2004-01-19 20:04:40 +01:00
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$PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/utils/misc/README,v 1.4 2004/01/19 19:04:40 tgl Exp $
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2002-05-17 03:19:19 +02:00
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GUC IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
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The GUC (Grand Unified Configuration) module implements configuration
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variables of multiple types (currently boolean, int, float, and string).
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Variable settings can come from various places, with a priority ordering
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determining which setting is used.
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PER-VARIABLE HOOKS
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Each variable known to GUC can optionally have an assign_hook and/or
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a show_hook to provide customized behavior. Assign hooks are used to
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perform validity checking on variable values (above and beyond what
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GUC can do). They are also used to update any derived state that needs
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to change when a GUC variable is set. Show hooks are used to modify
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the default SHOW display for a variable.
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If an assign_hook is provided, it points to a function of the signature
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2004-01-19 20:04:40 +01:00
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bool assign_hook(newvalue, bool doit, GucSource source)
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where the type of "newvalue" matches the kind of variable. This function
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is called immediately before actually setting the variable's value (so it
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can look at the actual variable to determine the old value). If the
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function returns "true" then the assignment is completed; if it returns
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"false" then newvalue is considered invalid and the assignment is not
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performed. If "doit" is false then the function should simply check
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validity of newvalue and not change any derived state. The "source" parameter
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indicates where the new value came from. If it is >= PGC_S_INTERACTIVE,
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then we are performing an interactive assignment (e.g., a SET command).
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In such cases it is okay for the assign_hook to raise an error via ereport().
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If the function returns false for an interactive assignment then guc.c will
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report a generic "invalid value" error message. (An internal ereport() in
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an assign_hook is only needed if you want to generate a specialized error
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message.) But when source < PGC_S_INTERACTIVE, we are reading a
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non-interactive option source, such as postgresql.conf. In this case the
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assign_hook should *not* ereport but should just return false if it doesn't
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like the newvalue. (An ereport(LOG) call would be acceptable if you feel a
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need for a custom complaint in this situation.)
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For string variables, the signature for assign hooks is a bit different:
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const char *assign_hook(const char *newvalue,
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bool doit,
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GucSource source)
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The meanings of the parameters are the same as for the other types of GUC
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variables, but the return value is handled differently:
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NULL --- assignment fails (like returning false for other datatypes)
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newvalue --- assignment succeeds, assign the newvalue as-is
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malloc'd (not palloc'd!!!) string --- assign that value instead
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The third choice is allowed in case the assign_hook wants to return a
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"canonical" version of the new value. For example, the assign_hook for
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datestyle always returns a string that includes both output and input
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datestyle options, although the input might have specified only one.
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If a show_hook is provided, it points to a function of the signature
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const char *show_hook(void)
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This hook allows variable-specific computation of the value displayed
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by SHOW.
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SAVING/RESTORING GUC VARIABLE VALUES
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Prior values of configuration variables must be remembered in order to
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deal with three special cases: RESET (a/k/a SET TO DEFAULT), rollback of
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SET on transaction abort, and rollback of SET LOCAL at transaction end
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(either commit or abort). RESET is defined as selecting the value that
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would be effective had there never been any SET commands in the current
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session.
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To handle these cases we must keep track of as many as four distinct
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values for each variable. They are:
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* actual variable contents always the current effective value
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* reset_value the value to use for RESET
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* session_value the "committed" setting for the session
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* tentative_value the uncommitted result of SET
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During initialization we set the first three of these (actual, reset_value,
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and session_value) based on whichever non-interactive source has the
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highest priority. All three will have the same value.
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A SET LOCAL command sets the actual variable (and nothing else). At
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transaction end, the session_value is used to restore the actual variable
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to its pre-transaction value.
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A SET (or SET SESSION) command sets the actual variable, and if no error,
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then sets the tentative_value. If the transaction commits, the
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tentative_value is assigned to the session_value and the actual variable
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(which could by now be different, if the SET was followed by SET LOCAL).
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If the transaction aborts, the tentative_value is discarded and the
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actual variable is restored from the session_value.
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RESET is executed like a SET, but using the reset_value as the desired new
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value. (We do not provide a RESET LOCAL command, but SET LOCAL TO DEFAULT
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has the same behavior that RESET LOCAL would.) The source associated with
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the reset_value also becomes associated with the actual and session values.
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If SIGHUP is received, the GUC code rereads the postgresql.conf
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configuration file (this does not happen in the signal handler, but at
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next return to main loop; note that it can be executed while within a
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transaction). New values from postgresql.conf are assigned to actual
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variable, reset_value, and session_value, but only if each of these has a
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current source priority <= PGC_S_FILE. (It is thus possible for
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reset_value to track the config-file setting even if there is currently
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a different interactive value of the actual variable.)
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Note that tentative_value is unused and undefined except between a SET
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command and the end of the transaction. Also notice that we must track
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the source associated with each of the four values.
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The assign_hook and show_hook routines work only with the actual variable,
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and are not directly aware of the additional values maintained by GUC.
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This is not a problem for normal usage, since we can assign first to the
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actual variable and then (if that succeeds) to the additional values as
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needed. However, for SIGHUP rereads we may not want to assign to the
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actual variable. Our procedure in that case is to call the assign_hook
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with doit = false so that the value is validated, but no derived state is
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changed.
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STRING MEMORY HANDLING
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String option values are allocated with strdup, not with the
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pstrdup/palloc mechanisms. We would need to keep them in a permanent
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context anyway, and strdup gives us more control over handling
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out-of-memory failures.
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We allow a variable's actual value, reset_val, session_val, and
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tentative_val to point at the same storage. This makes it slightly harder
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to free space (must test that the value to be freed isn't equal to any of
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the other three pointers). The main advantage is that we never need to
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strdup during transaction commit/abort, so cannot cause an out-of-memory
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failure there.
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