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In guc.c, ignore ERANGE errors from strtod().

Instead, just proceed with the infinity or zero result that it should
return for overflow/underflow.  This avoids a platform dependency,
in that various versions of strtod are inconsistent about whether they
signal ERANGE for a value that's specified as infinity.

It's possible this won't be enough to remove the buildfarm failures
we're seeing from ac75959cd, in which case I'll take out the infinity
test case that commit added.  But first let's see if we can fix it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1h33xk-0001Og-Gs@gemulon.postgresql.org
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane
2019-03-11 11:25:23 -04:00
parent 08cecfaf60
commit b212245f96

View File

@ -6240,13 +6240,15 @@ parse_real(const char *value, double *result, int flags, const char **hintmsg)
if (hintmsg)
*hintmsg = NULL;
errno = 0;
val = strtod(value, &endptr);
if (endptr == value)
return false; /* no HINT for syntax error */
if (endptr == value || errno == ERANGE)
return false; /* no HINT for these cases */
/* reject NaN (infinities will fail range checks later) */
/*
* We ignore strtod's errno, so that out-of-range inputs will just result
* in zero or infinity values. Subsequent range checks will reject those
* if necessary. We do need to reject NaN explicitly, however.
*/
if (isnan(val))
return false; /* treat same as syntax error; no HINT */