Commit Graph

27303 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Dunstan 1edd4ec831 Disallow invalid path elements in jsonb_set
Null path elements and, where the object is an array, invalid integer
elements now cause an error.

Incorrect behaviour noted by Thom Brown, patch from Dmitry Dolgov.

Backpatch to 9.5 where jsonb_set was introduced
2015-10-04 13:28:16 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 6390c8c654 Group cluster_name and update_process_title settings together 2015-10-04 12:29:36 -04:00
Noah Misch 3cb0a7e75a Make BYPASSRLS behave like superuser RLS bypass.
Specifically, make its effect independent from the row_security GUC, and
make it affect permission checks pertinent to views the BYPASSRLS role
owns.  The row_security GUC thereby ceases to change successful-query
behavior; it can only make a query fail with an error.  Back-patch to
9.5, where BYPASSRLS was introduced.
2015-10-03 20:19:57 -04:00
Andres Freund b67aaf21e8 Add CASCADE support for CREATE EXTENSION.
Without CASCADE, if an extension has an unfullfilled dependency on
another extension, CREATE EXTENSION ERRORs out with "required extension
... is not installed". That is annoying, especially when that dependency
is an implementation detail of the extension, rather than something the
extension's user can make sense of.

In addition to CASCADE this also includes a small set of regression
tests around CREATE EXTENSION.

Author: Petr Jelinek, editorialized by Michael Paquier, Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier, Andres Freund, Jeff Janes
Discussion: 557E0520.3040800@2ndquadrant.com
2015-10-03 18:23:40 +02:00
Tom Lane bf686796a0 Add missing "static" specifier.
Per buildfarm (pademelon, at least, doesn't like this).
2015-10-03 10:59:42 -04:00
Andres Freund 920218cbc0 Improve errhint() about replication slot naming restrictions.
The existing hint talked about "may only contain letters", but the
actual requirement is more strict: only lower case letters are allowed.

Reported-By: Rushabh Lathia
Author: Rushabh Lathia
Discussion: AGPqQf2x50qcwbYOBKzb4x75sO_V3g81ZsA8+Ji9iN5t_khFhQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 9.4-, where replication slots were added
2015-10-03 15:29:08 +02:00
Andres Freund ad22783792 Fix several bugs related to ON CONFLICT's EXCLUDED pseudo relation.
Four related issues:

1) attnos/varnos/resnos for EXCLUDED were out of sync when a column
   after one dropped in the underlying relation was referenced.
2) References to whole-row variables (i.e. EXCLUDED.*) lead to errors.
3) It was possible to reference system columns in the EXCLUDED pseudo
   relations, even though they would not have valid contents.
4) References to EXCLUDED were rewritten by the RLS machinery, as
   EXCLUDED was treated as if it were the underlying relation.

To fix the first two issues, generate the excluded targetlist with
dropped columns in mind and add an entry for whole row
variables. Instead of unconditionally adding a wholerow entry we could
pull up the expression if needed, but doing it unconditionally seems
simpler. The wholerow entry is only really needed for ruleutils/EXPLAIN
support anyway.

The remaining two issues are addressed by changing the EXCLUDED RTE to
have relkind = composite. That fits with EXCLUDED not actually being a
real relation, and allows to treat it differently in the relevant
places. scanRTEForColumn now skips looking up system columns when the
RTE has a composite relkind; fireRIRrules() already had a corresponding
check, thereby preventing RLS expansion on EXCLUDED.

Also add tests for these issues, and improve a few comments around
excluded handling in setrefs.c.

