Commit Graph

1122 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane 9b9cb3c453 Allow --with-bonjour to work with non-macOS implementations of Bonjour.
On macOS the relevant functions require no special library, but elsewhere
we need to pull in libdns_sd.

Back-patch to supported branches.  No docs change since the docs do not
suggest that this is a Mac-only feature.

Luke Lonergan

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2D8331C5-D64F-44C1-8717-63EDC6EAF7EB@brightforge.com
2017-11-08 17:47:14 -05:00
Tom Lane d0c80c17f1 Fix version numbering foulups exposed by 10.1.
configure computed PG_VERSION_NUM incorrectly.  (Coulda sworn I tested
that logic back when, but it had an obvious thinko.)

pg_upgrade had not been taught about the new dispensation with just
one part in the major version number.

Both things accidentally failed to fail with 10.0, but with 10.1 we
got the wrong results.

Per buildfarm.
2017-11-06 19:46:52 -05:00
Andres Freund d133982d59 Force "restrict" not to be used when compiling with xlc.
Per buildfarm animal Hornet and followup manual testing by Noah Misch,
it appears xlc miscompiles code using "restrict" in at least some
cases. Allow disabling restrict usage with FORCE_DISABLE_RESTRICT=yes
in template files, and do so for aix/xlc.

Author: Andres Freund and Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1820.1507918762@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-13 12:15:06 -07:00
Andres Freund 91d5f1a4a3 Use C99 restrict via pg_restrict, rather than restrict directly.
Unfortunately using 'restrict' plainly causes problems with MSVC,
which supports restrict only as '__restrict'. Defining 'restrict' to
'__restrict' unfortunately causes a conflict with MSVC's usage of
__declspec(restrict) in headers.

Therefore define pg_restrict to the appropriate keyword instead, and
replace existing usages.

This replaces the temporary workaround introduced in 36b4b91ba0.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2656.1507830907@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-12 16:17:35 -07:00
Andres Freund 0b974dba2d Add configure infrastructure to detect support for C99's restrict.
Will be used in later commits improving performance for a few key
routines where information about aliasing allows for significantly
better code generation.

This allows to use the C99 'restrict' keyword without breaking C89, or
for that matter C++, compilers. If not supported it's defined to be
empty.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914063418.sckdzgjfrsbekae4@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-11 16:01:52 -07:00
Tom Lane f4128ab466 Regenerate configure script.
Not sure how fffd651e83 ended up
probing for "strnlenfrak" rather than "strnlen".
My autoconf doesn't do that ...
2017-10-10 19:14:06 -04:00
Andres Freund fffd651e83 Rewrite strnlen replacement implementation from 8a241792f9.
The previous placement of the fallback implementation in libpgcommon
was problematic, because libpqport functions need strnlen
functionality.

Move replacement into libpgport. Provide strnlen() under its posix
name, instead of pg_strnlen(). Fix stupid configure bug, executing the
test only when compiled with threading support.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1e1gR2-0005fB-SI@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-10-10 14:50:30 -07:00
Andres Freund 8a241792f9 Add pg_strnlen() a portable implementation of strlen.
As the OS version is likely going to be more optimized, fall back to
it if available, as detected by configure.
2017-10-09 15:20:42 -07:00
Andres Freund 510b8cbff1 Extend & revamp pg_bswap.h infrastructure.
Upcoming patches are going to address performance issues that involve
slow system provided ntohs/htons etc. To address that expand
pg_bswap.h to provide pg_ntoh{16,32,64}, pg_hton{16,32,64} and
optimize their respective implementations by using compiler intrinsics
for gcc compatible compilers and msvc. Fall back to manual
implementations using shifts etc otherwise.

Additionally remove multiple evaluation hazards from the existing
BSWAP32/64 macros, by replacing them with inline functions when
necessary. In the course of that the naming scheme is changed to
pg_bswap16/32/64.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170927172019.gheidqy6xvlxb325@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-09-29 17:24:39 -07:00
Tom Lane 899bd785c0 Avoid SIGBUS on Linux when a DSM memory request overruns tmpfs.
On Linux, shared memory segments created with shm_open() are backed by
swap files created in tmpfs.  If the swap file needs to be extended,
but there's no tmpfs space left, you get a very unfriendly SIGBUS trap.
To avoid this, force allocation of the full request size when we create
the segment.  This adds a few cycles, but none that we wouldn't expend
later anyway, assuming the request isn't hugely bigger than the actual
need.

Make this code #ifdef __linux__, because (a) there's not currently a
reason to think the same problem exists on other platforms, and (b)
applying posix_fallocate() to an FD created by shm_open() isn't very
portable anyway.

Back-patch to 9.4 where the DSM code came in.

Thomas Munro, per a bug report from Amul Sul

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1002664500.12301802.1471008223422.JavaMail.yahoo@mail.yahoo.com
2017-09-25 16:09:19 -04:00
Tom Lane 85feb77aa0 Assume wcstombs(), towlower(), and sibling functions are always present.
These functions are required by SUS v2, which is our minimum baseline
for Unix platforms, and are present on all interesting Windows versions
as well.  Even our oldest buildfarm members have them.  Thus, we were not
testing the "!USE_WIDE_UPPER_LOWER" code paths, which explains why the bug
fixed in commit e6023ee7f escaped detection.  Per discussion, there seems
to be no more real-world value in maintaining this option.  Hence, remove
the configure-time tests for wcstombs() and towlower(), remove the
USE_WIDE_UPPER_LOWER symbol, and remove all the !USE_WIDE_UPPER_LOWER code.
There's not actually all that much of the latter, but simplifying the #if
nests is a win in itself.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170921052928.GA188913@rfd.leadboat.com
2017-09-22 11:00:58 -04:00
Andres Freund fc49e24fa6 Make WAL segment size configurable at initdb time.
For performance reasons a larger segment size than the default 16MB
can be useful. A larger segment size has two main benefits: Firstly,
in setups using archiving, it makes it easier to write scripts that
can keep up with higher amounts of WAL, secondly, the WAL has to be
written and synced to disk less frequently.

But at the same time large segment size are disadvantageous for
smaller databases. So far the segment size had to be configured at
compile time, often making it unrealistic to choose one fitting to a
particularly load. Therefore change it to a initdb time setting.

This includes a breaking changes to the xlogreader.h API, which now
requires the current segment size to be configured.  For that and
similar reasons a number of binaries had to be taught how to recognize
the current segment size.

Author: Beena Emerson, editorialized by Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund, David Steele, Kuntal Ghosh, Michael
    Paquier, Peter Eisentraut, Robert Hass, Tushar Ahuja
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOG9ApEAcQ--1ieKbhFzXSQPw_YLmepaa4hNdnY5+ZULpt81Mw@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-19 22:03:48 -07:00
Tom Lane 9d6b160d7d Make [U]INT64CONST safe for use in #if conditions.
Instead of using a cast to force the constant to be the right width,
assume we can plaster on an L, UL, LL, or ULL suffix as appropriate.
The old approach to this is very hoary, dating from before we were
willing to require compilers to have working int64 types.

This fix makes the PG_INT64_MIN, PG_INT64_MAX, and PG_UINT64_MAX
constants safe to use in preprocessor conditions, where a cast
doesn't work.  Other symbolic constants that might be defined using
[U]INT64CONST are likewise safer than before.

Also fix the SIZE_MAX macro to be similarly safe, if we are forced
to provide a definition for that.  The test added in commit 2e70d6b5e
happens to do what we want even with the hack "(size_t) -1" definition,
but we could easily get burnt on other tests in future.

Back-patch to all supported branches, like the previous commits.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15883.1504278595@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-01 15:14:46 -04:00
Tom Lane 9f14dc393b Stamp HEAD as 11devel.
Note that we no longer require any manual adjustments to shared-library
minor version numbers, cf commit a3bce17ef.  So this should be everything.
2017-08-14 18:08:30 -04:00
Tom Lane 5a5c2feca3 Absorb -D_USE_32BIT_TIME_T switch from Perl, if relevant.
Commit 3c163a7fc's original choice to ignore all #define symbols whose
names begin with underscore turns out to be too simplistic.  On Windows,
some Perl installations are built with -D_USE_32BIT_TIME_T, and we must
absorb that or we get the wrong result for sizeof(PerlInterpreter).

This effectively re-reverts commit ef58b87df, which injected that symbol
in a hacky way, making it apply to all of Postgres not just PL/Perl.
More significantly, it did so on *all* 32-bit Windows builds, even when
the Perl build to be used did not select this option; so that it fails
to work properly with some newer Perl builds.

By making this change, we would be introducing an ABI break in 32-bit
Windows builds; but fortunately we have not used type time_t in any
exported Postgres APIs in a long time.  So it should be OK, both for
PL/Perl itself and for third-party extensions, if an extension library
is built with a different _USE_32BIT_TIME_T setting than the core code.

Patch by me, based on research by Ashutosh Sharma and Robert Haas.
Back-patch to all supported branches, as commit 3c163a7fc was.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANFyU97OVQ3+Mzfmt3MhuUm5NwPU=-FtbNH5Eb7nZL9ua8=rcA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-14 11:48:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut d6391b03b3 Reject use of ucol_strcollUTF8() before ICU 53
Various bugs can cause crashes, so don't use that function before ICU
53.  It will fall back to the code path used for other encodings.

Since we now tie the function availability to an ICU version, we don't
need the configure test anymore.  That also resolves the issue that the
test result was previously hardcoded for Windows.

researched by Daniel Verite <daniel@manitou-mail.org>, Peter Geoghegan
<pg@bowt.ie>, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/f1438ec6-22aa-4029-9a3b-26f79d330e72%40manitou-mail.org
2017-08-10 22:14:00 -04:00
Tom Lane 8d6442377d Stamp 10beta3. 2017-08-07 17:08:19 -04:00
Tom Lane 8014d2afa7 Skip test for IPC::Run if user is overriding our search for PROVE.
The check for IPC::Run we added in commit c254970ad is useful in simple
cases, but there are real use-cases where "prove" is coming from a
different Perl installation than the "perl" we want to use to build.
In such cases asking whether "perl" knows about IPC::Run is irrelevant
and can cause an unnecessary configure failure.  Hence, if user has
specified a value for PROVE, skip the IPC::Run check.  Per discussion
with Andrew Dunstan.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1dcE5n-0005Sk-UE@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-08-07 16:42:18 -04:00
Tom Lane f4f41baf29 Improve configure's check for ICU presence.
Without ICU's header files, "configure --with-icu" would succeed anyway,
at least when using the non-pkgconfig-based setup.  Then you got a bunch of
ugly failures at build.  Add an explicit header check to tighten that up.
2017-08-05 11:48:43 -04:00
Tom Lane b21c569cea Further improve consistency of configure's program searching.
Peter Eisentraut noted that commit 40b9f1921 had broken a configure
behavior that some people might rely on: AC_CHECK_PROGS(FOO,...) will
allow the search to be overridden by specifying a value for FOO on
configure's command line or in its environment, but AC_PATH_PROGS(FOO,...)
accepts such an override only if it's an absolute path.  We had worked
around that behavior for some, but not all, of the pre-existing uses
of AC_PATH_PROGS by just skipping the macro altogether when FOO is
already set.  Let's standardize on that workaround for all uses of
AC_PATH_PROGS, new and pre-existing, by wrapping AC_PATH_PROGS in a
new macro PGAC_PATH_PROGS.  While at it, fix a deficiency of the old
workaround code by making sure we report the setting to configure's log.

Eventually I'd like to improve PGAC_PATH_PROGS so that it converts
non-absolute override inputs to absolute form, eg "PYTHON=python3"
becomes, say, PYTHON = /usr/bin/python3.  But that will take some
nontrivial coding so it doesn't seem like a thing to do in late beta.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/90a92a7d-938e-507a-3bd7-ecd2b4004689@2ndquadrant.com
2017-08-01 11:40:08 -04:00
Tom Lane 40b9f19217 Record full paths of programs sought by "configure".
Previously we had a mix of uses of AC_CHECK_PROG[S] and AC_PATH_PROG[S].
The only difference between those macros is that the latter emits the
full path to the program it finds, eg "/usr/bin/prove", whereas the
former emits just "prove".  Let's standardize on always emitting the
full path; this is better for documentation of the build, and it might
prevent some types of failures if later build steps are done with
a different PATH setting.

I did not touch the AC_CHECK_PROG[S] calls in ax_pthread.m4 and
ax_prog_perl_modules.m4.  There seems no need to make those diverge from
upstream, since we do not record the programs sought by the former, while
the latter's call to AC_CHECK_PROG(PERL,...) will never be reached.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25937.1501433410@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-07-31 13:02:49 -04:00
Tom Lane 3c163a7fc7 PL/Perl portability fix: absorb relevant -D switches from Perl.
The Perl documentation is very clear that stuff calling libperl should
be built with the compiler switches shown by Perl's $Config{ccflags}.
We'd been ignoring that up to now, and mostly getting away with it,
but recent Perl versions contain ABI compatibility cross-checks that
fail on some builds because of this omission.  In particular the
sizeof(PerlInterpreter) can come out different due to some fields being
added or removed; which means we have a live ABI hazard that we'd better
fix rather than continuing to sweep it under the rug.

However, it still seems like a bad idea to just absorb $Config{ccflags}
verbatim.  In some environments Perl was built with a different compiler
that doesn't even use the same switch syntax.  -D switch syntax is pretty
universal though, and absorbing Perl's -D switches really ought to be
enough to fix the problem.

Furthermore, Perl likes to inject stuff like -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE and
-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 into $Config{ccflags}, which affect libc ABIs on
platforms where they're relevant.  Adopting those seems dangerous too.
It's unclear whether a build wherein Perl and Postgres have different ideas
of sizeof(off_t) etc would work, or whether anyone would care about making
it work.  But it's dead certain that having different stdio ABIs in
core Postgres and PL/Perl will not work; we've seen that movie before.
Therefore, let's also ignore -D switches for symbols beginning with
underscore.  The symbols that we actually need to import should be the ones
mentioned in perl.h's PL_bincompat_options stanza, and none of those start
with underscore, so this seems likely to work.  (If it turns out not to
work everywhere, we could consider intersecting the symbols mentioned in
PL_bincompat_options with the -D switches.  But that will be much more
complicated, so let's try this way first.)

