I have just tested this on the latest code using the following
Connection con = JDBC2Tests.openDB();
try
{
// transaction mode
con.setAutoCommit(false);
Statement stmt = con.createStatement();
stmt.execute("select 1/0");
fail( "Should not execute this, as a SQLException s/b thrown" );
con.commit();
}
catch ( Exception ex )
{
}
try
{
con.commit();
con.close();
}catch ( Exception ex) {}
}
and it executes as expected. It throws the SQLException and does not
execute the fail statement
Thanks,
Dave
On Wed, 2002-06-12 at 12:12, Tom Lane wrote:
> John Taylor <postgres@jtresponse.co.uk> writes:
> > On Wednesday 12 June 2002 16:36, Tom Lane wrote:
> >> Queries after the failure aren't run at all; they're only passed through
> >> the parser's grammar so it can look for a COMMIT or ROLLBACK command.
> >> Normal processing resumes after ROLLBACK. If you were paying attention
> >> to the return codes you'd notice complaints like
> >>
> >> regression=# begin;
> >> BEGIN
> >> regression=# select 1/0;
> >> ERROR: floating point exception! The last floating point operation either exceeded legal ranges or was a divide
byzero
> >> -- subsequent queries will be rejected like so:
> >> regression=# select 1/0;
> >> WARNING: current transaction is aborted, queries ignored until end of transaction block
> >> *ABORT STATE*
>
> > Well, I'm using JDBC, and it isn't throwing any exceptions, so I
> > assumed it was working :-/
>
> This brings up a point that's bothered me in the past. Why is the
> "queries ignored" response treated as a NOTICE and not an ERROR?
> A client that is not paying close attention to the command result code
> (as JDBC is evidently not doing :-() might think that its command had
> been executed.
>
> It seems to me the right behavior is
>
> regression=# select 1/0;
> ERROR: current transaction is aborted, queries ignored until end of transaction block
> regression=#
>
> I think the reason why it's been done with a NOTICE is that if we
> elog(ERROR) on the first command of a query string, we'll not be able to
> process a ROLLBACK appearing later in the same string --- but that
> behavior does not seem nearly as helpful as throwing an error.
>
> regards, tom lane
>
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