Commit Graph

2056 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Daniel Gustafsson 549ec201d6 Replace Test::More plans with done_testing
Rather than doing manual book keeping to plan the number of tests to run
in each TAP suite, conclude each run with done_testing() summing up the
the number of tests that ran. This removes the need for maintaning and
updating the plan count at the expense of an accurate count of remaining
during the test suite runtime.

This patch has been discussed a number of times, often in the context of
other patches which updates tests, so a larger number of discussions can
be found in the archives.

Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker <ilmari@ilmari.org>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/DD399313-3D56-4666-8079-88949DAC870F@yesql.se
2022-02-11 20:54:44 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 4c5c41b4d9 Remove unnecessary resetPQExpBuffer call
Oversight in e2c52beecd.

Author: Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20220209025007.eogz2aivcnvw46ym%40jrouhaud
2022-02-10 12:23:40 +01:00
Daniel Gustafsson 1a29217a00 Free temporary memory when reading TOC
ReadStr returns allocated memory which the caller is responsible for
freeing when done with the string. This commit ensures that memory is
freed in one case which used ReadStr in a conditional. While the leak
might not be too concerning, this makes the code consistent across all
ReadStr callsites in ReadToc. Due to the lack of complaints of issues
in production from this, no backpatch is performed at this point.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy, Georgios Kokolatos
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/oZwKiUxFsVaetG2xOJp7Hwao8F1AKIdfFDQLNJrnwoaxmjyB-45r_aYmhgXHKLcMI3GT24m9L6HafSi2ns7WFxXe0mw2_tIJpD-Z3vb_eyI=@pm.me
2022-02-09 14:12:55 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 94aa7cc5f7 Add UNIQUE null treatment option
The SQL standard has been ambiguous about whether null values in
unique constraints should be considered equal or not.  Different
implementations have different behaviors.  In the SQL:202x draft, this
has been formalized by making this implementation-defined and adding
an option on unique constraint definitions UNIQUE [ NULLS [NOT]
DISTINCT ] to choose a behavior explicitly.

This patch adds this option to PostgreSQL.  The default behavior
remains UNIQUE NULLS DISTINCT.  Making this happen in the btree code
is pretty easy; most of the patch is just to carry the flag around to
all the places that need it.

The CREATE UNIQUE INDEX syntax extension is not from the standard,
it's my own invention.

I named all the internal flags, catalog columns, etc. in the negative
("nulls not distinct") so that the default PostgreSQL behavior is the
default if the flag is false.

Reviewed-by: Maxim Orlov <orlovmg@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Borisov <pashkin.elfe@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/84e5ee1b-387e-9a54-c326-9082674bde78@enterprisedb.com
2022-02-03 11:48:21 +01:00
Robert Haas aa01051418 pg_upgrade: Preserve database OIDs.
Commit 9a974cbcba arranged to preserve
relfilenodes and tablespace OIDs. For similar reasons, also arrange
to preserve database OIDs.

One problem is that, up until now, the OIDs assigned to the template0
and postgres databases have not been fixed. This could be a problem
when upgrading, because pg_upgrade might try to migrate a database
from the old cluster to the new cluster while keeping the OID and find
a different database with that OID, resulting in a failure. If it finds
a database with the same name and the same OID that's OK: it will be
dropped and recreated. But the same OID and a different name is a
problem.

To prevent that, fix the OIDs for postgres and template0 to specific
values less than 16384. To avoid running afoul of this rule, these
values should not be changed in future releases. It's not a problem
that these OIDs aren't fixed in existing releases, because the OIDs
that we're assigning here weren't used for either of these databases
in any previous release. Thus, there's no chance that an upgrade of
a cluster from any previous release will collide with the OIDs we're
assigning here. And going forward, the OIDs will always be fixed, so
the only potential collision is with a system database having the
same name and the same OID, which is OK.

This patch lets users assign a specific OID to a database as well,
provided however that it can't be less than 16384. I (rhaas) thought
it might be better not to expose this capability to users, but the
consensus was otherwise, so the syntax is documented. Letting users
assign OIDs below 16384 would not be OK, though, because a
user-created database with a low-numbered OID might collide with a
system-created database in a future release. We therefore prohibit
that.

