Commit Graph

9005 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane 1f559b7d3a Fix several hash functions that were taking chintzy shortcuts instead of
delivering a well-randomized hash value.  I got religion on this after
observing that performance of multi-batch hash join degrades terribly if the
higher-order bits of hash values aren't random, as indeed was true for say
hashes of small integer values.  It's now expected and documented that hash
functions should use hash_any or some comparable method to ensure that all
bits of their output are about equally random.

initdb forced because this change invalidates existing hash indexes.  For the
same reason, this isn't back-patchable; the hash join performance problem
will get a band-aid fix in the back branches.
2007-06-01 15:33:19 +00:00
Tom Lane cc3e9deee6 The shortcut exit that I recently added to ExecInitIndexScan() for
EXPLAIN-only operation was a little too short; it skipped initializing the
node's result tuple type, which may be needed depending on what's above the
indexscan node.  Call ExecAssignResultTypeFromTL before exiting.  (For good
luck I moved up the ExecAssignScanProjectionInfo call as well, so that
everything except indexscan-specific initialization will still be done.)
Per example from Grant Finnemore.
2007-05-31 20:45:26 +00:00
Tom Lane 10f719af33 Change build_index_pathkeys() so that the expressions it builds to represent
index key columns always have the type expected by the index's associated
operators, ie, we add RelabelType nodes when dealing with binary-compatible
index opclasses.  This is needed to get varchar indexes to play nicely with
the new EquivalenceClass machinery, as per recent gripe from Josh Berkus that
CVS HEAD was failing to match a varchar index column to a constant restriction
in the query.

It seems likely that this change will allow removal of a lot of ugly ad-hoc
RelabelType-stripping that the planner has traditionally done while matching
expressions to other expressions, but I'll worry about that some other day.
2007-05-31 16:57:34 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 7ce9b3683e Make some messages more consistent 2007-05-31 15:13:06 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev 54af876593 Replace ReadBuffer to ReadBufferWithStrategy in all vacuum-involved places
to implement limited-size "ring" of buffers for VACUUM for GIN & GIST
2007-05-31 14:03:09 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 71fb7b9014 Downgrade some low-level startup messages to DEBUG1. 2007-05-31 07:36:12 +00:00
Tom Lane fa0e318f94 Fix overly-strict sanity check in BeginInternalSubTransaction that made it
fail when used in a deferred trigger.  Bug goes back to 8.0; no doubt the
reason it hadn't been noticed is that we've been discouraging use of
user-defined constraint triggers.  Per report from Frank van Vugt.
2007-05-30 21:01:39 +00:00
Tom Lane d526575f89 Make large sequential scans and VACUUMs work in a limited-size "ring" of
buffers, rather than blowing out the whole shared-buffer arena.  Aside from
avoiding cache spoliation, this fixes the problem that VACUUM formerly tended
to cause a WAL flush for every page it modified, because we had it hacked to
use only a single buffer.  Those flushes will now occur only once per
ring-ful.  The exact ring size, and the threshold for seqscans to switch into
the ring usage pattern, remain under debate; but the infrastructure seems
done.  The key bit of infrastructure is a new optional BufferAccessStrategy
object that can be passed to ReadBuffer operations; this replaces the former
StrategyHintVacuum API.

This patch also changes the buffer usage-count methodology a bit: we now
advance usage_count when first pinning a buffer, rather than when last
unpinning it.  To preserve the behavior that a buffer's lifetime starts to
decrease when it's released, the clock sweep code is modified to not decrement
usage_count of pinned buffers.

Work not done in this commit: teach GiST and GIN indexes to use the vacuum
BufferAccessStrategy for vacuum-driven fetches.

Original patch by Simon, reworked by Heikki and again by Tom.
2007-05-30 20:12:03 +00:00
Neil Conway f14f27dd38 Tweak: use memcpy() in text_time(), rather than manually copying bytes
in a loop.
2007-05-30 19:38:05 +00:00
Neil Conway 6af04882de Fix a bug in input processing for the "interval" type. Previously,
"microsecond" and "millisecond" units were not considered valid input
by themselves, which caused inputs like "1 millisecond" to be rejected
erroneously.

Update the docs, add regression tests, and backport to 8.2 and 8.1
2007-05-29 04:58:43 +00:00
Neil Conway e78720ff2f mmgr README tweak: "either" is no longer correct. The previous wording
compared PortalContext with QueryContext, but the latter no longer exists.
2007-05-29 04:19:35 +00:00
Tom Lane fa98a86f65 Tweak the code in a couple of places to try to deliver more user-friendly
error messages when a single COPY line is too long for us to handle.  Per
example from Johann Spies.
2007-05-28 16:43:24 +00:00
Neil Conway f505edace1 Code cleanup: use "bool" for Boolean variables, rather than "int". 2007-05-27 20:32:16 +00:00
Tom Lane 97d12b434f Ooops, I was too busy worrying about getting the transactional infrastructure
right to think carefully about how insert and delete counts map to
n_live_tuples.  Of course a deletion should reduce n_live_tuples.
2007-05-27 17:28:36 +00:00
Tom Lane 8d675c85c5 pgstat's on-proc-exit hook has to execute after the last transaction commit
or abort within a backend; rearrange InitPostgres processing to make it so.
Revealed by just-added Asserts along with ECPG regression tests (hm, I wonder
why the core regression tests didn't expose it?).  This possibly is another
reason for missing stats updates ...
2007-05-27 05:37:50 +00:00
Tom Lane 77947c51c0 Fix up pgstats counting of live and dead tuples to recognize that committed
and aborted transactions have different effects; also teach it not to assume
that prepared transactions are always committed.

Along the way, simplify the pgstats API by tying counting directly to
Relations; I cannot detect any redeeming social value in having stats
pointers in HeapScanDesc and IndexScanDesc structures.  And fix a few
corner cases in which counts might be missed because the relation's
pgstat_info pointer hadn't been set.
2007-05-27 03:50:39 +00:00
Tom Lane cadb78330e Repair two constraint-exclusion corner cases triggered by proving that an
inheritance child of an UPDATE/DELETE target relation can be excluded by
constraints.  I had rearranged some code in set_append_rel_pathlist() to
avoid "useless" work when a child is excluded, but overdid it and left
the child with no cheapest_path entry, causing possible failure later
if the appendrel was involved in a join.  Also, it seems that the dummy
plan generated by inheritance_planner() when all branches are excluded
has to be a bit less dummy now than was required in 8.2.
Per report from Jan Wieck.  Add his test case to the regression tests.
2007-05-26 18:23:02 +00:00
Tom Lane 604ffd280b Create hooks to let a loadable plugin monitor (or even replace) the planner
and/or create plans for hypothetical situations; in particular, investigate
plans that would be generated using hypothetical indexes.  This is a
heavily-rewritten version of the hooks proposed by Gurjeet Singh for his
Index Advisor project.  In this formulation, the index advisor can be
entirely a loadable module instead of requiring a significant part to be
in the core backend, and plans can be generated for hypothetical indexes
without requiring the creation and rolling-back of system catalog entries.

The index advisor patch as-submitted is not compatible with these hooks,
but it needs significant work anyway due to other 8.2-to-8.3 planner
changes.  With these hooks in the core backend, development of the advisor
can proceed as a pgfoundry project.
2007-05-25 17:54:25 +00:00
Tom Lane ce5b24abed Remove ruleutils.c's use of varnoold/varoattno as a shortcut for determining
what a Var node refers to.  This is no longer necessary because the new
flat-range-table representation of plan trees makes it relatively easy to dig
down through child plan levels to find the original reference; and to keep
doing it that way, we'd have to store joinaliasvars lists in flattened RTEs,
as demonstrated by bug report from Leszek Trenkner.  This change makes
varnoold/varoattno truly just debug aids, which wasn't quite the case before.
Perhaps we should drop them, or only have them in assert-enabled builds?
2007-05-24 18:58:42 +00:00
Tom Lane 11086f2f2b Repair planner bug introduced in 8.2 by ability to rearrange outer joins:
in cases where a sub-SELECT inserts a WHERE clause between two outer joins,
that clause may prevent us from re-ordering the two outer joins.  The code
was considering only the joins' own ON-conditions in determining reordering
safety, which is not good enough.  Add a "delay_upper_joins" flag to
OuterJoinInfo to flag that we have detected such a clause and higher-level
outer joins shouldn't be permitted to commute with this one.  (This might
seem overly coarse, but given the current rules for OJ reordering, it's
sufficient AFAICT.)

The failure case is actually pretty narrow: it needs a WHERE clause within
the RHS of a left join that checks the RHS of a lower left join, but is not
strict for that RHS (else we'd have simplified the lower join to a plain
join).  Even then no failure will be manifest unless the planner chooses to
rearrange the join order.

