]
Johnathon Lee commented on TEIID-2138:
--------------------------------------
Given your last statement [1], I believe the expectation from the client(s) is for each
of those examples to actually return 1 record [2] and that they are attempting to use the
backslash as an escape already. Do you have thoughts that there is a connection property
that the clients can change in order for this to occur?
[1]
Checking with pg, they do indeed default their like escape to '\' (which is not
conforming, but common). The best resolution is to explicitly specify the escape character
e.g. 'x' like ... escape '\'. However if these are clients that cannot
change their sql, then we'll have to offer yet another pg emulation option.
[2]
Record: ddl_alterable
Use of the PG DSN for for ODBC metadata queries can result in
improperly escaped SQL
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Key: TEIID-2138
URL:
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/TEIID-2138
Project: Teiid
Issue Type: Bug
Components: ODBC, Query Engine
Affects Versions: 7.7
Reporter: Johnathon Lee
Assignee: Steven Hawkins
Various clients (Cognos, Excel, DBVisualizer) exhibit different results when querying
metadata.
For instance:
Querying ModeShape on a fresh 5.3 deploy.
{code}
select relname from pg_catalog.pg_class c, pg_catalog.pg_namespace n where relname like
E'ddl\\_alterable' and n.oid = relnamespace
{code}
0 Records
{code}
select relname from pg_catalog.pg_class c, pg_catalog.pg_namespace n where relname like
E'ddl_alterable' and n.oid = relnamespace
{code}
1 Record: ddl_alterable
{code}
select relname from pg_catalog.pg_class c, pg_catalog.pg_namespace n where relname like
E'ddl\_alterab__' and n.oid = relnamespace
{code}
1 Record: ddl_alterable
Looking at [1] per [2]. It seems proper escaping of the E'literal' syntax is not
always being performed. The Third example above shows that a wildcard is being escaped
and happens to match to a literal value it expects.
[1]
PostgreSQL also accepts "escape" string constants, which are an extension to
the SQL standard. An escape string constant is specified by writing the letter E (upper or
lower case) just before the opening single quote, e.g. E'foo'. (When continuing an
escape string constant across lines, write E only before the first opening quote.) Within
an escape string, a backslash character (\) begins a C-like backslash escape sequence, in
which the combination of backslash and following character(s) represents a special byte
value. \b is a backspace, \f is a form feed, \n is a newline, \r is a carriage return, \t
is a tab. Also supported are \digits, where digits represents an octal byte value, and
\xhexdigits, where hexdigits represents a hexadecimal byte value. (It is your
responsibility that the byte sequences you create are valid characters in the server
character set encoding.) Any other character following a backslash is taken literally.
Thus, to include a backslash character, write two backslashes (\\). Also, a single quote
can be included in an escape string by writing \', in addition to the normal way of
''.
[2]
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/interactive/sql-syntax-lexical.html#SQ...
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