for "aclitem" so that it is not an opaque datatype.
I needed these functions to browse aclitems from user land. I can load
them when necessary, but it seems to me that these accessors for a
backend type belong to the backend, so I submit them.
Fabien Coelho
the next are handled by ReleaseAndReadBuffer rather than separate
ReleaseBuffer and ReadBuffer calls. This cuts the number of acquisitions
of the BufMgrLock by a factor of 2 (possibly more, if an indexscan happens
to pull successive rows from the same heap page). Unfortunately this
doesn't seem enough to get us out of the recently discussed context-switch
storm problem, but it's surely worth doing anyway.
of whether we have successfully read data into a buffer; this makes the
error behavior a bit more transparent (IMHO anyway), and also makes it
work correctly for local buffers which don't use Start/TerminateBufferIO.
Collapse three separate functions for writing a shared buffer into one.
This overlaps a bit with cleanups that Neil proposed awhile back, but
seems not to have committed yet.
of VACUUM cases so that VACUUM requests don't affect the ARC state at all,
avoid corner case where BufferSync would uselessly rewrite a buffer that
no longer contains the page that was to be flushed. Make some minor
other cleanups in and around the bufmgr as well, such as moving PinBuffer
and UnpinBuffer into bufmgr.c where they really belong.
* removed a few redundant defines
* get_user_name safe under win32
* rationalized pipe read EOF for win32 (UPDATED PATCH USED)
* changed all backend instances of sleep() to pg_usleep
- except for the SLEEP_ON_ASSERT in assert.c, as it would exceed a
32-bit long [Note to patcher: If a SLEEP_ON_ASSERT of 2000 seconds is
acceptable, please replace with pg_usleep(2000000000L)]
I added a comment to that part of the code:
/*
* It would be nice to use pg_usleep() here, but only does 2000 sec
* or 33 minutes, which seems too short.
*/
sleep(1000000);
Claudio Natoli
o -Allow dump/load of CSV format
This adds new keywords to COPY and \copy:
CSV - enable CSV mode (comma separated variable)
QUOTE - specify quote character
ESCAPE - specify escape character
FORCE - force quoting of specified column
LITERAL - suppress null comparison for columns
Doc changes included. Regression updates coming from Andrew.
are sought first as local FROM columns, then as local SELECT-list aliases,
and finally as outer FROM columns; the former behavior made outer FROM
columns take precedence over aliases. This does not change spec
conformance because SQL99 allows only the first case anyway, and it seems
more useful and self-consistent. Per gripe from Dennis Bjorklund 2004-04-05.
It works on the principle of turning sockets into non-blocking, and then
emulate blocking behaviour on top of that, while allowing signals to
run. Signals are now implemented using an event instead of APCs, thus
getting rid of the issue of APCs not being compatible with "old style"
sockets functions.
It also moves the win32 specific code away from pqsignal.h/c into
port/win32, and also removes the "thread style workaround" of the APC
issue previously in place.
In order to make things work, a few things are also changed in pgstat.c:
1) There is now a separate pipe to the collector and the bufferer. This
is required because the pipe will otherwise only be signalled in one of
the processes when the postmaster goes down. The MS winsock code for
select() must have some kind of workaround for this behaviour, but I
have found no stable way of doing that. You really are not supposed to
use the same socket from more than one process (unless you use
WSADuplicateSocket(), in which case the docs specifically say that only
one will be flagged).
2) The check for "postmaster death" is moved into a separate select()
call after the main loop. The previous behaviour select():ed on the
postmaster pipe, while later explicitly saying "we do NOT check for
postmaster exit inside the loop".
The issue was that the code relies on the same select() call seeing both
the postmaster pipe *and* the pgstat pipe go away. This does not always
happen, and it appears that useing WSAEventSelect() makes it even more
common that it does not.
Since it's only called when the process exits, I don't think using a
separate select() call will have any significant impact on how the stats
collector works.
Magnus Hagander
"millennium" date part implementation in postgresql, both in the code
and the documentation, so that it conforms to the official definition.
