Vlad wrote:


i.e. the following perl code won't work correctly with DBD::Pg 1.40+

$dbh->do("SET search_path TO one");
my $sth1 = $dbh->prepare_cached("SELECT * FROM test WHERE item = ?");
$sth1->execute("one");

$dbh->do("set search_path to two");
my $sth2 = $dbh->prepare_cached("SELECT * FROM test WHERE item = ?");
$sth2->execute("two");


in the last call $sth1 prepared query will be actually executed, i.e.
"one.test" table used, not "two.test" as a programmer would expect!



Correctness seems to be in the eye of the beholder.

It does what I as a programmer would expect. The behaviour you previously saw was an unfortunate byproduct of the fact that up to now DBD::Pg has emulated proper prepared statements, whereas now it uses them for real. Any application that relies on that broken byproduct is simply erroneous, IMNSHO.

If you really need this, then as previously discussed on list, there is a way to turn off use of server-side prepared statements.

cheers

andrew

---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives?

http://archives.postgresql.org

Reply via email to