I wrote: > While we could probably revert just enough of the changes to > enforce_generic_type_consistency to allow this case again, I wonder > just how safe that'd really be. It would amount to expecting that > functions that take anyarray but don't take or return anyelement to > not only work on any array type, but to be always prepared for the > input element type to change on-the-fly (since that's exactly what > would happen when scanning pg_statistic). Quite a lot of the built-in > anyarray functions are prepared to do that, but I'm not sure they all > are.
I went and looked, and found that none of the thirty or so built-in functions that accept ANYARRAY are coded to make unsafe assumptions about the input array type remaining the same across calls. So at least as of CVS HEAD, it seems safe to relax this back to the way it was pre-8.3. I'm still worried about the possibility of extension functions or future core functions failing to follow this coding rule; but as long as people are lazy and copy-and-paste from the existing models, it should be okay. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-sql mailing list (pgsql-sql@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-sql