Commit Graph

1894 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane cb05f5388d There is no good reason for the CREATE TABLE LIKE INCLUDING COMMENTS code to
have hard-wired knowledge of the rules for naming index columns.  It can
just look at the actual names in the source index, instead.  Do some minor
formatting cleanup too.
2009-12-20 18:28:14 +00:00
Tom Lane 52fc0075ab Avoid a premature coercion failure in transformSetOperationTree() when
presented with an UNKNOWN-type Var, which can happen in cases where an
unknown literal appeared in a subquery.  While many such cases will fail
later on anyway in the planner, there are some cases where the planner is
able to flatten the query and replace the Var by the constant before it has
to coerce the union column to the final type.  I had added this check in 8.4
to provide earlier/better error detection, but it causes a regression for
some cases that worked OK before.  Fix by not making the check if the input
node is UNKNOWN type and not a Const or Param.  If it isn't going to work,
it will fail anyway at plan time, with the only real loss being inability to
provide an error cursor.  Per gripe from Britt Piehler.

In passing, rename a couple of variables to remove confusion from an
inner scope masking the same variable names in an outer scope.
2009-12-16 22:24:13 +00:00
Tom Lane 34d26872ed Support ORDER BY within aggregate function calls, at long last providing a
non-kluge method for controlling the order in which values are fed to an
aggregate function.  At the same time eliminate the old implementation
restriction that DISTINCT was only supported for single-argument aggregates.

Possibly release-notable behavioral change: formerly, agg(DISTINCT x)
dropped null values of x unconditionally.  Now, it does so only if the
agg transition function is strict; otherwise nulls are treated as DISTINCT
normally would, ie, you get one copy.

Andrew Gierth, reviewed by Hitoshi Harada
2009-12-15 17:57:48 +00:00
Itagaki Takahiro f1325ce213 Add large object access control.
A new system catalog pg_largeobject_metadata manages
ownership and access privileges of large objects.

KaiGai Kohei, reviewed by Jaime Casanova.
2009-12-11 03:34:57 +00:00
Tom Lane 0cb65564e5 Add exclusion constraints, which generalize the concept of uniqueness to
support any indexable commutative operator, not just equality.  Two rows
violate the exclusion constraint if "row1.col OP row2.col" is TRUE for
each of the columns in the constraint.

Jeff Davis, reviewed by Robert Haas
2009-12-07 05:22:23 +00:00
Tom Lane 7fc0f06221 Add a WHEN clause to CREATE TRIGGER, allowing a boolean expression to be
checked to determine whether the trigger should be fired.

For BEFORE triggers this is mostly a matter of spec compliance; but for AFTER
triggers it can provide a noticeable performance improvement, since queuing of
a deferred trigger event and re-fetching of the row(s) at end of statement can
be short-circuited if the trigger does not need to be fired.

Takahiro Itagaki, reviewed by KaiGai Kohei.
2009-11-20 20:38:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 5e66a51c2e Provide a parenthesized-options syntax for VACUUM, analogous to that recently
adopted for EXPLAIN.  This will allow additional options to be implemented
in future without having to make them fully-reserved keywords.  The old syntax
remains available for existing options, however.

Itagaki Takahiro
2009-11-16 21:32:07 +00:00
Tom Lane ef679ff6b7 Clean up a couple of bizarre code formatting choices in recent CREATE LIKE patch. 2009-11-13 23:49:23 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 01038d4ad7 A better fix for the "ARRAY[...]::domain" problem. The previous patch worked,
but the transformed ArrayExpr claimed to have a return type of "domain",
even though the domain constraint was only checked by the enclosing
CoerceToDomain node. With this fix, the ArrayExpr is correctly labeled with
the base type of the domain. Per gripe by Tom Lane.
2009-11-13 19:48:20 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 942702a496 When you do "ARRAY[...]::domain", where domain is a domain over an array type,
we need to check domain constraints. We used to do it correctly, but 8.4
introduced a separate code path for the "ARRAY[]::arraytype" case to infer
the type of an empty ARRAY construct from the cast target, and forgot to take
domains into account.

Per report from Florian G. Pflug.
2009-11-13 16:09:10 +00:00
Tom Lane 19d802767d Remove pg_parse_string_token() --- not needed anymore. 2009-11-12 01:13:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 2dee828cac Remove plpgsql's separate lexer (finally!), in favor of using the core lexer
directly.  This was a lot of trouble, but should be worth it in terms of
not having to keep the plpgsql lexer in step with core anymore.  In addition
the handling of keywords is significantly better-structured, allowing us to
de-reserve a number of words that plpgsql formerly treated as reserved.
2009-11-12 00:13:00 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera e9984c47e9 Change "name" nonterminal in cursor-related productions to cursor_name.
This is a preparatory patch for allowing a dynamic cursor name be used in the
ECPG grammar.

Author: Zoltan Boszormenyi
2009-11-11 20:31:26 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 2ea179f361 Support optional FROM/IN in FETCH and MOVE
The main motivation for this is that it's required for Informix compatibility
in ECPG.

This patch makes the ECPG and core grammars a bit closer to one another for
these productions.

Author: Zoltan Boszormenyi
2009-11-11 19:25:42 +00:00
Tom Lane 10bcfa189b Re-refactor the core scanner's API, in order to get out from under the problem
of different parsers having different YYSTYPE unions that they want to use
with it.  I defined a new union core_YYSTYPE that is just the (very short)
list of semantic values returned by the core scanner.  I had originally
worried that this would require an extra interface layer, but actually we can
have parser.c's base_yylex (formerly filtered_base_yylex) take care of that at
no extra cost.  Names associated with the core scanner are now "core_yy_foo",
with "base_yy_foo" being used in the core Bison parser and the parser.c
interface layer.

This solves the last serious stumbling block to eliminating plpgsql's separate
lexer.  One restriction that will still be present is that plpgsql and the
core will have to agree on the token numbers assigned to tokens that can be
returned by the core lexer.  Since Bison doesn't seem willing to accept
external assignments of those numbers, we'll have to live with decreeing that
core and plpgsql grammars declare these tokens first and in the same order.
2009-11-09 18:38:48 +00:00
Tom Lane 2ace38d226 Fix WHERE CURRENT OF to work as designed within plpgsql. The argument
can be the name of a plpgsql cursor variable, which formerly was converted
to $N before the core parser saw it, but that's no longer the case.
Deal with plain name references to plpgsql variables, and add a regression
test case that exposes the failure.
2009-11-09 02:36:59 +00:00
Tom Lane 593f4b854a Don't treat NEW and OLD as reserved words anymore. For the purposes of rules
it works just as well to have them be ordinary identifiers, and this gets rid
of a number of ugly special cases.  Plus we aren't interfering with non-rule
usage of these names.

catversion bump because the names change internally in stored rules.
2009-11-05 23:24:27 +00:00
Tom Lane 9ab6c3033e Make expression locations for LIKE and SIMILAR TO constructs uniformly point
at the first keyword of the expression, rather than drawing a rather
artificial distinction between the ESCAPE subclause and the rest.
Per gripe from Gokulakannan Somasundaram and subsequent discusssion.
2009-11-04 23:15:08 +00:00
Tom Lane fb5d05805b Implement parser hooks for processing ColumnRef and ParamRef nodes, as per my
recent proposal.  As proof of concept, remove knowledge of Params from the
core parser, arranging for them to be handled entirely by parser hook
functions.  It turns out we need an additional hook for that --- I had
forgotten about the code that handles inferring a parameter's type from
context.

This is a preliminary step towards letting plpgsql handle its variables
through parser hooks.  Additional work remains to be done to expose the
facility through SPI, but I think this is all the changes needed in the core
parser.
2009-10-31 01:41:31 +00:00
Tom Lane 46e3a16b05 When FOR UPDATE/SHARE is used with LIMIT, put the LockRows plan node
underneath the Limit node, not atop it.  This fixes the old problem that such
a query might unexpectedly return fewer rows than the LIMIT says, due to
LockRows discarding updated rows.

There is a related problem that LockRows might destroy the sort ordering
produced by earlier steps; but fixing that by pushing LockRows below Sort
would create serious performance problems that are unjustified in many
real-world applications, as well as potential deadlock problems from locking
many more rows than expected.  Instead, keep the present semantics of applying
FOR UPDATE after ORDER BY within a single query level; but allow the user to
specify the other way by writing FOR UPDATE in a sub-select.  To make that
work, track whether FOR UPDATE appeared explicitly in sub-selects or got
pushed down from the parent, and don't flatten a sub-select that contained an
explicit FOR UPDATE.
2009-10-28 14:55:47 +00:00
Tom Lane 61e5328208 Make FOR UPDATE/SHARE in the primary query not propagate into WITH queries;
for example in
  WITH w AS (SELECT * FROM foo) SELECT * FROM w, bar ... FOR UPDATE
the FOR UPDATE will now affect bar but not foo.  This is more useful and
consistent than the original 8.4 behavior, which tried to propagate FOR UPDATE
into the WITH query but always failed due to assorted implementation
restrictions.  Even though we are in process of removing those restrictions,
it seems correct on philosophical grounds to not let the outer query's
FOR UPDATE affect the WITH query.