Shruthi KC, based on an earlier patch from Antonin Houska, reviewed
and with some adjustments by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYgTwYcUmB=e8+hRHOFA0kkS6Kde85+UNdon6q7bt1niQ@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAASxf_Mnwm1Dh2vd5FAhVX6S1nwNSZUB1z12VddYtM++H2+p7w@mail.gmail.com
2022-01-24 14:23:43 -05:00
Tom Lane ac7df108cf pg_dump: avoid useless query in binary_upgrade_set_type_oids_by_type_oid
Commit 6df7a9698 wrote appendPQExpBuffer where it should have
written printfPQExpBuffer.  This resulted in re-issuing the
previous query along with the desired one, which very accidentally
had no negative consequences except for some wasted cycles.

Back-patch to v14 where that came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1714711.1642962663@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-01-23 13:54:24 -05:00
Tom Lane 353708e1fb Clean up recent Coverity complaints.
Commit 5c649fe15 introduced a memory leak into pg_basebackup's
parse_compress_options.  (I simplified nearby code while at it.)

Commit 9a974cbcb introduced a memory leak into pg_dump's
binary_upgrade_set_pg_class_oids.

Coverity also complained about a call of SnapBuildProcessChange that
ignored the result, unlike every other call of that function.  This
is evidently intentional, so add a (void) cast to indicate that.
(It's also old, dating to b89e15105; I suppose the reason it showed
up now is 7a5f6b474's recent rearrangement of nearby code.)
2022-01-23 12:51:38 -05:00
Robert Haas 9a974cbcba pg_upgrade: Preserve relfilenodes and tablespace OIDs.
Currently, database OIDs, relfilenodes, and tablespace OIDs can all
change when a cluster is upgraded using pg_upgrade. It seems better
to preserve them, because (1) it makes troubleshooting pg_upgrade
easier, since you don't have to do a lot of work to match up files
in the old and new clusters, (2) it allows 'rsync' to save bandwidth
when used to re-sync a cluster after an upgrade, and (3) if we ever
encrypt or sign blocks, we would likely want to use a nonce that
depends on these values.

This patch only arranges to preserve relfilenodes and tablespace
OIDs. The task of preserving database OIDs is left for another patch,
since it involves some complexities that don't exist in these cases.

Database OIDs have a similar issue, but there are some tricky points
in that case that do not apply to these cases, so that problem is left
for another patch.

Shruthi KC, based on an earlier patch from Antonin Houska, reviewed
and with some adjustments by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYgTwYcUmB=e8+hRHOFA0kkS6Kde85+UNdon6q7bt1niQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-01-17 13:40:27 -05:00
Michael Paquier ca86a63d20 Fix typo in pg_dumpall.c
Oversight in 2158628.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220117062006.GY14051@telsasoft.com
2022-01-17 16:03:12 +09:00
Michael Paquier 2158628864 Add support for --no-table-access-method in pg_{dump,dumpall,restore}
The logic is similar to default_tablespace in some ways, so as no SET
queries on default_table_access_method are generated before dumping or
restoring an object (table or materialized view support table AMs) when
specifying this new option.

This option is useful to enforce the use of a default access method even
if some tables included in a dump use an AM different than the system's
default.

There are already two cases in the TAP tests of pg_dump with a table and
a materialized view that use a non-default table AM, and these are
extended that the new option does not generate SET clauses on
default_table_access_method.

Author: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20211207153930.GR17618@telsasoft.com
2022-01-17 14:51:46 +09:00
Bruce Momjian 27b77ecf9f Update copyright for 2022
Backpatch-through: 10
2022-01-07 19:04:57 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera f4566345cf
Create foreign key triggers in partitioned tables too
While user-defined triggers defined on a partitioned table have
a catalog definition for both it and its partitions, internal
triggers used by foreign keys defined on partitioned tables only
have a catalog definition for its partitions.  This commit fixes
that so that partitioned tables get the foreign key triggers too,
just like user-defined triggers.  Moreover, like user-defined
triggers, partitions' internal triggers will now also have their
tgparentid set appropriately.  This is to allow subsequent commit(s)
to make the foreign key related events to be fired in some cases
using the parent table triggers instead of those of partitions'.

This also changes what tgisinternal means in some cases.  Currently,
it means either that the trigger is an internal implementation object
of a foreign key constraint, or a "child" trigger on a partition
cloned from the trigger on the parent.  This commit changes it to
only mean the former to avoid confusion.  As for the latter, it can
be told by tgparentid being nonzero, which is now true both for user-
defined and foreign key's internal triggers.

