Solution
Most probably, the solution is to schema-qualify the operator:
SELECT *
FROM test
WHERE tagged OPERATOR(pg_catalog.@>) '{11}'::int2[]
ORDER BY id
LIMIT 100;
Why?
It's a problem of operator resolution (in combination with type resolution and cast context).
In standard Postgres, there is only a single candidate operator anyarray @> anyarray
, that's the one you want.
Your setup would work just fine if you had not installed the additional module intarray (my assumption), which provides another operator for integer[] @> integer[]
.
Hence, another solution would be to use integer[]
instead and have a GIN index with the gin__int_ops
operator class. Or try the (default for intarray) gist__int_ops
index. Either might be faster, but both don't allow NULL values.
Or you could rename the intarray
operator @>
to disambiguate. (I would not do that. Upgrade and portability issues ensue.)
For expressions involving at least one operand of type integer[]
, Postgres knows which operator to pick: the intarray operator. But then the index is not applicable, because the intarray operator only operates on integer
(int4
) not int2
. And indexes are strictly bound to operators:
But for int2[] @> int2[]
, Postgres is unable to decide the best operator. Both seem equally applicable. Since the default operator is provided in the pg_catalog
schema and the intarray operator is provided in the public
schema (by default - or wherever you installed the extension), you can help solve the conundrum by schema-qualifying the operator with the OPERATOR()
construct. Related:
The error message you get is a bit misleading. But if you look closely, there is a HINT
line added which hints (tada!) in the right direction:
ERROR: operator is not unique: smallint[] @> smallint[]
LINE 1: SELECT NULL::int2[] @> NULL::int2[]
^
HINT: Could not choose a best candidate operator. You might need to add explicit type casts.
You can investigate existing operator candidates for @>
with:
SELECT o.oid, *, oprleft::regtype, oprright::regtype, n.nspname
FROM pg_operator o
JOIN pg_namespace n ON n.oid = o.oprnamespace
WHERE oprname = '@>';
Another alternative solution would be to temporarily(!) set a different search_path, so only the desired operator is found. In the same transaction:
SET LOCAL search_path = pg_catalog;
SELECT ...
But then you have to schema-qualify all tables in the query.
About cast context:
You could change the castcontext
of int2
-> int4
. But I strongly advise against it. Too many possible side effects: