Hello,
I am using
postgresql version: 15.3 (Debian 15.3-0+deb12u1)
org.postgresql.postgresql JDBC driver version: 42.6.0
via Java 17.0.7
I discovered an unattended (for me) situation: when I execute
10 times the same prepared query the result is not always the same.
I wrote a little test case to show this.
this is the db that I am using:
CREATE TABLE number(
name character varying(30) NOT NULL,
dim1 real DEFAULT '-1' NOT NULL
);
insert into number (name) VALUES('first');
and the test program:
static final String DB_URL = "jdbc:postgresql://192.168.64.7:5432/testdb";
static final String USER = "user";
static final String PASS = "password";
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
Connection conn = DriverManager.getConnection(DB_URL, USER, PASS);
for(int i=0; i<10; i++) {
try( PreparedStatement istruzioneCelle = conn.prepareStatement(
"SELECT dim1 FROM number WHERE name='first'") ) {
ResultSet rs = istruzioneCelle.executeQuery();
rs.next();
System.out.print("p: "+rs.getString("dim1")+"\n”);
} catch (SQLException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
conn.close();
}
The attended result was a sequence of ten equal values but this is the actual
result:
p: -1
p: -1
p: -1
p: -1
p: -1
p: -1.0
p: -1.0
p: -1.0
p: -1.0
p: -1.0
All works fine if I open and close the connection after every single query
but in production I am using pooled connections.
This is what I can read in postgresql logs (it seems that after 4 queries
the statement becomes named and the result changes after the second call to
the named query):
2023-08-21 11:51:50.633 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute <unnamed>: SET
extra_float_digits = 3
2023-08-21 11:51:50.634 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute <unnamed>: SET
application_name = 'PostgreSQL JDBC Driver'
2023-08-21 11:51:50.644 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute <unnamed>: SELECT
dim1 FROM number WHERE name='first'
2023-08-21 11:51:50.648 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute <unnamed>: SELECT
dim1 FROM number WHERE name='first'
2023-08-21 11:51:50.649 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute <unnamed>: SELECT
dim1 FROM number WHERE name='first'
2023-08-21 11:51:50.650 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute <unnamed>: SELECT
dim1 FROM number WHERE name='first'
2023-08-21 11:51:50.651 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute S_1: SELECT dim1
FROM number WHERE name='first'
2023-08-21 11:51:50.651 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute S_1: SELECT dim1
FROM number WHERE name='first'
2023-08-21 11:51:50.653 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute S_1: SELECT dim1
FROM number WHERE name='first'
2023-08-21 11:51:50.653 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute S_1: SELECT dim1
FROM number WHERE name='first'
2023-08-21 11:51:50.654 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute S_1: SELECT dim1
FROM number WHERE name='first'
2023-08-21 11:51:50.656 CEST [1511] user@testdb LOG: execute S_1: SELECT dim1
FROM number WHERE name=‘first'
Can I do something to avoid this problem?
thank you
Edoardo