If you do not agree with the official definition, please send your
complaint to "pope@vatican.org". I'm not responsible for them;-)
With the previous version, the centuries and millenniums had a wrong
number and started the wrong year. Moreover century number 0, which does
not exist in reality, lasted 200 years. Also, millennium number 0 lasted
2000 years.
If you want postgresql to have it's own definition of "century" and
"millennium" that does not conform to the one of the society, just give
them another name. I would suggest "pgCENTURY" and "pgMILLENNIUM";-)
IMO, if someone may use the options, it means that postgresql is used for
historical data, so it make sense to have an historical definition. Also,
I just want to divide the year by 100 or 1000, I can do that quite easily.
BACKWARD INCOMPATIBLE CHANGE
Fabien Coelho - coelho@cri.ensmp.fr
by the set operation, so that redundant sorts at higher levels can be
avoided. This was foreseen a good while back, but not done. Per request
from Karel Zak.
> >>with allowed values of "all, mod, ddl, none" with default "none".
OK, here is a patch that implements #1. Here is sample output:
test=> set client_min_messages = 'log';
SET
test=> set log_statement = 'mod';
SET
test=> select 1;
?column?
----------
1
(1 row)
test=> update test set x=1;
LOG: statement: update test set x=1;
ERROR: relation "test" does not exist
test=> update test set x=1;
LOG: statement: update test set x=1;
ERROR: relation "test" does not exist
test=> copy test from '/tmp/x';
LOG: statement: copy test from '/tmp/x';
ERROR: relation "test" does not exist
test=> copy test to '/tmp/x';
ERROR: relation "test" does not exist
test=> prepare xx as select 1;
PREPARE
test=> prepare xx as update x set y=1;
LOG: statement: prepare xx as update x set y=1;
ERROR: relation "x" does not exist
test=> explain analyze select 1;;
QUERY PLAN
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Result (cost=0.00..0.01 rows=1 width=0) (actual time=0.006..0.007 rows=1 loops=1)
Total runtime: 0.046 ms
(2 rows)
test=> explain analyze update test set x=1;
LOG: statement: explain analyze update test set x=1;
ERROR: relation "test" does not exist
test=> explain update test set x=1;
ERROR: relation "test" does not exist
It checks PREPARE and EXECUTE ANALYZE too. The log_statement values are
'none', 'mod', 'ddl', and 'all'. For 'all', it prints before the query
is parsed, and for ddl/mod, it does it right after parsing using the
node tag (or command tag for CREATE/ALTER/DROP), so any non-parse errors
will print after the log line.
That particular corner case is not exactly compelling, but given 7.4's
ability to discard redundant join clauses, it is possible for the situation
to arise from queries that are not so obviously silly. Per bug report
of 6-Apr-04.
the COPY NULL string:
test=> copy pg_language to '/tmp/x' with delimiter '|';
COPY
test=> copy pg_language to '/tmp/x' with delimiter '|' null '|x';
ERROR: COPY delimiter must not appear in the NULL specification
test=> copy pg_language from '/tmp/x' with delimiter '|' null '|x';
ERROR: COPY delimiter must not appear in the NULL specification
It also throws an error if it conflicts with the default NULL string:
test=> copy pg_language to '/tmp/x' with delimiter '\\';
ERROR: COPY delimiter must not appear in the NULL specification
test=> copy pg_language to '/tmp/x' with delimiter '\\' NULL 'x';
COPY
'SELECT foo()' in a SQL function returning a rowtype, to simply pass
back the results of another function returning the same rowtype.
However, that hasn't actually worked in many years. Now it works again.
results with tuples as ordinary varlena Datums. This commit does not
in itself do much for us, except eliminate the horrid memory leak
associated with evaluation of whole-row variables. However, it lays the
groundwork for allowing composite types as table columns, and perhaps
some other useful features as well. Per my proposal of a few days ago.
boxes. Change interface to user-defined GiST support methods union and
picksplit. Now instead of bytea struct it used special GistEntryVector
structure.
same path keys and nearly equivalent costs will be considered redundant.
The exact nature of the fuzziness may get adjusted later based on current
discussions, but no one has shot a hole in the basic idea yet ...
only stable and not immutable, pred_test_simple_clause has to guard
against making invalid deductions. Add a test for immutability of
the selected test_op.
is measured in kilobytes and checked against actual physical execution
stack depth, as per my proposal of 30-Dec. This gives us a fairly
bulletproof defense against crashing due to runaway recursive functions.
in s_lock.c were not updated, and still refers to select. Made my grep
hit the wrong files, so I figured a simple patch was in order.. (other
refs in the same comment block was changed..)
Magnus Hagander
remove separate implementation of ALTER TABLE SET WITHOUT OIDS in favor
of doing a regular DROP. Also, cause CREATE TABLE to account completely
correctly for the inheritance status of the OID column. This fixes
problems with dropping OID columns that have dependencies, as noted by
Christopher Kings-Lynne, as well as making sure that you can't drop an
OID column that was inherited from a parent.
listen_addresses parameter, as per recent discussion. The default behavior
is now to listen on localhost, which eliminates the need for the -i
postmaster switch in many scenarios.
Andrew Dunstan
of fighting it, avoid hard-wired (and wrong) assumption about max length
of prefix, cause %l to actually work as documented, don't compute data
we may not need.
TID (heap position). This doesn't do anything to the validity of the
finished index, but by pretending to qsort() that there are no really
equal keys in the sort, we can avoid performance problems with qsort
implementations that have trouble with large numbers of equal keys.
Patch from Manfred Koizar.
so that the 'val' is computed only once, per recent discussion. The
speedup is not much when 'val' is just a simple variable, but could be
significant for larger expressions. More importantly this avoids issues
with multiple evaluations of a volatile 'val', and it allows the CASE
expression to be reverse-listed in its original form by ruleutils.c.
directly to the appropriate per-node execution function, using a function
pointer stored by ExecInitExpr. This speeds things up by eliminating one
level of function call. The function-pointer technique also enables further
small improvements such as only making one-time tests once (and then
changing the function pointer). Overall this seems to gain about 10%
on evaluation of simple expressions, which isn't earthshaking but seems
a worthwhile gain for a relatively small hack. Per recent discussion
on pghackers.
that by querying the environment explicitly first for LC_COLLATE and
LC_CTYPE. We have to do this because initdb passes those values in the
environment. If there is nothing there we fall back on the codepage.
Andrew Dunstan
implemented casts to varchar and bpchar using a cast-to-text function.
This is a holdover from before we had pg_cast; it now makes more sense
to just list these casts in pg_cast. While at it, add pg_cast entries
for the other direction (casts from varchar/bpchar) where feasible.
In particular, don't depend on strtod() to accept 'NaN' and 'Infinity'
inputs (while this is required by C99, not all platforms are compliant
with that yet). Also, don't require glibc's behavior from isinf():
it seems that on a lot of platforms isinf() does not itself distinguish
between negative and positive infinity.
message that is reporting a prechecking error in a SQL function.
This is to cue client-side code that the syntax error position,
if any, is with respect to the function body and not the outer command.
incompatible enough to prevent indexscanning the referenced table. Also,
improve the error message that pops out when we can't implement the FK at
all for lack of a usable equality operator. Fabien Coelho, with some review
by Tom Lane.
7.4 rewrite for hashed aggregate support. If the transition data type
is pass-by-reference, the transValue must be pfreed when starting a new
group boundary, else we have a one-value-per-group leakage. Thanks to
Rae Steining for providing a reproducible test case.
types. Update the regression tests and the documentation to reflect
this. Remove the UNSAFE_FLOATS #ifdef.
This is only half the story: we still unconditionally reject
floating point operations that result in +/- infinity. See
recent thread on -hackers for more information.
any amount of leading or trailing whitespace (where "whitespace"
is defined by isspace()). This is for SQL conformance, as well
as consistency with other numeric types (e.g. oid, numeric).
Also refactor pg_atoi() to avoid looking at errno where not
necessary, and add a bunch of regression tests for the input
to these types.
initialization of stats process under EXEC_BACKEND.
