Fix inheritance count tracking in ALTER TABLE .. ADD CONSTRAINT.

Without this patch, constraints inherited by children of a parent
table which itself has multiple inheritance parents can end up with
the wrong coninhcount.  After dropping the constraint, the children
end up with a leftover copy of the constraint that is not dumped
and cannot be dropped.  There is a similar problem with ALTER TABLE
.. ADD COLUMN, but that looks significantly more difficult to
resolve, so I'm committing this fix separately.

Back-patch to 8.4, which is the first release that has coninhcount.

Report by Hank Enting.
This commit is contained in:
Robert Haas 2010-08-03 15:47:02 +00:00
parent 8c19d14be5
commit 31b6fc06d8
1 changed files with 10 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/commands/tablecmds.c,v 1.337 2010/07/29 19:23:20 tgl Exp $
* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/commands/tablecmds.c,v 1.338 2010/08/03 15:47:02 rhaas Exp $
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
@ -4890,6 +4890,15 @@ ATAddCheckConstraint(List **wqueue, AlteredTableInfo *tab, Relation rel,
/* Advance command counter in case same table is visited multiple times */
CommandCounterIncrement();
/*
* If the constraint got merged with an existing constraint, we're done.
* We mustn't recurse to child tables in this case, because they've already
* got the constraint, and visiting them again would lead to an incorrect
* value for coninhcount.
*/
if (newcons == NIL)
return;
/*
* Propagate to children as appropriate. Unlike most other ALTER
* routines, we have to do this one level of recursion at a time; we can't