Actually, on further thought, you example shows that it works correctly
because we do want all references to the old schema to be changed to the
new schema, since all copies of functions will now reside in the new
schema. Otherwise, there is no point of duplicating those functions.

On Mon, Sep 14, 2015 at 8:42 PM, Melvin Davidson <melvin6...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Jim,
>
> Have you actually tried this, or is it just a theory? AFAIK, the function
> will work because only the schema name is changed.. So please provide
> a full working example of a function that fails and I will attempt a
> solution.
>
> On Mon, Sep 14, 2015 at 6:36 PM, Jim Nasby <jim.na...@bluetreble.com>
> wrote:
>
>> On 9/12/15 9:38 AM, Daniel Verite wrote:
>>
>>> "seriously flawed" is a bit of a stretch. Most sane developers would not
>>>> >have schema names of one letter.
>>>> >They usually name a schema something practical, which totally avoids
>>>> your
>>>> >nit picky exception.
>>>>
>>> That's confusing the example with the problem it shows.
>>>
>>> Another example could be:
>>> if the source schema is "public" and the function body contains
>>>     GRANT SELECT on sometable to public;
>>> then this statement would be wrongly altered by replace().
>>>
>>
>> Well, the new version actually fixes that. But you could still trip this
>> up, certainly in the functions. IE:
>>
>> CREATE FUNCTION ...
>>   SELECT old.field FROM old.old;
>>
>> That will end up as
>>
>>   SELECT new.field FROM new.old
>>
>> which won't work.
>>
>> My objection is not about some corner case: it's the general
>>> idea of patching the entire body of a function without a fully-fledged
>>> parser that is dead on arrival.
>>>
>>
>> ISTM that's also the biggest blocker for allowing extensions that refer
>> to other schemas to be relocatable. It would be interesting if we had some
>> way to handle this inside function bodies, perhaps via something equivalent
>> to @extschema@.
>> --
>> Jim Nasby, Data Architect, Blue Treble Consulting, Austin TX
>> Experts in Analytics, Data Architecture and PostgreSQL
>> Data in Trouble? Get it in Treble! http://BlueTreble.com
>>
>
>
>
> --
> *Melvin Davidson*
> I reserve the right to fantasize.  Whether or not you
> wish to share my fantasy is entirely up to you.
>



-- 
*Melvin Davidson*
I reserve the right to fantasize.  Whether or not you
wish to share my fantasy is entirely up to you.

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