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Posted to issues@calcite.apache.org by "Yuzhao Chen (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2018/11/16 03:59:00 UTC
[jira] [Comment Edited] (CALCITE-2674) Column name with escape
character should not be verified as a function when the column name is same
with it
[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CALCITE-2674?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16688970#comment-16688970 ]
Yuzhao Chen edited comment on CALCITE-2674 at 11/16/18 3:58 AM:
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Hi, [~julianhyde]
I check out Oracle and Postgres also, they also support escaped column name same with builtin function in DML.
I thought a way to fix this, if we encounter an escape character in sql text during parsing, we set a flag in this SqlIdentifier to mark it as a definitely id attribute, during validation we can just skip catalog checking for it.
was (Author: danny0405):
Hi, [~julianhyde]
I check out Oracle and Postgres also, they also support escaped column name same with builtin function in DML.
> Column name with escape character should not be verified as a function when the column name is same with it
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: CALCITE-2674
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CALCITE-2674
> Project: Calcite
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: core
> Affects Versions: 1.18.0
> Reporter: Yuzhao Chen
> Assignee: Julian Hyde
> Priority: Major
> Fix For: 1.18.0
>
>
> Now If user defines table as schema below:
> {code:java}
> create table tt(
> `current_time` int,
> b int);
> {code}
> Then start a query:
> {code:java}
> select `current_time` from tt;
> {code}
> Calcite parser will parse the *current_time* as a normal *SqlIdentifier*, then the SqlValidator will recognize it as a builtin function with below code snippet:
> {code:java}
> public static SqlCall makeCall(
> SqlOperatorTable opTab,
> SqlIdentifier id) {
> if (id.names.size() == 1) {
> final List<SqlOperator> list = new ArrayList<>();
> opTab.lookupOperatorOverloads(id, null, SqlSyntax.FUNCTION, list);
> for (SqlOperator operator : list) {
> if (operator.getSyntax() == SqlSyntax.FUNCTION_ID) {
> // Even though this looks like an identifier, it is a
> // actually a call to a function. Construct a fake
> // call to this function, so we can use the regular
> // operator validation.
> return new SqlBasicCall(
> operator,
> SqlNode.EMPTY_ARRAY,
> id.getParserPosition(),
> true,
> null);
> }
> }
> }
> return null;
> }{code}
> While i tried MYSQL and such query can work properly, so is this a bug ?
> Cause if the matched function's return type is same with the column, then the query will output wrong results.
>
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