Author: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Arne Roland <A.Roland@index.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqG7LQSK+n8Bki8tWv7piHD=PnZro2y6ysU2-28JS6cfgQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-01-05 19:00:13 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut 56a3e848c7 pg_dump: Refactor dumpDatabase()
Rearrange the version-dependent pieces in the new more modular style.
2022-01-04 16:19:48 +01:00
Tom Lane 3e6e86abca pg_dump: avoid unsafe function calls in getPolicies().
getPolicies() had the same disease I fixed in other places in
commit e3fcbbd62, i.e., it was calling pg_get_expr() for
expressions on tables that we don't necessarily have lock on.
To fix, restrict the query to only collect interesting rows,
rather than doing the filtering on the client side.

Like the previous patch, apply to HEAD only for now.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2273648.1634764485@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7d7eb6128f40401d81b3b7a898b6b4de@W2012-02.nidsa.loc
2021-12-31 12:47:57 -05:00
Tom Lane d5e8930f50 pg_dump: minor performance improvements from eliminating sub-SELECTs.
Get rid of the "username_subquery" mechanism in favor of doing
local lookups of role names from role OIDs.  The PG backend isn't
terribly smart about scalar SubLinks in SELECT output lists,
so this offers a small performance improvement, at least in
installations with more than a couple of users.  In any case
the old method didn't make for particularly readable SQL code.

While at it, I removed the various custom warning messages about
failing to find an object's owner, in favor of just fatal'ing
in the local lookup function.  AFAIK there is no reason any
longer to treat that as anything but a catalog-corruption case,
and certainly no reason to make translators deal with a dozen
different messages where one would do.  (If it turns out that
fatal() is indeed a bad idea, we can back off to issuing
pg_log_warning() and returning an empty string, resulting in
the same behavior as before, except more consistent.)

Also drop an entirely unnecessary sub-SELECT to check on the
pg_depend status of a sequence relation: we already have a
LEFT JOIN to fetch the row of interest in the FROM clause.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2460369.1640903318@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-12-31 11:39:26 -05:00
Tom Lane 5e65df64d6 pg_dump: make dumpPublication et al. less unlike sibling functions.
dumpPublication, dumpPublicationNamespace, dumpPublicationTable, and
dumpSubscription failed to check dataOnly.  This is just a latent bug,
because pg_backup_archiver.c would filter out the ArchiveEntry later;
but they're wasting cycles in data-only dumps, and the omission might
become a live bug someday.  In any case, it's not good to have some
dumpFoo functions do this and some not.

On the same reasoning, make dumpPublicationNamespace follow the
same pattern as every other dumpFoo function for checking the
DUMP_COMPONENT_DEFINITION flag.  (Since 5209c0ba0, we wouldn't
even get here if that flag isn't set, so checking it is just
pro forma right now.  But it might not be so forever.)

Since this is just cosmetic and/or future-proofing, no need for
back-patch.
2021-12-30 19:40:53 -05:00
Tom Lane c7cf73eb7b Minor cleanup/optimization in pg_dump.
In the wake of commits 05649b88c and 5209c0ba0, findComments() and
findSecLabels() no longer use their "Archive *fout" arguments,
so get rid of those.

While doing that, I noticed that there's no very good reason why
dumpCompositeTypeColComments() should be doing its own query to fetch
the column names of the composite type, when the calling function has
just fetched the same data.  Tweak it to use that query result.  This
probably doesn't save a lot for most people, because since 5209c0ba0
we won't get into this code at all unless the composite type has at
least one comment.  Nonetheless, it's a wasted query.
2021-12-30 14:29:32 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut e2c52beecd pg_dump: Refactor getIndexes()
Rearrange the version-dependent pieces in the new more modular style.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/67a28a3f-7b79-a5a9-fcc7-947b170e66f0%40enterprisedb.com
2021-12-20 11:18:01 +01:00
Tom Lane b1c169caf0 Remove some more dead code in pg_dump.
Coverity complained that parts of dumpFunc() and buildACLCommands()
were now unreachable, as indeed they are.  Remove 'em.