In passing, fix isLockedRel which frequently got things wrong in
nested-subquery cases: "FOR UPDATE OF foo" applies to an alias foo in the
current query level, not subqueries.  This has been broken for a long time,
but it doesn't seem worth back-patching further than 8.4 because the actual
consequences are minimal.  At worst the parser would sometimes get
RowShareLock on a relation when it should be AccessShareLock or vice versa.
That would only make a difference if someone were using ExclusiveLock
concurrently, which no standard operation does, and anyway FOR UPDATE
doesn't result in visible changes so it's not clear that the someone would
notice any problem.  Between that and the fact that FOR UPDATE barely works
with subqueries at all in existing releases, I'm not excited about worrying
about it.
2009-10-27 17:11:18 +00:00
Tom Lane 9f2ee8f287 Re-implement EvalPlanQual processing to improve its performance and eliminate
a lot of strange behaviors that occurred in join cases.  We now identify the
"current" row for every joined relation in UPDATE, DELETE, and SELECT FOR
UPDATE/SHARE queries.  If an EvalPlanQual recheck is necessary, we jam the
appropriate row into each scan node in the rechecking plan, forcing it to emit
only that one row.  The former behavior could rescan the whole of each joined
relation for each recheck, which was terrible for performance, and what's much
worse could result in duplicated output tuples.

Also, the original implementation of EvalPlanQual could not re-use the recheck
execution tree --- it had to go through a full executor init and shutdown for
every row to be tested.  To avoid this overhead, I've associated a special
runtime Param with each LockRows or ModifyTable plan node, and arranged to
make every scan node below such a node depend on that Param.  Thus, by
signaling a change in that Param, the EPQ machinery can just rescan the
already-built test plan.

This patch also adds a prohibition on set-returning functions in the
targetlist of SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE.  This is needed to avoid the
duplicate-output-tuple problem.  It seems fairly reasonable since the
other restrictions on SELECT FOR UPDATE are meant to ensure that there
is a unique correspondence between source tuples and result tuples,
which an output SRF destroys as much as anything else does.
2009-10-26 02:26:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 289e2905c8 Remove add_missing_from GUC and associated parser support for "implicit RTEs".
Per recent discussion, add_missing_from has been deprecated for long enough to
consider removing, and it's getting in the way of planned parser refactoring.
The system now always behaves as though add_missing_from were OFF.
2009-10-21 20:22:38 +00:00
Tom Lane b2734a0d79 Support SQL-compliant triggers on columns, ie fire only if certain columns
are named in the UPDATE's SET list.

Note: the schema of pg_trigger has not actually changed; we've just started
to use a column that was there all along.  catversion bumped anyway so that
this commit is included in the history of potentially interesting changes
to system catalog contents.

Itagaki Takahiro
2009-10-14 22:14:25 +00:00
Tom Lane 8d54c2482b Code review for LIKE INCLUDING patch --- clean up some cosmetic and not
so cosmetic stuff.
2009-10-13 00:53:08 +00:00
Tom Lane 5ec1341136 Use plurals (TABLES, FUNCTIONS, etc) in ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES. We have
the keywords as a consequence of the GRANT ALL patch, so we might as well
use them and make the ALTER commands read more naturally.
2009-10-12 23:41:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 11ca04b4b7 Support GRANT/REVOKE ON ALL TABLES/SEQUENCES/FUNCTIONS IN SCHEMA.
Petr Jelinek
2009-10-12 20:39:42 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan faa1afc6c1 CREATE LIKE INCLUDING COMMENTS and STORAGE, and INCLUDING ALL shortcut. Itagaki Takahiro. 2009-10-12 19:49:24 +00:00
Tom Lane 0adaf4cb31 Move the handling of SELECT FOR UPDATE locking and rechecking out of
execMain.c and into a new plan node type LockRows.  Like the recent change
to put table updating into a ModifyTable plan node, this increases planning
flexibility by allowing the operations to occur below the top level of the
plan tree.  It's necessary in any case to restore the previous behavior of
having FOR UPDATE locking occur before ModifyTable does.

This partially refactors EvalPlanQual to allow multiple rows-under-test
to be inserted into the EPQ machinery before starting an EPQ test query.
That isn't sufficient to fix EPQ's general bogosity in the face of plans
that return multiple rows per test row, though.  Since this patch is
mostly about getting some plan node infrastructure in place and not about
fixing ten-year-old bugs, I will leave EPQ improvements for another day.

Another behavioral change that we could now think about is doing FOR UPDATE
before LIMIT, but that too seems like it should be treated as a followon
patch.
2009-10-12 18:10:51 +00:00
Tom Lane 717fa274d1 Support use of function argument names to identify which actual arguments
match which function parameters.  The syntax uses AS, for example
	funcname(value AS arg1, anothervalue AS arg2)

Pavel Stehule
2009-10-08 02:39:25 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 2eda8dfb52 Make it possibly to specify GUC params per user and per database.
Create a new catalog pg_db_role_setting where they are now stored, and better
encapsulate the code that deals with settings into its realm.  The old
datconfig and rolconfig columns are removed.

psql has gained a \drds command to display the settings.

Backwards compatibility warning: while the backwards-compatible system views
still have the config columns, they no longer completely represent the
configuration for a user or database.

Catalog version bumped.
2009-10-07 22:14:26 +00:00
Tom Lane e0c433c4a3 Change CREATE TABLE so that column default expressions coming from different
inheritance parent tables are compared using equal(), instead of doing
strcmp() on the nodeToString representation.  The old implementation was
always a tad cheesy, and it finally fails completely as of 8.4, now that the
node tree might contain syntax location information.  equal() knows it's
supposed to ignore those fields, but strcmp() hardly can.  Per recent
report from Scott Ribe.
2009-10-06 00:55:26 +00:00
Tom Lane 249724cb01 Create an ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES command, which allows users to adjust
the privileges that will be applied to subsequently-created objects.

Such adjustments are always per owning role, and can be restricted to objects
created in particular schemas too.  A notable benefit is that users can
override the traditional default privilege settings, eg, the PUBLIC EXECUTE
privilege traditionally granted by default for functions.

Petr Jelinek
2009-10-05 19:24:49 +00:00
Tom Lane 799ac99201 Sync psql's scanner with recent changes in backend scanner's flex rules.
Marko Kreen, Tom Lane
2009-09-27 03:27:24 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut d39a84a612 Prevent isolated second surrogate in U& syntax 2009-09-25 21:13:06 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut ada0116e56 Remove backup states from Unicode escapes patch 2009-09-25 20:51:37 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut c2bb0378cf Unicode escapes in E'...' strings
Author: Marko Kreen <markokr@gmail.com>
2009-09-22 23:52:53 +00:00
Tom Lane 9048b73184 Implement the DO statement to support execution of PL code without having
to create a function for it.

Procedural languages now have an additional entry point, namely a function
to execute an inline code block.  This seemed a better design than trying
to hide the transient-ness of the code from the PL.  As of this patch, only
plpgsql has an inline handler, but probably people will soon write handlers
for the other standard PLs.

In passing, remove the long-dead LANCOMPILER option of CREATE LANGUAGE.

Petr Jelinek
2009-09-22 23:43:43 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 02faeb4ac8 Surrogate pair support for U& string and identifier syntax
This is mainly to make the functionality consistent with the proposed \u
escape syntax.
2009-09-21 22:22:07 +00:00
Tom Lane 923413ac6d Define a new, more extensible syntax for COPY options.
This is intentionally similar to the recently revised syntax for EXPLAIN
options, ie, (name value, ...).  The old syntax is still supported for
backwards compatibility, but we intend that any options added in future
will be provided only in the new syntax.

Robert Haas, Emmanuel Cecchet
2009-09-21 20:10:21 +00:00
Tom Lane 255f66efa9 Fix bug with WITH RECURSIVE immediately inside WITH RECURSIVE. 99% of the
code was already okay with this, but the hack that obtained the output
column types of a recursive union in advance of doing real parse analysis
of the recursive union forgot to handle the case where there was an inner
WITH clause available to the non-recursive term.  Best fix seems to be to
refactor so that we don't need the "throwaway" parse analysis step at all.
Instead, teach the transformSetOperationStmt code to set up the CTE's output
column information after it's processed the non-recursive term normally.
Per report from David Fetter.
2009-09-09 03:32:52 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 234c7ce9f2 Derived files that are shipped in the distribution used to be built in the
source directory even for out-of-tree builds.  They are now alsl built in
the build tree.  This should be more convenient for certain developers'
workflows, and shouldn't really break anything else.
2009-08-28 20:26:19 +00:00
Tom Lane bb16dc49ab Modify the definition of window-function PARTITION BY and ORDER BY clauses
so that their elements are always taken as simple expressions over the
query's input columns.  It originally seemed like a good idea to make them
act exactly like GROUP BY and ORDER BY, right down to the SQL92-era behavior
of accepting output column names or numbers.  However, that was not such a
great idea, for two reasons:

1. It permits circular references, as exhibited in bug #5018: the output
column could be the one containing the window function itself.  (We actually
had a regression test case illustrating this, but nobody thought twice about
how confusing that would be.)

2. It doesn't seem like a good idea for, eg, "lead(foo) OVER (ORDER BY foo)"
to potentially use two completely different meanings for "foo".

Accordingly, narrow down the behavior of window clauses to use only the
SQL99-compliant interpretation that the expressions are simple expressions.
2009-08-27 20:08:03 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 7ca774a873 Add -Wno-error to CFLAGS from gram.o as long as it's broken. 2009-08-26 22:15:59 +00:00
Tom Lane be4cd18f71 Allow mixing of traditional and SQL:2008 LIMIT/OFFSET syntax. Being rigid
about it doesn't simplify the grammar at all, and it does invite confusion
among those who only read the SELECT syntax summary and not the full details.
Per gripe from Jaime Casanova.
2009-08-18 23:40:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 9072592946 Add ALTER TABLE ... ALTER COLUMN ... SET STATISTICS DISTINCT
Robert Haas
2009-08-02 22:14:53 +00:00
Tom Lane 060baf2784 Merge the Constraint and FkConstraint node types into a single type.
This was foreseen to be a good idea long ago, but nobody had got round
to doing it.  The recent patch for deferred unique constraints made
transformConstraintAttrs() ugly enough that I decided it was time.
This change will also greatly simplify parsing of deferred CHECK constraints,
if anyone ever gets around to implementing that.

