Gregory Stark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I know when I was first starting out it was a big source of frustration that > you have to get those arguments right.. Until I figured out what they all > meant and how to use them I was constantly crashing the server.
> It seems to me we should be able to do better. To have some kind of struct in > the C code associated with the input/output functions from which the create > type command picks up these parameters. And what are the odds that you'll get it right in a C struct if you couldn't get it right in the SQL command? There might be some small advantage here from a packaging standpoint, but I think the argument that it'd help novice PG hackers is bogus. > As a consequence we could perhaps aim to make creating new types safe rather > than just deal with the fact that it's not safe currently? It would be nice if > non-superusers could create types which used an existing set of input/output > functions but defined new semantics. Unless you're going to allow them to create new C functions, I'm not clear on how much they're going to be able to change the semantics. >> * The just-added ability to specify a new type's type category and >> "preferred" status could allow subverting the behavior of existing >> queries that expect ambiguous operators to be resolved in a particular >> way. A new preferred type could "capture" such queries and thereby >> provide a trojan-horse vector for executing functions as some other >> user. > Would it be enough to only require super-user to create a preferred type? Well, it'd close one hole, but I think there are too many others to take a narrow-gauge approach. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers