Re: RFD: schemas and different kinds of Postgres objects
От | Hiroshi Inoue |
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Тема | Re: RFD: schemas and different kinds of Postgres objects |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 3C54AA51.64CE68AD@tpf.co.jp обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: RFD: schemas and different kinds of Postgres objects (Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net>) |
Ответы |
Re: RFD: schemas and different kinds of Postgres objects
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Список | pgsql-hackers |
Is *the path* below the same as "search path* in other postings about this thread ? Maybe Peter's posting isn't the one exactly what I have to ask but there are too many postings for me to follow. regards, Hiroshi Inoue Peter Eisentraut wrote: > > Bill Studenmund writes: > > > Does SQL'99 say anything about this? > > Yes, though, as usual, you have to twist your brain a little to understand > it. My understanding is that for a function call of the form "foo(a, b)" > it goes like this: > > 1. Find all functions named "foo" in the current database. This is the > set of "possibly candidate routines". > > 2. Drop all routines that you do not have EXECUTE privilege for. This is > the set of "executable routines". > > 3. Drop all routines that do not have compatible parameter lists. This is > the set of "invocable routines". > > 4. Drop all routines whose schema is not in the path. This is the set of > "candidate routines". > > 5. If you have more than one routine left, eliminate some routines > according to type precedence rules. (We do some form of this, SQL99 > specifies something different.) This yields the set of "candidate subject > routines". > > 6. Choose the routine whose schema is earliest in the path as the "subject > routine". > > Execute the subject routine. Phew! > > This doesn't look glaringly wrong to me, so maybe you want to consider it. > Please note step 2. > > -- > Peter Eisentraut peter_e@gmx.net
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