRC in non-partitioned cases it is possibly to break
> referential integrity by using those. What I was wondering is whether
> you can make this new code crash.
insert_destrel would be left set to NULL, which means
ExecCrossPartitionUpdateForeignKey() won't get called, because:
* NULL insert_destrel means that the move failed to occur, that
* is, the update failed, so no need to anything in that case.
*/
if (insert_destrel &&
resultRelInfo->ri_TrigDesc &&
resultRelInfo->ri_TrigDesc->trig_update_after_row)
ExecCrossPartitionUpdateForeignKey(mtstate, estate,
Moreover, trigger documentation warns of a "possibility of surprising
outcomes" if BR triggers are present in partitions that are chosen as
destinations of cross-partition updates:
"Then all row-level BEFORE INSERT triggers are fired on the
destination partition. The possibility of surprising outcomes should
be considered when all these triggers affect the row being moved."
I suppose the new code shouldn't need to take special care in such cases either.
--
Amit Langote
EDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com