Tom Lane wrote:
Jay Levitt<[email protected]>  writes:
I'm new to the codebase, but I think this patch reflects real-world usage;
the PostgreSQL code itself always calls the length field "vl_len_", and I
believe int32 is preferred over int4 (yes?)

The point of calling it vl_len_ is that it should never be referenced by
that name, so I'm not sure that propagating that name into user
documentation is a good idea.  I do agree with the part of this patch
that recommends use of SET_VARSIZE.

Ah, ok. My confusion came from trying to build a new extension, using cube as a baseline; cube (and all the other contrib extensions) use vl_len_, so I saw a disconnect between the "int4 length" in the manual and the
"int32 vl_len_" in all the real-world examples I had.

My thought was that "vl_len_" *feels* more like a "this is mysterious and I'd better not touch it - I'll use that macro", while "length" feels more like something I might just set myself if I didn't know better. But maybe not. Either way, the int32/int4 thing should be fixed.

For context, the issues you're concerned about only matter when dealing
with a toastable datatype (not all varlena types are toastable).  The
particular bit of docs here doesn't pretend to be explaining how to
write toast-safe code.  I think it might be better from an expository
standpoint to cover that separately, rather than try to work it into the
very first pass over the concepts.

Definitely; if anything, that's why I was favoring vl_len_. This is a magic field. Do not touch the magic.

Jay


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