On 2025/06/27 1:31, Yugo Nagata wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jun 2025 01:05:47 +0900
Fujii Masao <masao.fu...@oss.nttdata.com> wrote:
On 2025/06/26 18:01, Yugo Nagata wrote:
Hi,
The current documentation of pgbench’s \aset command states:
“If a query returns no row, no assignment is made and the variable
can be tested for existence to detect this.”
However, this is inaccurate, since variable existence check (like \if :{?var})
is not yet supported, although such a feature was proposed in [1] and discussed
again in [2], where \aset itself was introduced.
Right.
Therefore, I’ve attached a patch to remove this part from the documentation.
Or would it be worth documenting an alternative way to detect when no rows are
returned? For example:
If a query returns no rows, no variables are assigned. You can detect
this by setting an initial value to the variable before running the query
and checking whether it changes.
That's what I thought as well, but I didn’t do it because we can’t distinguish
it
from the case where the query returns the same value as the initial one.
Could we use a value that the query is guaranteed not to return as the initial
value?
For example, in SELECT id AS myid FROM test \aset, if the id column is of type
integer,
we could initialize myid to FALSE.
To detect it correctly, we would need to reconsider the variable existence
check,
or introduce a new meta-command or a special variable that indicates the number
of
rows returned by the previous query, and so on.
+1
Regards,
--
Fujii Masao
NTT DATA Japan Corporation