Commit Graph

21095 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Paquier a6642b3ae0 Add support for partitioned tables and indexes in REINDEX
Until now, REINDEX was not able to work with partitioned tables and
indexes, forcing users to reindex partitions one by one.  This extends
REINDEX INDEX and REINDEX TABLE so as they can accept a partitioned
index and table in input, respectively, to reindex all the partitions
assigned to them with physical storage (foreign tables, partitioned
tables and indexes are then discarded).

This shares some logic with schema and database REINDEX as each
partition gets processed in its own transaction after building a list of
relations to work on.  This choice has the advantage to minimize the
number of invalid indexes to one partition with REINDEX CONCURRENTLY in
the event a cancellation or failure in-flight, as the only indexes
handled at once in a single REINDEX CONCURRENTLY loop are the ones from
the partition being working on.

Isolation tests are added to emulate some cases I bumped into while
developing this feature, particularly with the concurrent drop of a
leaf partition reindexed.  However, this is rather limited as LOCK would
cause REINDEX to block in the first transaction building the list of
partitions.

Per its multi-transaction nature, this new flavor cannot run in a
transaction block, similarly to REINDEX SCHEMA, SYSTEM and DATABASE.

Author: Justin Pryzby, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Anastasia Lubennikova
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/db12e897-73ff-467e-94cb-4af03705435f.adger.lj@alibaba-inc.com
2020-09-08 10:09:22 +09:00
Jeff Davis a547e68675 Adjust cost model for HashAgg that spills to disk.
Tomas Vondra observed that the IO behavior for HashAgg tends to be
worse than for Sort. Penalize HashAgg IO costs accordingly.

Also, account for the CPU effort of spilling the tuples and reading
them back.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200906212112.nzoy5ytrzjjodpfh@development
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra
Backpatch-through: 13
2020-09-07 13:31:59 -07:00
Tom Lane 53367e6c62 Clarify comments in enforce_generic_type_consistency().
Some of the pre-existing comments were vague about whether they
referred to all polymorphic types or only the old-style ones.

Also be more consistent about using the "family 1" vs "family 2"
terminology.

Himanshu Upadhyaya and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPF61jBUg9XoMPNuLpoZ+h6UZ2VxKdNt3rQL1xw1GOBwjWzAXQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-07 14:52:33 -04:00
Tom Lane 9c79e646c6 Frob numeric.c loop so that clang will auto-vectorize it too.
Experimentation shows that clang will auto-vectorize the critical
multiplication loop if the termination condition is written "i2 < limit"
rather than "i2 <= limit".  This seems unbelievably stupid, but I've
reproduced it on both clang 9.0.1 (RHEL8) and 11.0.3 (macOS Catalina).
gcc doesn't care, so tweak the code to do it that way.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9evtA_vBo+WMYMyT-u=keHX7-r8p2w7OSRfXf42LTwCZQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-07 12:03:04 -04:00
Thomas Munro 861c6e7c8e Skip unnecessary stat() calls in walkdir().
Some kernels can tell us the type of a "dirent", so we can avoid a call
to stat() or lstat() in many cases.  Define a new function
get_dirent_type() to contain that logic, for use by the backend and
frontend versions of walkdir(), and perhaps other callers in future.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Juan José Santamaría Flecha <juanjo.santamaria@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BFzxupGGN4GpUdbzZN%2Btn6FQPHo8w0Q%2BAPH5Wz8RG%2Bww%40mail.gmail.com
2020-09-07 18:28:06 +12:00
Tom Lane 8870917623 Apply auto-vectorization to the inner loop of numeric multiplication.
Compile numeric.c with -ftree-vectorize where available, and adjust
the innermost loop of mul_var() so that it is amenable to being
auto-vectorized.  (Mainly, that involves making it process the arrays
left-to-right not right-to-left.)

Applying -ftree-vectorize actually makes numeric.o smaller, at least
with my compiler (gcc 8.3.1 on x86_64), and it's a little faster too.
Independently of that, fixing the inner loop to be vectorizable also
makes things a bit faster.  But doing both is a huge win for
multiplications with lots of digits.  For me, the numeric regression
test is the same speed to within measurement noise, but numeric_big
is a full 45% faster.

We also looked into applying -funroll-loops, but that makes numeric.o
bloat quite a bit, and the additional speed improvement is very
marginal.

Amit Khandekar, reviewed and edited a little by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9evtA_vBo+WMYMyT-u=keHX7-r8p2w7OSRfXf42LTwCZQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-06 21:40:39 -04:00
Tom Lane 695de5d1ed Split Makefile symbol CFLAGS_VECTOR into two symbols.
Replace CFLAGS_VECTOR with CFLAGS_UNROLL_LOOPS and CFLAGS_VECTORIZE,
allowing us to distinguish whether we want to apply -funroll-loops,
-ftree-vectorize, or both to a particular source file.  Up to now
the only consumer of the symbol has been checksum.c which wants
both, so that there was no need to distinguish; but that's about
to change.

Amit Khandekar, reviewed and edited a little by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9evtA_vBo+WMYMyT-u=keHX7-r8p2w7OSRfXf42LTwCZQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-06 21:28:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 8e3c58e6e4 Refactor pg_get_line() to expose an alternative StringInfo-based API.
Letting the caller provide a StringInfo to read into is helpful when
the caller needs to merge lines or otherwise modify the data after
it's been read.  Notably, now the code added by commit 8f8154a50
can use pg_get_line_append() instead of having its own copy of that
logic.  A follow-on commit will also make use of this.

Also, since StringInfo buffers are a minimum of 1KB long, blindly
using pg_get_line() in a loop can eat a lot more memory than one would
expect.  I discovered for instance that commit e0f05cd5b caused initdb
to consume circa 10MB to read postgres.bki, even though that's under
1MB worth of data.  A less memory-hungry alternative is to re-use the
same StringInfo for all lines and pg_strdup the results.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1315832.1599345736@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-09-06 14:13:19 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 2a093355aa Fix typo in comment
Author: Hou, Zhijie
2020-09-06 19:26:55 +02:00
Tom Lane 19ad7e1d7b Fix misleading error message about inconsistent moving-aggregate types.
We reported the wrong types when complaining that an aggregate's
moving-aggregate implementation is inconsistent with its regular
implementation.

This was wrong since the feature was introduced, so back-patch
to all supported branches.

Jeff Janes

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU=1x808LH=LPhZp9mNSP0Xd1xDqEd+XeGcvEe48dfE6xV=A@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-06 12:55:13 -04:00
Tom Lane e0f05cd5ba Improve some ancient, crufty code in bootstrap + initdb.
At some point back in the last century, somebody felt that reading
all of pg_type twice was cheaper, or at least easier, than using
repalloc() to resize the Typ[] array dynamically.  That seems like an
entirely wacko proposition, so rewrite the code to do it the other
way.  (To add insult to injury, there were two not-quite-identical
copies of said code.)

initdb.c's readfile() function had the same disease of preferring
to do double the I/O to avoid resizing its output array.  Here,
we can make things easier by using the just-invented pg_get_line()
function to handle reading individual lines without a predetermined
notion of how long they are.

On my machine, it's difficult to detect any net change in the
overall runtime of initdb from these changes; but they should
help on slower buildfarm machines (especially since a buildfarm
cycle involves a lot of initdb's these days).

My attention was drawn to these places by scan-build complaints,
but on inspection they needed a lot more work than just suppressing
dead stores :-(
2020-09-05 16:20:04 -04:00
Tom Lane a5cc4dab6d Yet more elimination of dead stores and useless initializations.
I'm not sure what tool Ranier was using, but the ones I contributed
were found by using a newer version of scan-build than I tried before.

Ranier Vilela and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEudQAo1+AcGppxDSg8k+zF4+Kv+eJyqzEDdbpDg58-=MQcerQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-05 13:17:32 -04:00
Michael Paquier 8febfd1855 Switch to multi-inserts when registering dependencies for many code paths
This commit improves the dependency registrations by taking advantage of
the preliminary work done in 63110c62, to group together the insertion
of dependencies of the same type to pg_depend.  With the current layer
of routines available, and as only dependencies of the same type can be
grouped, there are code paths still doing more than one multi-insert
when it is necessary to register dependencies of multiple types
(constraint and index creation are two cases doing that).

While on it, this refactors some of the code to use ObjectAddressSet()
when manipulating object addresses.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200807061619.GA23955@paquier.xyz
2020-09-05 21:33:53 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 556cbdfce4 Fix typo in comment 2020-09-05 11:32:20 +02:00
Michael Paquier 63110c6264 Use multi-inserts for pg_depend
This is a follow-up of the work done in e3931d01.  This case is a bit
different than pg_attribute and pg_shdepend: the maximum number of items
to insert is known in advance, but there is no need to handle pinned
dependencies.  Hence, the base allocation for slots is done based on the
number of items and the maximum allowed with a cap at 64kB.  Slots are
initialized once used to minimize the overhead of the operation.

The insertions can be done for dependencies of the same type.  More
could be done by grouping the insertion of multiple dependency types in
a single batch.  This is left as future work.

Some of the multi-insert logic is also simplified for pg_shdepend, as
per the feedback discussed for this specific patch.  This also moves to
indexing.h the variable capping the maximum amount of data that can be
used at once for a multi-insert, instead of having separate definitions
for pg_attribute, pg_depend and pg_shdepend.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200807061619.GA23955@paquier.xyz
2020-09-05 13:52:47 +09:00
Tom Lane c8746f999e Fix over-eager ping'ing in logical replication receiver.
Commit 3f60f690f only partially fixed the broken-status-tracking
issue in LogicalRepApplyLoop: we need ping_sent to have the same
lifetime as last_recv_timestamp.  The effects are much less serious
than what that commit fixed, though.  AFAICS this would just lead to
extra ping requests being sent, once per second until the sender
responds.  Still, it's a bug, so backpatch to v10 as before.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/959627.1599248476@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-09-04 20:33:36 -04:00
Tom Lane 9a851039aa Remove still more useless assignments.
Fix some more things scan-build pointed to as dead stores.  In some of
these cases, rearranging the code a little leads to more readable
code IMO.  It's all cosmetic, though.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEudQAo1+AcGppxDSg8k+zF4+Kv+eJyqzEDdbpDg58-=MQcerQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-04 20:33:36 -04:00
Jeff Davis 0852006a94 Fix bogus MaxAllocSize check in logtape.c.
Reported-by: Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=NZPZc3-fkdmvu=w2itx0PiB-G6QpxHXZOjuvFAzPdZw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13
2020-09-04 12:09:52 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera f43e295f68
Report expected contrecord length on mismatch
When reading a WAL record fails to find continuation record(s) of the
proper length, report what it expects, for clarity.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200903212152.GA15319@alvherre.pgsql
2020-09-04 14:58:32 -04:00
Tom Lane 38a2d70329 Remove some more useless assignments.
Found with clang's scan-build tool.  It also whines about a lot of
other dead stores that we should *not* change IMO, either as a matter
of style or future-proofing.  But these places seem like clear
oversights.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEudQAo1+AcGppxDSg8k+zF4+Kv+eJyqzEDdbpDg58-=MQcerQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-04 14:32:19 -04:00
Amit Kapila ac15b499f7 Fix inline marking introduced in commit 464824323e.
Forgot to add inline marking in changes_filename() declaration. In the passing, add
inline marking for a similar function subxact_filename().

Reported-By: Nathan Bossart
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E98FBE8F-B878-480D-A728-A60C6EED3047@amazon.com
2020-09-04 11:25:16 +05:30
Bruce Momjian e36e936e0e remove redundant initializations
Reported-by: Ranier Vilela

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEudQAo1+AcGppxDSg8k+zF4+Kv+eJyqzEDdbpDg58-=MQcerQ@mail.gmail.com

Author: Ranier Vilela

Backpatch-through: master
2020-09-03 22:57:35 -04:00
Michael Paquier 844c05abc3 Remove variable "concurrent" from ReindexStmt
This node already handles multiple options using a bitmask, so having a
separate boolean flag is not necessary.  This simplifies the code a bit
with less arguments to give to the reindex routines, by replacing the
boolean with an equivalent bitmask value.

Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200902110326.GA14963@paquier.xyz
2020-09-04 10:43:32 +09:00
Tom Lane 67a472d71c Remove arbitrary restrictions on password length.
This patch started out with the goal of harmonizing various arbitrary
limits on password length, but after awhile a better idea emerged:
let's just get rid of those fixed limits.

recv_password_packet() has an arbitrary limit on the packet size,
which we don't really need, so just drop it.  (Note that this doesn't
really affect anything for MD5 or SCRAM password verification, since
those will hash the user's password to something shorter anyway.
It does matter for auth methods that require a cleartext password.)

Likewise remove the arbitrary error condition in pg_saslprep().

The remaining limits are mostly in client-side code that prompts
for passwords.  To improve those, refactor simple_prompt() so that
it allocates its own result buffer that can be made as big as
necessary.  Actually, it proves best to make a separate routine
pg_get_line() that has essentially the semantics of fgets(), except
that it allocates a suitable result buffer and hence will never
return a truncated line.  (pg_get_line has a lot of potential
applications to replace randomly-sized fgets buffers elsewhere,
but I'll leave that for another patch.)

I built pg_get_line() atop stringinfo.c, which requires moving
that code to src/common/; but that seems fine since it was a poor
fit for src/port/ anyway.

This patch is mostly mine, but it owes a good deal to Nathan Bossart
who pressed for a solution to the password length problem and
created a predecessor patch.  Also thanks to Peter Eisentraut and
Stephen Frost for ideas and discussion.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/09512C4F-8CB9-4021-B455-EF4C4F0D55A0@amazon.com
2020-09-03 20:09:18 -04:00
Tom Lane be4b0c0077 Avoid lockup of a parallel worker when reporting a long error message.
Because sigsetjmp() will restore the initial state with signals blocked,
the code path in bgworker.c for reporting an error and exiting would
execute that way.  Usually this is fairly harmless; but if a parallel
worker had an error message exceeding the shared-memory communication
buffer size (16K) it would lock up, because it would wait for a
resume-sending signal from its parallel leader which it would never
detect.

To fix, just unblock signals at the appropriate point.

This can be shown to fail back to 9.6.  The lack of parallel query
infrastructure makes it difficult to provide a simple test case for
9.5; but I'm pretty sure the issue exists in some form there as well,
so apply the code change there too.

Vignesh C, reviewed by Bharath Rupireddy, Robert Haas, and myself

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm1d1hHPZUg3xU4XjtWBOLCrA+-2cJcLpw-cePZ=GgDVfA@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-03 16:52:09 -04:00
Tom Lane 8f8154a503 Allow records to span multiple lines in pg_hba.conf and pg_ident.conf.
A backslash at the end of a line now causes the next line to be appended
to the current one (effectively, the backslash and newline are discarded).
This allows long HBA entries to be created without legibility problems.

While we're here, get rid of the former hard-wired length limit on
pg_hba.conf lines, by using an expansible StringInfo buffer instead
of a fixed-size local variable.

Since the same code is used to read the ident map file, these changes
apply there as well.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Justin Pryzby and David Zhang

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.21.2003251906140.15243@pseudo
2020-09-03 12:16:48 -04:00
Amit Kapila 464824323e Add support for streaming to built-in logical replication.
To add support for streaming of in-progress transactions into the
built-in logical replication, we need to do three things:

* Extend the logical replication protocol, so identify in-progress
transactions, and allow adding additional bits of information (e.g.
XID of subtransactions).

* Modify the output plugin (pgoutput) to implement the new stream
API callbacks, by leveraging the extended replication protocol.

* Modify the replication apply worker, to properly handle streamed
in-progress transaction by spilling the data to disk and then
replaying them on commit.

We however must explicitly disable streaming replication during
replication slot creation, even if the plugin supports it. We
don't need to replicate the changes accumulated during this phase,
and moreover we don't have a replication connection open so we
don't have where to send the data anyway.

Author: Tomas Vondra, Dilip Kumar and Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila, Kuntal Ghosh and Ajin Cherian
Tested-by: Neha Sharma, Mahendra Singh Thalor and Ajin Cherian
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/688b0b7f-2f6c-d827-c27b-216a8e3ea700@2ndquadrant.com
2020-09-03 07:54:07 +05:30
Tom Lane 66f1630680 Add string_to_table() function.
This splits a string at occurrences of a delimiter.  It is exactly like
string_to_array() except for producing a set of values instead of an
array of values.  Thus, the relationship of these two functions is
the same as between regexp_split_to_table() and regexp_split_to_array().

Although the same results could be had from unnest(string_to_array()),
this is somewhat faster than that, and anyway it seems reasonable to
have it for symmetry with the regexp functions.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Peter Smith

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRD8HOpjq2TqeTBhSo_QkzjLOhXzGCpKJ4nCs7Y9SQkuPw@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-02 18:23:56 -04:00
Fujii Masao be9788e998 Avoid unnecessary acquisition of SyncRepLock in transaction commit time.
In SyncRepWaitForLSN() routine called in transaction commit time,
SyncRepLock is necessary to atomically both check the shared
sync_standbys_defined flag and operate the sync replication wait-queue.
On the other hand, when the flag is false, the lock is not necessary
because the wait-queue is not touched. But due to the changes by
commit 48c9f49265, previously the lock was taken whatever the flag was.
This could cause unnecessary performance overhead in every transaction
commit time. Therefore this commit avoids that unnecessary aquisition
of SyncRepLock.

Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Asim Praveen, Masahiko Sawada,
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200406050332.nsscfqjzk2d57zyx@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-09-02 10:55:55 +09:00
Michael Paquier 1d65416661 Improve handling of dropped relations for REINDEX DATABASE/SCHEMA/SYSTEM
When multiple relations are reindexed, a scan of pg_class is done first
to build the list of relations to work on.  However the REINDEX logic
has never checked if a relation listed still exists when beginning the
work on it, causing for example sudden cache lookup failures.

This commit adds safeguards against dropped relations for REINDEX,
similarly to VACUUM or CLUSTER where we try to open the relation,
ignoring it if it is missing.  A new option is added to the REINDEX
routines to control if a missed relation is OK to ignore or not.

An isolation test, based on REINDEX SCHEMA, is added for the concurrent
and non-concurrent cases.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Anastasia Lubennikova
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200813043805.GE11663@paquier.xyz
2020-09-02 09:08:12 +09:00
Tom Lane a7212be8b9 Set cutoff xmin more aggressively when vacuuming a temporary table.
Since other sessions aren't allowed to look into a temporary table
of our own session, we do not need to worry about the global xmin
horizon when setting the vacuum XID cutoff.  Indeed, if we're not
inside a transaction block, we may set oldestXmin to be the next
XID, because there cannot be any in-doubt tuples in a temp table,
nor any tuples that are dead but still visible to some snapshot of
our transaction.  (VACUUM, of course, is never inside a transaction
block; but we need to test that because CLUSTER shares the same code.)

This approach allows us to always clean out a temp table completely
during VACUUM, independently of concurrent activity.  Aside from
being useful in its own right, that simplifies building reproducible
test cases.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3490536.1598629609@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-09-01 18:40:43 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera afc7e0ad55
Raise error on concurrent drop of partitioned index
We were already raising an error for DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY on a
partitioned table, albeit a different and confusing one:
  ERROR:  DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY must be first action in transaction

Change that to throw a more comprehensible error:
  ERROR:  cannot drop partitioned index \"%s\" concurrently

Michael Paquier authored the test case for indexes on temporary
partitioned tables.

Backpatch to 11, where indexes on partitioned tables were added.

Reported-by: Jan Mussler <jan.mussler@zalando.de>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16594-d2956ca909585067@postgresql.org
2020-09-01 13:40:43 -04:00
Amit Kapila 4ab77697f6 Fix the SharedFileSetUnregister API.
Commit 808e13b282 introduced a few APIs to extend the existing Buffile
interface. In SharedFileSetDeleteOnProcExit, it tries to delete the list
element while traversing the list with 'foreach' construct which makes the
behavior of list traversal unpredictable.

Author: Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Dilip Kumar
Tested-by: Dilip Kumar and Neha Sharma
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1JhLatVcQ2OvwA_3s0ih6Hx9+kZbq107cXVsSWWukH7vA@mail.gmail.com
2020-09-01 08:11:39 +05:30
Tom Lane 3d351d916b Redefine pg_class.reltuples to be -1 before the first VACUUM or ANALYZE.
Historically, we've considered the state with relpages and reltuples
both zero as indicating that we do not know the table's tuple density.
This is problematic because it's impossible to distinguish "never yet
vacuumed" from "vacuumed and seen to be empty".  In particular, a user
cannot use VACUUM or ANALYZE to override the planner's normal heuristic
that an empty table should not be believed to be empty because it is
probably about to get populated.  That heuristic is a good safety
measure, so I don't care to abandon it, but there should be a way to
override it if the table is indeed intended to stay empty.

Hence, represent the initial state of ignorance by setting reltuples
to -1 (relpages is still set to zero), and apply the minimum-ten-pages
heuristic only when reltuples is still -1.  If the table is empty,
VACUUM or ANALYZE (but not CREATE INDEX) will override that to
reltuples = relpages = 0, and then we'll plan on that basis.

This requires a bunch of fiddly little changes, but we can get rid of
some ugly kluges that were formerly needed to maintain the old definition.

One notable point is that FDWs' GetForeignRelSize methods will see
baserel->tuples = -1 when no ANALYZE has been done on the foreign table.
That seems like a net improvement, since those methods were formerly
also in the dark about what baserel->tuples = 0 really meant.  Still,
it is an API change.

I bumped catversion because code predating this change would get confused
by seeing reltuples = -1.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/F02298E0-6EF4-49A1-BCB6-C484794D9ACC@thebuild.com
2020-08-30 12:21:51 -04:00
Michael Paquier 9511fb37ac Reset indisreplident for an invalid index in DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY
A failure when dropping concurrently an index used in a replica identity
could leave in pg_index an index marked as !indisvalid and
indisreplident.  Reindexing this index would switch back indisvalid to
true, and if the replica identity of the parent relation was switched to
use a different index, it would be possible to finish with more than one
index marked as indisreplident.  If that were to happen, this could mess
up with the relation cache as an incorrect index could be used for the
replica identity.

Indexes marked as invalid are discarded as candidates for the replica
identity, as of RelationGetIndexList(), so similarly to what is done
with indisclustered, resetting indisreplident when the index is marked
as invalid keeps things consistent.  REINDEX CONCURRENTLY's swapping
already resets the flag for the old index, while the new index inherits
the value of the old index to-be-dropped, so only DROP INDEX was an
issue.

Even if this is a bug, the sequence able to reproduce a problem requires
a failure while running DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY, something unlikely
going to happen in the field, so no backpatch is done.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Dolgov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200827025721.GN2017@paquier.xyz
2020-08-30 14:14:34 +09:00
Tom Lane 10564ee02c Fix code for re-finding scan position in a multicolumn GIN index.
collectMatchBitmap() needs to re-find the index tuple it was previously
looking at, after transiently dropping lock on the index page it's on.
The tuple should still exist and be at its prior position or somewhere
to the right of that, since ginvacuum never removes tuples but
concurrent insertions could add one.  However, there was a thinko in
that logic, to the effect of expecting any inserted tuples to have the
same index "attnum" as what we'd been scanning.  Since there's no
physical separation of tuples with different attnums, it's not terribly
hard to devise scenarios where this fails, leading to transient "lost
saved point in index" errors.  (While I've duplicated this with manual
testing, it seems impossible to make a reproducible test case with our
available testing technology.)

Fix by just continuing the scan when the attnum doesn't match.

While here, improve the error message used if we do fail, so that it
matches the wording used in btree for a similar case.

collectMatchBitmap()'s posting-tree code path was previously not
exercised at all by our regression tests.  While I can't make
a regression test that exhibits the bug, I can at least improve
the code coverage here, so do that.  The test case I made for this
is an extension of one added by 4b754d6c1, so it only works in
HEAD and v13; didn't seem worth trying hard to back-patch it.

Per bug #16595 from Jesse Kinkead.  This has been broken since
multicolumn capability was added to GIN (commit 27cb66fdf),
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16595-633118be8eef9ce2@postgresql.org
2020-08-27 17:36:13 -04:00
Michael Paquier 77c7267c37 Fix comment in procarray.c
The description of GlobalVisDataRels was missing, GlobalVisCatalogRels
being mentioned instead.

Author: Jim Nasby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8e06c883-2858-1fd4-07c5-560c28b08dcd@amazon.com
2020-08-27 16:40:34 +09:00
Tom Lane e942af7b82 Suppress compiler warning in non-cassert builds.
Oversight in 808e13b28, reported by Bruce Momjian.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200826160251.GB21909@momjian.us
2020-08-26 17:08:11 -04:00
Amit Kapila 7e453634bb Add additional information in the vacuum error context.
The additional information added will be an offset number for heap
operations. This information will help us in finding the exact tuple due
to which the error has occurred.

Author: Mahendra Singh Thalor and Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Sawada Masahiko, Justin Pryzby and Amit Kapila
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKYtNApK488TDF4bMbw+1QH8HJf9cxdNDXquhU50TK5iv_FtCQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-08-26 09:40:52 +05:30
Amit Kapila 808e13b282 Extend the BufFile interface.
Allow BufFile to support temporary files that can be used by the single
backend when the corresponding files need to be survived across the
transaction and need to be opened and closed multiple times. Such files
need to be created as a member of a SharedFileSet.

Additionally, this commit implements the interface for BufFileTruncate to
allow files to be truncated up to a particular offset and extends the
BufFileSeek API to support the SEEK_END case. This also adds an option to
provide a mode while opening the shared BufFiles instead of always opening
in read-only mode.

These enhancements in BufFile interface are required for the upcoming
patch to allow the replication apply worker, to handle streamed
in-progress transactions.

Author: Dilip Kumar, Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Tested-by: Neha Sharma
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/688b0b7f-2f6c-d827-c27b-216a8e3ea700@2ndquadrant.com
2020-08-26 07:36:43 +05:30
Fujii Masao 50db5964ee Move codes for pg_backend_memory_contexts from mmgr/mcxt.c to adt/mcxtfuncs.c.
Previously the codes for pg_backend_memory_contexts were in
src/backend/utils/mmgr/mcxt.c. This commit moves them to
src/backend/utils/adt/mcxtfuncs.c so that mcxt.c basically includes
only the low-level interface for memory contexts.

Author: Atsushi Torikoshi
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200819135545.GC19121@paquier.xyz
2020-08-26 10:51:31 +09:00
Fujii Masao 29dd6d8bc6 Prevent non-superusers from reading pg_backend_memory_contexts, by default.
pg_backend_memory_contexts view contains some internal information of
memory contexts. Since exposing them to any users by default may cause
security issue, this commit allows only superusers to read this view,
by default, like we do for pg_shmem_allocations view.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Atsushi Torikoshi
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1414992.1597849297@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-08-26 10:50:02 +09:00
David Rowley c34605daed Fixup some misusages of bms_num_members()
It's a bit inefficient to test if a Bitmapset is empty by counting all the
members and seeing if that number is zero. It's much better just to use
bms_is_empty().  Likewise for checking if there are at least two members,
just use bms_membership(), which does not need to do anything more after
finding two members.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvpvwm_QjbDOb5xga%2BKmX9XkN9xQavNGm3SvDbVnCYOerQ%40mail.gmail.com
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra
2020-08-26 10:51:36 +12:00
Amit Kapila a3c66de6c5 Improve the vacuum error context phase information.
We were displaying the wrong phase information for 'info' message in the
index clean up phase because we were switching to the previous phase a bit
early. We were also not displaying context information for heap phase
unless the block number is valid which is fine for error cases but for
messages at 'info' or lower error level it appears to be inconsistent with
index phase information.

Reported-by: Sawada Masahiko
Author: Sawada Masahiko
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 13, where it was introduced
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+fd4k4HcbhPnCs7paRTw1K-AHin8y4xKomB9Ru0ATw0UeTy2w@mail.gmail.com
2020-08-24 08:16:19 +05:30
Tom Lane 4d346def15 Avoid pushing quals down into sub-queries that have grouping sets.
The trouble with doing this is that an apparently-constant subquery
output column isn't really constant if it is a grouping column that
appears in only some of the grouping sets.  A qual using such a
column would be subject to incorrect const-folding after push-down,
as seen in bug #16585 from Paul Sivash.

To fix, just disable qual pushdown altogether if the sub-query has
nonempty groupingSets.  While we could imagine far less restrictive
solutions, there is not much point in working harder right now,
because subquery_planner() won't move HAVING clauses to WHERE within
such a subquery.  If the qual stays in HAVING it's not going to be
a lot more useful than if we'd kept it at the outer level.

Having said that, this restriction could be removed if we used a
parsetree representation that distinguished such outputs from actual
constants, which is something I hope to do in future.  Hence, make
the patch a minimal addition rather than integrating it more tightly
(e.g. by renumbering the existing items in subquery_is_pushdown_safe's
comment).

Back-patch to 9.5 where grouping sets were introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16585-9d8c340d23ade8c1@postgresql.org
2020-08-22 14:46:40 -04:00
Tom Lane 5b02d68e75 Fix ALTER TABLE's scheduling rules for AT_AddConstraint subcommands.
Commit 1281a5c90 rearranged the logic in this area rather drastically,
and it broke the case of adding a foreign key constraint in the same
ALTER that adds the pkey or unique constraint it depends on.  While
self-referential fkeys are surely a pretty niche case, this used to
work so we shouldn't break it.

To fix, reorganize the scheduling rules in ATParseTransformCmd so
that a transformed AT_AddConstraint subcommand will be delayed into
a later pass in all cases, not only when it's been spit out as a
side-effect of parsing some other command type.

Also tweak the logic so that we won't run ATParseTransformCmd twice
while doing this.  It seems to work even without that, but it's
surely wasting cycles to do so.

Per bug #16589 from Jeremy Evans.  Back-patch to v13 where the new
code was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16589-31c8d981ca503896@postgresql.org
2020-08-22 12:34:17 -04:00
Tom Lane 5028981923 Fix handling of CREATE TABLE LIKE with inheritance.
If a CREATE TABLE command uses both LIKE and traditional inheritance,
Vars in CHECK constraints and expression indexes that are absorbed
from a LIKE parent table tended to get mis-numbered, resulting in
wrong answers and/or bizarre error messages (though probably not any
actual crashes, thanks to validation occurring in the executor).

In v12 and up, the same could happen to Vars in GENERATED expressions,
even in cases with no LIKE clause but multiple traditional-inheritance
parents.

The cause of the problem for LIKE is that parse_utilcmd.c supposed
it could renumber such Vars correctly during transformCreateStmt(),
which it cannot since we have not yet accounted for columns added via
inheritance.  Fix that by postponing processing of LIKE INCLUDING
CONSTRAINTS, DEFAULTS, GENERATED, INDEXES till after we've performed
DefineRelation().

The error with GENERATED and multiple inheritance is a simple oversight
in MergeAttributes(); it knows it has to renumber Vars in inherited
CHECK constraints, but forgot to apply the same processing to inherited
GENERATED expressions (a/k/a defaults).

Per bug #16272 from Tom Gottfried.  The non-GENERATED variants of the
issue are ancient, presumably dating right back to the addition of
CREATE TABLE LIKE; hence back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16272-6e32da020e9a9381@postgresql.org
2020-08-21 15:00:47 -04:00
Fujii Masao 9d701e624f Rework EXPLAIN for planner's buffer usage.
Commit ce77abe63c allowed EXPLAIN (BUFFERS) to report the information
on buffer usage during planning phase. However three issues were
reported regarding this feature.

(1) Previously, EXPLAIN option BUFFERS required ANALYZE. So the query
    had to be actually executed by specifying ANALYZE even when we
    want to see only the planner's buffer usage. This was inconvenient
    especially when the query was write one like DELETE.

(2) EXPLAIN included the planner's buffer usage in summary
    information. So SUMMARY option had to be enabled to report that.
    Also this format was confusing.

(3) The output structure for planning information was not consistent
    between TEXT format and the others. For example, "Planning" tag
    was output in JSON format, but not in TEXT format.

For (1), this commit allows us to perform EXPLAIN (BUFFERS) without
ANALYZE to report the planner's buffer usage.

For (2), this commit changed EXPLAIN output so that the planner's
buffer usage is reported before summary information.

For (3), this commit made the output structure for planning
information more consistent between the formats.

Back-patch to v13 where the planner's buffer usage was allowed to
be reported in EXPLAIN.

Reported-by: Pierre Giraud, David Rowley
Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: David Rowley, Julien Rouhaud, Pierre Giraud
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/07b226e6-fa49-687f-b110-b7c37572f69e@dalibo.com
2020-08-21 20:48:59 +09:00
Fujii Masao d259afa736 Fix typos in comments.
Author: Masahiko Sawada
Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+fd4k4m9hFSrRLB3etPWO5_v5=MujVZWRtz63q+55hM0Dz25Q@mail.gmail.com
2020-08-21 12:35:22 +09:00
David Rowley 8431d33079 Fix a few typos in JIT comments and README
Reviewed-by: Abhijit Menon-Sen
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvobgmCs6CohqhKTUf7D8vffoZXQTCBTERo9gbOeZmvLTw%40mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 11, where JIT was added
2020-08-21 09:33:56 +12:00
Andres Freund c62a0a49f3 Revert "Make vacuum a bit more verbose to debug BF failure."
This reverts commit 49967da65a.

Enough time has passed that we can be confident that 07f32fcd23
resolved the issue. Therefore we can remove the temporary debugging
aids.

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1k7tGP-0005V0-5k@gemulon.postgresql.org
2020-08-20 12:59:00 -07:00
Andres Freund 1fe1f42e3e Acquire ProcArrayLock exclusively in ProcArrayClearTransaction.
This corrects an oversight by me in 2072932407, which made
ProcArrayClearTransaction() increment xactCompletionCount. That requires an
exclusive lock, obviously.

There's other approaches that avoid the exclusive acquisition, but given that a
2PC commit is fairly heavyweight, it doesn't seem worth doing so. I've not been
able to measure a performance difference, unsurprisingly.  I did add a
comment documenting that we could do so, should it ever become a bottleneck.

Reported-By: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1355915.1597794204@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-08-19 18:24:33 -07:00
Tom Lane 2072932407 Suppress unnecessary RelabelType nodes in yet more cases.
Commit a477bfc1d fixed eval_const_expressions() to ensure that it
didn't generate unnecessary RelabelType nodes, but I failed to notice
that some other places in the planner had the same issue.  Really
noplace in the planner should be using plain makeRelabelType(), for
fear of generating expressions that should be equal() to semantically
equivalent trees, but aren't.

An example is that because canonicalize_ec_expression() failed
to be careful about this, we could end up with an equivalence class
containing both a plain Const, and a Const-with-RelabelType
representing exactly the same value.  So far as I can tell this led to
no visible misbehavior, but we did waste a bunch of cycles generating
and evaluating "Const = Const-with-RelabelType" to prove such entries
are redundant.

Hence, move the support function added by a477bfc1d to where it can
be more generally useful, and use it in the places where planner code
previously used makeRelabelType.

Back-patch to v12, like the previous patch.  While I have no concrete
evidence of any real misbehavior here, it's certainly possible that
I overlooked a case where equivalent expressions that aren't equal()
could cause a user-visible problem.  In any case carrying extra
RelabelType nodes through planning to execution isn't very desirable.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1311836.1597781384@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-08-19 14:07:49 -04:00
Fujii Masao 3e98c0bafb Add pg_backend_memory_contexts system view.
This view displays the usages of all the memory contexts of the server
process attached to the current session. This information is useful to
investigate the cause of backend-local memory bloat.

This information can be also collected by calling
MemoryContextStats(TopMemoryContext) via a debugger. But this technique
cannot be uesd in some environments because no debugger is available there.
And it outputs lots of text messages and it's not easy to analyze them.
So, pg_backend_memory_contexts view allows us to access to backend-local
memory contexts information more easily.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Atsushi Torikoshi, Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Tatsuhito Kasahara, Andres Freund, Daniel Gustafsson, Robert Haas, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/72a656e0f71d0860161e0b3f67e4d771@oss.nttdata.com
2020-08-19 15:34:43 +09:00
Andres Freund 07f32fcd23 Fix race condition in snapshot caching when 2PC is used.
When preparing a transaction xactCompletionCount needs to be
incremented, even though the transaction has not committed
yet. Otherwise the snapshot used within the transaction otherwise can
get reused outside of the prepared transaction. As GetSnapshotData()
does not include the current xid when building a snapshot, reuse would
not be correct.

Somewhat surprisingly the regression tests only rarely show incorrect
results without the fix. The reason for that is that often the
snapshot's xmax will be >= the backend xid, yielding a snapshot that
is correct, despite the bug.

I'm working on a reliable test for the bug, but it seems worth seeing
whether this fixes all the BF failures while I do.

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1k7tGP-0005V0-5k@gemulon.postgresql.org
2020-08-18 16:31:12 -07:00
Andres Freund 623a9ba79b snapshot scalability: cache snapshots using a xact completion counter.
Previous commits made it faster/more scalable to compute snapshots. But not
building a snapshot is still faster. Now that GetSnapshotData() does not
maintain RecentGlobal* anymore, that is actually not too hard:

This commit introduces xactCompletionCount, which tracks the number of
top-level transactions with xids (i.e. which may have modified the database)
that completed in some form since the start of the server.

We can avoid rebuilding the snapshot's contents whenever the current
xactCompletionCount is the same as it was when the snapshot was
originally built.  Currently this check happens while holding
ProcArrayLock. While it's likely possible to perform the check without
acquiring ProcArrayLock, it seems better to do that separately /
later, some careful analysis is required. Even with the lock this is a
significant win on its own.

On a smaller two socket machine this gains another ~1.03x, on a larger
machine the effect is roughly double (earlier patch version tested
though).  If we were able to safely avoid the lock there'd be another
significant gain on top of that.

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200301083601.ews6hz5dduc3w2se@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-08-17 21:08:30 -07:00
Heikki Linnakangas a28d731a11 Mark commit and abort WAL records with XLR_SPECIAL_REL_UPDATE.
If a commit or abort record includes "dropped relfilenodes", then replaying
the record will remove data files. That is surely a "special rel update",
but the records were not marked as such. Fix that, teach pg_rewind to
expect and ignore them, and add a test case to cover it.

It's always been like this, but no backporting for fear of breaking
existing applications. If an application parsed the WAL but was not
handling commit/abort records, it would stop working. That might be a good
thing if it really needed to handle the dropped rels, but it will be caught
when the application is updated to work with PostgreSQL v14 anyway.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/07b33e2c-46a6-86a1-5f9e-a7da73fddb95%40iki.fi
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila, Michael Paquier
2020-08-17 10:52:58 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3941eb6341 Make xact.h usable in frontend.
xact.h included utils/datetime.h, which cannot be used in the frontend
(it includes fmgr.h, which needs Datum). But xact.h only needs the
definition of TimestampTz from it, which is available directly in
datatypes/timestamp.h. Change xact.h to include that instead of
utils/datetime.h, so that it can be used in client programs.
2020-08-17 10:50:13 +03:00
Andres Freund f6661d3df2 Fix use of wrong index in ComputeXidHorizons().
This bug, recently introduced in 941697c3c1, at least lead to vacuum
failing because it found tuples inserted by a running transaction, but
below the freeze limit. The freeze limit in turn is directly affected
by the aforementioned bug.

Thanks to Tom Lane figuring how to make the bug reproducible.

We should add a few more assertions to make sure this type of bug
isn't as hard to notice, but it's not yet clear how to best do so.

Co-Diagnosed-By: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1013484.1597609043@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-08-16 14:21:37 -07:00
Andres Freund 49967da65a Make vacuum a bit more verbose to debug BF failure.
This is temporary. While possibly some more error checking / debugging
in this path would be a good thing, it'll not look exactly like this.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200816181604.l54m6kss5ntd6xow@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-08-16 12:57:01 -07:00
Noah Misch 676a9c3cc4 Correct several behavior descriptions in comments.
Reuse cautionary language from src/test/ssl/README in
src/test/kerberos/README.  SLRUs have had access to six-character
segments names since commit 73c986adde,
and recovery stopped calling HeapTupleHeaderAdvanceLatestRemovedXid() in
commit 558a9165e0.  The other corrections
are more self-evident.
2020-08-15 20:21:52 -07:00
Noah Misch 566372b3d6 Prevent concurrent SimpleLruTruncate() for any given SLRU.
The SimpleLruTruncate() header comment states the new coding rule.  To
achieve this, add locktype "frozenid" and two LWLocks.  This closes a
rare opportunity for data loss, which manifested as "apparent
wraparound" or "could not access status of transaction" errors.  Data
loss is more likely in pg_multixact, due to released branches' thin
margin between multiStopLimit and multiWrapLimit.  If a user's physical
replication primary logged ":  apparent wraparound" messages, the user
should rebuild standbys of that primary regardless of symptoms.  At less
risk is a cluster having emitted "not accepting commands" errors or
"must be vacuumed" warnings at some point.  One can test a cluster for
this data loss by running VACUUM FREEZE in every database.  Back-patch
to 9.5 (all supported versions).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190218073103.GA1434723@rfd.leadboat.com
2020-08-15 10:15:53 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut bacda6a327 Remove obsolete HAVE_BUGGY_SOLARIS_STRTOD
Fixed more than 10 years ago.

Reviewed-by: Noah Misch <noah@leadboat.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/aa266ede-baaa-f4e6-06cf-5b1737610e9a%402ndquadrant.com
2020-08-15 11:27:41 +02:00
Tom Lane 1e7629d2c9 Be more careful about the shape of hashable subplan clauses.
nodeSubplan.c expects that the testexpr for a hashable ANY SubPlan
has the form of one or more OpExprs whose LHS is an expression of the
outer query's, while the RHS is an expression over Params representing
output columns of the subquery.  However, the planner only went as far
as verifying that the clauses were all binary OpExprs.  This works
99.99% of the time, because the clauses have the right shape when
emitted by the parser --- but it's possible for function inlining to
break that, as reported by PegoraroF10.  To fix, teach the planner
to check that the LHS and RHS contain the right things, or more
accurately don't contain the wrong things.  Given that this has been
broken for years without anyone noticing, it seems sufficient to just
give up hashing when it happens, rather than go to the trouble of
commuting the clauses back again (which wouldn't necessarily work
anyway).

While poking at that, I also noticed that nodeSubplan.c had a baked-in
assumption that the number of hash clauses is identical to the number
of subquery output columns.  Again, that's fine as far as parser output
goes, but it's not hard to break it via function inlining.  There seems
little reason for that assumption though --- AFAICS, the only thing
it's buying us is not having to store the number of hash clauses
explicitly.  Adding code to the planner to reject such cases would take
more code than getting nodeSubplan.c to cope, so I fixed it that way.

This has been broken for as long as we've had hashable SubPlans,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1549209182255-0.post@n3.nabble.com
2020-08-14 22:14:03 -04:00
Andres Freund 73487a60fc snapshot scalability: Move subxact info to ProcGlobal, remove PGXACT.
Similar to the previous changes this increases the chance that data
frequently needed by GetSnapshotData() stays in l2 cache. In many
workloads subtransactions are very rare, and this makes the check for
that considerably cheaper.

As this removes the last member of PGXACT, there is no need to keep it
around anymore.

On a larger 2 socket machine this and the two preceding commits result
in a ~1.07x performance increase in read-only pgbench. For read-heavy
mixed r/w workloads without row level contention, I see about 1.1x.

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200301083601.ews6hz5dduc3w2se@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-08-14 15:33:35 -07:00
Andres Freund 5788e258bb snapshot scalability: Move PGXACT->vacuumFlags to ProcGlobal->vacuumFlags.
Similar to the previous commit this increases the chance that data
frequently needed by GetSnapshotData() stays in l2 cache. As we now
take care to not unnecessarily write to ProcGlobal->vacuumFlags, there
should be very few modifications to the ProcGlobal->vacuumFlags array.

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200301083601.ews6hz5dduc3w2se@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-08-14 15:33:35 -07:00
Andres Freund 941697c3c1 snapshot scalability: Introduce dense array of in-progress xids.
The new array contains the xids for all connected backends / in-use
PGPROC entries in a dense manner (in contrast to the PGPROC/PGXACT
arrays which can have unused entries interspersed).

This improves performance because GetSnapshotData() always needs to
scan the xids of all live procarray entries and now there's no need to
go through the procArray->pgprocnos indirection anymore.

As the set of running top-level xids changes rarely, compared to the
number of snapshots taken, this substantially increases the likelihood
of most data required for a snapshot being in l2 cache.  In
read-mostly workloads scanning the xids[] array will sufficient to
build a snapshot, as most backends will not have an xid assigned.

To keep the xid array dense ProcArrayRemove() needs to move entries
behind the to-be-removed proc's one further up in the array. Obviously
moving array entries cannot happen while a backend sets it
xid. I.e. locking needs to prevent that array entries are moved while
a backend modifies its xid.

To avoid locking ProcArrayLock in GetNewTransactionId() - a fairly hot
spot already - ProcArrayAdd() / ProcArrayRemove() now needs to hold
XidGenLock in addition to ProcArrayLock. Adding / Removing a procarray
entry is not a very frequent operation, even taking 2PC into account.

Due to the above, the dense array entries can only be read or modified
while holding ProcArrayLock and/or XidGenLock. This prevents a
concurrent ProcArrayRemove() from shifting the dense array while it is
accessed concurrently.

While the new dense array is very good when needing to look at all
xids it is less suitable when accessing a single backend's xid. In
particular it would be problematic to have to acquire a lock to access
a backend's own xid. Therefore a backend's xid is not just stored in
the dense array, but also in PGPROC. This also allows a backend to
only access the shared xid value when the backend had acquired an
xid.

The infrastructure added in this commit will be used for the remaining
PGXACT fields in subsequent commits. They are kept separate to make
review easier.

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200301083601.ews6hz5dduc3w2se@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-08-14 15:33:35 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan 914140e85a Fix obsolete comment in xlogutils.c.
Oversight in commit 2c03216d83.
2020-08-14 11:09:08 -07:00
Tom Lane 0038f94387 Fix postmaster's behavior during smart shutdown.
Up to now, upon receipt of a SIGTERM ("smart shutdown" command), the
postmaster has immediately killed all "optional" background processes,
and subsequently refused to launch new ones while it's waiting for
foreground client processes to exit.  No doubt this seemed like an OK
policy at some point; but it's a pretty bad one now, because it makes
for a seriously degraded environment for the remaining clients:

* Parallel queries are killed, and new ones fail to launch. (And our
parallel-query infrastructure utterly fails to deal with the case
in a reasonable way --- it just hangs waiting for workers that are
not going to arrive.  There is more work needed in that area IMO.)

* Autovacuum ceases to function.  We can tolerate that for awhile,
but if bulk-update queries continue to run in the surviving client
sessions, there's eventually going to be a mess.  In the worst case
the system could reach a forced shutdown to prevent XID wraparound.

* The bgwriter and walwriter are also stopped immediately, likely
resulting in performance degradation.

Hence, let's rearrange things so that the only immediate change in
behavior is refusing to let in new normal connections.  Once the last
normal connection is gone, shut everything down as though we'd received
a "fast" shutdown.  To implement this, remove the PM_WAIT_BACKUP and
PM_WAIT_READONLY states, instead staying in PM_RUN or PM_HOT_STANDBY
while normal connections remain.  A subsidiary state variable tracks
whether or not we're letting in new connections in those states.

This also allows having just one copy of the logic for killing child
processes in smart and fast shutdown modes.  I moved that logic into
PostmasterStateMachine() by inventing a new state PM_STOP_BACKENDS.

Back-patch to 9.6 where parallel query was added.  In principle
this'd be a good idea in 9.5 as well, but the risk/reward ratio
is not as good there, since lack of autovacuum is not a problem
during typical uses of smart shutdown.

Per report from Bharath Rupireddy.

Patch by me, reviewed by Thomas Munro

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACXAZ5vKxT9P7P89D87i3MDO9bfS+_bjMHgnWJs8uwUOOw@mail.gmail.com
2020-08-14 13:26:57 -04:00
Andres Freund 1f51c17c68 snapshot scalability: Move PGXACT->xmin back to PGPROC.
Now that xmin isn't needed for GetSnapshotData() anymore, it leads to
unnecessary cacheline ping-pong to have it in PGXACT, as it is updated
considerably more frequently than the other PGXACT members.

After the changes in dc7420c2c9, this is a very straight-forward change.

For highly concurrent, snapshot acquisition heavy, workloads this change alone
can significantly increase scalability. E.g. plain pgbench on a smaller 2
socket machine gains 1.07x for read-only pgbench, 1.22x for read-only pgbench
when submitting queries in batches of 100, and 2.85x for batches of 100
'SELECT';.  The latter numbers are obviously not to be expected in the
real-world, but micro-benchmark the snapshot computation
scalability (previously spending ~80% of the time in GetSnapshotData()).

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200301083601.ews6hz5dduc3w2se@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-08-13 16:25:21 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera a811ea5bde
Handle new HOT chains in index-build table scans
When a table is scanned by heapam_index_build_range_scan (née
IndexBuildHeapScan) and the table lock being held allows concurrent data
changes, it is possible for new HOT chains to sprout in a page that were
unknown when the scan of a page happened.  This leads to an error such
as
  ERROR:  failed to find parent tuple for heap-only tuple at (X,Y) in table "tbl"
because the root tuple was not present when we first obtained the list
of the page's root tuples.  This can be fixed by re-obtaining the list
of root tuples, if we see that a heap-only tuple appears to point to a
non-existing root.

This was reported by Anastasia as occurring for BRIN summarization
(which exists since 9.5), but I think it could theoretically also happen
with CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY (much older) or REINDEX CONCURRENTLY
(very recent).  It seems a happy coincidence that BRIN forces us to
backpatch this all the way to 9.5.

Reported-by: Anastasia Lubennikova <a.lubennikova@postgrespro.ru>
Diagnosed-by: Anastasia Lubennikova <a.lubennikova@postgrespro.ru>
Co-authored-by: Anastasia Lubennikova <a.lubennikova@postgrespro.ru>
Co-authored-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/602d8487-f0b2-5486-0088-0f372b2549fa@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch: 9.5 - master
2020-08-13 17:33:49 -04:00
Andres Freund b8443eae72 Fix out-of-date version reference, grammar.
Time appears to be passing fast.

Reported-By: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
2020-08-12 17:04:51 -07:00
Andres Freund dc7420c2c9 snapshot scalability: Don't compute global horizons while building snapshots.
To make GetSnapshotData() more scalable, it cannot not look at at each proc's
xmin: While snapshot contents do not need to change whenever a read-only
transaction commits or a snapshot is released, a proc's xmin is modified in
those cases. The frequency of xmin modifications leads to, particularly on
higher core count systems, many cache misses inside GetSnapshotData(), despite
the data underlying a snapshot not changing. That is the most
significant source of GetSnapshotData() scaling poorly on larger systems.

Without accessing xmins, GetSnapshotData() cannot calculate accurate horizons /
thresholds as it has so far. But we don't really have to: The horizons don't
actually change that much between GetSnapshotData() calls. Nor are the horizons
actually used every time a snapshot is built.

The trick this commit introduces is to delay computation of accurate horizons
until there use and using horizon boundaries to determine whether accurate
horizons need to be computed.

The use of RecentGlobal[Data]Xmin to decide whether a row version could be
removed has been replaces with new GlobalVisTest* functions.  These use two
thresholds to determine whether a row can be pruned:
1) definitely_needed, indicating that rows deleted by XIDs >= definitely_needed
   are definitely still visible.
2) maybe_needed, indicating that rows deleted by XIDs < maybe_needed can
   definitely be removed
GetSnapshotData() updates definitely_needed to be the xmin of the computed
snapshot.

When testing whether a row can be removed (with GlobalVisTestIsRemovableXid())
and the tested XID falls in between the two (i.e. XID >= maybe_needed && XID <
definitely_needed) the boundaries can be recomputed to be more accurate. As it
is not cheap to compute accurate boundaries, we limit the number of times that
happens in short succession.  As the boundaries used by
GlobalVisTestIsRemovableXid() are never reset (with maybe_needed updated by
GetSnapshotData()), it is likely that further test can benefit from an earlier
computation of accurate horizons.

To avoid regressing performance when old_snapshot_threshold is set (as that
requires an accurate horizon to be computed), heap_page_prune_opt() doesn't
unconditionally call TransactionIdLimitedForOldSnapshots() anymore. Both the
computation of the limited horizon, and the triggering of errors (with
SetOldSnapshotThresholdTimestamp()) is now only done when necessary to remove
tuples.

This commit just removes the accesses to PGXACT->xmin from
GetSnapshotData(), but other members of PGXACT residing in the same
cache line are accessed. Therefore this in itself does not result in a
significant improvement. Subsequent commits will take advantage of the
fact that GetSnapshotData() now does not need to access xmins anymore.

Note: This contains a workaround in heap_page_prune_opt() to keep the
snapshot_too_old tests working. While that workaround is ugly, the tests
currently are not meaningful, and it seems best to address them separately.

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200301083601.ews6hz5dduc3w2se@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-08-12 16:03:49 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera 1f42d35a1d
BRIN: Handle concurrent desummarization properly
If a page range is desummarized at just the right time concurrently with
an index walk, BRIN would raise an error indicating index corruption.
This is scary and unhelpful; silently returning that the page range is
not summarized is sufficient reaction.

This bug was introduced by commit 975ad4e602 as additional protection
against a bug whose actual fix was elsewhere.  Backpatch equally.

Reported-By: Anastasia Lubennikova <a.lubennikova@postgrespro.ru>
Diagnosed-By: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2588667e-d07d-7e10-74e2-7e1e46194491@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch: 9.5 - master
2020-08-12 15:33:36 -04:00
Tom Lane 3546cf8a7a Improve comments for postmaster.c's BackendList.
This had gotten a little disjointed over time, and some of the grammar
was sloppy.  Rewrite for more clarity.

In passing, re-pgindent some recently added comments.

No code changes.
2020-08-12 11:54:16 -04:00
Andres Freund 3bd7f9969a Track latest completed xid as a FullTransactionId.
The reason for doing so is that a subsequent commit will need that to
avoid wraparound issues. As the subsequent change is large this was
split out for easier review.

The reason this is not a perfect straight-forward change is that we do
not want track 64bit xids in the procarray or the WAL. Therefore we
need to advance lastestCompletedXid in relation to 32 bit xids. The
code for that is now centralized in MaintainLatestCompletedXid*.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Thomas Munro, Robert Haas, David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200301083601.ews6hz5dduc3w2se@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-08-11 17:41:18 -07:00
Andres Freund fea10a6434 Rename VariableCacheData.nextFullXid to nextXid.
Including Full in variable names duplicates the type information and
leads to overly long names. As FullTransactionId cannot accidentally
be casted to TransactionId that does not seem necessary.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200724011143.jccsyvsvymuiqfxu@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-08-11 12:07:14 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut 1784f278a6 Replace remaining StrNCpy() by strlcpy()
They are equivalent, except that StrNCpy() zero-fills the entire
destination buffer instead of providing just one trailing zero.  For
all but a tiny number of callers, that's just overhead rather than
being desirable.

Remove StrNCpy() as it is now unused.

In some cases, namestrcpy() is the more appropriate function to use.
While we're here, simplify the API of namestrcpy(): Remove the return
value, don't check for NULL input.  Nothing was using that anyway.
Also, remove a few unused name-related functions.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/44f5e198-36f6-6cdb-7fa9-60e34784daae%402ndquadrant.com
2020-08-10 23:20:37 +02:00
Noah Misch 11da97024a Empty search_path in logical replication apply worker and walsender.
This is like CVE-2018-1058 commit
582edc369c.  Today, a malicious user of a
publisher or subscriber database can invoke arbitrary SQL functions
under an identity running replication, often a superuser.  This fix may
cause "does not exist" or "no schema has been selected to create in"
errors in a replication process.  After upgrading, consider watching
server logs for these errors.  Objects accruing schema qualification in
the wake of the earlier commit are unlikely to need further correction.
Back-patch to v10, which introduced logical replication.

Security: CVE-2020-14349
2020-08-10 09:22:54 -07:00
Tom Lane 7eeb1d9861 Make contrib modules' installation scripts more secure.
Hostile objects located within the installation-time search_path could
capture references in an extension's installation or upgrade script.
If the extension is being installed with superuser privileges, this
opens the door to privilege escalation.  While such hazards have existed
all along, their urgency increases with the v13 "trusted extensions"
feature, because that lets a non-superuser control the installation path
for a superuser-privileged script.  Therefore, make a number of changes
to make such situations more secure:

* Tweak the construction of the installation-time search_path to ensure
that references to objects in pg_catalog can't be subverted; and
explicitly add pg_temp to the end of the path to prevent attacks using
temporary objects.

* Disable check_function_bodies within installation/upgrade scripts,
so that any security gaps in SQL-language or PL-language function bodies
cannot create a risk of unwanted installation-time code execution.

* Adjust lookup of type input/receive functions and join estimator
functions to complain if there are multiple candidate functions.  This
prevents capture of references to functions whose signature is not the
first one checked; and it's arguably more user-friendly anyway.

* Modify various contrib upgrade scripts to ensure that catalog
modification queries are executed with secure search paths.  (These
are in-place modifications with no extension version changes, since
it is the update process itself that is at issue, not the end result.)

Extensions that depend on other extensions cannot be made fully secure
by these methods alone; therefore, revert the "trusted" marking that
commit eb67623c9 applied to earthdistance and hstore_plperl, pending
some better solution to that set of issues.

Also add documentation around these issues, to help extension authors
write secure installation scripts.

Patch by me, following an observation by Andres Freund; thanks
to Noah Misch for review.

Security: CVE-2020-14350
2020-08-10 10:44:42 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan d129c07499 Correct nbtree page split lock coupling comment.
There is no reason to distinguish between readers and writers here.
2020-08-09 12:01:15 -07:00
Tom Lane 1c164ef3d2 Remove useless Assert.
Testing that an unsigned variable is >= 0 is pretty pointless,
as noted by Coverity and numerous buildfarm members.

In passing, add comment about new uses of "volatile" --- Coverity
doesn't much like that either, but it seems probably necessary.
2020-08-09 11:32:31 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 470687b4a5
walsnd: Don't set waiting_for_ping_response spuriously
Ashutosh Bapat noticed that when logical walsender needs to wait for
WAL, and it realizes that it must send a keepalive message to
walreceiver to update the sent-LSN, which *does not* request a reply
from walreceiver, it wrongly sets the flag that it's going to wait for
that reply.  That means that any future would-be sender of feedback
messages ends up not sending a feedback message, because they all
believe that a reply is expected.

With built-in logical replication there's not much harm in this, because
WalReceiverMain will send a ping-back every wal_receiver_timeout/2
anyway; but with other logical replication systems (e.g. pglogical) it
can cause significant pain.

This problem was introduced in commit 41d5f8ad73, where the
request-reply flag was changed from true to false to WalSndKeepalive,
without at the same time removing the line that sets
waiting_for_ping_response.

Just removing that line would be a sufficient fix, but it seems better
to shift the responsibility of setting the flag to WalSndKeepalive
itself instead of requiring caller to do it; this is clearly less
error-prone.

Author: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Reported-by: Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat@2ndquadrant.com>
Backpatch: 9.5 and up
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200806225558.GA22401@alvherre.pgsql
2020-08-08 12:31:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a13421c96c Add some const decorations 2020-08-08 07:31:52 +02:00
Amit Kapila 7259736a6e Implement streaming mode in ReorderBuffer.
Instead of serializing the transaction to disk after reaching the
logical_decoding_work_mem limit in memory, we consume the changes we have
in memory and invoke stream API methods added by commit 45fdc9738b.
However, sometimes if we have incomplete toast or speculative insert we
spill to the disk because we can't generate the complete tuple and stream.
And, as soon as we get the complete tuple we stream the transaction
including the serialized changes.

We can do this incremental processing thanks to having assignments
(associating subxact with toplevel xacts) in WAL right away, and
thanks to logging the invalidation messages at each command end. These
features are added by commits 0bead9af48 and c55040ccd0 respectively.

Now that we can stream in-progress transactions, the concurrent aborts
may cause failures when the output plugin consults catalogs (both system
and user-defined).

We handle such failures by returning ERRCODE_TRANSACTION_ROLLBACK
sqlerrcode from system table scan APIs to the backend or WALSender
decoding a specific uncommitted transaction. The decoding logic on the
receipt of such a sqlerrcode aborts the decoding of the current
transaction and continue with the decoding of other transactions.

We have ReorderBufferTXN pointer in each ReorderBufferChange by which we
know which xact it belongs to.  The output plugin can use this to decide
which changes to discard in case of stream_abort_cb (e.g. when a subxact
gets discarded).

We also provide a new option via SQL APIs to fetch the changes being
streamed.

Author: Dilip Kumar, Tomas Vondra, Amit Kapila, Nikhil Sontakke
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila, Kuntal Ghosh, Ajin Cherian
Tested-by: Neha Sharma, Mahendra Singh Thalor and Ajin Cherian
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/688b0b7f-2f6c-d827-c27b-216a8e3ea700@2ndquadrant.com
2020-08-08 07:47:06 +05:30
Peter Geoghegan 0a7d771f0f Make nbtree split REDO locking match original execution.
Make the nbtree page split REDO routine consistent with original
execution in its approach to acquiring and releasing buffer locks (at
least for pages on the tree level of the page being split).  This brings
btree_xlog_split() in line with btree_xlog_unlink_page(), which was
taught to couple buffer locks by commit 9a9db08a.

Note that the precise order in which we both acquire and release sibling
buffer locks in btree_xlog_split() now matches original execution
exactly (the precise order in which the locks are released probably
doesn't matter much, but we might as well be consistent about it).

The rule for nbtree REDO routines from here on is that same-level locks
should be acquired in an order that's consistent with original
execution.  It's not practical to have a similar rule for cross-level
page locks, since for the most part original execution holds those locks
for a period that spans multiple atomic actions/WAL records.  It's also
not necessary, because clearly the cross-level lock coupling is only
truly needed during original execution because of the presence of
concurrent inserters.

This is not a bug fix (unlike the similar aforementioned commit, commit
9a9db08a).  The immediate reason to tighten things up in this area is to
enable an upcoming enhancement to contrib/amcheck that allows it to
verify that sibling links are in agreement with only an AccessShareLock
(this check produced false positives when run on a replica server on
account of the inconsistency fixed by this commit).  But that's not the
only reason to be stricter here.

It is generally useful to make locking on replicas be as close to what
happens during original execution as practically possible.  It makes it
less likely that hard to catch bugs will slip in in the future.  The
previous state of affairs seems to be a holdover from before the
introduction of Hot Standby, when buffer lock acquisitions during
recovery were totally unnecessary.  See also: commit 3bbf668d, which
tightened things up in this area a few years after the introduction of
Hot Standby.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=465cJj11YXD9RKH8z=nhQa2dofOZ_23h67EXUGOJ00Q@mail.gmail.com
2020-08-07 15:27:56 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera cea3d55898
Remove PROC_IN_ANALYZE and derived flags
These flags are unused and always have been.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200805235549.GA8118@alvherre.pgsql
2020-08-07 17:24:40 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 3df92bbd1d Rename nbtree split REDO routine variables.
Make the nbtree page split REDO routine variable names consistent with
_bt_split() (which handles the original execution of page splits).
These names make the code easier to follow by making the distinction
between the original page and the left half of the split clear.  (The
left half of the split page is a temp page that REDO creates to replace
the origpage contents.)