This will need to be back-patched, but first let's see what the
buildfarm makes of it.

Ashutosh Sharma, some adjustments by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANFyU97OVQ3+Mzfmt3MhuUm5NwPU=-FtbNH5Eb7nZL9ua8=rcA@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-28 14:25:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 42171e2cd2 Stamp 10beta2. 2017-07-10 16:26:20 -04:00
Tom Lane c254970ad6 Make configure check for IPC::Run when --enable-tap-tests is specified.
The TAP tests mostly don't work without IPC::Run, and the reason for
the failure is not immediately obvious from the error messages you get.
So teach configure to reject --enable-tap-tests unless IPC::Run exists.
Mostly this just involves adding ax_prog_perl_modules.m4 from the GNU
autoconf archives.

This was discussed last year, but we held off on the theory that we might
be switching to CMake soon.  That's evidently not happening for v10,
so let's absorb this now.

Eugene Kazakov and Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/56BDDC20.9020506@postgrespro.ru
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqRVKG_CR4Dy_AMfE6DXcr6F7ygy2goa2atJU4XkerDRUg@mail.gmail.com
2017-06-15 15:56:12 -04:00
Tom Lane 5ad367a35b Stamp 10beta1. 2017-05-15 17:20:59 -04:00
Tom Lane 64925603c9 Revert "Use pselect(2) not select(2), if available, to wait in postmaster's loop."
This reverts commit 81069a9efc.

Buildfarm results suggest that some platforms have versions of pselect(2)
that are not merely non-atomic, but flat out non-functional.  Revert the
use-pselect patch to confirm this diagnosis (and exclude the no-SA_RESTART
patch as the source of trouble).  If it's so, we should probably look into
blacklisting specific platforms that have broken pselect.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9696.1493072081@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-24 18:29:03 -04:00
Tom Lane 81069a9efc Use pselect(2) not select(2), if available, to wait in postmaster's loop.
Traditionally we've unblocked signals, called select(2), and then blocked
signals again.  The code expects that the select() will be cancelled with
EINTR if an interrupt occurs; but there's a race condition, which is that
an already-pending signal will be delivered as soon as we unblock, and then
when we reach select() there will be nothing preventing it from waiting.
This can result in a long delay before we perform any action that
ServerLoop was supposed to have taken in response to the signal.  As with
the somewhat-similar symptoms fixed by commit 893902085, the main practical
problem is slow launching of parallel workers.  The window for trouble is
usually pretty short, corresponding to one iteration of ServerLoop; but
it's not negligible.

To fix, use pselect(2) in place of select(2) where available, as that's
designed to solve exactly this problem.  Where not available, we continue
to use the old way, and are no worse off than before.

pselect(2) has been required by POSIX since about 2001, so most modern
platforms should have it.  A bigger portability issue is that some
implementations are said to be non-atomic, ie pselect() isn't really
any different from unblock/select/reblock.  Still, we're no worse off
than before on such a platform.

There is talk of rewriting the postmaster to use a WaitEventSet and
not do signal response work in signal handlers, at which point this
could be reverted, since we'd be using a self-pipe to solve the race
condition.  But that's not happening before v11 at the earliest.

Back-patch to 9.6.  The problem exists much further back, but the
worst symptom arises only in connection with parallel query, so it
does not seem worth taking any portability risks in older branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9205.1492833041@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-24 14:03:14 -04:00
Andres Freund b182a4ae2f Don't include sys/poll.h anymore.
poll.h is mandated by Single Unix Spec v2, the usual baseline for
postgres on unix.  None of the unixoid buildfarms animals has
sys/poll.h but not poll.h.  Therefore there's not much point to test
for sys/poll.h's existence and include it optionally.

Author: Andres Freund, per suggestion from Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20505.1492723662@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-23 16:11:35 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut 510074f9f0 Remove use of Jade and DSSSL
All documentation is now built using XSLT.  Remove all references to
Jade, DSSSL, also JadeTex and some other outdated tooling.

For chunked HTML builds, this changes nothing, but removes the
transitional "oldhtml" target.  The single-page HTML build is ported
over to XSLT.  For PDF builds, this removes the JadeTex builds and moves
the FOP builds in their place.
2017-04-06 22:09:11 -04:00
Simon Riggs 00b6b6feb1 Allow --with-wal-segsize=n up to n=1024MB
Other part of Beena Emerson's patch to allow testing
2017-04-05 15:38:17 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut ddce628971 Fix configure check for typeof 2017-03-28 22:28:56 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 4cb824699e Cast result of copyObject() to correct type
copyObject() is declared to return void *, which allows easily assigning
the result independent of the input, but it loses all type checking.

If the compiler supports typeof or something similar, cast the result to
the input type.  This creates a greater amount of type safety.  In some
cases, where the result is assigned to a generic type such as Node * or
Expr *, new casts are now necessary, but in general casts are now
unnecessary in the normal case and indicate that something unusual is
happening.

Reviewed-by: Mark Dilger <hornschnorter@gmail.com>
2017-03-28 21:59:23 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut eccfef81e1 ICU support
Add a column collprovider to pg_collation that determines which library
provides the collation data.  The existing choices are default and libc,
and this adds an icu choice, which uses the ICU4C library.

The pg_locale_t type is changed to a union that contains the
provider-specific locale handles.  Users of locale information are
changed to look into that struct for the appropriate handle to use.

Also add a collversion column that records the version of the collation
when it is created, and check at run time whether it is still the same.
This detects potentially incompatible library upgrades that can corrupt
indexes and other structures.  This is currently only supported by
ICU-provided collations.

initdb initializes the default collation set as before from the `locale
-a` output but also adds all available ICU locales with a "-x-icu"
appended.

Currently, ICU-provided collations can only be explicitly named
collations.  The global database locales are still always libc-provided.

ICU support is enabled by configure --with-icu.

Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
2017-03-23 15:28:48 -04:00
Tom Lane bc18126a6b Add configure test to see if the C compiler has gcc-style computed gotos.
We'll need this for the upcoming patch to speed up expression evaluation.
Might as well push it now to see if it behaves sanely in the buildfarm.

Andres Freund

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170320062511.hp5qeurtxrwsvfxr@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-03-20 13:35:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 2bd7f85796 Remove some configure header-file checks that we weren't really using.
We had some AC_CHECK_HEADER tests that were really wastes of cycles,
because the code proceeded to #include those headers unconditionally
anyway, in all or a large majority of cases.  The lack of complaints
shows that those headers are available on every platform of interest,
so we might as well let configure run a bit faster by not probing
those headers at all.

I suspect that some of the tests I left alone are equally useless, but
since all the existing #includes of the remaining headers are properly
guarded, I didn't touch them.
2017-02-25 18:10:09 -05:00
Tom Lane b6aa17e0ae De-support floating-point timestamps.
Per discussion, the time has come to do this.  The handwriting has been
on the wall at least since 9.0 that this would happen someday, whenever
it got to be too much of a burden to support the float-timestamp option.
The triggering factor now is the discovery that there are multiple bugs
in the code that attempts to implement use of integer timestamps in the
replication protocol even when the server is built for float timestamps.
The internal float timestamps leak into the protocol fields in places.
While we could fix the identified bugs, there's a very high risk of
introducing more.  Trying to build a wall that would positively prevent
mixing integer and float timestamps is more complexity than we want to
undertake to maintain a long-deprecated option.  The fact that these
bugs weren't found through testing also indicates a lack of interest
in float timestamps.

This commit disables configure's --disable-integer-datetimes switch
(it'll still accept --enable-integer-datetimes, though), removes direct
references to USE_INTEGER_DATETIMES, and removes discussion of float
timestamps from the user documentation.  A considerable amount of code is
rendered dead by this, but removing that will occur as separate mop-up.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26788.1487455319@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-23 11:40:20 -05:00
Tom Lane 4e5ce3c1ae Reject too-old Python versions a bit sooner.
Commit 04aad4018 added this check after the search for a Python shared
library, which seems to me to be a pretty unfriendly ordering.  The
search might fail for what are basically version-related reasons, and
in such a case it'd be better to say "your Python is too old" than
"could not find shared library for Python".
2017-02-21 11:28:23 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 04aad40186 Drop support for Python 2.3
There is no specific reason for this right now, but keeping support for
old Python versions around indefinitely increases the maintenance
burden.  The oldest supported Python version is now Python 2.4, which is
still shipped in RHEL/CentOS 5 by default.

In configure, add a check for the required Python version and give a
friendly error message for an old version, instead of relying on an
obscure build error later on.
2017-02-21 09:49:22 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 181bdb90ba Fix typos in comments.
Backpatch to all supported versions, where applicable, to make backpatching
of future fixes go more smoothly.

Josh Soref

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CACZqfqCf+5qRztLPgmmosr-B0Ye4srWzzw_mo4c_8_B_mtjmJQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-02-06 11:33:58 +02:00
Bruce Momjian 1d25779284 Update copyright via script for 2017 2017-01-03 13:48:53 -05:00
Tom Lane 1d63f7d2d1 Use clock_gettime(), if available, in instr_time measurements.
The advantage of clock_gettime() is that the API allows the result to
be precise to nanoseconds, not just microseconds as in gettimeofday().
Now that it's routinely possible to do tens of plan node executions
in 1us, we really need more precision than gettimeofday() can offer
for EXPLAIN ANALYZE to accumulate statistics with.

Some research shows that clock_gettime() is available on pretty nearly
every modern Unix-ish platform, and as far as I have been able to test,
it has about the same execution time as gettimeofday(), so there's no
loss in switching over.  (By the same token, this doesn't do anything
to fix the fact that we really wish clock readings were faster.  But
there's enough win here to justify changing anyway.)

A small side benefit is that on most platforms, we can use CLOCK_MONOTONIC
instead of CLOCK_REALTIME and thereby render EXPLAIN impervious to
concurrent resets of the system clock.  (This means that code must not
assume that the contents of struct instr_time have any well-defined
interpretation as timestamps, but really that was true before.)

Some platforms offer nonstandard clock IDs that might be of interest.
This patch knows we should use CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW on macOS, because it
provides more precision and is faster to read than their CLOCK_MONOTONIC.
If there turn out to be many more cases where we need special rules, it
might be appropriate to handle the selection of clock ID in configure,
but for the moment that doesn't seem worth the trouble.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/31856.1400021891@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-01-02 13:41:51 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas ad365b2f91 Fix broken autoconf test for random number source.
Hopefully this fixes buildfarm member jacana.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/be25aa16-2f06-b7d1-8810-c69489a0e70b@dunslane.net
2016-12-12 09:26:42 +02:00
Tom Lane c648f05831 Put AC_MSG_RESULT() call in the right place.
Thinko in ecb0d20a9 --- this needs to go one level further out in
the "if" nest.  As it stood, nothing got printed in the case of
selecting named POSIX semaphores.  Cosmetic issue only, but a bug.
2016-12-06 19:34:29 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 44a977f55f Fix typo in new message in configure.
Remove spurious "of", and reformat to fit on a 80 chars wide line.
2016-12-06 00:29:51 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas fe0a0b5993 Replace PostmasterRandom() with a stronger source, second attempt.
This adds a new routine, pg_strong_random() for generating random bytes,
for use in both frontend and backend. At the moment, it's only used in
the backend, but the upcoming SCRAM authentication patches need strong
random numbers in libpq as well.

pg_strong_random() is based on, and replaces, the existing implementation
in pgcrypto. It can acquire strong random numbers from a number of sources,
depending on what's available:

- OpenSSL RAND_bytes(), if built with OpenSSL
- On Windows, the native cryptographic functions are used
- /dev/urandom

Unlike the current pgcrypto function, the source is chosen by configure.
That makes it easier to test different implementations, and ensures that
we don't accidentally fall back to a less secure implementation, if the
primary source fails. All of those methods are quite reliable, it would be
pretty surprising for them to fail, so we'd rather find out by failing
hard.

If no strong random source is available, we fall back to using erand48(),
seeded from current timestamp, like PostmasterRandom() was. That isn't
cryptographically secure, but allows us to still work on platforms that
don't have any of the above stronger sources. Because it's not very secure,
the built-in implementation is only used if explicitly requested with
--disable-strong-random.

This replaces the more complicated Fortuna algorithm we used to have in
pgcrypto, which is unfortunate, but all modern platforms have /dev/urandom,
so it doesn't seem worth the maintenance effort to keep that. pgcrypto
functions that require strong random numbers will be disabled with
--disable-strong-random.

Original patch by Magnus Hagander, tons of further work by Michael Paquier
and me.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAB7nPqRy3krN8quR9XujMVVHYtXJ0_60nqgVc6oUk8ygyVkZsA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAB7nPqRWkNYRRPJA7-cF+LfroYV10pvjdz6GNvxk-Eee9FypKA@mail.gmail.com
2016-12-05 13:42:59 +02:00
Tom Lane 2b860f52ed Remove "sco" and "unixware" ports.
SCO OpenServer and SCO UnixWare are more or less dead platforms.
We have never had a buildfarm member testing the "sco" port, and
the last "unixware" member was last heard from in 2012, so it's
fair to doubt that the code even compiles anymore on either one.
Remove both ports.  We can always undo this if someone shows up
with an interest in maintaining and testing these platforms.

Discussion: <17177.1476136994@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-10-11 11:26:04 -04:00
Tom Lane ecb0d20a9d Use unnamed POSIX semaphores, if available, on Linux and FreeBSD.
We've had support for using unnamed POSIX semaphores instead of System V
semaphores for quite some time, but it was not used by default on any
platform.  Since many systems have rather small limits on the number of
SysV semaphores allowed, it seems desirable to switch to POSIX semaphores
where they're available and don't create performance or kernel resource
problems.  Experimentation by me shows that unnamed POSIX semaphores
are at least as good as SysV semaphores on Linux, and we previously had
a report from Maksym Sobolyev that FreeBSD is significantly worse with
SysV semaphores than POSIX ones.  So adjust those two platforms to use
unnamed POSIX semaphores, if configure can find the necessary library
functions.  If this goes well, we may switch other platforms as well,
but it would be advisable to test them individually first.