Per bug report from Adam Terrey.
2007-05-22 23:23:58 +00:00
Tom Lane d7153c5fad Fix best_inner_indexscan to return both the cheapest-total-cost and
cheapest-startup-cost innerjoin indexscans, and make joinpath.c consider
both of these (when different) as the inside of a nestloop join.  The
original design was based on the assumption that indexscan paths always
have negligible startup cost, and so total cost is the only important
figure of merit; an assumption that's obviously broken by bitmap
indexscans.  This oversight could lead to choosing poor plans in cases
where fast-start behavior is more important than total cost, such as
LIMIT and IN queries.  8.1-vintage brain fade exposed by an example from
Chuck D.
2007-05-22 01:40:33 +00:00
Tom Lane 2415ad9831 Teach tuplestore.c to throw away data before the "mark" point when the caller
is using mark/restore but not rewind or backward-scan capability.  Insert a
materialize plan node between a mergejoin and its inner child if the inner
child is a sort that is expected to spill to disk.  The materialize shields
the sort from the need to do mark/restore and thereby allows it to perform
its final merge pass on-the-fly; while the materialize itself is normally
cheap since it won't spill to disk unless the number of tuples with equal
key values exceeds work_mem.

Greg Stark, with some kibitzing from Tom Lane.
2007-05-21 17:57:35 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 3963574d13 XPath fixes:
- Function renamed to "xpath".
 - Function is now strict, per discussion.
 - Return empty array in case when XPath expression detects nothing
   (previously, NULL was returned in such case), per discussion.
 - (bugfix) Work with fragments with prologue: select xpath('/a',
   '<?xml version="1.0"?><a /><b />'); // now XML datum is always wrapped
   with dummy <x>...</x>, XML prologue simply goes away (if any).
 - Some cleanup.

Nikolay Samokhvalov

Some code cleanup and documentation work by myself.
2007-05-21 17:10:29 +00:00
Tom Lane a8d539f124 To support external compression of archived WAL data, add a flag bit to
WAL records that shows whether it is safe to remove full-page images
(ie, whether or not an on-line backup was in progress when the WAL entry
was made).  Also make provision for an XLOG_NOOP record type that can be
used to fill in the extra space when decompressing the data for restore.

This is the portion of Koichi Suzuki's "full page writes" patch that
has to go into the core database.  The remainder of that work is two
external compression and decompression programs, which for the time being
will undergo separate development on pgfoundry.  Per discussion.

Also, twiddle the handling of BTREE_SPLIT records to ensure it'll be
possible to compress them (the previous coding caused essential info
to be omitted).  The other commonly-used record types seem OK already,
with the possible exception of GIN and GIST WAL records, which I don't
understand well enough to opine on.
2007-05-20 21:08:19 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera e18ca9bbaa Fix dumb compile error in the last patch. 2007-05-19 01:02:34 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera b40776d221 Have CLUSTER advance the table's relfrozenxid. The new frozen point is the
FreezeXid introduced in a recent commit, so there isn't any data loss in this
approach.

Doing it causes ALTER TABLE (or rather, the forms of it that cause a full table
rewrite) to be affected as well.  In this case, the frozen point is RecentXmin,
because after the rewrite all the tuples are relabeled with the rewriting
transaction's Xid.

TOAST tables are fixed automatically as well, as fallout of the way they were
already being handled in the respective code paths.

With this patch, there is no longer need to VACUUM tables for Xid wraparound
purposes that have been cleaned up via TRUNCATE or CLUSTER.
2007-05-18 23:19:42 +00:00
Tom Lane d1972c52a8 Remove redundant logging of send failures when SSL is in use. While pqcomm.c
had been taught not to do that ages ago, the SSL code was helpfully bleating
anyway.  Resolves some recent reports such as bug #3266; however the
underlying cause of the related bug #2829 is still unclear.
2007-05-18 01:20:16 +00:00
Tom Lane dbb769352d Temporary fix for the problem that pg_stat_activity, inet_client_addr(),
and inet_server_addr() fail if the client connected over a "scoped" IPv6
address.  In this case getnameinfo() will return a string ending with
a poorly-standardized "%something" zone specifier, which these functions
try to feed to network_in(), which won't take it.  So that we don't lose
functionality altogether, suppress the zone specifier before giving the
string to network_in().  Per report from Brian Hirt.

TODO: probably someday the inet type should support scoped IPv6 addresses,
and then this patch should be reverted.

Backpatch to 8.2 ... is it worth going further?
2007-05-17 23:31:49 +00:00
Tom Lane b11123b675 Fix parameter recalculation for Limit nodes: during a ReScan call we must
recompute the limit/offset immediately, so that the updated values are
available when the child's ReScan function is invoked.  Add a regression
test for this, too.  Bug is new in HEAD (due to the bounded-sorting patch)
so no need for back-patch.

I did not do anything about merging this signaling with chgParam processing,
but if we were to do that we'd still need to compute the updated values
at this point rather than during the first ProcNode call.

Per observation and test case from Greg Stark, though I didn't use his patch.
2007-05-17 19:35:08 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 3b0347b36e Move the tuple freezing point in CLUSTER to a point further back in the past,
to avoid losing useful Xid information in not-so-old tuples.  This makes
CLUSTER behave the same as VACUUM as far a tuple-freezing behavior goes
(though CLUSTER does not yet advance the table's relfrozenxid).

While at it, move the actual freezing operation in rewriteheap.c to a more
appropriate place, and document it thoroughly.  This part of the patch from
Tom Lane.
2007-05-17 15:28:29 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 90cbc63fd1 Have TRUNCATE advance the affected table's relfrozenxid to RecentXmin, to
avoid a later needless VACUUM for Xid-wraparound purposes.  We can do this
since the table is known to be left empty, so no Xid remains on it.

Per discussion.
2007-05-16 17:28:20 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera dfed0012bc Have the rewriteheap code freeze old tuples. This is safe because it is only
applied to live tuples older than a recent Xmin, not to tuples that may be part
of an update chain.  Those still keep their original markings.

This patch makes it possible for CLUSTER to advance relfrozenxid, thus avoiding
the need of vacuuming the table for Xid wraparound purposes.  That will be
patched separately.

Patch from Heikki Linnakangas.
2007-05-16 16:36:56 +00:00
Tom Lane 0a9cbcbfd2 Get rid of the pg_shdepend entry for a TOAST table; it's unnecessary since
there's an indirect dependency on the owner via the parent table.  We were
already handling indexes that way, but not toast tables for some reason.
Saves a little catalog space and cuts down the verbosity of checkSharedDependencies
reports.
2007-05-14 20:24:41 +00:00
Tom Lane 2b321533f3 Fix up grammar and translatability of recent checkSharedDependencies
patch; also make the code logic a bit more self-consistent.
2007-05-14 20:07:01 +00:00
Tom Lane fd53a67dcd Prevent RevalidateCachedPlan from making any permanent change in
ActiveSnapshot.  Having it affect ActiveSnapshot only in the unusual
case of needing to replan seems a bad idea, and there's also the problem
that the created snap might be in a relatively short-lived context, as
noted by Jan Wieck.  Also, there's no need to force a new snap at all
unless we are called with no snap currently set, which is an unusual
case in itself.
2007-05-14 18:13:21 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 689dea424d Report all dependent objects to the server log when a shared object is dropped,
and only a truncated log of the objects in the current database to the client.
Also, instead of reporting object counts for all databases on which the user
might own objects, report only as many as fit in the predefined line count.

This is to avoid flooding the client when the user owns too many objects,
which could cause problems.

Per report from Ed L. on April 4th and subsequent discussion.
2007-05-14 16:50:36 +00:00
Tom Lane 1856e609ec Improve predicate_refuted_by_simple_clause() to handle IS NULL and IS NOT NULL
more completely.  The motivation for having it understand IS NULL at all was
to allow use of "foo IS NULL" as one of the subsets of a partitioning on
"foo", but as reported by Aleksander Kmetec, it wasn't really getting the job
done.  Backpatch to 8.2 since this is arguably a performance bug.
2007-05-12 19:22:35 +00:00
Tom Lane 9aa3c782c9 Fix the problem that creating a user-defined type named _foo, followed by one
named foo, would work but the other ordering would not.  If a user-specified
type or table name collides with an existing auto-generated array name, just
rename the array type out of the way by prepending more underscores.  This
should not create any backward-compatibility issues, since the cases in which
this will happen would have failed outright in prior releases.

Also fix an oversight in the arrays-of-composites patch: ALTER TABLE RENAME
renamed the table's rowtype but not its array type.
2007-05-12 00:55:00 +00:00
Tom Lane d8326119c8 Fix my oversight in enabling domains-of-domains: ALTER DOMAIN ADD CONSTRAINT
needs to check the new constraint against columns of derived domains too.

Also, make it error out if the domain to be modified is used within any
composite-type columns.  Eventually we should support that case, but it seems
a bit painful, and not suitable for a back-patch.  For the moment just let the
user know we can't do it.