Reported-By: Peter Geoghegan, Geoff Winkless
Author: Andres Freund, Amit Langote, Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: CAEzk6fdzJ3xYQZGbcuYM2rBd2BuDkUksmK=mY9UYYDugg_GgZg@mail.gmail.com,
   CAM3SWZS+CauzbiCEcg-GdE6K6ycHE_Bz6Ksszy8AoixcMHOmsA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 9.5, where ON CONFLICT was introduced
2015-10-03 15:12:10 +02:00
Tom Lane 241e6844ad Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2015g.
DST law changes in Cayman Islands, Fiji, Moldova, Morocco, Norfolk Island,
North Korea, Turkey, Uruguay.  New zone America/Fort_Nelson for Canadian
Northern Rockies.
2015-10-02 19:15:39 -04:00
Tom Lane 2e8cfcf4ea Add recursion depth protection to LIKE matching.
Since MatchText() recurses, it could in principle be driven to stack
overflow, although quite a long pattern would be needed.
2015-10-02 15:00:51 -04:00
Tom Lane b63fc28776 Add recursion depth protections to regular expression matching.
Some of the functions in regex compilation and execution recurse, and
therefore could in principle be driven to stack overflow.  The Tcl crew
has seen this happen in practice in duptraverse(), though their fix was
to put in a hard-wired limit on the number of recursive levels, which is
not too appetizing --- fortunately, we have enough infrastructure to check
the actually available stack.  Greg Stark has also seen it in other places
while fuzz testing on a machine with limited stack space.  Let's put guards
in to prevent crashes in all these places.

Since the regex code would leak memory if we simply threw elog(ERROR),
we have to introduce an API that checks for stack depth without throwing
such an error.  Fortunately that's not difficult.
2015-10-02 14:51:58 -04:00
Tom Lane f2c4ffc330 Fix potential infinite loop in regular expression execution.
In cfindloop(), if the initial call to shortest() reports that a
zero-length match is possible at the current search start point, but then
it is unable to construct any actual match to that, it'll just loop around
with the same start point, and thus make no progress.  We need to force the
start point to be advanced.  This is safe because the loop over "begin"
points has already tried and failed to match starting at "close", so there
is surely no need to try that again.

This bug was introduced in commit e2bd904955,
wherein we allowed continued searching after we'd run out of match
possibilities, but evidently failed to think hard enough about exactly
where we needed to search next.

Because of the way this code works, such a match failure is only possible
in the presence of backrefs --- otherwise, shortest()'s judgment that a
match is possible should always be correct.  That probably explains how
come the bug has escaped detection for several years.

The actual fix is a one-liner, but I took the trouble to add/improve some
comments related to the loop logic.

After fixing that, the submitted test case "()*\1" didn't loop anymore.
But it reported failure, though it seems like it ought to match a
zero-length string; both Tcl and Perl think it does.  That seems to be from
overenthusiastic optimization on my part when I rewrote the iteration match
logic in commit 173e29aa5deefd9e71c183583ba37805c8102a72: we can't just
"declare victory" for a zero-length match without bothering to set match
data for capturing parens inside the iterator node.

Per fuzz testing by Greg Stark.  The first part of this is a bug in all
supported branches, and the second part is a bug since 9.2 where the
iteration rewrite happened.
2015-10-02 14:26:36 -04:00
Tom Lane 9fe8fe9c9e Add some more query-cancel checks to regular expression matching.
Commit 9662143f0c added infrastructure to
allow regular-expression operations to be terminated early in the event
of SIGINT etc.  However, fuzz testing by Greg Stark disclosed that there
are still cases where regex compilation could run for a long time without
noticing a cancel request.  Specifically, the fixempties() phase never
adds new states, only new arcs, so it doesn't hit the cancel check I'd put
in newstate().  Add one to newarc() as well to cover that.

Some experimentation of my own found that regex execution could also run
for a long time despite a pending cancel.  We'd put a high-level cancel
check into cdissect(), but there was none inside the core text-matching
routines longest() and shortest().  Ordinarily those inner loops are very
very fast ... but in the presence of lookahead constraints, not so much.
As a compromise, stick a cancel check into the stateset cache-miss
function, which is enough to guarantee a cancel check at least once per
lookahead constraint test.

Making this work required more attention to error handling throughout the
regex executor.  Henry Spencer had apparently originally intended longest()
and shortest() to be incapable of incurring errors while running, so
neither they nor their subroutines had well-defined error reporting
behaviors.  However, that was already broken by the lookahead constraint
feature, since lacon() can surely suffer an out-of-memory failure ---
which, in the code as it stood, might never be reported to the user at all,
but just silently be treated as a non-match of the lookahead constraint.
Normalize all that by inserting explicit error tests as needed.  I took the
opportunity to add some more comments to the code, too.

Back-patch to all supported branches, like the previous patch.
2015-10-02 13:45:39 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera e06b2e1d2e Don't disable commit_ts in standby if enabled locally
Bug noticed by Fujii Masao
2015-10-02 12:49:01 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut cdcae2b6a7 pg_rewind: Improve some messages
The output of a typical pg_rewind run contained a mix of capitalized and
not-capitalized and punctuated and not-punctuated phrases for no
apparent reason.  Make that consistent.  Also fix some problems in other
messages.
2015-10-01 21:42:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 87c2b517ac Fix message punctuation according to style guide 2015-10-01 21:39:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 8ab4a6bd3f Fix pg_dump to handle inherited NOT VALID check constraints correctly.
This case seems to have been overlooked when unvalidated check constraints
were introduced, in 9.2.  The code would attempt to dump such constraints
over again for each child table, even though adding them to the parent
table is sufficient.

In 9.2 and 9.3, also fix contrib/pg_upgrade/Makefile so that the "make
clean" target fully cleans up after a failed test.  This evidently got
dealt with at some point in 9.4, but it wasn't back-patched.  I ran into
it while testing this fix ...

Per bug #13656 from Ingmar Brouns.
2015-10-01 16:20:13 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera f12e814b88 Fix commit_ts for standby
Module initialization was still not completely correct after commit
6b61955135, per crash report from Takashi Ohnishi.  To fix, instead of
trying to monkey around with the value of the GUC setting directly, add
a separate boolean flag that enables the feature on a standby, but only
for the startup (recovery) process, when it sees that its master server
has the feature enabled.
Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/ca44c6c7f9314868bdc521aea4f77cbf@MP-MSGSS-MBX004.msg.nttdata.co.jp

Also change the deactivation routine to delete all segment files rather
than leaving the last one around.  (This doesn't need separate
WAL-logging, because on recovery we execute the same deactivation
routine anyway.)

In passing, clean up the code structure somewhat, particularly so that
xlog.c doesn't know so much about when to activate/deactivate the
feature.

Thanks to Fujii Masao for testing and Petr Jelínek for off-list discussion.

Back-patch to 9.5, where commit_ts was introduced.
2015-10-01 15:06:55 -03:00
Fujii Masao bf4817e4f0 Fix incorrect tab-completion for GRANT and REVOKE
Previously "GRANT * ON * TO " was tab-completed to add an extra "TO",
rather than with a list of roles. This is the bug that commit 2f88807
introduced unexpectedly. This commit fixes that incorrect tab-completion.

Thomas Munro, reviewed by Jeff Janes.
2015-10-01 23:39:02 +09:00
Tom Lane 21995d3f6d Fix documentation error in commit 8703059c6b.
Etsuro Fujita spotted a thinko in the README commentary.
2015-10-01 10:32:11 -04:00
Robert Haas 286a3a68dc Fix readfuncs/outfuncs problems in last night's Gather patch.
KaiGai Kohei, with one correction by me.
2015-10-01 09:19:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 5884b92a84 Fix errors in commit a04bb65f70.
Not a lot of commentary needed here really.
2015-09-30 23:37:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 07e4d03fb4 Improve LISTEN startup time when there are many unread notifications.
If some existing listener is far behind, incoming new listener sessions
would start from that session's read pointer and then need to advance over
many already-committed notification messages, which they have no interest
in.  This was expensive in itself and also thrashed the pg_notify SLRU
buffers a lot more than necessary.  We can improve matters considerably
in typical scenarios, without much added cost, by starting from the
furthest-ahead read pointer, not the furthest-behind one.  We do have to
consider only sessions in our own database when doing this, which requires
an extra field in the data structure, but that's a pretty small cost.

Back-patch to 9.0 where the current LISTEN/NOTIFY logic was introduced.

Matt Newell, slightly adjusted by me
2015-09-30 23:32:43 -04:00
Robert Haas 3bd909b220 Add a Gather executor node.
A Gather executor node runs any number of copies of a plan in an equal
number of workers and merges all of the results into a single tuple
stream.  It can also run the plan itself, if the workers are
unavailable or haven't started up yet.  It is intended to work with
the Partial Seq Scan node which will be added in future commits.

