Commit Graph

18474 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Peter Eisentraut 831f5d11ec Refine error messages
"JSON" when not referring to a data type should be upper case.
2018-05-08 14:36:31 -04:00
Tom Lane 3a675f729e Count heap tuples in non-SnapshotAny path in IndexBuildHeapRangeScan().
Brown-paper-bag bug in commit 7c91a0364: when we rearranged the placement
of "reltuples += 1" statements, we missed including one in this code path.

The net effect of that was that CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY would set the
table's pg_class.reltuples to zero, as would index builds done during
bootstrap mode.  (It seems like parallel index builds ought to fail
similarly, but they don't, perhaps because reltuples is computed in some
other way.  You certainly couldn't figure that out from the abysmally
underdocumented parallelism code in this area.)

I was led to this by wondering why initdb seemed to have slowed down as
a result of 7c91a0364, as is evident in the buildfarm's timing history.
The reason is that every system catalog with indexes had pg_class.reltuples
= 0 after bootstrap, causing the planner to make some terrible choices for
queries in the post-bootstrap steps.  On my workstation, this fix causes
the runtime of "initdb -N" to drop from ~2.0 sec to ~1.4 sec, which is
almost though not quite back to where it was in v10.  That's not much of
a deal for production use perhaps, but it makes a noticeable difference
for buildfarm and "make check-world" runs, which do a lot of initdbs.
2018-05-08 00:20:19 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan d2c1512ac4 Clean up some perlcritic warnings
In Catalog.pm, mark eval of a string instead of a block as allowed.
Disallow perlcritic completely in Gen_dummy_probes.pl, as it's
generated code.
Protect a couple of lines in plperl code from  perltidy, so that the
annotation for perlcritic stays on the same line as the construct it
would otherwise object to.
2018-05-07 15:35:32 -04:00
Tom Lane 513ff52e81 Suppress compiler warnings when building with --enable-dtrace.
Most versions of "dtrace -h" drop const qualifiers from the declarations
of probe functions (though macOS gets it right).  This causes compiler
warnings when we pass in pointers to const.  Repair by extending our
existing post-processing of the probes.h file.  To do so, assume that all
"char *" arguments should be "const char *"; that seems reasonably safe.

Thomas Munro

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2j1pWSruQJqJ91ZDzD8w9ZZDsM4j2C6x75C-VryWg-_w@mail.gmail.com
2018-05-07 13:44:09 -04:00
Tom Lane d160882a17 Fix bootstrap parser so that its keywords are unreserved words.
Mark Dilger pointed out that the bootstrap parser does not allow
any of its keywords to appear as column values unless they're quoted,
and proposed dealing with that by quoting such values in genbki.pl.
Looking closer, though, we also have that problem with respect to table,
column, and type names appearing in the .bki file: the parser would fail
if any of those matched any of its keywords.  While so far there have
been no conflicts (that I've heard of), this seems like a booby trap
waiting to catch somebody.  Rather than clutter genbki.pl with enough
quoting logic to handle all that, let's make the bootstrap parser grow
up a little bit and treat its keywords as unreserved.

Experimentation shows that it's fairly easy to do so with the exception
of _null_, which I don't have a big problem with keeping as a reserved
word.  The only change needed is that we can't have the "close" command
take an optional table name: it has to either require or forbid the
table name to avoid shift/reduce conflicts.  genbki.pl has historically
always included the table name, so I took that option.

The implementation has bootscanner.l passing forward the string value
of each keyword, in case bootparse.y needs that.  This avoids needing to
know the precise spelling of each keyword in bootparse.y, which is good
because that's not always obvious from the token name.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3024FC91-DB6D-4732-B31C-DF772DF039A0@gmail.com
2018-05-05 16:23:07 -04:00
Tom Lane cb3e9e40bc Put in_range_float4_float8's work in-line.
In commit 8b29e88cd, I'd dithered about whether to make
in_range_float4_float8 be a standalone copy of the float in-range logic
or have it punt to in_range_float8_float8.  I went with the latter, which
saves code space though at the cost of performance and readability.

However, it emerges that this tickles a compiler or hardware bug on
buildfarm member opossum.  Test results from commit 55e0e4581 show
conclusively that widening a float4 NaN to float8 produces Inf, not NaN,
on that machine; which accounts perfectly for the window RANGE test
failures it's been showing.  We can dodge this problem by making
in_range_float4_float8 be an independent function, so that it checks
for NaN inputs before widening them.

Ordinarily I'd not be very excited about working around such obviously
broken functionality; but given that this was a judgment call to begin
with, I don't mind reversing it.
2018-05-05 13:21:50 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 0668719801 Fix scenario where streaming standby gets stuck at a continuation record.
If a continuation record is split so that its first half has already been
removed from the master, and is only present in pg_wal, and there is a
recycled WAL segment in the standby server that looks like it would
contain the second half, recovery would get stuck. The code in
XLogPageRead() incorrectly started streaming at the beginning of the
WAL record, even if we had already read the first page.

Backpatch to 9.4. In principle, older versions have the same problem, but
without replication slots, there was no straightforward mechanism to
prevent the master from recycling old WAL that was still needed by standby.
Without such a mechanism, I think it's reasonable to assume that there's
enough slack in how many old segments are kept around to not run into this,
or you have a WAL archive.

Reported by Jonathon Nelson. Analysis and patch by Kyotaro HORIGUCHI, with
some extra comments by me.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CACJqAM3xVz0JY1XFDKPP%2BJoJAjoGx%3DGNuOAshEDWCext7BFvCQ%40mail.gmail.com
2018-05-05 01:34:53 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera d2599ecfcc Don't mark pages all-visible spuriously
Dan Wood diagnosed a long-standing problem that pages containing tuples
that are locked by multixacts containing live lockers may spuriously end
up as candidates for getting their all-visible flag set.  This has the
long-term effect that multixacts remain unfrozen; this may previously
pass undetected, but since commit XYZ it would be reported as
  "ERROR: found multixact 134100944 from before relminmxid 192042633"
because when a later vacuum tries to freeze the page it detects that a
multixact that should have gotten frozen, wasn't.

Dan proposed a (correct) patch that simply sets a variable to its
correct value, after a bogus initialization.  But, per discussion, it
seems better coding to avoid the bogus initializations altogether, since
they could give rise to more bugs later.  Therefore this fix rewrites
the logic a little bit to avoid depending on the bogus initializations.

This bug was part of a family introduced in 9.6 by commit a892234f830e;
later, commit 38e9f90a22 fixed most of them, but this one was
unnoticed.

Authors: Dan Wood, Pavan Deolasee, Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada, Pavan Deolasee, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/84EBAC55-F06D-4FBE-A3F3-8BDA093CE3E3@amazon.com
2018-05-04 18:24:45 -03:00
Tom Lane 59cb323053 Fix precedence problem in new Perl code.
I think this bit of commit 1f1cd9b5d didn't do quite what I meant :-(
2018-05-04 09:46:35 -04:00
Teodor Sigaev 2a9e04f0a8 Don't truncate away non-key attributes for leftmost downlinks.
nbtsort.c does not need to truncate away non-key attributes for the
minimum key of the leftmost page on a level, since this is only used to
build a minus infinity downlink for the level's leftmost page.
Truncating away non-key attributes in advance of truncating away all
attributes in _bt_sortaddtup() does not affect the correctness of CREATE
INDEX, but it is misleading.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAH2-WzkAS2M3ussHG-s_Av=Zo6dPjOxyu5fNRkYnxQV+YzGQ4w@mail.gmail.com
2018-05-04 12:38:23 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev 0bef1c0678 Re-think predicate locking on GIN indexes.
The principle behind the locking was not very well thought-out, and not
documented. Add a section in the README to explain how it's supposed to
work, and change the code so that it actually works that way.

This fixes two bugs:

1. If fast update was turned on concurrently, subsequent inserts to the
   pending list would not conflict with predicate locks that were acquired
   earlier, on entry pages. The included 'predicate-gin-fastupdate' test
   demonstrates that. To fix, make all scans acquire a predicate lock on
   the metapage. That lock represents a scan of the pending list, whether
   or not there is a pending list at the moment. Forget about the
   optimization to skip locking/checking for locks, when fastupdate=off.
2. If a scan finds no match, it still needs to lock the entry page. The
   point of predicate locks is to lock the gabs between values, whether
   or not there is a match. The included 'predicate-gin-nomatch' test
   tests that case.

In addition to those two bug fixes, this removes some unnecessary locking,
following the principle laid out in the README. Because all items in
a posting tree have the same key value, a lock on the posting tree root is
enough to cover all the items. (With a very large posting tree, it would
possibly be better to lock the posting tree leaf pages instead, so that a
"skip scan" with a query like "A & B", you could avoid unnecessary conflict
if a new tuple is inserted with A but !B. But let's keep this simple.)

Also, some spelling  fixes.

Author: Heikki Linnakangas with some editorization by me
Review: Andrey Borodin, Alexander Korotkov
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/0b3ad2c2-2692-62a9-3a04-5724f2af9114@iki.fi
2018-05-04 11:27:50 +03:00
Tom Lane 1f1cd9b5dd Avoid overwriting unchanged output files in genbki.pl and Gen_fmgrtab.pl.
If a particular output file already exists with the contents it should
have, leave it alone, so that its mod timestamp is not advanced.

In builds using --enable-depend, this can avoid the need to recompile .c
files whose included files didn't actually change.  It's not clear whether
it saves much of anything for users of ccache; but the cost of doing the
file comparisons seems to be negligible, so we might as well do it.

For developers using the MSVC toolchain, this will create a regression:
msvc/Solution.pm will sometimes run genbki.pl or Gen_fmgrtab.pl
unnecessarily.  I'll look into fixing that separately.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16925.1525376229@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-05-03 18:06:45 -04:00
Tom Lane 9bf28f96c7 Rearrange makefile rules for running Gen_fmgrtab.pl.
Make these rules look more like the ones associated with genbki.pl,
to wit:

* Use a stamp file to record when we last ran the script, instead of
relying on the timestamps of the individual output files.

* Take the knowledge out of backend/Makefile and put it in utils/Makefile
where it belongs.  I moved down the handling of errcodes.h and probes.h
too, although those continue to be built by separate processes.

In itself, this is just much-needed cleanup with little practical effect.
However, by decoupling these makefile rules from the timestamps of the
generated header files, we open the door to not advancing those timestamps
unnecessarily, which will be taken advantage of by the next commit.

msvc/Solution.pm should be taught to do things similarly, but I'll leave
that for another commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16925.1525376229@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-05-03 17:54:18 -04:00
Teodor Sigaev 8f9be261f4 Add HOLD_INTERRUPTS section into FinishPreparedTransaction.
If an interrupt arrives in the middle of FinishPreparedTransaction
and any callback decide to call CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS (e.g.
RemoveTwoPhaseFile can write a warning with ereport, which checks for
interrupts) then it's possible to leave current GXact undeleted.

Backpatch to all supported branches

Stas Kelvich

Discussion: ihttps://www.postgresql.org/message-id/3AD85097-A3F3-4EBA-99BD-C38EDF8D2949@postgrespro.ru
2018-05-03 20:08:29 +03:00
Tom Lane a7a7387575 Further improve code for probing the availability of ARM CRC instructions.
Andrew Gierth pointed out that commit 1c72ec6f4 would yield the wrong
answer on big-endian ARM systems, because the data being CRC'd would be
different.  To fix that, and avoid the rather unsightly hard-wired
constant, simply compare the hardware and software implementations'
results.

While we're at it, also log the resulting decision at DEBUG1, and error
out if the hw and sw results unexpectedly differ.  Also, since this
file must compile for both frontend and backend, avoid incorrect
dependencies on backend-only headers.

In passing, add a comment to postmaster.c about when the CRC function
pointer will get initialized.

Thomas Munro, based on complaints from Andrew Gierth and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/HE1PR0801MB1323D171938EABC04FFE7FA9E3110@HE1PR0801MB1323.eurprd08.prod.outlook.com
2018-05-03 11:32:57 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 30c66e77be Fix SPI error cleanup and memory leak
Since the SPI stack has been moved from TopTransactionContext to
TopMemoryContext, setting _SPI_stack to NULL in AtEOXact_SPI() leaks
memory.  In fact, we don't need to do that anymore: We just leave the
allocated stack around for the next SPI use.

Also, refactor the SPI cleanup so that it is run both at transaction end
and when returning to the main loop on an exception.  The latter is
necessary when a procedure calls a COMMIT or ROLLBACK command that
itself causes an error.
2018-05-03 08:39:15 -04:00
Tom Lane fbb2e9a030 Fix assorted compiler warnings seen in the buildfarm.
Failure to use DatumGetFoo/FooGetDatum macros correctly, or at all,
causes some warnings about sign conversion.  This is just cosmetic
at the moment but in principle it's a type violation, so clean up
the instances I could find.

autoprewarm.c and sharedfileset.c contained code that unportably
assumed that pid_t is the same size as int.  We've variously dealt
with this by casting pid_t to int or to unsigned long for printing
purposes; I went with the latter.

Fix uninitialized-variable warning in RestoreGUCState.  This is
a live bug in some sense, but of no great significance given that
nobody is very likely to care what "line number" is associated with
a GUC that hasn't got a source file recorded.
2018-05-02 15:52:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 447dbf7aa7 Fix bogus code for extracting extended-statistics data from syscache.
statext_dependencies_load and statext_ndistinct_load were not up to snuff,
in addition to being randomly different from each other.  In detail:

* Deserialize the fetched bytea value before releasing the syscache
entry, not after.  This mistake causes visible regression test failures
when running with -DCATCACHE_FORCE_RELEASE.  Since it's not exposed by
-DCLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS, I think there may be no production hazard here
at present, but it's at least a latent bug.

* Use DatumGetByteaPP not DatumGetByteaP to save a detoasting cycle
for short stats values; the deserialize function has to be, and is,
prepared for short-header values since its other caller uses PP.

* Use a test-and-elog for null stats values in both functions, rather
than a test-and-elog in one case and an Assert in the other.  Perhaps
Asserts would be sufficient in both cases, but I don't see a good
argument for them being different.

* Minor cosmetic changes to make these functions more visibly alike.

Backpatch to v10 where this code came in.

Amit Langote, minor additional hacking by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1349aabb-3a1f-6675-9fc0-65e2ce7491dd@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-05-02 12:23:00 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 445e31bdc7 Fix some sloppiness in the new BufFileSize() and BufFileAppend() functions.
There were three related issues:

* BufFileAppend() incorrectly reset the seek position on the 'source' file.
  As a result, if you had called BufFileRead() on the file before calling
  BufFileAppend(), it got confused, and subsequent calls would read/write
  at wrong position.

* BufFileSize() did not work with files opened with BufFileOpenShared().

* FileGetSize() only worked on temporary files.

To fix, change the way BufFileSize() works so that it works on shared
files. Remove FileGetSize() altogether, as it's no longer needed. Remove
buffilesize from TapeShare struct, as the leader process can simply call
BufFileSize() to get the tape's size, there's no need to pass it through
shared memory anymore.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAH2-WznEDYe_NZXxmnOfsoV54oFkTdMy7YLE2NPBLuttO96vTQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-05-02 17:23:13 +03:00
Andres Freund 2993435dba Further -Wimplicit-fallthrough cleanup.
Tom's earlier commit in 41c912cad1 didn't update a few cases that
are only encountered with the non-standard --with-llvm config
flag. Additionally there's also one case that appears to be a
deficiency in gcc's (up to trunk as of a few days ago) detection of
"fallthrough" comments - changing the placement slightly fixes that.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180502003239.wfnqu7ekz7j7imm4@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-05-01 19:53:48 -07:00
Tom Lane b2328bf62b Fix some assorted compiler warnings on Windows.
Don't overflow the result type of constant expressions.  Don't negate
unsigned types.  Define HAVE_STDBOOL_H for Visual C++ 2013 and later.

Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm%3D3%3DTDYEXUEcHpEx%2BTwc31wo7PA0oBAiNt6sWmq93MW02A%40mail.gmail.com
2018-05-01 19:38:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 41c912cad1 Clean up warnings from -Wimplicit-fallthrough.
Recent gcc can warn about switch-case fall throughs that are not
explicitly labeled as intentional.  This seems like a good thing,
so clean up the warnings exposed thereby by labeling all such
cases with comments that gcc will recognize.

In files that already had one or more suitable comments, I generally
matched the existing style of those.  Otherwise I went with
/* FALLTHROUGH */, which is one of the spellings approved at the
more-restrictive-than-default level -Wimplicit-fallthrough=4.
(At the default level you can also spell it /* FALL ?THRU */,
and it's not picky about case.  What you can't do is include
additional text in the same comment, so some existing comments
containing versions of this aren't good enough.)

Testing with gcc 8.0.1 (Fedora 28's current version), I found that
I also had to put explicit "break"s after elog(ERROR) or ereport(ERROR);
apparently, for this purpose gcc doesn't recognize that those don't
return.  That seems like possibly a gcc bug, but it's fine because
in most places we did that anyway; so this amounts to a visit from the
style police.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15083.1525207729@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-05-01 19:35:08 -04:00
Robert Haas 37a3058bc7 Fix interaction of foreign tuple routing with remote triggers.
Without these fixes, changes to the inserted tuple made by remote
triggers are ignored when building local RETURNING tuples.

In the core code, call ExecInitRoutingInfo at a later point from
within ExecInitPartitionInfo so that the FDW callback gets invoked
after the returning list has been built.  But move CheckValidResultRel
out of ExecInitRoutingInfo so that it can happen at an earlier stage.

In postgres_fdw, refactor assorted deparsing functions to work with
the RTE rather than the PlannerInfo, which saves us having to
construct a fake PlannerInfo in cases where we don't have a real one.
Then, we can pass down a constructed RTE that yields the correct
deparse result when no real one exists.  Unfortunately, this
necessitates a hack that understands how the core code manages RT
indexes for update tuple routing, which is ugly, but we don't have a
better idea right now.

Original report, analysis, and patch by Etsuro Fujita.  Heavily
refactored by me.  Then worked over some more by Amit Langote.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/5AD4882B.10002@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-05-01 13:21:46 -04:00
Tom Lane bcbf2346d6 Remove investigative code for can't-reattach-to-shared-memory errors.
Revert commits 23078689a, 73042b8d1, ce07aff48, f7df8043f, 6ba0cc4bd,
eb16011f4, 68e7e973d, 63ca350ef.  We still have a problem here, but
somebody who's actually a Windows developer will need to spend time
on it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25495.1524517820@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-05-01 13:06:31 -04:00
Tom Lane 23078689a9 Does it help to wait before reattaching?
Revert the map/unmap dance I tried in commit 73042b8d1; that helps
not at all.

Instead, speculate that the unwanted allocation is being done on
another thread, and thus timing variations explain the apparent
unpredictability.  Temporarily add a 1-second sleep before the
VirtualFree call, in hopes that any such other threads will
quiesce and not jog our elbow.

This is obviously not a desirable long-term fix, but as a means of
investigation it seems useful.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25495.1524517820@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-30 20:09:31 -04:00
Tom Lane 73042b8d13 Map and unmap the shared memory block before risking VirtualFree.
The idea here is to get Windows' userspace infrastructure to allocate
whatever space it needs for MapViewOfFileEx() before we release the
locked-down space that we want to map the shared memory block into.

This is a fairly brute-force attempt, and would likely (for example)
fail with large shared memory on 32-bit Windows.  We could perhaps
ameliorate that by mapping only part of the shared memory block in
this way, but for the moment I just want to see if this approach
will fix dory's problem.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25495.1524517820@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-30 17:07:14 -04:00
Tom Lane ce07aff48f Further effort at preventing memory map dump from affecting the results.
Rather than elog'ing immediately, push the map data into a preallocated
StringInfo.  Perhaps this will prevent some of the mid-operation
allocations that are evidently happening now.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25495.1524517820@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-30 16:19:51 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c5679256e9 Write error messages about duplicate OIDs to stderr 2018-04-30 14:18:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 33a1c2145c Remove "Generating" output from catalog scripts
So by default, they don't output anything if everything is well.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/867f8a1a-6cf0-d835-78d8-0844e4936241%402ndquadrant.com
2018-04-30 14:18:07 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 92e1583b43 Don't do logical replication of TRUNCATE of zero tables
When due to publication configuration, a TRUNCATE change ends up with
zero tables to be published, don't send the message out, just skip it.
It's not wrong, but obviously useless overhead.
2018-04-30 13:49:20 -04:00
Tom Lane f7df8043f0 Remove Windows module-list-dumping code.
This code is evidently allocating memory and thus confusing matters
even more.  Let's see whether we can learn anything with
just VirtualQuery.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25495.1524517820@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-30 13:20:13 -04:00
Tom Lane 6ba0cc4bd3 Dump full memory maps around failing Windows reattach code.
This morning's results from buildfarm member dory make it pretty
clear that something is getting mapped into the just-freed space,
but not what that something is.  Replace my minimalistic probes
with a full dump of the process address space and module space,
based on Noah's work at
<20170403065106.GA2624300%40tornado.leadboat.com>

This is all (probably) to get reverted once we have fixed the
problem, but for now we need information.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25495.1524517820@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-30 11:16:21 -04:00
Tom Lane eb16011f4c Get still more info about Windows can't-reattach-to-shared-memory errors.
After some thought about the info captured so far, it seems possible
that MapViewOfFileEx is itself causing some DLL to get loaded into
the space just freed by VirtualFree.  The previous commit here didn't
capture enough info to really prove the case for that, so let's add
one more VirtualQuery in between those steps.  Also, be sure to
capture the post-Map state before we emit any log entries, just in
case elog() is invoking some code not previously loaded.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25495.1524517820@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-29 20:41:19 -04:00
Tom Lane 6bdf1303b3 Avoid wrong results for power() with NaN input on more platforms.
Buildfarm results show that the modern POSIX rule that 1 ^ NaN = 1 is not
honored on *BSD until relatively recently, and really old platforms don't
believe that NaN ^ 0 = 1 either.  (This is unsurprising, perhaps, since
SUSv2 doesn't require either behavior.)  In hopes of getting to platform
independent behavior, let's deal with all the NaN-input cases explicitly
in dpow().

Note that numeric_power() doesn't know either of these special cases.
But since that behavior is platform-independent, I think it should be
addressed separately, and probably not back-patched.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/75DB81BEEA95B445AE6D576A0A5C9E936A73E741@BPXM05GP.gisp.nec.co.jp
2018-04-29 18:15:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 68e7e973d2 Get more info about Windows can't-reattach-to-shared-memory errors.
Commit 63ca350ef neglected to probe the state of things *before*
the VirtualFree call, which now looks like it might be interesting.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25495.1524517820@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-29 16:02:45 -04:00
Tom Lane 61b200e2f5 Avoid wrong results for power() with NaN input on some platforms.
Per spec, the result of power() should be NaN if either input is NaN.
It appears that on some versions of Windows, the libc function does
return NaN, but it also sets errno = EDOM, confusing our code that
attempts to work around shortcomings of other platforms.  Hence, add
guard tests to avoid substituting a wrong result for the right one.

It's been like this for a long time (and the odd behavior only appears
in older MSVC releases, too) so back-patch to all supported branches.

Dang Minh Huong, reviewed by David Rowley

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/75DB81BEEA95B445AE6D576A0A5C9E936A73E741@BPXM05GP.gisp.nec.co.jp
2018-04-29 15:21:44 -04:00
Tom Lane 9cb7db3f0c In AtEOXact_Files, complain if any files remain unclosed at commit.
This change makes this module act more like most of our other low-level
resource management modules.  It's a caller error if something is not
explicitly closed by the end of a successful transaction, so issue
a WARNING about it.  This would not actually have caught the file leak
bug fixed in commit 231bcd080, because that was in a transaction-abort
path; but it still seems like a good, and pretty cheap, cross-check.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/152056616579.4966.583293218357089052@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-04-28 17:45:02 -04:00
Tom Lane cfffe83ba8 Fix incorrect field type for PlannedStmt.jitFlags in outfuncs/readfuncs.
This field was a bool at one point, but now it's an int.
Spotted by Hari Babu; trivial patch is by Ashutosh Bapat.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJrrPGedKiFE2fqntSauUfhapCksOJzam+QtHfSgx86LhXLeOQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-28 16:46:24 -04:00
Tom Lane 45c6d75f8c Clarify handling of special-case values in bootstrap catalog data.
I (tgl) originally coded the special case for pg_proc.pronargs as
though it were a kind of default value.  It seems better though to
treat computable columns as an independent concern: this makes the
code clearer, and probably a bit faster too since we needn't do
work inside the per-column loop.

Improve related comments, as well, in the expectation that there
might be more cases like this in future.

John Naylor, some additional comment-hacking by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGW-D7OobzU=dybVT2JqZAx-4X1yvBJdavBmqQL05Q6CLw@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-28 15:27:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 4094031dd3 Assorted minor doc/comment fixes.
Identify pg_replication_origin as a shared catalog in catalogs.sgml,
using the same boilerplate wording used for most other shared catalogs
(and tweak another place where someone had randomly deviated from
that boilerplate).

Make an example in mmgr/README more consistent with surrounding text.

Update an obsolete cross-reference in a comment in storage/block.h.

Zhuo Ql

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/44296255.1819230.1524889719001@mail.yahoo.com
2018-04-28 11:46:15 -04:00
Tom Lane 63ca350ef9 Try to get some info about Windows can't-reattach-to-shared-memory errors.
Add some debug printouts focused on the idea that MapViewOfFileEx might
be rounding its virtual memory allocation up more than we expect (and,
in particular, more than VirtualAllocEx does).

Once we've seen what this reports in one of the failures on buildfarm
members dory or jacana, we might revert this ... or perhaps just
decrease the log level.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25495.1524517820@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-27 21:59:58 -04:00
Tom Lane 2e83e6bd74 Adjust hints and docs to suggest CREATE EXTENSION not CREATE LANGUAGE.
The core PLs have been extension-ified for seven years now, and we can
reasonably hope that all out-of-core PLs have been too.  So adjust a few
places that were still recommending CREATE LANGUAGE as the user-level
way to install a PL.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoaJTUDMSuSCg4k08Dv8vhbrJq9nP3ZfPbmysVz_616qxw@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-27 13:42:03 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 76ece16974 perltidy: Add option --nooutdent-long-comments 2018-04-27 11:37:43 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut d4f16d5071 perltidy: Add option --nooutdent-long-quotes 2018-04-27 11:37:43 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 45f87b7710 Remove outdated comment on how to set logtape's read buffer size.
Commit b75f467b6e removed the LogicalTapeAssignReadBufferSize() function,
but forgot to update this comment. The read buffer size is an argument to
LogicalTapeRewindForRead() now. Doesn't seem worth going into the details
in the file header comment, so remove the outdated sentence altogether.
2018-04-27 09:31:43 +03:00
Tom Lane bdf46af748 Post-feature-freeze pgindent run.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15719.1523984266@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-26 14:47:16 -04:00
Tom Lane f83bf385c1 Preliminary work for pgindent run.
Update typedefs.list from current buildfarm results.  Adjust pgindent's
typedef blacklist to block some more unfortunate typedef names that have
snuck in since last time.  Manually tweak a few places where I didn't
like the initial results of pgindent'ing.
2018-04-26 14:45:04 -04:00
Tom Lane a0854f1072 Avoid parsing catalog data twice during BKI file construction.
In the wake of commit 5602265f7, we were doing duplicate-OID detection
quite inefficiently, by invoking duplicate_oids which does all the same
parsing of catalog headers and .dat files as genbki.pl does.  That adds
under half a second on modern machines, but quite a bit more on slow
buildfarm critters, so it seems worth avoiding.  Let's just extend
genbki.pl a little so it can also detect duplicate OIDs, and remove
the duplicate_oids call from the build process.

(This also means that duplicate OID detection will happen during
Windows builds, which AFAICS it didn't before.)

This makes the use-case for duplicate_oids a bit dubious, but it's
possible that people will still want to run that check without doing
a whole build run, so let's keep that script.

In passing, move down genbki.pl's creation of its temp output files
so that it doesn't happen until after we've done parsing and validation
of the input.  This avoids leaving a lot of clutter around after a
failure.

John Naylor and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/37D774E4-FE1F-437E-B3D2-593F314B7505@postgrespro.ru
2018-04-26 13:22:27 -04:00
Tom Lane 5602265f77 Convert unused_oids and duplicate_oids to use Catalog.pm infrastructure.
unused_oids was previously a shell script, which of course didn't work at
all on Windows.  Also, commit 372728b0d introduced some other portability
problems, as complained of by Stas Kelvich.  We can improve matters by
converting it to Perl.

While we're at it, let's future-proof both this script and duplicate_oids
to use Catalog.pm rather than having a bunch of ad-hoc logic for parsing
catalog headers and .dat files.  These scripts are thereby a bit slower,
which doesn't seem like a problem for typical manual use.  It is a little
annoying for buildfarm purposes, but we should be able to fix that case
by having genbki.pl make the check instead of parsing the headers twice.
(That's not done in this commit, though.)

Stas Kelvich, adjusted a bit by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/37D774E4-FE1F-437E-B3D2-593F314B7505@postgrespro.ru
2018-04-25 16:01:58 -04:00
Tom Lane 1eb3a09e93 Make Catalog.pm's representation of toast and index decls more abstract.
Instead of immediately constructing the string we need to emit into the
.BKI file, preserve the items we extracted from the header file in a hash.
This eases using the info for other purposes.

John Naylor (with cosmetic adjustments by me)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/37D774E4-FE1F-437E-B3D2-593F314B7505@postgrespro.ru
2018-04-25 16:01:58 -04:00
Robert Haas dc1057fcd8 Prevent generation of bogus subquery scan paths.
Commit 0927d2f46d didn't check that
consider_parallel was set for the target relation or account for
the possibility that required_outer might be non-empty.

To prevent future bugs of this ilk, add some assertions to
add_partial_path and do a bit of future-proofing of the code
recently added to recurse_set_operations.

Report by Andreas Seltenreich.  Patch by Jeevan Chalke.  Review
by Amit Kapila and by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAM2+6=U+9otsyF2fYB8x_2TBeHTR90itarqW=qAEjN-kHaC7kw@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-25 15:25:55 -04:00
Tom Lane f04d4ac919 Reindent Perl files with perltidy version 20170521.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABUevEzK3cNiHZQ18f5tK0guoT+cN_jWeVzhYYxY=r+1Q3SmoA@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-25 14:00:19 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera bd4aad3239 Update ExecInitPartitionInfo comment
Remove the words "if not already done."  This obsolete wording
corresponds to an early development version of what became edd44738bc.

Author: Etsuro Fujita
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5ADF117B.5030606@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-04-24 23:00:48 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 1957f8dabf Initialize ExprStates once in run-time partition pruning
Instead of doing ExecInitExpr every time a Param needs to be evaluated
in run-time partition pruning, do it once during run-time pruning
set-up and cache the exprstate in PartitionPruneContext, saving a lot of
work.

Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f8-x+q-90QAPDu_okhQBV4DPEtPz8CJ=m0940GyT4DA4w@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-24 14:03:10 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 055fb8d33d Add GUC enable_partition_pruning
This controls both plan-time and execution-time new-style partition
pruning.  While finer-grain control is possible (maybe using an enum GUC
instead of boolean), there doesn't seem to be much need for that.

This new parameter controls partition pruning for all queries:
trivially, SELECT queries that affect partitioned tables are naturally
under its control since they are using the new technology.  However,
while UPDATE/DELETE queries do not use the new code, we make the new GUC
control their behavior also (stealing control from
constraint_exclusion), because it is more natural, and it leads to a
more natural transition to the future in which those queries will also
use the new pruning code.

Constraint exclusion still controls pruning for regular inheritance
situations (those not involving partitioned tables).

Author: David Rowley
Review: Amit Langote, Ashutosh Bapat, Justin Pryzby, David G. Johnston
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_0HwsxJG9m+nzU+CizxSdGtfe6iF_ykPYBiYft302DCw@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-23 17:57:43 -03:00
Tom Lane 4df58f7ed7 Fix handling of partition bounds for boolean partitioning columns.
Previously, you could partition by a boolean column as long as you
spelled the bound values as string literals, for instance FOR VALUES
IN ('t').  The trouble with this is that ruleutils.c printed that as
FOR VALUES IN (TRUE), which is reasonable syntax but wasn't accepted by
the grammar.  That results in dump-and-reload failures for such cases.

Apply a minimal fix that just causes TRUE and FALSE to be converted to
strings 'true' and 'false'.  This is pretty grotty, but it's too late for
a more principled fix in v11 (to say nothing of v10).  We should revisit
the whole issue of how partition bound values are parsed for v12.

Amit Langote

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/e05c5162-1103-7e37-d1ab-6de3e0afaf70@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-04-23 15:29:11 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut df044026fc Fix typo in logical truncate replication
This could result in some misbehavior in a cascading replication setup.
2018-04-23 13:38:22 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera bc972072a3 Add missing pstrdup
Lifetime of the input string is not right, so create a separate copy.

Author: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a2773420-50d1-0a42-3396-fe42b0921134@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-04-23 12:11:41 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera dfce1f9e4e Remove useless default clause in switch
The switch covers all values of the enum driver variable, so having a
default: clause is useless, even if it's only to do Assert(false).
2018-04-23 12:11:41 -03:00
Teodor Sigaev a5ab8928d7 Make bms_prev_member work correctly with a 64 bit bitmapword
5c067521 erroneously had coded bms_prev_member assuming that a bitmapword
would always hold 32 bits and started it's search on what it thought was the
highest 8-bits of the word.  This was not the case if bitmapwords were 64
bits.

In passing add a test to exercise this function a little. Previously there was
no coverage at all.

David Rowly
2018-04-23 17:59:17 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev 6db4b49986 Fix wrong validation of top-parent pointer during page deletion in Btree.
After introducing usage of t_tid of inner or page high key for storing
number of attributes of tuple, validation of tuple's ItemPointer with
ItemPointerIsValid becomes incorrect, it's need to validate only blocknumber of
ItemPointer. Missing this causes a incorrect page deletion, fix that. Test is
added.

BTW, current contrib/amcheck doesn't fail on index corrupted by this way.

Also introduce BTreeTupleGetTopParent/BTreeTupleSetTopParent macroses to improve
code readability and to avoid possible confusion with page high key: high key
is used to store top-parent link for branch to remove.

Bug found by Michael Paquier, but bug doesn't exist in previous versions because
t_tid was set to P_HIKEY.

Author: Teodor Sigaev
Reviewer: Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20180419052436.GA16000%40paquier.xyz
2018-04-23 15:55:10 +03:00
Tom Lane a66c03f698 Add missing "static" marker.
Per pademelon.
2018-04-21 11:21:18 -04:00
Stephen Frost a0fefbcb71 Fix a couple minor typos
In commit f0e4475, GetIndexOpClass was renamed to ResolveOpClass, but
the comment in typecmds.c didn't get the memo.

In objectaddress.c, missing 'of' in a comment.

Both noticed by Vik Fearing, patch is mine though.
2018-04-20 19:04:54 -04:00
Tom Lane b1b71f1658 Fix race conditions when an event trigger is added concurrently with DDL.
EventTriggerTableRewrite crashed if there were table_rewrite triggers
present, but there had not been when the calling command started.

EventTriggerDDLCommandEnd called ddl_command_end triggers if present,
even if there had been no such triggers when the calling command started,
which would lead to a failure in pg_event_trigger_ddl_commands.

In both cases, fix by doing nothing; it's better to wait till the next
command when things will be properly initialized.

In passing, remove an elog(DEBUG1) call that might have seemed interesting
four years ago but surely isn't today.

We found this because of intermittent failures in the buildfarm.  Thanks
to Alvaro Herrera and Andrew Gierth for analysis.

Back-patch to 9.5; some of this code exists before that, but the specific
hazards we need to guard against don't.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5767.1523995174@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-20 17:15:31 -04:00
Tom Lane ec38dcd363 Tweak a couple of planner APIs to save recalculating join relids.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f8128b11-c5bf-3539-48cd-234178b2314d@proxel.se
2018-04-20 16:00:47 -04:00
Tom Lane c792c7db41 Change more places to be less trusting of RestrictInfo.is_pushed_down.
On further reflection, commit e5d83995e didn't go far enough: pretty much
everywhere in the planner that examines a clause's is_pushed_down flag
ought to be changed to use the more complicated behavior where we also
check the clause's required_relids.  Otherwise we could make incorrect
decisions about whether, say, a clause is safe to use as a hash clause.

Some (many?) of these places are safe as-is, either because they are
never reached while considering a parameterized path, or because there
are additional checks that would reject a pushed-down clause anyway.
However, it seems smarter to just code them all the same way rather
than rely on easily-broken reasoning of that sort.

In support of that, invent a new macro RINFO_IS_PUSHED_DOWN that should
be used in place of direct tests on the is_pushed_down flag.

Like the previous patch, back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f8128b11-c5bf-3539-48cd-234178b2314d@proxel.se
2018-04-20 15:19:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 68c23cba34 Improve consistency of comments in system catalog headers.
Use the term "system catalog" rather than "system relation" in assorted
places where it's clearly referring to a table rather than, say, an
index.  Use more natural word order in the header boilerplate, improve
some of the one-liner catalog descriptions, and fix assorted random
deviations from the normal boilerplate.  All purely neatnik-ism, but
why not.

John Naylor, some additional cleanup by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGUeJmFB3h-NJ18P32NPa+kzC165nm7GSoGHfPaN80Wxcw@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-19 17:14:09 -04:00
Tom Lane e5d83995e9 Fix incorrect handling of join clauses pushed into parameterized paths.
In some cases a clause attached to an outer join can be pushed down into
the outer join's RHS even though the clause is not degenerate --- this
can happen if we choose to make a parameterized path for the RHS.  If
the clause ends up attached to a lower outer join, we'd misclassify it
as being a "join filter" not a plain "filter" condition at that node,
leading to wrong query results.

To fix, teach extract_actual_join_clauses to examine each join clause's
required_relids, not just its is_pushed_down flag.  (The latter now
seems vestigial, or at least in need of rethinking, but we won't do
anything so invasive as redefining it in a bug-fix patch.)

This has been wrong since we introduced parameterized paths in 9.2,
though it's evidently hard to hit given the lack of previous reports.
The test case used here involves a lateral function call, and I think
that a lateral reference may be required to get the planner to select
a broken plan; though I wouldn't swear to that.  In any case, even if
LATERAL is needed to trigger the bug, it still affects all supported
branches, so back-patch to all.

Per report from Andreas Karlsson.  Thanks to Andrew Gierth for
preliminary investigation.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f8128b11-c5bf-3539-48cd-234178b2314d@proxel.se
2018-04-19 15:49:30 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 79b2e52615 Remove quick path in ExecInitPartitionInfo for equal tupdescs
I added this "optimization" on top of Amit Langote's 158b7bc6d7, but
the quick path is never taken because the partition uses a different
pg_type oid than its parent table (causing equalTupleDescs to return
false).  Changing that requires more analysis and is too considered
dangerous at this point in the cycle, so revert it.

We might make it work someday, but not for pg11.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/825031be-942c-8c24-6163-13c27f217a3d@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-04-19 16:46:53 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 2d625176c0 Plural of modulus is moduli 2018-04-19 12:39:13 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera e5dcbb88a1 Rework code to determine partition pruning procedure
Amit Langote reported that partition prune was unable to work with
arrays, enums, etc, which led him to research the appropriate way to
match query clauses to partition keys: instead of searching for an exact
match of the expression's type, it is better to rely on the fact that
the expression qual has already been resolved to a specific operator,
and that the partition key is linked to a specific operator family.
With that info, it's possible to figure out the strategy and comparison
function to use for the pruning clause in a manner that works reliably
for pseudo-types also.

Include new test cases that demonstrate pruning where pseudotypes are
involved.

Author: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2b02f1e9-9812-9c41-972d-517bdc0f815d@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-04-19 12:01:37 -03:00
Teodor Sigaev f97f0c921a Adjust _bt_insertonpg() comments
Remove an obsolete reference to the 'afteritem' argument, which was
removed by commit bc292937.  Add a comment that clarifies how
_bt_insertonpg() indirectly handles the insertion of high key items.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
2018-04-19 11:08:45 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev 3d927961ae Handle XLOG_BTREE_META_CLEANUP in btree_desc() and btree_identify()
New WAL record XLOG_BTREE_META_CLEANUP introduced in 857f9c36 has no handling
in btree_desc() and btree_identify().  This patch implements corresponding
handling.

Alexander Korotkov
2018-04-19 09:27:56 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev 075aade436 Adjust INCLUDE index truncation comments and code.
Add several assertions that ensure that we're dealing with a pivot tuple
without non-key attributes where that's expected.  Also, remove the
assertion within _bt_isequal(), restoring the v10 function signature.  A
similar check will be performed for the page highkey within
_bt_moveright() in most cases.  Also avoid dropping all objects within
regression tests, to increase pg_dump test coverage for INCLUDE indexes.

Rather than using infrastructure that's generally intended to be used
with reference counted heap tuple descriptors during truncation, use the
same function that was introduced to store flat TupleDescs in shared
memory (we use a temp palloc'd buffer).  This isn't strictly necessary,
but seems more future-proof than the old approach.  It also lets us
avoid including rel.h within indextuple.c, which was arguably a
modularity violation.  Also, we now call index_deform_tuple() with the
truncated TupleDesc, not the source TupleDesc, since that's more robust,
and saves a few cycles.

In passing, fix a memory leak by pfree'ing truncated pivot tuple memory
during CREATE INDEX.  Also pfree during a page split, just to be
consistent.

Refactor _bt_check_natts() to be more readable.

Author: Peter Geoghegan with some editorization by me
Reviewed by: Alexander Korotkov, Teodor Sigaev
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAH2-Wz%3DkCWuXeMrBCopC-tFs3FbiVxQNjjgNKdG2sHxZ5k2y3w%40mail.gmail.com
2018-04-19 08:45:58 +03:00
Tom Lane 5372c2c841 Improve error detection/reporting in Catalog.pm and genbki.pl.
Clean up error messages relating to mistakes in .dat files: make sure they
provide the .dat file name and line number, not the place in the Perl
script that's reporting the problem.  Adopt more uniform message phrasing,
too.

Make genbki.pl spit up on unrecognized field names in the input hashes.
Previously, it just silently ignored such fields, which could make a
misspelled field name into a very hard-to-decipher problem.  (This is in
genbki.pl, *not* Catalog.pm, because we don't want reformat_dat_file.pl to
complain about unrecognized fields.  We'd rather it silently dropped them,
to facilitate removing unwanted fields after a reorganization.)
2018-04-18 18:17:02 -04:00
Tom Lane 1dec82068b Better fix for deadlock hazard in CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY.
Commit 54eff5311 did not account for the possibility that we'd have
a transaction snapshot due to default_transaction_isolation being
set high enough to require one.  The transaction snapshot is enough
to hold back our advertised xmin and thus risk deadlock anyway.
The only way to get rid of that snap is to start a new transaction,
so let's do that instead.  Also throw in an assert checking that we
really have gotten to a state where no xmin is being advertised.

Back-patch to 9.4, like the previous commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU=1ztk3TpQdcUNbxq93pc80FrXUjpDWLGMeVBDx71GHNwZQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-18 12:07:37 -04:00
Tom Lane 55d26ff638 Rationalize handling of single and double quotes in bootstrap data.
Change things around so that proper quoting of values interpolated into
the BKI data by initdb is the responsibility of initdb, not something
we half-heartedly handle by putting double quotes into the raw BKI data.
(Note: experimentation shows that it still doesn't work to put a double
quote into the initial superuser username, but that's the fault of
inadequate quoting while interpolating the name into SQL scripts;
the BKI aspect of it works fine now.)

Having done that, we can remove the special-case handling of values
that look like "something" from genbki.pl, and instead teach it to
escape double --- and single --- quotes properly.  This removes the
nowhere-documented need to treat those specially in the BKI source
data; whatever you write will be passed through unchanged into the
inserted data value, modulo Perl's rules about single-quoted strings.

Add documentation explaining the (pre-existing) handling of backslashes
in the BKI data.

Per an earlier discussion with John Naylor.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGUNao=-Q2-vAN3PYcdF5tnL5JAHwGwzZGuYHtq+Mk_9ng@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-17 19:53:50 -04:00
Tom Lane 9ffcccdb95 Rationalize handling of array type names in bootstrap data.
Formerly, Catalog.pm turned a C array type declaration in the catalog
header files into a SQL type, e.g., 'foo[]'.  Along the way, genbki.pl
turned this into '_foo' for the purpose of type lookups, but wrote 'foo[]'
to postgres.bki.  During bootstrap, bootscanner.l had to have a special
case rule to tokenize this, and then MapArrayTypeName() would turn 'foo[]'
into '_foo' one more time.

This seems unnecessarily complicated, especially since nobody cares that
much about the readability of postgres.bki.  Instead, make Catalog.pm
convert the C declaration into '_foo' to start with, and preserve that
representation of the type name throughout bootstrap data processing.
Then rip out the special-case code in bootscanner.l and bootstrap.c.