Also reduce the elevel used when adding a new high key to the temp page
from PANIC to ERROR to be consistent.  We already only raise an ERROR
when data item PageAddItem() temp page calls fail.
2020-08-07 09:53:27 -07:00
Etsuro Fujita 199cec9779 Fix yet another issue with step generation in partition pruning.
Commit 13838740f fixed some issues with step generation in partition
pruning, but there was yet another one: get_steps_using_prefix() assumes
that clauses in the passed-in prefix list are sorted in ascending order
of their partition key numbers, but the caller failed to ensure this for
range partitioning, which led to an assertion failure in debug builds.
Adjust the caller function to arrange the clauses in the prefix list in
the required order for range partitioning.

Back-patch to v11, like the previous commit.

Patch by me, reviewed by Amit Langote.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPmGK16jkXiFG0YqMbU66wte-oJTfW6D1HaNvQf%3D%2B5o9%3Dm55wQ%40mail.gmail.com
2020-08-07 14:45:00 +09:00
David Rowley d5e96520ff Fix bogus EXPLAIN output for Hash Aggregate
9bdb300de modified the EXPLAIN output for Hash Aggregate to show details
from parallel workers. However, it neglected to consider that a given
parallel worker may not have assisted with the given Hash Aggregate. This
can occur when workers fail to start or during Parallel Append with
enable_partitionwise_join enabled when only a single worker is working on
a non-parallel aware sub-plan. It could also happen if a worker simply
wasn't fast enough to get any work done before other processes went and
finished all the work.

The bogus output came from the fact that ExplainOpenWorker() skipped
showing any details for non-initialized workers but show_hashagg_info()
did show details from the worker.  This meant that the worker properties
that were shown were not properly attributed to the worker that they
belong to.

In passing, we also now don't show Hash Aggregate properties for the
leader process when it did not contribute any work to the Hash Aggregate.
This can occur either during Parallel Append when only a parallel worker
worked on a given sub plan or with parallel_leader_participation set to
off.  This aims to make the behavior of Hash Aggregate's EXPLAIN output
more similar to Sort's.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200805012105.GZ28072%40telsasoft.com
Backpatch-through: 13, where the original breakage was introduced
2020-08-07 10:22:18 +12:00
Robert Haas bab150045b Register llvm_shutdown using on_proc_exit, not before_shmem_exit.
This seems more correct, because other before_shmem_exit calls may
expect the infrastructure that is needed to run queries and access the
database to be working, and also because this cleanup has nothing to
do with shared memory.

There are no known user-visible consequences to this, though, apart
from what was previous fixed by commit
303640199d and back-patched as commit
bcbc27251d and commit
f7013683d9, so for now, no back-patch.

Bharath Rupireddy

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACWk7j4F2v2fxxYfrroOF=AdFNPr1WsV+AGtHAFQOqm_pw@mail.gmail.com
2020-08-06 14:13:03 -04:00
Tom Lane 7a980dfc6c Fix matching of sub-partitions when a partitioned plan is stale.
Since we no longer require AccessExclusiveLock to add a partition,
the executor may see that a partitioned table has more partitions
than the planner saw.  ExecCreatePartitionPruneState's code for
matching up the partition lists in such cases was faulty, and would
misbehave if the planner had successfully pruned any partitions from
the query.  (Thus, trouble would occur only if a partition addition
happens concurrently with a query that uses both static and dynamic
partition pruning.)  This led to an Assert failure in debug builds,
and probably to crashes or query misbehavior in production builds.

To repair the bug, just explicitly skip zeroes in the plan's
relid_map[] list.  I also made some cosmetic changes to make the code
more readable (IMO anyway).  Also, convert the cross-checking Assert
to a regular test-and-elog, since it's now apparent that this logic
is more fragile than one would like.

Currently, there's no way to repeatably exercise this code, except
with manual use of a debugger to stop the backend between planning
and execution.  Hence, no test case in this patch.  We oughta do
something about that testability gap, but that's for another day.

Amit Langote and Tom Lane, per report from Justin Pryzby.  Oversight
in commit 898e5e329; backpatch to v12 where that appeared.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200802181131.GA27754@telsasoft.com
2020-08-05 15:38:55 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov f47b5e1395 Remove btree page items after page unlink
Currently, page unlink leaves remaining items "as is", but replay of
corresponding WAL-record re-initializes page leaving it with no items.
For the sake of consistency, this commit makes primary delete all the items
during page unlink as well.

Thanks to this change, we now don't mask contents of deleted btree page for
WAL consistency checking.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPpHfdt_OTyQpXaPJcWzV2N-LNeNJseNB-K_A66qG%3DL518VTFw%40mail.gmail.com
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan
2020-08-05 02:16:13 +03:00
Peter Geoghegan 9a9db08ae4 Fix replica backward scan race condition.
It was possible for the logic used by backward scans (which must reason
about concurrent page splits/deletions in its own peculiar way) to
become confused when running on a replica.  Concurrent replay of a WAL
record that describes the second phase of page deletion could cause
_bt_walk_left() to get confused.  btree_xlog_unlink_page() simply failed
to adhere to the same locking protocol that we use on the primary, which
is obviously wrong once you consider these two disparate functions
together.  This bug is present in all stable branches.

More concretely, the problem was that nothing stopped _bt_walk_left()
from observing inconsistencies between the deletion's target page and
its original sibling pages when running on a replica.  This is true even
though the second phase of page deletion is supposed to work as a single
atomic action.  Queries running on replicas raised "could not find left
sibling of block %u in index %s" can't-happen errors when they went back
to their scan's "original" page and observed that the page has not been
marked deleted (even though it really was concurrently deleted).

There is no evidence that this actually happened in the real world.  The
issue came to light during unrelated feature development work.  Note
that _bt_walk_left() is the only code that cares about the difference
between a half-dead page and a fully deleted page that isn't also
exclusively used by nbtree VACUUM (unless you include contrib/amcheck
code).  It seems very likely that backward scans are the only thing that
could become confused by the inconsistency.  Even amcheck's complex
bt_right_page_check_scankey() dance was unaffected.

To fix, teach btree_xlog_unlink_page() to lock the left sibling, target,
and right sibling pages in that order before releasing any locks (just
like _bt_unlink_halfdead_page()).  This is the simplest possible
approach.  There doesn't seem to be any opportunity to be more clever
about lock acquisition in the REDO routine, and it hardly seems worth
the trouble in any case.

This fix might enable contrib/amcheck verification of leaf page sibling
links with only an AccessShareLock on the relation.  An amcheck patch
from Andrey Borodin was rejected back in January because it clashed with
btree_xlog_unlink_page()'s lax approach to locking pages.  It now seems
likely that the real problem was with btree_xlog_unlink_page(), not the
patch.

This is a low severity, low likelihood bug, so no backpatch.

Author: Michail Nikolaev
Diagnosed-By: Michail Nikolaev
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANtu0ohkR-evAWbpzJu54V8eCOtqjJyYp3PQ_SGoBTRGXWhWRw@mail.gmail.com
2020-08-03 15:54:38 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan a451b7d442 Add nbtree page deletion assertion.
Add a documenting assertion that's similar to the nearby assertion added
by commit cd8c73a3.  This conveys that the entire call to _bt_pagedel()
does no work if it isn't possible to get a descent stack for the initial
scanblkno page.
2020-08-03 13:04:42 -07:00
Michael Paquier b8fdee7d0c Add %P to log_line_prefix for parallel group leader
This is useful for monitoring purposes with log parsing.  Similarly to
pg_stat_activity, the leader's PID is shown only for active parallel
workers, minimizing the log footprint for the leaders as the equivalent
shared memory field is set as long as a backend is alive.

Author: Justin Pryzby
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, Michael Paquier, Julien Rouhaud, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200315111831.GA21492@telsasoft.com
2020-08-03 13:38:48 +09:00
David Rowley 6ee3b5fb99 Use int64 instead of long in incremental sort code
Windows 64bit has 4-byte long values which is not suitable for tracking
disk space usage in the incremental sort code. Let's just make all these
fields int64s.

Author: James Coleman
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvpky%2BUhof8mryPf5i%3D6e6fib2dxHqBrhp0Qhu0NeBhLJw%40mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13, where the incremental sort code was added
2020-08-02 14:24:46 +12:00
Noah Misch cd5e82256d Change XID and mxact limits to warn at 40M and stop at 3M.
We have edge-case bugs when assigning values in the last few dozen pages
before the wrap limit.  We may introduce similar bugs in the future.  At
default BLCKSZ, this makes such bugs unreachable outside of single-user
mode.  Also, when VACUUM began to consume mxacts, multiStopLimit did not
change to compensate.

pg_upgrade may fail on a cluster that was already printing "must be
vacuumed" warnings.  Follow the warning's instructions to clear the
warning, then run pg_upgrade again.  One can still, peacefully consume
98% of XIDs or mxacts, so DBAs need not change routine VACUUM settings.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200621083513.GA3074645@rfd.leadboat.com
2020-08-01 15:31:01 -07:00
Tom Lane 9f9682783b Invent "amadjustmembers" AM method for validating opclass members.
This allows AM-specific knowledge to be applied during creation of
pg_amop and pg_amproc entries.  Specifically, the AM knows better than
core code which entries to consider as required or optional.  Giving
the latter entries the appropriate sort of dependency allows them to
be dropped without taking out the whole opclass or opfamily; which
is something we'd like to have to correct obsolescent entries in
extensions.

This callback also opens the door to performing AM-specific validity
checks during opclass creation, rather than hoping than an opclass
developer will remember to test with "amvalidate".  For the most part
I've not actually added any such checks yet; that can happen in a
follow-on patch.  (Note that we shouldn't remove any tests from
"amvalidate", as those are still needed to cross-check manually
constructed entries in the initdb data.  So adding tests to
"amadjustmembers" will be somewhat duplicative, but it seems like
a good idea anyway.)

Patch by me, reviewed by Alexander Korotkov, Hamid Akhtar, and
Anastasia Lubennikova.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4578.1565195302@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-08-01 17:12:47 -04:00
Thomas Munro e2b37d9e7c Use pg_pread() and pg_pwrite() in slru.c.
This avoids lseek() system calls at every SLRU I/O, as was
done for relation files in commit c24dcd0c.

Reviewed-by: Ashwin Agrawal <aagrawal@pivotal.io>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2Biqke4uTRFj8D8uEUUgj%2BRokPSp%2BCWM6YYzaaamG9Wvg%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJ%2BoHhnvqjn3%3DHro7xu-YDR8FPr0FL6LF35kHRX%3D_bUzg%40mail.gmail.com
2020-08-02 00:23:35 +12:00
Michael Paquier 022350b849 Minimize slot creation for multi-inserts of pg_shdepend
When doing multiple insertions in pg_shdepend for the copy of
dependencies from a template database in CREATE DATABASE, the same
number of slots would have been created and used all the time.  As the
number of items to insert is not known in advance, this makes most of
the slots created for nothing.  This improves the slot handling so as
slot creation only happens when needed, minimizing the overhead of the
operation.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200731024148.GB3317@paquier.xyz
2020-08-01 11:49:13 +09:00
Thomas Munro 84c0e4b9bc Improve programmer docs for simplehash and dynahash.
When reading the code it's not obvious when one should prefer dynahash
over simplehash and vice-versa, so, for programmer-friendliness, add
comments to inform that decision.

Show sample simplehash method signatures.

Author: James Coleman <jtc331@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAaqYe_dOF39gAJ8rL-a3YO3Qo96MHMRQ2whFjK5ZcU6YvMQSA%40mail.gmail.com
2020-08-01 12:16:15 +12:00
Tom Lane 3d2376d55c Fix oversight in ALTER TYPE: typmodin/typmodout must propagate to arrays.
If a base type supports typmods, its array type does too, with the
same interpretation.  Hence changes in pg_type.typmodin/typmodout
must be propagated to the array type.

While here, improve AlterTypeRecurse to not recurse to domains if
there is nothing we'd need to change.

Oversight in fe30e7ebf.  Back-patch to v13 where that came in.
2020-07-31 17:11:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 78e73e8754 Fix recently-introduced performance problem in ts_headline().
The new hlCover() algorithm that I introduced in commit c9b0c678d
turns out to potentially take O(N^2) or worse time on long documents,
if there are many occurrences of individual query words but few or no
substrings that actually satisfy the query.  (One way to hit this
behavior is with a "common_word & rare_word" type of query.)  This
seems unavoidable given the original goal of checking every substring
of the document, so we have to back off that idea.  Fortunately, it
seems unlikely that anyone would really want headlines spanning all of
a long document, so we can avoid the worse-than-linear behavior by
imposing a maximum length of substring that we'll consider.

For now, just hard-wire that maximum length as a multiple of max_words
times max_fragments.  Perhaps at some point somebody will argue for
exposing it as a ts_headline parameter, but I'm hesitant to make such
a feature addition in a back-patched bug fix.

I also noted that the hlFirstIndex() function I'd added in that
commit was unnecessarily stupid: it really only needs to check whether
a HeadlineWordEntry's item pointer is null or not.  This wouldn't make
all that much difference in typical cases with queries having just
a few terms, but a cycle shaved is a cycle earned.

In addition, add a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS call in TS_execute_recurse.
This ensures that hlCover's loop is cancellable if it manages to take
a long time, and it may protect some other TS_execute callers as well.

Back-patch to 9.6 as the previous commit was.  I also chose to add the
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS call to 9.5.  The old hlCover() algorithm seems
to avoid the O(N^2) behavior, at least on the test case I tried, but
nonetheless it's not very quick on a long document.

Per report from Stephen Frost.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200724160535.GW12375@tamriel.snowman.net
2020-07-31 11:43:12 -04:00
Thomas Munro 7be04496a9 Fix compiler warning from Clang.
Per build farm.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200731062626.GD3317%40paquier.xyz
2020-07-31 19:08:09 +12:00
Thomas Munro 84b1c63ad4 Preallocate some DSM space at startup.
Create an optional region in the main shared memory segment that can be
used to acquire and release "fast" DSM segments, and can benefit from
huge pages allocated at cluster startup time, if configured.  Fall back
to the existing mechanisms when that space is full.  The size is
controlled by a new GUC min_dynamic_shared_memory, defaulting to 0.

Main region DSM segments initially contain whatever garbage the memory
held last time they were used, rather than zeroes.  That change revealed
that DSA areas failed to initialize themselves correctly in memory that
wasn't zeroed first, so fix that problem.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGLAE2QBv-WgGp%2BD9P_J-%3Dyne3zof9nfMaqq1h3EGHFXYQ%40mail.gmail.com
2020-07-31 17:49:58 +12:00
Thomas Munro c5315f4f44 Cache smgrnblocks() results in recovery.
Avoid repeatedly calling lseek(SEEK_END) during recovery by caching
the size of each fork.  For now, we can't use the same technique in
other processes, because we lack a shared invalidation mechanism.

Do this by generalizing the pre-existing caching used by FSM and VM
to support all forks.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm%3D3SSw-Ty1DFcK%3D1rU-K6GSzYzfdD4d%2BZwapdN7dTa6%3DnQ%40mail.gmail.com
2020-07-31 14:29:52 +12:00
Michael Paquier e3931d01f3 Use multi-inserts for pg_attribute and pg_shdepend
For pg_attribute, this allows to insert at once a full set of attributes
for a relation (roughly 15% of WAL reduction in extreme cases).  For
pg_shdepend, this reduces the work done when creating new shared
dependencies from a database template.  The number of slots used for the
insertion is capped at 64kB of data inserted for both, depending on the
number of items to insert and the length of the rows involved.

More can be done for other catalogs, like pg_depend.  This part requires
a different approach as the number of slots to use depends also on the
number of entries discarded as pinned dependencies.  This is also
related to the rework or dependency handling for ALTER TABLE and CREATE
TABLE, mainly.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190213182737.mxn6hkdxwrzgxk35@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-07-31 10:54:26 +09:00
Jeff Davis fd734f387d Use pg_bitutils for HyperLogLog.
Using pg_leftmost_one_post32() yields substantial performance benefits.

Backpatching to version 13 because HLL is used for HashAgg
improvements in 9878b643, which was also backpatched to 13.

Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkGvDKVDo+0YvfvZ+1CE=iCi88DCOGFF3i1hTGGaxcKPw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13
2020-07-30 09:14:23 -07:00
Thomas Munro e7591fd3ca Introduce a WaitEventSet for the stats collector.
This avoids avoids some epoll/kqueue system calls for every wait.

Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJAC4Oqao%3DqforhNey20J8CiG2R%3DoBPqvfR0vOJrFysGw%40mail.gmail.com
2020-07-30 17:44:28 +12:00
Thomas Munro e2d394df5d Use WaitLatch() for condition variables.
Previously, condition_variable.c created a long lived WaitEventSet to
avoid extra system calls.  WaitLatch() now uses something similar
internally, so there is no point in wasting an extra kernel descriptor.

Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJAC4Oqao%3DqforhNey20J8CiG2R%3DoBPqvfR0vOJrFysGw%40mail.gmail.com
2020-07-30 17:42:45 +12:00
Thomas Munro 3347c982ba Use a long lived WaitEventSet for WaitLatch().
Create LatchWaitSet at backend startup time, and use it to implement
WaitLatch().  This avoids repeated epoll/kqueue setup and teardown
system calls.

Reorder SubPostmasterMain() slightly so that we restore the postmaster
pipe and Windows signal emulation before we reach InitPostmasterChild(),
to make this work in EXEC_BACKEND builds.

Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJAC4Oqao%3DqforhNey20J8CiG2R%3DoBPqvfR0vOJrFysGw%40mail.gmail.com
2020-07-30 17:40:00 +12:00
Peter Geoghegan d6c08e29e7 Add hash_mem_multiplier GUC.
Add a GUC that acts as a multiplier on work_mem.  It gets applied when
sizing executor node hash tables that were previously size constrained
using work_mem alone.

The new GUC can be used to preferentially give hash-based nodes more
memory than the generic work_mem limit.  It is intended to enable admin
tuning of the executor's memory usage.  Overall system throughput and
system responsiveness can be improved by giving hash-based executor
nodes more memory (especially over sort-based alternatives, which are
often much less sensitive to being memory constrained).

The default value for hash_mem_multiplier is 1.0, which is also the
minimum valid value.  This means that hash-based nodes continue to apply
work_mem in the traditional way by default.

hash_mem_multiplier is generally useful.  However, it is being added now
due to concerns about hash aggregate performance stability for users
that upgrade to Postgres 13 (which added disk-based hash aggregation in
commit 1f39bce0).  While the old hash aggregate behavior risked
out-of-memory errors, it is nevertheless likely that many users actually
benefited.  Hash agg's previous indifference to work_mem during query
execution was not just faster; it also accidentally made aggregation
resilient to grouping estimate problems (at least in cases where this
didn't create destabilizing memory pressure).

hash_mem_multiplier can provide a certain kind of continuity with the
behavior of Postgres 12 hash aggregates in cases where the planner
incorrectly estimates that all groups (plus related allocations) will
fit in work_mem/hash_mem.  This seems necessary because hash-based
aggregation is usually much slower when only a small fraction of all
groups can fit.  Even when it isn't possible to totally avoid hash
aggregates that spill, giving hash aggregation more memory will reliably
improve performance (the same cannot be said for external sort
operations, which appear to be almost unaffected by memory availability
provided it's at least possible to get a single merge pass).

The PostgreSQL 13 release notes should advise users that increasing
hash_mem_multiplier can help with performance regressions associated
with hash aggregation.  That can be taken care of by a later commit.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
Reviewed-By: Álvaro Herrera, Jeff Davis
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200625203629.7m6yvut7eqblgmfo@alap3.anarazel.de
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzmD%2Bi1pG6rc1%2BCjc4V6EaFJ_qSuKCCHVnH%3DoruqD-zqow%40mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 13-, where disk-based hash aggregation was introduced.
2020-07-29 14:14:58 -07:00
Fujii Masao b5310e4ff6 Remove non-fast promotion.
When fast promotion was supported in 9.3, non-fast promotion became
undocumented feature and it's basically not available for ordinary users.
However we decided not to remove non-fast promotion at that moment,
to leave it for a release or two for debugging purpose or as an emergency
method because fast promotion might have some issues, and then to
remove it later. Now, several versions were released since that decision
and there is no longer reason to keep supporting non-fast promotion.
Therefore this commit removes non-fast promotion.

Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Hamid Akhtar, Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/76066434-648f-f567-437b-54853b43398f@oss.nttdata.com
2020-07-29 21:24:26 +09:00
Jeff Davis 9878b643f3 HashAgg: use better cardinality estimate for recursive spilling.
Use HyperLogLog to estimate the group cardinality in a spilled
partition. This estimate is used to choose the number of partitions if
we recurse.

The previous behavior was to use the number of tuples in a spilled
partition as the estimate for the number of groups, which lead to
overpartitioning. That could cause the number of batches to be much
higher than expected (with each batch being very small), which made it
harder to interpret EXPLAIN ANALYZE results.

Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a856635f9284bc36f7a77d02f47bbb6aaf7b59b3.camel@j-davis.com
Backpatch-through: 13
2020-07-28 23:16:28 -07:00
Michael Paquier f2130e77da Fix incorrect print format in json.c
Oid is unsigned, so %u needs to be used and not %d.  The code path
involved here is not normally reachable, so no backpatch is done.

