Re: Materialized views don't show up in information_schema
От | Stephen Frost |
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Тема | Re: Materialized views don't show up in information_schema |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 20141018001031.GZ28859@tamriel.snowman.net обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Materialized views don't show up in information_schema (Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net>) |
Ответы |
Re: Materialized views don't show up in information_schema
Re: Materialized views don't show up in information_schema |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
* Peter Eisentraut (peter_e@gmx.net) wrote: > On 10/16/14 9:45 AM, Stephen Frost wrote: > > Alright, coming back to this, I have to ask- how are matviews different > > from views from the SQL standard's perspective? I tried looking through > > the standard to figure it out (and I admit that I probably missed > > something), but the only thing appears to be a statement in the standard > > that (paraphrased) "functions are run with the view is queried" and that > > strikes me as a relatively minor point.. > > To me, the main criterion is that you cannot DROP VIEW a materialized view. That is an entirely correctable situation. We don't require 'DROP UNLOGGED TABLE'. > Generally, if the information schema claims that a > view/table/function/etc. named "foo" exists, then I should be able to > operate on "foo" using the basic operations for a > view/table/function/etc. of that name. I think think DROP VIEW is a > basic operation for a view. Others might disagree. This strikes me as a reason to allow DROP VIEW and perhaps other operations against a matview, not as a reason why matviews aren't views. > More subtly, if we claim that a materialized view is a view, then we > cannot have asynchronously updated materialized views, because then we > have different semantics. This is, at least, a reason I can understand, though I'm not sure I see it as sufficient to say matviews are so different from views that they shouldn't be listed as such. Thanks, Stephen
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