This changes postgres.bki to the extent that array fields are now
declared like
  proconfig = _text ,
rather than
  proconfig = text[] ,

No documentation update, since the SGML docs didn't mention any of this
in the first place, and it's all pretty transparent to writers of
catalog header files anyway.

John Naylor

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGUNao=-Q2-vAN3PYcdF5tnL5JAHwGwzZGuYHtq+Mk_9ng@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-17 18:29:11 -04:00
Tom Lane e90d4ddc63 Simplify genbki.pl's data quoting rules.
During the bootstrap data format conversion, it seemed important for
verifiability's sake that the generated postgres.bki file stayed the same
as before.  That resulted in adding a bunch of ad-hoc rules about when to
quote emitted data values, to match previous manual decisions that had
often quoted values unnecessarily.  Now that the conversion is complete,
it seems fine to remove all those ad-hoc rules.  The net actual effect on
the current contents of postgres.bki is that some fields that had been
quoted despite containing only digits or only "-" lose their unnecessary
quotes.

Also, now that genbki.pl will always quote values containing a backslash,
there's no need for bootscanner.l to allow unquoted octal escapes;
so simplify its production for "id" by removing that possibility.

John Naylor, slightly modified by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGUNao=-Q2-vAN3PYcdF5tnL5JAHwGwzZGuYHtq+Mk_9ng@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-17 18:10:16 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas cf5a189059 Fix confusion on the padding of GIDs in on commit and abort records.
Review of commit 1eb6d652: It's pointless to add padding to the GID fields,
when the code that follows assumes that there is no alignment, and uses
memcpy(). Remove the pointless padding.

Update comments to note the new fields in the WAL records.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/33b787bf-dc20-1161-54e9-3f3b607bf59d%40iki.fi
2018-04-17 16:10:42 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera b7e2cbc5b4 Update Append's idea of first_partial_plan
It turns out that after runtime partition pruning, Append's
first_partial_plan does not accurately represent partial plans to run,
if any of those got pruned.  This could limit participation of workers
in some partial subplans, if other subplans got pruned.  Fix it by
keeping an index of the first valid partial subplan in the state node,
determined at execnode Init time.

Author: David Rowley, with cosmetic changes by me.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f8o2Yd=rOP=Et3A0FWgF+gSAOkFSU6eNhnGzTPV7nN8sQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-17 16:25:02 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 55101549d5 Fix a few typos in comments and variable names.
Author: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20180411075223.GB19732%40paquier.xyz
2018-04-17 11:54:57 -04:00
Tatsuo Ishii 03030512d1 Add more infinite recursion detection while locking a view.
Also add regression test cases for detecting infinite recursion in
locking view tests.  Some document enhancements. Patch by Yugo Nagata.
2018-04-17 16:59:17 +09:00
Tom Lane b15e8f71db Fix broken collation-aware searches in SP-GiST text opclass.
spg_text_leaf_consistent() supposed that it should compare only
Min(querylen, entrylen) bytes of the two strings, and then deal with
any excess bytes in one string or the other by assuming the longer
string is greater if the prefixes are equal.  Quite aside from the
fact that that's just wrong in some locales (e.g., 'ch' is not less
than 'd' in cs_CZ), it also risked passing incomplete multibyte
characters to strcoll(), with ensuing bad results.

Instead, just pass the full strings to varstr_cmp, and let it decide
what to do about unequal-length strings.

Fortunately, this error doesn't imply any index corruption, it's just
that searches might return the wrong set of entries.

Per report from Emre Hasegeli, though this is not his patch.
Thanks to Peter Geoghegan for review and discussion.

This code was born broken, so back-patch to all supported branches.
In HEAD, I failed to resist the temptation to do a bit of cosmetic
cleanup/pgindent'ing on 710d90da1, too.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAE2gYzzb6K51VnTq5i5p52z+j9p2duEa-K1T3RrC_GQEynAKEg@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-16 16:06:58 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 158b7bc6d7 Ignore whole-rows in INSERT/CONFLICT with partitioned tables
We had an Assert() preventing whole-row expressions from being used in
the SET clause of INSERT ON CONFLICT, but it seems unnecessary, given
some tests, so remove it.  Add a new test to exercise the case.

Still at ExecInitPartitionInfo, we used map_partition_varattnos (which
constructs an attribute map, then calls map_variable_attnos) using
the same two relations many times in different expressions and with
different parameters.  Constructing the map over and over is a waste.
To avoid this repeated work, construct the map once, and use
map_variable_attnos() directly instead.

Author: Amit Langote, per comments by me (Álvaro)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180326142016.m4st5e34chrzrknk@alvherre.pgsql
2018-04-16 15:52:28 -03:00
Tom Lane f8a187bdba Clean up callers of JsonbIteratorNext().
Coverity complained about the lack of a check on the return value in
parse_jsonb_index_flags' last call of JsonbIteratorNext.  Seems like
a reasonable gripe to me, especially since the code is depending on
that being WJB_DONE to not leak memory, so add a check.

In passing, improve a couple other places where the result was being
ignored, either by adding an assert or at least a cast to void.

Also, don't spell "WJB_DONE" as "0".  That's horrid coding style,
and it wasn't consistent either.
2018-04-15 12:40:01 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 33cedf1474 Don't attempt to verify checksums on new pages
Teach both base backups and pg_verify_checksums that if a page is new,
it does not have a checksum yet, so it shouldn't be verified.

Noted by Tomas Vondra, review by David Steele.
2018-04-15 14:05:56 +02:00
Tom Lane 49ac4039b2 Simplify view-expansion code in rewriteHandler.c.
In the wake of commit 50c6bb022, it's not necessary for ApplyRetrieveRule
to have a forUpdatePushedDown parameter.  By the time control gets here for
any given view-referencing RTE, we should already have pushed down the
effects of any FOR UPDATE/SHARE clauses affecting the view from outer query
levels.  Hence if we don't find a RowMarkClause at the current query level,
that's sufficient proof that there is no outer one either.  This in turn
means we need no forUpdatePushedDown parameter for fireRIRrules.

I wonder whether we oughtn't also revert commit cba2d2717, since it now
seems likely that that was band-aiding around the bad effects of doing
FOR UPDATE pushdown and view expansion in the wrong order.  However,
in the absence of evidence that the current coding of markQueryForLocking
is actually buggy (i.e. missing RTEs it ought to mark), it seems best to
leave it alone.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/24db7b8f-3de5-e25f-7ab9-d8848351d42c@gmail.com
2018-04-14 21:01:03 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera da6f3e45dd Reorganize partitioning code
There's been a massive addition of partitioning code in PostgreSQL 11,
with little oversight on its placement, resulting in a
catalog/partition.c with poorly defined boundaries and responsibilities.
This commit tries to set a couple of distinct modules to separate things
a little bit.  There are no code changes here, only code movement.

There are three new files:
  src/backend/utils/cache/partcache.c
  src/include/partitioning/partdefs.h
  src/include/utils/partcache.h

The previous arrangement of #including catalog/partition.h almost
everywhere is no more.

Authors: Amit Langote and Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/98e8d509-790a-128c-be7f-e48a5b2d8d97@lab.ntt.co.jp
	https://postgr.es/m/11aa0c50-316b-18bb-722d-c23814f39059@lab.ntt.co.jp
	https://postgr.es/m/143ed9a4-6038-76d4-9a55-502035815e68@lab.ntt.co.jp
	https://postgr.es/m/20180413193503.nynq7bnmgh6vs5vm@alvherre.pgsql
2018-04-14 21:12:14 -03:00
Tom Lane 50c6bb0224 Fix enforcement of SELECT FOR UPDATE permissions with nested views.
SELECT FOR UPDATE on a view should require UPDATE (as well as SELECT)
permissions on the view, and then the view's owner needs those same
permissions against the relations it references, and so on all the way
down to base tables.  But ApplyRetrieveRule did things in the wrong order,
resulting in failure to mark intermediate view levels as needing UPDATE
permission.  Thus for example, if user A creates a table T and an updatable
view V1 on T, then grants only SELECT permissions on V1 to user B, B could
create a second view V2 on V1 and then would be allowed to perform SELECT
FOR UPDATE via V2 (since V1 wouldn't be checked for UPDATE permissions).

To fix, just switch the order of expanding sub-views and marking referenced
objects as needing UPDATE permission.  I think additional simplifications
are now possible, but that's distinct from the bug fix proper.

This is certainly a security issue, but the consequences are pretty minor
(just the ability to lock rows that shouldn't be lockable).  Against that
we have a small risk of breaking applications that are working as-desired,
since nested views have behaved this way since such cases worked at all.
On balance I'm inclined not to back-patch.

Per report from Alexander Lakhin.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/24db7b8f-3de5-e25f-7ab9-d8848351d42c@gmail.com
2018-04-14 15:38:09 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e013288a65 Improve code comments
As of 0c2c81b403, the replication
parameter in libpq is no longer "deliberately undocumented".
2018-04-14 10:04:36 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a8677e3ff6 Support named and default arguments in CALL
We need to call expand_function_arguments() to expand named and default
arguments.

In PL/pgSQL, we also need to deal with named and default INOUT arguments
when receiving the output values into variables.

Author: Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
2018-04-14 09:13:53 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 7c44c46deb Prevent segfault in expand_tuple with no missing values
Commit 16828d5c forgot to check that it had a set of missing values
before trying to retrieve a value from it.

An additional query to add coverage for this code is added to the
regression test.

Per bug report from Andreas Seltenreich.
2018-04-13 16:43:33 -04:00
Tom Lane 8bf358c18e Improve regression test coverage for src/backend/tsearch/spell.c.
In passing, throw an error if the AF count is too small, rather than
just silently discarding extra affix entries.

Note that the new regression test cases require installing the
updated src/backend/tsearch/dicts files.

Arthur Zakirov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180413113447.GA32474@zakirov.localdomain
2018-04-13 13:49:52 -04:00
Tom Lane 65a69dfa08 Fix bogus affix-merging code.
NISortAffixes() compared successive compound affixes incorrectly,
thus possibly failing to merge identical affixes, or (less likely)
merging ones that shouldn't be merged.  The user-visible effects
of this are unclear, to me anyway.

Per bug #15150 from Alexander Lakhin.  It's been broken for a long time,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Arthur Zakirov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/152353327780.31225.13445405496721177988@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-04-12 18:39:51 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera b8ca984b2c Revert lowering of lock level for ATTACH PARTITION
I lowered the lock level for partitions being scanned from
AccessExclusive to ShareLock in the course of 72cf7f310c, but that was
bogus, as pointed out by Robert Haas.  Revert that bit.  Doing this is
possible, but requires more work.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobV7Nfmqv+TZXcdSsb9Bjc-OL-Anv6BNmCbfJVZLYPE4Q@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-12 16:53:27 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 181ccbb5e4 Add comment about default partition in check_new_partition_bound
The intention of the test is not immediately obvious, so we need this
much.
2018-04-12 16:52:29 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera a4d56f583e Use the right memory context for partkey's FmgrInfo
We were using CurrentMemoryContext to put the partsupfunc fmgr_info
into, which isn't right, because we want the PartitionKey as a whole to
be in the isolated Relation->rd_partkeycxt context.  This can cause a
crash with user-defined support functions in the operator classes used
by partitioning keys.  (Maybe this can cause problems with core-supplied
opclasses too, not sure.)

This is demonstrably broken in Postgres 10, too, but the initial
proposed fix runs afoul of a problem discussed back when 8a0596cb65
("Get rid of copy_partition_key") reorganized that code: namely that it
is possible to jump out of RelationBuildPartitionKey because of some
error and leave a dangling memory context child of CacheMemoryContext.
Also, while reviewing this I noticed that the removed-in-pg11
copy_partition_key was doing something wrong, unfixed in pg10, namely
doing memcpy() on the FmgrInfo, which is bogus (should be doing
fmgr_info_copy).  Therefore, in branch pg10, the sane fix seems to be to
backpatch both the aforementioned 8a0596cb65 and its followup
be2343221f ("Protect against hypothetical memory leaks in
RelationGetPartitionKey"), so do that, then apply the fmgr_info memcxt
bugfix on top.

Add a test case exercising btree-based custom operator classes, which
causes a crash prior to this fix.  This is not a security problem,
because in order to create an operator class you need superuser
privileges anyway.

Authors: Álvaro Herrera and Amit Langote
Reported and diagnosed by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3041e853-b1dd-a0c6-ff21-7cc5633bffd0@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-04-12 15:08:10 -03:00
Teodor Sigaev 524054598f Fix interference between covering indexes and partitioned tables
The bug is caused due to the original IndexStmt that DefineIndex receives
being overwritten when processing the INCLUDE columns. Use separate list of
index params to propagate to child tables. Add tests covering this case.

Amit Langote and Alexander Korotkov.

Re-commit 5c6110c6a9 because it discovered a bug
fixed in c266ed31a8

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAJGNTeO%3DBguEyG8wxMpU_Vgvg3nGGzy71zUQ0RpzEn_mb0bSWA%40mail.gmail.com
2018-04-12 17:25:13 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev c266ed31a8 Cleanup covering infrastructure
- Explicitly forbids opclass, collation and indoptions (like DESC/ASC etc) for
  including columns. Throw an error if user points that.
- Truncated storage arrays for such attributes to store only key atrributes,
  added assertion checks.
- Do not check opfamily and collation for including columns in
  CompareIndexInfo()

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/5ee72852-3c4e-ee35-e2ed-c1d053d45c08@sigaev.ru
2018-04-12 16:37:22 +03:00
Simon Riggs 08ea7a2291 Revert MERGE patch
This reverts commits d204ef6377,
83454e3c2b and a few more commits thereafter
(complete list at the end) related to MERGE feature.

While the feature was fully functional, with sufficient test coverage and
necessary documentation, it was felt that some parts of the executor and
parse-analyzer can use a different design and it wasn't possible to do that in
the available time. So it was decided to revert the patch for PG11 and retry
again in the future.

Thanks again to all reviewers and bug reporters.

List of commits reverted, in reverse chronological order:

 f1464c5380 Improve parse representation for MERGE
 ddb4158579 MERGE syntax diagram correction
 530e69e59b Allow cpluspluscheck to pass by renaming variable
 01b88b4df5 MERGE minor errata
 3af7b2b0d4 MERGE fix variable warning in non-assert builds
 a5d86181ec MERGE INSERT allows only one VALUES clause
 4b2d44031f MERGE post-commit review
 4923550c20 Tab completion for MERGE
 aa3faa3c7a WITH support in MERGE
 83454e3c2b New files for MERGE
 d204ef6377 MERGE SQL Command following SQL:2016

Author: Pavan Deolasee
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
2018-04-12 11:22:56 +01:00
Teodor Sigaev c9c875a28f Rename IndexInfo.ii_KeyAttrNumbers array
Rename ii_KeyAttrNumbers to ii_IndexAttrNumbers to prevent confusion with
ii_NumIndexAttrs/ii_NumIndexKeyAttrs. ii_IndexAttrNumbers contains
all attributes including "including" columns, not only key attribute.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/13123421-1d52-d0e4-c95c-6d69011e0595%40sigaev.ru
2018-04-12 13:02:45 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera 9e9befac4a Set relispartition correctly for index partitions
Oversight in commit 8b08f7d4820f: pg_class.relispartition was not
being set for index partitions, which is a bit odd, and was also causing
the code to unnecessarily call has_superclass() when simply checking the
flag was enough.

