/* * This test is meant to run on Windows systems that has successfully * run pg_import_system_collations(). Also, the database must have * WIN1252 encoding, because of the locales' own encodings. Because * of this, some test are lost from UTF-8 version, such as Turkish * dotted and undotted 'i'. */ SELECT getdatabaseencoding() <> 'WIN1252' OR (SELECT count(*) FROM pg_collation WHERE collname IN ('de_DE', 'en_US', 'sv_SE') AND collencoding = pg_char_to_encoding('WIN1252')) <> 3 OR (version() !~ 'Visual C\+\+' AND version() !~ 'mingw32' AND version() !~ 'windows') AS skip_test \gset \if :skip_test \quit \endif SET client_encoding TO WIN1252; CREATE SCHEMA collate_tests; SET search_path = collate_tests; CREATE TABLE collate_test1 ( a int, b text COLLATE "en_US" NOT NULL ); \d collate_test1 Table "collate_tests.collate_test1" Column | Type | Collation | Nullable | Default --------+---------+-----------+----------+--------- a | integer | | | b | text | en_US | not null | CREATE TABLE collate_test_fail ( a int, b text COLLATE "ja_JP.eucjp" ); ERROR: collation "ja_JP.eucjp" for encoding "WIN1252" does not exist LINE 3: b text COLLATE "ja_JP.eucjp" ^ CREATE TABLE collate_test_fail ( a int, b text COLLATE "foo" ); ERROR: collation "foo" for encoding "WIN1252" does not exist LINE 3: b text COLLATE "foo" ^ CREATE TABLE collate_test_fail ( a int COLLATE "en_US", b text ); ERROR: collations are not supported by type integer LINE 2: a int COLLATE "en_US", ^ CREATE TABLE collate_test_like ( LIKE collate_test1 ); \d collate_test_like Table "collate_tests.collate_test_like" Column | Type | Collation | Nullable | Default --------+---------+-----------+----------+--------- a | integer | | | b | text | en_US | not null | CREATE TABLE collate_test2 ( a int, b text COLLATE "sv_SE" ); CREATE TABLE collate_test3 ( a int, b text COLLATE "C" ); INSERT INTO collate_test1 VALUES (1, 'abc'), (2, 'äbc'), (3, 'bbc'), (4, 'ABC'); INSERT INTO collate_test2 SELECT * FROM collate_test1; INSERT INTO collate_test3 SELECT * FROM collate_test1; SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b >= 'bbc'; a | b ---+----- 3 | bbc (1 row) SELECT * FROM collate_test2 WHERE b >= 'bbc'; a | b ---+----- 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (2 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test3 WHERE b >= 'bbc'; a | b ---+----- 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (2 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test3 WHERE b >= 'BBC'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (3 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b COLLATE "C" >= 'bbc'; a | b ---+----- 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (2 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b >= 'bbc' COLLATE "C"; a | b ---+----- 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (2 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b COLLATE "C" >= 'bbc' COLLATE "C"; a | b ---+----- 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (2 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b COLLATE "C" >= 'bbc' COLLATE "en_US"; ERROR: collation mismatch between explicit collations "C" and "en_US" LINE 1: ...* FROM collate_test1 WHERE b COLLATE "C" >= 'bbc' COLLATE "e... ^ CREATE DOMAIN testdomain_sv AS text COLLATE "sv_SE"; CREATE DOMAIN testdomain_i AS int COLLATE "sv_SE"; -- fails ERROR: collations are not supported by type integer CREATE TABLE collate_test4 ( a int, b testdomain_sv ); INSERT INTO collate_test4 SELECT * FROM collate_test1; SELECT a, b FROM collate_test4 ORDER BY b; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) CREATE TABLE collate_test5 ( a int, b testdomain_sv COLLATE "en_US" ); INSERT INTO collate_test5 SELECT * FROM collate_test1; SELECT a, b FROM collate_test5 ORDER BY b; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY b; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test2 ORDER BY b; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY b; a | b ---+----- 4 | ABC 1 | abc 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY b COLLATE "C"; a | b ---+----- 4 | ABC 1 | abc 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) -- star expansion SELECT * FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY b; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (4 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test2 ORDER BY b; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY b; a | b ---+----- 4 | ABC 1 | abc 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) -- constant expression folding SELECT 'bbc' COLLATE "en_US" > 'äbc' COLLATE "en_US" AS "true"; true ------ t (1 row) SELECT 'bbc' COLLATE "sv_SE" > 'äbc' COLLATE "sv_SE" AS "false"; false ------- f (1 row) -- LIKE/ILIKE SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b LIKE 'abc'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc (1 row) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b LIKE 'abc%'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc (1 row) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b LIKE '%bc%'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (3 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b ILIKE 'abc'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC (2 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b ILIKE 'abc%'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC (2 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b ILIKE '%bc%'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 2 | äbc 3 | bbc 4 | ABC (4 rows) -- The following actually exercises the selectivity estimation for ILIKE. SELECT relname FROM pg_class WHERE relname ILIKE 'abc%'; relname --------- (0 rows) -- regular expressions SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b ~ '^abc$'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc (1 row) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b ~ '^abc'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc (1 row) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b ~ 'bc'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (3 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b ~* '^abc$'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC (2 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b ~* '^abc'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC (2 rows) SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b ~* 'bc'; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 2 | äbc 3 | bbc 4 | ABC (4 rows) CREATE TABLE collate_test6 ( a int, b text COLLATE "en_US" ); INSERT INTO collate_test6 VALUES (1, 'abc'), (2, 'ABC'), (3, '123'), (4, 'ab1'), (5, 'a1!'), (6, 'a c'), (7, '!.;'), (8, ' '), (9, 'äbç'), (10, 'ÄBÇ'); SELECT b, b ~ '^[[:alpha:]]+$' AS is_alpha, b ~ '^[[:upper:]]+$' AS is_upper, b ~ '^[[:lower:]]+$' AS is_lower, b ~ '^[[:digit:]]+$' AS is_digit, b ~ '^[[:alnum:]]+$' AS is_alnum, b ~ '^[[:graph:]]+$' AS is_graph, b ~ '^[[:print:]]+$' AS is_print, b ~ '^[[:punct:]]+$' AS is_punct, b ~ '^[[:space:]]+$' AS is_space FROM collate_test6; b | is_alpha | is_upper | is_lower | is_digit | is_alnum | is_graph | is_print | is_punct | is_space -----+----------+----------+----------+----------+----------+----------+----------+----------+---------- abc | t | f | t | f | t | t | t | f | f ABC | t | t | f | f | t | t | t | f | f 123 | f | f | f | t | t | t | t | f | f ab1 | f | f | f | f | t | t | t | f | f a1! | f | f | f | f | f | t | t | f | f a c | f | f | f | f | f | f | t | f | f !.; | f | f | f | f | f | t | t | t | f | f | f | f | f | f | f | t | f | t äbç | t | f | t | f | t | t | t | f | f ÄBÇ | t | t | f | f | t | t | t | f | f (10 rows) -- The following actually exercises the selectivity estimation for ~*. SELECT relname FROM pg_class WHERE relname ~* '^abc'; relname --------- (0 rows) -- backwards parsing CREATE VIEW collview1 AS SELECT * FROM collate_test1 WHERE b COLLATE "C" >= 'bbc'; CREATE VIEW collview2 AS SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY b COLLATE "C"; SELECT table_name, view_definition FROM information_schema.views WHERE table_name LIKE 'collview%' ORDER BY 1; table_name | view_definition ------------+------------------------------------------- collview1 | SELECT a, + | b + | FROM collate_test1 + | WHERE ((b COLLATE "C") >= 'bbc'::text); collview2 | SELECT a, + | b + | FROM collate_test1 + | ORDER BY (b COLLATE "C"); (2 rows) -- collation propagation in various expression types SELECT a, coalesce(b, 