Andres Freund <and...@anarazel.de> writes: > On 2015-06-08 14:44:53 +0000, Jeevan Chalke wrote: >> This is trivial bug fix in the area of hiding error context. >> >> I observed that there are two places from which we are calling this function >> to hide the context in log messages. Those were broken.
> Broken in which sense? They did prevent stuff to go from the server log? > I'm not convinced that hiding stuff from the client is really > necessarily the same as hiding it from the server log. We e.g. always > send the verbose log to the client, even if we only send the terse > version to the server log. I don't mind adjusting things for > errhidecontext(), but it's not "just a bug". Not only is it not "just a bug", I disagree that it's a bug at all. The documentation of the errhidestmt function is crystal clear about what it does: * errhidecontext --- optionally suppress CONTEXT: field of log entry That says "log entry", not anything else. Furthermore, this is clearly modeled on errhidestmt(), which also only affects what's written to the log. Generally our position on error reporting is that it's the client's responsibility to decide what parts of a report it will or won't show to the user, so even if we agreed the overall behavior was undesirable, I do not think this is the appropriate fix. I especially object to the part of the patch that suppresses calling the context callback stack functions; that's just introducing inconsistent behavior for no reason. It doesn't prevent collection of context (there are lots of errcontext() calls directly in ereports, which this wouldn't stop), and it will break callers that are using those callbacks for anything more than just calling errcontext(). An example here is that in clauses.c's sql_inline_error_callback, this would not only suppress the CONTEXT line but also reporting of the error cursor location. What is the actual use-case that prompted this complaint? regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers