Commit Graph

29211 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Peter Eisentraut 3d54c16c24 Fix hot standby tests for sequence catalog change
From: Kuntal Ghosh <kuntalghosh.2007@gmail.com>
2017-01-03 09:27:43 -05:00
Tom Lane de41869b64 Allow SSL configuration to be updated at SIGHUP.
It is no longer necessary to restart the server to enable, disable,
or reconfigure SSL.  Instead, we just create a new SSL_CTX struct
(by re-reading all relevant files) whenever we get SIGHUP.  Testing
shows that this is fast enough that it shouldn't be a problem.

In conjunction with that, downgrade the logic that complains about
pg_hba.conf "hostssl" lines when SSL isn't active: now that's just
a warning condition not an error.

An issue that still needs to be addressed is what shall we do with
passphrase-protected server keys?  As this stands, the server would
demand the passphrase again on every SIGHUP, which is certainly
impractical.  But the case was only barely supported before, so that
does not seem a sufficient reason to hold up committing this patch.

Andreas Karlsson, reviewed by Michael Banck and Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/556A6E8A.9030400@proxel.se
2017-01-02 21:37:12 -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
Tom Lane 67a875355e In pgbench logging, avoid assuming that instr_times match Unix timestamps.
For aggregated logging, pg_bench supposed that printing the integer part of
INSTR_TIME_GET_DOUBLE() would produce a Unix timestamp.  That was already
broken on Windows, and it's about to get broken on most other platforms as
well.  As in commit 74baa1e3b, we can remove the entanglement at the price
of one extra syscall per transaction; though here it seems more convenient
to use time(NULL) instead of gettimeofday(), since we only need
integral-second precision.

I took the time to do some wordsmithing on the documentation about
pgbench's logging features, too.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8837.1483216839@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-01-02 12:26:03 -05:00
Tom Lane 74baa1e3b8 Avoid assuming that instr_time == struct timeval in pgbench logging.
This code was presuming undue familiarity with the contents of the
instr_time struct.  That was already broken on Windows, and it's about
to get broken on most other platforms as well.  The simplest solution
that preserves the current output definition is to just do our own
gettimeofday() call here.  Realistically, the extra cost is probably
negligible in comparison to everything else that's going on in a
pgbench transaction, so it's not worth sweating over.

On Windows, the precision delivered by gettimeofday() is lower than
one could wish, but this is still a big improvement over printing
zeroes, as the code did before.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8837.1483216839@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-01-01 15:17:08 -05:00
Tom Lane 257d815720 Fix unstable regression test results.
Commit 2ac3ef7a0 added a query with an underdetermined output row order;
it has failed multiple times in the buildfarm since then.  Add an ORDER BY
to fix.  Also, don't rely on a DROP CASCADE to drop in a well-determined
order; that hasn't failed yet but I don't trust it much, and we're not
saving any typing by using CASCADE anyway.
2016-12-31 18:39:08 -05:00
Tom Lane 80a7298b9e Remove manual breaks in NodeTag assignments to fix duplicate tag numbers.
Commit f0e44751d added new node tags at a place in the tag numbering
where there was no daylight left before the next hard-coded number,
resulting in some duplicate tag assignments.  This doesn't seem to have
caused any big problem so far, but it's surely trouble waiting to happen.

We could adjust the manually assigned breakpoints to make more room,
but that just leaves the same hazard waiting to strike again in future.
What seems like a better idea is to get rid of the manual assignments
and leave NodeTags to be automatically assigned, consecutively from one
on up.  This means that any change in the tag list forces a backend-wide
recompile, but realistically that's usually needed anyway.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/29670.1482942811@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-12-29 16:57:41 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut db779d941e Fix typo in comment 2016-12-29 11:27:41 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 27866bd1e8 Expand ad-hoc unit abbreviations in function descriptions
There is no need to use abbreviations here, so just write it out for
consistency.
2016-12-29 11:15:01 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 2e254130d1 Make more use of RoleSpec struct
Most code was casting this through a generic Node.  By declaring
everything as RoleSpec appropriately, we can remove a bunch of casts and
ad-hoc node type checking.

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
2016-12-29 10:49:39 -05:00
Tom Lane f0774abde8 Fix interval_transform so it doesn't throw away non-no-op casts.
interval_transform() contained two separate bugs that caused it to
sometimes mistakenly decide that a cast from interval to restricted
interval is a no-op and throw it away.

First, it was wrong to rely on dt.h's field type macros to have an
ordering consistent with the field's significance; in one case they do
not.  This led to mistakenly treating YEAR as less significant than MONTH,
so that a cast from INTERVAL MONTH to INTERVAL YEAR was incorrectly
discarded.

Second, fls(1<<k) produces k+1 not k, so comparing its output directly
to SECOND was wrong.  This led to supposing that a cast to INTERVAL
MINUTE was really a cast to INTERVAL SECOND and so could be discarded.

To fix, get rid of the use of fls(), and make a function based on
intervaltypmodout to produce a field ID code adapted to the need here.

Per bug #14479 from Piotr Stefaniak.  Back-patch to 9.2 where transform
functions were introduced, because this code was born broken.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20161227172307.10135.7747@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2016-12-27 15:43:54 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 3ea56fffd6 Don't rename .partial files in pg_receivexlog if an error occured
In 56c7d8d the behavior to keep .partial segments around
(considered corrupt) in case an connection failure occurs was
accidentally removed. This would lead to an incomplete segment
being considered complete.

Author: Michael Paquier
2016-12-27 10:37:11 +01:00
Magnus Hagander 6cfa54e384 Fix typo comments
Erik Rijkers
2016-12-27 10:24:21 +01:00
Tom Lane 54386f3578 Remove triggerable Assert in hashname().
hashname() asserted that the key string it is given is shorter than
NAMEDATALEN.  That should surely always be true if the input is in fact a
regular value of type "name".  However, for reasons of coding convenience,
we allow plain old C strings to be treated as "name" values in many places.
Some SQL functions accept arbitrary "text" inputs, convert them to C
strings, and pass them otherwise-untransformed to syscache lookups for name
columns, allowing an overlength input value to trigger hashname's Assert.

This would be a DOS problem, except that it only happens in assert-enabled
builds which aren't recommended for production.  In a production build,
you'll just get a name lookup error, since regardless of the hash value
computed by hashname, the later equality comparison checks can't match.
Likewise, if the catalog lookup is done by seqscan or indexscan searches,
there will just be a lookup error, since the name comparison functions
don't contain any similar length checks, and will see an overlength input
as unequal to any stored entry.

After discussion we concluded that we should simply remove this Assert.
It's inessential to hashname's own functionality, and having such an
assertion in only some paths for name lookup is more of a foot-gun than
a useful check.  There may or may not be a case for the affected callers
to do something other than let the name lookup fail, but we'll consider
that separately; in any case we probably don't want to change such
behavior in the back branches.

Per report from Tushar Ahuja.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Report: https://postgr.es/m/7d0809ee-6f25-c9d6-8e74-5b2967830d49@enterprisedb.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17691.1482523168@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-12-26 14:58:02 -05:00
Tom Lane a3aef88e6a Fix incorrect error reporting for duplicate data in \crosstabview.
\crosstabview's complaint about multiple entries for the same crosstab
cell quoted the wrong row and/or column values.  It would accidentally
appear to work if the data had been in strcmp() order to start with,
which probably explains how we missed noticing this during development.

This could be fixed in more than one way, but the way I chose was to
hang onto both result pointers from bsearch() and use those to get at
the value names.

In passing, avoid casting away const in the bsearch comparison functions.
No bug there, just poor style.

Per bug #14476 from Tomonari Katsumata.  Back-patch to 9.6 where
\crosstabview was introduced.

Report: https://postgr.es/m/20161225021519.10139.45460@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2016-12-25 16:04:45 -05:00
Stephen Frost 86d216c775 pg_dumpall: Include --verbose option in --help output
The -v/--verbose option was not included in the output from --help for
pg_dumpall even though it's in the pg_dumpall documentation and has
apparently been around since pg_dumpall was reimplemented in C in 2002.

Fix that by adding it.

Pointed out by Daniel Westermann.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/2020970042.4589542.1482482101585.JavaMail.zimbra%40dbi-services.com
2016-12-24 01:41:59 -05:00
Stephen Frost f3fd531a51 Fix tab completion in psql for ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
When providing tab completion for ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES, we are
including the list of roles as possible options for completion after the
GRANT or REVOKE.  Further, we accept FOR ROLE/IN SCHEMA at the same time
and in either order, but the tab completion was only working for one or
the other.  Lastly, we weren't using the actual list of allowed kinds of
objects for default privileges for completion after the 'GRANT X ON' but
instead were completeing to what 'GRANT X ON' supports, which isn't the
ssame at all.

