According to the documentation for PQputCopyEnd:
> The result is 1 if the termination data was sent, zero if it was not sent
> because the attempt would block (this case is only possible if the connection
> is in
> nonblocking mode), or -1 if an error occurred. (Use PQerrorMessage to
> retrieve details if the return value is -1. If the value is zero, wait for
> write-ready and try again.)
However, pqPutCopyEnd contains no return statement that can ever
possibly return 0. I think the problem is approximately here:
/* Try to flush data */
if (pqFlush(conn) < 0)
return -1;
pqFlush() returns 0 if no data is waiting to be sent, or otherwise the
return value of pqSendSome(). pqSendSome() returns -1 if an error
occurs, 0 if all data is sent, or 1 if some data was sent but the
socket is non-blocking and the caller must try again later. It seems
to me that when pqSendSome() returns 1, pqPutCopyEnd ought to return 0
in order to meet its API contract - and then the client, presumably,
should repeatedly wait for the socket to become write-ready and then
try PQflush() until PQflush() returns non-zero.
Thoughts?
--
Robert Haas
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
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