In passing, make dumpFunc's handling of protrftypes less gratuitously
different from other fields.
2021-12-19 17:18:34 -05:00
Tom Lane c49d926833 Clean up some more freshly-dead code in pg_dump and pg_upgrade.
I missed a few things in 30e7c175b and e469f0aaf,
as noted by Justin Pryzby.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2923349.1634942313@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-12-16 12:01:59 -05:00
Tom Lane 2a712066d0 Remove pg_dump's --no-synchronized-snapshots switch.
Server versions for which there was a plausible reason to
use this switch are all out of support now.  Leaving it
around would accomplish little except to let careless DBAs
shoot themselves in the foot.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/556122.1639520324@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-12-15 18:44:47 -05:00
Tom Lane 30e7c175b8 Remove pg_dump/pg_dumpall support for dumping from pre-9.2 servers.
Per discussion, we'll limit support for old servers to those branches
that can still be built easily on modern platforms, which as of now
is 9.2 and up.  Remove over a thousand lines of code dedicated to
dumping from older server versions.  (As in previous changes of
this sort, we aren't removing pg_restore's ability to read older
archive files ... though it's fair to wonder how that might be
tested nowadays.)  This cleans up some dead code left behind by
commit 989596152.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2923349.1634942313@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-12-14 17:09:07 -05:00
Tom Lane 65aaed22a8 Account for TOAST data while scheduling parallel dumps.
In parallel mode, pg_dump tries to order the table-data-dumping
jobs with the largest tables first.  However, it was only
consulting the pg_class.relpages value to determine table size.
This ignores TOAST data, and so we could make poor scheduling
decisions in cases where some large tables are mostly TOASTed
data while others have very little.  To fix, add in the relpages
value for the TOAST table as well.

This patch also fixes a potential integer-overflow issue that
could result in poor scheduling on machines where off_t is
only 32 bits wide.  Such platforms are probably extinct in the
wild, but we do still nominally support them, so repair.

Per complaint from Hans Buschmann.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7d7eb6128f40401d81b3b7a898b6b4de@W2012-02.nidsa.loc
2021-12-06 13:23:07 -05:00
Tom Lane be85727a3d Use PREPARE/EXECUTE for repetitive per-object queries in pg_dump.
For objects such as functions, pg_dump issues the same secondary
data-collection query against each object to be dumped.  This can't
readily be refactored to avoid the repetitive queries, but we can
PREPARE these queries to reduce planning costs.

This patch applies the idea to functions, aggregates, operators, and
data types.  While it could be carried further, the remaining sorts of
objects aren't likely to appear in typical databases enough times to
be worth worrying over.  Moreover, doing the PREPARE is likely to be a
net loss if there aren't at least some dozens of objects to apply the
prepared query to.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7d7eb6128f40401d81b3b7a898b6b4de@W2012-02.nidsa.loc
2021-12-06 13:14:29 -05:00
Tom Lane 9895961529 Avoid per-object queries in performance-critical paths in pg_dump.
Instead of issuing a secondary data-collection query against each
table to be dumped, issue just one query, with a WHERE clause
restricting it to be applied to only the tables we intend to dump.
Likewise for indexes, constraints, and triggers.  This greatly
reduces the number of queries needed to dump a database containing
many tables.  It might seem that WHERE clauses listing many target
OIDs could be inefficient, but at least on recent server versions
this provides a very substantial speedup.

(In principle the same thing could be done with other object types
such as functions; but that would require significant refactoring
of pg_dump, so those will be tackled in a different way in a
following patch.)

The new WHERE clauses depend on the unnest() function, which is
only present in 8.4 and above.  We could implement them differently
for older servers, but there is an ongoing discussion that will
probably result in dropping pg_dump support for servers before 9.2,
so that seems like it'd be wasted work.  For now, just bump the
server version check to require >= 8.4, without stopping to remove
any of the code that's thereby rendered dead.  We'll mop that
situation up soon.

Patch by me, based on an idea from Andres Freund.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7d7eb6128f40401d81b3b7a898b6b4de@W2012-02.nidsa.loc
2021-12-06 13:07:31 -05:00
Tom Lane e3fcbbd623 Postpone calls of unsafe server-side functions in pg_dump.
Avoid calling pg_get_partkeydef(), pg_get_expr(relpartbound),
and regtypeout until we have lock on the relevant tables.
The existing coding is at serious risk of failure if there
are any concurrent DROP TABLE commands going on --- including
drops of other sessions' temp tables.

