So far the code is like this(In addition to the input and output functions):



struct trajectory_elem
{
  int32 id;
  Timestamp time_obj;
  GSERIALIZED *geom_elem;       /* Geometry Object */
};

PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(trajectory_elem);

Datum
trajectory_elem(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
{

  int32 id = PG_GETARG_INT32(0);

  Timestamp timestamp = PG_GETARG_TIMESTAMP(1);

  GSERIALIZED *geom = (GSERIALIZED*)PG_DETOAST_DATUM(PG_GETARG_DATUM(2));

  LWGEOM *lwgeom = lwgeom_from_gserialized(geom);

  struct trajectory_elem *trje = (struct trajectory_elem *) 
palloc(sizeof(struct trajectory_elem));

  GSERIALIZED *result;

  size_t size;

  /*elog(NOTICE, "trajectory_elem called");*/

  if (lwgeom_is_empty(lwgeom) || lwgeom->type != POINTTYPE)
  {
    elog(NOTICE, "trajectory_elem is NULL, or type is not correct");
  PG_RETURN_NULL();
  }

  /* Serialize the result back down from LWGEOM, but don't return right away */
  // result = geometry_serialize(lwgeom);
  result = gserialized_from_lwgeom(lwgeom, &size);

  trje->id = id;
  trje->time_obj = timestamp;
  trje->geom_elem = result;

  elog(NOTICE, "trajectory_elem finish");

  /* Then call free_if_copy on the *varlena* structures you originally get as 
arguments */
  // lwgeom_free(lwgeom);
  PG_FREE_IF_COPY(lwgeom, 0);

  elog(NOTICE, "trajectory_elem finish2");
  // PG_RETURN_TRAJECTELEM_TYPE_P(trje);

  PG_RETURN_POINTER(trje);

}
But the Postgres server crashes. Values are entering correctly, but I can not 
return the structure pointer..

It is wrong the way I'm programming the extension with the PostGIS?

Thanks in advance



________________________________
De: Paul Ramsey <pram...@cleverelephant.ca>
Enviado: segunda-feira, 14 de agosto de 2017 15:36
Para: Fabiana Zioti
Cc: pgsql-general@postgresql.org
Assunto: Re: [GENERAL] Development of an extension for PostgreSQL and PostGIS

In order to get an LWGEOM from PostGIS you'll need to convert from the 
serialized form (GSERIALIZED) which you can read all about in the liblwgeom.h 
header. You'll be adding a hard dependency of course, but hopefully you're OK 
with that.

If you're just hoping to build a compound type, as your example shows, you can 
do that without a C extension, just read up on CREATE TYPE.

For an alternate example of an extension with a lighter dependency on PostGIS, 
check out pgpointcloud, which has it's own structure for spatial data (a point 
patch) and exchanges data with PostGIS via well-known-binary. This removes the 
liblwgeom dependency, which means it's possible to compile and use pgpointcloud 
without PostGIS installed, which is not entirely uncommon.

P


On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 11:18 AM, Fabiana Zioti 
<fabi_zi...@hotmail.com<mailto:fabi_zi...@hotmail.com>> wrote:

Hello.

I will start developing an extension to PostgreSQL next to PostGIS using the C 
language.

If my new type were:


CREATE TYPE mytype (.., .., .., geom geometry);

The creation of the structure in c, would be something like?

#include "liblwgeom.h"

Struct mytype
{
   Int32 id;
   LWGEOM lwgeom;

};


In the extension I will create new data types for PostgreSQL, but I would like 
to use the geometric objects that the PostGIS extension offers, such as POINT, 
LINE, POLYGON, etc. In addition to their input functions (wkt- ST_GeomFromText 
()), operators, index, etc.

In this case just importing the liblwgeom library would be enough to develop an 
extension to PostgreSQL / PostGIS?

Would you have any examples of such a project?

Thanks in advance!!


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