Author: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200728015523.GA27308@telsasoft.com
2020-07-29 14:44:32 +09:00
Thomas Munro cb04ad4985 Move syncscan.c to src/backend/access/common.
Since the tableam.c code needs to make use of the syncscan.c routines
itself, and since other block-oriented AMs might also want to use it one
day, it didn't make sense for it to live under src/backend/access/heap.

Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGLCnG%3DNEAByg6bk%2BCT9JZD97Y%3DAxKhh27Su9FeGWOKvDg%40mail.gmail.com
2020-07-29 16:59:33 +12:00
Peter Geoghegan c49c74d192 Rename another "hash_mem" local variable.
Missed by my commit 564ce621.

Backpatch: 13-, where disk-based hash aggregation was introduced.
2020-07-28 17:59:16 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan b1d79127ed Correct obsolete UNION hash aggs comment.
Oversight in commit 1f39bce0, which added disk-based hash aggregation.

Backpatch: 13-, where disk-based hash aggregation was introduced.
2020-07-28 17:14:07 -07:00
David Rowley 0e3e1c4e1c Make EXPLAIN ANALYZE of HashAgg more similar to Hash Join
There were various unnecessary differences between Hash Agg's EXPLAIN
ANALYZE output and Hash Join's.  Here we modify the Hash Agg output so
that it's better aligned to Hash Join's.

The following changes have been made:
1. Start batches counter at 1 instead of 0.
2. Always display the "Batches" property, even when we didn't spill to
   disk.
3. Use the text "Batches" instead of "HashAgg Batches" for text format.
4. Use the text "Memory Usage" instead of "Peak Memory Usage" for text
   format.
5. Include "Batches" before "Memory Usage" in both text and non-text
   formats.

In passing also modify the "Planned Partitions" property so that we show
it regardless of if the value is 0 or not for non-text EXPLAIN formats.
This was pointed out by Justin Pryzby and probably should have been part
of 40efbf870.

Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby, Jeff Davis
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvrshRnA6C0VFnu7Fb9TVvgGo80PUMm5+2DiaS1gEkPvtw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13, where HashAgg batching was introduced
2020-07-29 11:42:21 +12:00
Amit Kapila 45fdc9738b Extend the logical decoding output plugin API with stream methods.
This adds seven methods to the output plugin API, adding support for
streaming changes of large in-progress transactions.

* stream_start
* stream_stop
* stream_abort
* stream_commit
* stream_change
* stream_message
* stream_truncate

Most of this is a simple extension of the existing methods, with
the semantic difference that the transaction (or subtransaction)
is incomplete and may be aborted later (which is something the
regular API does not really need to deal with).

This also extends the 'test_decoding' plugin, implementing these
new stream methods.

The stream_start/start_stop are used to demarcate a chunk of changes
streamed for a particular toplevel transaction.

This commit simply adds these new APIs and the upcoming patch to "allow
the streaming mode in ReorderBuffer" will use these APIs.

Author: Tomas Vondra, Dilip Kumar, Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Tested-by: Neha Sharma and Mahendra Singh Thalor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/688b0b7f-2f6c-d827-c27b-216a8e3ea700@2ndquadrant.com
2020-07-28 08:09:44 +05:30
Etsuro Fujita 13838740f6 Fix some issues with step generation in partition pruning.
In the case of range partitioning, get_steps_using_prefix() assumes that
the passed-in prefix list contains at least one clause for each of the
partition keys earlier than one specified in the passed-in
step_lastkeyno, but the caller (ie, gen_prune_steps_from_opexps())
didn't take it into account, which led to a server crash or incorrect
results when the list contained no clauses for such partition keys, as
reported in bug #16500 and #16501 from Kobayashi Hisanori.  Update the
caller to call that function only when the list created there contains
at least one clause for each of the earlier partition keys in the case
of range partitioning.

While at it, fix some other issues:

* The list to pass to get_steps_using_prefix() is allowed to contain
  multiple clauses for the same partition key, as described in the
  comment for that function, but that function actually assumed that the
  list contained just a single clause for each of middle partition keys,
  which led to an assertion failure when the list contained multiple
  clauses for such partition keys.  Update that function to match the
  comment.
* In the case of hash partitioning, partition keys are allowed to be
  NULL, in which case the list to pass to get_steps_using_prefix()
  contains no clauses for NULL partition keys, but that function treats
  that case as like the case of range partitioning, which led to the
  assertion failure.  Update the assertion test to take into account
  NULL partition keys in the case of hash partitioning.
* Fix a typo in a comment in get_steps_using_prefix_recurse().
* gen_partprune_steps() failed to detect self-contradiction from
  strict-qual clauses and an IS NULL clause for the same partition key
  in some cases, producing incorrect partition-pruning steps, which led
  to incorrect results of partition pruning, but didn't cause any
  user-visible problems fortunately, as the self-contradiction is
  detected later in the query planning.  Update that function to detect
  the self-contradiction.

Per bug #16500 and #16501 from Kobayashi Hisanori.  Patch by me, initial
diagnosis for the reported issue and review by Dmitry Dolgov.
Back-patch to v11, where partition pruning was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16500-d1613f2a78e1e090%40postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16501-5234a9a0394f6754%40postgresql.org
2020-07-28 11:00:00 +09:00
Peter Geoghegan bcbf9446a2 Remove hashagg_avoid_disk_plan GUC.
Note: This GUC was originally named enable_hashagg_disk when it appeared
in commit 1f39bce0, which added disk-based hash aggregation.  It was
subsequently renamed in commit 92c58fd9.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
Reviewed-By: Jeff Davis, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9d9d1e1252a52ea1bad84ea40dbebfd54e672a0f.camel%40j-davis.com
Backpatch: 13-, where disk-based hash aggregation was introduced.
2020-07-27 17:53:19 -07:00
Jeff Davis 200f6100a9 Fix LookupTupleHashEntryHash() pipeline-stall issue.
Refactor hash lookups in nodeAgg.c to improve performance.

Author: Andres Freund and Jeff Davis
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200612213715.op4ye4q7gktqvpuo%40alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch-through: 13
2020-07-26 15:09:46 -07:00
David Rowley 56788d2156 Allocate consecutive blocks during parallel seqscans
Previously we would allocate blocks to parallel workers during a parallel
sequential scan 1 block at a time.  Since other workers were likely to
request a block before a worker returns for another block number to work
on, this could lead to non-sequential I/O patterns in each worker which
could cause the operating system's readahead to perform poorly or not at
all.

Here we change things so that we allocate consecutive "chunks" of blocks
to workers and have them work on those until they're done, at which time
we allocate another chunk for the worker.  The size of these chunks is
based on the size of the relation.

Initial patch here was by Thomas Munro which showed some good improvements
just having a fixed chunk size of 64 blocks with a simple ramp-down near
the end of the scan. The revisions of the patch to make the chunk size
based on the relation size and the adjusted ramp-down in powers of two was
done by me, along with quite extensive benchmarking to determine the
optimal chunk sizes.

For the most part, benchmarks have shown significant performance
improvements for large parallel sequential scans on Linux, FreeBSD and
Windows using SSDs.  It's less clear how this affects the performance of
cloud providers.  Tests done so far are unable to obtain stable enough
performance to provide meaningful benchmark results.  It is possible that
this could cause some performance regressions on more obscure filesystems,
so we may need to later provide users with some ability to get something
closer to the old behavior.  For now, let's leave that until we see that
it's really required.

Author: Thomas Munro, David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Ranier Vilela, Soumyadeep Chakraborty, Robert Haas
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila, Kirk Jamison
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+hUKGJ_EErDv41YycXcbMbCBkztA34+z1ts9VQH+ACRuvpxig@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-26 21:02:45 +12:00
Michael Paquier 11a68e4b53 Tweak behavior of pg_stat_activity.leader_pid
The initial implementation of leader_pid in pg_stat_activity added by
b025f32 took the approach to strictly print what a PGPROC entry
includes.  In short, if a backend has been involved in parallel query at
least once, leader_pid would remain set as long as the backend is alive.
For a parallel group leader, this means that the field would always be
set after it participated at least once in parallel query, and after
more discussions this could be confusing if using for example a
connection pooler.

This commit changes the data printed so as leader_pid becomes always
NULL for a parallel group leader, showing up a non-NULL value only for
the parallel workers, and actually as long as a parallel query is
running as workers are shut down once the query has completed.

This does not change the definition of any catalog, so no catalog bump
is needed.  Per discussion with Justin Pryzby, Álvaro Herrera, Julien
Rouhaud and me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200721035145.GB17300@paquier.xyz
Backpatch-through: 13
2020-07-26 16:32:11 +09:00
Noah Misch ce4939ff70 Use RAND_poll() for seeding randomness after fork().
OpenSSL deprecated RAND_cleanup(), and OpenSSL 1.1.0 made it into a
no-op.  Replace it with RAND_poll(), per an OpenSSL community
recommendation.  While this has no user-visible consequences under
OpenSSL defaults, it might help under non-default settings.

Daniel Gustafsson, reviewed by David Steele and Michael Paquier.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9B038FA5-23E8-40D0-B932-D515E1D8F66A@yesql.se
2020-07-25 14:50:59 -07:00
Tom Lane 0a0727ccfc Improve performance of binary COPY FROM through better buffering.
At least on Linux and macOS, fread() turns out to have far higher
per-call overhead than one could wish.  Reading 64KB of data at a time
and then parceling it out with our own memcpy logic makes binary COPY
from a file significantly faster --- around 30% in simple testing for
cases with narrow text columns (on Linux ... even more on macOS).

In binary COPY from frontend, there's no per-call fread(), and this
patch introduces an extra layer of memcpy'ing, but it still manages
to eke out a small win.  Apparently, the control-logic overhead in
CopyGetData() is enough to be worth avoiding for small fetches.

Bharath Rupireddy and Amit Langote, reviewed by Vignesh C,
cosmetic tweaks by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACU5Bz06HWLwqSzNMN=Gupoj6Rcn_QVC+k070V4em9wu=A@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-25 16:34:35 -04:00
Amit Kapila 2a2494229a Fix buffer usage stats for nodes above Gather Merge.
Commit 85c9d347 addressed a similar problem for Gather and Gather
Merge nodes but forgot to account for nodes above parallel nodes.  This
still works for nodes above Gather node because we shut down the workers
for Gather node as soon as there are no more tuples.  We can do a similar
thing for Gather Merge as well but it seems better to account for stats
during nodes shutdown after completing the execution.

Reported-by: Stéphane Lorek, Jehan-Guillaume de Rorthais
Author: Jehan-Guillaume de Rorthais <jgdr@dalibo.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 10, where it was introduced
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200718160206.584532a2@firost
2020-07-25 10:20:39 +05:30
Tom Lane 79d6d1a277 Replace TS_execute's TS_EXEC_CALC_NOT flag with TS_EXEC_SKIP_NOT.
It's fairly silly that ignoring NOT subexpressions is TS_execute's
default behavior.  It's wrong on its face and it encourages errors
of omission.  Moreover, the only two remaining callers that aren't
specifying CALC_NOT are in ts_headline calculations, and it's very
arguable that those are bugs: if you've specified "!foo" in your
query, why would you want to get a headline that includes "foo"?

Hence, rip that out and change the default behavior to be to calculate
NOT accurately.  As a concession to the slim chance that there is still
somebody somewhere who needs the incorrect behavior, provide a new
SKIP_NOT flag to explicitly request that.

Back-patch into v13, mainly because it seems better to change this
at the same time as the previous commit's rejiggering of TS_execute
related APIs.  Any outside callers affected by this change are
probably also affected by that one.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALT9ZEE-aLotzBg-pOp2GFTesGWVYzXA3=mZKzRDa_OKnLF7Mg@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-24 15:43:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 2f2007fbb2 Fix assorted bugs by changing TS_execute's callback API to ternary logic.
Text search sometimes failed to find valid matches, for instance
'!crew:A'::tsquery might fail to locate 'crew:1B'::tsvector during
an index search.  The root of the issue is that TS_execute's callback
functions were not changed to use ternary (yes/no/maybe) reporting
when we made the search logic itself do so.  It's somewhat annoying
to break that API, but on the other hand we now see that any code
using plain boolean logic is almost certainly broken since the
addition of phrase search.  There seem to be very few outside callers
of this code anyway, so we'll just break them intentionally to get
them to adapt.

This allows removal of tsginidx.c's private re-implementation of
TS_execute, since that's now entirely duplicative.  It's also no
longer necessary to avoid use of CALC_NOT in tsgistidx.c, since
the underlying callbacks can now do something reasonable.

Back-patch into v13.  We can't change this in stable branches,
but it seems not quite too late to fix it in v13.

Tom Lane and Pavel Borisov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALT9ZEE-aLotzBg-pOp2GFTesGWVYzXA3=mZKzRDa_OKnLF7Mg@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-24 15:26:51 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 25244b8972 Rename configure.in to configure.ac
The new name has been preferred by Autoconf for a long time.  Future
versions of Autoconf will warn about the old name.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/e796c185-5ece-8569-248f-dd3799701be1%402ndquadrant.com
2020-07-24 10:42:08 +02:00
Thomas Munro 42dee8b8e3 Fix error message.
Remove extra space.  Back-patch to all releases, like commit 7897e3bb.

Author: Lu, Chenyang <lucy.fnst@cn.fujitsu.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/795d03c6129844d3803e7eea48f5af0d%40G08CNEXMBPEKD04.g08.fujitsu.local
2020-07-23 21:10:49 +12:00
Amit Kapila c55040ccd0 WAL Log invalidations at command end with wal_level=logical.
When wal_level=logical, write invalidations at command end into WAL so
that decoding can use this information.

This patch is required to allow the streaming of in-progress transactions
in logical decoding.  The actual work to allow streaming will be committed
as a separate patch.

We still add the invalidations to the cache and write them to WAL at
commit time in RecordTransactionCommit(). This uses the existing
XLOG_INVALIDATIONS xlog record type, from the RM_STANDBY_ID resource
manager (see LogStandbyInvalidations for details).

So existing code relying on those invalidations (e.g. redo) does not need
to be changed.

The invalidations written at command end uses a new xlog record type
XLOG_XACT_INVALIDATIONS, from RM_XACT_ID resource manager. See
LogLogicalInvalidations for details.

These new xlog records are ignored by existing redo procedures, which
still rely on the invalidations written to commit records.

The invalidations are decoded and accumulated in top-transaction, and then
executed during replay.  This obviates the need to decode the
invalidations as part of a commit record.

Bump XLOG_PAGE_MAGIC, since this introduces XLOG_XACT_INVALIDATIONS.

Author: Dilip Kumar, Tomas Vondra, Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Tested-by: Neha Sharma and Mahendra Singh Thalor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/688b0b7f-2f6c-d827-c27b-216a8e3ea700@2ndquadrant.com
2020-07-23 08:34:48 +05:30
Tom Lane a57d312a77 Support infinity and -infinity in the numeric data type.
Add infinities that behave the same as they do in the floating-point
data types.  Aside from any intrinsic usefulness these may have,
this closes an important gap in our ability to convert floating
values to numeric and/or replace float-based APIs with numeric.

The new values are represented by bit patterns that were formerly
not used (although old code probably would take them for NaNs).
So there shouldn't be any pg_upgrade hazard.

Patch by me, reviewed by Dean Rasheed and Andrew Gierth

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/606717.1591924582@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-07-22 19:19:44 -04:00
Thomas Munro a5073871ea Fix conversion table generator scripts.
convutils.pm used implicit conversion of undefined value to integer
zero.  Some of conversion scripts are susceptible to regexp greediness.
Fix, avoiding whitespace changes in the output.  Also update ICU URLs
that moved.

No need to back-patch, because the output of these scripts is also in
the source tree so we shouldn't need to rerun them on back-branches.

Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyoga.ntt@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJ7SEGLbj%3D%3DTQCcyKRA9aqj8%2B6L%3DexSq1y25TA%3DWxLziQ%40mail.gmail.com
2020-07-22 16:50:03 +12:00
Tom Lane bd0d893aa7 neqjoinsel must now pass through collation to eqjoinsel.
Since commit 044c99bc5, eqjoinsel passes the passed-in collation
to any operators it invokes.  However, neqjoinsel failed to pass
on whatever collation it got, so that if we invoked a
collation-dependent operator via that code path, we'd get "could not
determine which collation to use for string comparison" or the like.

Per report from Justin Pryzby.  Back-patch to v12, like the previous
commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200721191606.GL5748@telsasoft.com
2020-07-21 19:41:03 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 4a70f829d8 Add nbtree Valgrind buffer lock checks.
Holding just a buffer pin (with no buffer lock) on an nbtree buffer/page
provides very weak guarantees, especially compared to heapam, where it's
often safe to read a page while only holding a buffer pin.  This commit
has Valgrind enforce the following rule: it is never okay to access an
nbtree buffer without holding both a pin and a lock on the buffer.

A draft version of this patch detected questionable code that was
cleaned up by commits fa7ff642 and 7154aa16.  The code in question used
to access an nbtree buffer page's special/opaque area with no buffer
lock (only a buffer pin).  This practice (which isn't obviously unsafe)
is hereby formally disallowed in nbtree.  There doesn't seem to be any
reason to allow it, and banning it keeps things simple for Valgrind.

The new checks are implemented by adding custom nbtree client requests
(located in LockBuffer() wrapper functions); these requests are
"superimposed" on top of the generic bufmgr.c Valgrind client requests
added by commit 1e0dfd16.  No custom resource management cleanup code is
needed to undo the effects of marking buffers as non-accessible under
this scheme.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
Reviewed-By: Anastasia Lubennikova, Georgios Kokolatos
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkLgyN3zBvRZ1pkNJThC=xi_0gpWRUb_45eexLH1+k2_Q@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-21 15:50:58 -07:00
Tom Lane 670c0a1d47 Weaken type-OID-matching checks in array_recv and record_recv.
Rather than always insisting on an exact match of the type OID in the
data to the element type or column type we expect, complain only when
both OIDs fall within the manually-assigned range.  This acknowledges
the reality that user-defined types don't have stable OIDs, while
still preserving some of the mistake-detection value of the old test.

(It's not entirely clear whether to error if one OID is manually
assigned and the other isn't.  But perhaps that case could arise in
cross-version cases where a former extension type has been imported
into core, so I let it pass.)

This change allows us to remove the prohibition on binary transfer
of user-defined arrays and composites in the recently-landed support
for binary logical replication (commit 9de77b545).  We can just
unconditionally drop that check, since if the client has asked for
binary transfer it must be >= v14 and must have this change.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADK3HH+R3xMn=8t3Ct+uD+qJ1KD=Hbif5NFMJ+d5DkoCzp6Vgw@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-21 15:19:46 -04:00
Tom Lane fc032bed2f Be more careful about marking catalog columns NOT NULL by default.
The bug fixed in commit 72eab84a5 would not have occurred if initdb
had a less surprising rule about which columns should be marked
NOT NULL by default.  Let's make that rule be strictly that the
column must be fixed-width and its predecessors must be fixed-width
and NOT NULL, removing the hacky and unsafe exceptions for oidvector
and int2vector.

Since we do still want all existing oidvector and int2vector columns
to be marked NOT NULL, we have to put BKI_FORCE_NOT_NULL labels on
them.  But making this less magic and more documented seems like a
good idea, even if it's a shade more verbose.

I didn't bump catversion since the initial catalog contents are
not actually changed by this patch.  Note however that the
contents of postgres.bki do change, and feeding an old copy of
that to a new backend will produce wrong results.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/204760.1595181800@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-07-21 13:03:48 -04:00
Tom Lane 3e66019f15 Assert that we don't insert nulls into attnotnull catalog columns.
The executor checks for this error, and so does the bootstrap catalog
loader, but we never checked for it in retail catalog manipulations.
The folly of that has now been exposed, so let's add assertions
checking it.  Checking in CatalogTupleInsert[WithInfo] and
CatalogTupleUpdate[WithInfo] should be enough to cover this.

Back-patch to v10; the aforesaid functions didn't exist before that,
and it didn't seem worth adapting the patch to the oldest branches.
But given the risk of JIT crashes, I think we certainly need this
as far back as v11.

Pre-v13, we have to explicitly exclude pg_subscription.subslotname
and pg_subscription_rel.srsublsn from the checks, since they are
mismarked.  (Even if we change our mind about applying BKI_FORCE_NULL
in the branch tips, it doesn't seem wise to have assertions that
would fire in existing databases.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/298837.1595196283@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-07-21 12:38:08 -04:00
Tom Lane a4faef8f8f Fix some corner cases for window ranges with infinite offsets.
Many situations where the offset is infinity were not handled sanely.
We should generally allow the val versus base +/- offset comparison to
proceed according to the normal rules of IEEE arithmetic; however, we
must do something special for the corner cases where base +/- offset
would produce NaN due to subtracting two like-signed infinities.
That corresponds to asking which values infinitely precede +inf or
infinitely follow -inf, which should certainly be true of any finite
value or of the opposite-signed infinity.  After some discussion it
seems that the best decision is to make it true of the same-signed
infinity as well, ie, just return constant TRUE if the calculation
would produce a NaN.

(We could write this with a bit less code by subtracting anyway,
and then checking for a NaN result.  However, I prefer this
formulation because it'll be easier to transpose into numeric.c.)