'foo') FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY 2; a | coalesce ---+---------- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (4 rows) SELECT a, coalesce(b, 'foo') FROM collate_test2 ORDER BY 2; a | coalesce ---+---------- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, coalesce(b, 'foo') FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; a | coalesce ---+---------- 4 | ABC 1 | abc 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b, greatest(b, 'CCC') FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY 3; a | b | greatest ---+-----+---------- 1 | abc | CCC 2 | äbc | CCC 3 | bbc | CCC 4 | ABC | CCC (4 rows) SELECT a, b, greatest(b, 'CCC') FROM collate_test2 ORDER BY 3; a | b | greatest ---+-----+---------- 1 | abc | CCC 3 | bbc | CCC 4 | ABC | CCC 2 | äbc | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b, greatest(b, 'CCC') FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 3; a | b | greatest ---+-----+---------- 4 | ABC | CCC 1 | abc | abc 3 | bbc | bbc 2 | äbc | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, nullif(b, 'abc') FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY 2; a | nullif ---+-------- 4 | ABC 2 | äbc 3 | bbc 1 | (4 rows) SELECT a, nullif(b, 'abc') FROM collate_test2 ORDER BY 2; a | nullif ---+-------- 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc 1 | (4 rows) SELECT a, nullif(b, 'abc') FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; a | nullif ---+-------- 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc 1 | (4 rows) SELECT a, CASE b WHEN 'abc' THEN 'abcd' ELSE b END FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+------ 4 | ABC 2 | äbc 1 | abcd 3 | bbc (4 rows) SELECT a, CASE b WHEN 'abc' THEN 'abcd' ELSE b END FROM collate_test2 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+------ 4 | ABC 1 | abcd 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, CASE b WHEN 'abc' THEN 'abcd' ELSE b END FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+------ 4 | ABC 1 | abcd 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) CREATE DOMAIN testdomain AS text; SELECT a, b::testdomain FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b::testdomain FROM collate_test2 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b::testdomain FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 4 | ABC 1 | abc 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b::testdomain_sv FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT min(b), max(b) FROM collate_test1; min | max -----+----- abc | bbc (1 row) SELECT min(b), max(b) FROM collate_test2; min | max -----+----- abc | äbc (1 row) SELECT min(b), max(b) FROM collate_test3; min | max -----+----- ABC | äbc (1 row) SELECT array_agg(b ORDER BY b) FROM collate_test1; array_agg ------------------- {abc,ABC,äbc,bbc} (1 row) SELECT array_agg(b ORDER BY b) FROM collate_test2; array_agg ------------------- {abc,ABC,bbc,äbc} (1 row) SELECT array_agg(b ORDER BY b) FROM collate_test3; array_agg ------------------- {ABC,abc,bbc,äbc} (1 row) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 UNION ALL SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 1 | abc 4 | ABC 4 | ABC 2 | äbc 2 | äbc 3 | bbc 3 | bbc (8 rows) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test2 UNION SELECT a, b FROM collate_test2 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3 WHERE a < 4 INTERSECT SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3 WHERE a > 1 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (2 rows) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3 EXCEPT SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3 WHERE a < 2 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (3 rows) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 UNION ALL SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; -- fail ERROR: could not determine which collation to use for string comparison HINT: Use the COLLATE clause to set the collation explicitly. SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 UNION ALL SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3; -- ok a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 2 | äbc 3 | bbc 4 | ABC 1 | abc 2 | äbc 3 | bbc 4 | ABC (8 rows) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 