It could also be used to implement parallel query of a different sort
by itself, without help from Partial Seq Scan, if the single_copy mode
is used.  In that mode, a worker executes the plan, and the parallel
leader does not, merely collecting the worker's results.  So, a Gather
node could be inserted into a plan to split the execution of that plan
across two processes.  Nested Gather nodes aren't currently supported,
but we might want to add support for that in the future.

There's nothing in the planner to actually generate Gather nodes yet,
so it's not quite time to break out the champagne.  But we're getting
close.

Amit Kapila.  Some designs suggestions were provided by me, and I also
reviewed the patch.  Single-copy mode, documentation, and other minor
changes also by me.
2015-09-30 19:23:36 -04:00
Robert Haas 227d57f358 Don't dump core when destroying an unused ParallelContext.
If a transaction or subtransaction creates a ParallelContext but ends
without calling InitializeParallelDSM, the previous code would
seg fault.  Fix that.
2015-09-30 18:36:31 -04:00
Stephen Frost 7d8db3e8f3 Include policies based on ACLs needed
When considering which policies should be included, rather than look at
individual bits of the query (eg: if a RETURNING clause exists, or if a
WHERE clause exists which is referencing the table, or if it's a
FOR SHARE/UPDATE query), consider any case where we've determined
the user needs SELECT rights on the relation while doing an UPDATE or
DELETE to be a case where we apply SELECT policies, and any case where
we've deteremind that the user needs UPDATE rights on the relation while
doing a SELECT to be a case where we apply UPDATE policies.

This simplifies the logic and addresses concerns that a user could use
UPDATE or DELETE with a WHERE clauses to determine if rows exist, or
they could use SELECT .. FOR UPDATE to lock rows which they are not
actually allowed to modify through UPDATE policies.

Use list_append_unique() to avoid adding the same quals multiple times,
as, on balance, the cost of checking when adding the quals will almost
always be cheaper than keeping them and doing busywork for each tuple
during execution.

Back-patch to 9.5 where RLS was added.
2015-09-30 07:39:24 -04:00
Tom Lane 6057f61b4d Small improvements in comments in async.c.
We seem to have lost a line somewhere along the way in the comment block
that discusses async.c's locks, because it suddenly refers to "both locks"
without previously having mentioned more than one.  Add a sentence to make
that read more sanely.  Also, refer to the "pos of the slowest backend"
not the "tail of the slowest backend", since we have no per-backend value
called "tail".
2015-09-29 22:07:16 -04:00
Tatsuo Ishii a16db3a07d Fix incorrect tps number calculation in "excluding connections establishing".
The tolerance (larger than actual tps number) increases as the number
of threads decreases.  The bug has been there since the thread support
was introduced in 9.0. Because back patching introduces incompatible
behavior changes regarding the tps number, the fix is committed to
master and 9.5 stable branches only.

Problem spotted by me and fix proposed by Fabien COELHO. Note that his
original patch included more than fixes (a code re-factoring) which is
not related to the problem and I omitted the part.
2015-09-30 10:53:31 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 6b61955135 Code review for transaction commit timestamps
There are three main changes here:

1. No longer cause a start failure in a standby if the feature is
disabled in postgresql.conf but enabled in the master.  This reverts one
part of commit 4f3924d9cd43; what we keep is the ability of the standby
to activate/deactivate the module (which includes creating and removing
segments as appropriate) during replay of such actions in the master.

2. Replay WAL records affecting commitTS even if the feature is
disabled.  This means the standby will always have the same state as the
master after replay.

3. Have COMMIT PREPARE record the transaction commit time as well.  We
were previously only applying it in the normal transaction commit path.

Author: Petr Jelínek
Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAHGQGwHereDzzzmfxEBYcVQu3oZv6vZcgu1TPeERWbDc+gQ06g@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAHGQGwFuzfO4JscM9LCAmCDCxp_MfLvN4QdB+xWsS-FijbjTYQ@mail.gmail.com

Additionally, I cleaned up nearby code related to replication origins,
which I found a bit hard to follow, and fixed a couple of typos.