It's not currently contemplated that we'd encourage users to select
a semaphore API for themselves, but anyone who wants to experiment
can add PREFERRED_SEMAPHORES=UNNAMED_POSIX (or NAMED_POSIX, or SYSV)
to their configure command line to do so.

I also tweaked configure to report which API it's selected, mainly
so that we can tell that from buildfarm reports.

I did not touch the user documentation's discussion about semaphores;
that will need some adjustment once the dust settles.

Discussion: <8536.1475704230@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-10-09 18:03:45 -04:00
Tom Lane 17a3a1eb0e Fix python shlib probe for Cygwin.
On buildfarm member cockatiel, that library is in /usr/bin.
(Possibly we should look at $PATH on this platform?)
Per off-list report from Andrew Dunstan.
2016-10-07 11:27:34 -04:00
Tom Lane 11c0e743b6 Try to fix python shlib probe for MinGW.
Per discussion with Andrew Dunstan, it seems there are three peculiarities
of the Python installation on MinGW (or at least, of the instance on
buildfarm member frogmouth).  First, the library name doesn't contain
"2.7" but just "27".  It looks like we can deal with that by consulting
get_config_vars('VERSION') to see whether a dot should be used or not.
Second, the library might be in c:/Windows/System32, analogously to it
possibly being in /usr/lib on Unix-oid platforms.  Third, it's apparently
not standard to use the prefix "lib" on the file name.  This patch will
accept files with or without "lib", but the first part of that may well
be dead code.
2016-10-05 22:47:23 -04:00
Tom Lane ddd4f82cb6 In python shlib probe, cater for OpenBSD, which omits the .so symlink.
Most Unix-oid platforms provide a symlink "libfoo.so" -> "libfoo.so.n.n"
to allow the linker to resolve a reference "-lfoo" to a version-numbered
shared library.  OpenBSD has apparently hacked ld(1) to do this internally,
because there are no such symlinks to be found in their library
directories.  Tweak the new code in PGAC_CHECK_PYTHON_EMBED_SETUP to cope.
Per buildfarm member curculio.
2016-10-05 11:44:57 -04:00
Tom Lane fc76259f5b Huh, we do need to look in $python_configdir for the Python shlib.
Debian does it that way, for no doubt what seems to them a good reason.
Thanks to Aidan Van Dyk for confirmation.
2016-10-04 16:38:45 -04:00
Tom Lane 46ddbbb117 Improve (I hope) our autolocation of the Python shared library.
Older versions of Python produce garbage (or at least useless) values of
get_config_vars('LDLIBRARY').  Newer versions produce garbage (or at least
useless) values of get_config_vars('SO'), which was defeating our configure
logic that attempted to identify where the Python shlib really is.  The net
result, at least with a stock Python 3.5 installation on macOS, was that
we were linking against a static library in the mistaken belief that it was
a shared library.  This managed to work, if you count statically absorbing
libpython into plpython.so as working.  But it no longer works as of commit
d51924be8, because now we get separate static copies of libpython in
plpython.so and hstore_plpython.so, and those can't interoperate on the
same data.  There are some other infelicities like assuming that nobody
ever installs a private version of Python on a macOS machine.

Hence, forget about looking in $python_configdir for the Python shlib;
as far as I can tell no version of Python has ever put one there, and
certainly no currently-supported version does.  Also, rather than relying
on get_config_vars('SO'), just try all the possibilities for shlib
extensions.  Also, rather than trusting Py_ENABLE_SHARED, believe we've
found a shlib only if it has a recognized extension.  Last, explicitly
cope with the possibility that the shlib is really in /usr/lib and
$python_libdir is a red herring --- this is the actual situation on older
macOS, but we were only accidentally working with it.

Discussion: <5300.1475592228@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-10-04 15:23:07 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a5da81359d Add missing include files to configure tests
atoi() needs stdlib.h
strcmp() needs string.h

Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
2016-09-30 14:04:10 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 1c0cf52b39 Use return instead of exit() in configure
Using exit() requires stdlib.h, which is not included.  Use return
instead.  Also add return type for main().

Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
2016-09-30 14:03:57 -04:00
Tom Lane da6c4f6ca8 Refer to OS X as "macOS", except for the port name which is still "darwin".
We weren't terribly consistent about whether to call Apple's OS "OS X"
or "Mac OS X", and the former is probably confusing to people who aren't
Apple users.  Now that Apple has rebranded it "macOS", follow their lead
to establish a consistent naming pattern.  Also, avoid the use of the
ancient project name "Darwin", except as the port code name which does not
seem desirable to change.  (In short, this patch touches documentation and
comments, but no actual code.)

I didn't touch contrib/start-scripts/osx/, either.  I suspect those are
obsolete and due for a rewrite, anyway.

I dithered about whether to apply this edit to old release notes, but
those were responsible for quite a lot of the inconsistencies, so I ended
up changing them too.  Anyway, Apple's being ahistorical about this,
so why shouldn't we be?
2016-09-25 15:40:57 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 5c6df67e0c Fix building with LibreSSL.
LibreSSL defines OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER to claim that it is version 2.0.0,
but it doesn't have the functions added in OpenSSL 1.1.0. Add autoconf
checks for the individual functions we need, and stop relying on
OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER.

Backport to 9.5 and 9.6, like the patch that broke this. In the
back-branches, there are still a few OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER checks left,
to check for OpenSSL 0.9.8 or 0.9.7. I left them as they were - LibreSSL
has all those functions, so they work as intended.

Per buildfarm member curculio.

Discussion: <2442.1473957669@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-09-15 22:52:51 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 593d4e47db Support OpenSSL 1.1.0.
Changes needed to build at all:

- Check for SSL_new in configure, now that SSL_library_init is a macro.
- Do not access struct members directly. This includes some new code in
  pgcrypto, to use the resource owner mechanism to ensure that we don't
  leak OpenSSL handles, now that we can't embed them in other structs
  anymore.
- RAND_SSLeay() -> RAND_OpenSSL()

Changes that were needed to silence deprecation warnings, but were not
strictly necessary:

- RAND_pseudo_bytes() -> RAND_bytes().
- SSL_library_init() and OpenSSL_config() -> OPENSSL_init_ssl()
- ASN1_STRING_data() -> ASN1_STRING_get0_data()
- DH_generate_parameters() -> DH_generate_parameters()
- Locking callbacks are not needed with OpenSSL 1.1.0 anymore. (Good
  riddance!)

Also change references to SSLEAY_VERSION_NUMBER with OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER,
for the sake of consistency. OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER has existed since time
immemorial.

Fix SSL test suite to work with OpenSSL 1.1.0. CA certificates must have
the "CA:true" basic constraint extension now, or OpenSSL will refuse them.
Regenerate the test certificates with that. The "openssl" binary, used to
generate the certificates, is also now more picky, and throws an error
if an X509 extension is specified in "req_extensions", but that section
is empty.

Backpatch to all supported branches, per popular demand. In back-branches,
we still support OpenSSL 0.9.7 and above. OpenSSL 0.9.6 should still work
too, but I didn't test it. In master, we only support 0.9.8 and above.

Patch by Andreas Karlsson, with additional changes by me.

Discussion: <20160627151604.GD1051@msg.df7cb.de>
2016-09-15 14:42:29 +03:00
Tom Lane ca9112a424 Stamp HEAD as 10devel.
This is a good bit more complicated than the average new-version stamping
commit, because it includes various adjustments in pursuit of changing
from three-part to two-part version numbers.  It's likely some further
work will be needed around that change; but this is enough to get through
the regression tests, at least in Unix builds.

Peter Eisentraut and Tom Lane
2016-08-15 13:49:49 -04:00
Tom Lane 67c08c0d70 Stamp 9.6beta4. 2016-08-08 16:25:04 -04:00
Tom Lane b11e9bbc41 Stamp 9.6beta3. 2016-07-18 16:54:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 936b62ddf2 Stamp 9.6beta2. 2016-06-20 16:23:47 -04:00
Tom Lane 8ee29a19d6 Stamp 9.6beta1. 2016-05-09 16:47:49 -04:00
Tom Lane 7d7b129277 Fix configure's incorrect version tests for flex and perl.
awk's equality-comparison operator is "==" not "=".  We got this right
in many places, but not in configure's checks for supported version
numbers of flex and perl.  It hadn't been noticed because unsupported
versions are so old as to be basically extinct in the wild, and because
the only consequence is whether or not a WARNING flies by during
configure.

Daniel Gustafsson noted the problem with respect to the test for flex,
I found the other by reviewing other awk calls.
2016-05-02 11:18:10 -04:00
Tom Lane 34c33a1f00 Add BSD authentication method.
Create a "bsd" auth method that works the same as "password" so far as
clients are concerned, but calls the BSD Authentication service to
check the password.  This is currently only available on OpenBSD.

Marisa Emerson, reviewed by Thomas Munro
2016-04-08 13:52:06 -04:00
Andres Freund 98a64d0bd7 Introduce WaitEventSet API.
Commit ac1d794 ("Make idle backends exit if the postmaster dies.")
introduced a regression on, at least, large linux systems. Constantly
adding the same postmaster_alive_fds to the OSs internal datastructures
for implementing poll/select can cause significant contention; leading
to a performance regression of nearly 3x in one example.

This can be avoided by using e.g. linux' epoll, which avoids having to
add/remove file descriptors to the wait datastructures at a high rate.
Unfortunately the current latch interface makes it hard to allocate any
persistent per-backend resources.

Replace, with a backward compatibility layer, WaitLatchOrSocket with a
new WaitEventSet API. Users can allocate such a Set across multiple
calls, and add more than one file-descriptor to wait on. The latter has
been added because there's upcoming postgres features where that will be
helpful.

In addition to the previously existing poll(2), select(2),
WaitForMultipleObjects() implementations also provide an epoll_wait(2)
based implementation to address the aforementioned performance
problem. Epoll is only available on linux, but that is the most likely
OS for machines large enough (four sockets) to reproduce the problem.

To actually address the aforementioned regression, create and use a
long-lived WaitEventSet for FE/BE communication.  There are additional
places that would benefit from a long-lived set, but that's a task for
another day.

Thanks to Amit Kapila, who helped make the windows code I blindly wrote
actually work.

Reported-By: Dmitry Vasilyev Discussion:
CAB-SwXZh44_2ybvS5Z67p_CDz=XFn4hNAD=CnMEF+QqkXwFrGg@mail.gmail.com
20160114143931.GG10941@awork2.anarazel.de
2016-03-21 12:22:54 +01:00
Andres Freund 72e2d21c12 Combine win32 and unix latch implementations.
Previously latches for windows and unix had been implemented in
different files. A later patch introduce an expanded wait
infrastructure, keeping the implementation separate would introduce too
much duplication.

This basically just moves the functions, without too much change. The
reason to keep this separate is that it allows blame to continue working
a little less badly; and to make review a tiny bit easier.

Discussion: 20160114143931.GG10941@awork2.anarazel.de
2016-03-21 11:03:26 +01:00
Tom Lane 0e9b89986b Cope if platform declares mbstowcs_l(), but not locale_t, in <xlocale.h>.
Previously, we included <xlocale.h> only if necessary to get the definition
of type locale_t.  According to notes in PGAC_TYPE_LOCALE_T, this is
important because on some versions of glibc that file supplies an
incompatible declaration of locale_t.  (This info may be obsolete, because
on my RHEL6 box that seems to be the *only* definition of locale_t; but
there may still be glibc's in the wild for which it's a live concern.)

It turns out though that on FreeBSD and maybe other BSDen, you can get
locale_t from stdlib.h or locale.h but mbstowcs_l() and friends only from
<xlocale.h>.  This was leaving us compiling calls to mbstowcs_l() and
friends with no visible prototype, which causes a warning and could
possibly cause actual trouble, since it's not declared to return int.

Hence, adjust the configure checks so that we'll include <xlocale.h>
either if it's necessary to get type locale_t or if it's necessary to
get a declaration of mbstowcs_l().

Report and patch by Aleksander Alekseev, somewhat whacked around by me.
Back-patch to all supported branches, since we have been using
mbstowcs_l() since 9.1.
2016-03-15 13:19:57 -04:00
Tom Lane bf53d5c208 Teach the configure script to validate its --with-pgport argument.
Previously, configure would take any string, including an empty string,
leading to obscure compile failures in guc.c.  It seems worth expending
a few lines of code to ensure that the argument is a decimal number
between 1 and 65535.

Report and patch by Jim Nasby; reviews by Alex Shulgin, Peter Eisentraut,
Ivan Kartyshov
2016-03-14 10:41:29 -04:00
Tom Lane 9da70efcbe Mop-up for setting minimum Tcl version to 8.4.
Commit e2609323e set the minimum Tcl version we support to 8.4, but
I forgot to adjust the documentation to say the same.  Some nosing
around for other consequences found that the configure script could
be simplified slightly as well.
2016-03-13 17:14:49 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 7d17e683fc Add support for systemd service notifications
Insert sd_notify() calls at server start and stop for integration with
systemd.  This allows the use of systemd service units of type "notify",
which greatly simplifies the systemd configuration.

Reviewed-by: Pavel Stěhule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
2016-02-02 21:04:29 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 4631721166 Revert "Blind attempt at a Cygwin fix"
This reverts commit e9282e9532, which blew
up in a pretty spectacular way.  Re-introduce the original code while we
search for a real fix.
2016-01-08 13:18:40 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera e9282e9532 Blind attempt at a Cygwin fix
Further portability fix for a967613911.  Mingw- and MSVC-based builds
appear to be working fine, but Cygwin needs an extra tweak whereby the
new win32security.c file is explicitely added to the list of files to
build in pgport, per Cygwin members brolga and lorikeet.