UNION SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; -- fail ERROR: collation mismatch between implicit collations "en_US" and "C" LINE 1: SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 UNION SELECT a, b FROM collat... ^ HINT: You can choose the collation by applying the COLLATE clause to one or both expressions. SELECT a, b COLLATE "C" FROM collate_test1 UNION SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; -- ok a | b ---+----- 4 | ABC 1 | abc 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 INTERSECT SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; -- fail ERROR: collation mismatch between implicit collations "en_US" and "C" LINE 1: ...ELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 INTERSECT SELECT a, b FROM col... ^ HINT: You can choose the collation by applying the COLLATE clause to one or both expressions. SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 EXCEPT SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; -- fail ERROR: collation mismatch between implicit collations "en_US" and "C" LINE 1: SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 EXCEPT SELECT a, b FROM colla... ^ HINT: You can choose the collation by applying the COLLATE clause to one or both expressions. CREATE TABLE test_u AS SELECT a, b FROM collate_test1 UNION ALL SELECT a, b FROM collate_test3; -- fail ERROR: no collation was derived for column "b" with collatable type text HINT: Use the COLLATE clause to set the collation explicitly. -- collation mismatch between recursive and non-recursive term WITH RECURSIVE foo(x) AS (SELECT x FROM (VALUES('a' COLLATE "en_US"),('b')) t(x) UNION ALL SELECT (x || 'c') COLLATE "de_DE" FROM foo WHERE length(x) < 10) SELECT * FROM foo; ERROR: recursive query "foo" column 1 has collation "en_US" in non-recursive term but collation "de_DE" overall LINE 2: (SELECT x FROM (VALUES('a' COLLATE "en_US"),('b')) t(x) ^ HINT: Use the COLLATE clause to set the collation of the non-recursive term. -- casting SELECT CAST('42' AS text COLLATE "C"); ERROR: syntax error at or near "COLLATE" LINE 1: SELECT CAST('42' AS text COLLATE "C"); ^ SELECT a, CAST(b AS varchar) FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (4 rows) SELECT a, CAST(b AS varchar) FROM collate_test2 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, CAST(b AS varchar) FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; a | b ---+----- 4 | ABC 1 | abc 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) -- propagation of collation in SQL functions (inlined and non-inlined cases) -- and plpgsql functions too CREATE FUNCTION mylt (text, text) RETURNS boolean LANGUAGE sql AS $$ select $1 < $2 $$; CREATE FUNCTION mylt_noninline (text, text) RETURNS boolean LANGUAGE sql AS $$ select $1 < $2 limit 1 $$; CREATE FUNCTION mylt_plpgsql (text, text) RETURNS boolean LANGUAGE plpgsql AS $$ begin return $1 < $2; end $$; SELECT a.b AS a, b.b AS b, a.b < b.b AS lt, mylt(a.b, b.b), mylt_noninline(a.b, b.b), mylt_plpgsql(a.b, b.b) FROM collate_test1 a, collate_test1 b ORDER BY a.b, b.b; a | b | lt | mylt | mylt_noninline | mylt_plpgsql -----+-----+----+------+----------------+-------------- abc | abc | f | f | f | f abc | ABC | t | t | t | t abc | äbc | t | t | t | t abc | bbc | t | t | t | t ABC | abc | f | f | f | f ABC | ABC | f | f | f | f ABC | äbc | t | t | t | t ABC | bbc | t | t | t | t äbc | abc | f | f | f | f äbc | ABC | f | f | f | f äbc | äbc | f | f | f | f äbc | bbc | t | t | t | t bbc | abc | f | f | f | f bbc | ABC | f | f | f | f bbc | äbc | f | f | f | f bbc | bbc | f | f | f | f (16 rows) SELECT a.b AS a, b.b AS b, a.b < b.b COLLATE "C" AS lt, mylt(a.b, b.b COLLATE "C"), mylt_noninline(a.b, b.b COLLATE "C"), mylt_plpgsql(a.b, b.b COLLATE "C") FROM collate_test1 a, collate_test1 b ORDER BY a.b, b.b; a | b | lt | mylt | mylt_noninline | mylt_plpgsql -----+-----+----+------+----------------+-------------- abc | abc | f | f | f | f abc | ABC | f | f | f | f abc | äbc | t | t | t | t abc | bbc | t | t | t | t ABC | abc | t | t | t | t ABC | ABC | f | f | f | f ABC | äbc | t | t | t | t ABC | bbc | t | t | t | t äbc | abc | f | f | f | f äbc | ABC | f | f | f | f äbc | äbc | f | f | f | f