Backpatch to 9.5, where this code was introduced.

Per bug reports from Fujii Masao and subsequent discussion.
2015-09-29 14:40:56 -03:00
Tom Lane b631a46ed8 Fix plperl to handle non-ASCII error message texts correctly.
We were passing error message texts to croak() verbatim, which turns out
not to work if the text contains non-ASCII characters; Perl mangles their
encoding, as reported in bug #13638 from Michal Leinweber.  To fix, convert
the text into a UTF8-encoded SV first.

It's hard to test this without risking failures in different database
encodings; but we can follow the lead of plpython, which is already
assuming that no-break space (U+00A0) has an equivalent in all encodings
we care about running the regression tests in (cf commit 2dfa15de5).

Back-patch to 9.1.  The code is quite different in 9.0, and anyway it seems
too risky to put something like this into 9.0's final minor release.

Alex Hunsaker, with suggestions from Tim Bunce and Tom Lane
2015-09-29 10:52:22 -04:00
Robert Haas 758fcfdc01 Comment update for join pushdown.
Etsuro Fujita
2015-09-29 07:42:30 -04:00
Robert Haas d1b7c1ffe7 Parallel executor support.
This code provides infrastructure for a parallel leader to start up
parallel workers to execute subtrees of the plan tree being executed
in the master.  User-supplied parameters from ParamListInfo are passed
down, but PARAM_EXEC parameters are not.  Various other constructs,
such as initplans, subplans, and CTEs, are also not currently shared.
Nevertheless, there's enough here to support a basic implementation of
parallel query, and we can lift some of the current restrictions as
needed.

Amit Kapila and Robert Haas
2015-09-28 21:55:57 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 0557dc276f Fix compiler warning for non-TIOCGWINSZ case
Backpatch to 9.5 where the error was introduced.
2015-09-28 18:42:30 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 8a0aa686f4 Fix compiler warning about unused function in non-readline case.
Backpatch to all live branches to keep the code in sync.
2015-09-28 18:36:38 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 17f5831c81 Fix "sesssion" typo
It was introduced alongside replication origins, by commit
5aa2350426, so backpatch to 9.5.

Pointed out by Fujii Masao
2015-09-28 19:13:42 -03:00
Tom Lane 60f1e6bc13 Fix poor errno handling in libpq's version of our custom OpenSSL BIO.
Thom Brown reported that SSL connections didn't seem to work on Windows in
9.5.  Asif Naeem figured out that the cause was my_sock_read() looking at
"errno" when it needs to look at "SOCK_ERRNO".  This mistake was introduced
in commit 680513ab79, which cloned the
backend's custom SSL BIO code into libpq, and didn't translate the errno
handling properly.  Moreover, it introduced unnecessary errno save/restore
logic, which was particularly confusing because it was incomplete; and it
failed to check for all three of EINTR, EAGAIN, and EWOULDBLOCK in
my_sock_write.  (That might not be necessary; but since we're copying
well-tested backend code that does do that, it seems prudent to copy it
faithfully.)
2015-09-28 18:02:38 -04:00
Stephen Frost 992d702bfa Ensure a few policies remain for pg_upgrade
To make sure that pg_dump/pg_restore function properly with RLS
policies, arrange to have a few of them left around at the end of the
regression tests.

Back-patch to 9.5 where RLS was added.
2015-09-28 15:48:36 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 590e2d12f0 COPY: use pg_plan_query() instead of planner()
While at it, trim the includes list in copy.c.  The planner headers
cannot be removed, but there are a few others that are not of any use.
2015-09-28 15:14:08 -03:00
Andres Freund 617db3a2d8 Fix ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE for tables with oids.
When taking the UPDATE path in an INSERT .. ON CONFLICT .. UPDATE tables
with oids were not supported. The tuple generated by the update target
list was projected without space for an oid - a simple oversight.

Reported-By: Peter Geoghegan
Author: Andres Freund
Backpatch: 9.5, where ON CONFLICT was introduced
2015-09-28 19:29:44 +02:00
Robert Haas f40792a93c Use LOCKBIT_ON() instead of a bit shift in a few places.
We do this mostly everywhere, so it seems just as well to do it here,
too.

