postgresql/src/test/regress/sql/opr_sanity.sql

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--
-- OPR_SANITY
-- Sanity checks for common errors in making operator/procedure system tables:
-- pg_operator, pg_proc, pg_cast, pg_aggregate, pg_am, pg_amop, pg_amproc, pg_opclass.
--
-- None of the SELECTs here should ever find any matching entries,
-- so the expected output is easy to maintain ;-).
-- A test failure indicates someone messed up an entry in the system tables.
--
-- NB: we assume the oidjoins test will have caught any dangling links,
-- that is OID or REGPROC fields that are not zero and do not match some
-- row in the linked-to table. However, if we want to enforce that a link
-- field can't be 0, we have to check it here.
--
-- NB: run this test earlier than the create_operator test, because
-- that test creates some bogus operators...
-- Helper functions to deal with cases where binary-coercible matches are
-- allowed.
-- This should match IsBinaryCoercible() in parse_coerce.c.
create function binary_coercible(oid, oid) returns bool as
'SELECT ($1 = $2) OR
EXISTS(select 1 from pg_cast where
castsource = $1 and casttarget = $2 and
castfunc = 0 and castcontext = ''i'')'
language sql;
-- This one ignores castcontext, so it considers only physical equivalence
-- and not whether the coercion can be invoked implicitly.
create function physically_coercible(oid, oid) returns bool as
'SELECT ($1 = $2) OR
EXISTS(select 1 from pg_cast where
castsource = $1 and casttarget = $2 and
castfunc = 0)'
language sql;
-- **************** pg_proc ****************
-- Look for illegal values in pg_proc fields.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.proname
FROM pg_proc as p1
WHERE p1.prolang = 0 OR p1.prorettype = 0 OR
p1.pronargs < 0 OR
array_lower(p1.proargtypes, 1) != 0 OR
array_upper(p1.proargtypes, 1) != p1.pronargs-1 OR
0::oid = ANY (p1.proargtypes);
-- Look for conflicting proc definitions (same names and input datatypes).
-- (This test should be dead code now that we have the unique index
-- pg_proc_proname_narg_type_index, but I'll leave it in anyway.)
SELECT p1.oid, p1.proname, p2.oid, p2.proname
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.proname = p2.proname AND
p1.pronargs = p2.pronargs AND
p1.proargtypes = p2.proargtypes;
-- Considering only built-in procs (prolang = 12), look for multiple uses
-- of the same internal function (ie, matching prosrc fields). It's OK to
-- have several entries with different pronames for the same internal function,
-- but conflicts in the number of arguments and other critical items should
-- be complained of.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.proname, p2.oid, p2.proname
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.prosrc = p2.prosrc AND
p1.prolang = 12 AND p2.prolang = 12 AND
(p1.prolang != p2.prolang OR
p1.proisagg != p2.proisagg OR
p1.prosecdef != p2.prosecdef OR
p1.proisstrict != p2.proisstrict OR
p1.proretset != p2.proretset OR
p1.provolatile != p2.provolatile OR
p1.pronargs != p2.pronargs);
-- Look for uses of different type OIDs in the argument/result type fields
-- for different aliases of the same built-in function.
-- This indicates that the types are being presumed to be binary-equivalent,
-- or that the built-in function is prepared to deal with different types.
-- That's not wrong, necessarily, but we make lists of all the types being
-- so treated. Note that the expected output of this part of the test will
-- need to be modified whenever new pairs of types are made binary-equivalent,
-- or when new polymorphic built-in functions are added!
-- Note: ignore aggregate functions here, since they all point to the same
-- dummy built-in function.
SELECT DISTINCT p1.prorettype, p2.prorettype
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.prosrc = p2.prosrc AND
p1.prolang = 12 AND p2.prolang = 12 AND
NOT p1.proisagg AND NOT p2.proisagg AND
(p1.prorettype < p2.prorettype);
SELECT DISTINCT p1.proargtypes[0], p2.proargtypes[0]
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.prosrc = p2.prosrc AND
p1.prolang = 12 AND p2.prolang = 12 AND
NOT p1.proisagg AND NOT p2.proisagg AND
(p1.proargtypes[0] < p2.proargtypes[0]);
SELECT DISTINCT p1.proargtypes[1], p2.proargtypes[1]
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.prosrc = p2.prosrc AND
p1.prolang = 12 AND p2.prolang = 12 AND
NOT p1.proisagg AND NOT p2.proisagg AND
(p1.proargtypes[1] < p2.proargtypes[1]);
SELECT DISTINCT p1.proargtypes[2], p2.proargtypes[2]
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.prosrc = p2.prosrc AND
p1.prolang = 12 AND p2.prolang = 12 AND
NOT p1.proisagg AND NOT p2.proisagg AND
(p1.proargtypes[2] < p2.proargtypes[2]);
SELECT DISTINCT p1.proargtypes[3], p2.proargtypes[3]
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.prosrc = p2.prosrc AND
p1.prolang = 12 AND p2.prolang = 12 AND
NOT p1.proisagg AND NOT p2.proisagg AND
(p1.proargtypes[3] < p2.proargtypes[3]);
SELECT DISTINCT p1.proargtypes[4], p2.proargtypes[4]
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.prosrc = p2.prosrc AND
p1.prolang = 12 AND p2.prolang = 12 AND
NOT p1.proisagg AND NOT p2.proisagg AND
(p1.proargtypes[4] < p2.proargtypes[4]);
SELECT DISTINCT p1.proargtypes[5], p2.proargtypes[5]
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.prosrc = p2.prosrc AND
p1.prolang = 12 AND p2.prolang = 12 AND
NOT p1.proisagg AND NOT p2.proisagg AND
(p1.proargtypes[5] < p2.proargtypes[5]);
SELECT DISTINCT p1.proargtypes[6], p2.proargtypes[6]
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.prosrc = p2.prosrc AND
p1.prolang = 12 AND p2.prolang = 12 AND
NOT p1.proisagg AND NOT p2.proisagg AND
(p1.proargtypes[6] < p2.proargtypes[6]);
SELECT DISTINCT p1.proargtypes[7], p2.proargtypes[7]
FROM pg_proc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.prosrc = p2.prosrc AND
p1.prolang = 12 AND p2.prolang = 12 AND
NOT p1.proisagg AND NOT p2.proisagg AND
(p1.proargtypes[7] < p2.proargtypes[7]);
-- Look for functions that return type "internal" and do not have any
-- "internal" argument. Such a function would be a security hole since
-- it might be used to call an internal function from an SQL command.
-- As of 7.3 this query should find only internal_in.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.proname
FROM pg_proc as p1
WHERE p1.prorettype = 'internal'::regtype AND NOT
'internal'::regtype = ANY (p1.proargtypes);
-- **************** pg_cast ****************
-- Catch bogus values in pg_cast columns (other than cases detected by
-- oidjoins test).
SELECT *
FROM pg_cast c
WHERE castsource = 0 OR casttarget = 0 OR castcontext NOT IN ('e', 'a', 'i');
-- Look for casts to/from the same type that aren't length coercion functions.
-- (We assume they are length coercions if they take multiple arguments.)
-- Such entries are not necessarily harmful, but they are useless.
SELECT *
FROM pg_cast c
WHERE castsource = casttarget AND castfunc = 0;
SELECT c.*
FROM pg_cast c, pg_proc p
WHERE c.castfunc = p.oid AND p.pronargs < 2 AND castsource = casttarget;
-- Look for cast functions that don't have the right signature. The
-- argument and result types in pg_proc must be the same as, or binary
-- compatible with, what it says in pg_cast.
-- As a special case, we allow casts from CHAR(n) that use functions
-- declared to take TEXT. This does not pass the binary-coercibility test
-- because CHAR(n)-to-TEXT normally invokes rtrim(). However, the results
-- are the same, so long as the function is one that ignores trailing blanks.
