Commit Graph

21846 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane b3bc63efbc Fix pg_dump's handling of extension-member casts and languages.
pg_dump has some heuristic rules for whether to dump casts and procedural
languages, since it's not all that easy to distinguish built-in ones from
user-defined ones.  However, we should not apply those rules to objects
that belong to an extension, but just use the perfectly well-defined rules
for what to do with extension member objects.  Otherwise we might
mistakenly lose extension member objects during a binary upgrade (which is
the only time that we'd want to dump extension members).
2011-05-16 16:41:52 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 78b66cff72 Quote isolationtester command name so Windows will not think dot is the command. 2011-05-15 23:42:12 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan df15d11cb5 Add required psqldir setting for isolation checks. 2011-05-15 23:12:36 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan ec645ef346 Fix bad macro call noticed by MSVC compiler. 2011-05-15 18:45:26 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 20bacc9560 Add missing check function lookup. 2011-05-15 18:03:19 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 840826e36c Build and run isolation test programs under MSVC. 2011-05-15 17:55:05 -04:00
Robert Haas 9bb6d97952 More cleanup of FOREIGN TABLE permissions handling.
This commit fixes psql, pg_dump, and the information schema to be
consistent with the backend changes which I made as part of commit
be90032e0d, and also includes a
related documentation tweak.

Shigeru Hanada, with slight adjustment.
2011-05-13 15:51:03 -04:00
Robert Haas c5ab8425be Kill stray "not". 2011-05-12 17:10:30 -04:00
Tom Lane 8d0df2048f Fix write-past-buffer-end in ldapServiceLookup().
The code to assemble ldap_get_values_len's output into a single string
wrote the terminating null one byte past where it should.  Fix that,
and make some other cosmetic adjustments to make the code a trifle more
readable and more in line with usual Postgres coding style.

Also, free the "result" string when done with it, to avoid a permanent
memory leak.

Bug report and patch by Albe Laurenz, cosmetic adjustments by me.
2011-05-12 11:56:38 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera c6eb5740b3 Fix assorted typos 2011-05-12 08:52:56 -04:00
Tom Lane e05b866447 Split PGC_S_DEFAULT into two values, for true boot_val vs computed default.
Failure to distinguish these cases is the real cause behind the recent
reports of Windows builds crashing on 'infinity'::timestamp, which was
directly due to failure to establish a value of timezone_abbreviations
in postmaster child processes.  The postmaster had the desired value,
but write_one_nondefault_variable() didn't transmit it to backends.

To fix that, invent a new value PGC_S_DYNAMIC_DEFAULT, and be sure to use
that or PGC_S_ENV_VAR (as appropriate) for "default" settings that are
computed during initialization.  (We need both because there's at least
one variable that could receive a value from either source.)

This commit also fixes ProcessConfigFile's failure to restore the correct
default value for certain GUC variables if they are set in postgresql.conf
and then removed/commented out of the file.  We have to recompute and
reinstall the value for any GUC variable that could have received a value
from PGC_S_DYNAMIC_DEFAULT or PGC_S_ENV_VAR sources, and there were a
number of oversights.  (That whole thing is a crock that needs to be
redesigned, but not today.)

However, I intentionally didn't make it work "exactly right" for the cases
of timezone and log_timezone.  The exactly right behavior would involve
running select_default_timezone, which we'd have to do independently in
each postgres process, causing the whole database to become entirely
unresponsive for as much as several seconds.  That didn't seem like a good
idea, especially since the variable's removal from postgresql.conf might be
just an accidental edit.  Instead the behavior is to adopt the previously
active setting as if it were default.

Note that this patch creates an ABI break for extensions that use any of
the PGC_S_XXX constants; they'll need to be recompiled.
2011-05-11 19:57:38 -04:00
Tom Lane 6fc6686b48 Clean up parsing of CREATE TRIGGER's argument list.
Use ColLabel in place of ColId, so that reserved words are accepted as if
they were not reserved.  Also, remove BCONST and XCONST, which were never
documented as allowed.  Allowing those exposes to users an implementation
detail, namely the format in which the lexer outputs such constants, that
seems unwise to expose.

