Commit Graph

34617 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Heikki Linnakangas 0b6329130e Make pg_receivexlog and pg_basebackup -X stream work across timeline switches.
This mirrors the changes done earlier to the server in standby mode. When
receivelog reaches the end of a timeline, as reported by the server, it
fetches the timeline history file of the next timeline, and restarts
streaming from the new timeline by issuing a new START_STREAMING command.

When pg_receivexlog crosses a timeline, it leaves the .partial suffix on the
last segment on the old timeline. This helps you to tell apart a partial
segment left in the directory because of a timeline switch, and a completed
segment. If you just follow a single server, it won't make a difference, but
it can be significant in more complicated scenarios where new WAL is still
generated on the old timeline.

This includes two small changes to the streaming replication protocol:
First, when you reach the end of timeline while streaming, the server now
sends the TLI of the next timeline in the server's history to the client.
pg_receivexlog uses that as the next timeline, so that it doesn't need to
parse the timeline history file like a standby server does. Second, when
BASE_BACKUP command sends the begin and end WAL positions, it now also sends
the timeline IDs corresponding the positions.
2013-01-17 20:23:00 +02:00
Tom Lane 8ae35e9180 Improve memory space management in tuplesort and tuplestore.
The code originally just doubled the size of the tuple-pointer array so
long as that would fit in allowedMem.  This could result in failing to use
as much as half of allowedMem, if (as is typical) the last doubling attempt
didn't quite fit.  Worse, we might double the array size but be unable to
use most of the added slots, because there was no room left within the
allowedMem limit for tuples the slots should point to.  To fix, double only
so long as we've used less than half of allowedMem in total.  Then do one
more array enlargement, but scale it based on total memory consumption so
far.  This will work nicely as long as the average tuple size is reasonably
stable, and in any case should be better than the old method.

This change will result in large sort operations consuming a larger
fraction of work_mem than they typically did in the past.  The release
notes should mention that users may want to revisit their work_mem
settings, if they'd tuned those settings based on the old behavior of
sorting.

Jeff Janes, reviewed by Peter Geoghegan and Robert Haas
2013-01-17 13:12:56 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 1296d5c53c Fix a couple of error-handling bugs in the xlogreader patch.
XLogReadRecord should reset its state on every error, to make sure it
re-reads the page on next call. It was inconsistent in that some errors did
that, but some did not.

In ReadRecord(), don't give up on an error if we're in standby mode. The
loop was set up to retry, but the checks within the loop broke out of the
loop on any error.

Andres Freund, with some tweaking by me.
2013-01-17 19:27:04 +02:00
Bruce Momjian b14f81bc9a Add a latex-longtable output format to psql
latex longtable is more powerful than the 'tabular' output format
'latex' uses.  Also add border=3 support to 'latex'.
2013-01-17 11:39:38 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 8ef6961685 Silence compiler warnings 2013-01-17 16:10:33 +01:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9ee4d06f3f Make GiST indexes on-disk compatible with 9.2 again.
The patch that turned XLogRecPtr into a uint64 inadvertently changed the
on-disk format of GiST indexes, because the NSN field in the GiST page
opaque is an XLogRecPtr. That breaks pg_upgrade. Revert the format of that
field back to the two-field struct that XLogRecPtr was before. This is the
same we did to LSNs in the page header to avoid changing on-disk format.

Bump catversion, as this invalidates any existing GiST indexes built on
9.3devel.
2013-01-17 16:46:16 +02:00
Magnus Hagander bba486f372 Base the default SSL ciphers on DEFAULT instead of ALL
It's better to start from what the OpenSSL people consider a good
default and then remove insecure things (low encryption, exportable
encryption and md5 at this point) from that, instead of starting
from everything that exists and remove from that. We trust the
OpenSSL people to make good choices about what the default is.
2013-01-17 15:04:44 +01:00
Magnus Hagander 4eebf1309f Make size-output fixed length in pg_basebackup verbose mode
This way the line doesn't shift right as the amount of data processed
increases.
2013-01-17 14:43:33 +01:00
Magnus Hagander d7e9ca7ff7 Truncate filenames in the leadning end in pg_basebackup verbose output
When truncating at the end, like before, the output would often end up
just showing the path instead of the filename.

Also increase the length of the filename by 5, which still keeps us at
less than 80 characters in most outputs.
2013-01-17 14:38:49 +01:00
Magnus Hagander f3af53441e Support multiple -t/--table arguments for more commands
On top of the previous support in pg_dump, add support to specify
multiple tables (by using the -t option multiple times) to
pg_restore, clsuterdb, reindexdb and vacuumdb.

