With Postgres it's quite easy to prevent this by collecting all visited nodes in an array.
Setup:
create table hierarchy (id integer, parent_id integer);
insert into hierarchy
values
(1, null), -- root element
(2, 1), -- first child
(3, 1), -- second child
(4, 3),
(5, 4),
(3, 5); -- endless loop
Recursive query:
with recursive tree as (
select id,
parent_id,
array[id] as all_parents
from hierarchy
where parent_id is null
union all
select c.id,
c.parent_id,
p.all_parents||c.id
from hierarchy c
join tree p
on c.parent_id = p.id
and c.id <> ALL (p.all_parents) -- this is the trick to exclude the endless loops
)
select *
from tree;
To do this for multiple trees at the same time, you need to carry over the ID of the root node to the children:
with recursive tree as (
select id,
parent_id,
array[id] as all_parents,
id as root_id
from hierarchy
where parent_id is null
union all
select c.id,
c.parent_id,
p.all_parents||c.id,
p.root_id
from hierarchy c
join tree p
on c.parent_id = p.id
and c.id <> ALL (p.all_parents) -- this is the trick to exclude the endless loops
and c.root_id = p.root_id
)
select *
from tree;
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