[A cleaner, rationalized approach to stat/backend/SSDataBase child
processes under EXEC_BACKEND is on my TODO list. However this patch
takes care of immediate concerns (ie. stats test now passes under
win32)]
Claudio Natoli
bin directories to be packaged under the same root directory (eg. <some
path>/pgsql/bin and <some path>/pgsql/lib) for the win32 port, which
does not appear to be an onerous restriction.
Claudio Natoli
#log_line_prefix = '' # e.g. '<%u%%%d> '
# %u=user name %d=database name
# %r=remote host and port
# %p=PID %t=timestamp %i=command tag
# %c=session id %l=session line number
# %s=session start timestamp
# %x=stop here in non-session processes
# %%='%'
Andrew Dunstan
predicate of the form 'foo IS NOT NULL' is implied by a WHERE clause
that uses 'foo' in any strict operator or function. Per suggestion
and preliminary implementation by John Siracusa; some further hacking
by moi.
support for 'week' within the date_trunc function.
Within the patch I added a couple of test cases and associated target
output, and changed the documentation to add 'week' appropriately.
Robert Creager
* Mostly, casting etc to remove compilation warnings in win32 only code.
* main.c: set _IONBF to stdout/stderr under win32 (under win32, _IOLBF
defaults to full buffering)
* pg_resetxlog/Makefile: ensures dirmod.o gets cleaned (got bitten by
this when, after "make clean"ing, switching compilation between Ming +
Cygwin)
Claudio Natoli
+extern Oid SPI_getargtypeid(void *plan, int argIndex);
+extern int SPI_getargcount(void *plan);
+extern bool SPI_is_cursor_plan(void *plan);
Thomas Hallgren
float8 types. This begins the deprecation of this feature: in 7.6,
this input will be rejected.
Also added a new error code for warnings about deprecated features,
and updated the regression tests.
equivalent sort expressions to use was broken: you can't just look
at the relation membership, you have to actually grovel over the
individual Vars in each expression. I think this did work when it
was written, but it was broken by subsequent optimizations that made
join relations not propagate every single input variable upward.
Must find the Var that got propagated, not choose one at random.
Per bug report from Daniel O'Neill.
of which redundant clause to remove, it removes the more expensive one.
In simple scenarios the clauses will be like 'var = var' and there's
no difference, but we are now capable of considering cases where there
are sub-selects in the clauses, and it makes a BIG difference.
comments, make some unrelated improvements to the functions
documentation, and perform some minor consistency cleanup
elsewhere. Original initcap() change from Dennis B., additional
changes by Neil C.
* Changes incorrect CYGWIN defines to __CYGWIN__
* Some localtime returns NULL checks (when unchecked cause SEGVs under
Win32
regression tests)
* Rationalized CreateSharedMemoryAndSemaphores and
AttachSharedMemoryAndSemaphores (Bruce, I finally remembered to do it);
requires attention.
Claudio Natoli
exposed thereby. AFAICT these would not lead to any worse problems than
junk emitted on the backend's stdout, but we should have the option to
catch possible worse errors in future.
is still lacking, as is support in plpgsql and other places, but this is
the basic feature. Patch by Andrew Dunstan, some tweaking by Tom Lane.
Also, enable %option nodefault in these two lexers, and patch some gaps
revealed thereby.
and FreeDir routines modeled on the existing AllocateFile/FreeFile.
Like the latter, these routines will avoid failing on EMFILE/ENFILE
conditions whenever possible, and will prevent leakage of directory
descriptors if an elog() occurs while one is open.
Also, reduce PANIC to ERROR in MoveOfflineLogs() --- this is not
critical code and there is no reason to force a DB restart on failure.
All per recent trouble report from Olivier Hubaut.
number of openable files and the number already opened. This eliminates
depending on sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX), and allows much saner behavior on
platforms where open-file slots are used up by semaphores.
logically belongs. Arrange to update the _NSGetArgv() copy of the argv
pointer on Darwin. (It seems likely that other NeXT-derived platforms
also have an _NSGetArgv() problem, but until we have some reports I'll
just make this #ifdef __darwin__.)
problem, per previous discussion. Make some additional changes to
centralize the knowledge of just how identifier downcasing is done,
in hopes of simplifying any future tweaking in this area.
applied, deadlock detection and statement_timeout now works.