Josh Kupershmidt, reviewed by Karl O. Pinc
2013-01-17 11:24:47 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 36bdfa52a0 Get rid of pg_dump's README
It was largely full of outdated and incorrect information.  Move the few
notes which were still relevant into header comments of pg_backup_tar.c
and pg_dumpall.c.

Josh Kupershmidt
2013-01-16 23:49:54 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 7fcbf6a405 Split out XLog reading as an independent facility
This new facility can not only be used by xlog.c to carry out crash
recovery, but also by external programs.  By supplying a function to
read XLog pages from somewhere, all the WAL reading can be used for
completely different purposes.

For the standard backend use, the behavior should be pretty much the
same as previously.  As for non-backend programs, an hypothetical
pg_xlogdump program is now closer to reality, but some more backend
support is still necessary.

This patch was originally submitted by Andres Freund in a different
form, but Heikki Linnakangas opted for and authored another design of
the concept.  Andres has advanced the patch since Heikki's initial
version.  Review and some (mostly cosmetics) changes by me.
2013-01-16 16:12:53 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 8606dd8190 Make \? help message more clear when not connected.
On second thought, "none" could mislead to think that you're connected a
database with that name. Duplicate the whole string, so that it can be
more easily translated. In back-branches, thought, just use an empty string
in place of the database name, to avoid adding a translatable string.
2013-01-15 22:23:14 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas b04ce529fd Don't pass NULL to fprintf, if not currently connected to a database.
Backpatch all the way to 8.3. Fixes bug #7811, per report and diagnosis by
Meng Qingzhong.
2013-01-15 19:23:47 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera 7ac5760fa2 Rework order of checks in ALTER / SET SCHEMA
When attempting to move an object into the schema in which it already
was, for most objects classes we were correctly complaining about
exactly that ("object is already in schema"); but for some other object
classes, such as functions, we were instead complaining of a name
collision ("object already exists in schema").  The latter is wrong and
misleading, per complaint from Robert Haas in
CA+TgmoZ0+gNf7RDKRc3u5rHXffP=QjqPZKGxb4BsPz65k7qnHQ@mail.gmail.com

To fix, refactor the way these checks are done.  As a bonus, the
resulting code is smaller and can also share some code with Rename
cases.

While at it, remove use of getObjectDescriptionOids() in error messages.
These are normally disallowed because of translatability considerations,
but this one had slipped through since 9.1.  (Not sure that this is
worth backpatching, though, as it would create some untranslated
messages in back branches.)

This is loosely based on a patch by KaiGai Kohei, heavily reworked by
me.
2013-01-15 13:23:43 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas ffda05977a Give a proper error message if connecting to incompatible server.
The WAL streaming message format changed in 9.3, so 9.3 pg_basebackup or
pg_receivelog won't work against older servers.
2013-01-15 15:45:52 +02:00
Tom Lane 1b794d3f32 Fix hash_update_hash_key() to handle same-bucket case correctly.
Original coding would corrupt the hashtable if the item being updated was
at the end of its bucket chain and the new hash key hashed to that same
bucket.  Diagnosis and fix by Heikki Linnakangas.
2013-01-14 21:57:15 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3f4b1749a8 Return value of lseek() can be negative on failure.
Because the return value of lseek() was assigned to an unsigned size_t
variable, we'd fail to notice an error return code -1. Compiler gave a
warning about this.

Andres Freund
2013-01-15 00:42:37 +02:00
Tom Lane 325c54b69c Fix obsolete SQL syntax in comment.
This was legal back in the days of add_missing_from, though perhaps
never good style.  It's not legal anymore ...

Jan Urbański
2013-01-14 15:48:12 -05:00
Tom Lane 5c4eb9166e Reject out-of-range dates in to_date().
Dates outside the supported range could be entered, but would not print
reasonably, and operations such as conversion to timestamp wouldn't behave
sanely either.  Since this has the potential to result in undumpable table
data, it seems worth back-patching.

Hitoshi Harada
2013-01-14 15:19:48 -05:00
Tom Lane 7127293a5d Add new timezone abbrevation "FET".
This seems to have been invented in 2011 to represent GMT+3, non daylight
savings rules, as now used in Europe/Kaliningrad and Europe/Minsk.
There are no conflicts so might as well add it to the Default list.
Per bug #7804 from Ruslan Izmaylov.
2013-01-14 14:45:40 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 692079e5dc Remove spurious space
Andres Freund
2013-01-14 12:08:59 -03:00
Tom Lane 2065dd2834 Prevent very-low-probability PANIC during PREPARE TRANSACTION.
The code in PostPrepare_Locks supposed that it could reassign locks to
the prepared transaction's dummy PGPROC by deleting the PROCLOCK table
entries and immediately creating new ones.  This was safe when that code
was written, but since we invented partitioning of the shared lock table,
it's not safe --- another process could steal away the PROCLOCK entry in
the short interval when it's on the freelist.  Then, if we were otherwise
out of shared memory, PostPrepare_Locks would have to PANIC, since it's
too late to back out of the PREPARE at that point.