SELECT c.*
FROM pg_cast c, pg_proc p
WHERE c.castfunc = p.oid AND
(p.pronargs < 1 OR p.pronargs > 3
OR NOT (binary_coercible(c.castsource, p.proargtypes[0])
OR (c.castsource = 'character'::regtype AND
p.proargtypes[0] = 'text'::regtype))
OR NOT binary_coercible(p.prorettype, c.casttarget));
SELECT c.*
FROM pg_cast c, pg_proc p
WHERE c.castfunc = p.oid AND
((p.pronargs > 1 AND p.proargtypes[1] != 'int4'::regtype) OR
(p.pronargs > 2 AND p.proargtypes[2] != 'bool'::regtype));
-- Look for binary compatible casts that do not have the reverse
-- direction registered as well, or where the reverse direction is not
-- also binary compatible. This is legal, but usually not intended.
-- As of 7.4, this finds the casts from text and varchar to bpchar, because
-- those are binary-compatible while the reverse way goes through rtrim().
SELECT *
FROM pg_cast c
WHERE c.castfunc = 0 AND
NOT EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM pg_cast k
WHERE k.castfunc = 0 AND
k.castsource = c.casttarget AND
k.casttarget = c.castsource);
-- **************** pg_operator ****************
-- Look for illegal values in pg_operator fields.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname
FROM pg_operator as p1
WHERE (p1.oprkind != 'b' AND p1.oprkind != 'l' AND p1.oprkind != 'r') OR
p1.oprresult = 0 OR p1.oprcode = 0;
-- Look for missing or unwanted operand types
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname
FROM pg_operator as p1
WHERE (p1.oprleft = 0 and p1.oprkind != 'l') OR
(p1.oprleft != 0 and p1.oprkind = 'l') OR
(p1.oprright = 0 and p1.oprkind != 'r') OR
(p1.oprright != 0 and p1.oprkind = 'r');
-- Look for conflicting operator definitions (same names and input datatypes).
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprcode, p2.oid, p2.oprcode
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_operator AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.oprname = p2.oprname AND
p1.oprkind = p2.oprkind AND
p1.oprleft = p2.oprleft AND
p1.oprright = p2.oprright;
-- Look for commutative operators that don't commute.
-- DEFINITIONAL NOTE: If A.oprcom = B, then x A y has the same result as y B x.
-- We expect that B will always say that B.oprcom = A as well; that's not
-- inherently essential, but it would be inefficient not to mark it so.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprcode, p2.oid, p2.oprcode
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_operator AS p2
WHERE p1.oprcom = p2.oid AND
(p1.oprkind != 'b' OR
p1.oprleft != p2.oprright OR
p1.oprright != p2.oprleft OR
p1.oprresult != p2.oprresult OR
p1.oid != p2.oprcom);
-- Look for negatory operators that don't agree.
-- DEFINITIONAL NOTE: If A.oprnegate = B, then both A and B must yield
-- boolean results, and (x A y) == ! (x B y), or the equivalent for
-- single-operand operators.
-- We expect that B will always say that B.oprnegate = A as well; that's not
-- inherently essential, but it would be inefficient not to mark it so.
-- Also, A and B had better not be the same operator.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprcode, p2.oid, p2.oprcode
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_operator AS p2
WHERE p1.oprnegate = p2.oid AND
(p1.oprkind != p2.oprkind OR
p1.oprleft != p2.oprleft OR
p1.oprright != p2.oprright OR
p1.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype OR
p2.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype OR
p1.oid != p2.oprnegate OR
p1.oid = p2.oid);
-- Look for mergejoin operators that don't match their links.
-- An lsortop/rsortop link leads from an '=' operator to the
-- sort operator ('<' operator) that's appropriate for
-- its left-side or right-side data type.
-- An ltcmpop/gtcmpop link leads from an '=' operator to the
-- '<' or '>' operator of the same input datatypes.
-- (If the '=' operator has identical L and R input datatypes,
-- then lsortop, rsortop, and ltcmpop are all the same operator.)
