Commit Graph

4117 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane 131ea3e908 Fix plancache refcount leak after error in ExecuteQuery.
When stuffing a plan from the plancache into a Portal, one is
not supposed to risk throwing an error between GetCachedPlan and
PortalDefineQuery; if that happens, the plan refcount incremented
by GetCachedPlan will be leaked.  I managed to break this rule
while refactoring code in 9dbf2b7d7.  There is no visible
consequence other than some memory leakage, and since nobody is
very likely to trigger the relevant error conditions many times
in a row, it's not surprising we haven't noticed.  Nonetheless,
it's a bug, so rearrange the order of operations to remove the
hazard.

Noted on the way to looking for a better fix for bug #17053.
This mistake is pretty old, so back-patch to all supported
branches.
2021-06-16 19:30:17 -04:00
Tom Lane 6b787d9e32 Improve SQLSTATE reporting in some replication-related code.
I started out with the goal of reporting ERRCODE_CONNECTION_FAILURE
when walrcv_connect() fails, but as I looked around I realized that
whoever wrote this code was of the opinion that errcodes are purely
optional.  That's not my understanding of our project policy.  Hence,
make sure that an errcode is provided in each ereport that (a) is
ERROR or higher level and (b) isn't arguably an internal logic error.
Also fix some very dubious existing errcode assignments.

While this is not per policy, it's also largely cosmetic, since few
of these cases could get reported to applications.  So I don't
feel a need to back-patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2189704.1623512522@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-06-16 11:52:05 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov 817bb0a7d1 Revert 29854ee8d1 due to buildfarm failures
Reported-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPpHfdvcnw3x7jdV3r52p4%3D5S4WUxBCzcQKB3JukQHoicv1LSQ%40mail.gmail.com
2021-06-15 21:44:40 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 29854ee8d1 Support for unnest(multirange) and cast multirange as an array of ranges
It has been spotted that multiranges lack of ability to decompose them into
individual ranges.  Subscription and proper expanded object representation
require substantial work, and it's too late for v14.  This commit
provides the implementation of unnest(multirange) and cast multirange as
an array of ranges, which is quite trivial.

unnest(multirange) is defined as a polymorphic procedure.  The catalog
description of the cast underlying procedure is duplicated for each multirange
type because we don't have anyrangearray polymorphic type to use here.

Catversion is bumped.

Reported-by: Jonathan S. Katz
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/60258efe-bd7e-4886-82e1-196e0cac5433%40postgresql.org
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby, Jonathan S. Katz, Zhihong Yu
2021-06-15 15:59:20 +03:00
Michael Paquier 2d689babe3 Improve handling of dropped objects in pg_event_trigger_ddl_commands()
An object found as dropped when digging into the list of objects
returned by pg_event_trigger_ddl_commands() could cause a cache lookup
error, as the calls grabbing for the object address and the type name
would fail if the object was missing.

Those lookup errors could be seen with combinations of ALTER TABLE
sub-commands involving identity columns.  The lookup logic is changed in
this code path to get a behavior similar to any other SQL-callable
function by ignoring objects that are not found, taking advantage of
2a10fdc.  The back-branches are not changed, as they require this commit
that is too invasive for stable branches.

While on it, add test cases to exercise event triggers with identity
columns, and stress more cases with the event ddl_command_end for
relations.

Author: Sven Klemm, Aleksander Alekseev, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMCrgp2R1cEXU53iYKtW6yVEp2_yKUz+z=3-CTrYpPP+xryRtg@mail.gmail.com
2021-06-14 14:57:22 +09:00
Tom Lane e56bce5d43 Reconsider the handling of procedure OUT parameters.
Commit 2453ea142 redefined pg_proc.proargtypes to include the types of
OUT parameters, for procedures only.  While that had some advantages
for implementing the SQL-spec behavior of DROP PROCEDURE, it was pretty
disastrous from a number of other perspectives.  Notably, since the
primary key of pg_proc is name + proargtypes, this made it possible to
have multiple procedures with identical names + input arguments and
differing output argument types.  That would make it impossible to call
any one of the procedures by writing just NULL (or "?", or any other
data-type-free notation) for the output argument(s).  The change also
seems likely to cause grave confusion for client applications that
examine pg_proc and expect the traditional definition of proargtypes.

Hence, revert the definition of proargtypes to what it was, and
undo a number of complications that had been added to support that.

To support the SQL-spec behavior of DROP PROCEDURE, when there are
no argmode markers in the command's parameter list, we perform the
lookup both ways (that is, matching against both proargtypes and
proallargtypes), succeeding if we get just one unique match.
In principle this could result in ambiguous-function failures
that would not happen when using only one of the two rules.
However, overloading of procedure names is thought to be a pretty
rare usage, so this shouldn't cause many problems in practice.
Postgres-specific code such as pg_dump can defend against any
possibility of such failures by being careful to specify argmodes
for all procedure arguments.

This also fixes a few other bugs in the area of CALL statements
with named parameters, and improves the documentation a little.

catversion bump forced because the representation of procedures
with OUT arguments changes.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3742981.1621533210@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-06-10 17:11:36 -04:00
Tom Lane ba2c6d6cec Avoid misbehavior when persisting a non-stable cursor.
PersistHoldablePortal has long assumed that it should store the
entire output of the query-to-be-persisted, which requires rewinding
and re-reading the output.  This is problematic if the query is not
stable: we might get different row contents, or even a different
number of rows, which'd confuse the cursor state mightily.