No documentation change needed, since this just makes the code act more
like you'd expect from reading the CREATE TRIGGER man page.

Per complaint from Szymon Guz and subsequent discussion.
2011-05-11 14:43:01 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas a0c8514149 Shut down WAL receiver if it's still running at end of recovery. We used to
just check that it's not running and PANIC if it was, but that can rightfully
happen if recovery stops at recovery target.
2011-05-11 12:46:08 +03:00
Tom Lane 2e82d0b396 Prevent datebsearch() from crashing on base == NULL && nel == 0.
Normally nel == 0 works okay because the initial value of "last" will be
less than "base"; but if "base" is zero then the calculation wraps around
and we have a very large (unsigned) value for "last", so that the loop can
be entered and we get a SIGSEGV on a bogus pointer.

This is certainly the proximate cause of the recent reports of Windows
builds crashing on 'infinity'::timestamp --- evidently, they're either not
setting an active timezonetktbl, or setting an empty one.  It's not yet
clear to me why it's only happening on Windows and not happening on any
buildfarm member.  But even if that's due to some bug elsewhere, it seems
wise for this function to not choke on the powerup values of
timezonetktbl/sztimezonetktbl.

I also changed the copy of this code in ecpglib, although I am not sure
whether it's exposed to a similar hazard.

Per report and stack trace from Richard Broersma.
2011-05-10 20:37:26 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 7ff7711919 For create/dropdb, only connect once to the server since we now have a
shared description table for pg_database comments.

Also update comments about database name selection.
2011-05-10 19:44:47 -04:00
Tom Lane 1453cd8f82 Adjust documentation with respect to "unknown" timezone setting.
The recent cleanup of GUC assign hooks got rid of the kludge of using
"unknown" as a magic value for timezone and log_timezone.  But I forgot
to update the documentation to match, as noted by Martin Pitt.
2011-05-10 13:48:40 -04:00
Tom Lane 853c1750f9 Be more wary in initdb's creation of platform-dependent collations.
Discard any collation aliases that match the built-in pg_collation entries
(ie, "default", "C", "POSIX").  Such aliases would be refused by a CREATE
COLLATION command, but since initdb is injecting them via a simple INSERT,
it has to make the corresponding check for itself.  Per Martin Pitt's
report of funny behavior in a machine that had a bogus "C.UTF-8" locale.

Also, use E'' syntax for the output of escape_quotes, as per its header
comment.
2011-05-10 12:08:47 -04:00
Tom Lane 7886cc73ad Remove "make check" target in src/test/isolation/Makefile.
This doesn't work as expected because the isolationtester program requires
libpq to already be installed.  While it works when you've already installed
libpq, having to already have done "make install" defeats most of the point
of a check with a temp installation.  And there are weird corner cases if
the dynamic linker picks up an old libpq.so from system library directories.
Remove the target (or more precisely, make it print a helpful message) so
people don't expect the case to work.
2011-05-09 11:00:30 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 76e5b4c85d Add C comment about the fact that the autovacuum limit can go backwards
by 3, but that is it OK.
2011-05-08 23:59:31 -04:00
Tom Lane eff223ffd7 Fix some portability issues in isolation regression test driver.
Remove random system #includes in favor of using postgres_fe.h.  (The
alternative to that is letting this module grow its own configuration
testing ability...)

Also fix the "make clean" target to actually clean things up.

Per local testing.
2011-05-08 19:45:00 -04:00
Robert Haas 71932ecc2b Add comment about memory reordering to PredicateLockTupleRowVersionLink.
Dan Ports, per head-scratching from Simon Riggs and myself.
2011-05-06 21:55:10 -04:00
Tom Lane d2088ae949 Move RegisterPredicateLockingXid() call to a safer place.
The SSI patch inserted a call of RegisterPredicateLockingXid into
GetNewTransactionId, which was a bad idea on a couple of grounds.  First,
it's not necessary to hold XidGenLock while manipulating that shared
memory, and doing so is bad because XidGenLock is a high-contention lock
that should be held for as short a time as possible.  (Not to mention that
it adds an entirely unnecessary deadlock hazard, since we must take
SerializableXactHashLock as well.)  Second, the specific place where it was
put was between extending CLOG and advancing nextXid, which could result in
unpleasant behavior in case of a failure there.  Pull the call out to
AssignTransactionId, which is much safer and arguably better from a
modularity standpoint too.

There is more work to do to clean up the failure-before-advancing-nextXid
issue, but that is a separate change that will need to be back-patched.
So for the moment I just want to make GetNewTransactionId look the same as
it did in prior versions.
2011-05-06 12:57:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 12b7164578 Remove precedence labeling of keywords TRUE, FALSE, UNKNOWN, and ZONE.
These were labeled with precedences just to avoid attaching explicit
precedences to the productions in which they were the last terminal symbol.
Since a terminal symbol precedence marking can affect many other things
too, it seems like better practice to attach precedence labels to the
productions, and not mark the terminal symbols.

Ideally we'd also remove the precedence attached to NULL_P, but it turns
out that we are actually depending on that having a precedence higher than
POSTFIXOP, else we get a shift/reduce conflict for postfix operators in
b_expr.  (Which more or less proves my point about these markings having a
high risk of unexpected consequences.)  For the moment, move NULL_P into
the set of keywords grouped with IDENT, so that at least it will act
similarly to non-keywords; and document the interaction.
2011-05-05 20:38:52 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 27525b1831 Unbreak the regression tests from my previous commit 2011-05-05 23:02:03 +02:00
Magnus Hagander d76a149c95 Clarify error message when attempting to create index on foreign table
Instead of just saying "is not a table", specifically state that
indexes aren't supported on *foreign* tables.
2011-05-05 21:47:42 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 7f1f1bfdbb Remove redundant port number check
pg_basebackup doesn't need to police the format of port numbers.
libpq already does that.
2011-05-04 21:02:02 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut bff074b1ab Message style cleanup 2011-05-04 20:56:52 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut ce2fc20071 Fix alignment of --help output
Tabs replaced by spaces.
2011-05-04 20:29:40 +03:00
Tom Lane dcc685debb Fix pull_up_sublinks' failure to handle nested pull-up opportunities.
After finding an EXISTS or ANY sub-select that can be converted to a
semi-join or anti-join, we should recurse into the body of the sub-select.
This allows cases such as EXISTS-within-EXISTS to be optimized properly.
The original coding would leave the lower sub-select as a SubLink, which
is no better and often worse than what we can do with a join.  Per example
from Wayne Conrad.

Back-patch to 8.4.  There is a related issue in older versions' handling
of pull_up_IN_clauses, but they're lame enough anyway about the whole area
that it seems not worth the extra work to try to fix.
2011-05-02 15:57:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 6755558b92 Improve aset.c's space management in contexts with small maxBlockSize.
The previous coding would allow requests up to half of maxBlockSize to be
treated as "chunks", but when that actually did happen, we'd waste nearly
half of the space in the malloc block containing the chunk, if no smaller
requests came along to fill it.  Avoid this scenario by limiting the
maximum size of a chunk to 1/8th maxBlockSize, so that we can waste no more
than 1/8th of the allocated space.  This will not change the behavior at
all for the default context size parameters (with large maxBlockSize),
but it will change the behavior when using ALLOCSET_SMALL_MAXSIZE.

In particular, there's no longer a need for spell.c to be overly concerned
about the request size parameters it uses, so remove a rather unhelpful
comment about that.