Arguably this is a bug fix that should be back-patched, but it's
moderately invasive and we've not had all that many complaints
about such failures.  Let's just put it in HEAD for now.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2273648.1634764485@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7d7eb6128f40401d81b3b7a898b6b4de@W2012-02.nidsa.loc
2021-12-06 12:49:49 -05:00
Tom Lane 0c9d84427f Rethink pg_dump's handling of object ACLs.
Throw away most of the existing logic for this, as it was very
inefficient thanks to expensive sub-selects executed to collect
ACL data that we very possibly would have no interest in dumping.
Reduce the ACL handling in the initial per-object-type queries
to be just collection of the catalog ACL fields, as it was
originally.  Fetch pg_init_privs data separately in a single
scan of that catalog, and do the merging calculations on the
client side.  Remove the separate code path used for pre-9.6
source servers; there is no good reason to treat them differently
from newer servers that happen to have empty pg_init_privs.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2273648.1634764485@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7d7eb6128f40401d81b3b7a898b6b4de@W2012-02.nidsa.loc
2021-12-06 12:39:45 -05:00
Tom Lane 5209c0ba0b Refactor pg_dump's tracking of object components to be dumped.
Split the DumpableObject.dump bitmask field into separate bitmasks
tracking which components are requested to be dumped (in the
existing "dump" field) and which components exist for the particular
object (in the new "components" field).  This gets rid of some
klugy and easily-broken logic that involved setting bits and later
clearing them.  More importantly, it restores the originally intended
behavior that pg_dump's secondary data-gathering queries should not
be executed for objects we have no interest in dumping.  That
optimization got broken when the dump flag was turned into a bitmask,
because irrelevant bits tended to remain set in many cases.  Since
the "components" field starts from a minimal set of bits and is
added onto as needed, ANDing it with "dump" provides a reliable
indicator of what we actually have to dump, without having to
complicate the logic that manages the request bits.  This makes
a significant difference in the number of queries needed when,
for example, there are many functions in extensions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2273648.1634764485@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7d7eb6128f40401d81b3b7a898b6b4de@W2012-02.nidsa.loc
2021-12-06 12:25:48 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 37b2764593 Some RELKIND macro refactoring
Add more macros to group some RELKIND_* macros:

- RELKIND_HAS_PARTITIONS()
- RELKIND_HAS_TABLESPACE()
- RELKIND_HAS_TABLE_AM()

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/a574c8f1-9c84-93ad-a9e5-65233d6fc00f%40enterprisedb.com
2021-12-03 14:08:19 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut a22d6a2cb6 pg_dump: Add missing relkind case
Checking for RELKIND_MATVIEW was forgotten in
guessConstraintInheritance().  This isn't a live problem, since it is
checked in flagInhTables() which relkinds can have parents, and those
entries will have numParents==0 after that.  But after discussion it
was felt that this place should be kept consistent with
flagInhTables() and flagInhAttrs().

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/a574c8f1-9c84-93ad-a9e5-65233d6fc00f@enterprisedb.com
2021-12-02 16:46:28 +01:00
Tom Lane b55f2b6926 Adjust pg_dump's priority ordering for casts.
When a stored expression depends on a user-defined cast, the backend
records the dependency as being on the cast's implementation function
--- or indeed, if there's no cast function involved but just
RelabelType or CoerceViaIO, no dependency is recorded at all.  This
is problematic for pg_dump, which is at risk of dumping things in the
wrong order leading to restore failures.  Given the lack of previous
reports, the risk isn't that high, but it can be demonstrated if the
cast is used in some view whose rowtype is then used as an input or
result type for some other function.  (That results in the view
getting hoisted into the functions portion of the dump, ahead of
the cast.)

A logically bulletproof fix for this would require including the
cast's OID in the parsed form of the expression, whence it could be
extracted by dependency.c, and then the stored dependency would force
pg_dump to do the right thing.  Such a change would be fairly invasive,
and certainly not back-patchable.  Moreover, since we'd prefer that
an expression using cast syntax be equal() to one doing the same
thing by explicit function call, the cast OID field would have to
have special ignored-by-comparisons semantics, making things messy.

So, let's instead fix this by a very simple hack in pg_dump: change
the object-type priority order so that casts are initially sorted
before functions, immediately after types.  This fixes the problem
in a fairly direct way for casts that have no implementation function.
For those that do, the implementation function will be hoisted to just
before the cast by the dependency sorting step, so that we still have
a valid dump order.  (I'm not sure that this provides a full guarantee
of no problems; but since it's been like this for many years without
any previous reports, this is probably enough to fix it in practice.)