Author: Michael Paquier
2016-01-08 11:48:39 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera fa838b555f Add win32security to LIBOBJS
This seems to fix Mingw's compile that was broken in a967613911, as
evidenced by buildfarm.
2016-01-07 18:50:28 -03:00
Bruce Momjian ee94300446 Update copyright for 2016
Backpatch certain files through 9.1
2016-01-02 13:33:40 -05:00
Tom Lane 2ec477dc81 Cope with Readline's failure to track SIGWINCH events outside of input.
It emerges that libreadline doesn't notice terminal window size change
events unless they occur while collecting input.  This is easy to stumble
over if you resize the window while using a pager to look at query output,
but it can be demonstrated without any pager involvement.  The symptom is
that queries exceeding one line are misdisplayed during subsequent input
cycles, because libreadline has the wrong idea of the screen dimensions.

The safest, simplest way to fix this is to call rl_reset_screen_size()
just before calling readline().  That causes an extra ioctl(TIOCGWINSZ)
for every command; but since it only happens when reading from a tty, the
performance impact should be negligible.  A more valid objection is that
this still leaves a tiny window during entry to readline() wherein delivery
of SIGWINCH will be missed; but the practical consequences of that are
probably negligible.  In any case, there doesn't seem to be any good way to
avoid the race, since readline exposes no functions that seem safe to call
from a generic signal handler --- rl_reset_screen_size() certainly isn't.

It turns out that we also need an explicit rl_initialize() call, else
rl_reset_screen_size() dumps core when called before the first readline()
call.

rl_reset_screen_size() is not present in old versions of libreadline,
so we need a configure test for that.  (rl_initialize() is present at
least back to readline 4.0, so we won't bother with a test for it.)
We would need a configure test anyway since libedit's emulation of
libreadline doesn't currently include such a function.  Fortunately,
libedit seems not to have any corresponding bug.

Merlin Moncure, adjusted a bit by me
2015-12-16 16:59:35 -05:00
Tom Lane 32f15d05c8 Accept flex > 2.5.x in configure.
Per buildfarm member anchovy, 2.6.0 exists in the wild now.
Hopefully it works with Postgres; if not, we'll have to do something
about that, but in any case claiming it's "too old" is pretty silly.
2015-11-18 17:45:05 -05:00
Robert Haas c171818b27 Add BSWAP64 macro.
This is like BSWAP32, but for 64-bit values.  Since we've got two of
them now and they have use cases (like sortsupport) beyond CRCs, move
the definitions to their own header file.

Peter Geoghegan
2015-10-08 13:01:36 -04:00
Tom Lane a65e086453 Remove support for Unix systems without the POSIX signal APIs.
Remove configure's checks for HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS, HAVE_SIGPROCMASK, and
HAVE_SIGSETJMP.  These APIs are required by the Single Unix Spec v2
(POSIX 1997), which we generally consider to define our minimum required
set of Unix APIs.  Moreover, no buildfarm member has reported not having
them since 2012 or before, which means that even if the code is still live
somewhere, it's untested --- and we've made plenty of signal-handling
changes of late.  So just take these APIs as given and save the cycles for
configure probes for them.

However, we can't remove as much C code as I'd hoped, because the Windows
port evidently still uses the non-POSIX code paths for signal masking.
Since we're largely emulating these BSD-style APIs for Windows anyway, it
might be a good thing to switch over to POSIX-like notation and thereby
remove a few more #ifdefs.  But I'm not in a position to code or test that.
In the meantime, we can at least make things a bit more transparent by
testing for WIN32 explicitly in these places.
2015-08-31 12:56:10 -04:00
Tom Lane 0f19d0f12f Remove long-dead support for platforms without sig_atomic_t.
C89 requires <signal.h> to define sig_atomic_t, and there is no evidence
in the buildfarm that any supported platforms don't comply.  Remove the
configure test to stop wasting build cycles on a purely historical issue.
(Once upon a time, we cared about supporting C89-compliant compilers on
machines with pre-C89 system headers, but that use-case has been dead for
quite a few years.)

I have some other fixes planned in this area, but let's start with this
to see if the buildfarm produces any surprising results.
2015-08-31 01:36:46 -04:00
Andres Freund 6cf72879e9 Improve configure test for the sse4.2 crc instruction.
With optimizations enabled at least one compiler, clang 3.7, optimized
away the crc intrinsics knowing that the result went on unused and has
no side effects. That can trigger errors in code generation when the
intrinsic is used, as we chose to use the intrinsics without any
additional compiler flag. Return the computed value to prevent that.

With some more pedantic warning flags (-Wold-style-definition) the
configure test failed to recognize the existence of _mm_crc32_u*
intrinsics due to an independent warning in the test because the test
turned on -Werror, but that's not actually needed here.

Discussion: 20150814092039.GH4955@awork2.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.5, where the use of crc intrinsics was integrated.
2015-08-17 11:15:46 +02:00
Andres Freund de6fd1c898 Rely on inline functions even if that causes warnings in older compilers.
So far we have worked around the fact that some very old compilers do
not support 'inline' functions by only using inline functions
conditionally (or not at all). Since such compilers are very rare by
now, we have decided to rely on inline functions from 9.6 onwards.

To avoid breaking these old compilers inline is defined away when not
supported. That'll cause "function x defined but not used" type of
warnings, but since nobody develops on such compilers anymore that's
ok.

This change in policy will allow us to more easily employ inline
functions.

I chose to remove code previously conditional on PG_USE_INLINE as it
seemed confusing to have code dependent on a define that's always
defined.

Blacklisting of compilers, like in c53f73879f, now has to be done
differently. A platform template can define PG_FORCE_DISABLE_INLINE to
force inline to be defined empty.

Discussion: 20150701161447.GB30708@awork2.anarazel.de
2015-08-05 18:19:52 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas a2932283c2 Update ax_pthread.m4 to an experimental draft version from upstream.
The current version is adding a spurious -pthread option on some Darwin
systems that don't need it, which leads to a bunch of "unrecognized option
'-pthread'" warnings. There is a proposed fix for that in the upstream
autoconf archive's bug tracker, see https://savannah.gnu.org/patch/?8186.
This commit updates our version of ax_pthread.m4 to the "draft2" version
proposed there by Daniel Richard G. I'm using our buildfarm to help Daniel
to test this, before he commits this to the upstream repository.
2015-07-30 14:14:50 +03:00
Noah Misch 43d89a23d5 AIX: Test the -qlonglong option before use.
xlc provides "long long" unconditionally at C99-compatible language
levels, and this option provokes a warning.  The warning interferes with
"configure" tests that fail in response to any warning.  Notably, before
commit 85a2a8903f, it interfered with the
test for -qnoansialias.  Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).
2015-07-17 03:01:14 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 01051a9879 Use AS_IF rather than plain shell "if" in pthread-check.
Autoconf generates additional code for the first AC_CHECK_HEADERS call in
the script. If the first call is within an if-block, the additional code is
put inside the if-block too, even though it is needed by subsequent
AC_CHECK_HEADERS checks and should always be executed. When I moved the
pthread-related checks earlier in the script, the pthread.h test inside
the block became the very first AC_CHECK_HEADERS call in the script,
triggering that problem.

To fix, use AS_IF instead of plain shell if. AS_IF knows about that issue,
and makes sure the additional code is always executed. To be completely
safe from this issue (and others), we should always be using AS_IF instead
of plain if, but that seems like excessive caution given that this is the
first time we have trouble like this. Plain if-then is more readable than
AS_IF.

This should fix compilation with --disable-thread-safety, and hopefully the
buildfarm failure on forgmouth, related to mingw standard headers, too.
I backpatched the previous fixes to 9.5, but it's starting to look like
these changes are too fiddly to backpatch, so commit this to master only,
and revert all the pthread-related configure changes in 9.5.
2015-07-09 11:38:34 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3b14a17c8e Move pthread-tests earlier in the autoconf script.
On some Linux systems, "-lrt" exposed pthread-functions, so that linking
with -lrt was seemingly enough to make a program that uses pthreads to
work. However, when linking libpq, the dependency to libpthread was not
marked correctly, so that when an executable was linked with -lpq but
without -pthread, you got errors about undefined pthread_* functions from
libpq.

To fix, test for the flags required to use pthreads earlier in the autoconf
script, before checking any other libraries.

This should fix the failure on buildfarm member shearwater. gharial is also
failing; hopefully this fixes that too although the failure looks somewhat
different.
2015-07-09 00:05:45 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas e97af6c8bf Replace our hacked version of ax_pthread.m4 with latest upstream version.
Our version was different from the upstream version in that we tried to use
all possible pthread-related flags that the compiler accepts, rather than
just the first one that works. That change was made in commit
e48322a6d6, to work-around a bug affecting GCC
versions 3.2 and below (https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=8888),
although we didn't realize that it was a GCC bug at the time. We hardly care
about that old GCC versions anymore, so we no longer need that workaround.

This fixes the macro for compilers that print warnings with the chosen
flags. That's pretty annoying on its own right, but it also inconspicuously
disabled thread-safety, because we refused to use any pthread-related flags
if the compiler produced warnings. Max Filippov reported that problem when
linking with uClibc and OpenSSL. The warnings-check was added because the
workaround for the GCC bug caused warnings otherwise, so it's no longer
needed either. We can just use the upstream version as is.

If you really want to compile with GCC version 3.2 or older, you can still
work-around it manually by setting PTHREAD_CFLAGS="-pthread -lpthread"
manually on the configure command line.

Backpatch to 9.5. I don't want to unnecessarily rock the boat on stable
branches, but 9.5 seems like fair game.
2015-07-08 20:36:06 +03:00
Tom Lane a5d489ccb7 Make numeric form of PG version number readily available in Makefiles.
Expose PG_VERSION_NUM (e.g., "90600") as a Make variable; but for
consistency with the other Make variables holding similar info,
call the variable just VERSION_NUM not PG_VERSION_NUM.

There was some discussion of making this value available as a pg_config
value as well.  However, that would entail substantially more work than
this two-line patch.  Given that there was not exactly universal consensus
that we need this at all, let's just do a minimal amount of work for now.

Michael Paquier, reviewed by Pavel Stehule
2015-07-02 17:24:36 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas a2edb023d0 Replace obsolete autoconf macros with their modern replacements.
AC_TRY_COMPILE(...) -> AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM(...)])
AC_TRY_LINK(...) -> AC_LINK_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM(...)])
AC_TRY_RUN(...) -> AC_RUN_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM(...)])
AC_LANG_SAVE/RESTORE -> AC_LANG_PUSH/POP
AC_DECL_SYS_SIGLIST -> AC_CHECK_DECLS(...) (per snippet in autoconf manual)

Also use AC_LANG_SOURCE instead of AC_LANG_PROGRAM, where the main()
function is not needed.

With these changes, autoconf -Wall doesn't complain anymore.

Andreas Karlsson
2015-07-02 19:21:23 +03:00
Tom Lane cf8d65de10 Stamp HEAD as 9.6devel.
Let the hacking begin ...
2015-06-30 14:01:15 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera ab93f90cd3 Test -lrt for sched_yield
Apparently, this is needed in some Solaris versions.

Author: Oskari Saarenmaa
2015-06-30 14:20:38 -03:00
Tom Lane f78329d594 Stamp 9.5alpha1. 2015-06-29 15:42:18 -04:00
Tom Lane 86832eb891 Remove configure check prohibiting threaded libpython on OpenBSD.
According to recent tests, this case now works fine, so there's no reason
to reject it anymore.  (Even if there are still some OpenBSD platforms
in the wild where it doesn't work, removing the check won't break any case
that worked before.)

We can actually remove the entire test that discovers whether libpython
is threaded, since without the OpenBSD case there's no need to know that
at all.

Per report from Davin Potts.  Back-patch to all active branches.
2015-05-26 22:14:59 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan f707b53449 fix escaping of brackets for m4 broken in b6b2149e48 2015-05-03 09:37:15 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan b6b2149e48 Fix python_includespec on Windows at configure time
By converting to using forward slashes at configure time we avoid
having to repeat the logic anywhere that this is needed, such as
in transforms modules for plpython.
2015-05-03 08:17:04 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 67df9782e9 Windows also needs an override of the shared libpython detection 2015-05-02 13:23:16 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 010aa420b9 Fix shared libpython detection on OS X
Apparently, looking for an appropriately named file doesn't work on some
older versions, so put the back the explicit platform detection.
2015-05-01 23:12:45 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut d664a10f96 Move interpreter shared library detection to configure
For building PL/Perl, PL/Python, and PL/Tcl, we need a shared library of
libperl, libpython, and libtcl, respectively.  Previously, this was
checked in the makefiles, skipping the PL build with a warning if no
shared library was available.  Now this is checked in configure, with an
error if no shared library is available.

The previous situation arose because in the olden days, the configure
options --with-perl, --with-python, and --with-tcl controlled whether
frontend interfaces for those languages would be built.  The procedural
languages were added later, and shared libraries were often not
available in the beginning.  So it was decided skip the builds of the
procedural languages in those cases.  The frontend interfaces have since
been removed from the tree, and shared libraries are now available most
of the time, so that setup makes much less sense now.

Also, the new setup allows contrib modules and pgxs users to rely on the
respective PLs being available based on configure flags.
2015-05-01 21:38:21 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 936546dcbc Optimize pg_comp_crc32c_sse42 routine slightly, and also use it on x86.
Eliminate the separate 'len' variable from the loops, and also use the 4
byte instruction. This shaves off a few more cycles. Even though this
routine that uses the special SSE 4.2 instructions is much faster than a
generic routine, it's still a hot spot, so let's make it as fast as
possible.

Change the configure test to not test _mm_crc32_u64. That variant is only
available in the 64-bit x86-64 architecture, not in 32-bit x86. Modify
pg_comp_crc32c_sse42 so that it only uses _mm_crc32_u64 on x86-64. With
these changes, the SSE accelerated CRC-32C implementation can also be used
on 32-bit x86 systems.

This also fixes the 32-bit MSVC build.
2015-04-14 23:58:16 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas b4eb2d168d Try to fix the CRC-32C autoconf magic for icc compiler.
On gcc and clang, the _mm_crc32_u8 and _mm_crc32_u64 intrinsics are not
defined at all, when not building with -msse4.2. But on icc, they are.
So we cannot assume that if those intrinsics are defined, we can always use
them safely, we might still need the runtime check.