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprcode, p2.oid, p2.oprcode
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_operator AS p2
WHERE p1.oprlsortop = p2.oid AND
(p1.oprname NOT IN ('=', '~=~') OR p2.oprname NOT IN ('<', '~<~') OR
p1.oprkind != 'b' OR p2.oprkind != 'b' OR
p1.oprleft != p2.oprleft OR
p1.oprleft != p2.oprright OR
p1.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype OR
p2.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype);
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprcode, p2.oid, p2.oprcode
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_operator AS p2
WHERE p1.oprrsortop = p2.oid AND
(p1.oprname NOT IN ('=', '~=~') OR p2.oprname NOT IN ('<', '~<~') OR
p1.oprkind != 'b' OR p2.oprkind != 'b' OR
p1.oprright != p2.oprleft OR
p1.oprright != p2.oprright OR
p1.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype OR
p2.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype);
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprcode, p2.oid, p2.oprcode
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_operator AS p2
WHERE p1.oprltcmpop = p2.oid AND
(p1.oprname NOT IN ('=', '~=~') OR p2.oprname NOT IN ('<', '~<~') OR
p1.oprkind != 'b' OR p2.oprkind != 'b' OR
p1.oprleft != p2.oprleft OR
p1.oprright != p2.oprright OR
p1.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype OR
p2.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype);
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprcode, p2.oid, p2.oprcode
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_operator AS p2
WHERE p1.oprgtcmpop = p2.oid AND
(p1.oprname NOT IN ('=', '~=~') OR p2.oprname NOT IN ('>', '~>~') OR
p1.oprkind != 'b' OR p2.oprkind != 'b' OR
p1.oprleft != p2.oprleft OR
p1.oprright != p2.oprright OR
p1.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype OR
p2.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype);
-- Make sure all four links are specified if any are.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprcode
FROM pg_operator AS p1
WHERE NOT ((oprlsortop = 0 AND oprrsortop = 0 AND
oprltcmpop = 0 AND oprgtcmpop = 0) OR
(oprlsortop != 0 AND oprrsortop != 0 AND
oprltcmpop != 0 AND oprgtcmpop != 0));
-- A mergejoinable = operator must have a commutator (usually itself).
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname FROM pg_operator AS p1
WHERE p1.oprlsortop != 0 AND
p1.oprcom = 0;
-- Mergejoinable operators across datatypes must come in closed sets, that
-- is if you provide int2 = int4 and int4 = int8 then you must also provide
-- int2 = int8 (and commutators of all these). This is necessary because
-- the planner tries to deduce additional qual clauses from transitivity
-- of mergejoinable operators. If there are clauses int2var = int4var and
-- int4var = int8var, the planner will deduce int2var = int8var ... and it
-- had better have a way to represent it.
SELECT p1.oid, p2.oid FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_operator AS p2
WHERE p1.oprlsortop != p1.oprrsortop AND
p1.oprrsortop = p2.oprlsortop AND
p2.oprlsortop != p2.oprrsortop AND
NOT EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM pg_operator p3 WHERE
p3.oprlsortop = p1.oprlsortop AND p3.oprrsortop = p2.oprrsortop);
-- Hashing only works on simple equality operators "type = sametype",
-- since the hash itself depends on the bitwise representation of the type.
-- Check that allegedly hashable operators look like they might be "=".
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname
FROM pg_operator AS p1
WHERE p1.oprcanhash AND NOT
(p1.oprkind = 'b' AND p1.oprresult = 'bool'::regtype AND
p1.oprleft = p1.oprright AND p1.oprname IN ('=', '~=~') AND
p1.oprcom = p1.oid);
-- In 6.5 we accepted hashable array equality operators when the array element
-- type is hashable. However, what we actually need to make hashjoin work on
-- an array is a hashable element type *and* no padding between elements in
-- the array storage (or, perhaps, guaranteed-zero padding). Currently,
-- since the padding code in arrayfuncs.c is pretty bogus, it seems safest
-- to just forbid hashjoin on array equality ops.
-- This should be reconsidered someday.
-- -- Look for array equality operators that are hashable when the underlying
-- -- type is not, or vice versa. This is presumably bogus.
