might have inherited from the environment that would possibly cause
psql to fail to connect to the temp installation properly. Per trouble
report from Markus Bertheau 7/1/03.
float8smaller, float8larger (and thereby the MIN/MAX aggregates on these
datatypes) to agree with the datatypes' comparison operations as
regards NaN handling. In all these datatypes, NaN is arbitrarily
considered larger than any normal value ... but MIN/MAX had not gotten
the word. Per recent discussion on pgsql-sql.
error, if any input element is NULL. This is not what we ultimately want,
but until arrays can have NULL elements, it will have to do. Patch from
Joe Conway.
wait for the postmaster to actually exit. Otherwise running repeated
'make check's tends to misbehave, because we try to remove and recreate
the data directory while the old PM is still alive.
bottom. Otherwise we fail to moveright when the root page was split while
we were "in flight" to it. This is not a significant problem when the root
is above the leaf level, but if the root was also a leaf (ie, a single-page
index just got split) we may return the wrong leaf page to the caller,
resulting in failure to find a key that is in fact present. Bug has existed
at least since 7.1, probably forever.
CREATE TABLE (or ALTER TABLE SET DEFAULT), rather than postponing it to
the time that the default is inserted into an INSERT command by the
rewriter. This reverses an old decision that was intended to make the
world safe for writing
f1 timestamp default 'now'
but in fact merely made the failure modes subtle rather than obvious.
Per recent trouble report and followup discussion.
initdb forced since there is a chance that stored default expressions
will change.
heuristic determination of day vs month in date/time input. Add the
ability to specify that input is interpreted as yy-mm-dd order (which
formerly worked, but only for yy greater than 31). DateStyle's input
component now has the preferred spellings DMY, MDY, or YMD; the older
keywords European and US are now aliases for the first two of these.
Per recent discussions on pgsql-general.
materialized.
New items have been added to GucContext and GucSource enums, but of
course they were not added to the corresponding GucContextName[] and
GucSourceName[] arrays in the patch. Here's a new patch to fix the
resulting bugs.
Joe Conway
I'd have to disagree with regards to the memory leaks not being worth
a mention - any such leak can cause problems when the PostgreSQL
installation is either unattended, long-living andor has very high
connection levels. Half a kilobyte on start-up isn't negligible in
this light.
Regards, Lee.
Tom Lane writes:
> Lee Kindness <lkindness@csl.co.uk> writes:
> > Guys, attached is a patch to fix two memory leaks on start-up.
>
> I do not like the changes to miscinit.c. In the first place, it is not
> a "memory leak" to do a one-time allocation of state for a proc_exit
> function. A bigger complaint is that your proposed change introduces
> fragile coupling between CreateLockFile and its callers, in order to
> save no resources worth mentioning. More, it introduces an assumption
> that the globals directoryLockFile and socketLockFile don't change while
> the postmaster is running. UnlinkLockFile should unlink the file that
> it was originally told to unlink, regardless of what happens to those
> globals.
>
> If you are intent on spending code to free stuff just before the
> postmaster exits, a better fix would be for UnlinkLockFile to free its
> string argument after using it.
Lee Kindness
>>ISTM that "source" is worth knowing.
>
> Hm, possibly. Any other opinions?
This version has the seven fields I proposed, including "source". Here's
an example that shows why I think it's valuable:
regression=# \x
Expanded display is on.
regression=# select * from pg_settings where name = 'enable_seqscan';
-[ RECORD 1 ]-----------
name | enable_seqscan
setting | on
context | user
vartype | bool
source | default
min_val |
max_val |
regression=# update pg_settings set setting = 'off' where name =
'enable_seqscan';
-[ RECORD 1 ]---
set_config | off
regression=# select * from pg_settings where name = 'enable_seqscan';
-[ RECORD 1 ]-----------
name | enable_seqscan
setting | off
context | user
vartype | bool
source | session
min_val |
max_val |
regression=# alter user postgres set enable_seqscan to 'off';
ALTER USER
(log out and then back in again)
regression=# \x
Expanded display is on.
regression=# select * from pg_settings where name = 'enable_seqscan';
-[ RECORD 1 ]-----------
name | enable_seqscan
setting | off
context | user
vartype | bool
source | user
min_val |
max_val |
In the first case, enable_seqscan is set to its default value. After
setting it to off, it is obvious that the value has been changed for the
session only. In the third case, you can see that the value has been set
specifically for the user.
Joe Conway
annoyed me the other day while I was documenting my current project. It
makes pg_dump use the same layout for types as for tables, by putting "\n\t"
before the first field and "\n" before the final ");"
Can't really justify this too much except to say I had an itch and I
scratched it ;-)
Andrew Dunstan
psql4win32.patch - changes in the psql source code
psql-ref.patch - changes in the documentation psql-ref.sgml
(for new builtin variable WIN32_CONSOLE)
To apply them use "patch -p 1" in the root directory of the
postgres source directory.
These patches fix the following problems of psql on Win32
(all changes only have effect #ifdef WIN32):
a) Problem: Static library libpq.a did not work
Solution: Added WSAStartup() in fe-connect.c
b) Problem: Secret Password was echoed by psql
Solution: Password echoing disabled in sprompt.c
c) Problem: 8bit characters were displayed/interpreted wrong in psql
This is due to the fact that the Win32 "console" uses a
different encoding than the rest of the Windows system
Solution: Introduced a new psql variable WIN32_CONSOLE
When set with "\set WIN32_console", the function OemToChar()
is applied after reading input and CharToOem() before
displaying Output
Christoph Dalitz
that the regression tests for foreign keys didn't seem to test
a deferred constraint that was not satisified by a later
statement and was not made immediate by set constraints,
so here's a simple added test with a single invalid insert and
a commit.
Stephan Szabo
>>that you cannot change the value, similar to the argument variables:
>
> Perhaps you shouldn't mark it isconst; then it would actually have some
> usefulness (you could use it directly as a temporary variable to hold
> the intended result). I can't see much value in aliasing it if it's
> const, either.
OK; the only change in this version is "isconst = false;". Now you can
use $0 as a result placeholder if desired. E.g.:
create or replace function tmp(anyelement, anyelement) returns anyarray as '
declare
v_ret alias for $0;
v_el1 alias for $1;
v_el2 alias for $2;
begin
v_ret := ARRAY[v_el1, v_el2];
return v_ret;
end;
' language 'plpgsql';
create table f(f1 text, f2 text, f3 int, f4 int);
insert into f values ('a','b',1,2);
insert into f values ('z','x',3,4);
select tmp(f1,f2) from f;
select tmp(f3,f4) from f;
Joe Conway
modes (and replace the requiressl boolean). The four options were first
spelled out by Magnus Hagander <mha@sollentuna.net> on 2000-08-23 in email
to pgsql-hackers, archived here:
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2000-08/msg00639.php
My original less-flexible patch and the ensuing thread are archived at:
http://dbforums.com/t623845.html
Attached is a new patch, including documentation.
To sum up, there's a new client parameter "sslmode" and environment
variable "PGSSLMODE", with these options:
sslmode description
------- -----------
disable Unencrypted non-SSL only
allow Negotiate, prefer non-SSL
prefer Negotiate, prefer SSL (default)
require Require SSL
The only change to the server is a new pg_hba.conf line type,
"hostnossl", for specifying connections that are not allowed to use SSL
(for example, to prevent servers on a local network from accidentally
using SSL and wasting cycles). Thus the 3 pg_hba.conf line types are:
pg_hba.conf line types
----------------------
host applies to either SSL or regular connections
hostssl applies only to SSL connections
hostnossl applies only to regular connections
These client and server options, the postgresql.conf ssl = false option,
and finally the possibility of compiling with no SSL support at all,
make quite a range of combinations to test. I threw together a test
script to try many of them out. It's in a separate tarball with its
config files, a patch to psql so it'll announce SSL connections even in
absence of a tty, and the test output. The test is especially informative
when run on the same tty the postmaster was started on, so the FATAL:
errors during negotiation are interleaved with the psql client output.
I saw Tom write that new submissions for 7.4 have to be in before midnight
local time, and since I'm on the east coast in the US, this just makes it
in before the bell. :)
Jon Jensen
print.c: Add one more line to pager calculation to account for the prompt.
help.c: Call PageOutput with correct number of lines within slashUsage
Add one to line count in helpSQL to account for "Available help:" line.