In the case where the cursor is NO SCROLL, this is very easy to
solve: just store the remaining query output, without any rewinding,
and tweak the portal's cursor state to match.  Aside from removing
the semantic problem, this could be significantly more efficient
than storing the whole output.

If the cursor is scrollable, there's not much we can do, but it
was already the case that scrolling a volatile query's result was
pretty unsafe.  We can just document more clearly that getting
correct results from that is not guaranteed.

There are already prohibitions in place on using SCROLL with
FOR UPDATE/SHARE, which is one way for a SELECT query to have
non-stable results.  We could imagine prohibiting SCROLL when
the query contains volatile functions, but that would be
expensive to enforce.  Moreover, it could break applications
that work just fine, if they have functions that are in fact
stable but the user neglected to mark them so.  So settle for
documenting the hazard.

While this problem has existed in some guise for a long time,
it got a lot worse in v11, which introduced the possibility
of persisting plpgsql cursors (perhaps implicit ones) even
when they violate the rules for what can be marked WITH HOLD.
Hence, I've chosen to back-patch to v11 but not further.

Per bug #17050 from Алексей Булгаков.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17050-f77aa827dc85247c@postgresql.org
2021-06-08 17:50:29 -04:00
Michael Paquier 187682c321 Reduce risks of conflicts in internal queries of REFRESH MATVIEW CONCURRENTLY
The internal SQL queries used by REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW CONCURRENTLY
include some aliases for its diff and temporary relations with
rather-generic names: diff, newdata, newdata2 and mv.  Depending on the
queries used for the materialized view, using CONCURRENTLY could lead to
some internal failures if the matview query and those internal aliases
conflict.

Those names have been chosen in 841c29c8.  This commit switches instead
to a naming pattern which is less likely going to cause conflicts, based
on an idea from Thomas Munro, by appending _$ to those aliases.  This is
not perfect as those new names could still conflict, but at least it has
the advantage to keep the code readable and simple while reducing the
likelihood of conflicts to be close to zero.

Reported-by: Mathis Rudolf
Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Bernd Helmle, Thomas Munro, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/109c267a-10d2-3c53-b60e-720fcf44d9e8@credativ.de
Backpatch-through: 9.6
2021-06-03 15:28:24 +09:00
Tom Lane e6241d8e03 Rethink definition of pg_attribute.attcompression.
Redefine '\0' (InvalidCompressionMethod) as meaning "if we need to
compress, use the current setting of default_toast_compression".
This allows '\0' to be a suitable default choice regardless of
datatype, greatly simplifying code paths that initialize tupledescs
and the like.  It seems like a more user-friendly approach as well,
because now the default compression choice doesn't migrate into table
definitions, meaning that changing default_toast_compression is
usually sufficient to flip an installation's behavior; one needn't
tediously issue per-column ALTER SET COMPRESSION commands.

Along the way, fix a few minor bugs and documentation issues
with the per-column-compression feature.  Adopt more robust
APIs for SetIndexStorageProperties and GetAttributeCompression.

Bump catversion because typical contents of attcompression will now
be different.  We could get away without doing that, but it seems
better to ensure v14 installations all agree on this.  (We already
forced initdb for beta2, anyway.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/626613.1621787110@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-05-27 13:24:27 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 388e75ad33 Replace run-time error check with assertion
The error message was checking that the structures returned from the
parser matched expectations.  That's something we usually use
assertions for, not a full user-facing error message.  So replace that
with an assertion (hidden inside lfirst_node()).

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/452e9df8-ec89-e01b-b64a-8cc6ce830458%40enterprisedb.com
2021-05-27 09:54:14 +02:00
Amit Kapila 0734b0e983 Improve docs and error messages for parallel vacuum.
The error messages, docs, and one of the options were using
'parallel degree' to indicate parallelism used by vacuum command. We
normally use 'parallel workers' at other places so change it for parallel
vacuum accordingly.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Dilip Kumar, Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 13
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACWz=PYrrFXVsEKb9J1aiX4raA+UBe02hdRp_zqDkrWUiw@mail.gmail.com
2021-05-25 09:26:53 +05:30
Tom Lane f5024d8d7b Re-order pg_attribute columns to eliminate some padding space.
Now that attcompression is just a char, there's a lot of wasted
padding space after it.  Move it into the group of char-wide
columns to save a net of 4 bytes per pg_attribute entry.  While
we're at it, swap the order of attstorage and attalign to make for
a more logical grouping of these columns.

Also re-order actions in related code to match the new field ordering.

This patch also fixes one outright bug: equalTupleDescs() failed to
compare attcompression.  That could, for example, cause relcache
reload to fail to adopt a new value following a change.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane, per a gripe from Andres Freund.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210517204803.iyk5wwvwgtjcmc5w@alap3.anarazel.de
2021-05-23 12:12:09 -04:00
Tom Lane b39630fd41 Fix access to no-longer-open relcache entry in logical-rep worker.
If we redirected a replicated tuple operation into a partition child
table, and then tried to fire AFTER triggers for that event, the
relation cache entry for the child table was already closed.  This has
no visible ill effects as long as the entry is still there and still
valid, but an unluckily-timed cache flush could result in a crash or
other misbehavior.

To fix, postpone the ExecCleanupTupleRouting call (which is what
closes the child table) until after we've fired triggers.  This
requires a bit of refactoring so that the cleanup function can
have access to the necessary state.

In HEAD, I took the opportunity to simplify some of worker.c's
function APIs based on use of the new ApplyExecutionData struct.
However, it doesn't seem safe/practical to back-patch that aspect,
at least not without a lot of analysis of possible interactions
with a04daa97a.