To fix, check if the __SSE_4_2__ preprocessor symbol is defined. That's
supposed to be defined only when the compiler is targeting a processor that
has SSE 4.2 support.

Per buildfarm members fulmar and okapi.
2015-04-14 19:57:19 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3dc2d62d04 Use Intel SSE 4.2 CRC instructions where available.
Modern x86 and x86-64 processors with SSE 4.2 support have special
instructions, crc32b and crc32q, for calculating CRC-32C. They greatly
speed up CRC calculation.

Whether the instructions can be used or not depends on the compiler and the
target architecture. If generation of SSE 4.2 instructions is allowed for
the target (-msse4.2 flag on gcc and clang), use them. If they are not
allowed by default, but the compiler supports the -msse4.2 flag to enable
them, compile just the CRC-32C function with -msse4.2 flag, and check at
runtime whether the processor we're running on supports it. If it doesn't,
fall back to the slicing-by-8 algorithm. (With the common defaults on
current operating systems, the runtime-check variant is what you get in
practice.)

Abhijit Menon-Sen, heavily modified by me, reviewed by Andres Freund.
2015-04-14 17:05:03 +03:00
Tom Lane 73b416b2e4 Suppress clang's unhelpful gripes about -pthread switch being unused.
Considering the number of cases in which "unused" command line arguments
are silently ignored by compilers, it's fairly astonishing that anybody
thought this warning was useful; it's certainly nothing but an annoyance
when building Postgres.  One such case is that neither gcc nor clang
complain about unrecognized -Wno-foo switches, making it more difficult
to figure out whether the switch does anything than one could wish.

Back-patch to 9.3, which is as far back as the patch applies conveniently
(we'd have to back-patch PGAC_PROG_CC_VAR_OPT to go further, and it doesn't
seem worth that).
2015-04-05 13:01:59 -04:00
Andres Freund 8122e1437e Add, optional, support for 128bit integers.
We will, for the foreseeable future, not expose 128 bit datatypes to
SQL. But being able to use 128bit math will allow us, in a later patch,
to use 128bit accumulators for some aggregates; leading to noticeable
speedups over using numeric.

So far we only detect a gcc/clang extension that supports 128bit math,
but no 128bit literals, and no *printf support. We might want to expand
this in the future to further compilers; if there are any that that
provide similar support.

Discussion: 544BB5F1.50709@proxel.se
Author: Andreas Karlsson, with significant editorializing by me
Reviewed-By: Peter Geoghegan, Oskari Saarenmaa
2015-03-20 10:26:17 +01:00
Tom Lane 8008959773 src/port/dirmod.c needs to be built on Cygwin too.
Oversight in my commit 91f4a5a976.
Per buildfarm member brolga.
2015-03-15 14:14:24 -04:00
Tom Lane 91f4a5a976 Build src/port/dirmod.c only on Windows.
Since commit ba7c5975ad, port/dirmod.c
has contained only Windows-specific functions.  Most platforms don't
seem to mind uselessly building an empty file, but OS X for one issues
warnings.  Hence, treat dirmod.c as a Windows-specific file selected
by configure rather than one that's always built.  We can revert this
change if dirmod.c ever gains any non-Windows functionality again.

Back-patch to 9.4 where the mentioned commit appeared.
2015-03-14 14:08:45 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 025c02420d Speed up CRC calculation using slicing-by-8 algorithm.
This speeds up WAL generation and replay. The new algorithm is
significantly faster with large inputs, like full-page images or when
inserting wide rows. It is slower with tiny inputs, i.e. less than 10 bytes
or so, but the speedup with longer inputs more than make up for that. Even
small WAL records at least have 24 byte header in the front.

The output is identical to the current byte-at-a-time computation, so this
does not affect compatibility. The new algorithm is only used for the
CRC-32C variant, not the legacy version used in tsquery or the
"traditional" CRC-32 used in hstore and ltree. Those are not as performance
critical, and are usually only applied over small inputs, so it seems
better to not carry around the extra lookup tables to speed up those rare
cases.

Abhijit Menon-Sen
2015-02-10 10:54:40 +02:00
Tom Lane 85a2a8903f Allow CFLAGS from configure's environment to override automatic CFLAGS.
Previously, configure would add any switches that it chose of its own
accord to the end of the user-specified CFLAGS string.  Since most
compilers process these left-to-right, this meant that configure's choices
would override the user-specified flags in case of conflicts.  We'd rather
that worked the other way around, so adjust the logic to put the user's
string at the end not the beginning.

There does not seem to be a need for a similar behavior change for CPPFLAGS
or LDFLAGS: in those, the earlier switches tend to win (think -I or -L
behavior) so putting the user's string at the front is fine.

Backpatch to 9.4 but not earlier.  I'm not planning to run buildfarm member
guar on older branches, and it seems a bit risky to change this behavior
in long-stable branches.
2015-01-14 11:08:13 -05:00
Tom Lane 8883bae33b Remove configure test for nonstandard variants of getpwuid_r().
We had code that supposed that some platforms might offer a nonstandard
version of getpwuid_r() with only four arguments.  However, the 5-argument
definition has been standardized at least since the Single Unix Spec v2,
which is our normal reference for what's portable across all Unix-oid
platforms.  (What's more, this wasn't the only pre-standardization version
of getpwuid_r(); my old HPUX 10.20 box has still another signature.)
So let's just get rid of the now-useless configure step.
2015-01-11 12:52:37 -05:00
Noah Misch 894459e59f On Darwin, detect and report a multithreaded postmaster.
Darwin --enable-nls builds use a substitute setlocale() that may start a
thread.  Buildfarm member orangutan experienced BackendList corruption
on account of different postmaster threads executing signal handlers
simultaneously.  Furthermore, a multithreaded postmaster risks undefined
behavior from sigprocmask() and fork().  Emit LOG messages about the
problem and its workaround.  Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).
2015-01-07 22:35:44 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 4baaf863ec Update copyright for 2015
Backpatch certain files through 9.0
2015-01-06 11:43:47 -05:00
Noah Misch b779168ffe Detect PG_PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE automatically.
This eliminates gobs of "unrecognized format function type" warnings
under MinGW compilers predating GCC 4.4.
2014-11-23 09:34:03 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut a409b464f9 Add configure --enable-tap-tests option
Don't skip the TAP tests anymore when IPC::Run is not found.  This will
fail normally now.
2014-11-02 09:17:26 -05:00
Andres Freund 4a54b99e9c Add native compiler and memory barriers for solaris studio.
Discussion: 20140925133459.GB9633@alap3.anarazel.de
Author: Oskari Saarenmaa
2014-10-25 11:11:39 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 5d93ce2d0c doc: Check DocBook XML validity during the build
Building the documentation with XSLT does not check the DTD, like a
DSSSL build would.  One can often get away with having invalid XML, but
the stylesheets might then create incorrect output, as they are not
designed to handle that.  Therefore, check the validity of the XML
against the DTD, using xmllint, during the build.

Add xmllint detection to configure, and add some documentation.

xmllint comes with libxml2, which is already in use, but it might be in
a separate package, such as libxml2-utils on Debian.

Reviewed-by: Fabien COELHO <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
2014-10-21 14:46:38 -04:00
Andres Freund b64d92f1a5 Add a basic atomic ops API abstracting away platform/architecture details.
Several upcoming performance/scalability improvements require atomic
operations. This new API avoids the need to splatter compiler and
architecture dependent code over all the locations employing atomic
ops.

For several of the potential usages it'd be problematic to maintain
both, a atomics using implementation and one using spinlocks or
similar. In all likelihood one of the implementations would not get
tested regularly under concurrency. To avoid that scenario the new API
provides a automatic fallback of atomic operations to spinlocks. All
properties of atomic operations are maintained. This fallback -
obviously - isn't as fast as just using atomic ops, but it's not bad
either. For one of the future users the atomics ontop spinlocks
implementation was actually slightly faster than the old purely
spinlock using implementation. That's important because it reduces the
fear of regressing older platforms when improving the scalability for
new ones.

The API, loosely modeled after the C11 atomics support, currently
provides 'atomic flags' and 32 bit unsigned integers. If the platform
efficiently supports atomic 64 bit unsigned integers those are also
provided.

To implement atomics support for a platform/architecture/compiler for
a type of atomics 32bit compare and exchange needs to be
implemented. If available and more efficient native support for flags,
32 bit atomic addition, and corresponding 64 bit operations may also
be provided. Additional useful atomic operations are implemented
generically ontop of these.

The implementation for various versions of gcc, msvc and sun studio have
been tested. Additional existing stub implementations for
* Intel icc
* HUPX acc
* IBM xlc
are included but have never been tested. These will likely require
fixes based on buildfarm and user feedback.

As atomic operations also require barriers for some operations the
existing barrier support has been moved into the atomics code.

Author: Andres Freund with contributions from Oskari Saarenmaa
Reviewed-By: Amit Kapila, Robert Haas, Heikki Linnakangas and Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: CA+TgmoYBW+ux5-8Ja=Mcyuy8=VXAnVRHp3Kess6Pn3DMXAPAEA@mail.gmail.com,
    20131015123303.GH5300@awork2.anarazel.de,
    20131028205522.GI20248@awork2.anarazel.de
2014-09-25 23:49:05 +02:00
Andres Freund 7e3f728353 Fix configure check for %z printf support after INT64_MODIFIER changes.
The PGAC_FUNC_SNPRINTF_SIZE_T_SUPPORT test was broken by
ce486056ec. Among others it made the UINT64_FORMAT macro to be
defined in c.h, instead of directly being defined by configure.

This lead to the replacement printf being used on all platforms for a
while. Which seems to work, because this was only used due to
different profiles ;)

Fix by relying on INT64_MODIFIER instead.
2014-09-18 09:59:10 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut c2a01439c0 Run missing documentation tools through "missing"
Instead of just erroring out when a tool is missing, wrap the call with
the "missing" script that we are already using for bison, flex, and
perl, so that the users get a useful error message.
2014-09-13 20:22:21 -04:00
Noah Misch ec544a65c9 Always use our getaddrinfo.c on Windows.
Commit a16bac36ec let "configure" detect
the system getaddrinfo() when building under 64-bit MinGW-w64.  However,
src/include/port/win32/sys/socket.h assumes all native Windows
configurations use our replacement.  This change placates buildfarm
member jacana until we establish a plan for getaddrinfo() on Windows.
2014-08-28 20:36:27 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas ce486056ec Add #define INT64_MODIFIER for the printf length modifier for 64-bit ints.
We have had INT64_FORMAT and UINT64_FORMAT for a long time, but that's not
good enough if you want something more exotic, like "%20lld".

Abhijit Menon-Sen, per Andres Freund's suggestion.
2014-08-21 09:56:44 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 680513ab79 Break out OpenSSL-specific code to separate files.
This refactoring is in preparation for adding support for other SSL
implementations, with no user-visible effects. There are now two #defines,
USE_OPENSSL which is defined when building with OpenSSL, and USE_SSL which
is defined when building with any SSL implementation. Currently, OpenSSL is
the only implementation so the two #defines go together, but USE_SSL is
supposed to be used for implementation-independent code.

The libpq SSL code is changed to use a custom BIO, which does all the raw
I/O, like we've been doing in the backend for a long time. That makes it
possible to use MSG_NOSIGNAL to block SIGPIPE when using SSL, which avoids
a couple of syscall for each send(). Probably doesn't make much performance
difference in practice - the SSL encryption is expensive enough to mask the
effect - but it was a natural result of this refactoring.

Based on a patch by Martijn van Oosterhout from 2006. Briefly reviewed by
Alvaro Herrera, Andreas Karlsson, Jeff Janes.
2014-08-11 11:54:19 +03:00
Noah Misch e565ff7553 Move PGAC_LDAP_SAFE to config/programs.m4.
This restores the style of keeping configure.in free of AC_DEFUN.  Per
gripe from Tom Lane.
2014-07-25 18:51:35 -04:00
Noah Misch d7cdf6ee36 Diagnose incompatible OpenLDAP versions during build and test.
With OpenLDAP versions 2.4.24 through 2.4.31, inclusive, PostgreSQL
backends can crash at exit.  Raise a warning during "configure" based on
the compile-time OpenLDAP version number, and test the crash scenario in
the dblink test suite.  Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).
2014-07-22 11:01:03 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 5571caf42d Move check for SSL_get_current_compression to run on mingw
Mingw uses a different header file than msvc, so we don't get the
hardcoded value, so we need the configure test to run.
2014-07-15 22:02:46 +02:00
Magnus Hagander c9e1ad7faf Detect presence of SSL_get_current_compression
Apparently we still build against OpenSSL so old that it doesn't
have this function, so add an autoconf check for it to make the
buildfarm happy. If the function doesn't exist, always return
that compression is disabled, since presumably the actual
compression functionality is always missing.

For now, hardcode the function as present on MSVC, since we should
hopefully be well beyond those old versions on that platform.
2014-07-15 18:07:03 +02:00
Magnus Hagander a16bac36ec Remove dependency on wsock32.lib in favor of ws2_32
ws2_32 is the new version of the library that should be used, as
it contains the require functionality from wsock32 as well as some
more (which is why some binaries were already using ws2_32).

Michael Paquier, reviewed by MauMau
2014-07-15 14:18:39 +02:00
Tom Lane 2e8ce9ae46 Remove some useless code in the configure script.
Almost ten years ago, commit e48322a6d6 broke
the logic in ACX_PTHREAD by looping through all the possible flags rather
than stopping with the first one that would work.  This meant that
$acx_pthread_ok was no longer meaningful after the loop; it would usually
be "no", whether or not we'd found working thread flags.  The reason nobody
noticed is that Postgres doesn't actually use any of the symbols set up
by the code after the loop.  Rather than complicate things some more to
make it work as designed, let's just remove all that dead code, and thereby
save a few cycles in each configure run.
2014-07-01 17:51:53 -04:00
Andres Freund a6d488cb53 Remove Alpha and Tru64 support.
Support for running postgres on Alpha hasn't been tested for a long
while. Due to Alpha's uniquely lax cache coherency model it's a hard
to develop for platform (especially blindly!) and thought to be
unlikely to currently work correctly.

