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Record dependencies of a cast on other casts that it requires.
When creating a cast that uses a conversion function, we've historically allowed the input and result types to be binary-compatible with the function's input and result types, rather than necessarily being identical. This means that the new cast is logically dependent on the binary-compatible cast or casts that it references: if those are defined by pg_cast entries, and you try to restore the new cast without having defined them, it'll fail. Hence, we should make pg_depend entries to record these dependencies so that pg_dump knows that there is an ordering requirement. This is not the only place where we allow such shortcuts; aggregate functions for example are similarly lax, and in principle should gain similar dependencies. However, for now it seems sufficient to fix the cast-versus-cast case, as pg_dump's other ordering heuristics should keep it out of trouble for other object types. Per report from David Turoň; thanks also to Robert Haas for preliminary investigation. I considered back-patching, but seeing that this issue has existed for many years without previous reports, it's not clear it's worth the trouble. Moreover, back-patching wouldn't be enough to ensure that the new pg_depend entries exist in existing databases anyway. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/OF0A160F3E.578B15D1-ONC12588DA.003E4857-C12588DA.0045A428@notes.linuxbox.cz
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@ -35,13 +35,20 @@
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* Caller must have already checked privileges, and done consistency
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* checks on the given datatypes and cast function (if applicable).
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*
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* Since we allow binary coercibility of the datatypes to the cast
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* function's input and result, there could be one or two WITHOUT FUNCTION
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* casts that this one depends on. We don't record that explicitly
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* in pg_cast, but we still need to make dependencies on those casts.
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*
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* 'behavior' indicates the types of the dependencies that the new
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* cast will have on its input and output types and the cast function.
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* cast will have on its input and output types, the cast function,
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* and the other casts if any.
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* ----------------------------------------------------------------
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*/
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ObjectAddress
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CastCreate(Oid sourcetypeid, Oid targettypeid, Oid funcid, char castcontext,
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char castmethod, DependencyType behavior)
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CastCreate(Oid sourcetypeid, Oid targettypeid,
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Oid funcid, Oid incastid, Oid outcastid,
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char castcontext, char castmethod, DependencyType behavior)
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{
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Relation relation;
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HeapTuple tuple;
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@ -102,6 +109,18 @@ CastCreate(Oid sourcetypeid, Oid targettypeid, Oid funcid, char castcontext,
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add_exact_object_address(&referenced, addrs);
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}
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/* dependencies on casts required for function */
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if (OidIsValid(incastid))
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{
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ObjectAddressSet(referenced, CastRelationId, incastid);
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add_exact_object_address(&referenced, addrs);
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}
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if (OidIsValid(outcastid))
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{
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ObjectAddressSet(referenced, CastRelationId, outcastid);
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add_exact_object_address(&referenced, addrs);
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}
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record_object_address_dependencies(&myself, addrs, behavior);
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free_object_addresses(addrs);
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@ -1526,6 +1526,8 @@ CreateCast(CreateCastStmt *stmt)
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char sourcetyptype;
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char targettyptype;
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Oid funcid;
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Oid incastid = InvalidOid;
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Oid outcastid = InvalidOid;
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int nargs;
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char castcontext;
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char castmethod;
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@ -1603,7 +1605,9 @@ CreateCast(CreateCastStmt *stmt)
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ereport(ERROR,
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(errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_OBJECT_DEFINITION),
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errmsg("cast function must take one to three arguments")));
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if (!IsBinaryCoercible(sourcetypeid, procstruct->proargtypes.values[0]))
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if (!IsBinaryCoercibleWithCast(sourcetypeid,
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procstruct->proargtypes.values[0],
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&incastid))
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ereport(ERROR,
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(errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_OBJECT_DEFINITION),
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errmsg("argument of cast function must match or be binary-coercible from source data type")));
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@ -1617,7 +1621,9 @@ CreateCast(CreateCastStmt *stmt)
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(errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_OBJECT_DEFINITION),
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errmsg("third argument of cast function must be type %s",
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"boolean")));
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if (!IsBinaryCoercible(procstruct->prorettype, targettypeid))
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if (!IsBinaryCoercibleWithCast(procstruct->prorettype,
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targettypeid,
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&outcastid))
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ereport(ERROR,
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(errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_OBJECT_DEFINITION),
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errmsg("return data type of cast function must match or be binary-coercible to target data type")));
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@ -1756,8 +1762,8 @@ CreateCast(CreateCastStmt *stmt)
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break;
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}
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myself = CastCreate(sourcetypeid, targettypeid, funcid, castcontext,
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castmethod, DEPENDENCY_NORMAL);
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myself = CastCreate(sourcetypeid, targettypeid, funcid, incastid, outcastid,
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castcontext, castmethod, DEPENDENCY_NORMAL);
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return myself;
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}
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@ -1705,7 +1705,9 @@ DefineRange(ParseState *pstate, CreateRangeStmt *stmt)
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&castFuncOid);
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/* Create cast from the range type to its multirange type */
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CastCreate(typoid, multirangeOid, castFuncOid, 'e', 'f', DEPENDENCY_INTERNAL);
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CastCreate(typoid, multirangeOid, castFuncOid, InvalidOid, InvalidOid,
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COERCION_CODE_EXPLICIT, COERCION_METHOD_FUNCTION,
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DEPENDENCY_INTERNAL);
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pfree(multirangeArrayName);
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@ -2993,11 +2993,29 @@ IsPreferredType(TYPCATEGORY category, Oid type)
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*/
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bool
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IsBinaryCoercible(Oid srctype, Oid targettype)
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{
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Oid castoid;
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return IsBinaryCoercibleWithCast(srctype, targettype, &castoid);
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}
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/* IsBinaryCoercibleWithCast()
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* Check if srctype is binary-coercible to targettype.