While at it, add a location field to Constraint, and use that to provide
an error cursor for some of the constraint-related error messages.
2009-07-30 02:45:38 +00:00
Tom Lane 25d9bf2e3e Support deferrable uniqueness constraints.
The current implementation fires an AFTER ROW trigger for each tuple that
looks like it might be non-unique according to the index contents at the
time of insertion.  This works well as long as there aren't many conflicts,
but won't scale to massive unique-key reassignments.  Improving that case
is a TODO item.

Dean Rasheed
2009-07-29 20:56:21 +00:00
Tom Lane d4382c4ae7 Extend EXPLAIN to allow generic options to be specified.
The original syntax made it difficult to add options without making them
into reserved words.  This change parenthesizes the options to avoid that
problem, and makes provision for an explicit (and perhaps non-Boolean)
value for each option.  The original syntax is still supported, but only
for the two original options ANALYZE and VERBOSE.

As a test case, add a COSTS option that can suppress the planner cost
estimates.  This may be useful for including EXPLAIN output in the regression
tests, which are otherwise unable to cope with cross-platform variations in
cost estimates.

Robert Haas
2009-07-26 23:34:18 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan de7531a971 Allow * as parameter for FORCE QUOTE for COPY CSV. Itagaki Takahiro. 2009-07-25 00:07:14 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan e73131a16a DROP IF EXISTS for columns and constraints. Andres Freund. 2009-07-20 02:42:28 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut de160e2c00 Make backend header files C++ safe
This alters various incidental uses of C++ key words to use other similar
identifiers, so that a C++ compiler won't choke outright.  You still
(probably) need extern "C" { }; around the inclusion of backend headers.

based on a patch by Kurt Harriman <harriman@acm.org>

Also add a script cpluspluscheck to check for C++ compatibility in the
future.  As of right now, this passes without error for me.
2009-07-16 06:33:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 1aa58d3a83 Tweak the core scanner so that it can be used by plpgsql too.
Changes:

Pass in the keyword lookup array instead of having it be hardwired.
(This incidentally allows elimination of some duplicate coding in ecpg.)

Re-order the token declarations in gram.y so that non-keyword tokens have
numbers that won't change when keywords are added or removed.

Add ".." and ":=" to the set of tokens recognized by scan.l.  (Since these
combinations are nowhere legal in core SQL, this does not change anything
except the precise wording of the error you get when you write this.)
2009-07-14 20:24:10 +00:00
Tom Lane 34a11144e5 Although the flex documentation avers that yyalloc and yyrealloc take
size_t arguments, the emitted scanner actually prototypes them with
type yy_size_t, which is sometimes not the same thing depending on
flex version and platform.  Easiest fix seems to be to use yy_size_t.
Per buildfarm results.
2009-07-13 03:11:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 91e71929ba Convert the core lexer and parser into fully reentrant code, by making use
of features added to flex and bison since this code was originally written.
This change doesn't in itself offer any new capability, but it's needed
infrastructure for planned improvements in plpgsql.

Another feature now available in flex is the ability to make it use palloc
instead of malloc, so do that to avoid possible memory leaks.  (We should
at some point change the other lexers likewise, but this commit doesn't
touch them.)
2009-07-13 02:02:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 6566e37e02 Move some declarations in the raw-parser header files to create a clearer
distinction between the external API (parser.h) and declarations that only
need to be visible within the raw parser code (gramparse.h, which now is only
included by parser.c, gram.y, scan.l, and keywords.c).  This is in preparation
for the upcoming change to a reentrant lexer, which will require referencing
YYSTYPE in the declarations of base_yylex and filtered_base_yylex, hence
gram.h will have to be included by gramparse.h.  We don't want any more files
than absolutely necessary to depend on gram.h, so some cleanup is called for.
2009-07-12 17:12:34 +00:00
Tom Lane 869312e65e Per SQL spec (in particular, the grammar in SQL:2008 7.13) we should allow
parentheses around the <query expression body> that follows a WITH clause, eg
	with cte(foo) as ( values(0) ) ((select foo from cte));
This seems to be just an oversight/thinko in gram.y.  Noted while
experimenting with bug #4902.
2009-07-06 02:58:40 +00:00
Tom Lane f08e5e92e8 Fix the just-reported problem that you can't specify all four trigger event
types in CREATE TRIGGER.  While at it, clean up the amazingly tedious and
inextensible way that the trigger event type list was handled.  Per report
from Greg Sabino Mullane.
2009-06-18 01:27:02 +00:00
Tom Lane 5f6a14077b Fix get_sort_group_operators() so that it doesn't think arrays can be grouped
via hashing.  Eventually we ought to make that possible, but it won't happen
for 8.4.  Per yesterday's report from Robert Haas.
2009-06-13 15:42:09 +00:00
Bruce Momjian d747140279 8.4 pgindent run, with new combined Linux/FreeBSD/MinGW typedef list
provided by Andrew.
2009-06-11 14:49:15 +00:00
Tom Lane 76d4abf2d9 Improve the recently-added support for properly pluralized error messages
by extending the ereport() API to cater for pluralization directly.  This
is better than the original method of calling ngettext outside the elog.c
code because (1) it avoids double translation, which wastes cycles and in
the worst case could give a wrong result; and (2) it avoids having to use
a different coding method in PL code than in the core backend.  The
client-side uses of ngettext are not touched since neither of these concerns
is very pressing in the client environment.  Per my proposal of yesterday.
2009-06-04 18:33:08 +00:00
Tom Lane 6ec0753146 Ignore RECHECK in CREATE OPERATOR CLASS, just throwing a NOTICE, instead of
throwing an error as 8.4 had been doing.  The error interfered with porting
old database definitions (particularly for pg_migrator) without really buying
any safety.  Per bug #4817 and subsequent discussion.
2009-05-27 20:42:29 +00:00
Tom Lane d4a363cdf2 Modify find_inheritance_children() and find_all_inheritors() to add the
ability to lock relations as they scan pg_inherits, and to ignore any
relations that have disappeared by the time we get lock on them.  This
makes uses of these functions safe against concurrent DROP operations
on child tables: we will effectively ignore any just-dropped child,
rather than possibly throwing an error as in recent bug report from
Thomas Johansson (and similar past complaints).  The behavior should
not change otherwise, since the code was acquiring those same locks
anyway, just a little bit later.

An exception is LockTableCommand(), which is still behaving unsafely;
but that seems to require some more discussion before we change it.
2009-05-12 03:11:02 +00:00
Tom Lane 0ada559187 Do some minor code refactoring in preparation for changing the APIs of
find_inheritance_children() and find_all_inheritors().  I got annoyed that
these are buried inside the planner but mostly used elsewhere.  So, create
a new file catalog/pg_inherits.c and put them there, along with a couple
of other functions that search pg_inherits.

The code that modifies pg_inherits is (still) in tablecmds.c --- it's
kind of entangled with unrelated code that modifies pg_depend and other
stuff, so pulling it out seemed like a bigger change than I wanted to make
right now.  But this file provides a natural home for it if anyone ever
gets around to that.

This commit just moves code around; it doesn't change anything, except
I succumbed to the temptation to make a couple of trivial optimizations
in typeInheritsFrom().
2009-05-12 00:56:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 1bbbcb04f0 Make new complaint about unsafe Unicode literals include an error location.
Every other ereport in scan.l has one, this should too.
2009-05-05 21:09:23 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 40bc4c2605 Disable the use of Unicode escapes in string constants (U&'') when
standard_conforming_strings is not on, for security reasons.
2009-05-05 18:32:17 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas a4278fd858 Move SERVER to the right place in the alphabetically sorted keyword list. 2009-04-28 09:09:41 +00:00
Tom Lane 096a30b538 Fix some more 'variable may be used uninitialized' warnings from gcc 4.4. 2009-04-24 16:09:50 +00:00
Tom Lane 85128e5d56 Rethink the idea of having plpgsql depend on parser/gram.h. Aside from the
fact that this is breaking the MSVC build, it's probably not really a good
idea to expand the dependencies of gram.h any further than the core parser;
for instance the value of SCONST might depend on which bison version you'd
built with.  Better to expose an additional call point in parser.c, so
move what I had put into pl_funcs.c into parser.c.  Also PGDLLIMPORT'ify
the reference to standard_conforming_strings, per buildfarm results.
2009-04-19 21:50:09 +00:00
Tom Lane 22c922269f Fix de-escaping checks so that we will reject \000 as well as other invalidly
encoded sequences.  Per discussion of a couple of days ago.
2009-04-19 21:08:54 +00:00
Tom Lane 6a68f7fd3c Fix broken {xufailed} production that made HEAD fail on
select u&42 from table-with-a-u-column;
Also fix missing SET_YYLLOC() in the {dolqfailed} production that I suppose
this was based on.  The latter is a pre-existing bug, but the only effect
is to misplace the error cursor by one token, so probably not worth
backpatching.
2009-04-14 22:18:47 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 1eef90d0a2 Rename the new CREATE DATABASE options to set collation and ctype into
LC_COLLATE and LC_CTYPE, per discussion on pgsql-hackers.
2009-04-06 08:42:53 +00:00
Tom Lane 090173a3f9 Remove the recently added node types ReloptElem and OptionDefElem in favor
of adding optional namespace and action fields to DefElem.  Having three
node types that do essentially the same thing bloats the code and leads
to errors of confusion, such as in yesterday's bug report from Khee Chin.
2009-04-04 21:12:31 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 8032d76b5b Gettext plural support
In the backend, I changed only a handful of exemplary or important-looking
instances to make use of the plural support; there is probably more work
there.  For the rest of the source, this should cover all relevant cases.
2009-03-26 22:26:08 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera fb2ebae498 Add comments about kwlookup.c expectations 2009-03-08 16:53:30 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 328d235571 Separate the key word list that lived in keywords.c into a new header file
kwlist.h, to avoid having to link the backend object file into other programs
like pg_dump.  We can now simply symlink a single source file from the backend
(kwlookup.c, containing the shared routine ScanKeywordLookup) and compile it
locally, which is a lot cleaner.
2009-03-07 00:13:58 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 820984ba05 Clarify to the translator that yyerror() deals with the translation of
"syntax error", not the literal string.  I was previously confused on this
matter, but I have now verified that everything is translated properly.
2009-03-04 13:02:32 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 7babccb915 Add the possibility to specify an explicit validator function for foreign-data
wrappers (similar to procedural languages).  This way we don't need to retain
the nearly empty libraries, and we are more free in how to implement the
wrapper API in the future.
2009-02-24 10:06:36 +00:00
Tom Lane 6d1e361852 Change ALTER TABLE SET WITHOUT OIDS to rewrite the whole table to physically
get rid of the OID column.  This eliminates the problem discovered by Heikki
back in November that 8.4's suppression of "unnecessary" junk filtering in
INSERT/SELECT could lead to an Assert failure, or storing of oids into a table
that shouldn't have them if Asserts are off.  While that particular problem
could have been solved in other ways, it seems likely to be just a forerunner
of things to come if we continue to allow tables to contain rows that disagree
with the pg_class.relhasoids setting.  It's better to make this operation slow
than to sacrifice performance or risk bugs in more common code paths.