Although this seems like clearly a bug fix with respect to finite
values, it is less obviously correct for infinite values.  Between
that and the fact that the whole issue only arises for very strange
window specifications (e.g. RANGE BETWEEN 'inf' PRECEDING AND 'inf'
PRECEDING), I'll desist from back-patching.

Noted by Dean Rasheed.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3393130.1594925893@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-07-20 22:03:18 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 6ca7cd89a2 Assert that buffer is pinned in LockBuffer().
Strengthen the LockBuffer() assertion that verifies BufferIsValid() by
making it verify BufferIsPinned() instead.  Do the same in nearby
related functions.

There is probably not much chance that anybody will try to lock a buffer
that is not already pinned, but we might as well make sure of that.
2020-07-20 16:03:38 -07:00
Tom Lane 0fa0b487b5 Correctly mark pg_subscription_rel.srsublsn as nullable.
The code has always set this column to NULL when it's not valid,
but the catalog header's description failed to reflect that,
as did the SGML docs, as did some of the code.  To prevent future
coding errors of the same ilk, let's hide the field from C code
as though it were variable-length (which, in a sense, it is).

As with commit 72eab84a5, we can only fix this cleanly in HEAD
and v13; the problem extends further back but we'll need some
klugery in the released branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/367660.1595202498@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-07-20 14:55:56 -04:00
Tom Lane d5daae47db Fix construction of updated-columns bitmap in logical replication.
Commit b9c130a1f failed to apply the publisher-to-subscriber column
mapping while checking which columns were updated.  Perhaps less
significantly, it didn't exclude dropped columns either.  This could
result in an incorrect updated-columns bitmap and thus wrong decisions
about whether to fire column-specific triggers on the subscriber while
applying updates.  In HEAD (since commit 9de77b545), it could also
result in accesses off the end of the colstatus array, as detected by
buildfarm member skink.  Fix the logic, and adjust 003_constraints.pl
so that the problem is exposed in unpatched code.

In HEAD, also add some assertions to check that we don't access off
the ends of these newly variable-sized arrays.

Back-patch to v10, as b9c130a1f was.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=79hKQ4++c5A060RYbjTHgiYTHz=fw6mptCtgghH2gJA@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-20 13:40:16 -04:00
Fujii Masao c3fe108c02 Rename wal_keep_segments to wal_keep_size.
max_slot_wal_keep_size that was added in v13 and wal_keep_segments are
the GUC parameters to specify how much WAL files to retain for
the standby servers. While max_slot_wal_keep_size accepts the number of
bytes of WAL files, wal_keep_segments accepts the number of WAL files.
This difference of setting units between those similar parameters could
be confusing to users.

To alleviate this situation, this commit renames wal_keep_segments to
wal_keep_size, and make users specify the WAL size in it instead of
the number of WAL files.

There was also the idea to rename max_slot_wal_keep_size to
max_slot_wal_keep_segments, in the discussion. But we have been moving
away from measuring in segments, for example, checkpoint_segments was
replaced by max_wal_size. So we concluded to rename wal_keep_segments
to wal_keep_size.

Back-patch to v13 where max_slot_wal_keep_size was added.

Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, Kyotaro Horiguchi, David Steele
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/574b4ea3-e0f9-b175-ead2-ebea7faea855@oss.nttdata.com
2020-07-20 13:30:18 +09:00
Amit Kapila 0bead9af48 Immediately WAL-log subtransaction and top-level XID association.
The logical decoding infrastructure needs to know which top-level
transaction the subxact belongs to, in order to decode all the
changes. Until now that might be delayed until commit, due to the
caching (GPROC_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS), preventing features requiring
incremental decoding.

So we also write the assignment info into WAL immediately, as part
of the next WAL record (to minimize overhead) only when wal_level=logical.
We can not remove the existing XLOG_XACT_ASSIGNMENT WAL as that is
required for avoiding overflow in the hot standby snapshot.

Bump XLOG_PAGE_MAGIC, since this introduces XLR_BLOCK_ID_TOPLEVEL_XID.

Author: Tomas Vondra, Dilip Kumar, Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Tested-by: Neha Sharma and Mahendra Singh Thalor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/688b0b7f-2f6c-d827-c27b-216a8e3ea700@2ndquadrant.com
2020-07-20 08:48:26 +05:30
Fujii Masao d05b172a76 Add generic_plans and custom_plans fields into pg_prepared_statements.
There was no easy way to find how many times generic and custom plans
have been executed for a prepared statement. This commit exposes those
numbers of times in pg_prepared_statements view.

Author: Atsushi Torikoshi, Kyotaro Horiguchi
Reviewed-by: Tatsuro Yamada, Masahiro Ikeda, Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACZ0uYHZ4M=NZpofH6JuPHeX=__5xcDELF8hT8_2T+R55w4RQw@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-20 11:55:50 +09:00
Amit Kapila 044dc7b964 Fix minor typo in nodeIncrementalSort.c.
Author: Vignesh C
Reviewed-by: James Coleman
Backpatch-through: 13, where it was introduced
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm0WjZqRvdeL59ZfYH0o4mLbKQ23jm-bnjXcFzgpANx55g@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-20 07:45:26 +05:30
Peter Geoghegan a766d6ca22 Avoid harmless Valgrind no-buffer-pin errors.
Valgrind builds with assertions enabled sometimes perform a
theoretically unsafe page access inside an assertion in
heapam_tuple_lock().  This happened when the eval-plan-qual isolation
test ran one of the permutations added by commit a2418f9e23.

Avoid complaints from Valgrind by moving the assertion ever so slightly.
This is minor cleanup for commit 1e0dfd16, which added Valgrind buffer
access instrumentation.

No backpatch, since this only happens within an assertion, and seems
very unlikely to cause any real problems even with assert-enabled
builds.
2020-07-19 16:12:51 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan 46ef520b95 Mark buffers as defined to Valgrind consistently.
Make PinBuffer() mark buffers as defined to Valgrind unconditionally,
including when the buffer header spinlock must be acquired.  Failure to
handle that case could lead to false positive reports from Valgrind.

This theoretically creates a risk that we'll mark buffers defined even
when external callers don't end up with a buffer pin.  That seems
perfectly acceptable, though, since in general we make no guarantees
about buffers that are unsafe to access being reliably marked as unsafe.

Oversight in commit 1e0dfd16, which added valgrind buffer access
instrumentation.
2020-07-19 09:46:44 -07:00
Tom Lane 9de77b5453 Allow logical replication to transfer data in binary format.
This patch adds a "binary" option to CREATE/ALTER SUBSCRIPTION.
When that's set, the publisher will send data using the data type's
typsend function if any, rather than typoutput.  This is generally
faster, if slightly less robust.

As committed, we won't try to transfer user-defined array or composite
types in binary, for fear that type OIDs won't match at the subscriber.
This might be changed later, but it seems like fit material for a
follow-on patch.

Dave Cramer, reviewed by Daniel Gustafsson, Petr Jelinek, and others;
adjusted some by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADK3HH+R3xMn=8t3Ct+uD+qJ1KD=Hbif5NFMJ+d5DkoCzp6Vgw@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-18 12:44:51 -04:00
Amit Kapila f41fbee7e7 Adjust minor comment in reorderbuffer.c.
Author: Dave Cramer
Reviewed-by: David G. Johnston
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADK3HHL8do4Fp1bsymgNasx375njV3AR7zY3UgYwzbL_Dx-n2Q@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-18 09:57:23 +05:30
Amit Kapila df7c5cb16e Fix comments in reorderbuffer.c.
Author: Dave Cramer
Reviewed-by: David G. Johnston
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADK3HHL8do4Fp1bsymgNasx375njV3AR7zY3UgYwzbL_Dx-n2Q@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-18 09:47:38 +05:30
Peter Geoghegan 564ce62164 Rename "hash_mem" local variable.
The term "hash_mem" will take on new significance when pending work to
add a new hash_mem_multiplier GUC is committed.  Rename a local variable
that happens to have been called hash_mem now to avoid confusion.
2020-07-17 18:24:23 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan 1e0dfd166b Add Valgrind buffer access instrumentation.
Teach Valgrind memcheck to maintain the "defined-ness" of each shared
buffer based on whether the backend holds at least one pin at the point
it is accessed by access method code.  Bugs like the one fixed by commit
b0229f26 can be detected using this new instrumentation.

Note that backends running with Valgrind naturally have their own
independent ideas about whether any given byte in shared memory is safe
or unsafe to access.  There is no risk that concurrent access by
multiple backends to the same shared memory will confuse Valgrind's
instrumentation, because everything already works at the process level
(or at the memory mapping level, if you prefer).

Author: Álvaro Herrera, Peter Geoghegan
Reviewed-By: Anastasia Lubennikova
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20150723195349.GW5596@postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkLgyN3zBvRZ1pkNJThC=xi_0gpWRUb_45eexLH1+k2_Q@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-17 17:49:45 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan 5da8bf8bbb Avoid CREATE INDEX unique index deduplication.
There is no advantage to attempting deduplication for a unique index
during CREATE INDEX, since there cannot possibly be any duplicates.
Doing so wastes cycles due to unnecessary copying.  Make sure that we
avoid it consistently.

We already avoided unique index deduplication in the case where there
were some spool2 tuples to merge.  That didn't account for the fact that
spool2 is removed early/unset in the common case where it has no tuples
that need to be merged (i.e. it failed to account for the "spool2 turns
out to be unnecessary" optimization in _bt_spools_heapscan()).

Oversight in commit 0d861bbb, which added nbtree deduplication

Backpatch: 13-, where nbtree deduplication was introduced.
2020-07-17 09:50:48 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut 20ef355163 Fix whitespace 2020-07-17 15:16:13 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 44f34365b8 Resolve gratuitous tabs in SQL file 2020-07-17 15:07:54 +02:00
Amit Kapila 01160a3de3 Fix signal handler setup for SIGHUP in the apply launcher process.
Commit 1e53fe0e70 has unified the usage of the config-file reload flag by
using the same signal handler function for the SIGHUP signal at many places
in the code.  By mistake, it used the wrong SIGNAL in apply launcher
process for the SIGHUP signal handler function.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Dilip Kumar
Backpatch-through: 13, where it was introduced
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACVzHCRnS20bOiEHaLtP5PVBENZQn4khdsSJQgOv_GM-LA@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-17 09:02:44 +05:30
Thomas Munro cdc7169509 Use MinimalTuple for tuple queues.
This representation saves 8 bytes per tuple compared to HeapTuple, and
avoids the need to allocate, copy and free on the receiving side.

Gather can emit the returned MinimalTuple directly, but GatherMerge now
needs to make an explicit copy because it buffers multiple tuples at a
time.  That should be no worse than before.

Reviewed-by: Soumyadeep Chakraborty <soumyadeep2007@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2B8T_ggoUTAE-U%3DA%2BOcPc4%3DB0nPPHcSfffuQhvXXjML6w%40mail.gmail.com
2020-07-17 15:04:16 +12:00
Thomas Munro d2bddc2500 Add huge_page_size setting for use on Linux.
This allows the huge page size to be set explicitly.  The default is 0,
meaning it will use the system default, as before.

Author: Odin Ugedal <odin@ugedal.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200608154639.20254-1-odin%40ugedal.com
2020-07-17 14:33:00 +12:00
Michael Paquier 2a10fdc430 Eliminate cache lookup errors in SQL functions for object addresses
When using the following functions, users could see various types of
errors of the type "cache lookup failed for OID XXX" with elog(), that
can only be used for internal errors:
* pg_describe_object()
* pg_identify_object()
* pg_identify_object_as_address()

The set of APIs managing object addresses for all object types are made
smarter by gaining a new argument "missing_ok" that allows any caller to
control if an error is raised or not on an undefined object.  The SQL
functions listed above are changed to handle the case where an object is
missing.

Regression tests are added for all object types for the cases where
these are undefined.  Before this commit, these cases failed with cache
lookup errors, and now they basically return NULL (minus the name of the
object type requested).

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Aleksander Alekseev, Dmitry Dolgov, Daniel Gustafsson,
Álvaro Herrera, Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqSZxrSmdHK-rny7z8mi=EAFXJ5J-0RbzDw6aus=wB5azQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-15 09:03:10 +09:00
Tom Lane 689696c711 Fix bitmap AND/OR scans on the inside of a nestloop partition-wise join.
reparameterize_path_by_child() failed to reparameterize BitmapAnd
and BitmapOr paths.  This matters only if such a path is chosen as
the inside of a nestloop partition-wise join, where we have to pass
in parameters from the outside of the nestloop.  If that did happen,
we generated a bad plan that would likely lead to crashes at execution.

This is not entirely reparameterize_path_by_child()'s fault though;
it's the victim of an ancient decision (my ancient decision, I think)
to not bother filling in param_info in BitmapAnd/Or path nodes.  That
caused the function to believe that such nodes and their children
contain no parameter references and so need not be processed.

In hindsight that decision looks pretty penny-wise and pound-foolish:
while it saves a few cycles during path node setup, we do commonly
need the information later.  In particular, by reversing the decision
and requiring valid param_info data in all nodes of a bitmap path
tree, we can get rid of indxpath.c's get_bitmap_tree_required_outer()
function, which computed the data on-demand.  It's not unlikely that
that nets out as a savings of cycles in many scenarios.  A couple
of other things in indxpath.c can be simplified as well.

While here, get rid of some cases in reparameterize_path_by_child()
that are visibly dead or useless, given that we only care about
reparameterizing paths that can be on the inside of a parameterized
nestloop.  This case reminds one of the maxim that untested code
probably does not work, so I'm unwilling to leave unreachable code
in this function.  (I did leave the T_Gather case in place even
though it's not reached in the regression tests.  It's not very
clear to me when the planner might prefer to put Gather below
rather than above a nestloop, but at least in principle the case
might be interesting.)

Per bug #16536, originally from Arne Roland but with a test case
by Andrew Gierth.  Back-patch to v11 where this code came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16536-2213ee0b3aad41fd@postgresql.org
2020-07-14 18:56:56 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut de8feb1f3a Fix -Wcast-function-type warnings
Three groups of issues needed to be addressed:

load_external_function() and related functions returned PGFunction,
even though not necessarily all callers are looking for a function of
type PGFunction.  Since these functions are really just wrappers
around dlsym(), change to return void * just like dlsym().

In dynahash.c, we are using strlcpy() where a function with a
signature like memcpy() is expected.  This should be safe, as the new
comment there explains, but the cast needs to be augmented to avoid
the warning.

In PL/Python, methods all need to be cast to PyCFunction, per Python
API, but this now runs afoul of these warnings.  (This issue also
exists in core CPython.)

To fix the second and third case, we add a new type pg_funcptr_t that
is defined specifically so that gcc accepts it as a special function
pointer that can be cast to any other function pointer without the
warning.

Also add -Wcast-function-type to the standard warning flags, subject
to configure check.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1e97628e-6447-b4fd-e230-d109cec2d584%402ndquadrant.com
2020-07-14 19:55:25 +02:00
David Rowley 101f903e51 Add comment to explain an unused function parameter
Removing the unused 'miinfo' parameter has been raised a couple of times
now.  It was decided in the 2nd discussion below that we're going to leave
it alone.  It seems like it might be useful to add a comment to mention
this fact so that nobody wastes any time in the future proposing its
removal again.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvpCf-qR5HC1rXskUM4ToV+3YDb4-n1meY=vpAHsRS_1PA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAE9k0P%3DFvcDswnSVtRpSyZMpcAWC%3DGp%3DifZ0HdfPaRQ%3D__LBtw%40mail.gmail.com
2020-07-14 17:29:52 +12:00
David Rowley f1fcf2d3b2 Fix timing issue with ALTER TABLE's validate constraint
An ALTER TABLE to validate a foreign key in which another subcommand
already caused a pending table rewrite could fail due to ALTER TABLE
attempting to validate the foreign key before the actual table rewrite
takes place.  This situation could result in an error such as:

ERROR:  could not read block 0 in file "base/nnnnn/nnnnn": read only 0 of 8192 bytes

The failure here was due to the SPI call which validates the foreign key
trying to access an index which is yet to be rebuilt.

Similarly, we also incorrectly tried to validate CHECK constraints before
the heap had been rewritten.

The fix for both is to delay constraint validation until phase 3, after
the table has been rewritten.  For CHECK constraints this means a slight
behavioral change.  Previously ALTER TABLE VALIDATE CONSTRAINT on
inheritance tables would be validated from the bottom up.  This was
different from the order of evaluation when a new CHECK constraint was
added.  The changes made here aligns the VALIDATE CONSTRAINT evaluation
order for inheritance tables to be the same as ADD CONSTRAINT, which is
generally top-down.

Reported-by: Nazli Ugur Koyluoglu, using SQLancer
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvp%3DZXv8wiRyk_0rWr00skhGkt8vXDrHJYXRMft3TjkxCA%40mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 9.5 (all supported versions)
2020-07-14 16:55:35 +12:00
Michael Paquier 9168793d72 Fix comments related to table AMs
Incorrect function names were referenced.  As this fixes some portions
of tableam.h, that is mentioned in the docs as something to look at when
implementing a table AM, backpatch down to 12 where this has been
introduced.

Author: Hironobu Suzuki
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8fe6d672-28dd-3f1d-7aed-ac2f6d599d3f@interdb.jp
Backpatch-through: 12
2020-07-14 13:17:11 +09:00
Tom Lane a742ecf9c6 Cope with lateral references in the quals of a subquery RTE.
The qual pushdown logic assumed that all Vars in a restriction clause
must be Vars referencing subquery outputs; but since we introduced
LATERAL, it's possible for such a Var to be a lateral reference instead.
This led to an assertion failure in debug builds.  In a non-debug
build, there might be no ill effects (if qual_is_pushdown_safe decided
the qual was unsafe anyway), or we could get failures later due to
construction of an invalid plan.  I've not gone to much length to
characterize the possible failures, but at least segfaults in the
executor have been observed.

Given that this has been busted since 9.3 and it took this long for
anybody to notice, I judge that the case isn't worth going to great
lengths to optimize.  Hence, fix by just teaching qual_is_pushdown_safe
that such quals are unsafe to push down, matching the previous behavior
when it accidentally didn't fail.

Per report from Tom Ellis.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200713175124.GQ8220@cloudinit-builder
2020-07-13 20:38:20 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera b5b4c0fef9
Fix uninitialized value in segno calculation
Remove previous hack in KeepLogSeg that added a case to deal with a
(badly represented) invalid segment number.  This was added for the sake
of GetWALAvailability.  But it's not needed if in that function we
initialize the segment number to be retreated to the currently being
written segment, so do that instead.

Per valgrind-running buildfarm member skink, and some sparc64 animals.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1724648.1594230917@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-07-13 13:49:51 -04:00
Jeff Davis 2302302236 HashAgg: before spilling tuples, set unneeded columns to NULL.
This is a replacement for 4cad2534. Instead of projecting all tuples
going into a HashAgg, only remove unnecessary attributes when actually
spilling. This avoids the regression for the in-memory case.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a2fb7dfeb4f50aa0a123e42151ee3013933cb802.camel%40j-davis.com
Backpatch-through: 13
2020-07-12 22:59:32 -07:00
Jeff Davis 0babd10980 Revert "Use CP_SMALL_TLIST for hash aggregate"
This reverts commit 4cad2534da due to a
performance regression. It will be replaced by a new approach in an
upcoming commit.

Reported-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200614181418.mx4bvljmfkkhoqzl@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch-through: 13
2020-07-12 22:59:32 -07:00
Amit Kapila d973747281 Revert "Track statistics for spilling of changes from ReorderBuffer".
The stats with this commit was available only for WALSenders, however,
users might want to see for backends doing logical decoding via SQL API.
Then, users might want to reset and access these stats across server
restart which was not possible with the current patch.

List of commits reverted:

caa3c4242c   Don't call elog() while holding spinlock.
e641b2a995   Doc: Update the documentation for spilled transaction
statistics.
5883f5fe27   Fix unportable printf format introduced in commit 9290ad198.
9290ad198b   Track statistics for spilling of changes from ReorderBuffer.

Additionaly, remove the release notes entry for this feature.

Backpatch-through: 13, where it was introduced
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+fd4k5_pPAYRTDrO2PbtTOe0eHQpBvuqmCr8ic39uTNmR49Eg@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-13 08:53:23 +05:30
Michael Paquier b1e48bbe64 Include replication origins in SQL functions for commit timestamp
This includes two changes:
- Addition of a new function pg_xact_commit_timestamp_origin() able, for
a given transaction ID, to return the commit timestamp and replication
origin of this transaction.  An equivalent function existed in
pglogical.
- Addition of the replication origin to pg_last_committed_xact().

The commit timestamp manager includes already APIs able to return the
replication origin of a transaction on top of its commit timestamp, but
the code paths for replication origins were never stressed as those
functions have never looked for a replication origin, and the SQL
functions available have never included this information since their
introduction in 73c986a.

While on it, refactor a test of modules/commit_ts/ to use tstzrange() to
check that a transaction timestamp is within the wanted range, making
the test a bit easier to read.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Movead Li
Reviewed-by: Madan Kumar, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2020051116430836450630@highgo.ca
2020-07-12 20:47:15 +09:00
Tom Lane cd22d3cdb9 Avoid useless buffer allocations during binary COPY FROM.
The raw_buf and line_buf buffers aren't used when reading binary format,
so skip allocating them.  raw_buf is 64K so that seems like a worthwhile
savings.  An unused line_buf only wastes 1K, but as long as we're checking
it's free to avoid allocating that too.