Merlin Moncure, per an idea of Tom Lane's
2011-05-02 12:08:08 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5c436a79e0 Catch errors in for loop in makefile
Add "|| exit" so that the rule aborts when a command fails.
2011-05-02 01:05:08 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut b106195b17 Rewrite installation makefile rules without for loops
install-sh can install multiple files at once, so for loops are not
necessary.  This was already changed for the rest of the code some
time ago, but pgxs.mk was apparently forgotten, and the obsolete
coding style has now been copied to the PLs as well.

This also fixes the problem that the for loops in question did not
catch errors.
2011-05-02 01:05:08 +03:00
Tom Lane 83b7584944 Make CLUSTER lock the old table's toast table before copying data.
We must lock out autovacuuming of the old toast table before computing the
OldestXmin horizon we will use.  Otherwise, autovacuum could start on the
toast table later, compute a later OldestXmin horizon, and remove as DEAD
toast tuples that we still need (because we think their parent tuples are
only RECENTLY_DEAD).  Per further thought about bug #5998.
2011-05-01 17:57:33 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 5a71b64130 Lowercase status labels in pg_stat_replication view. 2011-04-29 22:20:43 -04:00
Tom Lane 44e4bbf75d Remove special case for xmin == xmax in HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum().
VACUUM was willing to remove a committed-dead tuple immediately if it was
deleted by the same transaction that inserted it.  The idea is that such a
tuple could never have been visible to any other transaction, so we don't
need to keep it around to satisfy MVCC snapshots.  However, there was
already an exception for tuples that are part of an update chain, and this
exception created a problem: we might remove TOAST tuples (which are never
part of an update chain) while their parent tuple stayed around (if it was
part of an update chain).  This didn't pose a problem for most things,
since the parent tuple is indeed dead: no snapshot will ever consider it
visible.  But MVCC-safe CLUSTER had a problem, since it will try to copy
RECENTLY_DEAD tuples to the new table.  It then has to copy their TOAST
data too, and would fail if VACUUM had already removed the toast tuples.

Easiest fix is to get rid of the special case for xmin == xmax.  This may
delay reclaiming dead space for a little bit in some cases, but it's by far
the most reliable way to fix the issue.

Per bug #5998 from Mark Reid.  Back-patch to 8.3, which is the oldest
version with MVCC-safe CLUSTER.
2011-04-29 16:29:42 -04:00
Tom Lane fd2e2d09aa Rewrite pg_size_pretty() to avoid compiler bug.
Convert it to use successive shifts right instead of increasing a divisor.
This is probably a tad more efficient than the original coding, and it's
nicer-looking than the previous patch because we don't need a special case
to avoid overflow in the last branch.  But the real reason to do it is to
avoid a Solaris compiler bug, as per results from buildfarm member moa.
2011-04-29 01:45:58 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan c49e4ae1f8 Use non-literal format for possibly non-standard strftime formats.
Per recent -hackers discussion. The formats in question are %G and %V,
and cause warnings on MinGW at least. We assume the ecpg application
knows what it's doing if it passes these formats to the library.
2011-04-28 19:58:49 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan ab0ba6e73a Add some casts to try to silence most of the remaining format warnings on MinGW-W64. 2011-04-28 15:05:58 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan c02d5b7c27 Use a macro variable PG_PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE for the style used for checking printf type functions.
The style is set to "printf" for backwards compatibility everywhere except
on Windows, where it is set to "gnu_printf", which eliminates hundreds of
false error messages from modern versions of gcc arising from  %m and %ll{d,u}
formats.
2011-04-28 10:56:14 -04:00
Tom Lane 993c5e5904 Tag 9.1beta1. 2011-04-27 17:17:22 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut b2ef8929ae Fix binary upgrade of altered typed tables
Instead of dumping them as CREATE TABLE ... OF, dump them as normal
tables with the usual special processing for dropped columns, and then
attach them to the type afterward, using ALTER TABLE ... OF.  This is
analogous to the existing handling of inherited tables.
2011-04-27 22:11:09 +03:00
Andrew Dunstan 6693fec0e8 Revert "Force use of "%I64d" format for 64 bit ints on MinGW."
This reverts commit 52d01c2f52.

