Re: InitPostgres and flatfiles question
- From: Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us>
- To: Markus Schiltknecht <markus(at)bluegap(dot)ch>
- Cc: pgsql-hackers(at)postgresql(dot)org
- Subject: Re: InitPostgres and flatfiles question
- Date: Thu, 04 Jan 2007 10:36:48 -0500
- Message-id: <17180.1167925008@sss.pgh.pa.us> <text/plain>
Markus Schiltknecht <markus(at)bluegap(dot)ch> writes:
> I've just found the stumbling block: the -c option of psql wraps all in
> a transaction, as man psql says:
> ...
> Thank you for clarification, I wouldn't have expected that (especially
> because CREATE DATABASE itself says, it cannot be run inside a
> transaction block... A transaction block (with BEGIN and COMMIT) seems
> to be more than just a transaction, right?)
Hm, that's an interesting point. psql's -c just shoves its whole
argument string at the backend in one PQexec(), instead of dividing
at semicolons as psql does with normal input. And so it winds up as
a single transaction because postgres.c doesn't force a transaction
commit until the end of the querystring. But that's not a "transaction
block" in the normal sense and so it doesn't trigger the
PreventTransactionChain defense in CREATE DATABASE and elsewhere.
I wonder whether we ought to change that? The point of
PreventTransactionChain is that we don't want the user rolling back
the statement post-completion, but it seems that
psql -c 'CREATE DATABASE foo; ABORT; BEGIN; ...'
would bypass the check.
regards, tom lane
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