Per report from Дмитрий Иванов.
Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPL5KHoGa3uvyKp6z6m48LwCnTsK+LRQ_mcA4uKGfqAVSEjV_A@mail.gmail.com
2021-11-22 17:16:29 -05:00
Tom Lane 0b126c6a4b Fix pg_dump --inserts mode for generated columns with dropped columns.
If a table contains a generated column that's preceded by a dropped
column, dumpTableData_insert failed to account for the dropped
column, and would emit DEFAULT placeholder(s) in the wrong column(s).
This resulted in failures at restore time.  The default COPY code path
did not have this bug, likely explaining why it wasn't noticed sooner.

While we're fixing this, we can be a little smarter about the
situation: (1) avoid unnecessarily fetching the values of generated
columns, (2) omit generated columns from the output, too, if we're
using --column-inserts.  While these modes aren't expected to be
as high-performance as the COPY path, we might as well be as
efficient as we can; it doesn't add much complexity.

Per report from Дмитрий Иванов.
Back-patch to v12 where generated columns came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPL5KHrkBniyQt5e1rafm5DdXvbgiiqfEQEJ9GjtVzN71Jj5pA@mail.gmail.com
2021-11-22 15:25:48 -05:00
Tom Lane 3cac2c8caa Handle close() failures more robustly in pg_dump and pg_basebackup.
Coverity complained that applying get_gz_error after a failed gzclose,
as we did in one place in pg_basebackup, is unsafe.  I think it's
right: it's entirely likely that the call is touching freed memory.
Change that to inspect errno, as we do for other gzclose calls.

Also, be careful to initialize errno to zero immediately before any
gzclose() call where we care about the error status.  (There are
some calls where we don't, because we already failed at some previous
step.)  This ensures that we don't get a misleadingly irrelevant
error code if gzclose() fails in a way that doesn't set errno.
We could work harder at that, but it looks to me like all such cases
are basically can't-happen if we're not misusing zlib, so it's
not worth the extra notational cruft that would be required.

Also, fix several places that simply failed to check for close-time
errors at all, mostly at some remove from the close or gzclose itself;
and one place that did check but didn't bother to report the errno.

Back-patch to v12.  These mistakes are older than that, but between
the frontend logging API changes that happened in v12 and the fact
that frontend code can't rely on %m before that, the patch would need
substantial revision to work in older branches.  It doesn't quite
seem worth the trouble given the lack of related field complaints.

Patch by me; thanks to Michael Paquier for review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1343113.1636489231@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-11-17 13:08:25 -05:00
Amit Kapila b3812d0b9b Rename some enums to use TABLE instead of REL.
Commit 5a2832465f introduced some enums to represent all tables in schema
publications and used REL in their names. Use TABLE instead of REL in
those enums to avoid confusion with other objects like SEQUENCES that can
be part of a publication in the future.

In the passing, (a) Change one of the newly introduced error messages to
make it consistent for Create and Alter commands, (b) add missing alias in
one of the SQL Statements that is used to print publications associated
with the table.

Reported-by: Tomas Vondra, Peter Smith
Author: Vignesh C
Reviewed-by: Hou Zhijie, Peter Smith
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CALDaNm0OANxuJ6RXqwZsM1MSY4s19nuH3734j4a72etDwvBETQ%40mail.gmail.com
2021-11-09 08:39:33 +05:30
Tom Lane 568620dfd6 contrib/sslinfo needs a fix too to make hamerkop happy.
Re-ordering the #include's is a bit problematic here because
libpq/libpq-be.h needs to include <openssl/ssl.h>.  Instead,
let's #undef the unwanted macro after all the #includes.
This is definitely uglier than the other way, but it should
work despite possible future header rearrangements.

(A look at the openssl headers indicates that X509_NAME is the
only conflicting symbol that we use.)

In passing, remove a related but long-incorrect comment in
pg_backup_archiver.h.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1051867.1635720347@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-11-07 11:33:53 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut fd2706589a pg_dump: Refactor messages
This reduces the number of separate messages for translation.
2021-10-30 19:25:10 +02:00
Amit Kapila 5a2832465f Allow publishing the tables of schema.
A new option "FOR ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA" in Create/Alter Publication allows
one or more schemas to be specified, whose tables are selected by the
publisher for sending the data to the subscriber.

The new syntax allows specifying both the tables and schemas. For example:
CREATE PUBLICATION pub1 FOR TABLE t1,t2,t3, ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA s1,s2;
OR
ALTER PUBLICATION pub1 ADD TABLE t1,t2,t3, ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA s1,s2;

A new system table "pg_publication_namespace" has been added, to maintain
the schemas that the user wants to publish through the publication.
Modified the output plugin (pgoutput) to publish the changes if the
relation is part of schema publication.

