pl/pgsql's notion of an "expression" is very broad, encompassing any SQL SELECT query that returns a single column and no more than one row. So there are cases, for example evaluation of an aggregate function, where the query involves significant work and it'd be useful to run it with parallel workers. This used to be possible, but commits 3eea7a0c9 et al unintentionally disabled it. The simplest fix is to make exec_eval_expr() pass maxtuples = 0 rather than 2 to exec_run_select(). This avoids the new rule that we will never use parallelism when a nonzero "count" limit is passed to ExecutorRun(). (Note that the pre-3eea7a0c9 behavior was indeed unsafe, so reverting that rule is not in the cards.) The reason for passing 2 before was that exec_eval_expr() will throw an error if it gets more than one returned row, so we figured that as soon as we have two rows we know that will happen and we might as well stop running the query. That choice was cost-free when it was made; but disabling parallelism is far from cost-free, so now passing 2 amounts to optimizing a failure case at the expense of useful cases. An expression query that can return more than one row is certainly broken. People might now need to wait a bit longer to discover such breakage; but hopefully few will use enormously expensive cases as their first test of new pl/pgsql logic. Author: Dipesh Dhameliya <dipeshdhameliya125@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABgZEgdfbnq9t6xXJnmXbChNTcWFjeM_6nuig41tm327gYi2ig@mail.gmail.com Backpatch-through: 13
PostgreSQL Database Management System
This directory contains the source code distribution of the PostgreSQL database management system.
PostgreSQL is an advanced object-relational database management system that supports an extended subset of the SQL standard, including transactions, foreign keys, subqueries, triggers, user-defined types and functions. This distribution also contains C language bindings.
Copyright and license information can be found in the file COPYRIGHT.
General documentation about this version of PostgreSQL can be found at https://www.postgresql.org/docs/devel/. In particular, information about building PostgreSQL from the source code can be found at https://www.postgresql.org/docs/devel/installation.html.
The latest version of this software, and related software, may be obtained at https://www.postgresql.org/download/. For more information look at our web site located at https://www.postgresql.org/.