In passing, add an Assert to afterTriggerInvokeEvents to catch
such cases.  This seems worthwhile because we've grown a number
of fairly unstructured ways of calling AfterTriggerEndQuery.

Back-patch to v13, where worker.c grew the ability to deal with
partitioned target tables.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3382681.1621381328@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-05-22 21:25:29 -04:00
Tom Lane 2b0ee126bb Fix usage of "tableoid" in GENERATED expressions.
We consider this supported (though I've got my doubts that it's a
good idea, because tableoid is not immutable).  However, several
code paths failed to fill the field in soon enough, causing such
a GENERATED expression to see zero or the wrong value.  This
occurred when ALTER TABLE adds a new GENERATED column to a table
with existing rows, and during regular INSERT or UPDATE on a
foreign table with GENERATED columns.

Noted during investigation of a report from Vitaly Ustinov.
Back-patch to v12 where GENERATED came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAM_DEiWR2DPT6U4xb-Ehigozzd3n3G37ZB1+867zbsEVtYoJww@mail.gmail.com
2021-05-21 15:02:06 -04:00
Tom Lane 84f5c2908d Restore the portal-level snapshot after procedure COMMIT/ROLLBACK.
COMMIT/ROLLBACK necessarily destroys all snapshots within the session.
The original implementation of intra-procedure transactions just
cavalierly did that, ignoring the fact that this left us executing in
a rather different environment than normal.  In particular, it turns
out that handling of toasted datums depends rather critically on there
being an outer ActiveSnapshot: otherwise, when SPI or the core
executor pop whatever snapshot they used and return, it's unsafe to
dereference any toasted datums that may appear in the query result.
It's possible to demonstrate "no known snapshots" and "missing chunk
number N for toast value" errors as a result of this oversight.

Historically this outer snapshot has been held by the Portal code,
and that seems like a good plan to preserve.  So add infrastructure
to pquery.c to allow re-establishing the Portal-owned snapshot if it's
not there anymore, and add enough bookkeeping support that we can tell
whether it is or not.

We can't, however, just re-establish the Portal snapshot as part of
COMMIT/ROLLBACK.  As in normal transaction start, acquiring the first
snapshot should wait until after SET and LOCK commands.  Hence, teach
spi.c about doing this at the right time.  (Note that this patch
doesn't fix the problem for any PLs that try to run intra-procedure
transactions without using SPI to execute SQL commands.)

This makes SPI's no_snapshots parameter rather a misnomer, so in HEAD,
rename that to allow_nonatomic.

replication/logical/worker.c also needs some fixes, because it wasn't
careful to hold a snapshot open around AFTER trigger execution.
That code doesn't use a Portal, which I suspect someday we're gonna
have to fix.  But for now, just rearrange the order of operations.
This includes back-patching the recent addition of finish_estate()
to centralize the cleanup logic there.

This also back-patches commit 2ecfeda3e into v13, to improve the
test coverage for worker.c (it was that test that exposed that
worker.c's snapshot management is wrong).

Per bug #15990 from Andreas Wicht.  Back-patch to v11 where
intra-procedure COMMIT was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15990-eee2ac466b11293d@postgresql.org
2021-05-21 14:03:59 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera cafde58b33
Allow compute_query_id to be set to 'auto' and make it default
Allowing only on/off meant that all either all existing configuration
guides would become obsolete if we disabled it by default, or that we
would have to accept a performance loss in the default config if we
enabled it by default.  By allowing 'auto' as a middle ground, the
performance cost is only paid by those who enable pg_stat_statements and
similar modules.

I only edited the release notes to comment-out a paragraph that is now
factually wrong; further edits are probably needed to describe the
related change in more detail.

Author: Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210513002623.eugftm4nk2lvvks3@nol
2021-05-15 14:13:09 -04:00
Tom Lane def5b065ff Initial pgindent and pgperltidy run for v14.
Also "make reformat-dat-files".

The only change worthy of note is that pgindent messed up the formatting
of launcher.c's struct LogicalRepWorkerId, which led me to notice that
that struct wasn't used at all anymore, so I just took it out.
2021-05-12 13:14:10 -04:00
Fujii Masao d780d7c088 Change data type of counters in BufferUsage and WalUsage from long to int64.
Previously long was used as the data type for some counters in BufferUsage
and WalUsage. But long is only four byte, e.g., on Windows, and it's entirely
possible to wrap a four byte counter. For example, emitting more than
four billion WAL records in one transaction isn't actually particularly rare.

To avoid the overflows of those counters, this commit changes the data type
of them from long to int64.

Suggested-by: Andres Freund
Author: Masahiro Ikeda
Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20201221211650.k7b53tcnadrciqjo@alap3.anarazel.de
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/af0964ac-7080-1984-dc23-513754987716@oss.nttdata.com
2021-05-12 09:56:34 +09:00
Michael Paquier 829daab4bb Fix typos in operatorcmds.c
Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210428.173633.1525059946206239295.horikyota.ntt@gmail.com
2021-05-10 15:45:54 +09:00
Michael Paquier 9681f2160d Fix incorrect error code for CREATE/ALTER TABLE COMPRESSION
Specifying an incorrect value for the compression method of an attribute
caused ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED to be raised as error.  Use instead
ERRCODE_INVALID_PARAMETER_VALUE to be more consistent.

Author: Dilip Kumar
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFiTN-vH84fE-8C4zGZw4v0Wyh4Y2v=5JWg2fGE5+LPaDvz1GQ@mail.gmail.com
2021-05-08 10:18:05 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 4e8c0f1a0d
AlterSubscription_refresh: avoid stomping on global variable
This patch replaces use of the global "wrconn" variable in
AlterSubscription_refresh with a local variable of the same name, making
it consistent with other functions in subscriptioncmds.c (e.g.
DropSubscription).

