Commit Graph

235 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Dunstan
9e257a181c Add parallel pg_dump option.
New infrastructure is added which creates a set number of workers
(threads on Windows, forked processes on Unix). Jobs are then
handed out to these workers by the master process as needed.
pg_restore is adjusted to use this new infrastructure in place of the
old setup which created a new worker for each step on the fly. Parallel
dumps acquire a snapshot clone in order to stay consistent, if
available.

The parallel option is selected by the -j / --jobs command line
parameter of pg_dump.

Joachim Wieland, lightly editorialized by Andrew Dunstan.
2013-03-24 11:27:20 -04:00
Tom Lane
d43837d030 Add lock_timeout configuration parameter.
This GUC allows limiting the time spent waiting to acquire any one
heavyweight lock.

In support of this, improve the recently-added timeout infrastructure
to permit efficiently enabling or disabling multiple timeouts at once.
That reduces the performance hit from turning on lock_timeout, though
it's still not zero.

Zoltán Böszörményi, reviewed by Tom Lane,
Stephen Frost, and Hari Babu
2013-03-16 23:22:57 -04:00
Kevin Grittner
3bf3ab8c56 Add a materialized view relations.
A materialized view has a rule just like a view and a heap and
other physical properties like a table.  The rule is only used to
populate the table, references in queries refer to the
materialized data.

This is a minimal implementation, but should still be useful in
many cases.  Currently data is only populated "on demand" by the
CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW and REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW statements.
It is expected that future releases will add incremental updates
with various timings, and that a more refined concept of defining
what is "fresh" data will be developed.  At some point it may even
be possible to have queries use a materialized in place of
references to underlying tables, but that requires the other
above-mentioned features to be working first.

Much of the documentation work by Robert Haas.
Review by Noah Misch, Thom Brown, Robert Haas, Marko Tiikkaja
Security review by KaiGai Kohei, with a decision on how best to
implement sepgsql still pending.
2013-03-03 18:23:31 -06:00
Alvaro Herrera
8396447cdb Create libpgcommon, and move pg_malloc et al to it
libpgcommon is a new static library to allow sharing code among the
various frontend programs and backend; this lets us eliminate duplicate
implementations of common routines.  We avoid libpgport, because that's
intended as a place for porting issues; per discussion, it seems better
to keep them separate.

The first use case, and the only implemented by this patch, is pg_malloc
and friends, which many frontend programs were already using.

At the same time, we can use this to provide palloc emulation functions
for the frontend; this way, some palloc-using files in the backend can
also be used by the frontend cleanly.  To do this, we change palloc() in
the backend to be a function instead of a macro on top of
MemoryContextAlloc().  This was previously believed to cause loss of
performance, but this implementation has been tweaked by Tom and Andres
so that on modern compilers it provides a slight improvement over the
previous one.

This lets us clean up some places that were already with
localized hacks.

Most of the pg_malloc/palloc changes in this patch were authored by
Andres Freund. Zoltán Böszörményi also independently provided a form of
that.  libpgcommon infrastructure was authored by Álvaro.
2013-02-12 11:21:05 -03:00
Magnus Hagander
f3af53441e Support multiple -t/--table arguments for more commands
On top of the previous support in pg_dump, add support to specify
multiple tables (by using the -t option multiple times) to
pg_restore, clsuterdb, reindexdb and vacuumdb.

Josh Kupershmidt, reviewed by Karl O. Pinc
2013-01-17 11:24:47 +01:00
Tom Lane
edef20f6e1 Fix pg_dump's handling of DROP DATABASE commands in --clean mode.
In commit 4317e0246c, I accidentally broke
this behavior while rearranging code to ensure that --create wouldn't
affect whether a DATABASE entry gets put into archive-format output.
Thus, 9.2 would issue a DROP DATABASE command in --clean mode, which is
either useless or dangerous depending on the usage scenario.
It should not do that, and no longer does.

A bright spot is that this refactoring makes it easy to allow the
combination of --clean and --create to work sensibly, ie, emit DROP
DATABASE then CREATE DATABASE before reconnecting.  Ordinarily we'd
consider that a feature addition and not back-patch it, but it seems
silly to not include the extra couple of lines required in the 9.2
version of the code.