Thomas Munro
2015-09-28 10:57:15 -04:00
Robert Haas 45e5b4ef5c Don't try to create a temp install without abs_top_builddir.
Otherwise, we effectively act as if abs_top_builddir were the root
directory, which is quite dangerous if the user happens to have
permissions to do things there.  This can crop up in PGXS builds,
for example.

Report by Sandro Santilli, patch by me, review by Noah Misch.
2015-09-28 10:49:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 883af819c1 pg_dump: Fix some messages
Make quoting style match existing style.  Improve plural support.
2015-09-27 20:29:40 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 71fc49dfe1 reindexdb: Fix mistake in help output 2015-09-27 11:22:16 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 72ed390556 pg_ctl: Improve help formatting and order 2015-09-26 21:09:52 -04:00
Andres Freund aa29c1ccd9 Remove legacy multixact truncation support.
In 9.5 and master there is no need to support legacy truncation. This is
just committed separately to make it easier to backpatch the WAL logged
multixact truncation to 9.3 and 9.4 if we later decide to do so.

I bumped master's magic from 0xD086 to 0xD088 and 9.5's from 0xD085 to
0xD087 to avoid 9.5 reusing a value that has been in use on master while
keeping the numbers increasing between major versions.

Discussion: 20150621192409.GA4797@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.5
2015-09-26 19:04:25 +02:00
Andres Freund 4f627f8973 Rework the way multixact truncations work.
The fact that multixact truncations are not WAL logged has caused a fair
share of problems. Amongst others it requires to do computations during
recovery while the database is not in a consistent state, delaying
truncations till checkpoints, and handling members being truncated, but
offset not.

We tried to put bandaids on lots of these issues over the last years,
but it seems time to change course. Thus this patch introduces WAL
logging for multixact truncations.

This allows:
1) to perform the truncation directly during VACUUM, instead of delaying it
   to the checkpoint.
2) to avoid looking at the offsets SLRU for truncation during recovery,
   we can just use the master's values.
3) simplify a fair amount of logic to keep in memory limits straight,
   this has gotten much easier

During the course of fixing this a bunch of additional bugs had to be
fixed:
1) Data was not purged from memory the member's SLRU before deleting
   segments. This happened to be hard or impossible to hit due to the
   interlock between checkpoints and truncation.
2) find_multixact_start() relied on SimpleLruDoesPhysicalPageExist - but
   that doesn't work for offsets that haven't yet been flushed to
   disk. Add code to flush the SLRUs to fix. Not pretty, but it feels
   slightly safer to only make decisions based on actual on-disk state.
3) find_multixact_start() could be called concurrently with a truncation
   and thus fail. Via SetOffsetVacuumLimit() that could lead to a round
   of emergency vacuuming. The problem remains in
   pg_get_multixact_members(), but that's quite harmless.

For now this is going to only get applied to 9.5+, leaving the issues in
the older branches in place. It is quite possible that we need to
backpatch at a later point though.

For the case this gets backpatched we need to handle that an updated
standby may be replaying WAL from a not-yet upgraded primary. We have to
recognize that situation and use "old style" truncation (i.e. looking at
the SLRUs) during WAL replay. In contrast to before, this now happens in
the startup process, when replaying a checkpoint record, instead of the
checkpointer. Doing truncation in the restartpoint is incorrect, they
can happen much later than the original checkpoint, thereby leading to
wraparound.  To avoid "multixact_redo: unknown op code 48" errors
standbys would have to be upgraded before primaries.

A later patch will bump the WAL page magic, and remove the legacy
truncation codepaths. Legacy truncation support is just included to make
a possible future backpatch easier.