The global wrconn is only meant to be used for logical apply/tablesync worker.
Abusing it this way is known to cause trouble if an apply worker
manages to do a subscription refresh, such as reported by Jeremy Finzel
and diagnosed by Andres Freund back in November 2020, at
https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20201111215820.qihhrz7fayu6myfi@alap3.anarazel.de

Backpatch to 10.  In branch master, also move the connection establishment
to occur outside the PG_TRY block; this way we can remove a test for NULL in
PG_FINALLY, and it also makes the code more consistent with similar code in
the same file.

Author: Peter Smith <peter.b.smith@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy <bharath.rupireddyforpostgres@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Japin Li <japinli@hotmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHut+Pu7Jv9L2BOEx_Z0UtJxfDevQSAUW2mJqWU+CtmDrEZVAg@mail.gmail.com
2021-05-07 11:46:37 -04:00
Thomas Munro ec48314708 Revert per-index collation version tracking feature.
Design problems were discovered in the handling of composite types and
record types that would cause some relevant versions not to be recorded.
Misgivings were also expressed about the use of the pg_depend catalog
for this purpose.  We're out of time for this release so we'll revert
and try again.

Commits reverted:

1bf946bd: Doc: Document known problem with Windows collation versions.
cf002008: Remove no-longer-relevant test case.
ef387bed: Fix bogus collation-version-recording logic.
0fb0a050: Hide internal error for pg_collation_actual_version(<bad OID>).
ff942057: Suppress "warning: variable 'collcollate' set but not used".
d50e3b1f: Fix assertion in collation version lookup.
f24b1569: Rethink extraction of collation dependencies.
257836a7: Track collation versions for indexes.
cd6f479e: Add pg_depend.refobjversion.
7d1297df: Remove pg_collation.collversion.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGLhj5t1fcjqAu8iD9B3ixJtsTNqyCCD4V0aTO9kAKAjjA%40mail.gmail.com
2021-05-07 21:10:11 +12:00
Alvaro Herrera c250062df4
Remove unused argument of ATAddForeignConstraint
Commit 0325d7a595 made this unused but forgot to remove it. Do so now.

Author: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/209c99fe-b9a2-94f4-cd68-a8304186a09e@lab.ntt.co.jp
2021-05-05 12:27:39 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 6f70d7ca1d
Have ALTER CONSTRAINT recurse on partitioned tables
When ALTER TABLE .. ALTER CONSTRAINT changes deferrability properties
changed in a partitioned table, we failed to propagate those changes
correctly to partitions and to triggers.  Repair by adding a recursion
mechanism to affect all derived constraints and all derived triggers.
(In particular, recurse to partitions even if their respective parents
are already in the desired state: it is possible for the partitions to
have been altered individually.)  Because foreign keys involve tables in
two sides, we cannot use the standard ALTER TABLE recursion mechanism,
so we invent our own by following pg_constraint.conparentid down.

When ALTER TABLE .. ALTER CONSTRAINT is invoked on the derived
pg_constraint object that's automaticaly created in a partition as a
result of a constraint added to its parent, raise an error instead of
pretending to work and then failing to modify all the affected triggers.
Before this commit such a command would be allowed but failed to affect
all triggers, so it would silently misbehave.  (Restoring dumps of
existing databases is not affected, because pg_dump does not produce
anything for such a derived constraint anyway.)

Add some tests for the case.

Backpatch to 11, where foreign key support was added to partitioned
tables by commit 3de241dba8.  (A related change is commit f56f8f8da6
in pg12 which added support for FKs *referencing* partitioned tables;
this is what forces us to use an ad-hoc recursion mechanism for this.)

Diagnosed by Tom Lane from bug report from Ron L Johnson.  As of this
writing, no reviews were offered.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/75fe0761-a291-86a9-c8d8-4906da077469@gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3144850.1607369633@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-05-05 12:21:50 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera e798d095da
Fix OID passed to object-alter hook during ALTER CONSTRAINT
The OID of the constraint is used instead of the OID of the trigger --
an easy mistake to make.  Apparently the object-alter hooks are not very
well tested :-(

Backpatch to 12, where this typo was introduced by 578b229718

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210503231633.GA6994@alvherre.pgsql
2021-05-04 10:09:12 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a970edbed3 Fix ALTER TABLE / INHERIT with generated columns
When running ALTER TABLE t2 INHERIT t1, we must check that columns in
t2 that correspond to a generated column in t1 are also generated and
have the same generation expression.  Otherwise, this would allow
creating setups that a normal CREATE TABLE sequence would not allow.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/22de27f6-7096-8d96-4619-7b882932ca25@2ndquadrant.com
2021-05-04 12:09:08 +02:00
David Rowley 3c80e96dff Adjust EXPLAIN output for parallel Result Cache plans
Here we adjust the EXPLAIN ANALYZE output for Result Cache so that we
don't show any Result Cache stats for parallel workers who don't
contribute anything to Result Cache plan nodes.

I originally had ideas that workers who don't help could still have their
Result Cache stats displayed.  The idea with that was so that I could
write some parallel Result Cache regression tests that show the EXPLAIN
ANALYZE output.  However, I realized a little too late that such tests
would just not be possible to have run in a stable way on the buildfarm.

With that knowledge, before 9eacee2e6 went in, I had removed all of the
tests that were showing the EXPLAIN ANALYZE output of a parallel Result
Cache plan, however, I forgot to put back the code that adjusts the
EXPLAIN output to hide the Result Cache stats for parallel workers who
were not fast enough to help out before query execution was over. All
other nodes behave this way and so should Result Cache.