Also, add ALTER TABLE SET WITH OIDS to rewrite the table to add oids.
This was a bit more controversial, but in view of the very small amount of
extra code needed given the current ALTER TABLE infrastructure, it seems best
to eliminate the asymmetry in features.
2009-02-11 21:11:16 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 3a5b773715 Allow reloption names to have qualifiers, initially supporting a TOAST
qualifier, and add support for this in pg_dump.

This allows TOAST tables to have user-defined fillfactor, and will also
enable us to move the autovacuum parameters to reloptions without taking
away the possibility of setting values for TOAST tables.
2009-02-02 19:31:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 3cb5d6580a Support column-level privileges, as required by SQL standard.
Stephen Frost, with help from KaiGai Kohei and others
2009-01-22 20:16:10 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 6587818542 Add vacuum_freeze_table_age GUC option, to control when VACUUM should
ignore the visibility map and scan the whole table, to advance
relfrozenxid.
2009-01-16 13:27:24 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut bf21cdb7e7 Use qualified_name instead of relation_expr for commands that have no
business with inheritance recursion: ALTER INDEX, ALTER SEQUENCE, ALTER
TRIGGER, ALTER VIEW.  They would just silently ignore the ONLY.

ALTER TABLE has mixed behavior and cannot be dealt with this way because
of the resulting shift/reduce conflicts.
2009-01-12 09:38:30 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut ca8100f9eb Add ONLY support to LOCK and TRUNCATE. By default, these commands are now
recursive.

=> Note this incompatibility in the release notes.
2009-01-12 08:54:27 +00:00
Tom Lane 2e9650cbcf Defend against null input in analyze_requires_snapshot(), per report
from Rushabh Lathia.
2009-01-08 13:42:33 +00:00
Bruce Momjian ae3c075221 Add comment about why BETWEEN uses operator strings and not opclasses,
with URL pointing to email discussion.
2009-01-07 22:54:45 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 511db38ace Update copyright for 2009. 2009-01-01 17:24:05 +00:00
Tom Lane df0ea5a1cd Throw error if a <window definition> references a window that already has a
frame clause, as appears to be required by the fine print in the SQL spec.
Per discussion with Pavel, not doing so risks user confusion.
2008-12-31 23:42:56 +00:00
Tom Lane 26ce4e85a1 Add a WINDOW attribute to CREATE FUNCTION, and teach pg_dump about it,
so that user-defined window functions are possible.  For the moment you'll
have to write them in C, for lack of any interface to the WindowObject API
in the available PLs, but it's better than no support at all.

There was some debate about the best syntax for this.  I ended up choosing
the "it's an attribute" position --- the other approach will inevitably be
more work, and the likely market for user-defined window functions is
probably too small to justify it.
2008-12-31 02:25:06 +00:00
Tom Lane 8e8854daa2 Add some basic support for window frame clauses to the window-functions
patch.  This includes the ability to force the frame to cover the whole
partition, and the ability to make the frame end exactly on the current row
rather than its last ORDER BY peer.  Supporting any more of the full SQL
frame-clause syntax will require nontrivial hacking on the window aggregate
code, so it'll have to wait for 8.5 or beyond.
2008-12-31 00:08:39 +00:00
Tom Lane 95b07bc7f5 Support window functions a la SQL:2008.
Hitoshi Harada, with some kibitzing from Heikki and Tom.
2008-12-28 18:54:01 +00:00
Tom Lane 6d79871883 Add missing semicolon, per buildfarm results. Martin Pihlak 2008-12-20 16:02:55 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut cae565e503 SQL/MED catalog manipulation facilities
This doesn't do any remote or external things yet, but it gives modules
like plproxy and dblink a standardized and future-proof system for
managing their connection information.

Martin Pihlak and Peter Eisentraut
2008-12-19 16:25:19 +00:00
Tom Lane 517ae4039e Code review for function default parameters patch. Fix numerous problems as
per recent discussions.  In passing this also fixes a couple of bugs in
the previous variadic-parameters patch.
2008-12-18 18:20:35 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas dcf8409985 Don't reset pg_class.reltuples and relpages in VACUUM, if any pages were
skipped. We could update relpages anyway, but it seems better to only
update it together with reltuples, because we use the reltuples/relpages
ratio in the planner. Also don't update n_live_tuples in pgstat.

ANALYZE in VACUUM ANALYZE now needs to update pg_class, if the
VACUUM-phase didn't do so. Added some boolean-passing to let analyze_rel
know if it should update pg_class or not.

I also moved the relcache invalidation (to update rd_targblock) from
vac_update_relstats to where RelationTruncate is called, because
vac_update_relstats is not called for partial vacuums anymore. It's more
obvious to send the invalidation close to the truncation that requires it.

Per report by Ned T. Crigler.
2008-12-17 09:15:03 +00:00
Tom Lane a9d5f30be3 Restore enforce_generic_type_consistency's pre-8.3 behavior of allowing an
actual argument type of ANYARRAY to match an argument declared ANYARRAY,
so long as ANYELEMENT etc aren't used.  I had overlooked the fact that this
is a possible case while fixing bug #3852; but it is possible because
pg_statistic contains columns declared ANYARRAY.  Per gripe from Corey Horton.
2008-12-14 19:45:52 +00:00
Tom Lane c98a923786 Fix failure to ensure that a snapshot is available to datatype input functions
when they are invoked by the parser.  We had been setting up a snapshot at
plan time but really it needs to be done earlier, before parse analysis.
Per report from Dmitry Koterov.

Also fix two related problems discovered while poking at this one:
exec_bind_message called datatype input functions without establishing a
snapshot, and SET CONSTRAINTS IMMEDIATE could call trigger functions without
establishing a snapshot.

Backpatch to 8.2.  The underlying problem goes much further back, but it is
masked in 8.1 and before because we didn't attempt to invoke domain check
constraints within datatype input.  It would only be exposed if a C-language
datatype input function used the snapshot; which evidently none do, or we'd
have heard complaints sooner.  Since this code has changed a lot over time,
a back-patch is hardly risk-free, and so I'm disinclined to patch further
than absolutely necessary.
2008-12-13 02:00:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian ff1ea2173a Allow CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW to add columns to the _end_ of the view.
Robert Haas
2008-12-06 23:22:46 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 455dffbb73 Default values for function arguments
Pavel Stehule, with some tweaks by Peter Eisentraut
2008-12-04 17:51:28 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7537f52a00 Utilize the visibility map in autovacuum, too. There was an oversight in
the visibility map patch that because autovacuum always sets
VacuumStmt->freeze_min_age, visibility map was never used for autovacuum,
only for manually launched vacuums. This patch introduces a new scan_all
field to VacuumStmt, indicating explicitly whether the visibility map
should be used, or the whole relation should be scanned, to advance
relfrozenxid. Anti-wraparound vacuums still need to scan all pages.
2008-12-04 11:42:24 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut a53536d031 Add %expect 0 to all parser input files to prevent conflicts slipping by. 2008-11-26 08:45:12 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut a378555501 CLUSTER VERBOSE and corresponding clusterdb --verbose option
Jim Cox and Peter Eisentraut
2008-11-24 08:46:04 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 5758d5ea31 Use relation_expr for TABLE command, requested by Tom. 2008-11-21 11:47:55 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut b09a1a2942 TABLE command 2008-11-20 14:04:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 0656ed3daa Make SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE work on inheritance trees, by having the plan
return the tableoid as well as the ctid for any FOR UPDATE targets that
have child tables.  All child tables are listed in the ExecRowMark list,
but the executor just skips the ones that didn't produce the current row.

