Marcelo Zabani <mzabani@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > Hi, according to the docs, RESET sets the value of a setting to > "The default value is defined as the value that the parameter would have > had, if no SET had ever been issued for it in the current session" This is, I guess, strictly true only for built-in settings. Custom settings act a little differently in that they don't exist at all before you assign to them. Thus > $ psql > => select current_setting('my.test', true) is null; -- true my.test doesn't exist here. current_setting(..., true) returns NULL instead of throwing an error, although SHOW reacts differently: regression=# show my.test; ERROR: unrecognized configuration parameter "my.test" > => set my.test = 'abc'; > => reset my.test; Now it does exist, but its reset value is an empty string. > => select current_setting('my.test', true) is null; -- false > => select current_setting('my.test', true)=''; -- true > Is this expected? I thought even if I misunderstand the docs, the effect > isn't very nice because SQL like > current_setting('my.some_boolean_setting')::boolean will fail after a > transaction with SET LOCAL sets it, a side-effect that can be particularly > confusing and basically requires usage of nullif(.., '') or other explicit > checks around every current_setting call-site in practice. [ shrug... ] This whole area is an undocumented, unsupported abuse of a behavior that's only meant to support GUCs defined by loadable extensions. (To wit, allowing postgresql.conf to set values for GUCs that aren't loaded yet.) Without a way to declare a GUC's type, reset value, etc, there's no way to have custom GUCs act really consistently with built-in ones. Pavel Stehule has spent years pushing forward a patch to invent a better-thought-out implementation of custom session variables [1]. Every time I look at it, I come away with the feeling that it's a giant patch with a much smaller patch struggling to get out. But certainly the area needs some nontrivial thought, and I'm not sure that extending the GUC mechanism is a better answer. regards, tom lane [1] https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAFj8pRD053CY_N4%3D6SvPe7ke6xPbh%3DK50LUAOwjC3jm8Me9Obg%40mail.gmail.com