Updates pg_dump to identify and dump schema publications. Updates the \d
family of commands to display schema publications and \dRp+ variant will
now display associated schemas if any.

Author: Vignesh C, Hou Zhijie, Amit Kapila
Syntax-Suggested-by: Tom Lane, Alvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Greg Nancarrow, Masahiko Sawada, Hou Zhijie, Amit Kapila, Haiying Tang, Ajin Cherian, Rahila Syed, Bharath Rupireddy, Mark Dilger
Tested-by: Haiying Tang
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CALDaNm0OANxuJ6RXqwZsM1MSY4s19nuH3734j4a72etDwvBETQ@mail.gmail.com
2021-10-27 07:44:52 +05:30
Tom Lane 70bef49400 Fix minor memory leaks in pg_dump.
I found these by running pg_dump under "valgrind --leak-check=full".

The changes in flagInhIndexes() and getIndexes() replace allocation of
an array of which we use only some elements by individual allocations
of just the actually-needed objects.  The previous coding wasted some
memory, but more importantly it confused valgrind's leak tracking.

collectComments() and collectSecLabels() remain major blots on
the valgrind report, because they don't PQclear their query
results, in order to avoid a lot of strdup's.  That's a dubious
tradeoff, but I'll leave it alone here; an upcoming patch will
modify those functions enough to justify changing the tradeoff.
2021-10-24 12:38:26 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan b3b4d8e68a
Move Perl test modules to a better namespace
The five modules in our TAP test framework all had names in the top
level namespace. This is unwise because, even though we're not
exporting them to CPAN, the names can leak, for example if they are
exported by the RPM build process. We therefore move the modules to the
PostgreSQL::Test namespace. In the process PostgresNode is renamed to
Cluster, and TestLib is renamed to Utils. PostgresVersion becomes simply
PostgreSQL::Version, to avoid possible confusion about what it's the
version of.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/aede93a4-7d92-ef26-398f-5094944c2504@dunslane.net

Reviewed by Erik Rijkers and Michael Paquier
2021-10-24 10:28:19 -04:00
Tom Lane 92316a4582 In pg_dump, use simplehash.h to look up dumpable objects by OID.
Create a hash table that indexes dumpable objects by CatalogId
(that is, catalog OID + object OID).  Use this to replace the
former catalogIdMap array, as well as various other single-
catalog index arrays, and also the extension membership map.

In principle this should be faster for databases with many objects,
since lookups are now O(1) not O(log N).  However, it seems that these
lookups are pretty much negligible in context, so that no overall
performance change can be measured.  But having only one lookup
data structure to maintain makes the code simpler and more flexible,
so let's do it anyway.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2595220.1634855245@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-10-22 17:19:03 -04:00
Tom Lane 2acc84c6fd pg_dump: fix mis-dumping of non-global default privileges.
Non-global default privilege entries should be dumped as-is,
not made relative to the default ACL for their object type.
This would typically only matter if one had revoked some
on-by-default privileges in a global entry, and then wanted
to grant them again in a non-global entry.

Per report from Boris Korzun.  This is an old bug, so back-patch
to all supported branches.

Neil Chen, test case by Masahiko Sawada

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/111621616618184@mail.yandex.ru
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA3qoJnr2+1dVJObNtfec=qW4Z0nz=A9+r5bZKoTSy5RDjskMw@mail.gmail.com
2021-10-22 15:22:25 -04:00
Tom Lane 4438eb4a49 pg_dump: Reorganize getTables()
Along the same lines as 047329624, ed2c7f65b and daa9fe8a5, reduce
code duplication by having just one copy of the parts of the query
that are the same across all server versions; and make the
conditionals control the smallest possible amount of code.
This also gets rid of the confusing assortment of different ways
to accomplish the same result that we had here before.

While at it, make sure all three relevant parts of the function
list the fields in the same order.  This is just neatnik-ism,
of course.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1240992.1634419055@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-10-19 17:22:22 -04:00
Daniel Gustafsson 998d060f3d Fix bug in TOC file error message printing
If the blob TOC file cannot be parsed, the error message was failing
to print the filename as the variable holding it was shadowed by the
destination buffer for parsing.  When the filename fails to parse,
the error will print an empty string:

 ./pg_restore -d foo -F d dump
 pg_restore: error: invalid line in large object TOC file "": ..

..instead of the intended error message:

 ./pg_restore -d foo -F d dump
 pg_restore: error: invalid line in large object TOC file "dump/blobs.toc": ..