Curiously, this longstanding restriction doesn't seem to have been documented
anywhere; so no doc changes.
2008-11-15 19:43:47 +00:00
Michael Meskes cd583703ea Removed two non-terminals:
- FloatOnly: only used by NumericOnly, instead put the FloatOnly production into NumericOnly
- IntegerOnly: only used by NumericOnly and one ALTER TABLE rule, replacement SignedIconst is already used in several other places
2008-11-13 11:10:06 +00:00
Michael Meskes 9e6976057c Do not use ICONST/SCONST in rules other than Iconst/Sconst. 2008-11-12 15:50:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 6517f377d6 Implement ALTER DATABASE SET TABLESPACE to move a whole database (or at least
as much of it as lives in its default tablespace) to a new tablespace.

Guillaume Lelarge, with some help from Bernd Helmle and Tom Lane
2008-11-07 18:25:07 +00:00
Michael Meskes cd97f98844 Added missing ';' 2008-10-31 16:36:13 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 092bc49653 Add support for user-defined I/O conversion casts. 2008-10-31 08:39:22 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut f7ad874ca8 Since SQL:2003, the array size specification in the SQL ARRAY syntax has
been optional.
2008-10-29 11:24:53 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 06735e3256 Unicode escapes in strings and identifiers 2008-10-29 08:04:54 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 8ecd535169 Add WITH [NO] DATA clause to CREATE TABLE AS, per SQL.
Also, since WITH is now a reserved word, simplify the token merging code to
only deal with WITH_TIME.

by Tom Lane and myself
2008-10-28 14:09:45 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 0fec77ae88 SQL:2008 syntax CURRENT_CATALOG, CURRENT_SCHEMA, SET CATALOG, SET SCHEMA. 2008-10-27 09:37:47 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 5163b94e6f Allow EXPLAIN on CREATE TABLE AS. 2008-10-27 08:47:14 +00:00
Tom Lane 0aed62fea9 Better solution to the IN-list issue: instead of having an arbitrary cutoff,
treat Var and non-Var IN-list items differently.  Only non-Var items are
candidates to go into an ANY(ARRAY) construct --- we put all Vars as separate
OR conditions on the grounds that that leaves more scope for optimization.
Per suggestion from Robert Haas.
2008-10-26 02:46:25 +00:00
Tom Lane ddbe8dca08 Add a heuristic to transformAExprIn() to make it prefer expanding "x IN (list)"
into an OR of equality comparisons, rather than x = ANY(ARRAY[...]), when there
are Vars in the right-hand side.  This avoids a performance regression compared
to pre-8.2 releases, in cases where the OR form can be optimized into scans
of multiple indexes.  Limit the possible downside by preferring this form only
when the list isn't very long (I set the cutoff at 32 elements, which is a
bit arbitrary but in the right ballpark).  Per discussion with Jim Nasby.

In passing, also make it try the OR form if it cannot select a common type
for the array elements; we've seen a complaint or two about how the OR form
worked for such cases and ARRAY doesn't.
2008-10-25 17:19:09 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 361bfc3572 SQL:2008 alternative syntax for LIMIT/OFFSET:
OFFSET num {ROW|ROWS} FETCH {FIRST|NEXT} [num] {ROW|ROWS} ONLY
2008-10-22 11:00:34 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 1471e3843d Allow SQL:2008 syntax ALTER TABLE ... ALTER COLUMN ... SET DATA TYPE
alongside our traditional syntax.
2008-10-21 08:38:16 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut a6ebb1f2f4 SQL 200N -> SQL:2003 2008-10-20 14:26:28 +00:00
Tom Lane e3b0117459 Implement comparison of generic records (composite types), and invent a
pseudo-type record[] to represent arrays of possibly-anonymous composite
types.  Since composite datums carry their own type identification, no
extra knowledge is needed at the array level.

The main reason for doing this right now is that it is necessary to support
the general case of detection of cycles in recursive queries: if you need to
compare more than one column to detect a cycle, you need to compare a ROW()
to an array built from ROW()s, at least if you want to do it as the spec
suggests.  Add some documentation and regression tests concerning the cycle
detection issue.
2008-10-13 16:25:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 3437286356 Modify the parser's error reporting to include a specific hint for the case
of referencing a WITH item that's not yet in scope according to the SQL
spec's semantics.  This seems to be an easy error to make, and the bare
"relation doesn't exist" message doesn't lead one's mind in the correct
direction to fix it.
2008-10-08 01:14:44 +00:00
Tom Lane 0d115dde82 Extend CTE patch to support recursive UNION (ie, without ALL). The
implementation uses an in-memory hash table, so it will poop out for very
large recursive results ... but the performance characteristics of a
sort-based implementation would be pretty unpleasant too.
2008-10-07 19:27:04 +00:00
Tom Lane 078aaf796e Improve parser error location for cases where an INSERT or UPDATE command
supplies an expression that can't be coerced to the target column type.
The code previously attempted to point at the target column name, which
doesn't work at all in an INSERT with omitted column name list, and is
also not remarkably helpful when the problem is buried somewhere in a
long INSERT-multi-VALUES command.  Make it point at the failed expression
instead.
2008-10-07 01:47:55 +00:00
Tom Lane bf461538e1 When expanding a whole-row Var into a RowExpr during ResolveNew(), attach
the column alias names of the RTE referenced by the Var to the RowExpr.
This is needed to allow ruleutils.c to correctly deparse FieldSelect nodes
referencing such a construct.  Per my recent bug report.

Adding a field to RowExpr forces initdb (because of stored rules changes)
so this solution is not back-patchable; which is unfortunate because 8.2
and 8.3 have this issue.  But it only affects EXPLAIN for some pretty odd
corner cases, so we can probably live without a solution for the back
branches.
2008-10-06 17:39:26 +00:00
Tom Lane e64bb65aff Fix GetCTEForRTE() to deal with the possibility that the RTE it's given came
from a query level above the current ParseState.
2008-10-06 15:15:22 +00:00
Tom Lane 0ff384f0bc Fix the implicit-RTE code to be able to handle implicit RTEs for CTEs, as
well as regular tables.  Per discussion, this seems necessary to meet the
principle of least astonishment.

In passing, simplify the error messages in warnAutoRange().  Now that we
have parser error position info for these errors, it doesn't seem very
useful to word the error message differently depending on whether we are
inside a sub-select or not.
2008-10-06 02:12:56 +00:00
Tom Lane 1e4b03847c Improve behavior of WITH RECURSIVE with an untyped literal in the
non-recursive term.  Per an example from Dickson S. Guedes.
2008-10-05 22:50:55 +00:00
Tom Lane 0814250474 Fix markTargetListOrigin() to not fail on a simple-Var reference to a
recursive CTE that we're still in progress of analyzing.  Add a similar guard
to the similar code in expandRecordVariable(), and tweak regression tests to
cover this case.  Per report from Dickson S. Guedes.
2008-10-05 22:20:17 +00:00
Tom Lane 44d5be0e53 Implement SQL-standard WITH clauses, including WITH RECURSIVE.
There are some unimplemented aspects: recursive queries must use UNION ALL
(should allow UNION too), and we don't have SEARCH or CYCLE clauses.
These might or might not get done for 8.4, but even without them it's a
pretty useful feature.

There are also a couple of small loose ends and definitional quibbles,
which I'll send a memo about to pgsql-hackers shortly.  But let's land
the patch now so we can get on with other development.

Yoshiyuki Asaba, with lots of help from Tatsuo Ishii and Tom Lane
2008-10-04 21:56:55 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 61d9674988 Make LC_COLLATE and LC_CTYPE database-level settings. Collation and
ctype are now more like encoding, stored in new datcollate and datctype
columns in pg_database.

This is a stripped-down version of Radek Strnad's patch, with further
changes by me.
2008-09-23 09:20:39 +00:00
Tom Lane 70530c808b Adjust the parser to accept the typename syntax INTERVAL ... SECOND(n)
and the literal syntax INTERVAL 'string' ... SECOND(n), as required by the
SQL standard.  Our old syntax put (n) directly after INTERVAL, which was
a mistake, but will still be accepted for backward compatibility as well
as symmetry with the TIMESTAMP cases.

Change intervaltypmodout to show it in the spec's way, too.  (This could
potentially affect clients, if there are any that analyze the typmod of an
INTERVAL in any detail.)

Also fix interval input to handle 'min:sec.frac' properly; I had overlooked
this case in my previous patch.

Document the use of the interval fields qualifier, which up to now we had
never mentioned in the docs.  (I think the omission was intentional because
it didn't work per spec; but it does now, or at least close enough to be
credible.)
2008-09-11 15:27:30 +00:00
Tom Lane f867339c01 Make our parsing of INTERVAL literals spec-compliant (or at least a heck of
a lot closer than it was before).  To do this, tweak coerce_type() to pass
through the typmod information when invoking interval_in() on an UNKNOWN
constant; then fix DecodeInterval to pay attention to the typmod when deciding
how to interpret a units-less integer value.  I changed one or two other
details as well.  I believe the code now reacts as expected by spec for all
the literal syntaxes that are specifically enumerated in the spec.  There
are corner cases involving strings that don't exactly match the set of fields
called out by the typmod, for which we might want to tweak the behavior some
more; but I think this is an area of user friendliness rather than spec
compliance.  There remain some non-compliant details about the SQL syntax
(as opposed to what's inside the literal string); but at least we'll throw
error rather than silently doing the wrong thing in those cases.
2008-09-10 18:29:41 +00:00
Tom Lane ee33b95d9c Improve the plan cache invalidation mechanism to make it invalidate plans
when user-defined functions used in a plan are modified.  Also invalidate
plans when schemas, operators, or operator classes are modified; but for these
cases we just invalidate everything rather than tracking exact dependencies,
since these types of objects seldom change in a production database.