Bharath Rupireddy, tweaked a bit by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACXcCKaGPY0whowqrJ4OPJvDnTssgpGCzvuFQu5z0CXb-g@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-11 14:21:28 -04:00
Michael Paquier cc35d8933a Rename field "relkind" to "objtype" for CTAS and ALTER TABLE nodes
"relkind" normally refers to the char field from pg_class.  However, in
the parse nodes AlterTableStmt and CreateTableAsStmt, "relkind" was used
for a field of type enum ObjectType, that could refer to other object
types than those possible for a relkind.  Such fields being usually
named "objtype", switch the name in both structures to make things more
consistent.  Note that this led to some confusion in functions that
also operate on a RangeTableEntry object, which also has a field named
"relkind".

This naming goes back to commit 09d4e96, where only OBJECT_TABLE and
OBJECT_INDEX were used.  This got extended later to use as well
OBJECT_TYPE with e440e12, not really a relation kind.

Author: Mark Dilger
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson, Álvaro Herrera, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/609181AE-E399-47C7-9221-856E0F96BF93@enterprisedb.com
2020-07-11 13:32:28 +09:00
Alexander Korotkov df646509f3 Forbid numeric NaN in jsonpath
SQL standard doesn't define numeric Inf or NaN values.  It appears even more
ridiculous to support then in jsonpath assuming JSON doesn't support these
values as well.  This commit forbids returning NaN from .double(), which was
previously allowed.  NaN can't be result of inner-jsonpath computation over
non-NaNs.  So, we can not expect NaN in the jsonpath output.

Reported-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/203949.1591879542%40sss.pgh.pa.us
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Backpatch-through: 12
2020-07-11 03:21:00 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 0657181167 Improve error reporting for jsonpath .double() method
When jsonpath .double() method detects that numeric or string can't be
converted to double precision, it throws an error.  This commit makes these
errors explicitly express the reason of failure.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPpHfdtqJtiSXkP7tOXez18NxhLUH_-75bL8%3DOce4Ki%2Bbv7V6Q%40mail.gmail.com
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Backpatch-through: 12
2020-07-11 03:20:46 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut ff61359ad7 Log the location field before any backtrace
This order makes more sense because the location is effectively at the
lowest level of the backtrace.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/90f5fa04-c410-a54e-9449-aa3749fb7972%402ndquadrant.com
2020-07-10 08:32:06 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera 986529ce40
Remove WARNING message from brin_desummarize_range
This message was being emitted on the grounds that only crashed
summarization could cause it, but in reality even an aborted vacuum
could do it ... which makes it way too noisy, particularly since it
shows up in regression tests and makes them die.

Reported by Tom Lane.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/489091.1593534251@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-07-09 20:13:25 -04:00
Tom Lane 183926da31 Fix pg_current_logfile() to not emit a carriage return on Windows.
Due to not having our signals straight about CRLF vs. LF line
termination, the output of pg_current_logfile() included a trailing
\r on Windows.  To fix, force the file descriptor it uses into text
mode.

While here, move a couple of local variable declarations to make
the function's logic clearer.

In v12 and v13, also back-patch the test added by 1c4e88e2f so that
this function has some test coverage.  However, the 004_logrotate.pl
test script doesn't exist before v12, and it didn't seem worth adding
to older branches just for this.

Per report from Thomas Kellerer.  Back-patch to v10 where this
function was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/412ae8da-76bb-640f-039a-f3513499e53d@gmx.net
2020-07-09 16:02:23 -04:00
David Rowley 2b7dbc0db6 Fix whitespace in HashAgg EXPLAIN ANALYZE
The Sort node does not put a space between the number of kilobytes and
the "kB" of memory or disk space used, but HashAgg does.  Here we align
HashAgg to do the same as Sort.  Sort has been displaying this
information for longer than HashAgg, so it makes sense to align HashAgg
to Sort rather than the other way around.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200708163021.GW4107@telsasoft.com
Backpatch-through: 13, where the hashagg started showing these details
2020-07-09 10:06:24 +12:00
Andres Freund a9a4a7ad56 code: replace most remaining uses of 'master'.
Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: David Steele
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200615182235.x7lch5n6kcjq4aue@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-07-08 13:24:35 -07:00
Andres Freund e07633646a code: replace 'master' with 'leader' where appropriate.
Leader already is the more widely used terminology, but a few places
didn't get the message.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: David Steele
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200615182235.x7lch5n6kcjq4aue@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-07-08 12:58:32 -07:00
Andres Freund 5e7bbb5286 code: replace 'master' with 'primary' where appropriate.
Also changed "in the primary" to "on the primary", and added a few
"the" before "primary".

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: David Steele
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200615182235.x7lch5n6kcjq4aue@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-07-08 12:57:23 -07:00
Fujii Masao 654242fd81 Fix incorrect variable datatype.
Since slot_keep_segs indicates the number of WAL segments not LSN,
its datatype should not be XLogRecPtr.

Back-patch to v13 where this issue was added.

Reported-by: Atsushi Torikoshi
Author: Atsushi Torikoshi, tweaked by Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ebd0d674f3e050222238a960cac5251a@oss.nttdata.com
2020-07-08 21:24:34 +09:00
Magnus Hagander 98f0eba5b7 Fix typo
Author: Daniel Gustafsson
2020-07-08 10:11:43 +02:00
Fujii Masao 5e574d170e Fix function name in comment.
Author: Masahiro Ikeda
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0043eee90b38351ea199d7e3294c10c4@oss.nttdata.com
2020-07-08 11:00:23 +09:00
Tom Lane f3faf35f37 Don't create pg_type entries for sequences or toast tables.
Commit f7f70d5e2 left one inconsistency behind: we're still creating
pg_type entries for the composite types of sequences and toast tables,
but not arrays over those composites.  But there seems precious little
reason to have named composite types for toast tables, and not much more
to have them for sequences (especially given the thought that sequences
may someday not be standalone relations at all).

So, let's close that inconsistency by removing these composite types,
rather than adding arrays for them.  This buys back a little bit of
the initial pg_type bloat added by the previous patch, and could be
a significant savings in a large database with many toast tables.

Aside from a small logic rearrangement in heap_create_with_catalog,
this patch mostly needs to clean up some places that were assuming that
pg_class.reltype always has a valid value.  Those are really pre-existing
bugs, given that it's documented otherwise; notably, the plpgsql changes
fix code that gives "cache lookup failed for type 0" on indexes today.
But none of these seem interesting enough to back-patch.

Also, remove the pg_dump/pg_upgrade infrastructure for propagating
a toast table's pg_type OID into the new database, since we no longer
need that.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/761F1389-C6A8-4C15-80CE-950C961F5341@gmail.com
2020-07-07 15:43:22 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera a8aaa0c786
Morph pg_replication_slots.min_safe_lsn to safe_wal_size
The previous definition of the column was almost universally disliked,
so provide this updated definition which is more useful for monitoring
purposes: a large positive value is good, while zero or a negative value
means danger.  This should be operationally more convenient.

Backpatch to 13, where the new column to pg_replication_slots (and the
feature it represents) were added.

Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Author: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Reported-by: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9ddfbf8c-2f67-904d-44ed-cf8bc5916228@oss.nttdata.com
2020-07-07 13:08:00 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 6a5c750f3f Check ssl_in_use flag when reporting statistics
Previously we checked that the ssl pointer was not null, but this puts a
requirement on there being such a pointer which may not be true in
future multi-ssl-library supporting times. This seems to have been an
oversight in 9029f4b374, but hasn't really had any effect since we only
have one library.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson
2020-07-07 16:57:27 +02:00
Peter Geoghegan 28c16f4947 Remove unnecessary PageIsEmpty() nbtree build check.
nbtree index builds cannot write out an empty page.  That would mean
that there was no way to create a pivot tuple pointing to the page one
level up, since _bt_truncate() generates one based on page's firstright
tuple.

Replace the unnecessary PageIsEmpty() check with an assertion that
checks that the page has space for at least two line pointers (the
would-be high key line pointer, plus at least one valid "data item"
tuple line pointer).

The PageIsEmpty() check was added by commit 5d9f146c over 20 years ago.
It looks like it has always been unnecessary.
2020-07-06 13:47:29 -07:00
Tom Lane f7f70d5e22 Create composite array types for initdb-created relations.
When we invented arrays of composite types (commit bc8036fc6),
we excluded system catalogs, basically just on the grounds of not
wanting to bloat pg_type.  However, it's definitely inconsistent that
catalogs' composite types can't be put into arrays when others can.
Another problem is that the exclusion is done by checking
IsUnderPostmaster in heap_create_with_catalog, which means that

(1) If a user tries to create a table in single-user mode, it doesn't
get an array type.  That's bad in itself, plus it breaks pg_upgrade.

(2) If someone drops and recreates a system view or information_schema
view (as we occasionally recommend doing), it will now have an array
type where it did not before, making for still more inconsistency.

So this is all pretty messy.  Let's just get rid of the inconsistency
and decree that system-created relations should have array types if
similar user-created ones would, i.e. it only depends on the relkind.
As of HEAD, that means that the initial contents of pg_type grow from
411 rows to 605, which is a lot of growth percentage-wise, but it's
still quite a small catalog compared to others.

Wenjing Zeng, reviewed by Shawn Wang, further hacking by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/761F1389-C6A8-4C15-80CE-950C961F5341@gmail.com
2020-07-06 14:21:16 -04:00
Michael Paquier aa38434824 Refactor routines for name lookups of procedures and operators
This introduces a new set of extended routines for procedure and
operator name lookups, with a flag bitmask argument that can modify the
result.  The following options are available:
- Force schema qualification, ignoring search_path.  This is similar to
the existing option for format_{operator|procedure}_qualified().
- Force NULL as result instead of a numeric OID for an undefined
object.  This option is new.

This is a refactoring similar to 1185c78, that will be used for a future
patch to improve the SQL functions providing information using object
addresses for undefined objects.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Aleksander Alekseev, Dmitry Dolgov, Daniel Gustafsson,
Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqSZxrSmdHK-rny7z8mi=EAFXJ5J-0RbzDw6aus=wB5azQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-06 13:06:08 +09:00
Amit Kapila 04c7f4144f Remove extra whitespace in comments atop ReorderBufferCheckMemoryLimit.
Backpatch-through: 13, where it was introduced
2020-07-06 08:49:09 +05:30
Michael Paquier 1185c78294 Add new flag to format_type_extended() to get NULL for undefined type
If a type scanned is undefined, type format routines have two behaviors
depending on if FORMAT_TYPE_ALLOW_INVALID is used by the caller or not:
- Issue a cache lookup error
- Return an undefined type name "???", "???[]" or "-"

The current interface is not really helpful for callers willing to
format properly a type name, but still make sure that the type is
defined as there could be types matching the strings generated when
looking for an undefined type, even if that should not be a problem in
practice.  In order to counter that, add a new flag called
FORMAT_TYPE_INVALID_AS_NULL that returns a NULL result instead of "???
or "-" which does not generate an error.  This flag will be used in a
follow-up patch improving the set of SQL functions showing information
for object addresses when it comes to undefined objects.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Aleksander Alekseev, Dmitry Dolgov, Daniel Gustafsson,
Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqSZxrSmdHK-rny7z8mi=EAFXJ5J-0RbzDw6aus=wB5azQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-06 12:12:11 +09:00
Amit Kapila 231ef5b90d Remove unused function parameter in end_parallel_vacuum.
Author: Vignesh C
Reviewed-by: Sawada Masahiko
Backpatch-through: 13, where it was introduced
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm3Ppt71NafGY5mk3V2i3Q+mm93pVibDq-0NpW7WU67Jcg@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-06 08:21:52 +05:30
Peter Eisentraut e61225ffab Rename enable_incrementalsort for clarity
Author: James Coleman <jtc331@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/df652910-e985-9547-152c-9d4357dc3979%402ndquadrant.com
2020-07-05 11:43:08 +02:00
Joe Conway 1d05627fcf Fix "ignoring return value" complaints from commit 96d1f423f9
The cfbot and some BF animals are complaining about the previous
read_binary_file commit because of ignoring return value of ‘fread’.
So let's make everyone happy by testing the return value even though
not strictly needed.

Reported by Justin Pryzby, and suggested patch by Tom Lane. Backpatched
to v11 same as the previous commit.

Reported-By: Justin Pryzby
Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/969b8d82-5bb2-5fa8-4eb1-f0e685c5d736%40joeconway.com
Backpatch-through: 11
2020-07-04 13:46:31 -04:00
Joe Conway 96d1f423f9 Read until EOF vice stat-reported size in read_binary_file
read_binary_file(), used by SQL functions pg_read_file() and friends,
uses stat to determine file length to read, when not passed an explicit
length as an argument. This is problematic, for example, if the file
being read is a virtual file with a stat-reported length of zero.
Arrange to read until EOF, or StringInfo data string lenth limit, is
reached instead.

Original complaint and patch by me, with significant review, corrections,
advice, and code optimizations by Tom Lane. Backpatched to v11. Prior to
that only paths relative to the data and log dirs were allowed for files,
so no "zero length" files were reachable anyway.

Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/969b8d82-5bb2-5fa8-4eb1-f0e685c5d736%40joeconway.com
Backpatch-through: 11
2020-07-04 06:26:53 -04:00
Tom Lane ca5e93f769 Clamp total-tuples estimates for foreign tables to ensure planner sanity.
After running GetForeignRelSize for a foreign table, adjust rel->tuples
to be at least as large as rel->rows.  This prevents bizarre behavior
in estimate_num_groups() and perhaps other places, especially in the
scenario where rel->tuples is zero because pg_class.reltuples is
(suggesting that ANALYZE has never been run for the table).  As things
stood, we'd end up estimating one group out of any GROUP BY on such a
table, whereas the default group-count estimate is more likely to result
in a sane plan.

Also, clarify in the documentation that GetForeignRelSize has the option
to override the rel->tuples value if it has a better idea of what to use
than what is in pg_class.reltuples.

Per report from Jeff Janes.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Patch by me; thanks to Etsuro Fujita for review

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU=1xNo9cnan+Npxgz0eK7394xmjmKg-QEm8wYG9P5-CcaqQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-03 19:01:21 -04:00
Tom Lane f7b5988cc0 Fix temporary tablespaces for shared filesets some more.
Commit ecd9e9f0b fixed the problem in the wrong place, causing unwanted
side-effects on the behavior of GetNextTempTableSpace().  Instead,
let's make SharedFileSetInit() responsible for subbing in the value
of MyDatabaseTableSpace when the default tablespace is called for.

The convention about what is in the tempTableSpaces[] array is
evidently insufficiently documented, so try to improve that.

It also looks like SharedFileSetInit() is doing the wrong thing in the
case where temp_tablespaces is empty.  It was hard-wiring use of the
pg_default tablespace, but it seems like using MyDatabaseTableSpace
is more consistent with what happens for other temp files.

Back-patch the reversion of PrepareTempTablespaces()'s behavior to
9.5, as ecd9e9f0b was.  The changes in SharedFileSetInit() go back
to v11 where that was introduced.  (Note there is net zero code change
before v11 from these two patch sets, so nothing to release-note.)

Magnus Hagander and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABUevExg5YEsOvqMxrjoNvb3ApVyH+9jggWGKwTDFyFCVWczGQ@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-03 17:01:34 -04:00
Magnus Hagander ecd9e9f0bc Fix temporary tablespaces for shared filesets
A likely copy/paste error in 98e8b48053 from  back in 2004 would
cause temp tablespace to be reset to InvalidOid if temp_tablespaces
was set to the same value as the primary tablespace in the database.
This would cause shared filesets (such as for parallel hash joins)
to ignore them, putting the temporary files in the default tablespace
instead of the configured one. The bug is in the old code, but it
appears to have been exposed only once we had shared filesets.

Reviewed-By: Daniel Gustafsson
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABUevExg5YEsOvqMxrjoNvb3ApVyH+9jggWGKwTDFyFCVWczGQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 9.5
2020-07-03 15:09:06 +02:00
Peter Geoghegan 947456a823 Initialize work_mem using current guc.c default.
Do the same for the maintenance_work_mem global variable.

Oversight in commit 848ae330a4, which increased the previous defaults
for work_mem and maintenance_work_mem by 4X.
2020-07-02 16:34:54 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan e25d462a38 nbtree: Rename _bt_search() variables.
Make some of the variable names in _bt_search() consistent with
corresponding variables within _bt_getstackbuf().  This naming scheme is
clearer because the variable names always express a relationship between
the currently locked buffer/page and some other page.
2020-07-02 14:54:55 -07:00
Michael Paquier 641dd167a3 Move description of libpqwalreceiver hooks out of the replication's README
src/backend/replication/README includes since 32bc08b a basic
description of the WAL receiver hooks available in walreceiver.h for a
module like libpqwalreceiver, but the README has never been updated to
reflect changes done to the hooks, so the contents of the README have
rotten with the time.  This commit moves the description from the README
to walreceiver.h, where it will be hard to miss that a description
update or addition is needed depending on the modifications done to the
hooks.

Each hook now includes a description of what it does in walreceiver.h,
and the replication's README mentions walreceiver.h.

Thanks also to Amit Kapila for the discussion.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200502024606.GA471944@paquier.xyz
2020-07-02 13:57:03 +09:00
Michael Paquier 4315e8c23b Refactor ObjectAddress field assignments in more places
This is a follow-up commit similar to 68de144, with more places in the
backend code simplified with the macros able to assign values to the
fields of ObjectAddress.  The code paths changed here could be
transitioned later into using more grouping when inserting dependency
records, simplifying this future work.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190213182737.mxn6hkdxwrzgxk35@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-07-01 17:03:50 +09:00
Amit Kapila a69e041d0c Improve vacuum error context handling.
Use separate functions to save and restore error context information as
that made code easier to understand.  Also, make it clear that the index
information required for error context is sane.

Author: Andres Freund, Justin Pryzby, Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 13, where it was introduced
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1LWo+v1OWu=Sky27GTGSCuOmr7iaURNbc5xz6jO+SaPeA@mail.gmail.com
2020-07-01 07:58:36 +05:30
Michael Paquier 684b4f29b7 Refactor creation of normal dependency records when creating extension
When creating an extension, the same type of dependency is used when
registering a dependency to a schema and required extensions.  This
improves the code so as those dependencies are not recorded one-by-one,
but grouped together.  Note that this has as side effect to remove
duplicate dependency entries, even if it should not happen in practice
as extensions listed as required in a control file should be listed only
once.

Extracted from a larger patch by the same author.

Author: Daniel Dustafsson
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200629065535.GA183079@paquier.xyz
2020-07-01 11:12:33 +09:00
David Rowley 40efbf8706 Further adjustments to Hashagg EXPLAIN ANALYZE output
The "Disk Usage" and "HashAgg Batches" properties in the EXPLAIN ANALYZE
output for HashAgg were previously only shown if the number of batches
was greater than 0.  Here we change this so that these properties are
always shown for EXPLAIN ANALYZE formats other than "text".  The idea here
is that since the HashAgg could have spilled to disk if there had been
more data or groups to aggregate, then it's relevant that we're clear in
the EXPLAIN ANALYZE output when no spilling occurred in this particular
execution of the given plan.

For the "text" EXPLAIN format, we still hide these properties when no
spilling occurs.  This EXPLAIN format is designed to be easy for humans
to read.  To maintain the readability we have a higher threshold for which
properties we display for this format.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvo_dmNozQQTmN-2jGp1vT%3Ddxx7Q0vd%2BMvD1cGpv2HU%3DSg%40mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13, where the hashagg spilling code was added.
2020-07-01 12:15:59 +12:00
Fujii Masao 9bae7e4cde Add +(pg_lsn,numeric) and -(pg_lsn,numeric) operators.
By using these operators, the number of bytes can be added into and
subtracted from LSN.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Michael Paquier, Asif Rehman
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ed9f7f74-e996-67f8-554a-52ebd3779b3b@oss.nttdata.com
2020-06-30 23:55:07 +09:00
Tom Lane c410af098c Mop up some no-longer-necessary hacks around printf %.*s format.
Commit 54cd4f045 added some kluges to work around an old glibc bug,
namely that %.*s could misbehave if glibc thought any characters in
the supplied string were incorrectly encoded.  Now that we use our
own snprintf.c implementation, we need not worry about that bug (even
if it still exists in the wild).  Revert a couple of particularly
ugly hacks, and remove or improve assorted comments.

Note that there can still be encoding-related hazards here: blindly
clipping at a fixed length risks producing wrongly-encoded output
if the clip splits a multibyte character.  However, code that's
doing correct multibyte-aware clipping doesn't really need a comment
about that, while code that isn't needs an explanation why not,
rather than a red-herring comment about an obsolete bug.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/279428.1593373684@sss.pgh.pa.us
2020-06-29 17:12:38 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan f7a476f0d6 nbtree: Correct inaccurate split location comment.
Minor oversight in commit fab2502433.
2020-06-29 12:30:39 -07:00
Tom Lane 16e3ad5d14 Avoid using %c printf format for potentially non-ASCII characters.
Since %c only passes a C "char" to printf, it's incapable of dealing
with multibyte characters.  Passing just the first byte of such a
character leads to an output string that is visibly not correctly
encoded, resulting in undesirable behavior such as encoding conversion
failures while sending error messages to clients.