Fix by inventing a dynahash.c function to atomically update a hashtable
entry's key.  (This might possibly have other uses in future.)

This is an ancient bug that in principle we ought to back-patch, but the
odds of someone hitting it in the field seem really tiny, because (a) the
risk window is small, and (b) nobody runs servers with maxed-out lock
tables for long, because they'll be getting non-PANIC out-of-memory errors
anyway.  So fixing it in HEAD seems sufficient, at least until the new
code has gotten some testing.
2013-01-13 22:20:22 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 9d2cd99a60 Make spelling more uniform 2013-01-13 21:42:03 -05:00
Tom Lane 24dd0502a1 Update comments for elog_start().
Forgot I was going to do this as part of the previous patch ...
2013-01-13 18:50:48 -05:00
Tom Lane b853eb9718 Improve handling of ereport(ERROR) and elog(ERROR).
In commit 71450d7fd6, we added code to inform
suitably-intelligent compilers that ereport() doesn't return if the elevel
is ERROR or higher.  This patch extends that to elog(), and also fixes a
double-evaluation hazard that the previous commit created in ereport(),
as well as reducing the emitted code size.

The elog() improvement requires the compiler to support __VA_ARGS__, which
should be available in just about anything nowadays since it's required by
C99.  But our minimum language baseline is still C89, so add a configure
test for that.

The previous commit assumed that ereport's elevel could be evaluated twice,
which isn't terribly safe --- there are already counterexamples in xlog.c.
On compilers that have __builtin_constant_p, we can use that to protect the
second test, since there's no possible optimization gain if the compiler
doesn't know the value of elevel.  Otherwise, use a local variable inside
the macros to prevent double evaluation.  The local-variable solution is
inferior because (a) it leads to useless code being emitted when elevel
isn't constant, and (b) it increases the optimization level needed for the
compiler to recognize that subsequent code is unreachable.  But it seems
better than not teaching non-gcc compilers about unreachability at all.

Lastly, if the compiler has __builtin_unreachable(), we can use that
instead of abort(), resulting in a noticeable code savings since no
function call is actually emitted.  However, it seems wise to do this only
in non-assert builds.  In an assert build, continue to use abort(), so that
the behavior will be predictable and debuggable if the "impossible"
happens.

These changes involve making the ereport and elog macros emit do-while
statement blocks not just expressions, which forces small changes in
a few call sites.

Andres Freund, Tom Lane, Heikki Linnakangas
2013-01-13 18:40:09 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 4ae5ee6c9b Extend and improve use of EXTRA_REGRESS_OPTS.
This is now used by ecpg tests, and not clobbered by pg_upgrade
tests. This change won't affect anything that doesn't set this
environment variable, but will enable the buildfarm to control
exactly what port regression test installs will be running on,
and thus to detect possible rogue postmasters more easily.

Backpatch to release 9.2 where EXTRA_REGRESS_OPTS was first used.
2013-01-12 08:28:58 -05:00
Tom Lane 31f38f28b0 Redesign the planner's handling of index-descent cost estimation.
Historically we've used a couple of very ad-hoc fudge factors to try to
get the right results when indexes of different sizes would satisfy a
query with the same number of index leaf tuples being visited.  In
commit 21a39de580 I tweaked one of these
fudge factors, with results that proved disastrous for larger indexes.
Commit bf01e34b55 fudged it some more,
but still with not a lot of principle behind it.

What seems like a better way to address these issues is to explicitly model
index-descent costs, since that's what's really at stake when considering
diferent indexes with similar leaf-page-level costs.  We tried that once
long ago, and found that charging random_page_cost per page descended
through was way too much, because upper btree levels tend to stay in cache
in real-world workloads.  However, there's still CPU costs to think about,
and the previous fudge factors can be seen as a crude attempt to account
for those costs.  So this patch replaces those fudge factors with explicit
charges for the number of tuple comparisons needed to descend the index
tree, plus a small charge per page touched in the descent.  The cost
multipliers are chosen so that the resulting charges are in the vicinity of
the historical (pre-9.2) fudge factors for indexes of up to about a million
tuples, while not ballooning unreasonably beyond that, as the old fudge
factor did (even more so in 9.2).