Tom Lane; loosely based on a patch by Martin Pihlak.
2008-09-09 18:58:09 +00:00
Tom Lane fbb2b69c8f Prevent memory leaks in our various bison parsers when an error occurs
during parsing.  Formerly the parser's stack was allocated with malloc
and so wouldn't be reclaimed; this patch makes it use palloc instead,
so that flushing the current context will reclaim the memory.  Per
Marko Kreen.
2008-09-02 20:37:55 +00:00
Tom Lane b153c09209 Add a bunch of new error location reports to parse-analysis error messages.
There are still some weak spots around JOIN USING and relation alias lists,
but most errors reported within backend/parser/ now have locations.
2008-09-01 20:42:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 449a00fbbd Fix the raw-parsetree representation of star (as in SELECT * FROM or
SELECT foo.*) so that it cannot be confused with a quoted identifier "*".
Instead create a separate node type A_Star to represent this notation.
Per pgsql-hackers discussion of 2007-Sep-27.
2008-08-30 01:39:14 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 7c31742a07 Remove all traces that suggest that a non-Bison yacc might be supported, and
change build system to use only Bison.  Simplify build rules, make file names
uniform.  Don't build the token table header file where it is not needed.
2008-08-29 13:02:33 +00:00
Tom Lane a2794623d2 Extend the parser location infrastructure to include a location field in
most node types used in expression trees (both before and after parse
analysis).  This allows us to place an error cursor in many situations
where we formerly could not, because the information wasn't available
beyond the very first level of parse analysis.  There's a fair amount
of work still to be done to persuade individual ereport() calls to actually
include an error location, but this gets the initdb-forcing part of the
work out of the way; and the situation is already markedly better than
before for complaints about unimplementable implicit casts, such as
CASE and UNION constructs with incompatible alternative data types.
Per my proposal of a few days ago.
2008-08-28 23:09:48 +00:00
Tom Lane e5536e77a5 Move exprType(), exprTypmod(), expression_tree_walker(), and related routines
into nodes/nodeFuncs, so as to reduce wanton cross-subsystem #includes inside
the backend.  There's probably more that should be done along this line,
but this is a start anyway.
2008-08-25 22:42:34 +00:00
Tom Lane bd3daddaf2 Arrange to convert EXISTS subqueries that are equivalent to hashable IN
subqueries into the same thing you'd have gotten from IN (except always with
unknownEqFalse = true, so as to get the proper semantics for an EXISTS).
I believe this fixes the last case within CVS HEAD in which an EXISTS could
give worse performance than an equivalent IN subquery.

The tricky part of this is that if the upper query probes the EXISTS for only
a few rows, the hashing implementation can actually be worse than the default,
and therefore we need to make a cost-based decision about which way to use.
But at the time when the planner generates plans for subqueries, it doesn't
really know how many times the subquery will be executed.  The least invasive
solution seems to be to generate both plans and postpone the choice until
execution.  Therefore, in a query that has been optimized this way, EXPLAIN
will show two subplans for the EXISTS, of which only one will actually get
executed.

There is a lot more that could be done based on this infrastructure: in
particular it's interesting to consider switching to the hash plan if we start
out using the non-hashed plan but find a lot more upper rows going by than we
expected.  I have therefore left some minor inefficiencies in place, such as
initializing both subplans even though we will currently only use one.
2008-08-22 00:16:04 +00:00
Tom Lane 2d1d96b1ce Teach the system how to use hashing for UNION. (INTERSECT/EXCEPT will follow,
but seem like a separate patch since most of the remaining work is on the
executor side.)  I took the opportunity to push selection of the grouping
operators for set operations into the parser where it belongs.  Otherwise this
is just a small exercise in making prepunion.c consider both alternatives.

As with the recent DISTINCT patch, this means we can UNION on datatypes that
can hash but not sort, and it means that UNION without ORDER BY is no longer
certain to produce sorted output.
2008-08-07 01:11:52 +00:00
Tom Lane be3b265c94 Improve SELECT DISTINCT to consider hash aggregation, as well as sort/uniq,
as methods for implementing the DISTINCT step.  This eliminates the former
performance gap between DISTINCT and GROUP BY, and also makes it possible
to do SELECT DISTINCT on datatypes that only support hashing not sorting.

SELECT DISTINCT ON is still always implemented by sorting; it would take
executor changes to support hashing that, and it's not clear it's worth
the trouble.

This is a release-note-worthy incompatibility from previous PG versions,
since SELECT DISTINCT can no longer be counted on to deliver sorted output
without explicitly saying ORDER BY.  (Anyone who can't cope with that
can consider turning off enable_hashagg.)

Several regression test queries needed to have ORDER BY added to preserve
stable output order.  I fixed the ones that manifested here, but there
might be some other cases that show up on other platforms.
2008-08-05 02:43:18 +00:00
Tom Lane ec73b56a31 Make GROUP BY work properly for datatypes that only support hashing and not
sorting.  The infrastructure for this was all in place already; it's only
necessary to fix the planner to not assume that sorting is always an available
option.
2008-08-03 19:10:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 9511304752 Rearrange the querytree representation of ORDER BY/GROUP BY/DISTINCT items
as per my recent proposal:

1. Fold SortClause and GroupClause into a single node type SortGroupClause.
We were already relying on them to be struct-equivalent, so using two node
tags wasn't accomplishing much except to get in the way of comparing items
with equal().

2. Add an "eqop" field to SortGroupClause to carry the associated equality
operator.  This is cheap for the parser to get at the same time it's looking
up the sort operator, and storing it eliminates the need for repeated
not-so-cheap lookups during planning.  In future this will also let us
represent GROUP/DISTINCT operations on datatypes that have hash opclasses
but no btree opclasses (ie, they have equality but no natural sort order).
The previous representation simply didn't work for that, since its only
indicator of comparison semantics was a sort operator.

3. Add a hasDistinctOn boolean to struct Query to explicitly record whether
the distinctClause came from DISTINCT or DISTINCT ON.  This allows removing
some complicated and not 100% bulletproof code that attempted to figure
that out from the distinctClause alone.

This patch doesn't in itself create any new capability, but it's necessary
infrastructure for future attempts to use hash-based grouping for DISTINCT
and UNION/INTERSECT/EXCEPT.
2008-08-02 21:32:01 +00:00
Tom Lane 63247bec28 Fix parser so that we don't modify the user-written ORDER BY list in order
to represent DISTINCT or DISTINCT ON.  This gets rid of a longstanding
annoyance that a view or rule using SELECT DISTINCT will be dumped out
with an overspecified ORDER BY list, and is one small step along the way
to decoupling DISTINCT and ORDER BY enough so that hash-based implementation
of DISTINCT will be possible.  In passing, improve transformDistinctClause
so that it doesn't reject duplicate DISTINCT ON items, as was reported by
Steve Midgley a couple weeks ago.
2008-07-31 22:47:56 +00:00
Tom Lane c8572986ad Allow I/O conversion casts to be applied to or from any type that is a member
of the STRING type category, thereby opening up the mechanism for user-defined
types.  This is mainly for the benefit of citext, though; there aren't likely
to be a lot of types that are all general-purpose character strings.
Per discussion with David Wheeler.
2008-07-30 21:23:17 +00:00
Tom Lane bac3e83622 Replace the hard-wired type knowledge in TypeCategory() and IsPreferredType()
with system catalog lookups, as was foreseen to be necessary almost since
their creation.  Instead put the information into two new pg_type columns,
typcategory and typispreferred.  Add support for setting these when
creating a user-defined base type.

The category column is just a "char" (i.e. a poor man's enum), allowing
a crude form of user extensibility of the category list: just use an
otherwise-unused character.  This seems sufficient for foreseen uses,
but we could upgrade to having an actual category catalog someday, if
there proves to be a huge demand for custom type categories.

In this patch I have attempted to hew exactly to the behavior of the
previous hardwired logic, except for introducing new type categories for
arrays, composites, and enums.  In particular the default preferred state
for user-defined types remains TRUE.  That seems worth revisiting, but it
should be done as a separate patch from introducing the infrastructure.
Likewise, any adjustment of the standard set of categories should be done
separately.
2008-07-30 17:05:05 +00:00
Tom Lane a1c692358b Adjust things so that the query_string of a cached plan and the sourceText of
a portal are never NULL, but reliably provide the source text of the query.
It turns out that there was only one place that was really taking a short-cut,
which was the 'EXECUTE' utility statement.  That doesn't seem like a
sufficiently critical performance hotspot to justify not offering a guarantee
of validity of the portal source text.  Fix it to copy the source text over
from the cached plan.  Add Asserts in the places that set up cached plans and
portals to reject null source strings, and simplify a bunch of places that
formerly needed to guard against nulls.

There may be a few places that cons up statements for execution without
having any source text at all; I found one such in ConvertTriggerToFK().
It seems sufficient to inject a phony source string in such a case,
for instance
        ProcessUtility((Node *) atstmt,
                       "(generated ALTER TABLE ADD FOREIGN KEY command)",
                       NULL, false, None_Receiver, NULL);

We should take a second look at the usage of debug_query_string,
particularly the recently added current_query() SQL function.

