Tom Lane wrote:
I believe I have fixed all the reported crashes in contrib/xml2.

Yay! Well done! That at least removes any possibly urgency about removing the module.

However there is still this issue pointed out by Robert:

CREATE TABLE xpath_test (id integer NOT NULL, t xml);
INSERT INTO xpath_test VALUES (1, '<rowlist><row a="1"/><row a="2" 
b="oops"/></rowlist>');
SELECT * FROM xpath_table('id', 't', 'xpath_test',
'/rowlist/row/@a|/rowlist/row/@b', 'true') as t(id int4, a text, b text);

which yields an answer that is, at least, extremely surprising, if not
flat-out wrong:

 id | a |  b
----+---+------
  1 | 1 | oops
  1 | 2 |
(2 rows)

the point being that it seems like "oops" should be associated with "2"
not "1".  The reason for that behavior is that xpath_table runs through
the XPATH_NODESET results generated by the various XPaths and dumps the
k'th one of each into the k'th output row generated for the current
input row.  If there is any way to synchronize which node in each array
goes with each node in each other array, it's not apparent to me, but
I don't know libxml's API at all.  Perhaps there is some other call we
should be using to evaluate all the XPaths in parallel?

(The code is also unbelievably inefficient, recompiling each XPath
expression once per output row (!); but it doesn't seem worth fixing
that right away given that we might have to throw away the logic
entirely in order to fix this bug.)

                        

Damn that's ugly.


ISTM the missing piece is really in our API. We need to be able to specify a nodeset to iterate over, and then for each node take the first value produced by each xpath expression. So the example above would look something like:

   SELECT * FROM xpath_table('id', 't', 'xpath_test',
   '/rowlist/row', '@a|@b', 'true') as t(id int4, a text, b text);


Maybe we could approximate that with the current API by factoring out the common root of the xpath expressions, but that's likely to be extremely fragile and error prone, and we've already got bad experience of trying to be too cute with xpath expressions.

cheers

andrew

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