Per report from Guillaume Lelarge, though this is slightly more extensive
than his proposed patch.
2012-10-20 16:58:32 -04:00
Tom Lane
a563d94180 Standardize naming of malloc/realloc/strdup wrapper functions.
We had a number of variants on the theme of "malloc or die", with the
majority named like "pg_malloc", but by no means all.  Standardize on the
names pg_malloc, pg_malloc0, pg_realloc, pg_strdup.  Get rid of pg_calloc
entirely in favor of using pg_malloc0.

This is an essentially cosmetic change, so no back-patch.  (I did find
a couple of places where psql and pg_dump were using plain malloc or
strdup instead of the pg_ versions, but they don't look significant
enough to bother back-patching.)
2012-10-02 15:35:48 -04:00
Magnus Hagander
d074805fd4 Change "restoring" to "processing" in message from pg_dump
The same message is used in both pg_restore and pg_dump, and it's
confusing to output "restoring data for table xyz" when the user
is just doing a pg_dump.
2012-09-04 15:00:04 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera
58f17dcf83 Add translator comments to module names 2012-07-25 00:02:49 -04:00
Tom Lane
8a504a3639 Make pg_dump emit more accurate dependency information.
While pg_dump has included dependency information in archive-format output
ever since 7.3, it never made any large effort to ensure that that
information was actually useful.  In particular, in common situations where
dependency chains include objects that aren't separately emitted in the
dump, the dependencies shown for objects that were emitted would reference
the dump IDs of these un-dumped objects, leaving no clue about which other
objects the visible objects indirectly depend on.  So far, parallel
pg_restore has managed to avoid tripping over this misfeature, but only
by dint of some crude hacks like not trusting dependency information in
the pre-data section of the archive.

It seems prudent to do something about this before it rises up to bite us,
so instead of emitting the "raw" dependencies of each dumped object,
recursively search for its actual dependencies among the subset of objects
that are being dumped.

Back-patch to 9.2, since that code hasn't yet diverged materially from
HEAD.  At some point we might need to back-patch further, but right now
there are no known cases where this is actively necessary.  (The one known
case, bug #6699, is fixed in a different way by my previous patch.)  Since
this patch depends on 9.2 changes that made TOC entries be marked before
output commences as to whether they'll be dumped, back-patching further
would require additional surgery; and as of now there's no evidence that
it's worth the risk.
2012-06-25 21:21:18 -04:00
Tom Lane
a1ef01fe16 Improve pg_dump's dependency-sorting logic to enforce section dump order.
As of 9.2, with the --section option, it is very important that the concept
of "pre data", "data", and "post data" sections of the output be honored
strictly; else a dump divided into separate sectional files might be
unrestorable.  However, the dependency-sorting logic knew nothing of
sections and would happily select output orderings that didn't fit that
structure.  Doing so was mostly harmless before 9.2, but now we need to be
sure it doesn't do that.  To fix, create dummy objects representing the
section boundaries and add dependencies between them and all the normal
objects.  (This might sound expensive but it seems to only add a percent or
two to pg_dump's runtime.)

This also fixes a problem introduced in 9.1 by the feature that allows
incomplete GROUP BY lists when a primary key is given in GROUP BY.
That means that views can depend on primary key constraints.  Previously,
pg_dump would deal with that by simply emitting the primary key constraint
before the view definition (and hence before the data section of the
output).  That's bad enough for simple serial restores, where creating an
index before the data is loaded works, but is undesirable for speed
reasons.  But it could lead to outright failure of parallel restores, as
seen in bug #6699 from Joe Van Dyk.  That happened because pg_restore would
switch into parallel mode as soon as it reached the constraint, and then
very possibly would try to emit the view definition before the primary key
was committed (as a consequence of another bug that causes the view not to
be correctly marked as depending on the constraint).  Adding the section
boundary constraints forces the dependency-sorting code to break the view
into separate table and rule declarations, allowing the rule, and hence the
primary key constraint it depends on, to revert to their intended location
in the post-data section.  This also somewhat accidentally works around the
bogus-dependency-marking problem, because the rule will be correctly shown
as depending on the constraint, so parallel pg_restore will now do the
right thing.  (We will fix the bogus-dependency problem for real in a
separate patch, but that patch is not easily back-portable to 9.1, so the
fact that this patch is enough to dodge the only known symptom is
fortunate.)

