Fix plpgsql's handling of "simple" expression evaluation.

In general, expression execution state trees aren't re-entrantly usable,
since functions can store private state information in them.
For efficiency reasons, plpgsql tries to cache and reuse state trees for
"simple" expressions.  It can get away with that most of the time, but it
can fail if the state tree is dirty from a previous failed execution (as
in an example from Alvaro) or is being used recursively (as noted by me).

Fix by tracking whether a state tree is in use, and falling back to the
"non-simple" code path if so.  This results in a pretty considerable speed
hit when the non-simple path is taken, but the available alternatives seem
even more unpleasant because they add overhead in the simple path.  Per
idea from Heikki.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2010-10-28 13:00:54 -04:00
parent e9eb4f4013
commit 8ce22dd4c5
4 changed files with 121 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -4491,7 +4491,18 @@ loop_exit:
* a Datum by directly calling ExecEvalExpr().
*
* If successful, store results into *result, *isNull, *rettype and return
* TRUE. If the expression is not simple (any more), return FALSE.
* TRUE. If the expression cannot be handled by simple evaluation,
* return FALSE.
*
* Because we only store one execution tree for a simple expression, we
* can't handle recursion cases. So, if we see the tree is already busy
* with an evaluation in the current xact, we just return FALSE and let the
* caller run the expression the hard way. (Other alternatives such as
* creating a new tree for a recursive call either introduce memory leaks,
* or add enough bookkeeping to be doubtful wins anyway.) Another case that
* is covered by the expr_simple_in_use test is where a previous execution
* of the tree was aborted by an error: the tree may contain bogus state
* so we dare not re-use it.
*
* It is possible though unlikely for a simple expression to become non-simple
* (consider for example redefining a trivial view). We must handle that for
@ -4527,6 +4538,12 @@ exec_eval_simple_expr(PLpgSQL_execstate *estate,
if (expr->expr_simple_expr == NULL)
return false;
/*
* If expression is in use in current xact, don't touch it.
*/
if (expr->expr_simple_in_use && expr->expr_simple_lxid == curlxid)
return false;
/*
* Revalidate cached plan, so that we will notice if it became stale. (We
* also need to hold a refcount while using the plan.) Note that even if
@ -4562,6 +4579,7 @@ exec_eval_simple_expr(PLpgSQL_execstate *estate,
{
expr->expr_simple_state = ExecPrepareExpr(expr->expr_simple_expr,
simple_eval_estate);
expr->expr_simple_in_use = false;
expr->expr_simple_lxid = curlxid;
}
@ -4596,6 +4614,11 @@ exec_eval_simple_expr(PLpgSQL_execstate *estate,
paramLI = setup_param_list(estate, expr);
econtext->ecxt_param_list_info = paramLI;
/*
* Mark expression as busy for the duration of the ExecEvalExpr call.
*/
expr->expr_simple_in_use = true;
/*
* Finally we can call the executor to evaluate the expression
*/
@ -4605,6 +4628,8 @@ exec_eval_simple_expr(PLpgSQL_execstate *estate,
NULL);
/* Assorted cleanup */
expr->expr_simple_in_use = false;
estate->cur_expr = save_cur_expr;
if (!estate->readonly_func)
@ -5341,6 +5366,7 @@ exec_simple_check_plan(PLpgSQL_expr *expr)
*/
expr->expr_simple_expr = tle->expr;
expr->expr_simple_state = NULL;
expr->expr_simple_in_use = false;
expr->expr_simple_lxid = InvalidLocalTransactionId;
/* Also stash away the expression result type */
expr->expr_simple_type = exprType((Node *) tle->expr);

View File

@ -214,10 +214,12 @@ typedef struct PLpgSQL_expr
/*
* if expr is simple AND prepared in current transaction,
* expr_simple_state is valid. Test validity by seeing if expr_simple_lxid
* matches current LXID.
* expr_simple_state and expr_simple_in_use are valid. Test validity by
* seeing if expr_simple_lxid matches current LXID. (If not,
* expr_simple_state probably points at garbage!)
*/
ExprState *expr_simple_state;
ExprState *expr_simple_state; /* eval tree for expr_simple_expr */
bool expr_simple_in_use; /* true if eval tree is active */
LocalTransactionId expr_simple_lxid;
} PLpgSQL_expr;

View File

@ -3988,6 +3988,53 @@ SELECT nonsimple_expr_test();
(1 row)
DROP FUNCTION nonsimple_expr_test();
--
-- Test cases involving recursion and error recovery in simple expressions
-- (bugs in all versions before October 2010). The problems are most
-- easily exposed by mutual recursion between plpgsql and sql functions.
--
create function recurse(float8) returns float8 as
$$
begin
if ($1 < 10) then
return sql_recurse($1 + 1);
else
return $1;
end if;
end;
$$ language plpgsql;
-- "limit" is to prevent this from being inlined
create function sql_recurse(float8) returns float8 as
$$ select recurse($1) limit 1; $$ language sql;
select recurse(0);
recurse
---------
10
(1 row)
create function error1(text) returns text language sql as
$$ SELECT relname::text FROM pg_class c WHERE c.oid = $1::regclass $$;
create function error2(p_name_table text) returns text language plpgsql as $$
begin
return error1(p_name_table);
end$$;
BEGIN;
create table public.stuffs (stuff text);
SAVEPOINT a;
select error2('nonexistent.stuffs');
ERROR: schema "nonexistent" does not exist
CONTEXT: SQL function "error1" statement 1
PL/pgSQL function "error2" line 3 at RETURN
ROLLBACK TO a;
select error2('public.stuffs');
error2
--------
stuffs
(1 row)
rollback;
drop function error2(p_name_table text);
drop function error1(text);
-- Test handling of string literals.
set standard_conforming_strings = off;
create or replace function strtest() returns text as $$

View File

@ -3190,6 +3190,48 @@ SELECT nonsimple_expr_test();
DROP FUNCTION nonsimple_expr_test();
--
-- Test cases involving recursion and error recovery in simple expressions
-- (bugs in all versions before October 2010). The problems are most
-- easily exposed by mutual recursion between plpgsql and sql functions.
--
create function recurse(float8) returns float8 as
$$
begin
if ($1 < 10) then
return sql_recurse($1 + 1);
else
return $1;
end if;
end;
$$ language plpgsql;
-- "limit" is to prevent this from being inlined
create function sql_recurse(float8) returns float8 as
$$ select recurse($1) limit 1; $$ language sql;
select recurse(0);
create function error1(text) returns text language sql as
$$ SELECT relname::text FROM pg_class c WHERE c.oid = $1::regclass $$;
create function error2(p_name_table text) returns text language plpgsql as $$
begin
return error1(p_name_table);
end$$;
BEGIN;
create table public.stuffs (stuff text);
SAVEPOINT a;
select error2('nonexistent.stuffs');
ROLLBACK TO a;
select error2('public.stuffs');
rollback;
drop function error2(p_name_table text);
drop function error1(text);
-- Test handling of string literals.
set standard_conforming_strings = off;