ITAGAKI Takahiro and Tom Lane
2008-07-18 20:26:06 +00:00
Tom Lane 69a785b8bf Implement SQL-spec RETURNS TABLE syntax for functions.
(Unlike the original submission, this patch treats TABLE output parameters
as being entirely equivalent to OUT parameters -- tgl)

Pavel Stehule
2008-07-18 03:32:53 +00:00
Tom Lane d89737d31c Support "variadic" functions, which can accept a variable number of arguments
so long as all the trailing arguments are of the same (non-array) type.
The function receives them as a single array argument (which is why they
have to all be the same type).

It might be useful to extend this facility to aggregates, but this patch
doesn't do that.

This patch imposes a noticeable slowdown on function lookup --- a follow-on
patch will fix that by adding a redundant column to pg_proc.

Pavel Stehule
2008-07-16 01:30:23 +00:00
Tom Lane c63147d6f0 Add a function pg_get_keywords() to let clients find out the set of keywords
known to the SQL parser.  Dave Page
2008-07-03 20:58:47 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera a3540b0f65 Improve our #include situation by moving pointer types away from the
corresponding struct definitions.  This allows other headers to avoid including
certain highly-loaded headers such as rel.h and relscan.h, instead using just
relcache.h, heapam.h or genam.h, which are more lightweight and thus cause less
unnecessary dependencies.
2008-06-19 00:46:06 +00:00
Tom Lane a0b012a1ab Rearrange ALTER TABLE syntax processing as per my recent proposal: the
grammar allows ALTER TABLE/INDEX/SEQUENCE/VIEW interchangeably for all
subforms of those commands, and then we sort out what's really legal
at execution time.  This allows the ALTER SEQUENCE/VIEW reference pages
to fully document all the ALTER forms available for sequences and views
respectively, and eliminates a longstanding cause of confusion for users.

The net effect is that the following forms are allowed that weren't before:
	ALTER SEQUENCE OWNER TO
	ALTER VIEW ALTER COLUMN SET/DROP DEFAULT
	ALTER VIEW OWNER TO
	ALTER VIEW SET SCHEMA
(There's no actual functionality gain here, but formerly you had to say
ALTER TABLE instead.)

Interestingly, the grammar tables actually get smaller, probably because
there are fewer special cases to keep track of.

I did not disallow using ALTER TABLE for these operations.  Perhaps we
should, but there's a backwards-compatibility issue if we do; in fact
it would break existing pg_dump scripts.  I did however tighten up
ALTER SEQUENCE and ALTER VIEW to reject non-sequences and non-views
in the new cases as well as a couple of cases where they didn't before.

The patch doesn't change pg_dump to use the new syntaxes, either.
2008-06-15 01:25:54 +00:00
Michael Meskes d82e7c84fa Link in keywords file instead of copying it.
Use #define/#ifdef instead of sed to fix include files, this should work on Windows too.
2008-05-21 19:51:01 +00:00
Tom Lane 10a3471bed Add a RESTART (without parameter) option to ALTER SEQUENCE, allowing a
sequence to be reset to its original starting value.  This requires adding the
original start value to the set of parameters (columns) of a sequence object,
which is a user-visible change with potential compatibility implications;
it also forces initdb.

Also add hopefully-SQL-compatible RESTART/CONTINUE IDENTITY options to
TRUNCATE TABLE.  RESTART IDENTITY executes ALTER SEQUENCE RESTART for all
sequences "owned by" any of the truncated relations.  CONTINUE IDENTITY is
a no-op option.

Zoltan Boszormenyi
2008-05-16 23:36:05 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera f8c4d7db60 Restructure some header files a bit, in particular heapam.h, by removing some
unnecessary #include lines in it.  Also, move some tuple routine prototypes and
macros to htup.h, which allows removal of heapam.h inclusion from some .c
files.

For this to work, a new header file access/sysattr.h needed to be created,
initially containing attribute numbers of system columns, for pg_dump usage.

While at it, make contrib ltree, intarray and hstore header files more
consistent with our header style.
2008-05-12 00:00:54 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut d35c56ed9f Add "%option noinput" to the scanners to avoid compiler warnings. GCC 4.3
began to realize that the input() function isn't used and printed warnings.
2008-05-09 15:36:31 +00:00
Tom Lane c0cf5c37cd Some minor further cleanup around A_Const. Don't attach a typecast in
makeFloatConst, and avoid "manual" construction of A_Const nodes in grammar
productions, in favor of using makeXXXConst subroutines.
2008-04-29 20:44:49 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 6fff5c3b82 Remove typename from A_Const.
Brendan Jurd, minor editorialization by me.
2008-04-29 14:59:17 +00:00
Tom Lane 46e9709f48 Remove transformAlterTableStmt's kluge to replace ColumnDef.is_not_null
flags by separate AT_SetNotNull subcommands.  That was always ugly and
inefficient, and it's now clear that it was merely a partial workaround
for the bug just identified in ATExecAddColumn.  This is just code
beautification not a bug fix, so no back-patch.

Brendan Jurd, with some trivial additional cleanup by me.
2008-04-24 20:46:49 +00:00
Tom Lane 1ad76112e7 Issue explicit error messages for attempts to use "shell" operators in
ordinary expressions.  This probably doesn't catch every single case
where you might get "cache lookup failed for function 0" for use of a
shell operator, but it will catch most.  Per bug #4120 from Pedro Gimeno.

This patch incidentally folds make_op_expr() into its sole remaining
caller --- the alternative was to give it yet more arguments, which
didn't seem an improvement.
2008-04-22 01:34:34 +00:00
Tom Lane 8472bf7a73 Allow float8, int8, and related datatypes to be passed by value on machines
where Datum is 8 bytes wide.  Since this will break old-style C functions
(those still using version 0 calling convention) that have arguments or
results of these types, provide a configure option to disable it and retain
the old pass-by-reference behavior.  Likewise, provide a configure option
to disable the recently-committed float4 pass-by-value change.

Zoltan Boszormenyi, plus configurability stuff by me.
2008-04-21 00:26:47 +00:00
Tom Lane 9b5c8d45f6 Push index operator lossiness determination down to GIST/GIN opclass
"consistent" functions, and remove pg_amop.opreqcheck, as per recent
discussion.  The main immediate benefit of this is that we no longer need
8.3's ugly hack of requiring @@@ rather than @@ to test weight-using tsquery
searches on GIN indexes.  In future it should be possible to optimize some
other queries better than is done now, by detecting at runtime whether the
index match is exact or not.

Tom Lane, after an idea of Heikki's, and with some help from Teodor.
2008-04-14 17:05:34 +00:00
Tom Lane 65c3d05e18 Add some debug support code to try to catch future mistakes in the area of
input functions that include garbage bytes in their results.  Provide a
compile-time option RANDOMIZE_ALLOCATED_MEMORY to make palloc fill returned
blocks with variable contents.  This option also makes the parser perform
conversions of literal constants twice and compare the results, emitting a
WARNING if they don't match.  (This is the code I used to catch the input
function bugs fixed in the previous commit.)  For the moment, I've set it
to be activated automatically by --enable-cassert.
2008-04-11 22:54:23 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 91509e6a87 Small wording improvements for source code READMEs. 2008-04-09 01:00:46 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 4d048b7b8b Revert README cleanups. 2008-04-09 00:59:24 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 8cb3ad9f52 Revert sentence removal from nickname in FAQ. 2008-04-09 00:55:30 +00:00
Tom Lane ceb5db69d4 Defend against JOINs having more than 32K columns altogether. We cannot
currently support this because we must be able to build Vars referencing
join columns, and varattno is only 16 bits wide.  Perhaps this should be
improved in future, but considering that it never came up before, I'm not
sure the problem is worth much effort.  Per bug #4070 from Marcello
Ceschia.

The problem seems largely academic in 8.0 and 7.4, because they have
(different) O(N^2) performance issues with such wide joins, but
back-patch all the way anyway.
2008-04-05 01:58:20 +00:00
Magnus Hagander cfaf8b6b67 Oops, change should go in scan.l to survive a clean checkout and not just
a make clean...
2008-04-04 12:44:36 +00:00
Tom Lane 7692d8d5b7 Support statement-level ON TRUNCATE triggers. Simon Riggs 2008-03-28 00:21:56 +00:00
Tom Lane 039dfbfd5d Reduce the need for frontend programs to include "postgres.h" by refactoring
inclusions in src/include/catalog/*.h files.  The main idea here is to push
function declarations for src/backend/catalog/*.c files into separate headers,
rather than sticking them into the corresponding catalog definition file as
has been done in the past.  This commit only carries out that idea fully for
pg_proc, pg_type and pg_conversion, but that's enough for the moment ---
if pg_list.h ever becomes unsafe for frontend code to include, we'll need
to work a bit more.

Zdenek Kotala
2008-03-27 03:57:34 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 73b0300b2a Move the HTSU_Result enum definition into snapshot.h, to avoid including
tqual.h into heapam.h.  This makes all inclusion of tqual.h explicit.

I also sorted alphabetically the includes on some source files.
2008-03-26 21:10:39 +00:00
Tom Lane 220db7ccd8 Simplify and standardize conversions between TEXT datums and ordinary C
strings.  This patch introduces four support functions cstring_to_text,
cstring_to_text_with_len, text_to_cstring, and text_to_cstring_buffer, and
two macros CStringGetTextDatum and TextDatumGetCString.  A number of
existing macros that provided variants on these themes were removed.

Most of the places that need to make such conversions now require just one
function or macro call, in place of the multiple notational layers that used
to be needed.  There are no longer any direct calls of textout or textin,
and we got most of the places that were using handmade conversions via
memcpy (there may be a few still lurking, though).