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Reported-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12085bc4-0bc6-0f3a-4c43-57fe0681772b@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-04-11 21:27:12 -03:00
Tom Lane d1e9079295 Ignore nextOid when replaying an ONLINE checkpoint.
The nextOid value is from the start of the checkpoint and may well be stale
compared to values from more recent XLOG_NEXTOID records.  Previously, we
adopted it anyway, allowing the OID counter to go backwards during a crash.
While this should be harmless, it contributed to the severity of the bug
fixed in commit 0408e1ed5, by allowing duplicate TOAST OIDs to be assigned
immediately following a crash.  Without this error, that issue would only
have arisen when TOAST objects just younger than a multiple of 2^32 OIDs
were deleted and then not vacuumed in time to avoid a conflict.

Pavan Deolasee

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABOikdOgWT2hHkYG3Wwo2cyZJq2zfs1FH0FgX-=h4OLosXHf9w@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-11 18:11:29 -04:00
Tom Lane 0408e1ed59 Do not select new object OIDs that match recently-dead entries.
When selecting a new OID, we take care to avoid picking one that's already
in use in the target table, so as not to create duplicates after the OID
counter has wrapped around.  However, up to now we used SnapshotDirty when
scanning for pre-existing entries.  That ignores committed-dead rows, so
that we could select an OID matching a deleted-but-not-yet-vacuumed row.
While that mostly worked, it has two problems:

* If recently deleted, the dead row might still be visible to MVCC
snapshots, creating a risk for duplicate OIDs when examining the catalogs
within our own transaction.  Such duplication couldn't be visible outside
the object-creating transaction, though, and we've heard few if any field
reports corresponding to such a symptom.

* When selecting a TOAST OID, deleted toast rows definitely *are* visible
to SnapshotToast, and will remain so until vacuumed away.  This leads to
a conflict that will manifest in errors like "unexpected chunk number 0
(expected 1) for toast value nnnnn".  We've been seeing reports of such
errors from the field for years, but the cause was unclear before.

The fix is simple: just use SnapshotAny to search for conflicting rows.
This results in a slightly longer window before object OIDs can be
recycled, but that seems unlikely to create any large problems.

Pavan Deolasee

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABOikdOgWT2hHkYG3Wwo2cyZJq2zfs1FH0FgX-=h4OLosXHf9w@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-11 17:41:22 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 811969b218 Allocate enough shared string memory for stats of auxiliary processes.
This fixes a bug whereby the st_appname, st_clienthostname, and
st_activity_raw fields for auxiliary processes point beyond the end of
their respective shared memory segments. As a result, the application_name
of a backend might show up as the client hostname of an auxiliary process.

Backpatch to v10, where this bug was introduced, when the auxiliary
processes were added to the array.

Author: Edmund Horner
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAMyN-kA7aOJzBmrYFdXcc7Z0NmW%2B5jBaf_m%3D_-77uRNyKC9r%3DA%40mail.gmail.com
2018-04-11 23:39:49 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas a820b4c329 Make local copy of client hostnames in backend status array.
The other strings, application_name and query string, were snapshotted to
local memory in pgstat_read_current_status(), but we forgot to do that for
client hostnames. As a result, the client hostname would appear to change in
the local copy, if the client disconnected.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Author: Edmund Horner
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAMyN-kA7aOJzBmrYFdXcc7Z0NmW%2B5jBaf_m%3D_-77uRNyKC9r%3DA%40mail.gmail.com
2018-04-11 23:39:48 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera 72cf7f310c Fix ALTER TABLE .. ATTACH PARTITION ... DEFAULT
If the table being attached contained values that contradict the default
partition's partition constraint, it would fail to complain, because
CommandCounterIncrement changes in 4dba331cb3 coupled with some bogus
coding in the existing ValidatePartitionConstraints prevented the
partition constraint from being validated after all -- or rather, it
caused to constraint to become an empty one, always succeeding.

Fix by not re-reading the OID of the default partition in
ATExecAttachPartition.  To forestall similar problems, revise the
existing code:
* rename routine from ValidatePartitionConstraints() to
  QueuePartitionConstraintValidation, to better represent what it
  actually does.
* add an Assert() to make sure that when queueing a constraint for a
  partition we're not overwriting a constraint previously queued.
* add an Assert() that we don't try to invoke the special-purpose
  validation of the default partition when attaching the default
  partition itself.

While at it, change some loops to obtain partition OIDs from
partdesc->oids rather than find_all_inheritors; reduce the lock level
of partitions being scanned from AccessExclusiveLock to ShareLock;
rewrite QueuePartitionConstraintValidation in a recursive fashion rather
than repetitive.

Author: Álvaro Herrera.  Tests written by Amit Langote
Reported-by: Rushabh Lathia
Diagnosed-by: Kyotaro HORIGUCHI, who also provided the initial fix.
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro HORIGUCHI, Amit Langote, Jeevan Ladhe
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGPqQf0W+v-Ci_qNV_5R3A=Z9LsK4+jO7LzgddRncpp_rrnJqQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-11 15:32:46 -03:00
Teodor Sigaev 92899992e1 Temporary revert 5c6110c6a9
It discovers one more bug in CompareIndexInfo(), should be fixed first.
2018-04-11 19:32:19 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev 5c6110c6a9 Fix interference between cavering indexes and partitioned tables
The bug is caused due to the original IndexStmt that DefineIndex receives
being overwritten when processing the INCLUDE columns. Use separate list of
index params to propagate to child tables. Add tests covering this case.

Amit Langote and Alexander Korotkov.
2018-04-11 16:44:26 +03:00
Andrew Dunstan 8716b264ed minor comment fixes in nbtinsert.c 2018-04-10 18:36:40 -04:00
Tom Lane 231bcd0803 Fix incorrect close() call in dsm_impl_mmap().
One improbable error-exit path in this function used close() where
it should have used CloseTransientFile().  This is unlikely to be
hit in the field, and I think the consequences wouldn't be awful
(just an elog(LOG) bleat later).  But a bug is a bug, so back-patch
to 9.4 where this code came in.

Pan Bian

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/152056616579.4966.583293218357089052@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-04-10 18:34:54 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 074251db67 Adjustments to the btree fastpath optimization.
This optimization was introduced in commit 2b272734. The changes include
some additional comments and documentation, and also these more
substantive changes:
. ensure the optimization is only applied on the leaf node of a tree
whose root is on level 2 or more. It's of little value on small trees.
. Delay calling RelationSetTargetBlock() until after the critical
section of _bt_insertonpg
. ensure the optimization is also applied to unlogged tables.

Pavan Deolasee and Peter Geoghegan with some very light editing from me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABOikdO8jhRarNC60nZLktZYhxt+TK8z_V97+Ny499YQdyAfug@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-10 18:21:03 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 15a8f8caad Fix IndexOnlyScan counter for heap fetches in parallel mode
The HeapFetches counter was using a simple value in IndexOnlyScanState,
which fails to propagate values from parallel workers; so the counts are
wrong when IndexOnlyScan runs in parallel.  Move it to Instrumentation,
like all the other counters.

While at it, change INSERT ON CONFLICT conflicting tuple counter to use
the new ntuples2 instead of nfiltered2, which is a blatant misuse.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180409215851.idwc75ct2bzi6tea@alvherre.pgsql
2018-04-10 15:56:15 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 29d7ebf51e Fix comment on B-tree insertion fastpath condition.
The comment earlier in the function correctly states "and the insertion
key is strictly greater than the first key in this page". That is what
we check here, not "greater than or equal".
2018-04-10 16:57:19 +03:00
Tom Lane 3b8f6e75f3 Fix partial-build problems introduced by having more generated headers.
Commit 372728b0d created some problems for usages like building a
subdirectory without having first done "make all" at the top level,
or for proceeding directly to "make install" without "make all".
The only reasonably clean way to fix this seems to be to force the
submake-generated-headers rule to fire in *any* "make all" or "make
install" command anywhere in the tree.  To avoid lots of redundant work,
as well as parallel make jobs possibly clobbering each others' output, we
still need to be sure that the rule fires only once in a recursive build.
For that, adopt the same MAKELEVEL hack previously used for "temp-install".
But try to document it a bit better.

The submake-errcodes mechanism previously used in src/port/ and src/common/
is subsumed by this, so we can get rid of those special cases.  It was
inadequate for src/common/ anyway after the aforesaid commit, and it always
risked parallel attempts to build errcodes.h.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1f5FAB-0006LU-MB@gemulon.postgresql.org
2018-04-09 16:42:10 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 468abb8f7a Fix incorrect logic for choosing the next Parallel Append subplan
In 499be013de support for pruning unneeded Append subnodes was added.
The logic in that commit was not correctly checking if the next subplan
was in fact a valid subplan. This could cause parallel workers processes
to be given a subplan to work on which didn't require any work.

Per code review following an otherwise unexplained regression failure in
buildfarm member Pademelon.  (We haven't been able to reproduce the
failure, so this is a bit of a blind fix in terms of whether it'll
actually fix it; but it is a clear bug nonetheless).

In passing, also add a comment to explain what first_partial_plan means.

Author: David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_E5r05hHUVG3UmCQJ49DGKKHtN=SHybD44LdzBn+CJng@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-09 17:23:49 -03:00
Tom Lane a65e17bd6f Reduce chattiness of genbki.pl and Gen_fmgrtab.pl.
Make these scripts emit just one log message when they run, not one
per output file.  The latter is way too verbose in the wake of
commit 372728b0d.  The specific wording used is what already existed
in the MSVC scripts.

John Naylor

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11103.1523208822@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-09 15:01:10 -04:00
Tom Lane af1a949109 Further cleanup of client dependencies on src/include/catalog headers.
In commit 9c0a0de4c, I'd failed to notice that catalog/catalog.h
should also be considered a frontend-unsafe header, because it includes
(and needs) the full form of pg_class.h, not to mention relcache.h.
However, various frontend code was depending on it to get
TABLESPACE_VERSION_DIRECTORY, so refactoring of some sort is called for.

The cleanest answer seems to be to move TABLESPACE_VERSION_DIRECTORY,
as well as the OIDCHARS symbol, to common/relpath.h.  Do that, and mop up
inclusions as necessary.  (I found that quite a few current users of
catalog/catalog.h don't seem to need it at all anymore, apparently as a
result of the refactorings that created common/relpath.[hc].  And
initdb.c needed it only as a route to pg_class_d.h.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6629.1523294509@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-09 14:39:58 -04:00
Magnus Hagander a228cc13ae Revert "Allow on-line enabling and disabling of data checksums"
This reverts the backend sides of commit 1fde38beaa.
I have, at least for now, left the pg_verify_checksums tool in place, as
this tool can be very valuable without the rest of the patch as well,
and since it's a read-only tool that only runs when the cluster is down
it should be a lot safer.
2018-04-09 19:03:42 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera d7a95f06a1 Minor comment updates
Fix a couple of typos, and update a comment about why we set a BMS to
NULL.

Author: David Rowley
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-tux=KdUz6ENJ9GHM_V2qgxysadYiOyQS9Ko9PTteVhQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-09 11:17:35 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 7ba6ee815d Add missed bms_copy() in perform_pruning_combine_step
We were initializing a BMS to merely reference an existing one, which
would cause a double-free (and a crash) when the recursive algorithm
tried to intersect it with an empty one.  Fix it by creating a copy at
initialization time.

Reported-by: sqlsmith (by way of Andreas Seltenreich)
Author: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87in923lyw.fsf@ansel.ydns.eu
2018-04-09 10:54:28 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2c19ea863a Fix typo in comment.
Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi
2018-04-09 14:20:13 +03:00
Tom Lane b3b7f7898f Fix additional breakage in covering-index patch.
CheckIndexCompatible() misused ComputeIndexAttrs() by not bothering
to fill ii_NumIndexAttrs and ii_NumIndexKeyAttrs in the passed
IndexInfo.  Omission of ii_NumIndexAttrs was previously unimportant,
but now this matters because ComputeIndexAttrs depends on
ii_NumIndexKeyAttrs to decide how many columns it needs to report on.

(BTW, the fact that this oversight wasn't detected earlier implies
that we have no regression test verifying whether CheckIndexCompatible
ever succeeds.  Bad dog.  Not the job of this patch to fix it, though.)

Also, change the API of ComputeIndexAttrs so that it fills the opclass
output array for all column positions, as it does for the options output
array; positions for non-key index columns are filled with zeroes.
This isn't directly fixing any bug, but it seems like a good idea.

Per valgrind failure reports from buildfarm.

Alexander Korotkov, tweaked a bit by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPpHfduWrysrT-qAhn+3Ea5+Mg6Vhc-oA6o2Z-hRCPRdvf3tiw@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-08 17:23:39 -04:00
Tom Lane cefa387153 Merge catalog/pg_foo_fn.h headers back into pg_foo.h headers.
Traditionally, include/catalog/pg_foo.h contains extern declarations
for functions in backend/catalog/pg_foo.c, in addition to its function
as the authoritative definition of the pg_foo catalog's rowtype.
In some cases, we'd been forced to split out those extern declarations
into separate pg_foo_fn.h headers so that the catalog definitions
could be #include'd by frontend code.  That problem is gone as of
commit 9c0a0de4c, so let's undo the splits to make things less
confusing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/23690.1523031777@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-08 14:35:29 -04:00
Tom Lane 372728b0d4 Replace our traditional initial-catalog-data format with a better design.
Historically, the initial catalog data to be installed during bootstrap
has been written in DATA() lines in the catalog header files.  This had
lots of disadvantages: the format was badly underdocumented, it was
very difficult to edit the data in any mechanized way, and due to the
lack of any abstraction the data was verbose, hard to read/understand,
and easy to get wrong.

Hence, move this data into separate ".dat" files and represent it in a way
that can easily be read and rewritten by Perl scripts.  The new format is
essentially "key => value" for each column; while it's a bit repetitive,
explicit labeling of each value makes the data far more readable and less
error-prone.  Provide a way to abbreviate entries by omitting field values
that match a specified default value for their column.  This allows removal
of a large amount of repetitive boilerplate and also lowers the barrier to
adding new columns.

Also teach genbki.pl how to translate symbolic OID references into
numeric OIDs for more cases than just "regproc"-like pg_proc references.
It can now do that for regprocedure-like references (thus solving the
problem that regproc is ambiguous for overloaded functions), operators,
types, opfamilies, opclasses, and access methods.  Use this to turn
nearly all OID cross-references in the initial data into symbolic form.
This represents a very large step forward in readability and error
resistance of the initial catalog data.  It should also reduce the
difficulty of renumbering OID assignments in uncommitted patches.

Also, solve the longstanding problem that frontend code that would like to
use OID macros and other information from the catalog headers often had
difficulty with backend-only code in the headers.  To do this, arrange for
all generated macros, plus such other declarations as we deem fit, to be
placed in "derived" header files that are safe for frontend inclusion.
(Once clients migrate to using these pg_*_d.h headers, it will be possible
to get rid of the pg_*_fn.h headers, which only exist to quarantine code
away from clients.  That is left for follow-on patches, however.)

The now-automatically-generated macros include the Anum_xxx and Natts_xxx
constants that we used to have to update by hand when adding or removing
catalog columns.

