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author | Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> | 2018-10-12 12:36:26 -0300 |
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committer | Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org> | 2018-10-12 12:37:37 -0300 |
commit | c7d43c4d8a5b7215ea0a32d95260188b5d3ae3f4 (patch) | |
tree | a4505c0aaae92242eb52b63fb855dcd9363412a9 /src/tutorial/funcs.c | |
parent | f1885386f6246ac7b6f8d3f0aef247988f48ee7a (diff) | |
download | postgresql-c7d43c4d8a5b7215ea0a32d95260188b5d3ae3f4.tar.gz postgresql-c7d43c4d8a5b7215ea0a32d95260188b5d3ae3f4.zip |
Correct attach/detach logic for FKs in partitions
There was no code to handle foreign key constraints on partitioned
tables in the case of ALTER TABLE DETACH; and if you happened to ATTACH
a partition that already had an equivalent constraint, that one was
ignored and a new constraint was created. Adding this to the fact that
foreign key cloning reuses the constraint name on the partition instead
of generating a new name (as it probably should, to cater to SQL
standard rules about constraint naming within schemas), the result was a
pretty poor user experience -- the most visible failure was that just
detaching a partition and re-attaching it failed with an error such as
ERROR: duplicate key value violates unique constraint "pg_constraint_conrelid_contypid_conname_index"
DETAIL: Key (conrelid, contypid, conname)=(26702, 0, test_result_asset_id_fkey) already exists.
because it would try to create an identically-named constraint in the
partition. To make matters worse, if you tried to drop the constraint
in the now-independent partition, that would fail because the constraint
was still seen as dependent on the constraint in its former parent
partitioned table:
ERROR: cannot drop inherited constraint "test_result_asset_id_fkey" of relation "test_result_cbsystem_0001_0050_monthly_2018_09"
This fix attacks the problem from two angles: first, when the partition
is detached, the constraint is also marked as independent, so the drop
now works. Second, when the partition is re-attached, we scan existing
constraints searching for one matching the FK in the parent, and if one
exists, we link that one to the parent constraint. So we don't end up
with a duplicate -- and better yet, we don't need to scan the referenced
table to verify that the constraint holds.
To implement this I made a small change to previously planner-only
struct ForeignKeyCacheInfo to contain the constraint OID; also relcache
now maintains the list of FKs for partitioned tables too.
Backpatch to 11.
Reported-by: Michael Vitale (bug #15425)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15425-2dbc9d2aa999f816@postgresql.org
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