--
-- SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprcanhash, p2.oid, p2.oprcanhash, t1.typname, t2.typname
-- FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_operator AS p2, pg_type AS t1, pg_type AS t2
-- WHERE p1.oprname = '=' AND p1.oprleft = p1.oprright AND
-- p2.oprname = '=' AND p2.oprleft = p2.oprright AND
-- p1.oprleft = t1.oid AND p2.oprleft = t2.oid AND t1.typelem = t2.oid AND
-- p1.oprcanhash != p2.oprcanhash;
-- Substitute check: forbid hashable array ops, period.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oprcanhash AND p1.oprcode = p2.oid AND p2.proname = 'array_eq';
-- Hashable operators should appear as members of hash index opclasses.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname
FROM pg_operator AS p1
WHERE p1.oprcanhash AND NOT EXISTS
(SELECT 1 FROM pg_opclass op JOIN pg_amop p ON op.oid = amopclaid
WHERE opcamid = (SELECT oid FROM pg_am WHERE amname = 'hash') AND
amopopr = p1.oid);
-- And the converse.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname, op.opcname
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_opclass op, pg_amop p
WHERE amopopr = p1.oid AND amopclaid = op.oid
AND opcamid = (SELECT oid FROM pg_am WHERE amname = 'hash')
AND NOT p1.oprcanhash;
-- Check that each operator defined in pg_operator matches its oprcode entry
-- in pg_proc. Easiest to do this separately for each oprkind.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname, p2.oid, p2.proname
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oprcode = p2.oid AND
p1.oprkind = 'b' AND
(p2.pronargs != 2
OR NOT binary_coercible(p2.prorettype, p1.oprresult)
OR NOT binary_coercible(p1.oprleft, p2.proargtypes[0])
OR NOT binary_coercible(p1.oprright, p2.proargtypes[1]));
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname, p2.oid, p2.proname
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oprcode = p2.oid AND
p1.oprkind = 'l' AND
(p2.pronargs != 1
OR NOT binary_coercible(p2.prorettype, p1.oprresult)
OR NOT binary_coercible(p1.oprright, p2.proargtypes[0])
OR p1.oprleft != 0);
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname, p2.oid, p2.proname
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oprcode = p2.oid AND
p1.oprkind = 'r' AND
(p2.pronargs != 1
OR NOT binary_coercible(p2.prorettype, p1.oprresult)
OR NOT binary_coercible(p1.oprleft, p2.proargtypes[0])
OR p1.oprright != 0);
-- If the operator is mergejoinable or hashjoinable, its underlying function
-- should not be volatile.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname, p2.oid, p2.proname
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oprcode = p2.oid AND
(p1.oprlsortop != 0 OR p1.oprcanhash) AND
p2.provolatile = 'v';
-- If oprrest is set, the operator must return boolean,
-- and it must link to a proc with the right signature
-- to be a restriction selectivity estimator.
-- The proc signature we want is: float8 proc(internal, oid, internal, int4)
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname, p2.oid, p2.proname
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oprrest = p2.oid AND
(p1.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype OR
p2.prorettype != 'float8'::regtype OR p2.proretset OR
p2.pronargs != 4 OR
p2.proargtypes[0] != 'internal'::regtype OR
p2.proargtypes[1] != 'oid'::regtype OR
p2.proargtypes[2] != 'internal'::regtype OR
p2.proargtypes[3] != 'int4'::regtype);
-- If oprjoin is set, the operator must be a binary boolean op,
-- and it must link to a proc with the right signature
-- to be a join selectivity estimator.
-- The proc signature we want is: float8 proc(internal, oid, internal, int2)
SELECT p1.oid, p1.oprname, p2.oid, p2.proname
FROM pg_operator AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.oprjoin = p2.oid AND
(p1.oprkind != 'b' OR p1.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype OR
p2.prorettype != 'float8'::regtype OR p2.proretset OR
p2.pronargs != 4 OR
p2.proargtypes[0] != 'internal'::regtype OR
p2.proargtypes[1] != 'oid'::regtype OR
p2.proargtypes[2] != 'internal'::regtype OR
p2.proargtypes[3] != 'int2'::regtype);
-- **************** pg_aggregate ****************
-- Look for illegal values in pg_aggregate fields.
SELECT ctid, aggfnoid::oid
FROM pg_aggregate as p1
WHERE aggfnoid = 0 OR aggtransfn = 0 OR aggtranstype = 0;
-- Make sure the matching pg_proc entry is sensible, too.