Address these issues by improving the forward tab-completion for ALTER
DEFAULT PRIVILEGES and then constrain and correct how the tail
completion is done when it is for ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES.

Back-patch the forward/tail tab-completion to 9.6, where we made it easy
to handle such cases.

For 9.5 and earlier, correct the initial tab-completion to at least be
correct as far as it goes and then add a check for GRANT/REVOKE to only
tab-complete when the GRANT/REVOKE is the start of the command, so we
don't try to do tab-completion after we get to the GRANT/REVOKE part of
the ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES command, which is better than providing
incorrect completions.

Initial patch for master and 9.6 by Gilles Darold, though I cleaned it
up and added a few comments.  All bugs in the 9.5 and earlier patch are
mine.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/1614593c-e356-5b27-6dba-66320a9bc68b@dalibo.com
2016-12-23 21:01:29 -05:00
Tom Lane fe591f8bf6 Replace enum InhOption with simple boolean.
Now that it has only INH_NO and INH_YES values, it's just weird that
it's not a plain bool, so make it that way.

Also rename RangeVar.inhOpt to "inh", to be like RangeTblEntry.inh.
My recollection is that we gave it a different name specifically because
it had a different representation than the derived bool value, but it
no longer does.  And this is a good forcing function to be sure we
catch any places that are affected by the change.

Bump catversion because of possible effect on stored RangeVar nodes.
I'm not exactly convinced that we ever store RangeVar on disk, but
we have a readfuncs function for it, so be cautious.  (If we do do so,
then commit e13486eba was in error not to bump catversion.)

Follow-on to commit e13486eba.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYe+EG7LdYX6pkcNxr4ygkP4+A=jm9o-CPXyOvRiCNwaQ@mail.gmail.com
2016-12-23 13:35:18 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 158df30359 Remove unnecessary casts of makeNode() result
makeNode() is already a macro that has the right result pointer type, so
casting it again to the same type is unnecessary.
2016-12-23 13:17:20 -05:00
Tom Lane ff33d1456e Spellcheck: s/descendent/descendant/g
I got a little annoyed by reading documentation paragraphs containing
both spellings within a few lines of each other.  My dictionary says
"descendant" is the preferred spelling, and it's certainly the majority
usage in our tree, so standardize on that.

For one usage in parallel.sgml, I thought it better to rewrite to avoid
the term altogether.
2016-12-23 11:53:35 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 3e6639a465 pg_dump: Remove obsolete handling of sequence names
There was code that attempted to check whether the sequence name stored
inside the sequence was the same as the name in pg_class.  But that code
was already ifdef'ed out, and now that the sequence no longer stores its
own name, it's altogether obsolete, so remove it.
2016-12-23 10:55:06 -05:00
Robert Haas e13486eba0 Remove sql_inheritance GUC.
This backward-compatibility GUC is long overdue for removal.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYe+EG7LdYX6pkcNxr4ygkP4+A=jm9o-CPXyOvRiCNwaQ@mail.gmail.com
2016-12-23 07:35:01 -05:00
Robert Haas 7819ba1ef6 Remove _hash_chgbufaccess().
This is basically for the same reasons I got rid of _hash_wrtbuf()
in commit 25216c98938495fd741bf585dcbef45b3a9ffd40: it's not
convenient to have a function which encapsulates MarkBufferDirty(),
especially as we move towards having hash indexes be WAL-logged.

Patch by me, reviewed (but not entirely endorsed) by Amit Kapila.
2016-12-23 07:14:37 -05:00
Robert Haas 2ac3ef7a01 Fix tuple routing in cases where tuple descriptors don't match.
The previous coding failed to work correctly when we have a
multi-level partitioned hierarchy where tables at successive levels
have different attribute numbers for the partition key attributes.  To
fix, have each PartitionDispatch object store a standalone
TupleTableSlot initialized with the TupleDesc of the corresponding
partitioned table, along with a TupleConversionMap to map tuples from
the its parent's rowtype to own rowtype.  After tuple routing chooses
a leaf partition, we must use the leaf partition's tuple descriptor,
not the root table's.  To that end, a dedicated TupleTableSlot for
tuple routing is now allocated in EState.

Amit Langote
2016-12-22 17:36:37 -05:00
Stephen Frost 12bd7dd317 Use TSConfigRelationId in AlterTSConfiguration()
When we are altering a text search configuration, we are getting the
tuple from pg_ts_config and using its OID, so use TSConfigRelationId
when invoking any post-alter hooks and setting the object address.

Further, in the functions called from AlterTSConfiguration(), we're
saving information about the command via
EventTriggerCollectAlterTSConfig(), so we should be setting
commandCollected to true.  Also add a regression test to
test_ddl_deparse for ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION.

Author: Artur Zakirov, a few additional comments by me
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/57a71eba-f2c7-e7fd-6fc0-2126ec0b39bd%40postgrespro.ru

Back-patch the fix for the InvokeObjectPostAlterHook() call to 9.3 where
it was introduced, and the fix for the ObjectAddressSet() call and
setting commandCollected to true to 9.5 where those changes to
ProcessUtilitySlow() were introduced.
2016-12-22 17:08:43 -05:00
Tom Lane 1ead0208b2 Fix CREATE TABLE ... LIKE ... WITH OIDS.
Having a WITH OIDS specification should result in the creation of an OID
column, but commit b943f502b broke that in the case that there were LIKE
tables without OIDS.  Commentary in that patch makes it look like this was
intentional, but if so it was based on a faulty reading of what inheritance
does: the parent tables can add an OID column, but they can't subtract one.
AFAICS, the behavior ought to be that you get an OID column if any of the
inherited tables, LIKE tables, or WITH clause ask for one.

Also, revert that patch's unnecessary split of transformCreateStmt's loop
over the tableElts list into two passes.  That seems to have been based on
a misunderstanding as well: we already have two-pass processing here,
we don't need three passes.

Per bug #14474 from Jeff Dafoe.  Back-patch to 9.6 where the misbehavior
was introduced.

Report: https://postgr.es/m/20161222145304.25620.47445@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2016-12-22 16:23:38 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 22434dd06b Update sequence_1.out for recent changes 2016-12-22 16:02:34 -05:00
Tom Lane cd1b215692 Fix handling of expanded objects in CoerceToDomain and CASE execution.
When the input value to a CoerceToDomain expression node is a read-write
expanded datum, we should pass a read-only pointer to any domain CHECK
expressions and then return the original read-write pointer as the
expression result.  Previously we were blindly passing the same pointer to
all the consumers of the value, making it possible for a function in CHECK
to modify or even delete the expanded value.  (Since a plpgsql function
will absorb a passed-in read-write expanded array as a local variable
value, it will in fact delete the value on exit.)

A similar hazard of passing the same read-write pointer to multiple
consumers exists in domain_check() and in ExecEvalCase, so fix those too.

The fix requires adding MakeExpandedObjectReadOnly calls at the appropriate
places, which is simple enough except that we need to get the data type's
typlen from somewhere.  For the domain cases, solve this by redefining
DomainConstraintRef.tcache as okay for callers to access; there wasn't any
reason for the original convention against that, other than not wanting the
API of typcache.c to be any wider than it had to be.  For CASE, there's
no good solution except to add a syscache lookup during executor start.

Per bug #14472 from Marcos Castedo.  Back-patch to 9.5 where expanded
values were introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15225.1482431619@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-12-22 15:01:37 -05:00
Andres Freund 6ef2eba3f5 Skip checkpoints, archiving on idle systems.
Some background activity (like checkpoints, archive timeout, standby
snapshots) is not supposed to happen on an idle system. Unfortunately
so far it was not easy to determine when a system is idle, which
defeated some of the attempts to avoid redundant activity on an idle
system.

To make that easier, allow to make individual WAL insertions as not
being "important". By checking whether any important activity happened
since the last time an activity was performed, it now is easy to check
whether some action needs to be repeated.

Use the new facility for checkpoints, archive timeout and standby
snapshots.

The lack of a facility causes some issues in older releases, but in my
opinion the consequences (superflous checkpoints / archived segments)
aren't grave enough to warrant backpatching.