As Alpha is the only supported architecture for Tru64 drop support for
it as well. Tru64's support has ended 2012 and it has been in
maintenance-only mode for much longer.

Also remove stray references to __ksr__ and ultrix defines.
2014-06-28 21:46:15 +02:00
Noah Misch 9e6b1bf258 Add mkdtemp() to libpgport.
This function is pervasive on free software operating systems; import
NetBSD's implementation.  Back-patch to 8.4, like the commit that will
harness it.
2014-06-14 09:41:13 -04:00
Tom Lane a24c104b9a Stamp HEAD as 9.5devel.
Let the hacking begin ...
2014-06-10 21:36:13 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 55fb759ab3 Silence Bison deprecation warnings
Bison >=3.0 issues warnings about

    %name-prefix="base_yy"

instead of the now preferred

    %name-prefix "base_yy"

but the latter doesn't work with Bison 2.3 or less.  So for now we
silence the deprecation warnings.
2014-06-03 22:36:35 -04:00
Tom Lane 20561acf93 On OS X, link libpython normally, ignoring the "framework" framework.
As of Xcode 5.0, Apple isn't including the Python framework as part of the
SDK-level files, which means that linking to it might fail depending on
whether Xcode thinks you've selected a specific SDK version.  According to
their Tech Note 2328, they've basically deprecated the framework method of
linking to libpython and are telling people to link to the shared library
normally.  (I'm pretty sure this is in direct contradiction to the advice
they were giving a few years ago, but whatever.)  Testing says that this
approach works fine at least as far back as OS X 10.4.11, so let's just
rip out the framework special case entirely.  We do still need a special
case to decide that OS X provides a shared library at all, unfortunately
(I wonder why the distutils check doesn't work ...).  But this is still
less of a special case than before, so it's fine.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since we'll doubtless be hearing
about this more as more people update to recent Xcode.
2014-05-30 18:19:06 -04:00
Tom Lane b8cc8f9473 Support BSD and e2fsprogs UUID libraries alongside OSSP UUID library.
Allow the contrib/uuid-ossp extension to be built atop any one of these
three popular UUID libraries.  (The extension's name is now arguably a
misnomer, but we'll keep it the same so as not to cause unnecessary
compatibility issues for users.)

We would not normally consider a change like this post-beta1, but the issue
has been forced by our upgrade to autoconf 2.69, whose more rigorous header
checks are causing OSSP's header files to be rejected on some platforms.
It's been foreseen for some time that we'd have to move away from depending
on OSSP UUID due to lack of upstream maintenance, so this is a down payment
on that problem.

While at it, add some simple regression tests, in hopes of catching any
major incompatibilities between the three implementations.

Matteo Beccati, with some further hacking by me
2014-05-27 19:42:08 -04:00
Tom Lane e6df2e1be6 Stamp 9.4beta1. 2014-05-11 17:16:48 -04:00
Tom Lane eaba54c20c Accept tcl 8.6 in configure's probe for tclsh.
Usually the search would find plain "tclsh" without any trouble,
but some installations might only have the version-numbered flavor
of that program.

No compatibility problems have been reported with 8.6, so we might
as well back-patch this to all active branches.

Christoph Berg
2014-05-10 10:48:01 -04:00
Tom Lane 9252b8eec2 Run autoconf in wake of commit a692ee5870.
Heikki updated configure.in but evidently forgot to include the updated
configure script in the commit.  Per buildfarm.
2014-05-05 20:24:38 -04:00
Tom Lane 4c8aa8b5ae Fix "quiet inline" configure test for newer clang compilers.
This test used to just define an unused static inline function and check
whether that causes a warning.  But newer clang versions warn about
unused static inline functions when defined inside a .c file, but not
when defined in an included header, which is the case we care about.
Change the test to cope.

Andres Freund
2014-05-01 16:16:36 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 7d0f493f19 Add TAP tests for client programs
Reviewed-by: Pavel Stěhule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Erik Rijkers <er@xs4all.nl>
2014-04-14 21:33:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 2c65856b7b configure.in: Use dnl in place of # where appropriate
The comment added by ed011d9754 used #,
which means it gets copied into configure, but it doesn't make sense
there.  So use dnl, which gets dropped when creating configure.
2014-02-22 20:42:39 -05:00
Tom Lane ac4ef637ad Allow use of "z" flag in our printf calls, and use it where appropriate.
Since C99, it's been standard for printf and friends to accept a "z" size
modifier, meaning "whatever size size_t has".  Up to now we've generally
dealt with printing size_t values by explicitly casting them to unsigned
long and using the "l" modifier; but this is really the wrong thing on
platforms where pointers are wider than longs (such as Win64).  So let's
start using "z" instead.  To ensure we can do that on all platforms, teach
src/port/snprintf.c to understand "z", and add a configure test to force
use of that implementation when the platform's version doesn't handle "z".

Having done that, modify a bunch of places that were using the
unsigned-long hack to use "z" instead.  This patch doesn't pretend to have
gotten everyplace that could benefit, but it catches many of them.  I made
an effort in particular to ensure that all uses of the same error message
text were updated together, so as not to increase the number of
translatable strings.

It's possible that this change will result in format-string warnings from
pre-C99 compilers.  We might have to reconsider if there are any popular
compilers that will warn about this; but let's start by seeing what the
buildfarm thinks.

Andres Freund, with a little additional work by me
2014-01-23 17:18:33 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 98de86e422 Remove support for native krb5 authentication
krb5 has been deprecated since 8.3, and the recommended way to do
Kerberos authentication is using the GSSAPI authentication method
(which is still fully supported).

libpq retains the ability to identify krb5 authentication, but only
gives an error message about it being unsupported. Since all authentication
is initiated from the backend, there is no need to keep it at all
in the backend.
2014-01-19 17:05:01 +01:00
Bruce Momjian 7e04792a1c Update copyright for 2014
Update all files in head, and files COPYRIGHT and legal.sgml in all back
branches.
2014-01-07 16:05:30 -05:00
Tom Lane ed011d9754 Undo autoconf 2.69's attempt to #define _DARWIN_USE_64_BIT_INODE.
Defining this symbol causes OS X 10.5 to use a buggy version of readdir(),
which can sometimes fail with EINVAL if the previously-fetched directory
entry has been deleted or renamed.  In later OS X versions that bug has
been repaired, but we still don't need the #define because it's on by
default.  So this is just an all-around bad idea, and we can do without it.
2013-12-29 12:57:56 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 94b899b829 Upgrade to Autoconf 2.69 2013-12-18 20:53:23 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 46328916ee configure: Allow adding a custom string to PG_VERSION
This can be used to mark custom built binaries with an extra version
string such as a git describe identifier or distribution package release
version.

From: Oskari Saarenmaa <os@ohmu.fi>
2013-12-12 22:01:27 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 34fa72ec9c Remove use of obsolescent Autoconf macros
Remove the use of the following macros, which are obsolescent according
to the Autoconf documentation:

- AC_C_CONST
- AC_C_STRINGIZE
- AC_C_VOLATILE
- AC_FUNC_MEMCMP
2013-11-30 09:17:08 -05:00
Tom Lane 09a89cb5fc Get rid of use of asprintf() in favor of a more portable implementation.
asprintf(), aside from not being particularly portable, has a fundamentally
badly-designed API; the psprintf() function that was added in passing in
the previous patch has a much better API choice.  Moreover, the NetBSD
implementation that was borrowed for the previous patch doesn't work with
non-C99-compliant vsnprintf, which is something we still have to cope with
on some platforms; and it depends on va_copy which isn't all that portable
either.  Get rid of that code in favor of an implementation similar to what
we've used for many years in stringinfo.c.  Also, move it into libpgcommon
since it's not really libpgport material.

I think this patch will be enough to turn the buildfarm green again, but
there's still cosmetic work left to do, namely get rid of pg_asprintf()
in favor of using psprintf().  That will come in a followon patch.
2013-10-22 18:42:13 -04:00
Robert Haas ea91a6be89 Remove IRIX port.
Development of IRIX has been discontinued, and support is scheduled
to end in December of 2013.  Therefore, there will be no supported
versions of this operating system by the time PostgreSQL 9.4 is
released.  Furthermore, we have no maintainer for this platform.
2013-10-18 08:14:21 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5b6d08cd29 Add use of asprintf()
Add asprintf(), pg_asprintf(), and psprintf() to simplify string
allocation and composition.  Replacement implementations taken from
NetBSD.

Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Asif Naeem <anaeem.it@gmail.com>
2013-10-13 00:09:18 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5dd41f3574 Remove maintainer-check target, fold into normal build
make maintainer-check was obscure and rarely called in practice, and
many breakages were missed.  Fold everything that make maintainer-check
used to do into the normal build.  Specifically:

- Call duplicate_oids when genbki.pl is called.

- Check for tabs in SGML files when the documentation is built.

- Run msgfmt with the -c option during the regular build.  Add an
  additional configure check to see whether we are using the GNU
  version.  (make maintainer-check probably used to fail with non-GNU
  msgfmt.)

Keep maintainer-check as around as phony target for the time being in
case anyone is calling it.  But it won't do anything anymore.
2013-10-10 20:11:56 -04:00
Robert Haas 0ac5e5a7e1 Allow dynamic allocation of shared memory segments.
Patch by myself and Amit Kapila.  Design help from Noah Misch.  Review
by Andres Freund.
2013-10-09 21:05:02 -04:00
Jeff Davis b1892aaeaa Revert WAL posix_fallocate() patches.
This reverts commit 269e780822
and commit 5b571bb8c8.

Unfortunately, the initial patch had insufficient performance testing,
and resulted in a regression.

Per report by Thom Brown.
2013-09-04 23:43:41 -07:00
Tom Lane 1b09630fce Fix configure probe for sys/ucred.h.
The configure script's test for <sys/ucred.h> did not work on OpenBSD,
because on that platform <sys/param.h> has to be included first.
As a result, socket peer authentication was disabled on that platform.
Problem introduced in commit be4585b1c2.

Andres Freund, slightly simplified by me.
2013-07-25 11:39:46 -04:00
Jeff Davis 269e780822 Use posix_fallocate() for new WAL files, where available.
This function is more efficient than actually writing out zeroes to
the new file, per microbenchmarks by Jon Nelson. Also, it may reduce
the likelihood of WAL file fragmentation.

Jon Nelson, with review by Andres Freund, Greg Smith and me.
2013-07-05 12:30:29 -07:00
Tom Lane 5242fefb47 Be consistent about #define'ing configure symbols as "1" not empty.
This is just neatnik-ism, since all the tests in the code are #ifdefs,
but we shouldn't specify symbols as "Define to 1 ..." and then not
actually define them that way.
2013-06-15 14:11:43 -04:00
Tom Lane 58ae1f4577 Stamp HEAD as 9.4devel.
Let the hacking begin ...
2013-06-14 14:41:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 817a89423f Stamp 9.3beta1. 2013-05-06 16:57:06 -04:00
Simon Riggs fdea2530bd Compiler optimizations for page checksum code.
Ants Aasma and Jeff Davis
2013-04-30 06:59:26 +01:00
Robert Haas 0f05840bf4 Allow sepgsql labels to depend on object name.
The main change here is to call security_compute_create_name_raw()
rather than security_compute_create_raw().  This ups the minimum
requirement for libselinux from 2.0.99 to 2.1.10, but it looks
like most distributions will have picked that up before 9.3 is out.

KaiGai Kohei
2013-03-28 15:41:38 -04:00
Tom Lane b853eb9718 Improve handling of ereport(ERROR) and elog(ERROR).
In commit 71450d7fd6, we added code to inform
suitably-intelligent compilers that ereport() doesn't return if the elevel
is ERROR or higher.  This patch extends that to elog(), and also fixes a
double-evaluation hazard that the previous commit created in ereport(),
as well as reducing the emitted code size.

The elog() improvement requires the compiler to support __VA_ARGS__, which
should be available in just about anything nowadays since it's required by
C99.  But our minimum language baseline is still C89, so add a configure
test for that.

The previous commit assumed that ereport's elevel could be evaluated twice,
which isn't terribly safe --- there are already counterexamples in xlog.c.
On compilers that have __builtin_constant_p, we can use that to protect the
second test, since there's no possible optimization gain if the compiler
doesn't know the value of elevel.  Otherwise, use a local variable inside
the macros to prevent double evaluation.  The local-variable solution is
inferior because (a) it leads to useless code being emitted when elevel
isn't constant, and (b) it increases the optimization level needed for the
compiler to recognize that subsequent code is unreachable.  But it seems
better than not teaching non-gcc compilers about unreachability at all.

Lastly, if the compiler has __builtin_unreachable(), we can use that
instead of abort(), resulting in a noticeable code savings since no
function call is actually emitted.  However, it seems wise to do this only
in non-assert builds.  In an assert build, continue to use abort(), so that
the behavior will be predictable and debuggable if the "impossible"
happens.

These changes involve making the ereport and elog macros emit do-while
statement blocks not just expressions, which forces small changes in
a few call sites.