the UINT64_FORMAT bit broke the b uildfarm, so I'm reverting the whole thing pending further investigation.
2011-04-27 14:55:18 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 6693eb72c0 timeline is not needed in BaseBackup()
This code was accidentally part of the patch, it's only
needed for the code that's for 9.2. Not needing the timeline
also removes the need to call IDENTIFY_SYSTEM.

Noted by Peter E.
2011-04-27 20:39:20 +02:00
Tom Lane 18c0b4eccd Fix array- and path-creating functions to ensure padding bytes are zeroes.
Per recent discussion, it's important for all computed datums (not only the
results of input functions) to not contain any ill-defined (uninitialized)
bits.  Failing to ensure that can result in equal() reporting that
semantically indistinguishable Consts are not equal, which in turn leads to
bizarre and undesirable planner behavior, such as in a recent example from
David Johnston.  We might eventually try to fix this in a general manner by
allowing datatypes to define identity-testing functions, but for now the
path of least resistance is to expect datatypes to force all unused bits
into consistent states.

Per some testing by Noah Misch, array and path functions seem to be the
only ones presenting risks at the moment, so I looked through all the
functions in adt/array*.c and geo_ops.c and fixed them as necessary.  In
the array functions, the easiest/safest fix is to allocate result arrays
with palloc0 instead of palloc.  Possibly in future someone will want to
look into whether we can just zero the padding bytes, but that looks too
complex for a back-patchable fix.  In the path functions, we already had a
precedent in path_in for just zeroing the one known pad field, so duplicate
that code as needed.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2011-04-27 13:58:36 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 348c10efe0 Revert "Remove hard coded formats for INT64 and use configured settings instead."
This reverts commit 9b1508af89.

As requested by Tom.
2011-04-27 11:28:14 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 9b1508af89 Remove hard coded formats for INT64 and use configured settings instead. 2011-04-27 11:07:52 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 52d01c2f52 Force use of "%I64d" format for 64 bit ints on MinGW.
Both this and "%lld" work, but the compiler's format checking doesn't
like "%lld", so we get all sorts of spurious warnings.
2011-04-27 10:09:23 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan c43d0791ac Use an explicit format string to keep the compiler happy. 2011-04-27 10:02:21 -04:00
Tom Lane 71e7083532 Rephrase some not-supported error messages in pg_hba.conf processing.
In a couple of places we said "not supported on this platform" for cases
that aren't really platform-specific, but could depend on configuration
options such as --with-openssl.  Use "not supported by this build" instead,
as that doesn't convey the impression that you can't fix it without moving
to another OS; that's also more consistent with the wording used for an
identical error case in guc.c.

No back-patch, as the clarity gain is small enough to not be worth
burdening translators with back-branch changes.
2011-04-26 15:56:28 -04:00
Tom Lane c464a0657b Complain if pg_hba.conf contains "hostssl" but SSL is disabled.
Most commenters agreed that this is more friendly than silently failing
to match the line during actual connection attempts.  Also, this will
prevent corner cases that might arise when trying to handle such a line
when the SSL code isn't turned on.  An example is that specifying
clientcert=1 in such a line would formerly result in a completely
misleading complaint that root.crt wasn't present, as seen in a recent
report from Marc-Andre Laverdiere.  While we could have instead fixed
that specific behavior, it seems likely that we'd have a continuing stream
of such bizarre behaviors if we keep on allowing hostssl lines when SSL is
disabled.

Back-patch to 8.4, where clientcert was introduced.  Earlier versions don't
have this specific issue, and the code is enough different to make this
patch not applicable without more work than it seems worth.
2011-04-26 15:40:11 -04:00