On Fri, Oct 30, 2015 at 12:26 PM, Adrian Klaver <adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 10/30/2015 08:13 AM, Dane Foster wrote:
On Fri, Oct 30, 2015 at 10:57 AM, Adrian Klaver
<adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
On 10/30/2015 07:21 AM, Dane Foster wrote:
On Fri, Oct 30, 2015 at 9:40 AM, Adrian Klaver
<adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx>
<mailto:adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx>>> wrote:
On 10/29/2015 05:38 PM, Dane Foster wrote:
Hello,
I think I've tripped over another mysq_fdw bug. I've
filed a bug
report
on github already but just in case the problem is w/ my
query I
figured
I would post it here in case someone sees something
obvious.
The error message I get is: null value in column
"location" violates
not-null constraint.
The DDL is here:
https://github.com/EnterpriseDB/mysql_fdw/issues/71
For the record I know top posting is a crime against
god and
humanity
but I feel justified because this post is not directly
related
to the
original. So there! Granted it's in the same milieu;
and yes this
current sentence exists for the sole purpose of me
being able to
use the
word milieu because the opportunity to use it is so few
and far
between.
INSERT INTO series (cid, day, title, description,
location,
duration,
can_join)
SELECT
cid,
row_number() OVER (PARTITION BY cid ORDER BY
lower(duration)),
title,
description,
location,
duration,
can_join
FROM (
SELECT
cid,
title,
description,
can_join::BOOLEAN,
(SELECT label FROM _locations WHERE
loc=location) AS
location,
('[' || starts || ', ' || (starts + INTERVAL '4
HOUR') ||
']')::TSZ_PERIOD AS duration
FROM
_series
) AS v
Regards,
So what do you get when you do?:
SELECT
cid,
title,
description,
can_join::BOOLEAN,
(SELECT label FROM _locations WHERE loc=location) AS
location,
('[' || starts || ', ' || (starts + INTERVAL '4
HOUR') ||
']')::TSTZRANGE AS duration
FROM
_series
);
Dane
--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx>adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx>
<mailto:adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx>>
I get rows of data, location and all.
And when you do?:
SELECT
cid,
row_number() OVER (PARTITION BY cid ORDER BY lower(duration)),
title,
description,
location,
duration,
can_join
FROM (
SELECT
cid,
title,
description,
can_join::BOOLEAN,
(SELECT label FROM _locations WHERE loc=location) AS location,
('[' || starts || ', ' || (starts + INTERVAL '4 HOUR') ||
']')::TSTZRANGE AS duration
FROM
_series
) AS v
Dane
--
Adrian Klaver
Before I answer your second query question I need to revise my response
to the first. Yes the first query runs w/o an error message but the bit
about "rows and all" was not entirely correct. Out of 313 rows only the
first row had a location. The other 312 rows have NULL in the location
column which is not supposed to happen. To verify this I changed the
table names and removed the PostgreSQL transformations (i.e., use of ||
and :: for casting) and ran the query against the MySQL database; it
returned 313 rows of data, location and all.
You would think that would also cause an issue with the first row that is returned correctly. My suspicion is with this:
row_number() OVER (PARTITION BY cid ORDER BY lower(duration))
What happens if you run the full SELECT without it?--
Now that I've cleared that up.
Your second query also runs w/o any error messages but like the first
only the first row has a non NULL value in the location column.
Dane
Adrian Klaver
adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx
Your first query didn't use it and as discussed rows come back but only the first row has a non NULL location column.
Dane