Back-patch to 9.1, except for the hunk that adds verification that the
finished archive TOC list is in correct section order; the place where
it was convenient to add that doesn't exist in 9.1.
2012-06-25 21:21:17 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
11b335ac4c pg_dump: Fix verbosity level in LO progress messages
In passing, reword another instance of the same message that was
gratuitously different.

Author: Josh Kupershmidt
after a bug report by Bosco Rama
2012-06-19 17:20:23 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
e1e97e9313 pg_dump: Add missing newlines at end of messages 2012-06-18 23:57:00 +03:00
Bruce Momjian
927d61eeff Run pgindent on 9.2 source tree in preparation for first 9.3
commit-fest.
2012-06-10 15:20:04 -04:00
Tom Lane
4317e0246c Rewrite --section option to decouple it from --schema-only/--data-only.
The initial implementation of pg_dump's --section option supposed that the
existing --schema-only and --data-only options could be made equivalent to
--section settings.  This is wrong, though, due to dubious but long since
set-in-stone decisions about where to dump SEQUENCE SET items, as seen in
bug report from Martin Pitt.  (And I'm not totally convinced there weren't
other bugs, either.)  Undo that coupling and instead drive --section
filtering off current-section state tracked as we scan through the TOC
list to call _tocEntryRequired().

To make sure those decisions don't shift around and hopefully save a few
cycles, run _tocEntryRequired() only once per TOC entry and save the result
in a new TOC field.  This required minor rejiggering of ACL handling but
also allows a far cleaner implementation of inhibit_data_for_failed_table.

Also, to ensure that pg_dump and pg_restore have the same behavior with
respect to the --section switches, add _tocEntryRequired() filtering to
WriteToc() and WriteDataChunks(), rather than trying to implement section
filtering in an entirely orthogonal way in dumpDumpableObject().  This
required adjusting the handling of the special ENCODING and STDSTRINGS
items, but they were pretty weird before anyway.

Minor other code review for the patch, too.
2012-05-29 23:22:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
c89bdf7690 Eliminate some more O(N^2) behaviors in pg_dump/pg_restore.
This patch fixes three places (which AFAICT is all of them) where runtime
was O(N^2) in the number of TOC entries, by using an index array to replace
linear searches of the TOC list.  This performance issue is a bit less bad
than those recently fixed, because it depends on the number of items dumped
not the number in the source database, so the problem can be dodged by
doing partial dumps.

The previous coding already had an instance of one of the two index arrays
needed, but it was only calculated in parallel-restore cases; now we need
it all the time.  I also chose to move the arrays into the ArchiveHandle
data structure, to make this code a bit more ready for the day that we
try to sling multiple ArchiveHandles around in pg_dump or pg_restore.

Since we still need some server-side work before pg_dump can really cope
nicely with tens of thousands of tables, there's probably little point in
back-patching.
2012-05-28 20:38:28 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
9d23a70d51 pg_dump: get rid of die_horribly
The old code was using exit_horribly or die_horribly other depending on
whether it had an ArchiveHandle on which to close the connection or not;
but there were places that were passing a NULL ArchiveHandle to
die_horribly, and other places that used exit_horribly while having an
AH available.  So there wasn't all that much consistency.

Improve the situation by keeping only one of the routines, and instead
of having to pass the AH down from the caller, arrange for it to be
present for an on_exit_nicely callback to operate on.

Author: Joachim Wieland
Some tweaks by me

Per a suggestion from Robert Haas, in the ongoing "parallel pg_dump"
saga.
2012-03-20 18:58:00 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut
19f45565f5 pg_dump: Remove undocumented "files" output format
This was for demonstration only, and now it was creating compiler
warnings from zlib without an obvious fix (see also
d923125b77), let's just remove it.  The
"directory" format is presumably similar enough anyway.
2012-03-20 20:39:59 +02:00
Tom Lane
89e0bac86d Convert newlines to spaces in names written in pg_dump comments.
pg_dump was incautious about sanitizing object names that are emitted
within SQL comments in its output script.  A name containing a newline
would at least render the script syntactically incorrect.  Maliciously
crafted object names could present a SQL injection risk when the script
is reloaded.