The file timer.c goes into src/backend/port/win32/.
The patch also removes two lines of "printf debugging" accidentally left
in pqsignal.h, in the console control handler.
Magnus Hagander
1) Now puts in exactly the same change as the current-cvs mingw code
does. (see
http://cvs.sourceforge.net/viewcvs.py/mingw/runtime/mingwex/dirent.c?r1=
1.3&r2=1.4, second part of the patch).
2) Updates both xlog.c and slru.c in backend/access/transam/
3) Also updates pg_resetxlog, which also uses readdir() and checks the
errno value after the loop.
Magnus Hagander
Win2K, and possibly all Win32 variants, it is always 0). This causes a
number of problems in the dfmgr.c logic, which basically all revolve
around the fact that *any* two files will appear to have the same inode.
Claudio Natoli
corner cases that could stand improvement, but it does all the basic
stuff. A byproduct is that the selectivity routines are no longer
constrained to working on simple Vars; we might in future be able to
improve the behavior for subexpressions that don't match indexes.
This commit teaches ANALYZE to store such stats in pg_statistic, but
nothing is done yet about teaching the planner to use 'em.
Also, repair longstanding oversight in separate ANALYZE command: it
updated the pg_class.relpages and reltuples counts for the table proper,
but not for indexes.
vs. timestamptz. This allows use of indexes for expressions like
datecol >= date 'today' - interval '1 month'
which were formerly not indexable without casting the righthand side
down from timestamp to date.
Nov 2002: when constant-expression simplification removes all the
aggregate function calls from a query, that doesn't mean we can act as
though there never were any aggregates. Per bug report from Gabor Szucs.
indexes, it seems like we ought to put another layer of indirection
between the compute_stats functions and the actual data storage. This
would allow us to compute the values on-the-fly, for example.
for already empty buffers because their buffer tag was not cleard out
when the buffers have been invalidated before.
Also removed the misnamed BM_FREE bufhdr flag and replaced the checks,
which effectively ask if the buffer is unpinned, with checks against the
refcount field.
Jan
wit: Add a header record to each WAL segment file so that it can be reliably
identified. Avoid splitting WAL records across segment files (this is not
strictly necessary, but makes it simpler to incorporate the header records).
Make WAL entries for file creation, deletion, and truncation (as foreseen but
never implemented by Vadim). Also, add support for making XLOG_SEG_SIZE
configurable at compile time, similarly to BLCKSZ. Fix a couple bugs I
introduced in WAL replay during recent smgr API changes. initdb is forced
due to changes in pg_control contents.
allow the bgwriter to start before the startup subprocess has finished
... it tends to crash otherwise. (The same problem may have existed for
the checkpointer, I'm not entirely sure.) Remove some code that was
redundant because the bgwriter is handled as a member of the backend list.
subroutine in src/port/pgsleep.c. Remove platform dependencies from
miscadmin.h and put them in port.h where they belong. Extend recent
vacuum cost-based-delay patch to apply to VACUUM FULL, ANALYZE, and
non-btree index vacuuming.
By the way, where is the documentation for the cost-based-delay patch?
the relcache, and so the notion of 'blind write' is gone. This should
improve efficiency in bgwriter and background checkpoint processes.
Internal restructuring in md.c to remove the not-very-useful array of
MdfdVec objects --- might as well just use pointers.
Also remove the long-dead 'persistent main memory' storage manager (mm.c),
since it seems quite unlikely to ever get resurrected.
Natoli and Bruce Momjian (and some cosmetic fixes from Neil Conway).
Changes:
- remove duplicate signal definitions from pqsignal.h
- replace pqkill() with kill() and redefine kill() in Win32
- use ereport() in place of fprintf() in some error handling in
pqsignal.c
- export pg_queue_signal() and make use of it where necessary
- add a console control handler for Ctrl-C and similar handling
on Win32
- do WaitForSingleObjectEx() in CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() on Win32;
query cancelling should now work on Win32
- various other fixes and cleanups
is asked to assign a variable to itself, it will result in doing a
memcpy() on an entirely-overlapping memory range, which results in
undefined behavior according to ANSI C. That said, it is unlikely to
actually do anything bad on any sane libc, but this keeps valgrind quiet.