SELECT a.aggfnoid::oid, p.proname
FROM pg_aggregate as a, pg_proc as p
WHERE a.aggfnoid = p.oid AND
(NOT p.proisagg OR p.pronargs != 1 OR p.proretset);
-- Make sure there are no proisagg pg_proc entries without matches.
SELECT oid, proname
FROM pg_proc as p
WHERE p.proisagg AND
NOT EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM pg_aggregate a WHERE a.aggfnoid = p.oid);
-- If there is no finalfn then the output type must be the transtype.
SELECT a.aggfnoid::oid, p.proname
FROM pg_aggregate as a, pg_proc as p
WHERE a.aggfnoid = p.oid AND
a.aggfinalfn = 0 AND p.prorettype != a.aggtranstype;
-- Cross-check transfn against its entry in pg_proc.
-- NOTE: use physically_coercible here, not binary_coercible, because
-- max and min on abstime are implemented using int4larger/int4smaller.
SELECT a.aggfnoid::oid, p.proname, ptr.oid, ptr.proname
FROM pg_aggregate AS a, pg_proc AS p, pg_proc AS ptr
WHERE a.aggfnoid = p.oid AND
a.aggtransfn = ptr.oid AND
(ptr.proretset
OR NOT physically_coercible(ptr.prorettype, a.aggtranstype)
OR NOT physically_coercible(a.aggtranstype, ptr.proargtypes[0])
OR NOT ((ptr.pronargs = 2 AND
physically_coercible(p.proargtypes[0], ptr.proargtypes[1]))
OR
(ptr.pronargs = 1 AND
p.proargtypes[0] = '"any"'::regtype)));
-- Cross-check finalfn (if present) against its entry in pg_proc.
SELECT a.aggfnoid::oid, p.proname, pfn.oid, pfn.proname
FROM pg_aggregate AS a, pg_proc AS p, pg_proc AS pfn
WHERE a.aggfnoid = p.oid AND
a.aggfinalfn = pfn.oid AND
(pfn.proretset
OR NOT binary_coercible(pfn.prorettype, p.prorettype)
OR pfn.pronargs != 1
OR NOT binary_coercible(a.aggtranstype, pfn.proargtypes[0]));
-- If transfn is strict then either initval should be non-NULL, or
-- input type should match transtype so that the first non-null input
-- can be assigned as the state value.
SELECT a.aggfnoid::oid, p.proname, ptr.oid, ptr.proname
FROM pg_aggregate AS a, pg_proc AS p, pg_proc AS ptr
WHERE a.aggfnoid = p.oid AND
a.aggtransfn = ptr.oid AND ptr.proisstrict AND
a.agginitval IS NULL AND
NOT binary_coercible(p.proargtypes[0], a.aggtranstype);
-- **************** pg_opclass ****************
-- Look for illegal values in pg_opclass fields
SELECT p1.oid
FROM pg_opclass as p1
WHERE p1.opcamid = 0 OR p1.opcintype = 0;
-- There should not be multiple entries in pg_opclass with opcdefault true
-- and the same opcamid/opcintype combination.
SELECT p1.oid, p2.oid
FROM pg_opclass AS p1, pg_opclass AS p2
WHERE p1.oid != p2.oid AND
p1.opcamid = p2.opcamid AND p1.opcintype = p2.opcintype AND
p1.opcdefault AND p2.opcdefault;
-- **************** pg_amop ****************
-- Look for illegal values in pg_amop fields
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amopstrategy
FROM pg_amop as p1
WHERE p1.amopclaid = 0 OR p1.amopstrategy <= 0 OR p1.amopopr = 0;
-- Cross-check amopstrategy index against parent AM
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amopopr, p2.oid, p2.amname
FROM pg_amop AS p1, pg_am AS p2, pg_opclass AS p3
WHERE p1.amopclaid = p3.oid AND p3.opcamid = p2.oid AND
p1.amopstrategy > p2.amstrategies;
-- Detect missing pg_amop entries: should have as many strategy operators
-- as AM expects for each opclass for the AM. When nondefault subtypes are
-- present, enforce condition separately for each subtype.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.amname, p2.oid, p2.opcname, p3.amopsubtype
FROM pg_am AS p1, pg_opclass AS p2, pg_amop AS p3
WHERE p2.opcamid = p1.oid AND p3.amopclaid = p2.oid AND
p1.amstrategies != (SELECT count(*) FROM pg_amop AS p4
WHERE p4.amopclaid = p2.oid AND
p4.amopsubtype = p3.amopsubtype);
-- Check that amopopr points at a reasonable-looking operator, ie a binary
-- operator yielding boolean.