Reported by Heikki Linnakangas, patch by Robert Haas

Security: CVE-2012-0868
2012-02-23 15:53:09 -05:00
Robert Haas
e9a22259c4 Invent on_exit_nicely for pg_dump.
Per recent discussions on pgsql-hackers regarding parallel pg_dump.
2012-02-16 11:49:20 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
e09509bd33 pg_dump: Add some const qualifiers 2012-02-07 23:20:29 +02:00
Robert Haas
1631598ea2 pg_dump: Further reduce reliance on global variables.
This is another round of refactoring to make things simpler for parallel
pg_dump.  pg_dump.c now issues SQL queries through the relevant Archive
object, rather than relying on the global variable g_conn.  This commit
isn't quite enough to get rid of g_conn entirely, but it makes a big
dent in its utilization and, along the way, manages to be slightly less
code than before.
2012-02-07 10:07:02 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
88a6ac9f93 pg_dump: Add GCC noreturn attribute to appropriate functions
This is a small help to the compiler and static analyzers.
2012-01-31 20:49:10 +02:00
Tom Lane
f3316a05b5 Fix pg_restore's direct-to-database mode for INSERT-style table data.
In commit 6545a901aa, I removed the mini SQL
lexer that was in pg_backup_db.c, thinking that it had no real purpose
beyond separating COPY data from SQL commands, which purpose had been
obsoleted by long-ago fixes in pg_dump's archive file format.
Unfortunately this was in error: that code was also used to identify
command boundaries in INSERT-style table data, which is run together as a
single string in the archive file for better compressibility.  As a result,
direct-to-database restores from archive files made with --inserts or
--column-inserts fail in our latest releases, as reported by Dick Visser.

To fix, restore the mini SQL lexer, but simplify it by adjusting the
calling logic so that it's only required to cope with INSERT-style table
data, not arbitrary SQL commands.  This allows us to not have to deal with
SQL comments, E'' strings, or dollar-quoted strings, none of which have
ever been emitted by dumpTableData_insert.

Also, fix the lexer to cope with standard-conforming strings, which was the
actual bug that the previous patch was meant to solve.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  The previous patch went back to 8.2,
which unfortunately means that the EOL release of 8.2 contains this bug,
but I don't think we're doing another 8.2 release just because of that.
2012-01-06 13:04:09 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
54a622cadf Suggest use of psql when pg_restore gets a text dump. 2012-01-03 16:02:49 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
a4cd6abcc9 Add --section option to pg_dump and pg_restore.
Valid values are --pre-data, data and post-data. The option can be
given more than once. --schema-only is equivalent to
--section=pre-data --section=post-data. --data-only is equivalent
to --section=data.

Andrew Dunstan, reviewed by Joachim Wieland and Josh Berkus.
2011-12-16 19:09:38 -05:00
Tom Lane
0195e5c4ab Clean up after recent pg_dump patches.
Fix entirely broken handling of va_list printing routines, update some
out-of-date comments, fix some bogus inclusion orders, fix NLS declarations,
fix missed realloc calls.
2011-11-29 20:41:54 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
8b08deb0d1 Simplify the pg_dump/pg_restore error reporting macros, and allow
pg_dumpall to use the same memory allocation functions as the others.
2011-11-29 16:34:45 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
9a7d49d1fb Move pg_dump memory routines into pg_dumpmem.c/h and restore common.c
with its original functions.  The previous function migration would
cause too many difficulties in back-patching.
2011-11-26 22:34:36 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
3c0afde11a Modify pg_dump to use error-free memory allocation macros. This avoids
ignoring errors and call-site error checking.
2011-11-25 15:40:51 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
1b81c2fe6e Remove many -Wcast-qual warnings
This addresses only those cases that are easy to fix by adding or
moving a const qualifier or removing an unnecessary cast.  There are
many more complicated cases remaining.
2011-09-11 21:54:32 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut
52ce20589a Add missing format attributes
Add __attribute__ decorations for printf format checking to the places that
were missing them.  Fix the resulting warnings.  Add
-Wmissing-format-attribute to the standard set of warnings for GCC, so these
don't happen again.

The warning fixes here are relatively harmless.  The one serious problem
discovered by this was already committed earlier in
cf15fb5cab.
2011-09-10 23:12:46 +03:00
Tom Lane
6e1f1fee97 Actually, all of parallel restore's limitations should be tested earlier.
On closer inspection, whining in restore_toc_entries_parallel is really
much too late for any user-facing error case.  The right place to do it
is at the start of RestoreArchive(), before we've done anything interesting
(suh as trying to DROP all the targets ...)