This commit doesn't make any serious effort to eliminate transient memory
leaks caused by detoasting toasted text objects before they reach
text_to_cstring.  We changed PG_GETARG_TEXT_P to PG_GETARG_TEXT_PP in a few
places where it was easy, but much more could be done.

Brendan Jurd and Tom Lane
2008-03-25 22:42:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 58a8285542 Remove TypeName struct's timezone flag, which has been write-only storage
for a very long time --- in current usage it's entirely redundant with the
name field.
2008-03-21 22:41:48 +00:00
Tom Lane 20e82a7c0b Give an explicit error for serial[], rather than silently ignoring
the array decoration as the code had been doing.
2008-03-21 22:10:56 +00:00
Bruce Momjian fca9fff41b More README src cleanups. 2008-03-21 13:23:29 +00:00
Tom Lane 6b0706ac33 Arrange for an explicit cast applied to an ARRAY[] constructor to be applied
directly to all the member expressions, instead of the previous implementation
where the ARRAY[] constructor would infer a common element type and then we'd
coerce the finished array after the fact.  This has a number of benefits,
one being that we can allow an empty ARRAY[] construct so long as its
element type is specified by such a cast.

Brendan Jurd, minor fixes by me.
2008-03-20 21:42:48 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 4e228447aa Make source code READMEs more consistent. Add CVS tags to all README files. 2008-03-20 17:55:15 +00:00
Tom Lane 5507b22dfc Support ALTER TYPE RENAME. Petr Jelinek 2008-03-19 18:38:30 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 0474dcb608 Refactor backend makefiles to remove lots of duplicate code 2008-02-19 10:30:09 +00:00
Tom Lane e67867b26c Allow AS to be omitted when specifying an output column name in SELECT
(or RETURNING), but only when the output name is not any SQL keyword.
This seems as close as we can get to the standard's syntax without a
great deal of thrashing.  Original patch by Hiroshi Saito, amended by me.
2008-02-15 22:17:06 +00:00
Tom Lane cc80f0a340 Remove ancient restriction that LIMIT/OFFSET can't contain a sub-select.
This was probably protecting some implementation limitation when it was
put in, but as far as I can tell the planner and executor have no such
assumption anymore; the case seems to work fine.  Per a gripe from
Grzegorz Jaskiewicz.
2008-02-15 17:19:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 1ab19a36a5 Some variants of ALTER OWNER tried to make the "object" field of the
statement be a list of bare C strings, rather than String nodes, which is
what they need to be for copyfuncs/equalfuncs to work.  Fortunately these
node types never go out to disk (if they did, we'd likely have noticed the
problem sooner), so we can just fix it without creating a need for initdb.
This bug has been there since 8.0, but 8.3 exposes it in a more common
code path (Parse messages) than prior releases did.  Per bug #3940 from
Vladimir Kokovic.
2008-02-07 21:07:55 +00:00
Tom Lane b7fe5f70d3 Fix CREATE TABLE ... LIKE ... INCLUDING INDEXES to not cause unwanted
tablespace permissions failures when copying an index that is in the
database's default tablespace.  A side-effect of the change is that explicitly
specifying the default tablespace no longer triggers a permissions check;
this is not how it was done in pre-8.3 releases but is argued to be more
consistent.  Per bug #3921 from Andrew Gilligan.  (Note: I argued in the
subsequent discussion that maybe LIKE shouldn't copy index tablespaces
at all, but since no one indicated agreement with that idea, I've refrained
from doing it.)
2008-02-07 17:09:51 +00:00
Tom Lane 89c0a87fda The original implementation of polymorphic aggregates didn't really get the
checking of argument compatibility right; although the problem is only exposed
with multiple-input aggregates in which some arguments are polymorphic and
some are not.  Per bug #3852 from Sokolov Yura.
2008-01-11 18:39:41 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 9098ab9e32 Update copyrights in source tree to 2008. 2008-01-01 19:46:01 +00:00
Tom Lane 265f904d8f Code review for LIKE ... INCLUDING INDEXES patch. Fix failure to propagate
constraint status of copied indexes (bug #3774), as well as various other
small bugs such as failure to pstrdup when needed.  Allow INCLUDING INDEXES
indexes to be merged with identical declared indexes (perhaps not real useful,
but the code is there and having it not apply to LIKE indexes seems pretty
unorthogonal).  Avoid useless work in generateClonedIndexStmt().  Undo some
poorly chosen API changes, and put a couple of routines in modules that seem
to be better places for them.
2007-12-01 23:44:44 +00:00
Tom Lane d54ca56743 Install a lookaside cache to speed up repeated lookups of the same operator
by short-circuiting schema search path and ambiguous-operator resolution
computations.  Remarkably, this buys as much as 45% speedup of repetitive
simple queries that involve operators that are not an exact match to the
input datatypes.  It should be marginally faster even for exact-match
cases, though I've not had success in proving an improvement in benchmark
tests.  Per report from Guillame Smet and subsequent discussion.
2007-11-28 18:47:56 +00:00
Tom Lane 07daff63c5 Fix select_common_type() so that it can select a domain type, if all inputs
to a UNION, CASE, or related construct are of the same domain type.  The
main part of this routine smashes domains to their base types, which seems
necessary because the logic involves TypeCategory() and IsPreferredType(),
neither of which work usefully on domains.  However, we can add a first
pass that just detects whether all the inputs are exactly the same type,
and if so accept that without question (so long as it's not UNKNOWN).
Per recent gripe from Dean Rasheed.

In passing, remove some tests for InvalidOid, which have clearly been dead
code for quite some time now, because getBaseType() would fail on that input.

Also, clarify the manual's not-very-precise description of the existing
algorithm's behavior.
2007-11-26 16:46:51 +00:00
Tom Lane ef48ed4c86 Actually ... it's pretty silly that parse_oper.c doesn't set up the
opfuncid of an OpExpr initially, considering that it has the information
at hand already.  We'll still treat opfuncid as a cache rather than a
guaranteed-valid value, but this change saves one more syscache lookup
in the normal code path.
2007-11-22 19:40:25 +00:00
Bruce Momjian f6e8730d11 Re-run pgindent with updated list of typedefs. (Updated README should
avoid this problem in the future.)
2007-11-15 22:25:18 +00:00
Bruce Momjian fdf5a5efb7 pgindent run for 8.3. 2007-11-15 21:14:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 0bd4da23a4 Ensure that typmod decoration on a datatype name is validated in all cases,
even in code paths where we don't pay any subsequent attention to the typmod
value.  This seems needed in view of the fact that 8.3's generalized typmod
support will accept a lot of bogus syntax, such as "timestamp(foo)" or
"record(int, 42)" --- if we allow such things to pass without comment,
users will get confused.  Per a recent example from Greg Stark.

To implement this in a way that's not very vulnerable to future
bugs-of-omission, refactor the API of parse_type.c's TypeName lookup routines
so that typmod validation is folded into the base lookup operation.  Callers
can still choose not to receive the encoded typmod, but we'll check the
decoration anyway if it's present.
2007-11-11 19:22:49 +00:00
Tom Lane b17b7fae8c Remove the hack in the grammar that "optimized away" DEFAULT NULL clauses.
Instead put in a test to drop a NULL default at the last moment before
storing the catalog entry.  This changes the behavior in a couple of ways:
* Specifying DEFAULT NULL when creating an inheritance child table will
  successfully suppress inheritance of any default expression from the
  parent's column, where formerly it failed to do so.
* Specifying DEFAULT NULL for a column of a domain type will correctly
  override any default belonging to the domain; likewise for a sub-domain.
The latter change happens because by the time the clause is checked,
it won't be a simple null Const but a CoerceToDomain expression.

Personally I think this should be back-patched, but there doesn't seem to
be consensus for that on pgsql-hackers, so refraining.
2007-10-29 19:40:40 +00:00
Tom Lane fcc20bd4ba Tweak new error messages to match the actual syntax of DECLARE CURSOR.
(Last night I copied-and-pasted from the WITH HOLD case, but that's
wrong because of the bizarrely irregular syntax specified by the standard.)
2007-10-25 13:48:57 +00:00
Tom Lane 048efc25e4 Disallow scrolling of FOR UPDATE/FOR SHARE cursors, so as to avoid problems
in corner cases such as re-fetching a just-deleted row.  We may be able to
relax this someday, but let's find out how many people really care before
we invest a lot of work in it.  Per report from Heikki and subsequent
discussion.

While in the neighborhood, make the combination of INSENSITIVE and FOR UPDATE
throw an error, since they are semantically incompatible.  (Up to now we've
accepted but just ignored the INSENSITIVE option of DECLARE CURSOR.)
2007-10-24 23:27:08 +00:00
Tom Lane a62a359ba2 Fix Assert failure in ExpandColumnRefStar --- what I thought was a can't
happen condition can happen given incorrect input.  The real problem is that
gram.y should try harder to distinguish * from "*" --- the latter is a legal
column name per spec, and someday we ought to treat it that way.  However
fixing that is too invasive for a back-patch, and it's too late for the 8.3
cycle too.  So just reduce the Assert to a plain elog for now.  Per report
from NikhilS.
2007-09-27 17:42:03 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan 02138357ff Remove "convert 'blah' using conversion_name" facility, because if it
produces text it is an encoding hole and if not it's incompatible
with the spec, whatever the spec means (which we're not sure about anyway).
2007-09-24 01:29:30 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan eb0a7735ba Perform post-escaping encoding validity checks on SQL literals and COPY input
so that invalidly encoded data cannot enter the database by these means.
2007-09-12 20:49:27 +00:00