Additionally, with this change, it now seems safe enough to remove the SET
force_parallel_mode = off that I had added to the regression tests.

Also, perform some cleanup in the partition_prune tests. I had adjusted
the explain_parallel_append() function to sanitize the Result Cache
EXPLAIN ANALYZE output.  However, since I didn't actually include any
parallel Result Cache tests that show their EXPLAIN ANALYZE output, that
code does nothing and can be removed.

In passing, move the setting of memPeakKb into the scope where it's used.

Reported-by: Amit Khandekar
Author: David Rowley, Amit Khandekar
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9d8SkfY95GpM1zmsOtX2-Ogx5q-WLsf8f0ykEb0hCRK3w@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-30 14:46:42 +12:00
Tom Lane 9626325da5 Add heuristic incoming-message-size limits in the server.
We had a report of confusing server behavior caused by a client bug
that sent junk to the server: the server thought the junk was a
very long message length and waited patiently for data that would
never come.  We can reduce the risk of that by being less trusting
about message lengths.

For a long time, libpq has had a heuristic rule that it wouldn't
believe large message size words, except for a small number of
message types that are expected to be (potentially) long.  This
provides some defense against loss of message-boundary sync and
other corrupted-data cases.  The server does something similar,
except that up to now it only limited the lengths of messages
received during the connection authentication phase.  Let's
do the same as in libpq and put restrictions on the allowed
length of all messages, while distinguishing between message
types that are expected to be long and those that aren't.

I used a limit of 10000 bytes for non-long messages.  (libpq's
corresponding limit is 30000 bytes, but given the asymmetry of
the FE/BE protocol, there's no good reason why the numbers should
be the same.)  Experimentation suggests that this is at least a
factor of 10, maybe a factor of 100, more than we really need;
but plenty of daylight seems desirable to avoid false positives.
In any case we can adjust the limit based on beta-test results.

For long messages, set a limit of MaxAllocSize - 1, which is the
most that we can absorb into the StringInfo buffer that the message
is collected in.  This just serves to make sure that a bogus message
size is reported as such, rather than as a confusing gripe about
not being able to enlarge a string buffer.

While at it, make sure that non-mainline code paths (such as
COPY FROM STDIN) are as paranoid as SocketBackend is, and validate
the message type code before believing the message length.
This provides an additional guard against getting stuck on corrupted
input.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2003757.1619373089@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-28 15:50:46 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera d6b8d29419
Allow a partdesc-omitting-partitions to be cached
Makes partition descriptor acquisition faster during the transient
period in which a partition is in the process of being detached.

This also adds the restriction that only one partition can be in
pending-detach state for a partitioned table.

While at it, return find_inheritance_children() API to what it was
before 71f4c8c6f7, and create a separate
find_inheritance_children_extended() that returns detailed info about
detached partitions.

(This incidentally fixes a bug in 8aba932251 whereby a memory context
holding a transient partdesc is reparented to a NULL PortalContext,
leading to permanent leak of that memory.  The fix is to no longer rely
on reparenting contexts to PortalContext.   Reported by Amit Langote.)

Per gripe from Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqFgpP1LxJZOBYGt9rpvTjXXkg5qG2+Xch2Z1Q7KrqZR1A@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-28 15:44:35 -04:00
Fujii Masao 8e9ea08bae Don't pass "ONLY" options specified in TRUNCATE to foreign data wrapper.
Commit 8ff1c94649 allowed TRUNCATE command to truncate foreign tables.
Previously the information about "ONLY" options specified in TRUNCATE
command were passed to the foreign data wrapper. Then postgres_fdw
constructed the TRUNCATE command to issue the remote server and
included "ONLY" options in it based on the passed information.

On the other hand, "ONLY" options specified in SELECT, UPDATE or DELETE
have no effect when accessing or modifying the remote table, i.e.,
are not passed to the foreign data wrapper. So it's inconsistent to
make only TRUNCATE command pass the "ONLY" options to the foreign data
wrapper. Therefore this commit changes the TRUNCATE command so that
it doesn't pass the "ONLY" options to the foreign data wrapper,
for the consistency with other statements. Also this commit changes
postgres_fdw so that it always doesn't include "ONLY" options in
the TRUNCATE command that it constructs.

Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Justin Pryzby, Zhihong Yu
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/551ed8c1-f531-818b-664a-2cecdab99cd8@oss.nttdata.com
2021-04-27 14:41:27 +09:00
Alexander Korotkov 6bbcff096f Mark multirange_constructor0() and multirange_constructor2() strict
These functions shouldn't receive null arguments: multirange_constructor0()
doesn't have any arguments while multirange_constructor2() has a single array
argument, which is never null.

But mark them strict anyway for the sake of uniformity.

Also, make checks for null arguments use elog() instead of ereport() as these
errors should normally be never thrown.  And adjust corresponding comments.

Catversion is bumped.

Reported-by: Peter Eisentraut
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0f783a96-8d67-9e71-996b-f34a7352eeef%40enterprisedb.com
2021-04-23 13:25:45 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera 8aba932251
Fix relcache inconsistency hazard in partition detach
During queries coming from ri_triggers.c, we need to omit partitions
that are marked pending detach -- otherwise, the RI query is tricked
into allowing a row into the referencing table whose corresponding row
is in the detached partition.  Which is bogus: once the detach operation
completes, the row becomes an orphan.