Backpatch to 8.2, which is the only released version that allows nested
domains.  Possibly the other part should be back-patched further.
2007-05-11 20:17:15 +00:00
Tom Lane bc8036fc66 Support arrays of composite types, including the rowtypes of regular tables
and views (but not system catalogs, nor sequences or toast tables).  Get rid
of the hardwired convention that a type's array type is named exactly "_type",
instead using a new column pg_type.typarray to provide the linkage.  (It still
will be named "_type", though, except in odd corner cases such as
maximum-length type names.)

Along the way, make tracking of owner and schema dependencies for types more
uniform: a type directly created by the user has these dependencies, while a
table rowtype or auto-generated array type does not have them, but depends on
its parent object instead.

David Fetter, Andrew Dunstan, Tom Lane
2007-05-11 17:57:14 +00:00
Neil Conway ade493e02d Add a hash function for "numeric". Mark the equality operator for
numerics as "oprcanhash", and make the corresponding system catalog
updates. As a result, hash indexes, hashed aggregation, and hash
joins can now be used with the numeric type. Bump the catversion.

The only tricky aspect to doing this is writing a correct hash
function: it's possible for two Numerics to be equal according to
their equality operator, but have different in-memory bit patterns.
To cope with this, the hash function doesn't consider the Numeric's
"scale" or "sign", and explictly skips any leading or trailing
zeros in the Numeric's digit buffer (the current implementation
should suppress any such zeros, but it seems unwise to rely upon
this). See discussion on pgsql-patches for more details.
2007-05-08 18:56:48 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 3b4f9fe5d2 The appended patch addresses the outstanding issues of the recent guc patch.
It makes PGCLIENTENCODING work again and uses bsearch() instead of
iterating over the array of guc variables in guc_get_index().

Joachim Wieland
2007-05-08 16:33:51 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 067deaf83d Make sure we don't skip databases that are supposed to be vacuumed "exactly
now".  This can happen if the time granularity is not very high.

Per ITAGAKI Takahiro.
2007-05-07 20:41:24 +00:00
Magnus Hagander 343a9a27a9 Check return code from strxfrm on Windows since it has a
non-standard way of indicating errors, so we don't try to
allocate INT_MAX bytes to store a result in.
2007-05-05 17:05:48 +00:00
Tom Lane d2a4a4069f Add a line to the EXPLAIN ANALYZE output for a Sort node, showing the
actual sort strategy and amount of space used.  By popular demand.
2007-05-04 21:29:53 +00:00
Tom Lane fab789eac9 Suppress a recently-introduced 'variable might be clobbered by longjmp' warning. 2007-05-04 02:06:13 +00:00
Tom Lane 79ca7ffeb6 A few fixups in error handling: mark pg_re_throw() as noreturn for gcc,
and for other compilers, insert a dummy exit() call so that they understand
PG_RE_THROW() doesn't return.  Insert fflush(stderr) in ExceptionalCondition,
per recent buildfarm evidence that that might not happen automatically on some
platforms.  And const-ify ExceptionalCondition's declaration while at it.
2007-05-04 02:01:02 +00:00
Tom Lane d26559dbf3 Teach tuplesort.c about "top N" sorting, in which only the first N tuples
need be returned.  We keep a heap of the current best N tuples and sift-up
new tuples into it as we scan the input.  For M input tuples this means
only about M*log(N) comparisons instead of M*log(M), not to mention a lot
less workspace when N is small --- avoiding spill-to-disk for large M
is actually the most attractive thing about it.  Patch includes planner
and executor support for invoking this facility in ORDER BY ... LIMIT
queries.  Greg Stark, with some editorialization by moi.
2007-05-04 01:13:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 0fef38da21 Tweak hash index AM to use the new ReadOrZeroBuffer bufmgr API when fetching
pages it intends to zero immediately.  Just to show there is some use for that
function besides WAL recovery :-).
Along the way, fold _hash_checkpage and _hash_pageinit calls into _hash_getbuf
and friends, instead of expecting callers to do that separately.
2007-05-03 16:45:58 +00:00
Tom Lane 63735ca815 Dept. of second thoughts: add comments cautioning against using
ReadOrZeroBuffer to fetch pages from beyond physical EOF.  This would
usually work, but would cause problems for md.c if writes occurred
beyond a segment boundary when the previous segment file hadn't been
fully extended.
2007-05-02 23:34:48 +00:00