Replace the former manual method of generating OID macros for pg_type
entries with an automatic method, ensuring that all built-in types have
OID macros.  (But note that this patch does not change the way that
OID macros for pg_proc entries are built and used.  It's not clear that
making that match the other catalogs would be worth extra code churn.)

Add SGML documentation explaining what the new data format is and how to
work with it.

Despite being a very large change in the catalog headers, there is no
catversion bump here, because postgres.bki and related output files
haven't changed at all.

John Naylor, based on ideas from various people; review and minor
additional coding by me; previous review by Alvaro Herrera

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGWO48JbbwXkJz_yBFyGYW-M9YWxnPdxJBUosDC9ou_F0Q@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-08 13:17:27 -04:00
Teodor Sigaev 02f3e558f2 match_clause_to_index should check only key columns
Alexander Korotkov per gripe from Tom Lane noticed on valgrind-enabled
buildfarm members
2018-04-08 19:58:15 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev 34602b0a1d Remove unused variable in non-assert-enabled build
Use field of structure in Assert directly

Jeff Janes
2018-04-08 19:30:38 +03:00
Andrew Gierth 49b0e300f7 Support index INCLUDE in the AM properties interface.
This rectifies an oversight in commit 8224de4f4, by adding a new
property 'can_include' for pg_indexam_has_property, and adjusting the
results of pg_index_column_has_property to give more appropriate
results for INCLUDEd columns.
2018-04-08 06:02:05 +01:00
Stephen Frost 2b74022473 Fix EXEC BACKEND + Windows builds for group privs
Under EXEC BACKEND we also need to be going through the group privileges
setup since we do support that on Unixy systems, so add that to
SubPostmasterMain().

Under Windows, we need to simply return true from
GetDataDirectoryCreatePerm(), but that wasn't happening due to a missing
 #else clause.

Per buildfarm.
2018-04-07 19:01:43 -04:00
Stephen Frost c37b3d08ca Allow group access on PGDATA
Allow the cluster to be optionally init'd with read access for the
group.

This means a relatively non-privileged user can perform a backup of the
cluster without requiring write privileges, which enhances security.

The mode of PGDATA is used to determine whether group permissions are
enabled for directory and file creates.  This method was chosen as it's
simple and works well for the various utilities that write into PGDATA.

Changing the mode of PGDATA manually will not automatically change the
mode of all the files contained therein.  If the user would like to
enable group access on an existing cluster then changing the mode of all
the existing files will be required.  Note that pg_upgrade will
automatically change the mode of all migrated files if the new cluster
is init'd with the -g option.

Tests are included for the backend and all the utilities which operate
on the PG data directory to ensure that the correct mode is set based on
the data directory permissions.

Author: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier, with discussion amongst many others.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ad346fe6-b23e-59f1-ecb7-0e08390ad629%40pgmasters.net
2018-04-07 17:45:39 -04:00
Stephen Frost da9b580d89 Refactor dir/file permissions
Consolidate directory and file create permissions for tools which work
with the PG data directory by adding a new module (common/file_perm.c)
that contains variables (pg_file_create_mode, pg_dir_create_mode) and
constants to initialize them (0600 for files and 0700 for directories).

Convert mkdir() calls in the backend to MakePGDirectory() if the
original call used default permissions (always the case for regular PG
directories).

Add tests to make sure permissions in PGDATA are set correctly by the
tools which modify the PG data directory.

Authors: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>,
         Adam Brightwell <adam.brightwell@crunchydata.com>
Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier, with discussion amongst many others.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ad346fe6-b23e-59f1-ecb7-0e08390ad629%40pgmasters.net
2018-04-07 17:45:39 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 499be013de Support partition pruning at execution time
Existing partition pruning is only able to work at plan time, for query
quals that appear in the parsed query.  This is good but limiting, as
there can be parameters that appear later that can be usefully used to
further prune partitions.

This commit adds support for pruning subnodes of Append which cannot
possibly contain any matching tuples, during execution, by evaluating
Params to determine the minimum set of subnodes that can possibly match.
We support more than just simple Params in WHERE clauses. Support
additionally includes:

1. Parameterized Nested Loop Joins: The parameter from the outer side of the
   join can be used to determine the minimum set of inner side partitions to
   scan.

2. Initplans: Once an initplan has been executed we can then determine which
   partitions match the value from the initplan.

Partition pruning is performed in two ways.  When Params external to the plan
are found to match the partition key we attempt to prune away unneeded Append
subplans during the initialization of the executor.  This allows us to bypass
the initialization of non-matching subplans meaning they won't appear in the
EXPLAIN or EXPLAIN ANALYZE output.

For parameters whose value is only known during the actual execution
then the pruning of these subplans must wait.  Subplans which are
eliminated during this stage of pruning are still visible in the EXPLAIN
output.  In order to determine if pruning has actually taken place, the
EXPLAIN ANALYZE must be viewed.  If a certain Append subplan was never
executed due to the elimination of the partition then the execution
timing area will state "(never executed)".  Whereas, if, for example in
the case of parameterized nested loops, the number of loops stated in
the EXPLAIN ANALYZE output for certain subplans may appear lower than
others due to the subplan having been scanned fewer times.  This is due
to the list of matching subnodes having to be evaluated whenever a
parameter which was found to match the partition key changes.

This commit required some additional infrastructure that permits the
building of a data structure which is able to perform the translation of
the matching partition IDs, as returned by get_matching_partitions, into
the list index of a subpaths list, as exist in node types such as
Append, MergeAppend and ModifyTable.  This allows us to translate a list
of clauses into a Bitmapset of all the subpath indexes which must be
included to satisfy the clause list.

Author: David Rowley, based on an earlier effort by Beena Emerson
Reviewers: Amit Langote, Robert Haas, Amul Sul, Rajkumar Raghuwanshi,
Jesper Pedersen
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOG9ApE16ac-_VVZVvv0gePSgkg_BwYEV1NBqZFqDR2bBE0X0A@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-07 17:54:39 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 5c0675215e Add bms_prev_member function
This works very much like the existing bms_last_member function, only it
traverses through the Bitmapset in the opposite direction from the most
significant bit down to the least significant bit.  A special prevbit value of
-1 may be used to have the function determine the most significant bit.  This
is useful for starting a loop.  When there are no members less than prevbit,
the function returns -2 to indicate there are no more members.

Author: David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-K=3d5MDASNYFJpUpc20xcBnAwNC1-AOeunhn0OtkWbQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-07 17:54:39 -03:00
Andres Freund f16241bef7 Raise error when affecting tuple moved into different partition.
When an update moves a row between partitions (supported since
2f17844104), our normal logic for following update chains in READ
COMMITTED mode doesn't work anymore. Cross partition updates are
modeled as an delete from the old and insert into the new
partition. No ctid chain exists across partitions, and there's no
convenient space to introduce that link.

Not throwing an error in a partitioned context when one would have
been thrown without partitioning is obviously problematic. This commit
introduces infrastructure to detect when a tuple has been moved, not
just plainly deleted. That allows to throw an error when encountering
a deletion that's actually a move, while attempting to following a
ctid chain.

The row deleted as part of a cross partition update is marked by
pointing it's t_ctid to an invalid block, instead of self as a normal
update would.  That was deemed to be the least invasive and most
future proof way to represent the knowledge, given how few infomask
bits are there to be recycled (there's also some locking issues with
using infomask bits).

External code following ctid chains should be updated to check for
moved tuples. The most likely consequence of not doing so is a missed
error.

Author: Amul Sul, editorialized by me
Reviewed-By: Amit Kapila, Pavan Deolasee, Andres Freund, Robert Haas
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b95PkwojoYfz0bzXU8OokcTVGzN6vYGCNVUukeUDrnF3dw@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-07 13:24:27 -07:00
Teodor Sigaev 8224de4f42 Indexes with INCLUDE columns and their support in B-tree
This patch introduces INCLUDE clause to index definition.  This clause
specifies a list of columns which will be included as a non-key part in
the index.  The INCLUDE columns exist solely to allow more queries to
benefit from index-only scans.  Also, such columns don't need to have
appropriate operator classes.  Expressions are not supported as INCLUDE
columns since they cannot be used in index-only scans.

Index access methods supporting INCLUDE are indicated by amcaninclude flag
in IndexAmRoutine.  For now, only B-tree indexes support INCLUDE clause.

In B-tree indexes INCLUDE columns are truncated from pivot index tuples
(tuples located in non-leaf pages and high keys).  Therefore, B-tree indexes
now might have variable number of attributes.  This patch also provides
generic facility to support that: pivot tuples contain number of their
attributes in t_tid.ip_posid.  Free 13th bit of t_info is used for indicating
that.  This facility will simplify further support of index suffix truncation.
The changes of above are backward-compatible, pg_upgrade doesn't need special
handling of B-tree indexes for that.

Bump catalog version

Author: Anastasia Lubennikova with contribition by Alexander Korotkov and me
Reviewed by: Peter Geoghegan, Tomas Vondra, Antonin Houska, Jeff Janes,
			 David Rowley, Alexander Korotkov
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/56168952.4010101@postgrespro.ru
2018-04-07 23:00:39 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev 1c1791e000 Add json(b)_to_tsvector function
Jsonb has a complex nature so there isn't best-for-everything way to convert it
to tsvector for full text search. Current to_tsvector(json(b)) suggests to
convert only string values, but it's possible to index keys, numerics and even
booleans value. To solve that json(b)_to_tsvector has a second required
argument contained a list of desired types of json fields. Second argument is
a jsonb scalar or array right now with possibility to add new options in a
future.

Bump catalog version

Author: Dmitry Dolgov with some editorization by me
Reviewed by: Teodor Sigaev
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CA+q6zcXJQbS1b4kJ_HeAOoOc=unfnOrUEL=KGgE32QKDww7d8g@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-07 20:58:03 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 039eb6e92f Logical replication support for TRUNCATE
Update the built-in logical replication system to make use of the
previously added logical decoding for TRUNCATE support.  Add the
required truncate callback to pgoutput and a new logical replication
protocol message.

Publications get a new attribute to determine whether to replicate
truncate actions.  When updating a publication via pg_dump from an older
version, this is not set, thus preserving the previous behavior.

Author: Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com>
Author: Marco Nenciarini <marco.nenciarini@2ndquadrant.it>
Author: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
2018-04-07 11:34:11 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5dfd1e5a66 Logical decoding of TRUNCATE
Add a new WAL record type for TRUNCATE, which is only used when
wal_level >= logical.  (For physical replication, TRUNCATE is already
replicated via SMGR records.)  Add new callback for logical decoding
output plugins to receive TRUNCATE actions.

Author: Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com>
Author: Marco Nenciarini <marco.nenciarini@2ndquadrant.it>
Author: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
2018-04-07 11:34:10 -04:00
Teodor Sigaev b508a56f2f Predicate locking in hash indexes.
Hash index searches acquire predicate locks on the primary
page of a bucket. It acquires a lock on both the old and new buckets
for scans that happen concurrently with page splits. During a bucket
split, a predicate lock is copied from the primary page of an old
bucket to the primary page of a new bucket.

Author: Shubham Barai, Amit Kapila
Reviewed by: Amit Kapila, Alexander Korotkov, Thomas Munro
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CALxAEPvNsM2GTiXdRgaaZ1Pjd1bs+sxfFsf7Ytr+iq+5JJoYXA@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-07 16:59:14 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera 971d7ddbe1 Document partprune.c a little better
Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqGzq4D6z=8R0AP+XhbTFCQ-4Ct+t2ekqjE9Fpm84_JUGg@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-07 10:35:38 -03:00
Andres Freund 8c3debbbf6 Fix and improve pg_atomic_flag fallback implementation.
The atomics fallback implementation for pg_atomic_flag was broken,
returning the inverted value from pg_atomic_test_set_flag().  This was
unnoticed because a) atomic flags were unused until recently b) the
test code wasn't run when the fallback implementation was in
use (because it didn't allow to test for some edge cases).

Fix the bug, and improve the fallback so it has the same behaviour as
the non-fallback implementation in the problematic edge cases. That
breaks ABI compatibility in the back branches when fallbacks are in
use, but given they were broken until now...

Author: Andres Freund
Reported-by: Daniel Gustafsson
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/FB948276-7B32-4B77-83E6-D00167F8EEB4@yesql.se
    https://postgr.es/m/20180406233854.uni2h3mbnveczl32@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.5-, where the atomics abstraction was introduced.
2018-04-06 19:55:32 -07:00
Robert Haas 47cb9ca49a Fix possible failure in parallel index build.
Report and proposed fix by David Rowley, put in patch form by
Peter Geoghegan.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f91kq1wfYR8rnRRfKtxyhU2woEA+=whd640UxMyU+O0EQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-06 19:28:48 -04:00
Robert Haas 3d956d9562 Allow insert and update tuple routing and COPY for foreign tables.
Also enable this for postgres_fdw.

Etsuro Fujita, based on an earlier patch by Amit Langote. The larger
patch series of which this is a part has been reviewed by Amit
Langote, David Fetter, Maksim Milyutin, Álvaro Herrera, Stephen Frost,
and me.  Minor documentation changes to the final version by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/29906a26-da12-8c86-4fb9-d8f88442f2b9@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-04-06 19:22:03 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 9fdb675fc5 Faster partition pruning
Add a new module backend/partitioning/partprune.c, implementing a more
sophisticated algorithm for partition pruning.  The new module uses each
partition's "boundinfo" for pruning instead of constraint exclusion,
based on an idea proposed by Robert Haas of a "pruning program": a list
of steps generated from the query quals which are run iteratively to
obtain a list of partitions that must be scanned in order to satisfy
those quals.

At present, this targets planner-time partition pruning, but there exist
further patches to apply partition pruning at execution time as well.

This commit also moves some definitions from include/catalog/partition.h
to a new file include/partitioning/partbounds.h, in an attempt to
rationalize partitioning related code.

Authors: Amit Langote, David Rowley, Dilip Kumar
Reviewers: Robert Haas, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Ashutosh Bapat, Jesper Pedersen.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/098b9c71-1915-1a2a-8d52-1a7a50ce79e8@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-04-06 16:44:05 -03:00
Stephen Frost 11523e860f Support new default roles with adminpack
This provides a newer version of adminpack which works with the newly
added default roles to support GRANT'ing to non-superusers access to
read and write files, along with related functions (unlinking files,
getting file length, renaming/removing files, scanning the log file
directory) which are supported through adminpack.

Note that new versions of the functions are required because an
environment might have an updated version of the library but still have
the old adminpack 1.0 catalog definitions (where EXECUTE is GRANT'd to
PUBLIC for the functions).

This patch also removes the long-deprecated alternative names for
functions that adminpack used to include and which are now included in
the backend, in adminpack v1.1.  Applications using the deprecated names
should be updated to use the backend functions instead.  Existing
installations which continue to use adminpack v1.0 should continue to
function until/unless adminpack is upgraded.

Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171231191939.GR2416%40tamriel.snowman.net
2018-04-06 14:47:10 -04:00
Stephen Frost 0fdc8495bf Add default roles for file/program access
This patch adds new default roles named 'pg_read_server_files',
'pg_write_server_files', 'pg_execute_server_program' which
allow an administrator to GRANT to a non-superuser role the ability to
access server-side files or run programs through PostgreSQL (as the user
the database is running as).  Having one of these roles allows a
non-superuser to use server-side COPY to read, write, or with a program,
and to use file_fdw (if installed by a superuser and GRANT'd USAGE on
it) to read from files or run a program.