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amopopr, p2.oid, p2.oprname
FROM pg_amop AS p1, pg_operator AS p2
WHERE p1.amopopr = p2.oid AND
(p2.oprkind != 'b' OR p2.oprresult != 'bool'::regtype);
-- Make a list of all the distinct operator names being used in particular
-- strategy slots. This is a bit hokey, since the list might need to change
-- in future releases, but it's an effective way of spotting mistakes such as
-- swapping two operators within a class.
SELECT DISTINCT opcamid, amopstrategy, oprname
FROM pg_amop p1 LEFT JOIN pg_opclass p2 ON amopclaid = p2.oid
LEFT JOIN pg_operator p3 ON amopopr = p3.oid
ORDER BY 1, 2, 3;
-- Check that all operators linked to by opclass entries have selectivity
-- estimators. This is not absolutely required, but it seems a reasonable
-- thing to insist on for all standard datatypes.
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amopopr, p2.oid, p2.oprname
FROM pg_amop AS p1, pg_operator AS p2
WHERE p1.amopopr = p2.oid AND
(p2.oprrest = 0 OR p2.oprjoin = 0);
-- Check that operator input types match the opclass
-- For 8.0, we require that oprleft match opcintype (possibly by coercion).
-- When amopsubtype is zero (default), oprright must equal oprleft;
-- when amopsubtype is not zero, oprright must equal amopsubtype.
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amopopr, p2.oid, p2.oprname, p3.opcname
FROM pg_amop AS p1, pg_operator AS p2, pg_opclass AS p3
WHERE p1.amopopr = p2.oid AND p1.amopclaid = p3.oid AND
NOT binary_coercible(p3.opcintype, p2.oprleft);
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amopopr, p2.oid, p2.oprname, p3.opcname
FROM pg_amop AS p1, pg_operator AS p2, pg_opclass AS p3
WHERE p1.amopopr = p2.oid AND p1.amopclaid = p3.oid AND
p1.amopsubtype = 0 AND
p2.oprleft != p2.oprright;
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amopopr, p2.oid, p2.oprname, p3.opcname
FROM pg_amop AS p1, pg_operator AS p2, pg_opclass AS p3
WHERE p1.amopopr = p2.oid AND p1.amopclaid = p3.oid AND
p1.amopsubtype != 0 AND
p1.amopsubtype != p2.oprright;
-- Operators that are primary members of opclasses must be immutable (else
-- it suggests that the index ordering isn't fixed). Operators that are
-- cross-type members need only be stable, since they are just shorthands
-- for index probe queries.
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amopopr, p2.oprname, p3.prosrc
FROM pg_amop AS p1, pg_operator AS p2, pg_proc AS p3
WHERE p1.amopopr = p2.oid AND p2.oprcode = p3.oid AND
p1.amopsubtype = 0 AND
p3.provolatile != 'i';
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amopopr, p2.oprname, p3.prosrc
FROM pg_amop AS p1, pg_operator AS p2, pg_proc AS p3
WHERE p1.amopopr = p2.oid AND p2.oprcode = p3.oid AND
p1.amopsubtype != 0 AND
p3.provolatile = 'v';
-- **************** pg_amproc ****************
-- Look for illegal values in pg_amproc fields
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amprocnum
FROM pg_amproc as p1
WHERE p1.amopclaid = 0 OR p1.amprocnum <= 0 OR p1.amproc = 0;
-- Cross-check amprocnum index against parent AM
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amprocnum, p2.oid, p2.amname
FROM pg_amproc AS p1, pg_am AS p2, pg_opclass AS p3
WHERE p1.amopclaid = p3.oid AND p3.opcamid = p2.oid AND
p1.amprocnum > p2.amsupport;
-- Detect missing pg_amproc entries: should have as many support functions
-- as AM expects for each opclass for the AM. When nondefault subtypes are
-- present, enforce condition separately for each subtype.