However, the code was not doing that in repeatable-read transactions,
because relcache kept a copy of the partition descriptor that included
the partition, and used it in the RI query.  This commit changes the
partdesc cache code to only keep descriptors that aren't dependent on
a snapshot (namely: those where no detached partition exist, and those
where detached partitions are included).  When a partdesc-without-
detached-partitions is requested, we create one afresh each time; also,
those partdescs are stored in PortalContext instead of
CacheMemoryContext.

find_inheritance_children gets a new output *detached_exist boolean,
which indicates whether any partition marked pending-detach is found.
Its "include_detached" input flag is changed to "omit_detached", because
that name captures desired the semantics more naturally.
CreatePartitionDirectory() and RelationGetPartitionDesc() arguments are
identically renamed.

This was noticed because a buildfarm member that runs with relcache
clobbering, which would not keep the improperly cached partdesc, broke
one test, which led us to realize that the expected output of that test
was bogus.  This commit also corrects that expected output.

Author: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Author: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3269784.1617215412@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-22 15:13:25 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 7b357cc6ae
Don't add a redundant constraint when detaching a partition
On ALTER TABLE .. DETACH CONCURRENTLY, we add a new table constraint
that duplicates the partition constraint.  But if the partition already
has another constraint that implies that one, then that's unnecessary.
We were already avoiding the addition of a duplicate constraint if there
was an exact 'equal' match -- this just improves the quality of the check.

Author: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210410184226.GY6592@telsasoft.com
2021-04-21 18:12:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 544b28088f doc: Improve hyphenation consistency 2021-04-21 08:14:43 +02:00
Michael Paquier 7ef8b52cf0 Fix typos and grammar in comments and docs
Author: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210416070310.GG3315@telsasoft.com
2021-04-19 11:32:30 +09:00
Tom Lane f90c708a04 Fix wrong units in two ExplainPropertyFloat calls.
This is only a latent bug, since these calls are only reached for
non-text output formats, and currently none of those will print
the units.  Still, we should get it right in case that ever changes.

Justin Pryzby

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210415163846.GA3315@telsasoft.com
2021-04-16 11:30:27 -04:00
Tom Lane 409723365b Provide query source text when parsing a SQL-standard function body.
Without this, we lose error cursor positions, as shown in the
modified regression test result.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2197698.1617984583@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-15 17:24:12 -04:00
Tom Lane 1111b2668d Undo decision to allow pg_proc.prosrc to be NULL.
Commit e717a9a18 changed the longstanding rule that prosrc is NOT NULL
because when a SQL-language function is written in SQL-standard style,
we don't currently have anything useful to put there.  This seems a poor
decision though, as it could easily have negative impacts on external
PLs (opening them to crashes they didn't use to have, for instance).
SQL-function-related code can just as easily test "is prosqlbody not
null" as "is prosrc null", so there's no real gain there either.
Hence, revert the NOT NULL marking removal and adjust related logic.

For now, we just put an empty string into prosrc for SQL-standard
functions.  Maybe we'll have a better idea later, although the
history of things like pg_attrdef.adsrc suggests that it's not
easy to maintain a string equivalent of a node tree.

This also adds an assertion that queryDesc->sourceText != NULL
to standard_ExecutorStart.  We'd been silently relying on that
for awhile, so let's make it less silent.

Also fix some overlooked documentation and test cases.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2197698.1617984583@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-15 17:17:20 -04:00
Tom Lane 69d5ca484b Fix some inappropriately-disallowed uses of ALTER ROLE/DATABASE SET.
Most GUC check hooks that inspect database state have special checks
that prevent them from throwing hard errors for state-dependent issues
when source == PGC_S_TEST.  This allows, for example,
"ALTER DATABASE d SET default_text_search_config = foo" when the "foo"
configuration hasn't been created yet.  Without this, we have problems
during dump/reload or pg_upgrade, because pg_dump has no idea about
possible dependencies of GUC values and can't ensure a safe restore
ordering.

However, check_role() and check_session_authorization() hadn't gotten
the memo about that, and would throw hard errors anyway.  It's not
entirely clear what is the use-case for "ALTER ROLE x SET role = y",
but we've now heard two independent complaints about that bollixing
an upgrade, so apparently some people are doing it.

Hence, fix these two functions to act more like other check hooks
with similar needs.  (But I did not change their insistence on
being inside a transaction, as it's still not apparent that setting
either GUC from the configuration file would be wise.)

Also fix check_temp_buffers, which had a different form of the disease
of making state-dependent checks without any exception for PGC_S_TEST.
A cursory survey of other GUC check hooks did not find any more issues
of this ilk.  (There are a lot of interdependencies among
PGC_POSTMASTER and PGC_SIGHUP GUCs, which may be a bad idea, but
they're not relevant to the immediate concern because they can't be
set via ALTER ROLE/DATABASE.)

Per reports from Charlie Hornsby and Nathan Bossart.  Back-patch
to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/HE1P189MB0523B31598B0C772C908088DB7709@HE1P189MB0523.EURP189.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20160711223641.1426.86096@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2021-04-13 15:10:18 -04:00
Fujii Masao 81a23dd879 Avoid unnecessary table open/close in TRUNCATE command.
ExecuteTruncate() filters out the duplicate tables specified
in the TRUNCATE command, for example in the case where "TRUNCATE foo, foo"
is executed. Such duplicate tables obviously don't need to be opened
and closed because they are skipped. But previously it always opened
the tables before checking whether they were duplicated ones or not,
and then closed them if they were. That is, the duplicated tables were
opened and closed unnecessarily.

This commit changes ExecuteTruncate() so that it opens the table
after it confirms that table is not duplicated one, which leads to
avoid unnecessary table open/close.