To make this work accurately for btree indexes, add some code that allows
extraction of the known root-page height from a btree.  There's no
equivalent number readily available for other index types, but we can use
the log of the number of index pages as an approximate substitute.

This seems like too much of a behavioral change to risk back-patching,
but it should improve matters going forward.  In 9.2 I'll just revert
the fudge-factor change.
2013-01-11 12:56:58 -05:00
Tom Lane e1b735ae35 Last-gasp attempt to save libperl.so configure probe.
I notice that plperl's makefile adds the -I for $perl_archlibexp/CORE
at the end of CPPFLAGS not the beginning.  It seems somewhat unlikely
that the include search order has anything to do with why buildfarm
member okapi is failing, but I'm about out of other ideas.
2013-01-10 22:16:22 -05:00
Tom Lane 9d5a160ca3 Test linking libperl.so using only Perl's required libraries.
It appears that perl_embed_ldflags should already mention all the libraries
that are required by libperl.so itself.  So let's try the test link with
just those and not the other LIBS we've found up to now.  This should
more nearly reproduce what will happen when plperl is linked, and perhaps
will fix buildfarm member okapi's problem.
2013-01-09 23:46:44 -05:00
Tom Lane 1f3ed51f8e Add explicit configure-time checks for perl.h and libperl.so.
Although most platforms seem to package Perl in such a way that these files
are present even in basic Perl installations, Debian does not.  Hence, make
an effort to fail during configure rather than build if --with-perl was
given and these files are lacking.  Per gripe from Josh Berkus.
2013-01-09 19:41:37 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 7fb97ecd13 Detect Windows perl linkage parameters in configure script.
This means we can now construct a configure test for the library
presence. Previously these parameters were only figured out at
build time in plperl's GnuMakefile.
2013-01-09 17:49:23 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 6e650a55cd Properly install ecpg_compat and pgtypes libraries on msvc
JiangGuiqing
2013-01-09 17:29:59 +01:00
Magnus Hagander b5ed1376c6 Don't attempt to write recovery.conf when -R is not specified
Fixes segmentation fault during regular use.

Fujii Masao
2013-01-09 16:57:32 +01:00
Bruce Momjian a89c46f9bc Allow parallel copy/link in pg_upgrade
This patch implements parallel copying/linking of files by tablespace
using the --jobs option in pg_upgrade.
2013-01-09 08:57:47 -05:00
Tom Lane c00dc337b8 Fix potential corruption of lock table in CREATE/DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY.
If VirtualXactLock() has to wait for a transaction that holds its VXID lock
as a fast-path lock, it must first convert the fast-path lock to a regular
lock.  It failed to take the required "partition" lock on the main
shared-memory lock table while doing so.  This is the direct cause of the
assert failure in GetLockStatusData() recently observed in the buildfarm,
but more worryingly it could result in arbitrary corruption of the shared
lock table if some other process were concurrently engaged in modifying the
same partition of the lock table.  Fortunately, VirtualXactLock() is only
used by CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY and DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY, so the
opportunities for failure are fewer than they might have been.

In passing, improve some comments and be a bit more consistent about
order of operations.
2013-01-08 18:25:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut f31d5baff6 Fix typo 2013-01-07 21:34:30 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 74570db99c Fix a logic bug in pgindent. 2013-01-07 12:26:27 -05:00
Robert Haas a0dc23f205 Fix incorrect error message when schema-CREATE permission is absent.
Report by me.  Fix by KaiGai Kohei.
2013-01-07 11:54:59 -05:00
Tatsuo Ishii cf03ff6c4e Add new "-q" logging option (quiet mode) while in initialize mode
(-i), producing only one progress message per 5 seconds along with
elapsed time and estimated remaining time.  Also add elapsed time and
estimated remaining time to the default logging(prints one message
each 100000 rows).
Patch contributed by Tomas Vondra, reviewed by Jeevan Chalke and
Tatsuo Ishii.
2013-01-07 11:13:44 +09:00
Tom Lane 5aec9ccafe Fix plpython build on older versions of OS X.
Pre-Lion versions of Apple's linker don't allow space between -F and its
argument.  (Snow Leopard is nice enough to tell you that in so many words,
but older versions just fail with very obscure link errors, as seen on
buildfarm member locust for instance.)  Oversight in commit
fc8745070a.
2013-01-06 15:49:53 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 915a29a10c Add support for generating minimal recovery.conf when doing base backups
Adds commandline option -R to pg_basebackup that creates a recovery.conf which
enables standby mode using the same parameters that pg_basebackup used to
connect to the master, and writes it into the output directory (or injects it
in the tar file when tar format is used).