äbc | bbc | f | f | f | f bbc | abc | f | f | f | f bbc | ABC | f | f | f | f bbc | äbc | t | t | t | t bbc | bbc | f | f | f | f (16 rows) -- collation override in plpgsql CREATE FUNCTION mylt2 (x text, y text) RETURNS boolean LANGUAGE plpgsql AS $$ declare xx text := x; yy text := y; begin return xx < yy; end $$; SELECT mylt2('a', 'B' collate "en_US") as t, mylt2('a', 'B' collate "C") as f; t | f ---+--- t | f (1 row) CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION mylt2 (x text, y text) RETURNS boolean LANGUAGE plpgsql AS $$ declare xx text COLLATE "POSIX" := x; yy text := y; begin return xx < yy; end $$; SELECT mylt2('a', 'B') as f; f --- f (1 row) SELECT mylt2('a', 'B' collate "C") as fail; -- conflicting collations ERROR: could not determine which collation to use for string comparison HINT: Use the COLLATE clause to set the collation explicitly. CONTEXT: PL/pgSQL function mylt2(text,text) line 6 at RETURN SELECT mylt2('a', 'B' collate "POSIX") as f; f --- f (1 row) -- polymorphism SELECT * FROM unnest((SELECT array_agg(b ORDER BY b) FROM collate_test1)) ORDER BY 1; unnest -------- abc ABC äbc bbc (4 rows) SELECT * FROM unnest((SELECT array_agg(b ORDER BY b) FROM collate_test2)) ORDER BY 1; unnest -------- abc ABC bbc äbc (4 rows) SELECT * FROM unnest((SELECT array_agg(b ORDER BY b) FROM collate_test3)) ORDER BY 1; unnest -------- ABC abc bbc äbc (4 rows) CREATE FUNCTION dup (anyelement) RETURNS anyelement AS 'select $1' LANGUAGE sql; SELECT a, dup(b) FROM collate_test1 ORDER BY 2; a | dup ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 2 | äbc 3 | bbc (4 rows) SELECT a, dup(b) FROM collate_test2 ORDER BY 2; a | dup ---+----- 1 | abc 4 | ABC 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) SELECT a, dup(b) FROM collate_test3 ORDER BY 2; a | dup ---+----- 4 | ABC 1 | abc 3 | bbc 2 | äbc (4 rows) -- indexes CREATE INDEX collate_test1_idx1 ON collate_test1 (b); CREATE INDEX collate_test1_idx2 ON collate_test1 (b COLLATE "C"); CREATE INDEX collate_test1_idx3 ON collate_test1 ((b COLLATE "C")); -- this is different grammatically CREATE INDEX collate_test1_idx4 ON collate_test1 (((b||'foo') COLLATE "POSIX")); CREATE INDEX collate_test1_idx5 ON collate_test1 (a COLLATE "C"); -- fail ERROR: collations are not supported by type integer CREATE INDEX collate_test1_idx6 ON collate_test1 ((a COLLATE "C")); -- fail ERROR: collations are not supported by type integer LINE 1: ...ATE INDEX collate_test1_idx6 ON collate_test1 ((a COLLATE "C... ^ SELECT relname, pg_get_indexdef(oid) FROM pg_class WHERE relname LIKE 'collate_test%_idx%' ORDER BY 1; relname | pg_get_indexdef --------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- collate_test1_idx1 | CREATE INDEX collate_test1_idx1 ON collate_tests.collate_test1 USING btree (b) collate_test1_idx2 | CREATE INDEX collate_test1_idx2 ON collate_tests.collate_test1 USING btree (b COLLATE "C") collate_test1_idx3 | CREATE INDEX collate_test1_idx3 ON collate_tests.collate_test1 USING btree (b COLLATE "C") collate_test1_idx4 | CREATE INDEX collate_test1_idx4 ON collate_tests.collate_test1 USING btree (((b || 'foo'::text)) COLLATE "POSIX") (4 rows) -- schema manipulation commands CREATE ROLE regress_test_role; CREATE SCHEMA test_schema; -- We need to do this this way to cope with varying names for encodings: do $$ BEGIN EXECUTE 'CREATE COLLATION test0 (locale = ' || quote_literal(current_setting('lc_collate')) || ');'; END $$; CREATE COLLATION test0 FROM "C"; -- fail, duplicate name ERROR: collation "test0" already exists CREATE COLLATION IF NOT EXISTS test0 FROM "C"; -- ok, skipped NOTICE: collation "test0" already exists, skipping CREATE COLLATION IF NOT EXISTS test0 (locale = 'foo'); -- ok, skipped NOTICE: collation "test0" for encoding "WIN1252" already exists, skipping do $$ BEGIN EXECUTE 'CREATE COLLATION test1 (lc_collate = ' || quote_literal(current_setting('lc_collate')) || ', lc_ctype = ' || quote_literal(current_setting('lc_ctype')) || ');'; END $$; CREATE COLLATION test3 (lc_collate = 'en_US.utf8'); -- fail, need lc_ctype ERROR: parameter "lc_ctype" must be specified CREATE COLLATION testx (locale = 'nonsense'); -- fail ERROR: could not create locale "nonsense": No such file or directory