Make copyright match COPYRIGHT file. (Just "1994")
Greg Sabino Mullane
> thought that I would see if I could come up with a simple solution, and
> have my first delve into the code for PostgreSQL.
>
> Attached is a diff against 7.3.3 source, of changes to describe.c for
> psql. This should print out a list of parent tables in a similar style
> to that of the index listing. I have done some testing on my side and it
> all seems fine, can some other people have a quick look? What do people
> think? Useful?
Nick Barr
dropped columns. Fix by using LEFT JOIN rather than straight join
between pg_attribute and pg_type. Also, use pg_type.oid as input to
format_type, so that we don't get a failure on deleted types of deleted
columns (this may be a change we ought to backpatch to 7.3....).
Alias the appropriate columns back to their original name.
Fixed formatting of a few other places as I went along (indenting)
--
Rod Taylor <rbt@rbt.ca>
> > It seems that readline() on my system (FreeBSD 4.8) isn't declared to
> > take the prompt as a const. Thus, remove const from gets_interactive()
> > to remove the warning.
>
> I think it would be a lot cleaner to just put a cast to char * into the
> readline call (with a note about why).
Ok.. that works.
I must say it's a little strange being able to take a constant and say
its no longer constant anymore -- but I suppose it's no different than
defining then undefining pre-processor constants.
Rod Taylor <rbt@rbt.ca>
and Dmitry Tkach. Specifically the previous fix still allowed the statement termination character through in unquoted places in the sql statement, and the driver never correctly handled someone passing a value of \0 in a string which under the v2 protocol would end the statement causing the following text to possibly
be treated as a new sql statement
Modified Files:
jdbc/org/postgresql/Driver.java.in
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1Statement.java
was modified for IPv6. Use a robust definition of struct sockaddr_storage,
do a proper configure test to see if ss_len exists, don't assume that
getnameinfo() will handle AF_UNIX sockets, don't trust getaddrinfo to
return the protocol we ask for, etc. This incorporates several outstanding
patches from Kurt Roeckx, but I'm to blame for anything that doesn't
work ...
where Object is a user supplied String and the type is a numeric type
(i.e. INTEGER,LONG,etc).
Also applied a patch from Kim Ho that fixes compile problems under jdk1.2
Modified Files:
jdbc/org/postgresql/Driver.java.in
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1Statement.java
database, emit a WARNING and do nothing, rather than raising ERROR.
Per recent discussion in which we concluded this is the best way to deal
with database dumps that are reloaded into a database of a new name.
fixed incorrect initial setting of StartUpID. The logic in XLogWrite()
expects that Write->curridx is advanced to the next page as soon as
LogwrtResult points to the end of the current page, but StartupXLOG()
failed to make that happen when the old WAL ended exactly on a page
boundary. Per trouble report from Hannu Krosing.
for the sign of timezone offsets, ie, positive is east from UTC. These
were previously out of step with other operations that accept or show
timezones, such as I/O of timestamptz values.
query node, since that won't work unless the planner is upgraded.
Someday we should try to support at least some cases of this, but for
now just plug the hole in the dike. Per discussion with Dmitry Tkach.
shared_buffers and max_connections values to use before we run the
bootstrap process. Without this, initdb would fail on platforms where
the hardwired default values are too large. (We could get around that
by making the hardwired defaults tiny, perhaps, but why slow down
bootstrap by starving it for buffers...)
and 100 respectively, if the platform will allow it. initdb selects
values that are not too large to allow the postmaster to start, and
places these values in the installed postgresql.conf file. This allows
us to continue to start up out-of-the-box on platforms with small SHMMAX,
while having somewhat-realistic default settings on platforms with
reasonable SHMMAX. Per recent pghackers discussion.
spec complient with regards to various data/time/timestamp objects
Modified Files:
jdbc/org/postgresql/errors.properties
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1Statement.java
without needing a running backend. Reorder postgresql.conf.sample
to match new layout of runtime.sgml. This commit re-adds work lost
in Wednesday's crash.
instead of the former kluge whereby gram.y emitted already-transformed
expressions. This is needed so that Params appearing in these clauses
actually work correctly. I suppose some might claim that the side effect
of 'SELECT ... LIMIT 2+2' working is a new feature, but I say this is
a bug fix.
It also works to create a non-polymorphic aggregate from polymorphic
functions, should you want to do that. Regression test added, docs still
lacking. By Joe Conway, with some kibitzing from Tom Lane.
Applied patch by Philip Yarra to fix some thread issues.
Added a new data type "decimal" which is mostly the same as our
"numeric" but uses a fixed length array to store the digits. This is
for compatibility with Informix and maybe others.
ANYELEMENT. The effect is to postpone typechecking of the function
body until runtime. Documentation is still lacking.
Original patch by Joe Conway, modified to postpone type checking
by Tom Lane.
1) Patch from Kris Jurka to fix IPv6 parsing of the jdbc URL
2) Patch from Kris Jurka to fix an ArrayIndexOutOfBounds error
when calling moveToCurrentRow while currentRow is "beforeFirst"
3) Patch from Kim Ho to fix add some bounds checking in setMaxRows(),
setQueryTimeout(), setFetchSize()
Modified Files:
jdbc/org/postgresql/Driver.java.in
jdbc/org/postgresql/errors.properties
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1Statement.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/AbstractJdbc2ResultSet.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/AbstractJdbc2Statement.java
node emits only those vars that are actually needed above it in the
plan tree. (There were comments in the code suggesting that this was
done at some point in the dim past, but for a long time we have just
made join nodes emit everything that either input emitted.) Aside from
being marginally more efficient, this fixes the problem noted by Peter
Eisentraut where a join above an IN-implemented-as-join might fail,
because the subplan targetlist constructed in the latter case didn't
meet the expectation of including everything.
Along the way, fix some places that were O(N^2) in the targetlist
length. This is not all the trouble spots for wide queries by any
means, but it's a step forward.
fixed amount of digits and not an allocated one. So we have to work
around. PostgreSQL numeric type remains the same.
- In INFORMIX_SE mode with autcommit set, make all cursors be "with
hold". Is this really they way SE behaves?
'scalar op ALL (array)', where the operator is applied between the
lefthand scalar and each element of the array. The operator must
yield boolean; the result of the construct is the OR or AND of the
per-element results, respectively.
Original coding by Joe Conway, after an idea of Peter's. Rewritten
by Tom to keep the implementation strictly separate from subqueries.
client-side AUTOCOMMIT mode now: '\set AUTOCOMMIT off' supports
SQL-spec commit behavior. Get rid of LO_TRANSACTION hack --- the
LO operations just work now, using libpq's ability to track the
transaction status. Add a VERBOSE variable to control verboseness
of error message display, and add a %T prompt-string code to show
current transaction-block status. Superuser state display in the
prompt string correctly follows SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION commands.
Control-C works to get out of COPY IN state.
comparison functions), replacing the highly bogus bitwise array_eq. Create
a btree index opclass for ANYARRAY --- it is now possible to create indexes
on array columns.
Arrange to cache the results of catalog lookups across multiple array
operations, instead of repeating the lookups on every call.
Add string_to_array and array_to_string functions.
Remove singleton_array, array_accum, array_assign, and array_subscript
functions, since these were for proof-of-concept and not intended to become
supported functions.
Minor adjustments to behavior in some corner cases with empty or
zero-dimensional arrays.
Joe Conway (with some editorializing by Tom Lane).
HH:MM:SS.SSS... when there is a nonzero part-of-a-day field in an
interval value. The seconds part used to be suppressed if zero,
but there's no equivalent behavior for timestamp, and since we're
modeling this format on timestamp it's probably wrong. Per complaint
and patch from Larry Rosenman.
This is no longer necessary or appropriate since we don't use zero typeid
as a wildcard anymore, and it fixes a nasty performance problem with
functions with many parameters. Per recent example from Reuven Lerner.
The attached fixes select_common_type() to support the below case:
create table t1( c1 int);
create domain dom_c1 int;
create table t2(c1 dom_c1);
select * from t1 join t2 using( c1 );
I didn't see a need for maintaining the domain as the preferred type. A
simple getBaseType() call on all elements of the list seems to be
enough.
--
Rod Taylor <rbt@rbt.ca>
after the CHECK. Cluster depends on the index name, so I thought it
wise to ensure all names are available, rather than leaving off the
CONSTRAINT "$n" portion for internally named constraints.