Author: Michael Paquier, editorialized by Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund, David Steele, Amit Kapila, Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
Bug: #13685
Discussion:
    https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20151016203031.3019.72930@wrigleys.postgresql.org
    https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAB7nPqQcPqxEM3S735Bd2RzApNqSNJVietAC=6kfkYv_45dKwA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: -
2016-12-22 11:31:50 -08:00
Robert Haas 097e41439d Fix broken error check in _hash_doinsert.
You can't just cast a HashMetaPage to a Page, because the meta page
data is stored after the page header, not at offset 0.  Fortunately,
this didn't break anything because it happens to find hashm_bsize
at the offset at which it expects to find pd_pagesize_version, and
the values are close enough to the same that this works out.

Still, it's a bug, so back-patch to all supported versions.

Mithun Cy, revised a bit by me.
2016-12-22 13:59:01 -05:00
Robert Haas 3ee8067284 Code review for ATExecAttachPartition.
Amit Langote.  Most of this reported by Álvaro Herrera.
2016-12-22 12:40:45 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 01ec25631f Simplify tape block format.
No more indirect blocks. The blocks form a linked list instead.

This saves some memory, because we don't need to have a buffer in memory to
hold the indirect block (or blocks). To reflect that, TAPE_BUFFER_OVERHEAD
is reduced from 3 to 1 buffer, which allows using more memory for building
the initial runs.

Reviewed by Peter Geoghegan and Robert Haas.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/34678beb-938e-646e-db9f-a7def5c44ada%40iki.fi
2016-12-22 18:45:00 +02:00
Michael Meskes 4032ef18d0 Fix buffer overflow on particularly named files and clarify documentation about
output file naming.

Patch by Tsunakawa, Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com>
2016-12-22 08:28:13 +01:00
Tom Lane a8ae12322a Fix detection of unfinished Unicode surrogate pair at end of string.
The U&'...' and U&"..." syntaxes silently discarded a surrogate pair
start (that is, a code between U+D800 and U+DBFF) if it occurred at
the very end of the string.  This seems like an obvious oversight,
since we throw an error for every other invalid combination of surrogate
characters, including the very same situation in E'...' syntax.

This has been wrong since the pair processing was added (in 9.0),
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19113.1482337898@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-12-21 17:39:32 -05:00
Tom Lane 89fcea1ace Fix strange behavior (and possible crashes) in full text phrase search.
In an attempt to simplify the tsquery matching engine, the original
phrase search patch invented rewrite rules that would rearrange a
tsquery so that no AND/OR/NOT operator appeared below a PHRASE operator.
But this approach had numerous problems.  The rearrangement step was
missed by ts_rewrite (and perhaps other places), allowing tsqueries
to be created that would cause Assert failures or perhaps crashes at
execution, as reported by Andreas Seltenreich.  The rewrite rules
effectively defined semantics for operators underneath PHRASE that were
buggy, or at least unintuitive.  And because rewriting was done in
tsqueryin() rather than at execution, the rearrangement was user-visible,
which is not very desirable --- for example, it might cause unexpected
matches or failures to match in ts_rewrite.

As a somewhat independent problem, the behavior of nested PHRASE operators
was only sane for left-deep trees; queries like "x <-> (y <-> z)" did not
behave intuitively at all.

To fix, get rid of the rewrite logic altogether, and instead teach the
tsquery execution engine to manage AND/OR/NOT below a PHRASE operator
by explicitly computing the match location(s) and match widths for these
operators.

This requires introducing some additional fields into the publicly visible
ExecPhraseData struct; but since there's no way for third-party code to
pass such a struct to TS_phrase_execute, it shouldn't create an ABI problem
as long as we don't move the offsets of the existing fields.

Another related problem was that index searches supposed that "!x <-> y"
could be lossily approximated as "!x & y", which isn't correct because
the latter will reject, say, "x q y" which the query itself accepts.
This required some tweaking in TS_execute_ternary along with the main
tsquery engine.

Back-patch to 9.6 where phrase operators were introduced.  While this
could be argued to change behavior more than we'd like in a stable branch,
we have to do something about the crash hazards and index-vs-seqscan
inconsistency, and it doesn't seem desirable to let the unintuitive
behaviors induced by the rewriting implementation stand as precedent.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/28215.1481999808@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26706.1482087250@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-12-21 15:18:39 -05:00
Stephen Frost 2259bf672c Fix dumping of casts and transforms using built-in functions
In pg_dump.c dumpCast() and dumpTransform(), we would happily ignore the
cast or transform if it happened to use a built-in function because we
weren't including the information about built-in functions when querying
pg_proc from getFuncs().