SELECT p1.oid, p1.amname, p2.oid, p2.opcname, p3.amprocsubtype
FROM pg_am AS p1, pg_opclass AS p2, pg_amproc AS p3
WHERE p2.opcamid = p1.oid AND p3.amopclaid = p2.oid AND
p1.amsupport != (SELECT count(*) FROM pg_amproc AS p4
WHERE p4.amopclaid = p2.oid AND
p4.amprocsubtype = p3.amprocsubtype);
-- Unfortunately, we can't check the amproc link very well because the
-- signature of the function may be different for different support routines
-- or different base data types.
-- We can check that all the referenced instances of the same support
-- routine number take the same number of parameters, but that's about it
-- for a general check...
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amprocnum,
p2.oid, p2.proname,
p3.opcname,
p4.amopclaid, p4.amprocnum,
p5.oid, p5.proname,
p6.opcname
FROM pg_amproc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2, pg_opclass AS p3,
pg_amproc AS p4, pg_proc AS p5, pg_opclass AS p6
WHERE p1.amopclaid = p3.oid AND p4.amopclaid = p6.oid AND
p3.opcamid = p6.opcamid AND p1.amprocnum = p4.amprocnum AND
p1.amproc = p2.oid AND p4.amproc = p5.oid AND
(p2.proretset OR p5.proretset OR p2.pronargs != p5.pronargs);
-- For btree, though, we can do better since we know the support routines
-- must be of the form cmp(input, input) returns int4 in the default case
-- (subtype = 0), and cmp(input, subtype) returns int4 when subtype != 0.
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amprocnum,
p2.oid, p2.proname,
p3.opcname
FROM pg_amproc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2, pg_opclass AS p3
WHERE p3.opcamid = (SELECT oid FROM pg_am WHERE amname = 'btree')
AND p1.amopclaid = p3.oid AND p1.amproc = p2.oid AND
amprocsubtype = 0 AND
(opckeytype != 0
OR amprocnum != 1
OR proretset
OR prorettype != 23
OR pronargs != 2
OR NOT binary_coercible(opcintype, proargtypes[0])
OR proargtypes[0] != proargtypes[1]);
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amprocnum,
p2.oid, p2.proname,
p3.opcname
FROM pg_amproc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2, pg_opclass AS p3
WHERE p3.opcamid = (SELECT oid FROM pg_am WHERE amname = 'btree')
AND p1.amopclaid = p3.oid AND p1.amproc = p2.oid AND
amprocsubtype != 0 AND
(opckeytype != 0
OR amprocnum != 1
OR proretset
OR prorettype != 23
OR pronargs != 2
OR NOT binary_coercible(opcintype, proargtypes[0])
OR proargtypes[1] != amprocsubtype);
-- For hash we can also do a little better: the support routines must be
-- of the form hash(something) returns int4. Ideally we'd check that the
-- opcintype is binary-coercible to the function's input, but there are
-- enough cases where that fails that I'll just leave out the check for now.
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amprocnum,
p2.oid, p2.proname,
p3.opcname
FROM pg_amproc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2, pg_opclass AS p3
WHERE p3.opcamid = (SELECT oid FROM pg_am WHERE amname = 'hash')
AND p1.amopclaid = p3.oid AND p1.amproc = p2.oid AND
(opckeytype != 0
OR amprocnum != 1
OR proretset
OR prorettype != 23
OR pronargs != 1
-- OR NOT physically_coercible(opcintype, proargtypes[0])
);
-- Support routines that are primary members of opclasses must be immutable
-- (else it suggests that the index ordering isn't fixed). But cross-type
-- members need only be stable, since they are just shorthands
-- for index probe queries.
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amproc, p2.prosrc
FROM pg_amproc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.amproc = p2.oid AND
p1.amprocsubtype = 0 AND
p2.provolatile != 'i';
SELECT p1.amopclaid, p1.amproc, p2.prosrc
FROM pg_amproc AS p1, pg_proc AS p2
WHERE p1.amproc = p2.oid AND
p1.amprocsubtype != 0 AND
p2.provolatile = 'v';