The existing misc file functions are also changed to allow a user with
the 'pg_read_server_files' default role to read any files on the
filesystem, matching the privileges given to that role through COPY and
file_fdw from above.

Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171231191939.GR2416%40tamriel.snowman.net
2018-04-06 14:47:10 -04:00
Stephen Frost e79350fef2 Remove explicit superuser checks in favor of ACLs
This removes the explicit superuser checks in the various file-access
functions in the backend, specifically pg_ls_dir(), pg_read_file(),
pg_read_binary_file(), and pg_stat_file().  Instead, EXECUTE is REVOKE'd
from public for these, meaning that only a superuser is able to run them
by default, but access to them can be GRANT'd to other roles.

Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171231191939.GR2416%40tamriel.snowman.net
2018-04-06 14:47:10 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 94c1f9ba11 Add memory context identifier to portal context
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/6421.1522194949@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-06 12:37:54 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut bbca77623f Rename MemoryContextCopySetIdentifier() for clarity
MemoryContextCopySetIdentifier -> MemoryContextCopyAndSetIdentifier

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/6421.1522194949@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-06 12:37:54 -04:00
Robert Haas cfbecf8100 Enforce child constraints during COPY TO a partitioned table.
The previous coding inadvertently checked the constraints for the
partitioned table rather than the target partition, which could
lead to data in a partition that fails to satisfy some constraint
on that partition.  This problem seems to date back to when
table partitioning was introduced; prior to that, there was only
one target table for a COPY, so the problem didn't occur, and the
code just didn't get updated.

Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Amit Langote and Ashutosh Bapat

Discussion: https://postgr.es/message-id/5ABA4074.1090500%40lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-04-06 11:42:28 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut bcf79b5bb6 Split the SetSubscriptionRelState function into two
We don't actually need the insert-or-update logic, so it's clearer to
have separate functions for the inserting and updating.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
2018-04-06 10:00:26 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c25304a945 Improve messaging during logical replication worker startup
In case the subscription is removed before the worker is fully started,
give a specific error message instead of the generic "cache lookup"
error.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
2018-04-06 09:07:09 -04:00
Simon Riggs f1464c5380 Improve parse representation for MERGE
Separation of parser data structures from executor, as
requested by Tom Lane. Further improvements possible.

While there, implement error for multiple VALUES clauses via parser
to allow line number of error, as requested by Andres Freund.

Author: Pavan Deolasee

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CABOikdPpqjectFchg0FyTOpsGXyPoqwgC==OLKWuxgBOsrDDZw@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-06 09:38:59 +01:00
Magnus Hagander 1fde38beaa Allow on-line enabling and disabling of data checksums
This makes it possible to turn checksums on in a live cluster, without
the previous need for dump/reload or logical replication (and to turn it
off).

Enabling checkusm starts a background process in the form of a
launcher/worker combination that goes through the entire database and
recalculates checksums on each and every page. Only when all pages have
been checksummed are they fully enabled in the cluster. Any failure of
the process will revert to checksums off and the process has to be
started.

This adds a new WAL record that indicates the state of checksums, so
the process works across replicated clusters.

Authors: Magnus Hagander and Daniel Gustafsson
Review: Tomas Vondra, Michael Banck, Heikki Linnakangas, Andrey Borodin
2018-04-05 22:04:48 +02:00
Simon Riggs 530e69e59b Allow cpluspluscheck to pass by renaming variable
Use of a C++ keyword as a function name caused problems

Reported-by: Álvaro Herrera
2018-04-05 20:06:02 +01:00
Magnus Hagander eed1ce72e1 Allow background workers to bypass datallowconn
THis adds a "flags" field to the BackgroundWorkerInitializeConnection()
and BackgroundWorkerInitializeConnectionByOid(). For now only one flag,
BGWORKER_BYPASS_ALLOWCONN, is defined, which allows the worker to ignore
datallowconn.
2018-04-05 19:02:45 +02:00
Teodor Sigaev 1664ae1978 Add websearch_to_tsquery
Error-tolerant conversion function with web-like syntax for search query,
it simplifies  constraining search engine with close to habitual interface for
users.

Bump catalog version

Authors: Victor Drobny, Dmitry Ivanov with editorization by me
Reviewed by: Aleksander Alekseev, Tomas Vondra, Thomas Munro, Aleksandr Parfenov
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/fe931111ff7e9ad79196486ada79e268@postgrespro.ru
2018-04-05 19:55:11 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev 0a64b45152 Fix handling of non-upgraded B-tree metapages
857f9c36 bumps B-tree metapage version while upgrade is performed "on the fly"
when needed. However, some asserts fired when old version metapage was
cached to rel->rd_amcache. Despite new metadata fields are never used from
rel->rd_amcache, that needs to be fixed. This patch introduces metadata
upgrade during its caching, which fills unavailable fields with their default
values. contrib/pageinspect is also patched to handle non-upgraded metapages
in the same way.

Author: Alexander Korotkov
2018-04-05 17:56:00 +03:00
Simon Riggs 01b88b4df5 MERGE minor errata 2018-04-05 13:19:13 +01:00
Simon Riggs 3af7b2b0d4 MERGE fix variable warning in non-assert builds
Author: Jesper Pedersen
2018-04-05 13:02:29 +01:00
Teodor Sigaev 17d8beb4f5 Remove unused vars and mark assert-only vars
Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
2018-04-05 13:16:15 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev 51e6562324 Fix typo
Masahiko Sawada
2018-04-05 13:04:18 +03:00
Simon Riggs 4b2d44031f MERGE post-commit review
Review comments from Andres Freund

* Consolidate code into AfterTriggerGetTransitionTable()
* Rename nodeMerge.c to execMerge.c
* Rename nodeMerge.h to execMerge.h
* Move MERGE handling in ExecInitModifyTable()
  into a execMerge.c ExecInitMerge()
* Move mt_merge_subcommands flags into execMerge.h
* Rename opt_and_condition to opt_merge_when_and_condition
* Wordsmith various comments

Author: Pavan Deolasee
Reviewer: Simon Riggs
2018-04-05 09:54:07 +01:00
Andrew Gierth 1fd8690668 Install errcodes.txt for use by extensions.
Maintainers of out-of-tree PLs typically need access to the set of
error codes. To avoid the need to duplicate that information in some
form in PL source trees, provide errcodes.txt as part of a server
installation.

Thomas Munro, based on a suggestion from Andrew Gierth
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87woykk7mu.fsf%40news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2018-04-05 04:05:40 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera 7d7c99790b Restore erroneously removed ONLY from PK check
This is a blind fix, since I don't have SE-Linux to verify it.

Per unwanted change in rhinoceros, running sepgsql tests.  Noted by Tom
Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/32347.1522865050@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-04 16:38:11 -03:00
Tom Lane 1383e2a1a9 Improve FSM management for BRIN indexes.
BRIN indexes like to propagate additions of free space into the upper pages
of their free space maps as soon as the new space is known, even when it's
just on one individual index page.  Previously this required calling
FreeSpaceMapVacuum, which is quite an expensive thing if the map is large.
Use the FreeSpaceMapVacuumRange function recently added by commit c79f6df75
to reduce the amount of work done for this purpose.

Fix a couple of places that neglected to do the upper-page vacuuming at all
after recording new free space.  If the policy is to be that BRIN should do
that, it should do it everywhere.

Do RecordPageWithFreeSpace unconditionally in brin_page_cleanup, and do
FreeSpaceMapVacuum unconditionally in brin_vacuum_scan.  Because of the
FSM's imprecise storage of free space, the old complications here seldom
bought anything, they just slowed things down.  This approach also
provides a predictable path for FSM corruption to be repaired.

Remove premature RecordPageWithFreeSpace call in brin_getinsertbuffer
where it's about to return an extended page to the caller.  The caller
should do that, instead, after it's inserted its new tuple.  Fix the
one caller that forgot to do so.

Simplify logic in brin_doupdate's same-page-update case by postponing
brin_initialize_empty_new_buffer to after the critical section; I see
little point in doing it before.

Avoid repeat calls of RelationGetNumberOfBlocks in brin_vacuum_scan.
Avoid duplicate BufferGetBlockNumber and BufferGetPage calls in
a couple of places where we already had the right values.

Move a BRIN_elog debug logging call out of a critical section; that's
pretty unsafe and I don't think it buys us anything to not wait till
after the critical section.

Move the "*extended = false" step in brin_getinsertbuffer into the
routine's main loop.  There's no actual bug there, since the loop can't
iterate with *extended still true, but it doesn't seem very future-proof
as coded; and it's certainly not documented as a loop invariant.

This is all from follow-on investigation inspired by commit c79f6df75.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5801.1522429460@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-04 14:26:04 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 3de241dba8 Foreign keys on partitioned tables
Author: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171231194359.cvojcour423ulha4@alvherre.pgsql
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut
2018-04-04 14:02:49 -03:00
Teodor Sigaev 857f9c36cd Skip full index scan during cleanup of B-tree indexes when possible
Vacuum of index consists from two stages: multiple (zero of more) ambulkdelete
calls and one amvacuumcleanup call. When workload on particular table
is append-only, then autovacuum isn't intended to touch this table. However,
user may run vacuum manually in order to fill visibility map and get benefits
of index-only scans. Then ambulkdelete wouldn't be called for indexes
of such table (because no heap tuples were deleted), only amvacuumcleanup would
be called In this case, amvacuumcleanup would perform full index scan for
two objectives: put recyclable pages into free space map and update index
statistics.

This patch allows btvacuumclanup to skip full index scan when two conditions
are satisfied: no pages are going to be put into free space map and index
statistics isn't stalled. In order to check first condition, we store
oldest btpo_xact in the meta-page. When it's precedes RecentGlobalXmin, then
there are some recyclable pages. In order to check second condition we store
number of heap tuples observed during previous full index scan by cleanup.
If fraction of newly inserted tuples is less than
vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor, then statistics isn't considered to be
stalled. vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor can be defined as both reloption and GUC (default).

This patch bumps B-tree meta-page version. Upgrade of meta-page is performed
"on the fly": during VACUUM meta-page is rewritten with new version. No special
handling in pg_upgrade is required.

Author: Masahiko Sawada, Alexander Korotkov
Review by: Peter Geoghegan, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Alexander Korotkov, Yura Sokolov
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAD21AoAX+d2oD_nrd9O2YkpzHaFr=uQeGr9s1rKC3O4ENc568g@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-04 19:29:00 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera 851f4b4e14 Don't clone internal triggers to partitions
Trigger cloning to partitions was supposed to occur for user-visible
triggers only, but during development the protection that prevented it
from occurring to internal triggers was lost.  Reinstate it, as well as
add a test case to ensure internal triggers (in the tested case,
triggers implementing a deferred unique constraint) are not cloned.
Without the code fix, the partitions in the test end up with different
numbers of triggers, which is clearly wrong ...

Bug in 86f575948c.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180403214903.ozfagwjcpk337uw7@alvherre.pgsql
2018-04-03 19:08:25 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera cd5005bc12 Pass correct TupDesc to ri_NullCheck() in Assert
Previous coding was passing the wrong table's tuple descriptor, which
accidentally fails to fail because no existing test case exercises a
foreign key in which the referenced attributes are further to the right
of the referencing attributes.

Add a test so that further breakage is visible.

This got broken in 16828d5c02.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180403204723.fqte755nukgm42uf@alvherre.pgsql
2018-04-03 18:04:50 -03:00
Tom Lane dddfc4cb2e Prevent accidental linking of system-supplied copies of libpq.so etc.
We were being careless in some places about the order of -L switches in
link command lines, such that -L switches referring to external directories
could come before those referring to directories within the build tree.
This made it possible to accidentally link a system-supplied library, for
example /usr/lib/libpq.so, in place of the one built in the build tree.
Hilarity ensued, the more so the older the system-supplied library is.

To fix, break LDFLAGS into two parts, a sub-variable LDFLAGS_INTERNAL
and the main LDFLAGS variable, both of which are "recursively expanded"
so that they can be incrementally adjusted by different makefiles.
Establish a policy that -L switches for directories in the build tree
must always be added to LDFLAGS_INTERNAL, while -L switches for external
directories must always be added to LDFLAGS.  This is sufficient to
ensure a safe search order.  For simplicity, we typically also put -l
switches for the respective libraries into those same variables.
(Traditional make usage would have us put -l switches into LIBS, but
cleaning that up is a project for another day, as there's no clear
need for it.)

This turns out to also require separating SHLIB_LINK into two variables,
SHLIB_LINK and SHLIB_LINK_INTERNAL, with a similar rule about which
switches go into which variable.  And likewise for PG_LIBS.

Although this change might appear to affect external users of pgxs.mk,
I think it doesn't; they shouldn't have any need to touch the _INTERNAL
variables.

In passing, tweak src/common/Makefile so that the value of CPPFLAGS
recorded in pg_config lacks "-DFRONTEND" and the recorded value of
LDFLAGS lacks "-L../../../src/common".  Both of those things are
mistakes, apparently introduced during prior code rearrangements,
as old versions of pg_config don't print them.  In general we don't
want anything that's specific to the src/common subdirectory to
appear in those outputs.

This is certainly a bug fix, but in view of the lack of field
complaints, I'm unsure whether it's worth the risk of back-patching.
In any case it seems wise to see what the buildfarm makes of it first.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25214.1522604295@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-04-03 16:26:05 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 242408dbef C comment: mention null handling in BuildTupleFromCStrings()
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRcF-wNbe0w-m3NpkEwr9shmOZ=GoESOzd2Wog9h55J8sA@mail.gmail.com

Author: Ashutosh Bapat
2018-04-03 14:01:14 -04:00
Teodor Sigaev 710d90da1f Add prefix operator for TEXT type.
The prefix operator along with SP-GiST indexes can be used as an alternative
for LIKE 'word%' commands  and it doesn't have a limitation of string/prefix
length as B-Tree has.

Bump catalog version

Author: Ildus Kurbangaliev with some editorization by me
Review by: Arthur Zakirov, Alexander Korotkov, and me
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20180202180327.222b04b3@wp.localdomain
2018-04-03 19:46:45 +03:00
Magnus Hagander 10d62d1065 Properly use INT64_FORMAT in output
Per buildfarm animal prairiedog, suggestion solution from Tom.
2018-04-03 16:39:29 +02:00
Magnus Hagander a08dc71195 Fix for checksum validation patch
Reorder the check for non-BLCKSZ size reads to make sure we don't abort
sending the file in this case.

Missed in the previous commit.
2018-04-03 13:57:49 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 4eb77d50c2 Validate page level checksums in base backups
When base backups are run over the replication protocol (for example
using pg_basebackup), verify the checksums of all data blocks if
checksums are enabled. If checksum failures are encountered, log them
as warnings but don't abort the backup.

This becomes the default behaviour in pg_basebackup (provided checksums
are enabled on the server), so add a switch (-k) to disable the checks
if necessary.

