This function looks for a reference to the recursive WITH CTE,
but it checked only the CTE name not ctelevelsup, so that it could
seize on a lower CTE that happened to have the same name. This
would result in planner failures later, either weird errors such as
"could not find attribute 2 in subquery targetlist", or crashes
or assertion failures. The code also merely Assert'ed that it found
a matching entry, which is not guaranteed at all by the parser.
Per bugs #17320 and #17318 from Zhiyong Wu.
Thanks to Kyotaro Horiguchi for investigation.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17320-
70e37868182512ab@postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17318-
2eb65a3a611d2368@postgresql.org
newrte->eref = newrte->alias;
/*
- * Find the reference to our CTE in the range table
+ * Find the reference to the recursive CTE in the right UNION subquery's
+ * range table. We expect it to be two levels up from the UNION subquery
+ * (and must check that to avoid being fooled by sub-WITHs with the same
+ * CTE name). There will not be more than one such reference, because the
+ * parser would have rejected that (see checkWellFormedRecursion() in
+ * parse_cte.c). However, the parser doesn't insist that the reference
+ * appear in the UNION subquery's topmost range table, so we might fail to
+ * find it at all. That's an unimplemented case for the moment.
*/
for (int rti = 1; rti <= list_length(rte2->subquery->rtable); rti++)
{
RangeTblEntry *e = rt_fetch(rti, rte2->subquery->rtable);
- if (e->rtekind == RTE_CTE && strcmp(cte->ctename, e->ctename) == 0)
+ if (e->rtekind == RTE_CTE &&
+ strcmp(cte->ctename, e->ctename) == 0 &&
+ e->ctelevelsup == 2)
{
cte_rtindex = rti;
break;
}
}
- Assert(cte_rtindex > 0);
+ if (cte_rtindex <= 0)
+ ereport(ERROR,
+ (errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
+ errmsg("with a SEARCH or CYCLE clause, the recursive reference to WITH query \"%s\" must be at the top level of its right-hand SELECT",
+ cte->ctename)));
newsubquery = copyObject(rte2->subquery);
IncrementVarSublevelsUp((Node *) newsubquery, 1, 1);
) search depth first by f, t set seq
select * from search_graph order by seq;
ERROR: with a SEARCH or CYCLE clause, the right side of the UNION must be a SELECT
+-- check that we distinguish same CTE name used at different levels
+-- (this case could be supported, perhaps, but it isn't today)
+with recursive x(col) as (
+ select 1
+ union
+ (with x as (select * from x)
+ select * from x)
+) search depth first by col set seq
+select * from x;
+ERROR: with a SEARCH or CYCLE clause, the recursive reference to WITH query "x" must be at the top level of its right-hand SELECT
-- test ruleutils and view expansion
create temp view v_search as
with recursive search_graph(f, t, label) as (
) search depth first by f, t set seq
select * from search_graph order by seq;
+-- check that we distinguish same CTE name used at different levels
+-- (this case could be supported, perhaps, but it isn't today)
+with recursive x(col) as (
+ select 1
+ union
+ (with x as (select * from x)
+ select * from x)
+) search depth first by col set seq
+select * from x;
+
-- test ruleutils and view expansion
create temp view v_search as
with recursive search_graph(f, t, label) as (