Make btree index creation and initial validation of foreign-key constraints
use maintenance_work_mem rather than work_mem as their memory limit.
Add some code to guc.c to allow these variables to be referenced by their
old names in SHOW and SET commands, for backwards compatibility.
a series of numbers, optionally using an explicit step size other
than the default value (one). Use function in the information_schema
to replace hard-wired knowledge of INDEX_MAX_KEYS. initdb forced due
to pg_proc change. Documentation update still needed -- will be
committed separately.
palloc()$
Fixed. Thanks.
> src/backend/postmaster/pgstat.c miss
> #include "tcop/tcopprot.h" line.
Fixed.
> src/utils/dllinit.c wrong include header line at MinGW.
> #include <cygwin/version.h> must be not included
Fixed.
> by the way,
> I can't compile eccp because I used lower version bison.
> and bin/pg_resetxlog too. in this case I can't find what's wrong.
Fixed.
valgrind: a buffer passed to strncmp() had to be NUL-terminated. Original
report and patch from Dennis Bjorkland, some cleanup by Andrew Dunstan,
and finally some editorializing from Neil Conway.
* configure + Makefile changes
* shared memory attaching in EXEC_BACKEND case (+ minor fix for apparent
cygwin bug under cygwin/EXEC_BACKEND case only)
* PATH env var separator differences
* missing win32 rand functions added
* placeholder replacements for sync etc under port.h
To those who are really interested, and there are a few of you: the attached
patch + file will allow the source base to be compiled (and, for some
definition, "run") under MingW, with the following caveats (I wanted to
first properly fix all but the last of these, but y'all won't quit asking
for a patch :-):
* child death: SIGCHLD not yet sent, so as a minimum, you'll need to
put in some sort of delay after StartupDatabase, and handle setting
StartupPID to 0 etc (ie. the stuff the reaper() signal function is supposed
to do)
* dirmod.c: comment out the elog calls
* dfmgr.c: some hackage required to substitute_libpath_macro
* slru/xact.c: comment out the errno checking after the readdir
(fixed by next version of MingW)
Again, this is only if you *really* want to see postgres compile and start,
and is a nice leg-up for working on the other Win32 TODO list items. Just
don't expect too much else from it at this point...
Claudio Natoli
whereToSendOutput instead because they are really inquiring about
the correct client communication protocol. Update some comments.
This is pointing towards supporting regular FE/BE client protocol
in a standalone backend, per discussion a month or so back.
unnecessary checks for complex grouping expressions: we cannot check
whether the expressions are simple Vars until after we apply
flatten_join_alias_vars, because in the case of FULL JOIN that routine
can introduce non-Var expressions. Per example from Joel Knight.
composite types, because TupleTableSlots aren't Datums and can't be
stored in Const nodes. We can remove this restriction if we ever
adopt a cleaner runtime representation for whole-tuple results, but
at the moment it's broken. Per example from Thomas Hallgren.
against the latest shapshot. It also includes the replacement of kill()
with pqkill() and sigsetmask() with pqsigsetmask().
Passes all tests fine on my linux machine once applied. Still doesn't
link completely on Win32 - there are a few things still required. But
much closer than before.
At Bruce's request, I'm goint to write up a README file about the method
of signals delivery chosen and why the others were rejected (basically a
summary of the mailinglist discussions). I'll finish that up once/if the
patch is accepted.
Magnus Hagander
PostmasterPid variable, which gets set (early) in PostmasterMain
getppid would not be the postmaster?