Author: Michael Banck
Reviewed-By: Magnus Hagander, David Steele
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180228180856.GE13784@nighthawk.caipicrew.dd-dns.de
2018-04-03 13:47:16 +02:00
Simon Riggs aa3faa3c7a WITH support in MERGE
Author: Peter Geoghegan
Recursive support removed, no tests
Docs added by me
2018-04-03 12:13:59 +01:00
Simon Riggs 83454e3c2b New files for MERGE 2018-04-03 10:22:21 +01:00
Simon Riggs d204ef6377 MERGE SQL Command following SQL:2016
MERGE performs actions that modify rows in the target table
using a source table or query. MERGE provides a single SQL
statement that can conditionally INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE rows
a task that would other require multiple PL statements.
e.g.

MERGE INTO target AS t
USING source AS s
ON t.tid = s.sid
WHEN MATCHED AND t.balance > s.delta THEN
  UPDATE SET balance = t.balance - s.delta
WHEN MATCHED THEN
  DELETE
WHEN NOT MATCHED AND s.delta > 0 THEN
  INSERT VALUES (s.sid, s.delta)
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN
  DO NOTHING;

MERGE works with regular and partitioned tables, including
column and row security enforcement, as well as support for
row, statement and transition triggers.

MERGE is optimized for OLTP and is parameterizable, though
also useful for large scale ETL/ELT. MERGE is not intended
to be used in preference to existing single SQL commands
for INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE since there is some overhead.
MERGE can be used statically from PL/pgSQL.

MERGE does not yet support inheritance, write rules,
RETURNING clauses, updatable views or foreign tables.
MERGE follows SQL Standard per the most recent SQL:2016.

Includes full tests and documentation, including full
isolation tests to demonstrate the concurrent behavior.

This version written from scratch in 2017 by Simon Riggs,
using docs and tests originally written in 2009. Later work
from Pavan Deolasee has been both complex and deep, leaving
the lead author credit now in his hands.
Extensive discussion of concurrency from Peter Geoghegan,
with thanks for the time and effort contributed.

Various issues reported via sqlsmith by Andreas Seltenreich

Authors: Pavan Deolasee, Simon Riggs
Reviewer: Peter Geoghegan, Amit Langote, Tomas Vondra, Simon Riggs

Discussion:
https://postgr.es/m/CANP8+jKitBSrB7oTgT9CY2i1ObfOt36z0XMraQc+Xrz8QB0nXA@mail.gmail.com
https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkJdBuxj9PO=2QaO9-3h3xGbQPZ34kJH=HukRekwM-GZg@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-03 09:28:16 +01:00
Simon Riggs aa5877bb26 Revert "MERGE SQL Command following SQL:2016"
This reverts commit e6597dc353.
2018-04-02 21:36:38 +01:00
Simon Riggs 7cf8a5c302 Revert "Modified files for MERGE"
This reverts commit 354f13855e.
2018-04-02 21:34:15 +01:00
Simon Riggs 354f13855e Modified files for MERGE 2018-04-02 21:12:47 +01:00
Simon Riggs e6597dc353 MERGE SQL Command following SQL:2016
MERGE performs actions that modify rows in the target table
using a source table or query. MERGE provides a single SQL
statement that can conditionally INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE rows
a task that would other require multiple PL statements.
e.g.

MERGE INTO target AS t
USING source AS s
ON t.tid = s.sid
WHEN MATCHED AND t.balance > s.delta THEN
  UPDATE SET balance = t.balance - s.delta
WHEN MATCHED THEN
  DELETE
WHEN NOT MATCHED AND s.delta > 0 THEN
  INSERT VALUES (s.sid, s.delta)
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN
  DO NOTHING;

MERGE works with regular and partitioned tables, including
column and row security enforcement, as well as support for
row, statement and transition triggers.

MERGE is optimized for OLTP and is parameterizable, though
also useful for large scale ETL/ELT. MERGE is not intended
to be used in preference to existing single SQL commands
for INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE since there is some overhead.
MERGE can be used statically from PL/pgSQL.

MERGE does not yet support inheritance, write rules,
RETURNING clauses, updatable views or foreign tables.
MERGE follows SQL Standard per the most recent SQL:2016.

Includes full tests and documentation, including full
isolation tests to demonstrate the concurrent behavior.

This version written from scratch in 2017 by Simon Riggs,
using docs and tests originally written in 2009. Later work
from Pavan Deolasee has been both complex and deep, leaving
the lead author credit now in his hands.
Extensive discussion of concurrency from Peter Geoghegan,
with thanks for the time and effort contributed.

Various issues reported via sqlsmith by Andreas Seltenreich

Authors: Pavan Deolasee, Simon Riggs
Reviewers: Peter Geoghegan, Amit Langote, Tomas Vondra, Simon Riggs

Discussion:
https://postgr.es/m/CANP8+jKitBSrB7oTgT9CY2i1ObfOt36z0XMraQc+Xrz8QB0nXA@mail.gmail.com
https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkJdBuxj9PO=2QaO9-3h3xGbQPZ34kJH=HukRekwM-GZg@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-02 21:04:35 +01:00
Tom Lane b01f32c313 Fix some dubious WAL-parsing code.
Coverity complained about possible buffer overrun in two places added by
commit 1eb6d6527, and AFAICS it's reasonable to worry: even granting that
the WAL originator properly truncated the commit GID to GIDSIZE, we should
not really bet our lives on that having the same value as it does in the
current build.  Hence, use strlcpy() not strcpy(), and adjust the pointer
advancement logic to be sure we skip over the whole source string even if
strlcpy() truncated it.
2018-04-02 13:46:21 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 2764d5dcfa Make be-secure-common.c more consistent for future SSL implementations
Recent commit 8a3d9425 has introduced be-secure-common.c, which is aimed
at including backend-side APIs that can be used by any SSL
implementation.  The purpose is similar to fe-secure-common.c for the
frontend-side APIs.

However, this has forgotten to include check_ssl_key_file_permissions()
in the move, which causes a double dependency between be-secure.c and
be-secure-openssl.c.

Refactor the code in a more logical way.  This also puts into light an
API which is usable by future SSL implementations for permissions on SSL
key files.

Author: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
2018-04-02 11:37:40 -04:00
Robert Haas 7e0d64c7a5 postgres_fdw: Push down partition-wise aggregation.
Since commit 7012b132d0, postgres_fdw
has been able to push down the toplevel aggregation operation to the
remote server.  Commit e2f1eb0ee3 made
it possible to break down the toplevel aggregation into one
aggregate per partition.  This commit lets postgres_fdw push down
aggregation in that case just as it does at the top level.

In order to make this work, this commit adds an additional argument
to the GetForeignUpperPaths FDW API.  A matching argument is added
to the signature for create_upper_paths_hook.  Third-party code using
either of these will need to be updated.

Also adjust create_foreignscan_plan() so that it picks up the correct
set of relids in this case.

Jeevan Chalke, reviewed by Ashutosh Bapat and by me and with some
adjustments by me.  The larger patch series of which this patch is a
part was also reviewed and tested by Antonin Houska, Rajkumar
Raghuwanshi, David Rowley, Dilip Kumar, Konstantin Knizhnik, Pascal
Legrand, and Rafia Sabih.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAM2+6=V64_xhstVHie0Rz=KPEQnLJMZt_e314P0jaT_oJ9MR8A@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAM2+6=XPWujjmj5zUaBTGDoB38CemwcPmjkRy0qOcsQj_V+2sQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-04-02 10:51:50 -04:00
Tom Lane 0b11a674fb Fix a boatload of typos in C comments.
Justin Pryzby

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180331105640.GK28454@telsasoft.com
2018-04-01 15:01:28 -04:00
Andres Freund 686d399f2b Fix non-portable use of round().
round() is from C99.  Use rint() instead.  There are behavioral
differences between round() and rint(), but they should not matter to
the Bloom filter optimal_k() function.  We already assume POSIX
behavior for rint(), so there is no question of rint() not using
"rounds towards nearest" as its rounding mode.

Cleanup from commit 51bc271790.

Per buildfarm member thrips.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wzn76eCGUonARy-wrVtMHsf+4cvbK_oJAWTLfORTU5ki0w@mail.gmail.com
2018-03-31 20:26:47 -07:00
Andres Freund 51bc271790 Add Bloom filter implementation.
A Bloom filter is a space-efficient, probabilistic data structure that
can be used to test set membership.  Callers will sometimes incur false
positives, but never false negatives.  The rate of false positives is a
function of the total number of elements and the amount of memory
available for the Bloom filter.

Two classic applications of Bloom filters are cache filtering, and data
synchronization testing.  Any user of Bloom filters must accept the
possibility of false positives as a cost worth paying for the benefit in
space efficiency.

This commit adds a test harness extension module, test_bloomfilter.  It
can be used to get a sense of how the Bloom filter implementation
performs under varying conditions.

This is infrastructure for the upcoming "heapallindexed" amcheck patch,
which verifies the consistency of a heap relation against one of its
indexes.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
Reviewed-By: Andrey Borodin, Michael Paquier, Thomas Munro, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wzm5VmG7cu1N-H=nnS57wZThoSDQU+F5dewx3o84M+jY=g@mail.gmail.com
2018-03-31 17:49:41 -07:00
Andrew Dunstan ed69864350 Small cleanups in fast default code.
Problems identified by Andres Freund and Haribabu Kommi
2018-04-01 08:16:18 +09:30
Andres Freund a4ebbd2752 Remove PARTIAL_LINKING build mode.
In 9956ddc191, ten years ago, the
current objfile.txt based linking model was introduced.  It's time to
retire the old SUBSYS.o based model.

This primarily is pertinent because the bitcode files for LLVM based
inlining are not produced when using PARTIAL_LINKING. It does not seem
worth to fix PARTIAL_LINKING to support that.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180121204356.d5oeu34jetqhmdv2@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-03-30 17:33:04 -07:00
Tatsuo Ishii 1b26bd4089 Fix bug with view locking code.
LockViewRecurese() obtains view relation using heap_open() and passes
it to get_view_query() to get view info. It immediately closes the
relation then uses the returned view info by calling
LockViewRecurse_walker().  Since get_view_query() returns a pointer
within the relcache, the relcache should be kept until
LockViewRecurse_walker() returns. Otherwise the relation could point
to a garbage memory area.

Fix is moving the heap_close() call after LockViewRecurse_walker().

Problem reported by Tom Lane (buildfarm is unhappy, especially prion
since it enables -DRELCACHE_FORCE_RELEASE cpp flag), fix by me.
2018-03-31 09:26:43 +09:00
Andres Freund 3e256e5506 Add SKIP_LOCKED option to RangeVarGetRelidExtended().
This will be used for VACUUM (SKIP LOCKED).

Author: Nathan Bossart
Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier and Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180306005349.b65whmvj7z6hbe2y@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-03-30 17:05:16 -07:00
Andres Freund d87510a524 Combine options for RangeVarGetRelidExtended() into a flags argument.
A followup patch will add a SKIP_LOCKED option. To avoid introducing
evermore arguments, breaking existing callers each time, introduce a
flags argument. This'll no doubt break a few external users...

Also change the MISSING_OK behaviour so a DEBUG1 debug message is
emitted when a relation is not found.

Author: Nathan Bossart
Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier and Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180306005349.b65whmvj7z6hbe2y@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-03-30 17:05:16 -07:00
Fujii Masao 9a895462d9 Enhance pg_stat_wal_receiver view to display host and port of sender server.
Previously there was no way in the standby side to find out the host and port
of the sender server that the walreceiver was currently connected to when
multiple hosts and ports were specified in primary_conninfo. For that purpose,
this patch adds sender_host and sender_port columns into pg_stat_wal_receiver
view. They report the host and port that the active replication connection
currently uses.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Haribabu Kommi
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier and me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJrrPGcV_aq8=cdqkFhVDJKEnDQ70yRTTdY9RODzMnXNrCz2Ow@mail.gmail.com
2018-03-31 07:51:22 +09:00
Tom Lane 4a33bb59df Ensure that WAL pages skipped by a forced WAL switch are zero-filled.
In the previous coding, skipped pages were mostly zeroes, but they still
had valid WAL page headers.  That makes them very much less compressible
than an unbroken string of zeroes would be --- about 10X worse for bzip2
compression, for instance.  We don't need those headers, so tweak the logic
so that we zero them out.

Chapman Flack, reviewed by Daniel Gustafsson

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/579297F8.7020107@anastigmatix.net
2018-03-30 16:18:18 -04:00
Tom Lane e5eb4fa873 Remove obsolete SLRU wrapping and warnings from predicate.c.
When SSI was developed, slru.c was limited to segment files with names in
the range 0000-FFFF.  This didn't allow enough space for predicate.c to
store every possible XID when spilling old transactions to disk, so it
would wrap around sooner and print warnings.  Since commits 638cf09e and
73c986ad increased the number of segment files slru.c could manage, that
behavior is unnecessary.  Therefore remove that code.

Also remove the macro OldSerXidSegment, which has been unused since
4cd3fb6e.

Thomas Munro, reviewed by Anastasia Lubennikova

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=3XfsTSxgEbEOmxu0QDiXy0o18NUg2nC89JZcCGE+XFPA@mail.gmail.com
2018-03-30 15:11:39 -04:00
Tom Lane 1bb9e731e1 Improve out-of-memory error reports by including memory context name.
Add the target context's name to the errdetail field of "out of memory"
errors in mcxt.c.  Per discussion, this seems likely to be useful to
help narrow down the cause of a reported failure, and it costs little.
Also, now that context names are required to be compile-time constants
in all cases, there's little reason to be concerned about security
issues from exposing these names to users.  (Because of such concerns,
we are *not* including the context "ident" field.)

In passing, add unlikely() markers to the allocation-failed tests,
just to be sure the compiler is on the right page about that.
Also, in palloc and friends, copy CurrentMemoryContext into a local
variable, as that's almost surely cheaper to reference than a global.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1099.1522285628@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-03-30 13:53:33 -04:00
Tom Lane c79f6df75d Do index FSM vacuuming sooner.
In btree and SP-GiST indexes, move the responsibility for calling
IndexFreeSpaceMapVacuum from the vacuumcleanup phase to the bulkdelete
phase, and do it if and only if we found some pages that could be put into
FSM.  As in commit 851a26e26, the idea is to make free pages visible to FSM
searchers sooner when vacuuming very large tables (large enough to need
multiple bulkdelete scans).  This adds more redundant work than that commit
did, since we have to scan the entire index FSM each time rather than being
able to localize what needs to be updated; but it still seems worthwhile.
However, we can buy something back by not touching the FSM at all when
there are no pages that can be put in it.  That will result in slower
recovery from corrupt upper FSM pages in such a scenario, but it doesn't
seem like that's a case we need to optimize for.

Hash indexes don't use FSM at all.  GIN, GiST, and bloom indexes update
FSM during the vacuumcleanup phase not bulkdelete, so that doing something
comparable to this would be a much more invasive change, and it's not clear
it's worth it.  BRIN indexes do things sufficiently differently that this
change doesn't apply to them, either.

Claudio Freire, reviewed by Masahiko Sawada and Jing Wang, some additional
tweaks by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGTBQpYR0uJCNTt3M5GOzBRHo+-GccNO1nCaQ8yEJmZKSW5q1A@mail.gmail.com
2018-03-30 11:48:20 -04:00