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*
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* This variant also returns the OID of the pg_cast entry if one is involved.
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* *castoid is set to InvalidOid if no binary-coercible cast exists, or if
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* there is a hard-wired rule for it rather than a pg_cast entry.
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*/
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bool
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IsBinaryCoercibleWithCast(Oid srctype, Oid targettype,
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Oid *castoid)
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{
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HeapTuple tuple;
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Form_pg_cast castForm;
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bool result;
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*castoid = InvalidOid;
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/* Fast path if same type */
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if (srctype == targettype)
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return true;
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@ -3061,6 +3079,9 @@ IsBinaryCoercible(Oid srctype, Oid targettype)
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result = (castForm->castmethod == COERCION_METHOD_BINARY &&
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castForm->castcontext == COERCION_CODE_IMPLICIT);
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if (result)
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*castoid = castForm->oid;
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ReleaseSysCache(tuple);
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return result;
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@ -95,6 +95,8 @@ typedef enum CoercionMethod
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extern ObjectAddress CastCreate(Oid sourcetypeid,
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Oid targettypeid,
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Oid funcid,
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Oid incastid,
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Oid outcastid,
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char castcontext,
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char castmethod,
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DependencyType behavior);
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@ -32,6 +32,8 @@ typedef enum CoercionPathType
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extern bool IsBinaryCoercible(Oid srctype, Oid targettype);
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extern bool IsBinaryCoercibleWithCast(Oid srctype, Oid targettype,
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Oid *castoid);
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extern bool IsPreferredType(TYPCATEGORY category, Oid type);
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extern TYPCATEGORY TypeCategory(Oid type);
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@ -72,3 +72,32 @@ SELECT 1234::int4::casttesttype; -- Should work now
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foo1234
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(1 row)
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DROP FUNCTION int4_casttesttype(int4) CASCADE;
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NOTICE: drop cascades to cast from integer to casttesttype
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-- Try it with a function that requires an implicit cast
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CREATE FUNCTION bar_int4_text(int4) RETURNS text LANGUAGE SQL AS
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$$ SELECT ('bar'::text || $1::text); $$;
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CREATE CAST (int4 AS casttesttype) WITH FUNCTION bar_int4_text(int4) AS IMPLICIT;
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SELECT 1234::int4::casttesttype; -- Should work now
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casttesttype
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--------------
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bar1234
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(1 row)
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-- check dependencies generated for that
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SELECT pg_describe_object(classid, objid, objsubid) as obj,
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pg_describe_object(refclassid, refobjid, refobjsubid) as objref,
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deptype
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FROM pg_depend
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WHERE classid = 'pg_cast'::regclass AND
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objid = (SELECT oid FROM pg_cast
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WHERE castsource = 'int4'::regtype
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AND casttarget = 'casttesttype'::regtype)
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ORDER BY refclassid;
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obj | objref | deptype
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-----------------------------------+---------------------------------+---------
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cast from integer to casttesttype | type casttesttype | n
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cast from integer to casttesttype | function bar_int4_text(integer) | n
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cast from integer to casttesttype | cast from text to casttesttype | n
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(3 rows)
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CREATE CAST (int4 AS casttesttype) WITH FUNCTION int4_casttesttype(int4) AS IMPLICIT;
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SELECT 1234::int4::casttesttype; -- Should work now
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DROP FUNCTION int4_casttesttype(int4) CASCADE;
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-- Try it with a function that requires an implicit cast
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CREATE FUNCTION bar_int4_text(int4) RETURNS text LANGUAGE SQL AS
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$$ SELECT ('bar'::text || $1::text); $$;
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CREATE CAST (int4 AS casttesttype) WITH FUNCTION bar_int4_text(int4) AS IMPLICIT;
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SELECT 1234::int4::casttesttype; -- Should work now
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-- check dependencies generated for that
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SELECT pg_describe_object(classid, objid, objsubid) as obj,
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pg_describe_object(refclassid, refobjid, refobjsubid) as objref,
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deptype
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FROM pg_depend
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WHERE classid = 'pg_cast'::regclass AND
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objid = (SELECT oid FROM pg_cast
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WHERE castsource = 'int4'::regtype
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AND casttarget = 'casttesttype'::regtype)
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ORDER BY refclassid;
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overread_tuplestruct_pg_cast
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Memcheck:Addr4
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fun:IsBinaryCoercible
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fun:IsBinaryCoercibleWithCast
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}
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# Python's allocator does some low-level tricks for efficiency. Those
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