We've lived with this issue for a long time because it was inconvenient
to avoid in a portable fashion.  However, now that we always use our own
snprintf code, it's reasonable to use the %.*s format to print just one
possibly-multibyte character in a string.  (We previously avoided that
obvious-looking answer in order to work around glibc's bug #6530, cf
commits 54cd4f045 and ed437e2b2.)

Hence, run around and fix a bunch of places that used %c to report
a character found in a user-supplied string.  For simplicity, I did
not touch places that were emitting non-user-facing debug messages,
or reporting catalog data that should always be ASCII.  (It's also
unclear how useful this approach could be in frontend code, where
it's less certain that we know what encoding we're dealing with.)

In passing, improve a couple of poorly-written error messages in
pageinspect/heapfuncs.c.

This is a longstanding issue, but I'm hesitant to back-patch because
of the impact on translatable message strings.  In any case this fix
would not work reliably before v12.

Tom Lane and Quan Zongliang

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a120087c-4c88-d9d4-1ec5-808d7a7f133d@gmail.com
2020-06-29 11:41:19 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 78c887679d Add current substring regular expression syntax
SQL:1999 had syntax

    SUBSTRING(text FROM pattern FOR escapechar)

but this was replaced in SQL:2003 by the more clear

    SUBSTRING(text SIMILAR pattern ESCAPE escapechar)

but this was never implemented in PostgreSQL.  This patch adds that
new syntax as an alternative in the parser, and updates documentation
and tests to indicate that this is the preferred alternative now.

Reviewed-by: Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Vik Fearing <vik@postgresfriends.org>
Reviewed-by: Fabien COELHO <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/a15db31c-d0f8-8ce0-9039-578a31758adb%402ndquadrant.com
2020-06-29 11:05:00 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut aafefb4dcb Clean up grammar a bit
Simplify the grammar specification of substring() and overlay() a bit,
simplify and update some comments.

Reviewed-by: Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Vik Fearing <vik@postgresfriends.org>
Reviewed-by: Fabien COELHO <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/a15db31c-d0f8-8ce0-9039-578a31758adb%402ndquadrant.com
2020-06-29 11:05:00 +02:00
Michael Paquier 68de1440c7 Refactor ObjectAddress field assignments for type dependencies
The logic used to build the set of dependencies needed for a type is
rather repetitive with direct assignments for each ObjectAddress field.
This refactors the code to use the macro ObjectAddressSet() instead, to
do the same work.  There are more areas of the backend code that could
use this macro, but these are left for a follow-up patch that will
partially rework the way dependencies are recorded as well.  Type
dependencies are left out of the follow-up patch, so they are refactored
separately here.

Extracted from a larger patch by the same author.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson
Discussion: https://potgr.es/m/20190213182737.mxn6hkdxwrzgxk35@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-06-29 09:56:52 +09:00
Tom Lane e1cc25f59a Fix list of SSL error codes for older OpenSSL versions.
Apparently 1.0.1 lacks SSL_R_VERSION_TOO_HIGH and
SSL_R_VERSION_TOO_LOW.  Per buildfarm.
2020-06-27 13:26:17 -04:00
Tom Lane b63dd3d88f Add hints about protocol-version-related SSL connection failures.
OpenSSL's native reports about problems related to protocol version
restrictions are pretty opaque and inconsistent.  When we get an
SSL error that is plausibly due to this, emit a hint message that
includes the range of SSL protocol versions we (think we) are
allowing.  This should at least get the user thinking in the right
direction to resolve the problem, even if the hint isn't totally
accurate, which it might not be for assorted reasons.

Back-patch to v13 where we increased the default minimum protocol
version, thereby increasing the risk of this class of failure.

Patch by me, reviewed by Daniel Gustafsson

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a9408304-4381-a5af-d259-e55d349ae4ce@2ndquadrant.com
2020-06-27 12:47:58 -04:00
Amit Kapila e7b476c657 Remove duplicate check added by commit b2a5545bd6.
As this doesn't cause any harm so we decided to this clean up in HEAD only.

Author: Ádám Balogh
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/VI1PR0702MB36631BD67559461AFDE1FEEE81920@VI1PR0702MB3663.eurprd07.prod.outlook.com
2020-06-27 09:59:27 +05:30
Alvaro Herrera 4ae08cd5fd
Persist slot invalidation correctly
We failed to save slot to disk after invalidating it, so the state was
lost in case of server restart or crash.  Fix by marking it dirty and
flushing.

Also, if the slot is known invalidated we don't need to reason about the
LSN at all -- it's known invalidated.  Only test the LSN if the slot is
known not invalidated.

Author: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com>
Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17a69cfe-f1c1-a416-ee25-ae15427c69eb@oss.nttdata.com
2020-06-26 20:41:29 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 10f1ab2cb8 Fix misuse of table_index_fetch_tuple_check().
Commit 0d861bbb, which added deduplication to nbtree, had
_bt_check_unique() pass a TID to table_index_fetch_tuple_check() that
isn't safe to mutate.  table_index_fetch_tuple_check()'s tid argument is
modified when the TID in question is not the latest visible tuple in a
hot chain, though this wasn't documented.

To fix, go back to using a local copy of the TID in _bt_check_unique(),
and update comments above table_index_fetch_tuple_check().

Backpatch: 13-, where B-Tree deduplication was introduced.
2020-06-25 10:55:28 -07:00
Fujii Masao a82ba066ea Remove erroneous assertion from pg_copy_logical_replication_slot().
If restart_lsn of logical replication slot gets behind more than
max_slot_wal_keep_size from the current LSN, the logical replication slot
would be invalidated and its restart_lsn is reset to an invalid LSN.
If this logical replication slot with an invalid restart_lsn was specified as
the source slot in pg_copy_logical_replication_slot(), the function caused
the assertion failure unexpectedly.

This assertion was added because restart_lsn should not be invalid before.
But in v13, it can be invalid thanks to max_slot_wal_keep_size. So since this
assertion is no longer useful, this commit removes it.

This commit also changes the errcode in the error message that
pg_copy_logical_replication_slot() emits when the slot with an invalid
restart_lsn is specified, to more appropriate one.

Back-patch to v13 where max_slot_wal_keep_size was added and
the assertion was no longer valid.

Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera, Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f91de4fb-a7ab-b90e-8132-74796e049d51@oss.nttdata.com
2020-06-25 11:13:13 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera b8fd4e02c6
Adjust max_slot_wal_keep_size behavior per review
In pg_replication_slot, change output from normal/reserved/lost to
reserved/extended/unreserved/ lost, which better expresses the possible
states particularly near the time where segments are no longer safe but
checkpoint has not run yet.

Under the new definition, reserved means the slot is consuming WAL
that's still under the normal WAL size constraints; extended means it's
consuming WAL that's being protected by wal_keep_segments or the slot
itself, whose size is below max_slot_wal_keep_size; unreserved means the
WAL is no longer safe, but checkpoint has not yet removed those files.
Such as slot is in imminent danger, but can still continue for a little
while and may catch up to the reserved WAL space.

Also, there were some bugs in the calculations used to report the
status; fixed those.

Backpatch to 13.

Reported-by: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com>
Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200616.120236.1809496990963386593.horikyota.ntt@gmail.com
2020-06-24 14:23:39 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 0188bb8253
Save slot's restart_lsn when invalidated due to size
We put it aside as invalidated_at, which let us show "lost" in
pg_replication slot.  Prior to this change, the state value was reported
as NULL.

Backpatch to 13.

Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200617.101707.1735599255100002667.horikyota.ntt@gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200407.120905.1507671100168805403.horikyota.ntt@gmail.com
2020-06-24 14:15:17 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 368d7f3297
Add parens to ConvertToXSegs macro
The current definition is dangerous.  No bugs exist in our code at
present, but backpatch to 11 nonetheless where it was introduced.

Author: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
2020-06-24 14:00:37 -04:00
Michael Paquier a3554b2d71 Fix comment in heap.c
The description of InsertPgAttributeTuple() does not match its handling
of pg_attribute contents with NULL values for a long time, with 911e702
making things more inconsistent.  This adjusts the description to match
the reality.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4E4E4B33-9FDF-4D21-B77A-642D027AEAD9@yesql.se
2020-06-24 15:14:04 +09:00
Tom Lane 63d2ac23b0 Undo double-quoting of index names in non-text EXPLAIN output formats.
explain_get_index_name() applied quote_identifier() to the index name.
This is fine for text output, but the non-text output formats all have
their own quoting conventions and would much rather start from the
actual index name.  For example in JSON you'd get something like

       "Index Name": "\"My Index\"",

which is surely not desirable, especially when the same does not
happen for table names.  Hence, move the responsibility for applying
quoting out to the callers, where it can go into already-existing
special code paths for text format.

This changes the API spec for users of explain_get_index_name_hook:
before, they were supposed to apply quote_identifier() if necessary,
now they should not.  Research suggests that the only publicly
available user of the hook is hypopg, and it actually forgot to
apply quoting anyway, so it's fine.  (In any case, there's no
behavioral change for the output of a hook as seen in non-text
EXPLAIN formats, so this won't break any case that programs should
be relying on.)

Digging in the commit logs, it appears that quoting was included in
explain_get_index_name's duties when commit 604ffd280 invented it;
and that was fine at the time because we only had text output format.
This should have been rethought when non-text formats were invented,
but it wasn't.

This is a fairly clear bug for users of non-text EXPLAIN formats,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Per bug #16502 from Maciek Sakrejda.  Patch by me (based on
investigation by Euler Taveira); thanks to Julien Rouhaud for review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16502-57bd1c9f913ed1d1@postgresql.org
2020-06-22 11:46:41 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov a44dd932ff Fix masking of SP-GiST pages during xlog consistency check
spg_mask() didn't take into account that pd_lower equal to SizeOfPageHeaderData
is still valid value.  This commit fixes that.  Backpatch to 11, where
spg_mask() pg_lower check was introduced.

Reported-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200615131405.GM52676%40paquier.xyz
Backpatch-through: 11
2020-06-20 17:34:51 +03:00
Noah Misch d28ab91e71 Remove dead forceSync parameter of XactLogCommitRecord().
The function has been reading global variable forceSyncCommit, mirroring
the intent of the caller that passed forceSync=forceSyncCommit.  The
other caller, RecordTransactionCommitPrepared(), passed false.  Since
COMMIT PREPARED can't share a transaction with any command, it certainly
doesn't share a transaction with a command that sets forceSyncCommit.

Reviewed by Michael Paquier.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200617032615.GC2916904@rfd.leadboat.com
2020-06-20 01:25:40 -07:00
Amit Kapila 74b4d78e03 Removal unused function parameter in CopyReadBinaryAttribute.
The function parameter column_no is not used in CopyReadBinaryAttribute,
this can be removed.

Commit 0e319c7ad7 removed the usage of column_no parameter in function
CopyReadBinaryAttribute but forgot to remove the parameter.

Reported-by: Vignesh C
Author: Vignesh C
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm1TYSNTfqx_jfz9_mwEZ2Er=dZnu++duXpC1uQo1cG=WA@mail.gmail.com
2020-06-20 09:18:57 +05:30
Peter Geoghegan be14f884d5 Fix deduplication "single value" strategy bug.
It was possible for deduplication's single value strategy to mistakenly
believe that a very small duplicate tuple counts as one of the six large
tuples that it aims to leave behind after the page finally splits.  This
could cause slightly suboptimal space utilization with very low
cardinality indexes, though only under fairly narrow conditions.

To fix, be particular about what kind of tuple counts as a
maxpostingsize-capped tuple.  This avoids confusion in the event of a
small tuple that gets "wedged" between two large tuples, where all
tuples on the page are duplicates of the same value.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=Y+sgSFc-O3LpiZX-POx2bC+okec2KafERHuzdVa7-rQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 13-, where deduplication was introduced (by commit 0d861bbb)
2020-06-19 08:57:24 -07:00
Fujii Masao f9e9704f09 Fix issues in invalidation of obsolete replication slots.
This commit fixes the following issues.

1. There is the case where the slot is dropped while trying to invalidate it.
    InvalidateObsoleteReplicationSlots() did not handle this case, and
    which could cause checkpoint to fail.

2. InvalidateObsoleteReplicationSlots() could emit the same log message
    multiple times unnecessary. It should be logged only once.

3. When marking the slot as used, we always searched the target slot from
    all the replication slots even if we already found it. This could cause
    useless waste of cycles.

Back-patch to v13 where these issues were added as a part of
max_slot_wal_keep_size code.

Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Alvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/66c05b67-3396-042c-1b41-bfa6c3ddcf82@oss.nttdata.com
2020-06-19 17:15:52 +09:00
David Rowley 9bdb300ded Fix EXPLAIN ANALYZE for parallel HashAgg plans
Since 1f39bce02, HashAgg nodes have had the ability to spill to disk when
memory consumption exceeds work_mem. That commit added new properties to
EXPLAIN ANALYZE to show the maximum memory usage and disk usage, however,
it didn't quite go as far as showing that information for parallel
workers.  Since workers may have experienced something very different from
the main process, we should show this information per worker, as is done
in Sort.

Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby
Reviewed-by: Jeff Davis
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvpEKbfZa18mM1TD7qV6PG+w97pwCWq5tVD0dX7e11gRJw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13, where the hashagg spilling code was added.
2020-06-19 17:24:27 +12:00
Andres Freund f219167910 Clean up includes of s_lock.h.
Users of spinlocks should use spin.h, not s_lock.h. And lwlock.h
hasn't utilized spinlocks for quite a while.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200618183041.upyrd25eosecyf3x@alap3.anarazel.de
2020-06-18 19:41:05 -07:00
Andres Freund cf1234a10e Fix deadlock danger when atomic ops are done under spinlock.
This was a danger only for --disable-spinlocks in combination with
atomic operations unsupported by the current platform.

While atomics.c was careful to signal that a separate semaphore ought
to be used when spinlock emulation is active, spin.c didn't actually
implement that mechanism. That's my (Andres') fault, it seems to have
gotten lost during the development of the atomic operations support.

Fix that issue and add test for nesting atomic operations inside a
spinlock.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200605023302.g6v3ydozy5txifji@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.5-
2020-06-18 14:08:32 -07:00
Michael Paquier b48df818dc Fix oldest xmin and LSN computation across repslots after advancing
Advancing a replication slot did not recompute the oldest xmin and LSN
values across replication slots, preventing resource removal like
segments not recycled at checkpoint time.  The original commit that
introduced the slot advancing in 9c7d06d never did the update of those
oldest values, and b0afdca removed this code.

This commit adds a TAP test to check segment recycling with advancing
for physical slots, enforcing an extra segment switch before advancing
to check if the segment gets correctly recycled after a checkpoint.

Reported-by: Andres Freund
Reviewed-by: Alexey Kondratov, Kyptaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200609171904.kpltxxvjzislidks@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch-through: 11
2020-06-18 16:34:59 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 0a40563ead Disallow factorial of negative numbers
The previous implementation returned 1 for all negative numbers, which
is not sensible under any definition.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/6ce1df0e-86a3-e544-743a-f357ff663f68%402ndquadrant.com
2020-06-18 08:41:31 +02:00
Andres Freund 4d4ca24efe spinlock emulation: Fix bug when more than INT_MAX spinlocks are initialized.
Once the counter goes negative we ended up with spinlocks that errored
out on first use (due to check in tas_sema).

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200606023103.avzrctgv7476xj7i@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.5-
2020-06-17 12:50:54 -07:00
Andres Freund fd49d53807 Avoid potential spinlock in a signal handler as part of global barriers.
On platforms without support for 64bit atomic operations where we also
cannot rely on 64bit reads to have single copy atomicity, such atomics
are implemented using a spinlock based fallback. That means it's not
safe to even read such atomics from within a signal handler (since the
signal handler might run when the spinlock already is held).

To avoid this issue defer global barrier processing out of the signal
handler. Instead of checking local / shared barrier generation to
determine whether to set ProcSignalBarrierPending, introduce
PROCSIGNAL_BARRIER and always set ProcSignalBarrierPending when
receiving such a signal. Additionally avoid redundant work in
ProcessProcSignalBarrier if ProcSignalBarrierPending is unnecessarily.

Also do a small amount of other polishing.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200609193723.eu5ilsjxwdpyxhgz@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 13-, where the code was introduced.
2020-06-17 12:41:45 -07:00
Robert Haas 2fd2effc50 Improve server code to read files as part of a base backup.
Don't use fread(), since that doesn't necessarily set errno. We could
use read() instead, but it's even better to use pg_pread(), which
allows us to avoid some extra calls to seek to the desired location in
the file.

Also, advertise a wait event while reading from a file, as we do for
most other places where we're reading data from files.

Patch by me, reviewed by Hamid Akhtar.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobBw-3573vMosGj06r72ajHsYeKtksT_oTxH8XvTL7DxA@mail.gmail.com
2020-06-17 11:39:17 -04:00
Robert Haas 453e0e3f0e Minor code cleanup for perform_base_backup().
Merge two calls to sendDir() that are exactly the same except for
the fifth argument. Adjust comments to match.

Also, don't bother checking whether tblspc_map_file is NULL. We
initialize it in all cases, so it can't be.

Patch by me, reviewed by Amit Kapila and Kyotaro Horiguchi.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYq+59SJ2zBbP891ngWPA9fymOqntqYcweSDYXS2a620A@mail.gmail.com
2020-06-17 11:05:42 -04:00
Robert Haas 1fa092913d Don't export basebackup.c's sendTablespace().
Commit 72d422a522 made xlog.c call
sendTablespace() with the 'sizeonly' argument set to true, which
required basebackup.c to export sendTablespace(). However, that's
kind of ugly, so instead defer the call to sendTablespace() until
basebackup.c regains control. That way, it can still be a static
function.

Patch by me, reviewed by Amit Kapila and Kyotaro Horiguchi.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYq+59SJ2zBbP891ngWPA9fymOqntqYcweSDYXS2a620A@mail.gmail.com
2020-06-17 10:57:34 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a513f1dfbf Remove STATUS_WAITING
Add a separate enum for use in the locking APIs, which were the only
user.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/a6f91ead-0ce4-2a34-062b-7ab9813ea308%402ndquadrant.com
2020-06-17 09:14:37 +02:00
Tom Lane 400f169373 In dpow(), remove redundant check for whether y is an integer.
I failed to notice that we don't really need to check for y being an
integer in the code path where x = -inf; we already did.

Also make some further cosmetic rearrangements in that spot in hopes
of dodging the seeming compiler bug that buildfarm member fossa is
hitting.  And be consistent about declaring variables as "float8"
not "double", since the pre-existing variables in this function are
like that.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1jkyFX-0005RR-1Q@gemulon.postgresql.org
2020-06-16 11:09:42 -04:00
Thomas Munro 4dd804a99c Remove useless variable. 2020-06-16 17:40:06 +12:00
Thomas Munro f5d18862bb Make BufFileWrite() void.
It now either returns after it wrote all the data you gave it, or raises
an error.  Not done in back-branches, because it might cause problems
for external code.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJE04G%3D8TLK0DLypT_27D9dR8F1RQgNp0jK6qR0tZGWOw%40mail.gmail.com
2020-06-16 17:33:04 +12:00
Thomas Munro 7897e3bb90 Fix buffile.c error handling.
Convert buffile.c error handling to use ereport.  This fixes cases where
I/O errors were indistinguishable from EOF or not reported.  Also remove
"%m" from error messages where errno would be bogus.  While we're
modifying those strings, add block numbers and short read byte counts
where appropriate.

Back-patch to all supported releases.

Reported-by: Amit Khandekar <amitdkhan.pg@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ibrar Ahmed <ibrar.ahmad@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJE04G%3D8TLK0DLypT_27D9dR8F1RQgNp0jK6qR0tZGWOw%40mail.gmail.com
2020-06-16 16:59:07 +12:00
Tom Lane 5674eb9876 Fix power() for large inputs yet more.
Buildfarm results for commit e532b1d57 reveal the error in my thinking
about the unexpected-EDOM case.  I'd supposed this was no longer really
a live issue, but it seems the fix for glibc's bug #3866 is not all that
old, and we still have at least one buildfarm animal (lapwing) with the
bug.  Hence, resurrect essentially the previous logic (but, I hope, less
opaquely presented), and explain what it is we're really doing here.

Also, blindly try to fix fossa's failure by tweaking the logic that
figures out whether y is an odd integer when x is -inf.  This smells
a whole lot like a compiler bug, but I lack access to icc to try to
pin it down.  Maybe doing division instead of multiplication will
dodge the issue.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1jkU7H-00024V-NZ@gemulon.postgresql.org
2020-06-15 19:10:33 -04:00
Robert Haas 2961c9711c Assorted cleanup of tar-related code.
Introduce TAR_BLOCK_SIZE and replace many instances of 512 with
the new constant. Introduce function tarPaddingBytesRequired
and use it to replace numerous repetitions of (x + 511) & ~511.

Add preprocessor guards against multiple inclusion to pgtar.h.

Reformat the prototype for tarCreateHeader so it doesn't extend
beyond 80 characters.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobWbfReO9-XFk8urR1K4wTNwqoHx_v56t7=T8KaiEoKNw@mail.gmail.com
2020-06-15 15:28:49 -04:00