[fork/exec] Implements processCancelRequest by keeping an array of
pid/cancel_key structs in shared mem
[fork/exec] Moves AttachSharedMemoryAndSemaphores call for backends into
SubPostmasterMain
[win32] Implements reaper/waitpid by keeping an arrays of children
pids,handles in postmaster local mem
- this item is largely untested, for reasons which should be
obvious, but appears sound
[win32/all] Added extern for pgpipe in Win32 case, and changed the second
pipe call (which seems to have been missed earlier) to pgpipe
[win32] #define'd ftruncate to chsize in the Win32 case
[win32] PG_USLEEP for Win32 has a misplaced paren. Fixed.
[win32] DLLIMPORT handling for MingW case
Claudio Natoli
complete ExtendCLOG() before advancing nextXid, so that if that routine
fails, the next incoming transaction will try it again. Per trouble
report from Christopher Kings-Lynne.
done by the background writer between writing dirty blocks and
napping.
none (default) no action
sync bgwriter calls smgrsync() causing a sync(2)
A global sync() is only good on dedicated database servers, so
more flush methods should be added in the future.
Jan
IN (sub-SELECT) constructs. We must force a clauseless join of the
sub-select member relations, but it wasn't happening because the code
thought it would be able to use the join clause arising from the IN.
that it's good to join where there are join clauses rather than where there
are not. Also enable it to generate bushy plans at need, so that it doesn't
fail in the presence of multiple IN clauses containing sub-joins. These
changes appear to improve the behavior enough that we can substantially reduce
the default pool size and generations count, thereby decreasing the runtime,
and yet get as good or better plans as we were getting in 7.4. Consequently,
adjust the default GEQO parameters. I also modified the way geqo_effort is
used so that it affects both population size and number of generations;
it's now useful as a single control to adjust the GEQO runtime-vs-plan-quality
tradeoff. Bump geqo_threshold to 12, since even with these changes GEQO
seems to be slower than the regular planner at 11 relations.
patch: a 3-value enum was mistakenly assigned directly to a 'bool'
in transformCreateStmt(). Along the way, change makeObjectName()
to be static, as it isn't used outside analyze.c
when scanning a table that we need all the columns from. In case of
SELECT INTO, we have to check that the hasoids flag matches the desired
output type, too. Per report from Mike Mascari.
default value for geqo_effort is supposed to be 40, not 1. The actual
'genetic' component of the GEQO algorithm has been practically disabled
since 7.1 because of this mistake. Improve documentation while at it.
should not be too eager to reject paths involving unknown schemas, since
it can't really tell whether the schemas exist in the target database.
(Also, when reading pg_dumpall output, it could be that the schemas
don't exist yet, but eventually will.) ALTER USER SET has a similar issue.
So, reduce the normal ERROR to a NOTICE when checking search_path values
for these commands. Supporting this requires changing the API for GUC
assign_hook functions, which causes the patch to touch a lot of places,
but the changes are conceptually trivial.
dynamically loaded C functions). Some limited testing suggests that
this puts the lookup speed for external functions just about on par
with built-in functions. Per discussion with Eric Ridge.
in a COPY error message. It seems that glibc gets indigestion if it is
asked to truncate strings that contain invalid UTF-8 encoding sequences.
vsnprintf will return -1 in such cases, leading to looping and eventual
memory overflow in elog.c. Instead use our own, more robust pg_mbcliplen
routine. I believe this problem accounts for several recent reports of
unexpected 'out of memory' errors during COPY IN.
check instead of hardwiring assumptions that only certain plan node types
can appear at the places where we are testing. This was always a pretty
fragile assumption, and it turns out to be broken in 7.4 for certain cases
involving IN-subselect tests that need type coercion.
Also, modify code that builds finished Plan tree so that node types that
don't do projection always copy their input node's targetlist, rather than
having the tlist passed in from the caller. The old method makes it too
easy to write broken code that thinks it can modify the tlist when it
cannot.
a run-time key (that is, a nonconstant expression compared to the index
variable), the key is evaluated just once per scan, but we were charging
costs as though it were evaluated once per visited index entry.
tuptoaster.c --- fields that are compressed in-line are not a reason
to invoke the toaster. Along the way, add a couple more htup.h macros
to eliminate confusing negated tests, and get rid of the already
vestigial TUPLE_TOASTER_ACTIVE symbol.