Disallow a digit as the first character of a variable name in pgbench.

The point of this restriction is to avoid trying to substitute variables
into timestamp literal values, which may contain strings like '12:34'.

There is a good deal more that should be done to reduce pgbench's
tendency to substitute where it shouldn't.  But this is sufficient to
solve the case complained of by Jaime Soler, and it's simple enough
to back-patch.

Back-patch to v11; before commit 9d36a3866, pgbench had a slightly
different definition of what a variable name is, and anyway it seems
unwise to change long-stable branches for this.

Fabien Coelho

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.22.394.2006291740420.805678@pseudo
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2021-01-13 14:52:49 -05:00
parent bcdff44914
commit d8bb22ab3c
2 changed files with 24 additions and 10 deletions

View File

@ -899,7 +899,7 @@ pgbench <optional> <replaceable>options</replaceable> </optional> <replaceable>d
<para>
There is a simple variable-substitution facility for script files.
Variable names must consist of letters (including non-Latin letters),
digits, and underscores.
digits, and underscores, with the first character not being a digit.
Variables can be set by the command-line <option>-D</option> option,
explained above, or by the meta commands explained below.
In addition to any variables preset by <option>-D</option> command-line options,

View File

@ -1322,6 +1322,7 @@ makeVariableValue(Variable *var)
* "src/bin/pgbench/exprscan.l". Also see parseVariable(), below.
*
* Note: this static function is copied from "src/bin/psql/variables.c"
* but changed to disallow variable names starting with a digit.
*/
static bool
valid_variable_name(const char *name)
@ -1332,6 +1333,15 @@ valid_variable_name(const char *name)
if (*ptr == '\0')
return false;
/* must not start with [0-9] */
if (IS_HIGHBIT_SET(*ptr) ||
strchr("ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
"_", *ptr) != NULL)
ptr++;
else
return false;
/* remaining characters can include [0-9] */
while (*ptr)
{
if (IS_HIGHBIT_SET(*ptr) ||
@ -1453,23 +1463,27 @@ putVariableInt(CState *st, const char *context, char *name, int64 value)
*
* "sql" points at a colon. If what follows it looks like a valid
* variable name, return a malloc'd string containing the variable name,
* and set *eaten to the number of characters consumed.
* and set *eaten to the number of characters consumed (including the colon).
* Otherwise, return NULL.
*/
static char *
parseVariable(const char *sql, int *eaten)
{
int i = 0;
int i = 1; /* starting at 1 skips the colon */
char *name;
do
{
/* keep this logic in sync with valid_variable_name() */
if (IS_HIGHBIT_SET(sql[i]) ||
strchr("ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
"_", sql[i]) != NULL)
i++;
else
return NULL;
while (IS_HIGHBIT_SET(sql[i]) ||
strchr("ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
"_0123456789", sql[i]) != NULL)
i++;
} while (IS_HIGHBIT_SET(sql[i]) ||
strchr("ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
"_0123456789", sql[i]) != NULL);
if (i == 1)
return NULL; /* no valid variable name chars */
name = pg_malloc(i);
memcpy(name, &sql[1], i - 1);