Discussion: 20150621192409.GA4797@alap3.anarazel.de
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas, Alvaro Herrera, Thomas Munro
Backpatch: 9.5 for now
2015-09-26 19:04:25 +02:00
Tom Lane 2abfd9d5e9 Second try at fixing O(N^2) problem in foreign key references.
This replaces ill-fated commit 5ddc72887a,
which was reverted because it broke active uses of FK cache entries.  In
this patch, we still do nothing more to invalidatable cache entries than
mark them as needing revalidation, so we won't break active uses.  To keep
down the overhead of InvalidateConstraintCacheCallBack(), keep a list of
just the currently-valid cache entries.  (The entries are large enough that
some added space for list links doesn't seem like a big problem.)  This
would still be O(N^2) when there are many valid entries, though, so when
the list gets too long, just force the "sinval reset" behavior to remove
everything from the list.  I set the threshold at 1000 entries, somewhat
arbitrarily.  Possibly that could be fine-tuned later.  Another item for
future study is whether it's worth adding reference counting so that we
could safely remove invalidated entries.  As-is, problem cases are likely
to end up with large and mostly invalid FK caches.

Like the previous attempt, backpatch to 9.3.

Jan Wieck and Tom Lane
2015-09-25 13:16:30 -04:00
Tom Lane 77130fc148 Further fix for psql's code for locale-aware formatting of numeric output.
(Third time's the charm, I hope.)

Additional testing disclosed that this code could mangle already-localized
output from the "money" datatype.  We can't very easily skip applying it
to "money" values, because the logic is tied to column right-justification
and people expect "money" output to be right-justified.  Short of
decoupling that, we can fix it in what should be a safe enough way by
testing to make sure the string doesn't contain any characters that would
not be expected in plain numeric output.
2015-09-25 12:20:45 -04:00
Tom Lane 6325527d84 Further fix for psql's code for locale-aware formatting of numeric output.
On closer inspection, those seemingly redundant atoi() calls were not so
much inefficient as just plain wrong: the author of this code either had
not read, or had not understood, the POSIX specification for localeconv().
The grouping field is *not* a textual digit string but separate integers
encoded as chars.

We'll follow the existing code as well as the backend's cash.c in only
honoring the first group width, but let's at least honor it correctly.

This doesn't actually result in any behavioral change in any of the
locales I have installed on my Linux box, which may explain why nobody's
complained; grouping width 3 is close enough to universal that it's barely
worth considering other cases.  Still, wrong is wrong, so back-patch.
2015-09-25 00:00:33 -04:00
Tom Lane 4778a0bdaa Fix psql's code for locale-aware formatting of numeric output.
This code did the wrong thing entirely for numbers with an exponent
but no decimal point (e.g., '1e6'), as reported by Jeff Janes in
bug #13636.  More generally, it made lots of unverified assumptions
about what the input string could possibly look like.  Rearrange so
that it only fools with leading digits that it's directly verified
are there, and an immediately adjacent decimal point.  While at it,
get rid of some useless inefficiencies, like converting the grouping
count string to integer over and over (and over).

This has been broken for a long time, so back-patch to all supported
branches.
2015-09-24 23:01:04 -04:00
Tom Lane 39df0f150c Allow planner to use expression-index stats for function calls in WHERE.
Previously, a function call appearing at the top level of WHERE had a
hard-wired selectivity estimate of 0.3333333, a kludge conveniently dated
in the source code itself to July 1992.  The expectation at the time was
that somebody would soon implement estimator support functions analogous
to those for operators; but no such code has appeared, nor does it seem
likely to in the near future.  We do have an alternative solution though,
at least for immutable functions on single relations: creating an
expression index on the function call will allow ANALYZE to gather stats
about the function's selectivity.  But the code in clause_selectivity()
failed to make use of such data even if it exists.

Refactor so that that will happen.  I chose to make it try this technique
for any clause type for which clause_selectivity() doesn't have a special
case, not just functions.  To avoid adding unnecessary overhead in the
common case where we don't learn anything new, make selfuncs.c provide an
API that hooks directly to examine_variable() and then var_eq_const(),
rather than the previous coding which laboriously constructed an OpExpr
only so that it could be expensively deconstructed again.

I preserved the behavior that the default estimate for a function call
is 0.3333333.  (For any other expression node type, it's 0.5, as before.)
I had originally thought to make the default be 0.5 across the board, but
changing a default estimate that's survived for twenty-three years seems
like something not to do without a lot more testing than I care to put
into it right now.

Per a complaint from Jehan-Guillaume de Rorthais.  Back-patch into 9.5,
but not further, at least for the moment.
2015-09-24 18:35:46 -04:00