Zoltan Boszormenyi, modified by Magnus Hagander, reviewed by Amit Kapila & Fujii Masao
2013-01-05 16:54:06 +01:00
Magnus Hagander 940d136661 Centralize single quote escaping in src/port/quotes.c
For code-reuse in upcoming functionality in pg_basebackup.

Zoltan Boszormenyi
2013-01-05 15:40:19 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut fc8745070a PL/Python: Make build on OS X more flexible
The PL/Python build on OS X was previously hardcoded to use the system
installation of Python, ignoring whatever was specified to configure.
Except that it would use the header files from configure, which could
lead to mismatches.  It was not possible to build against a custom
Python installation.

Now, we check in configure how the specified Python installation was
built and use that, supporting framework and non-framework builds.
2013-01-05 08:56:14 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 7e938e3c56 Revert "PL/Python: Remove workaround for returning booleans in Python <2.3"
This reverts commit be0dfbad36.

The previous information that Py_RETURN_TRUE and Py_RETURN_FALSE are
supported in Python 2.3 is wrong.  They require Python 2.4.  Update the
comment about that.
2013-01-05 08:50:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 9e6df60619 doc: Update CREATE FUNCTION compatibility information
Parameter defaults are actually in the SQL standard, while it was
previously claimed they were not.
2013-01-05 08:29:18 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 49e7a26d67 Make some spelling more consistent 2013-01-05 08:25:21 -05:00
Tom Lane 94afbd5831 Invent a "one-shot" variant of CachedPlans for better performance.
SPI_execute() and related functions create a CachedPlan, execute it once,
and immediately discard it, so that the functionality offered by
plancache.c is of no value in this code path.  And performance measurements
show that the extra data copying and invalidation checking done by
plancache.c slows down simple queries by 10% or more compared to 9.1.
However, enough of the SPI code is shared with functions that do need plan
caching that it seems impractical to bypass plancache.c altogether.
Instead, let's invent a variant version of cached plans that preserves
99% of the API but doesn't offer any of the actual functionality, nor the
overhead.  This puts SPI_execute() performance back on par, or maybe even
slightly better, than it was before.  This change should resolve recent
complaints of performance degradation from Dong Ye, Pavel Stehule, and
others.

By avoiding data copying, this change also reduces the amount of memory
needed to execute many-statement SPI_execute() strings, as for instance in
a recent complaint from Tomas Vondra.

An additional benefit of this change is that multi-statement SPI_execute()
query strings are now processed fully serially, that is we complete
execution of earlier statements before running parse analysis and planning
on following ones.  This eliminates a long-standing POLA violation, in that
DDL that affects the behavior of a later statement will now behave as
expected.

Back-patch to 9.2, since this was a performance regression compared to 9.1.
(In 9.2, place the added struct fields so as to avoid changing the offsets
of existing fields.)

Heikki Linnakangas and Tom Lane
2013-01-04 17:42:19 -05:00
Tom Lane 78a5e738e9 Prevent creation of postmaster's TCP socket during pg_upgrade testing.
On non-Windows machines, we use the Unix socket for connections to test
postmasters, so there is no need to create a TCP socket.  Furthermore,
doing so causes failures due to port conflicts if two builds are carried
out concurrently on one machine.  (If the builds are done in different
chroots, which is standard practice at least in Red Hat distros, there
is no risk of conflict on the Unix socket.)  Suppressing the TCP socket
by setting listen_addresses to empty has long been standard practice
for pg_regress, and pg_upgrade knows about this too ... but pg_upgrade's
test.sh didn't get the memo.

Back-patch to 9.2, and also sync the 9.2 version of the script with HEAD
as much as practical.
2013-01-03 18:34:51 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas b0daba57bb Tolerate timeline switches while "pg_basebackup -X fetch" is running.
If you take a base backup from a standby server with "pg_basebackup -X
fetch", and the timeline switches while the backup is being taken, the
backup used to fail with an error "requested WAL segment %s has already
been removed". This is because the server-side code that sends over the
required WAL files would not construct the WAL filename with the correct
timeline after a switch.

Fix that by using readdir() to scan pg_xlog for all the WAL segments in the
range, regardless of timeline.

Also, include all timeline history files in the backup, if taken with
"-X fetch". That fixes another related bug: If a timeline switch happened
just before the backup was initiated in a standby, the WAL segment
containing the initial checkpoint record contains WAL from the older
timeline too. Recovery will not accept that without a timeline history file
that lists the older timeline.

Backpatch to 9.2. Versions prior to that were not affected as you could not
take a base backup from a standby before 9.2.
2013-01-03 19:51:00 +02:00