Andres Freund, Tom Lane, Heikki Linnakangas
2013-01-13 18:40:09 -05:00
Tom Lane e1b735ae35 Last-gasp attempt to save libperl.so configure probe.
I notice that plperl's makefile adds the -I for $perl_archlibexp/CORE
at the end of CPPFLAGS not the beginning.  It seems somewhat unlikely
that the include search order has anything to do with why buildfarm
member okapi is failing, but I'm about out of other ideas.
2013-01-10 22:16:22 -05:00
Tom Lane 9d5a160ca3 Test linking libperl.so using only Perl's required libraries.
It appears that perl_embed_ldflags should already mention all the libraries
that are required by libperl.so itself.  So let's try the test link with
just those and not the other LIBS we've found up to now.  This should
more nearly reproduce what will happen when plperl is linked, and perhaps
will fix buildfarm member okapi's problem.
2013-01-09 23:46:44 -05:00
Tom Lane 1f3ed51f8e Add explicit configure-time checks for perl.h and libperl.so.
Although most platforms seem to package Perl in such a way that these files
are present even in basic Perl installations, Debian does not.  Hence, make
an effort to fail during configure rather than build if --with-perl was
given and these files are lacking.  Per gripe from Josh Berkus.
2013-01-09 19:41:37 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 7fb97ecd13 Detect Windows perl linkage parameters in configure script.
This means we can now construct a configure test for the library
presence. Previously these parameters were only figured out at
build time in plperl's GnuMakefile.
2013-01-09 17:49:23 -05:00
Tom Lane 5aec9ccafe Fix plpython build on older versions of OS X.
Pre-Lion versions of Apple's linker don't allow space between -F and its
argument.  (Snow Leopard is nice enough to tell you that in so many words,
but older versions just fail with very obscure link errors, as seen on
buildfarm member locust for instance.)  Oversight in commit
fc8745070a.
2013-01-06 15:49:53 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut fc8745070a PL/Python: Make build on OS X more flexible
The PL/Python build on OS X was previously hardcoded to use the system
installation of Python, ignoring whatever was specified to configure.
Except that it would use the header files from configure, which could
lead to mismatches.  It was not possible to build against a custom
Python installation.

Now, we check in configure how the specified Python installation was
built and use that, supporting framework and non-framework builds.
2013-01-05 08:56:14 -05:00
Bruce Momjian bd61a623ac Update copyrights for 2013
Fully update git head, and update back branches in ./COPYRIGHT and
legal.sgml files.
2013-01-01 17:15:01 -05:00
Tom Lane 2666a6d0b9 Ignore libedit/libreadline while probing for standard functions.
Some versions of libedit expose bogus definitions of setproctitle(),
optreset, and perhaps other symbols that we don't want configure to pick up
on.  There was a previous report of similar problems with strlcpy(), which
we addressed in commit 59cf88da91, but the
problem has evidently grown in scope since then.  In hopes of not having to
deal with it again in future, rearrange configure's tests for supplied
functions so that we ignore libedit/libreadline except when probing
specifically for functions we expect them to provide.

Per report from Christoph Berg, though this is slightly more aggressive
than his proposed patch.
2012-12-18 16:23:33 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut bc5430aa95 Remove -Wlogical-op from standard compiler flags
It creates too many warnings with GCC 4.3 and 4.4.
2012-11-23 16:24:24 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 67c03c6f3c Add -Wlogical-op to standard compiler flags, if supported 2012-11-16 00:35:06 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera f7491616a9 restore permission bits 2012-10-09 12:08:13 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera f46baf601d Rename USE_INLINE to PG_USE_INLINE
The former name was too likely to conflict with symbols from external
headers; and, as seen in recent buildfarm failures in member spoonbill,
it has now happened at least in plpython.
2012-10-09 11:17:33 -03:00
Tom Lane 95d035e66d Autoconfiscate selection of 64-bit int type for 64-bit large object API.
Get rid of the fundamentally indefensible assumption that "long long int"
exists and is exactly 64 bits wide on every platform Postgres runs on.
Instead let the configure script select the type to use for "pg_int64".

This is a bit of a pain in the rear since we do not want to pollute client
namespace with all the random symbols that pg_config.h defines; instead
we have to create a separate generated header file, "pg_config_ext.h".
But now that the infrastructure is there, we might have the ability to
add some other stuff that's long been wanting in this area.
2012-10-07 21:52:43 -04:00
Tom Lane ea473fb2de Add infrastructure for compile-time assertions about variable types.
Currently, the macros only work with fairly recent gcc versions, but there
is room to expand them to other compilers that have comparable features.

Heavily revised and autoconfiscated version of a patch by Andres Freund.
2012-09-30 14:38:31 -04:00
Tom Lane 58a031f920 Make configure probe for mbstowcs_l as well as wcstombs_l.
We previously supposed that any given platform would supply both or neither
of these functions, so that one configure test would be sufficient.  It now
appears that at least on AIX this is not the case ... which is likely an
AIX bug, but nonetheless we need to cope with it.  So use separate tests.
Per bug #6758; thanks to Andrew Hastie for doing the followup testing
needed to confirm what was happening.

Backpatch to 9.1, where we began using these functions.
2012-08-31 14:17:56 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 381a9ed66d Remove configure flag --disable-shared, as it is no longer used by any
port.  The last use was QNX, per Peter Eisentraut.
2012-08-30 16:26:53 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 9cffb187d8 Also check for Python platform-specific include directory
Python can be built to have two separate include directories: one for
platform-independent files and one for platform-specific files.  So
far, this has apparently never mattered for a PL/Python build.  But
with the new multi-arch Python packages in Debian and Ubuntu, this is
becoming the standard configuration on these platforms, so we must
check these directories separately to be able to build there.

Also add a bit of reporting in configure to be able to see better what
is going on with this.
2012-08-29 23:05:35 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut b748d8f280 Fix install-strip on Mac OS X
There was a hack put into install-sh to call strip with the correct
options on Mac OS X.  But that never worked, because configure
disabled stripping on that platform altogether.  So remove that dead
code, and while we're at it, update install-sh to the latest upstream
source (from Automake).

Instead, set up the right strip options in programs.m4, so this now
actually works the way it was originally intended.
2012-08-21 23:42:43 -04:00
Tom Lane 470d0b9789 Check LIBXML_VERSION instead of testing in configure script.
We had put a test for libxml2's xmlStructuredErrorContext variable in
configure, but of course that doesn't work on Windows builds.  The next
best alternative seems to be to test the LIBXML_VERSION symbol provided
by xmlversion.h.

Per report from Talha Bin Rizwan, though this fixes it in a different way
than his proposed patch.
2012-08-17 00:05:26 -04:00
Tom Lane b966dd6c42 Add fsync capability to initdb, and use sync_file_range() if available.
Historically we have not worried about fsync'ing anything during initdb
(in fact, initdb intentionally passes -F to each backend launch to prevent
it from fsync'ing).  But with filesystems getting more aggressive about
caching data, that's not such a good plan anymore.  Make initdb do a pass
over the finished data directory tree to fsync everything.  For testing
purposes, the -N/--nosync flag can be used to restore the old behavior.

Also, testing shows that on Linux, sync_file_range() is much faster than
posix_fadvise() for hinting to the kernel that an fsync is coming,
apparently because the latter blocks on a rather small request queue while
the former doesn't.  So use this function if available in initdb, and also
in the backend's pg_flush_data() (where it currently will affect only the
speed of CREATE DATABASE's cloning step).

We will later make pg_regress invoke initdb with the --nosync flag
to avoid slowing down cases such as "make check" in contrib.  But
let's not do so until we've shaken out any portability issues in this
patch.

Jeff Davis, reviewed by Andres Freund
2012-07-13 17:16:58 -04:00
Tom Lane fc548b2296 Remove support for using wait3() in place of waitpid().
All Unix-oid platforms that we currently support should have waitpid(),
since it's in V2 of the Single Unix Spec.  Our git history shows that
the wait3 code was added to support NextStep, which we officially dropped
support for as of 9.2.  So get rid of the configure test, and simplify the
macro spaghetti in reaper().  Per suggestion from Fujii Masao.
2012-07-05 14:00:40 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut dcd5af6c34 Further fix install program detection
The $(or) make function was introduced in GNU make 3.81, so the
previous coding didn't work in 3.80.  Write it differently, and
improve the variable naming to make more sense in the new coding.
2012-06-28 20:07:02 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut f786715412 Fix install program detection
configure handles INSTALL as a substitution variable specially, and
apparently it gets confused when it's set to empty.  Use INSTALL_
instead as a workaround to avoid the issue.
2012-06-27 21:22:41 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 9db7ccae20 Use system install program when available and usable
In a3176dac22 we switched to using
install-sh unconditionally, because the configure check
AC_PROG_INSTALL would pick up any random program named install, which
has caused failure reports
(http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2001-03/msg00312.php).
Now the configure check is much improved and should avoid false
positives.  It has also been shown that using a system install program
can significantly reduce "make install" times, so it's worth trying.
2012-06-27 13:40:51 +03:00
Tom Lane bed88fceac Stamp HEAD as 9.3devel.
Let the hacking begin ...
2012-06-13 20:03:02 -04:00
Tom Lane 4bec93ac0f Stamp 9.2beta2. 2012-05-31 19:16:55 -04:00
Tom Lane f667747b6d Put back AC_REQUIRE([AC_STRUCT_TM]).
The BSD-ish members of the buildfarm all seem to think removing this
was a bad idea.  It looks to me like it resulted in omitting the system
header inclusion necessary to detect the fields of struct tm correctly.
2012-05-14 23:06:48 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut ff4628f37a Remove unused AC_DEFINE symbols
ENABLE_DTRACE            unused as of a7b7b07af3
HAVE_ERR_SET_MARK        unused as of 4ed4b6c54e
HAVE_FCVT                unused as of 4553e1d80f
HAVE_STRUCT_SOCKADDR_UN  unused as of b4cea00a1f
HAVE_SYSCONF             unused as of f83356c7f5
TM_IN_SYS_TIME           never used, obsolescent per Autoconf documentation
2012-05-14 22:51:21 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 64f09ca386 Remove leftovers of BeOS port
These should have been removed when the BeOS port was removed in
44f9021223.
2012-05-14 04:50:39 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 7b85527eae Remove unused AC_SUBST variables
These were apparently never used.  The AC_SUBST was probably just
added in a copy-and-paste manner.  (The shell variables continue to be
used inside configure.  The change is just that we don't need them
outside of configure.)
2012-05-12 23:39:38 +03:00
Tom Lane f70fa835e0 Stamp 9.2beta1. 2012-05-10 18:35:09 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 3284e03d5d Remove strdup, strtol, strtoul from libpgport
These should not be needed anymore, at least after the recent port
removals.  So let's see whether we can do without them.
2012-05-07 23:10:28 +03:00
Bruce Momjian ebcaa5fcde Remove BSD/OS (BSDi) port. There are no known users upgrading to
Postgres 9.2, and perhaps no existing users either.
2012-05-03 10:58:44 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut f2f9439fbf Remove dead ports
Remove the following ports:

- dgux
- nextstep
- sunos4
- svr4
- ultrix4
- univel

These are obsolete and not worth rescuing.  In most cases, there is
circumstantial evidence that they wouldn't work anymore anyway.
2012-05-01 22:11:12 +03:00
Tom Lane f2386d7136 Fix configure's search for collateindex.pl.
PGAC_PATH_COLLATEINDEX supposed that it could use AC_PATH_PROGS to search
for collateindex.pl, but that macro will only accept files that are marked
executable, and at least some DocBook installations don't mark the script
executable (a case the docs Makefile was already prepared for).  Accept the
script if it's present and readable in $DOCBOOKSTYLE/bin, and otherwise
search the PATH as before.

Having fixed that up, we don't need the fallback case that was in the docs
Makefile, and instead can throw an understandable error if configure didn't
find the script.  Per recent trouble report from John Lumby.
2012-03-22 00:46:03 -04:00
Tom Lane 74e29162a4 Allow MinGW builds to use standardly-named OpenSSL libraries.
In the Fedora variant of MinGW, the openssl libraries have their normal
names, not libeay32 and libssleay32.  Adjust configure probes to allow
that, per bug #6486.

Tomasz Ostrowski
2012-02-23 15:05:08 -05:00
Tom Lane c0efc2c2ab Don't reject threaded Python on FreeBSD.
According to Chris Rees, this has worked for awhile, and the current
FreeBSD port is removing the test anyway.
2012-02-20 16:21:28 -05:00
Robert Haas 4f658dc851 Support fls().
The immediate impetus for this is that Noah Misch's patch to elide
unnecessary table and index rebuilds when changing typmod for temporal
types uses it; and this is extracted from that patch, with some
further commentary by me.  But it seems logically separate from the
remainder of the patch, so I'm committing it separately; this is not
the first time someone has wanted fls() in the backend and probably
won't be the last.

If we end up using this in more performance-critical spots it may be
worthwhile to add some architecture-specific optimizations to our
src/port version of fls() - e.g. any x86 platform can implement this
using the assembly instruction BSRL.  But performance won't matter
a bit for assessing typmod changes, so I'm not worried about that
right now.
2012-02-07 13:45:46 -05:00
Tom Lane 0a41e86584 Use __sync_lock_test_and_set() for spinlocks on ARM, if available.
Historically we've used the SWPB instruction for TAS() on ARM, but this
is deprecated and not available on ARMv6 and later.  Instead, make use
of a GCC builtin if available.  We'll still fall back to SWPB if not,
so as not to break existing ports using older GCC versions.

Eventually we might want to try using __sync_lock_test_and_set() on some
other architectures too, but for now that seems to present only risk and
not reward.

Back-patch to all supported versions, since people might want to use any
of them on more recent ARM chips.

Martin Pitt
2012-01-07 15:38:52 -05:00
Tom Lane 5cfa8dd300 Use mutex hint bit in PPC LWARX instructions, where possible.
The hint bit makes for a small but measurable performance improvement
in access to contended spinlocks.

On the other hand, some PPC chips give an illegal-instruction failure.
There doesn't seem to be a completely bulletproof way to tell whether the
hint bit will cause an illegal-instruction failure other than by trying
it; but most if not all 64-bit PPC machines should accept it, so follow
the Linux kernel's lead and assume it's okay to use it in 64-bit builds.
Of course we must also check whether the assembler accepts the command,
since even with a recent CPU the toolchain could be old.

Patch by Manabu Ori, significantly modified by me.
2012-01-02 00:02:00 -05:00
Bruce Momjian e126958c2e Update copyright notices for year 2012. 2012-01-01 18:01:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut d383c23f6f Remove support for on_exit()
All supported platforms support the C89 standard function atexit()
(SunOS 4 probably being the last one not to), and supporting both
makes the code clumsy.
2011-12-27 20:57:59 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan 5878a328e3 Disable excessive FP optimization by recent versions of gcc.
Suggested solution from Tom Lane. Problem discovered, probably not
for the first time, while testing the mingw-w64 32 bit compiler.