CREATE TABLE jkey (col integer primary key);
CREATE TABLE j (col integer REFERENCES jkey);
ALTER TABLE j ADD CHECK(col > 5);
This is a problem in 7.3 series as well as -Tip.
Rod Taylor <rbt@rbt.ca>
- LIKE <subtable> [ INCLUDING DEFAULTS | EXCLUDING DEFAULTS ]
- Quick cleanup of analyze.c function prototypes.
- New non-reserved keywords (INCLUDING, EXCLUDING, DEFAULTS), SQL 200X
Opted not to extend for check constraints at this time.
As per the definition that it's user defined columns, OIDs are NOT
inherited.
Doc and Source patches attached.
--
Rod Taylor <rbt@rbt.ca>
> http://developer.postgresql.org/cvsweb.cgi/pgsql-server/src/include/libpq/pqcomm.h.diff?r1=1.85&r2=1.86
>
> modified SockAddr, but no corresponding change was made here
> (fe-auth.c:612):
>
> case AUTH_REQ_KRB5:
> #ifdef KRB5
> if (pg_krb5_sendauth(PQerrormsg, conn->sock, &conn->laddr.in,
> &conn->raddr.in,
> hostname) != STATUS_OK)
>
> It's not obvious to me what the change ought to be though.
This patch should hopefully fix both kerberos 4 and 5.
Kurt Roeckx
> rexec and making it an untrusted language. Last time I looked, it didn't
> look particularly difficult. I've set aside some time next week, so stay
> tuned.
Attached is a patch that removes all of the RExec code from plpython from
the current PostgreSQL CVS. In addition, plpython needs to be changed to an
untrusted language in createlang. Please let me know if there are any
problems.
Kevin Jacobs
postgresql-7.3.3/src/interfaces/python/pg.py.
_quote() function fails due to integer overflow if input d is larger
than max integer.
In the case where the column type is "BIGINT", the input d may very well
be larger than max integer while its type, t, is labeled 'int'.
The conversion on line 19, return "%d" % int(d), will fail due to
"OverflowError: long int too large to convert to int".
Please describe a way to repeat the problem. Please try to provide a
concise reproducible example, if at all possible:
----------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] create a table with a column type 'BIGINT'.
[2] use pg.DB.insert() to insert a value that is larger than max integer
If you know how this problem might be fixed, list the solution below:
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Just changing the conversion at line 19 of pg.py to long(d) instead of
int(d) should fix it. The following is a patch:
Chih-Hao Huang
>> actually having updated the tuple, [...] can we simply
>> set the HEAP_XMAX_INVALID hint bit of the tuple?
>
>AFAICS this is a reasonable thing to do.
Thanks for the confirmation. Here's a patch which also contains some
more noncritical changes to tqual.c:
. make code more readable by introducing local variables for xvac
. no longer two separate branches for aborted and crashed.
The actions were the same in all cases.
Manfred Koizar
restructures the deferred trigger queue. The fundamental change is to
put all the static variables to hold the deferred triggers in a single
structure.
Alvaro Herrera
Regression tests for IPv6 operations added.
Documentation updated to document IPv6 bits.
Stop treating IPv4 as an "unsigned int" and IPv6 as an array of
characters. Instead, always use the array of characters so we
can have one function fits all. This makes bitncmp(), addressOK(),
and several other functions "just work" on both address families.
add family() function which returns integer 4 or 6 for IPv4 or
IPv6. (See examples below) Note that to add this new function
you will need to dump/initdb/reload or find the correct magic
to add the function to the postgresql function catalogs.
IPv4 addresses always sort before IPv6.
On disk we use AF_INET for IPv4, and AF_INET+1 for IPv6 addresses.
This prevents the need for a dump and reload, but lets IPv6 parsing
work on machines without AF_INET6.
To select all IPv4 addresses from a table:
select * from foo where family(addr) = 4 ...
Order by and other bits should all work.
Michael Graff
specific hash functions used by hash indexes, rather than the old
not-datatype-aware ComputeHashFunc routine. This makes it safe to do
hash joining on several datatypes that previously couldn't use hashing.
The sets of datatypes that are hash indexable and hash joinable are now
exactly the same, whereas before each had some that weren't in the other.