Back-patch to 8.4, where parallel restore was introduced.
2011-08-28 22:27:48 -04:00
Tom Lane
d6e7abe45a Be more user-friendly about unsupported cases for parallel pg_restore.
If we are unable to do a parallel restore because the input file is stdin
or is otherwise unseekable, we should complain and fail immediately, not
after having done some of the restore.  Complaining once per thread isn't
so cool either, and the messages should be worded to make it clear this is
an unsupported case not some weird race-condition bug.  Per complaint from
Lonni Friedman.

Back-patch to 8.4, where parallel restore was introduced.
2011-08-28 21:48:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
6545a901aa Fix pg_restore's direct-to-database mode for standard_conforming_strings.
pg_backup_db.c contained a mini SQL lexer with which it tried to identify
boundaries between SQL commands, but that code was not designed to cope
with standard_conforming_strings, and would get the wrong answer if a
backslash immediately precedes a closing single quote in such a string,
as per report from Julian Mehnle.  The bug only affects direct-to-database
restores from archive files made with standard_conforming_strings = on.

Rather than complicating the code some more to try to fix that, let's just
rip it all out.  The only reason it was needed was to cope with COPY data
embedded into ordinary archive entries, which was a layout that was used
only for about the first three weeks of the archive format's existence,
and never in any production release of pg_dump.  Instead, just rely on the
archive file layout to tell us whether we're printing COPY data or not.

This bug represents a data corruption hazard in all releases in which
standard_conforming_strings can be turned on, ie 8.2 and later, so
back-patch to all supported branches.
2011-07-28 14:06:57 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
c8e0c32119 Rename pg_dump --no-security-label to --no-security-labels
Other similar options also use the plural form.
2011-05-19 23:20:11 +03:00
Bruce Momjian
bf50caf105 pgindent run before PG 9.1 beta 1. 2011-04-10 11:42:00 -04:00
Tom Lane
1471a147f0 Fix SortTocFromFile() to cope with lines that are too long for its buffer.
The original coding supposed that a dump TOC file could never contain lines
longer than 1K.  The folly of that was exposed by a recent report from
Per-Olov Esgard.  We only really need to see the first dozen or two bytes
of each line, since we're just trying to read off the numeric ID at the
start of the line; so there's no need for a particularly huge buffer.
What there is a need for is logic to not process continuation bufferloads.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since it's always been like this.
2011-04-07 11:40:23 -04:00
Tom Lane
4cff100d73 Fix parallel pg_restore to handle comments on POST_DATA items correctly.
The previous coding would try to process all SECTION_NONE items in the
initial sequential-restore pass, which failed if they were dependencies of
not-yet-restored items.  Fix by postponing such items into the parallel
processing pass once we have skipped any non-PRE_DATA item.

Back-patch into 9.0; the original parallel-restore coding in 8.4 did not
have this bug, so no need to change it.

Report and diagnosis by Arnd Hannemann.
2011-02-18 13:11:45 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
b313bca0af DDL support for collations
- collowner field
- CREATE COLLATION
- ALTER COLLATION
- DROP COLLATION
- COMMENT ON COLLATION
- integration with extensions
- pg_dump support for the above
- dependency management
- psql tab completion
- psql \dO command
2011-02-12 15:55:18 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
56d77c9e56 Silence compiler warning about uninitialized variable, noted by
Itagaki Takahiro
2011-01-24 08:28:35 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
7f508f1c6b Add 'directory' format to pg_dump. The new directory format is compatible
with the 'tar' format, in that untarring a tar format archive produces a
valid directory format archive.

Joachim Wieland and Heikki Linnakangas
2011-01-23 23:10:15 +02:00
Tom Lane
e2627258c3 Suppress possibly-uninitialized-variable warnings from gcc 4.5.
It appears that gcc 4.5 can issue such warnings for whole structs, not
just scalar variables as in the past.  Refactor some pg_dump code slightly
so that the OutputContext local variables are always initialized, even
if they won't be used.  It's cheap enough to not be worth worrying about.
2011-01-22 17:56:42 -05:00
Robert Haas
0d692a0dc9 Basic foreign table support.
Foreign tables are a core component of SQL/MED.  This commit does
not provide a working SQL/MED infrastructure, because foreign tables
cannot yet be queried.  Support for foreign table scans will need to
be added in a future patch.  However, this patch creates the necessary
system catalog structure, syntax support, and support for ancillary
operations such as COMMENT and SECURITY LABEL.