Backpatched to all live branches.
2011-12-14 17:15:24 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 1a0c76c32f Enable compiling with the mingw-w64 32 bit compiler.
Original patch by Lars Kanis, reviewed by Nishiyama Tomoaki and tweaked some by me.

This compiler, or at least the latest version of it, is currently broken, and
only passes the regression tests if built with -O0.
2011-12-10 15:35:41 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 80ac853f05 python.m4: Remove useless "import string" calls
They have been unneeded since the use of the string module has been
removed in a65ed83f8a.
2011-11-29 06:50:11 +02:00
Bruce Momjian 7012b5edb7 Remove scandir() requirement in pg_upgrade; instead just use readdir()
--- we were not using the scandir pattern filtering anyway.  This also
removes the scandir requirement in configure.
2011-11-17 21:59:49 -05:00
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
Robert Haas 4232c4b406 Userspace access vector cache for contrib/sepgsql.
KaiGai Kohei
2011-09-01 08:38:40 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 65e899b2fb Fix MinGW build, broken by my previous patch to add a setlocale() wrapper
on Windows. ecpglib doesn't link with libpgport, but picks and compiles
the .c files it needs individually. To cope with that, move the setlocale()
wrapper from chklocale.c to a separate setlocale.c file, and include that
in ecpglib.
2011-09-01 14:02:40 +03:00
Tom Lane 2c5d6f1fb5 Include $cc_string in the info reported by a configure run.
Without this, it's not very easy to tell which compiler version a buildfarm
animal is actually using at the moment.
2011-08-28 17:14:52 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut f8c2029ef0 Improve detection of Python 3.2 installations
Because of ABI tagging, the library version number might no longer be
exactly the Python version number, so do extra lookups.  This affects
installations without a shared library, such as ActiveState's
installer.

Also update the way to detect the location of the 'config' directory,
which can also be versioned.

Ashesh Vashi
2011-08-18 14:43:16 +03:00
Robert Haas 4af43ee3f1 Make pgbench use erand48() rather than random().
glibc renders random() thread-safe by wrapping a futex lock around it;
testing reveals that this limits the performance of pgbench on machines
with many CPU cores.  Rather than switching to random_r(), which is
only available on GNU systems and crashes unless you use undocumented
alchemy to initialize the random state properly, switch to our built-in
implementation of erand48(), which is both thread-safe and concurrent.

Since the list of reasons not to use the operating system's erand48()
is getting rather long, rename ours to pg_erand48() (and similarly
for our implementations of lrand48() and srand48()) and just always
use those.  We were already doing this on Cygwin anyway, and the
glibc implementation is not quite thread-safe, so pgbench wouldn't
be able to use that either.

Per discussion with Tom Lane.
2011-08-03 16:26:40 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan c9737310d5 Don't build replacement getpeereid function on mingw.
Windows doesn't have Unix sockets, so it's not needed, and moreover causes compile warnings.
2011-07-25 23:48:44 -04:00
Tom Lane cacd42d62c Rewrite libxml error handling to be more robust.
libxml reports some errors (like invalid xmlns attributes) via the error
handler hook, but still returns a success indicator to the library caller.
This causes us to miss some errors that are important to report.  Since the
"generic" error handler hook doesn't know whether the message it's getting
is for an error, warning, or notice, stop using that and instead start
using the "structured" error handler hook, which gets enough information
to be useful.

While at it, arrange to save and restore the error handler hook setting in
each libxml-using function, rather than assuming we can set and forget the
hook.  This should improve the odds of working nicely with third-party
libraries that also use libxml.

In passing, volatile-ize some local variables that get modified within
PG_TRY blocks.  I noticed this while testing with an older gcc version
than I'd previously tried to compile xml.c with.

Florian Pflug and Tom Lane, with extensive review/testing by Noah Misch
2011-07-20 13:03:49 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut dbbba5279f Start using flexible array members
Flexible array members are a C99 feature that avoids "cheating" in the
declaration of variable-length arrays at the end of structs.  With
Autoconf support, this should be transparent for older compilers.

We start with one use in gist.h because gcc 4.6 started to raise a
warning there.  Over time, it can be expanded to other places in the
source, but they will likely need some review of sizeof and offsetof
usage.  The current change in gist.h appears to be safe in this
regard.
2011-06-16 22:45:38 +03:00
Tom Lane c962792211 Stamp HEAD as 9.2devel. 2011-06-11 17:46:49 -04:00
Tom Lane 829ae4bf83 Tag 9.1beta2. 2011-06-09 19:40:42 -04:00
Tom Lane 3980f7fc6e Implement getpeereid() as a src/port compatibility function.
This unifies a bunch of ugly #ifdef's in one place.  Per discussion,
we only need this where HAVE_UNIX_SOCKETS, so no need to cover Windows.

Marko Kreen, some adjustment by Tom Lane
2011-06-02 13:05:01 -04:00
Tom Lane be4585b1c2 Replace use of credential control messages with getsockopt(LOCAL_PEERCRED).
It turns out the reason we hadn't found out about the portability issues
with our credential-control-message code is that almost no modern platforms
use that code at all; the ones that used to need it now offer getpeereid(),
which we choose first.  The last holdout was NetBSD, and they added
getpeereid() as of 5.0.  So far as I can tell, the only live platform on
which that code was being exercised was Debian/kFreeBSD, ie, FreeBSD kernel
with Linux userland --- since glibc doesn't provide getpeereid(), we fell
back to the control message code.  However, the FreeBSD kernel provides a
LOCAL_PEERCRED socket parameter that's functionally equivalent to Linux's
SO_PEERCRED.  That is both much simpler to use than control messages, and
superior because it doesn't require receiving a message from the other end
at just the right time.

Therefore, add code to use LOCAL_PEERCRED when necessary, and rip out all
the credential-control-message code in the backend.  (libpq still has such
code so that it can still talk to pre-9.1 servers ... but eventually we can
get rid of it there too.)  Clean up related autoconf probes, too.

This means that libpq's requirepeer parameter now works on exactly the same
platforms where the backend supports peer authentication, so adjust the
documentation accordingly.
2011-05-31 16:10:46 -04:00
Tom Lane 44404f3945 Adjust configure to use "+Olibmerrno" with HP-UX C compiler, if possible.
This is reported to be necessary on some versions of that OS.  In service
of this, cause PGAC_PROG_CC_CFLAGS_OPT to reject switches that result in
compiler warnings, since on yet other versions of that OS, the switch does
nothing except provoke a warning.

Report and patch by Ibrar Ahmed, further tweaking by me.
2011-05-26 17:29:33 -04:00
Tom Lane 8ff1f6a78c Adjust configure's probe for libselinux so it rejects too-old versions.
We need at least version 2.0.93, so probe for a function that was added
in that version.

Kaigai Kohei
2011-05-24 15:50:50 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 51ad1784cc Clarify the documentation of the --with-ossp-uuid option 2011-05-22 14:29:36 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 8dd2ede3f8 Improve compiler string shown in version()
With some compilers such as Clang and ICC emulating GCC, using a
version string of the form "GCC $version" can be quite misleading.
Also, a great while ago, the version output from gcc --version started
including the string "gcc", so it is redundant to repeat that.  In
order to support ancient GCC versions, we now prefix the result with
"GCC " only if the version output does not start with a letter.
2011-05-06 23:01:50 +03:00
Tom Lane 993c5e5904 Tag 9.1beta1. 2011-04-27 17:17:22 -04:00
Tom Lane 2ab0796d7a Fix char2wchar/wchar2char to support collations properly.
These functions should take a pg_locale_t, not a collation OID, and should
call mbstowcs_l/wcstombs_l where available.  Where those functions are not
available, temporarily select the correct locale with uselocale().

This change removes the bogus assumption that all locales selectable in
a given database have the same wide-character conversion method; in
particular, the collate.linux.utf8 regression test now passes with
LC_CTYPE=C, so long as the database encoding is UTF8.

I decided to move the char2wchar/wchar2char functions out of mbutils.c and
into pg_locale.c, because they work on wchar_t not pg_wchar_t and thus
don't really belong with the mbutils.c functions.  Keeping them where they
were would have required importing pg_locale_t into pg_wchar.h somehow,
which did not seem like a good plan.
2011-04-23 12:35:41 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 6094c242d1 Support for DragonFly BSD
Mapped to NetBSD, the closest existing match.  (Even though DragonFly
BSD is derived from FreeBSD, the shared library version numbering
matches NetBSD, and the rest is mostly the same among all BSD
variants.)

per "Rumko"
2011-03-02 21:15:28 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan 42e5223648 Add a configure check for Python.h if building with python. 2011-02-26 14:17:57 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut f005384532 Better support for thread-support flag detection with clang
When testing the stderr produced by various thread-support flags, also
run a compilation in addition to a link, because clang warns on
certain flags when compiling but not when linking.
2011-02-16 23:15:54 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 414c5a2ea6 Per-column collation support
This adds collation support for columns and domains, a COLLATE clause
to override it per expression, and B-tree index support.

Peter Eisentraut
reviewed by Pavel Stehule, Itagaki Takahiro, Robert Haas, Noah Misch
2011-02-08 23:04:18 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan 91812df4ed Enable building with the Mingw64 compiler.
This can be used to build 64 bit Windows binaries, not only on 64 bit
Windows but on supported cross-compiling hosts including 32 bit Windows,
Cygwin, Darwin and Linux.
2011-01-30 19:56:46 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 8b6f5f2510 Use -Wformat-security when available 2011-01-27 01:23:48 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 6fe5e4e63e autoreconf
Synchronize pg_config.h.in with configure.in (someone must have
forgotten to run autoheader or autoreconf), and clean up some spurious
change in configure introduced by the last commit there.
2011-01-27 01:19:45 +02:00
Robert Haas 968bc6fac9 sepgsql, an SE-Linux integration for PostgreSQL
This is still pretty rough - among other things, the documentation
needs work, and the messages need a visit from the style police -
but this gets the basic framework in place.

KaiGai Kohei
2011-01-23 20:48:27 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 5d950e3b0c Stamp copyrights for year 2011. 2011-01-01 13:18:15 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan a534728afb Only build in crashdump support on Windows if there's a working dbghelp.h. 2010-12-26 10:34:47 -05:00
Tom Lane 5cdd65f324 Fix up getopt() reset management so it works on recent mingw.
The mingw people don't appear to care about compatibility with non-GNU
versions of getopt, so force use of our own copy of getopt on Windows.
Also, ensure that we make use of optreset when using our own copy.

Per report from Andrew Dunstan.  Back-patch to all versions supported
on Windows.
2010-12-15 23:50:41 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 804a786c95 Add/fix caching on some configure checks 2010-09-29 22:38:04 +03:00
Tom Lane 651377933e Fix remaining stray references to CVS.
These are just cosmetic and don't seem worth back-patching far.
I put them into 9.0 just because it was trivial to do so.
2010-09-22 19:51:39 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2746e5f21d Introduce latches. A latch is a boolean variable, with the capability to
wait until it is set. Latches can be used to reliably wait until a signal
arrives, which is hard otherwise because signals don't interrupt select()
on some platforms, and even when they do, there's race conditions.

On Unix, latches use the so called self-pipe trick under the covers to
implement the sleep until the latch is set, without race conditions. On
Windows, Windows events are used.

Use the new latch abstraction to sleep in walsender, so that as soon as
a transaction finishes, walsender is woken up to immediately send the WAL
to the standby. This reduces the latency between master and standby, which
is good.

Preliminary work by Fujii Masao. The latch implementation is by me, with
helpful comments from many people.
2010-09-11 15:48:04 +00:00
Tom Lane b40466c337 Stamp HEAD as 9.1devel.
(And there was much rejoicing.)
2010-07-09 04:10:58 +00:00
Marc G. Fournier 1084f31770 tag beta3 2010-07-09 02:43:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 291a957745 Split the LDFLAGS make variable into two parts: LDFLAGS is now used for
linking both executables and shared libraries, and we add on LDFLAGS_EX when
linking executables or LDFLAGS_SL when linking shared libraries.  This
provides a significantly cleaner way of dealing with link-time switches than
the former behavior.  Also, make sure that the various platform-specific
%.so: %.o rules incorporate LDFLAGS and LDFLAGS_SL; most of them missed that
before.  (I did not add these variables for the platforms that invoke $(LD)
directly, however.  It's not clear if we can do that safely, since for the
most part we assume these variables use CC command-line syntax.)

Per gripe from Aaron Swenson and subsequent investigation.
2010-07-05 18:54:38 +00:00
Marc G. Fournier dcd52a64bd tag 9.0beta2 2010-06-04 07:28:30 +00:00
Michael Meskes 29259531c7 Replace self written 'long long int' configure test by standard 'AC_TYPE_LONG_LONG_INT' macro call. 2010-05-25 17:28:20 +00:00
Michael Meskes 555a02f910 Added a configure test for "long long" datatypes. So far this is only used in ecpg and replaces the old test that was kind of hackish. 2010-05-25 14:32:55 +00:00
Tom Lane 382ff21203 Fix up lame idea of not using autoconf to determine if platform has scandir().
Should fix buildfarm failures.
2010-05-13 22:07:43 +00:00
Marc G. Fournier f9d9b2b34a tag for 9.0beta1 2010-04-30 03:16:58 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 7e8a60b7c5 Don't link PL/Python against LOCALMODLIBS
This variable is apparently only for Python internally.  In newer releases
of Python this variable pulls in more and more libraries that users are
less likely to have, leading to potential build failures.
2010-03-17 22:02:44 +00:00
Tom Lane dc43e2f540 Fix configure's regexp for extracting the Perl version number from perl -v
output.  Per bug #5339, Perl 5.11 has changed the format of that output
enough to break the previous coding.

Alex Hunsaker
2010-02-23 18:35:07 +00:00
Bruce Momjian b4689bfb00 Revert configure warning to use "official distribution". 2010-02-22 21:16:50 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 6a0b6421e2 Use the term "bundled distribution" instead of "official distribution" in
configure warnings.
2010-02-22 18:02:06 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 2f6cf9192c Revert version stamping in wrong branch 2010-02-19 18:42:30 +00:00