DETAIL: The operating system could not find any locale data for the locale name "nonsense". CREATE COLLATION test4 FROM nonsense; ERROR: collation "nonsense" for encoding "WIN1252" does not exist CREATE COLLATION test5 FROM test0; SELECT collname FROM pg_collation WHERE collname LIKE 'test%' ORDER BY 1; collname ---------- test0 test1 test5 (3 rows) ALTER COLLATION test1 RENAME TO test11; ALTER COLLATION test0 RENAME TO test11; -- fail ERROR: collation "test11" for encoding "WIN1252" already exists in schema "collate_tests" ALTER COLLATION test1 RENAME TO test22; -- fail ERROR: collation "test1" for encoding "WIN1252" does not exist ALTER COLLATION test11 OWNER TO regress_test_role; ALTER COLLATION test11 OWNER TO nonsense; ERROR: role "nonsense" does not exist ALTER COLLATION test11 SET SCHEMA test_schema; COMMENT ON COLLATION test0 IS 'US English'; SELECT collname, nspname, obj_description(pg_collation.oid, 'pg_collation') FROM pg_collation JOIN pg_namespace ON (collnamespace = pg_namespace.oid) WHERE collname LIKE 'test%' ORDER BY 1; collname | nspname | obj_description ----------+---------------+----------------- test0 | collate_tests | US English test11 | test_schema | test5 | collate_tests | (3 rows) DROP COLLATION test0, test_schema.test11, test5; DROP COLLATION test0; -- fail ERROR: collation "test0" for encoding "WIN1252" does not exist DROP COLLATION IF EXISTS test0; NOTICE: collation "test0" does not exist, skipping SELECT collname FROM pg_collation WHERE collname LIKE 'test%'; collname ---------- (0 rows) DROP SCHEMA test_schema; DROP ROLE regress_test_role; -- ALTER ALTER COLLATION "en_US" REFRESH VERSION; NOTICE: version has not changed -- also test for database while we are here SELECT current_database() AS datname \gset ALTER DATABASE :"datname" REFRESH COLLATION VERSION; NOTICE: version has not changed -- dependencies CREATE COLLATION test0 FROM "C"; CREATE TABLE collate_dep_test1 (a int, b text COLLATE test0); CREATE DOMAIN collate_dep_dom1 AS text COLLATE test0; CREATE TYPE collate_dep_test2 AS (x int, y text COLLATE test0); CREATE VIEW collate_dep_test3 AS SELECT text 'foo' COLLATE test0 AS foo; CREATE TABLE collate_dep_test4t (a int, b text); CREATE INDEX collate_dep_test4i ON collate_dep_test4t (b COLLATE test0); DROP COLLATION test0 RESTRICT; -- fail ERROR: cannot drop collation test0 because other objects depend on it DETAIL: column b of table collate_dep_test1 depends on collation test0 type collate_dep_dom1 depends on collation test0 column y of composite type collate_dep_test2 depends on collation test0 view collate_dep_test3 depends on collation test0 index collate_dep_test4i depends on collation test0 HINT: Use DROP ... CASCADE to drop the dependent objects too. DROP COLLATION test0 CASCADE; NOTICE: drop cascades to 5 other objects DETAIL: drop cascades to column b of table collate_dep_test1 drop cascades to type collate_dep_dom1 drop cascades to column y of composite type collate_dep_test2 drop cascades to view collate_dep_test3 drop cascades to index collate_dep_test4i \d collate_dep_test1 Table "collate_tests.collate_dep_test1" Column | Type | Collation | Nullable | Default --------+---------+-----------+----------+--------- a | integer | | | \d collate_dep_test2 Composite type "collate_tests.collate_dep_test2" Column | Type | Collation | Nullable | Default --------+---------+-----------+----------+--------- x | integer | | | DROP TABLE collate_dep_test1, collate_dep_test4t; DROP TYPE collate_dep_test2; -- test range types and collations create type textrange_c as range(subtype=text, collation="C"); create type textrange_en_us as range(subtype=text, collation="en_US"); select textrange_c('A','Z') @> 'b'::text; ?column? ---------- f (1 row) select textrange_en_us('A','Z') @> 'b'::text; ?column? ---------- t (1 row) drop type textrange_c; drop type textrange_en_us; -- nondeterministic collations -- (not supported with libc provider) CREATE COLLATION ctest_det (locale = 'en_US', deterministic = true); CREATE COLLATION ctest_nondet (locale = 'en_US', deterministic = false); ERROR: nondeterministic collations not supported with this provider -- cleanup SET client_min_messages TO warning; DROP SCHEMA collate_tests CASCADE;