Shigeru Hanada, heavily revised by Robert Haas
2011-01-01 23:48:11 -05:00
Tom Lane
663fc32e26 Eliminate O(N^2) behavior in parallel restore with many blobs.
With hundreds of thousands of TOC entries, the repeated searches in
reduce_dependencies() become the dominant cost.  Get rid of that searching
by constructing reverse-dependency lists, which we can do in O(N) time
during the fix_dependencies() preprocessing.  I chose to store the reverse
dependencies as DumpId arrays for consistency with the forward-dependency
representation, and keep the previously-transient tocsByDumpId[] array
around to locate actual TOC entry structs quickly from dump IDs.

While this fixes the slow case reported by Vlad Arkhipov, there is still
a potential for O(N^2) behavior with sufficiently many tables:
fix_dependencies itself, as well as mark_create_done and
inhibit_data_for_failed_table, are doing repeated searches to deal with
table-to-table-data dependencies.  Possibly this work could be extended
to deal with that, although the latter two functions are also used in
non-parallel restore where we currently don't run fix_dependencies.

Another TODO is that we fail to parallelize restore of multiple blobs
at all.  This appears to require changes in the archive format to fix.

Back-patch to 9.0 where the problem was reported.  8.4 has potential issues
as well; but since it doesn't create a separate TOC entry for each blob,
it's at much less risk of having enough TOC entries to cause real problems.
2010-12-09 13:03:11 -05:00
Robert Haas
4d355a8336 Add a SECURITY LABEL command.
This is intended as infrastructure to support integration with label-based
mandatory access control systems such as SE-Linux. Further changes (mostly
hooks) will be needed, but this is a big chunk of it.

KaiGai Kohei and Robert Haas
2010-09-27 20:55:27 -04:00
Magnus Hagander
9f2e211386 Remove cvs keywords from all files. 2010-09-20 22:08:53 +02:00
Tom Lane
c5d6d5bc6d Improve parallel restore's ability to cope with selective restore (-L option).
The original coding tended to break down in the face of modified restore
orders, as shown in bug #5626 from Albert Ullrich, because it would flip over
into parallel-restore operation too soon.  That causes problems because we
don't have sufficient dependency information in dump archives to allow safe
parallel processing of SECTION_PRE_DATA items.  Even if we did, it's probably
undesirable to allow that to override the commanded restore order.

To fix the problem of omitted items causing unexpected changes in restore
order, tweak SortTocFromFile so that omitted items end up at the head of
the list not the tail.  This ensures that they'll be examined and their
dependencies will be marked satisfied before we get to any interesting
items.

In HEAD and 9.0, we can easily change restore_toc_entries_parallel so that
all SECTION_PRE_DATA items are guaranteed to be processed in the initial
serial-restore loop, and hence in commanded order.  Only DATA and POST_DATA
items are candidates for parallel processing.  For them there might be
variations from the commanded order because of parallelism, but we should
do it in a safe order thanks to dependencies.

In 8.4 it's much harder to make such a guarantee.  I settled for not
letting the initial loop break out into parallel processing mode if
it sees a DATA/POST_DATA item that's not to be restored; this at least
prevents a non-restorable item from causing premature exit from the loop.
This means that 8.4 will be more likely to fail given a badly-ordered -L
list than 9.x, but we don't really promise any such thing will work anyway.
2010-08-21 13:59:44 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
239d769e7e pgindent run for 9.0, second run 2010-07-06 19:19:02 +00:00
Tom Lane
04d9f4dab4 Improve pg_dump's checkSeek() function to verify the functioning of ftello
as well as fseeko, and to not assume that fseeko(fp, 0, SEEK_CUR) proves
anything.  Also improve some related comments.  Per my observation that
the SEEK_CUR test didn't actually work on some platforms, and subsequent
discussion with Robert Haas.

Back-patch to 8.4.  In earlier releases it's not that important whether
we get the hasSeek test right, but with parallel restore it matters.
2010-06-28 02:07:02 +00:00