Fix by renaming both variables as the shared name was too generic to
store either and still convey what the variable held.

Backpatch all the way down to 9.6.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/A2B151F5-B32B-4F2C-BA4A-6870856D9BDE@yesql.se
Backpatch-through: 9.6
2021-10-19 12:59:54 +02:00
Daniel Gustafsson 1d7641d51a Fix sscanf limits in pg_basebackup and pg_dump
Make sure that the string parsing is limited by the size of the
destination buffer.

In pg_basebackup the available values sent from the server
is limited to two characters so there was no risk of overflow.

In pg_dump the buffer is bounded by MAXPGPATH, and thus the limit
must be inserted via preprocessor expansion and the buffer increased
by one to account for the terminator. There is no risk of overflow
here, since in this case, the buffer scanned is smaller than the
destination buffer.

Backpatch the pg_basebackup fix to 11 where it was introduced, and
the pg_dump fix all the way down to 9.6.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/B14D3D7B-F98C-4E20-9459-C122C67647FB@yesql.se
Backpatch-through: 11 and 9.6
2021-10-19 12:59:50 +02:00
Tom Lane 40dfac4fc4 Avoid core dump in pg_dump when dumping from pre-8.3 server.
Commit f0e21f2f6 missed adding a tgisinternal output column
to getTriggers' query for pre-8.3 servers.  Back-patch to v11,
like that commit.
2021-10-16 15:02:55 -04:00
Tom Lane e2ff7d9a83 Make pg_dump acquire lock on partitioned tables that are to be dumped.
It was clearly the intent to do so all along, but the original coding
fat-fingered this by checking the wrong array element.  We fixed it
in passing in 403a3d91c, but that later got reverted, and we forgot
to keep this bug fix.

Most of the time this'd be relatively harmless, since once we lock
any of the partitioned table's leaf partitions, that would suffice
to prevent major DDL on the partitioned table itself.  However, a
childless partitioned table would get dumped with no relevant lock
whatsoever, possibly allowing dump failure or inconsistent output.

Unlike 403a3d91c, there are no versioning concerns, since every server
version that has partitioned tables will allow you to lock one.

Back-patch to v10 where partitioned tables were introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1018205.1634346327@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-10-16 12:23:57 -04:00
Noah Misch b073c3ccd0 Revoke PUBLIC CREATE from public schema, now owned by pg_database_owner.
This switches the default ACL to what the documentation has recommended
since CVE-2018-1058.  Upgrades will carry forward any old ownership and
ACL.  Sites that declined the 2018 recommendation should take a fresh
look.  Recipes for commissioning a new database cluster from scratch may
need to create a schema, grant more privileges, etc.  Out-of-tree test
suites may require such updates.

Reviewed by Peter Eisentraut.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20201031163518.GB4039133@rfd.leadboat.com
2021-09-09 23:38:09 -07:00
Tom Lane 072e2f8a62 Avoid useless malloc/free traffic around getFormattedTypeName().
Coverity complained that one caller of getFormattedTypeName() failed
to free the returned string.  Which is true, but rather than fixing
that one, let's get rid of this tedious and error-prone requirement.
Now that getFormattedTypeName() caches its result, strdup'ing that
result and expecting the caller to free it accomplishes little except
to waste cycles.  We do create a leak in the case where getTypes didn't
make a TypeInfo for the type, but that basically shouldn't ever happen.

Back-patch, as commit 6c450a861 was.  This isn't a particularly
interesting bug fix, but the API change seems like a hazard for
future back-patching activity if we don't back-patch it.
2021-09-08 15:09:42 -04:00
Michael Paquier 5fcb23c18f Remove some unused variables in TAP tests
Author: Amul Sul
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b96xuFh4JZE6p-zhLyDu7q=NbxJfb1z_yeAu6t-MqaBC+Q@mail.gmail.com
2021-09-06 09:25:45 +09:00
Tomas Vondra 13380e1476 Don't print extra parens around expressions in extended stats
The code printing expressions for extended statistics doubled the
parens, producing results like ((a+1)), which is unnecessary and not
consistent with how we print expressions elsewhere.

Fixed by tweaking the code to produce just a single set of parens.

Reported by Mark Dilger, fix by me. Backpatch to 14, where support for
extended statistics on expressions was added.

Reported-by: Mark Dilger
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210122040101.GF27167%40telsasoft.com
2021-09-01 00:43:22 +02:00