Do not back-patch because such unnecessary table open/close is not
a bug though it exists in older versions.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Amul Sul, Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACUdBO_sXJTa08OZ0YT0qk7F_gAmRa9hT4dxRcgPS4nsZA@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-12 00:05:58 +09:00
Noah Misch df5efaf441 Standardize pg_authid oid_symbol values.
Commit c9c41c7a33 used two different
naming patterns.  Standardize on the majority pattern, which was the
only pattern in the last reviewed version of that commit.
2021-04-10 12:01:41 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera 0e69f705cc
Set pg_class.reltuples for partitioned tables
When commit 0827e8af70 added auto-analyze support for partitioned
tables, it included code to obtain reltuples for the partitioned table
as a number of catalog accesses to read pg_class.reltuples for each
partition.  That's not only very inefficient, but also problematic
because autovacuum doesn't hold any locks on any of those tables -- and
doesn't want to.  Replace that code with a read of pg_class.reltuples
for the partitioned table, and make sure ANALYZE and TRUNCATE properly
maintain that value.

I found no code that would be affected by the change of relpages from
zero to non-zero for partitioned tables, and no other code that should
be maintaining it, but if there is, hopefully it'll be an easy fix.

Per buildfarm.

Author: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Reviewed-by: Zhihong Yu <zyu@yugabyte.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1823909.1617862590@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-09 11:50:33 -04:00
Michael Paquier 609b0652af Fix typos and grammar in documentation and code comments
Comment fixes are applied on HEAD, and documentation improvements are
applied on back-branches where needed.

Author: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210408164008.GJ6592@telsasoft.com
Backpatch-through: 9.6
2021-04-09 13:53:07 +09:00
Fujii Masao 8ff1c94649 Allow TRUNCATE command to truncate foreign tables.
This commit introduces new foreign data wrapper API for TRUNCATE.
It extends TRUNCATE command so that it accepts foreign tables as
the targets to truncate and invokes that API. Also it extends postgres_fdw
so that it can issue TRUNCATE command to foreign servers, by adding
new routine for that TRUNCATE API.

The information about options specified in TRUNCATE command, e.g.,
ONLY, CACADE, etc is passed to FDW via API. The list of foreign tables to
truncate is also passed to FDW. FDW truncates the foreign data sources
that the passed foreign tables specify, based on those information.
For example, postgres_fdw constructs TRUNCATE command using them
and issues it to the foreign server.

For performance, TRUNCATE command invokes the FDW routine for
TRUNCATE once per foreign server that foreign tables to truncate belong to.

Author: Kazutaka Onishi, Kohei KaiGai, slightly modified by Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy, Michael Paquier, Zhihong Yu, Alvaro Herrera, Stephen Frost, Ashutosh Bapat, Amit Langote, Daniel Gustafsson, Ibrar Ahmed, Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOP8fzb_gkReLput7OvOK+8NHgw-RKqNv59vem7=524krQTcWA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJuF6cMWDDqU-vn_knZgma+2GMaout68YUgn1uyDnexRhqqM5Q@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-08 20:56:08 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 0827e8af70
autovacuum: handle analyze for partitioned tables
Previously, autovacuum would completely ignore partitioned tables, which
is not good regarding analyze -- failing to analyze those tables means
poor plans may be chosen.  Make autovacuum aware of those tables by
propagating "changes since analyze" counts from the leaf partitions up
the partitioning hierarchy.

This also introduces necessary reloptions support for partitioned tables
(autovacuum_enabled, autovacuum_analyze_scale_factor,
autovacuum_analyze_threshold).  It's unclear how best to document this
aspect.

Author: Yuzuko Hosoya <yuzukohosoya@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKkQ508_PwVgwJyBY=0Lmkz90j8CmWNPUxgHvCUwGhMrouz6UA@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-08 01:19:36 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e717a9a18b SQL-standard function body
This adds support for writing CREATE FUNCTION and CREATE PROCEDURE
statements for language SQL with a function body that conforms to the
SQL standard and is portable to other implementations.

Instead of the PostgreSQL-specific AS $$ string literal $$ syntax,
this allows writing out the SQL statements making up the body
unquoted, either as a single statement:

    CREATE FUNCTION add(a integer, b integer) RETURNS integer
        LANGUAGE SQL
        RETURN a + b;

or as a block

    CREATE PROCEDURE insert_data(a integer, b integer)
    LANGUAGE SQL
    BEGIN ATOMIC
      INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (a);
      INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (b);
    END;

The function body is parsed at function definition time and stored as
expression nodes in a new pg_proc column prosqlbody.  So at run time,
no further parsing is required.

However, this form does not support polymorphic arguments, because
there is no more parse analysis done at call time.

Dependencies between the function and the objects it uses are fully
tracked.

A new RETURN statement is introduced.  This can only be used inside
function bodies.  Internally, it is treated much like a SELECT
statement.

psql needs some new intelligence to keep track of function body
boundaries so that it doesn't send off statements when it sees
semicolons that are inside a function body.

Tested-by: Jaime Casanova <jcasanov@systemguards.com.ec>
Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1c11f1eb-f00c-43b7-799d-2d44132c02d7@2ndquadrant.com
2021-04-07 21:47:55 +02:00
Peter Geoghegan 1e55e7d175 Add wraparound failsafe to VACUUM.
Add a failsafe mechanism that is triggered by VACUUM when it notices
that the table's relfrozenxid and/or relminmxid are dangerously far in
the past.  VACUUM checks the age of the table dynamically, at regular
intervals.

