=?utf-8?Q?=C3=81lvaro?= Herrera <alvhe...@kurilemu.de> writes: > If the table doesn't have check constraints, we end up doing > MemoryContextAllocZero() with size 0 in CacheMemoryContext, which isn't > great (IIUC we innecessarily allocate a chunk of size 8 in this case). > I think we should make the allocation conditional on nchecks not being > zero, otherwise I think we're indeed leaking memory permanently in > CacheMemoryContext, since that allocation is not recorded anywhere:
Uh ... yeah it is, down at the bottom of the function: /* Install array only after it's fully valid */ relation->rd_att->constr->check = check; relation->rd_att->constr->num_check = found; So it seems like valgrind is wrong here, or else we're leaking the whole rd_att structure later on somehow. In any case, you're right that asking for a zero-size chunk is pretty pointless. I'd support doing + if (ncheck > 0) + check = (ConstrCheck *) + MemoryContextAllocZero(CacheMemoryContext, + ncheck * sizeof(ConstrCheck)); + else + check = NULL; but I think we have to make sure it's null if we don't palloc it. > On the other hand, the bug I was thinking about, is that if the table > has an invalid not-null constraint, we leak during detoasting in > extractNotNullColumn(). We purposefully made that function leak that > memory, because it was only used in DDL code (so the leak didn't > matter), and to simplify code; commit ff239c3bf4e8. This uses the > caller memory context, so it's not a permanent leak and I don't think we > need any fixes. But it's no longer so obvious that extractNotNullColumn > is okay to leak those few bytes. Given your description it still sounds fine to me. regards, tom lane