Fix crash in contrib/ltree's lca() function for empty input array.

lca_inner() wasn't prepared for the possibility of getting no inputs.
Fix that, and make some cosmetic improvements to the code while at it.

Also, I thought the documentation of this function as returning the
"longest common prefix" of the paths was entirely misleading; it really
returns a path one shorter than the longest common prefix, for the typical
definition of "prefix".  Don't use that term in the docs, and adjust the
examples to clarify what really happens.

This has been broken since its beginning, so back-patch to all supported
branches.

Per report from Hailong Li.  Thanks to Pierre Ducroquet for diagnosing
and for the initial patch, though I whacked it around some and added
test cases.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5b0d8e4f-f2a3-1305-d612-e00e35a7be66@qunar.com
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2018-07-13 18:45:30 -04:00
parent 333224c99e
commit 28a1ae5342
4 changed files with 50 additions and 13 deletions

View File

@ -259,6 +259,24 @@ SELECT lca('{1.2.3,1.2.3.4.5.6}');
1.2
(1 row)
SELECT lca('{1.2.3}');
lca
-----
1.2
(1 row)
SELECT lca('{1}'), lca('{1}') IS NULL;
lca | ?column?
-----+----------
| f
(1 row)
SELECT lca('{}') IS NULL;
?column?
----------
t
(1 row)
SELECT lca('1.la.2.3','1.2.3.4.5.6');
lca
-----

View File

@ -402,22 +402,34 @@ ltree_textadd(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
PG_RETURN_POINTER(r);
}
/*
* Common code for variants of lca(), find longest common ancestor of inputs
*
* Returns NULL if there is no common ancestor, ie, the longest common
* prefix is empty.
*/
ltree *
lca_inner(ltree **a, int len)
{
int tmp,
num = ((*a)->numlevel) ? (*a)->numlevel - 1 : 0;
ltree **ptr = a + 1;
int i,
reslen = LTREE_HDRSIZE;
num,
i,
reslen;
ltree **ptr;
ltree_level *l1,
*l2;
ltree *res;
if (len <= 0)
return NULL; /* no inputs? */
if ((*a)->numlevel == 0)
return NULL;
return NULL; /* any empty input means NULL result */
/* num is the length of the longest common ancestor so far */
num = (*a)->numlevel - 1;
/* Compare each additional input to *a */
ptr = a + 1;
while (ptr - a < len)
{
if ((*ptr)->numlevel == 0)
@ -428,11 +440,12 @@ lca_inner(ltree **a, int len)
{
l1 = LTREE_FIRST(*a);
l2 = LTREE_FIRST(*ptr);
tmp = num;
tmp = Min(num, (*ptr)->numlevel - 1);
num = 0;
for (i = 0; i < Min(tmp, (*ptr)->numlevel - 1); i++)
for (i = 0; i < tmp; i++)
{
if (l1->len == l2->len && memcmp(l1->name, l2->name, l1->len) == 0)
if (l1->len == l2->len &&
memcmp(l1->name, l2->name, l1->len) == 0)
num = i + 1;
else
break;
@ -443,6 +456,8 @@ lca_inner(ltree **a, int len)
ptr++;
}
/* Now compute size of result ... */
reslen = LTREE_HDRSIZE;
l1 = LTREE_FIRST(*a);
for (i = 0; i < num; i++)
{
@ -450,6 +465,7 @@ lca_inner(ltree **a, int len)
l1 = LEVEL_NEXT(l1);
}
/* ... and construct it by copying from *a */
res = (ltree *) palloc0(reslen);
SET_VARSIZE(res, reslen);
res->numlevel = num;

View File

@ -54,6 +54,9 @@ SELECT lca('{la.2.3,1.2.3.4.5.6,""}') IS NULL;
SELECT lca('{la.2.3,1.2.3.4.5.6}') IS NULL;
SELECT lca('{1.la.2.3,1.2.3.4.5.6}');
SELECT lca('{1.2.3,1.2.3.4.5.6}');
SELECT lca('{1.2.3}');
SELECT lca('{1}'), lca('{1}') IS NULL;
SELECT lca('{}') IS NULL;
SELECT lca('1.la.2.3','1.2.3.4.5.6');
SELECT lca('1.2.3','1.2.3.4.5.6');
SELECT lca('1.2.2.3','1.2.3.4.5.6');

View File

@ -457,17 +457,17 @@ Europe &amp; Russia*@ &amp; !Transportation
<row>
<entry><function>lca(ltree, ltree, ...)</function><indexterm><primary>lca</primary></indexterm></entry>
<entry><type>ltree</type></entry>
<entry>lowest common ancestor, i.e., longest common prefix of paths
<entry>longest common ancestor of paths
(up to 8 arguments supported)</entry>
<entry><literal>lca('1.2.2.3','1.2.3.4.5.6')</literal></entry>
<entry><literal>lca('1.2.3','1.2.3.4.5.6')</literal></entry>
<entry><literal>1.2</literal></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry><function>lca(ltree[])</function></entry>
<entry><type>ltree</type></entry>
<entry>lowest common ancestor, i.e., longest common prefix of paths</entry>
<entry><literal>lca(array['1.2.2.3'::ltree,'1.2.3'])</literal></entry>
<entry>longest common ancestor of paths in array</entry>
<entry><literal>lca(array['1.2.3'::ltree,'1.2.3.4'])</literal></entry>
<entry><literal>1.2</literal></entry>
</row>