When the failsafe triggers, VACUUM takes extraordinary measures to
finish as quickly as possible so that relfrozenxid and/or relminmxid can
be advanced.  VACUUM will stop applying any cost-based delay that may be
in effect.  VACUUM will also bypass any further index vacuuming and heap
vacuuming -- it only completes whatever remaining pruning and freezing
is required.  Bypassing index/heap vacuuming is enabled by commit
8523492d, which made it possible to dynamically trigger the mechanism
already used within VACUUM when it is run with INDEX_CLEANUP off.

It is expected that the failsafe will almost always trigger within an
autovacuum to prevent wraparound, long after the autovacuum began.
However, the failsafe mechanism can trigger in any VACUUM operation.
Even in a non-aggressive VACUUM, where we're likely to not advance
relfrozenxid, it still seems like a good idea to finish off remaining
pruning and freezing.   An aggressive/anti-wraparound VACUUM will be
launched immediately afterwards.  Note that the anti-wraparound VACUUM
that follows will itself trigger the failsafe, usually before it even
begins its first (and only) pass over the heap.

The failsafe is controlled by two new GUCs: vacuum_failsafe_age, and
vacuum_multixact_failsafe_age.  There are no equivalent reloptions,
since that isn't expected to be useful.  The GUCs have rather high
defaults (both default to 1.6 billion), and are expected to generally
only be used to make the failsafe trigger sooner/more frequently.

Author: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoD0SkE11fMw4jD4RENAwBMcw1wasVnwpJVw3tVqPOQgAw@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzmgH3ySGYeC-m-eOBsa2=sDwa292-CFghV4rESYo39FsQ@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-07 12:37:45 -07:00
Bruce Momjian 4f0b0966c8 Make use of in-core query id added by commit 5fd9dfa5f5
Use the in-core query id computation for pg_stat_activity,
log_line_prefix, and EXPLAIN VERBOSE.

Similar to other fields in pg_stat_activity, only the queryid from the
top level statements are exposed, and if the backends status isn't
active then the queryid from the last executed statements is displayed.

Add a %Q placeholder to include the queryid in log_line_prefix, which
will also only expose top level statements.

For EXPLAIN VERBOSE, if a query identifier has been computed, either by
enabling compute_query_id or using a third-party module, display it.

Bump catalog version.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210407125726.tkvjdbw76hxnpwfi@nol

Author: Julien Rouhaud

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera, Nitin Jadhav, Zhihong Yu
2021-04-07 14:04:06 -04:00
Tom Lane c5b7ba4e67 Postpone some stuff out of ExecInitModifyTable.
Arrange to do some things on-demand, rather than immediately during
executor startup, because there's a fair chance of never having to do
them at all:

* Don't open result relations' indexes until needed.

* Don't initialize partition tuple routing, nor the child-to-root
tuple conversion map, until needed.

This wins in UPDATEs on partitioned tables when only some of the
partitions will actually receive updates; with larger partition
counts the savings is quite noticeable.  Also, we can remove some
sketchy heuristics in ExecInitModifyTable about whether to set up
tuple routing.

Also, remove execPartition.c's private hash table tracking which
partitions were already opened by the ModifyTable node.  Instead
use the hash added to ModifyTable itself by commit 86dc90056.

To allow lazy computation of the conversion maps, we now set
ri_RootResultRelInfo in all child ResultRelInfos.  We formerly set it
only in some, not terribly well-defined, cases.  This has user-visible
side effects in that now more error messages refer to the root
relation instead of some partition (and provide error data in the
root's column order, too).  It looks to me like this is a strict
improvement in consistency, so I don't have a problem with the
output changes visible in this commit.

Extracted from a larger patch, which seemed to me to be too messy
to push in one commit.

Amit Langote, reviewed at different times by Heikki Linnakangas and
myself

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqG7ZruBmmih3wPsBZ4s0H2EhywrnXEduckY5Hr3fWzPWA@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-06 15:57:11 -04:00
Tom Lane 091e22b2e6 Clean up treatment of missing default and CHECK-constraint records.
Andrew Gierth reported that it's possible to crash the backend if no
pg_attrdef record is found to match an attribute that has atthasdef set.
AttrDefaultFetch warns about this situation, but then leaves behind
a relation tupdesc that has null "adbin" pointer(s), which most places
don't guard against.

We considered promoting the warning to an error, but throwing errors
during relcache load is pretty drastic: it effectively locks one out
of using the relation at all.  What seems better is to leave the
load-time behavior as a warning, but then throw an error in any code
path that wants to use a default and can't find it.  This confines
the error to a subset of INSERT/UPDATE operations on the table, and
in particular will at least allow a pg_dump to succeed.

Also, we should fix AttrDefaultFetch to not leave any null pointers
in the tupdesc, because that just creates an untested bug hazard.

While at it, apply the same philosophy of "warn at load, throw error
only upon use of the known-missing info" to CHECK constraints.
CheckConstraintFetch is very nearly the same logic as AttrDefaultFetch,
but for reasons lost in the mists of time, it was throwing ERROR for
the same cases that AttrDefaultFetch treats as WARNING.  Make the two
functions more nearly alike.

In passing, get rid of potentially-O(N^2) loops in equalTupleDesc
by making AttrDefaultFetch sort the entries after fetching them,
so that equalTupleDesc can assume that entries in two equal tupdescs
must be in matching order.  (CheckConstraintFetch already was sorting
CHECK constraints, but equalTupleDesc hadn't been told about it.)

There's some argument for back-patching this, but with such a small
number of field reports, I'm content to fix it in HEAD.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87pmzaq4gx.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2021-04-06 10:34:39 -04:00