Modify the query in getFuncs() to also gather information about
functions which are used by user-defined casts and transforms (where
"user-defined" means "has an OID >= FirstNormalObjectId").  This also
adds to the TAP regression tests for 9.6 and master to cover these
types of objects.

Back-patch all the way for casts, back to 9.5 for transforms.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20160504183952.GE10850%40tamriel.snowman.net
2016-12-21 13:47:06 -05:00
Stephen Frost 19990918d3 For 8.0 servers, get last built-in oid from pg_database
We didn't start ensuring that all built-in objects had OIDs less than
16384 until 8.1, so for 8.0 servers we still need to query the value out
of pg_database.  We need this, in particular, to distinguish which casts
were built-in and which were user-defined.

For HEAD, we only worry about going back to 8.0, for the back-branches,
we also ensure that 7.0-7.4 work.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20160504183952.GE10850%40tamriel.snowman.net
2016-12-21 13:47:06 -05:00
Dean Rasheed 58b1362642 Fix order of operations in CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW.
When CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW acts on an existing view, don't update the
view options until after the view query has been updated.

This is necessary in the case where CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW is used on
an existing view that is not updatable, and the new view is updatable
and specifies the WITH CHECK OPTION. In this case, attempting to apply
the new options to the view before updating its query fails, because
the options are applied using the ALTER TABLE infrastructure which
checks that WITH CHECK OPTION is only applied to an updatable view.

If new columns are being added to the view, that is also done using
the ALTER TABLE infrastructure, but it is important that that still be
done before updating the view query, because the rules system checks
that the query columns match those on the view relation. Added a
comment to explain that, in case someone is tempted to move that to
where the view options are now being set.

Back-patch to 9.4 where WITH CHECK OPTION was added.

Report: https://postgr.es/m/CAEZATCUp%3Dz%3Ds4SzZjr14bfct_bdJNwMPi-gFi3Xc5k1ntbsAgQ%40mail.gmail.com
2016-12-21 16:58:18 +00:00
Robert Haas cd510f0413 Convert elog() to ereport() and do some wordsmithing.
It's not entirely clear that we should log a message here at all, but
it's certainly wrong to use elog() for a message that should clearly
be translatable.

Amit Langote
2016-12-21 11:47:50 -05:00
Robert Haas 1fc5c49450 Refactor partition tuple routing code to reduce duplication.
Amit Langote
2016-12-21 11:36:10 -05:00
Robert Haas 3b790d256f Fix corner-case bug in WaitEventSetWaitBlock on Windows.
If we do not reset the FD_READ event, WaitForMultipleObjects won't
return it again again unless we've meanwhile read from the socket,
which is generally true but not guaranteed.  WaitEventSetWaitBlock
itself may fail to return the event to the caller if the latch is
also set, and even if we changed that, the caller isn't obliged to
handle all returned events at once.  On non-Windows systems, the
socket-read event is purely level-triggered, so this issue does
not exist.  To fix, make Windows reset the event when needed.

This bug was introduced by 98a64d0bd7,
and causes hangs when trying to use the pldebugger extension.

Patch by Amit Kapial.  Reported and tested by Ashutosh Sharma, who
also provided some analysis.  Further analysis by Michael Paquier.
2016-12-21 11:01:48 -05:00
Robert Haas 59649c3f1c Refactor merge path generation code.
This shouldn't change the set of paths that get generated in any
way, but it is preparatory work for further changes to allow a
partial path to be merge-joined witih a non-partial path to produce
a partial join path.

Dilip Kumar, with cosmetic adjustments by me.
2016-12-21 09:45:50 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut f3b421da5f Reorder pg_sequence columns to avoid alignment issue
On AIX, doubles are aligned at 4 bytes, but int64 is aligned at 8 bytes.
Our code assumes that doubles have alignment that can also be applied to
int64, but that fails in this case.  One effect is that
heap_form_tuple() writes tuples in a different layout than
Form_pg_sequence expects.

Rather than rewrite the whole alignment code, work around the issue by
reordering the columns in pg_sequence so that the first int64 column
naturally comes out at an 8-byte boundary.
2016-12-21 09:06:49 -05:00
Fujii Masao ecbdc4c555 Forbid invalid combination of options in pg_basebackup.
Commit 56c7d8d455 allowed pg_basebackup
to stream WAL in tar mode. But there is the restriction that WAL
streaming in tar mode works only when the value - (dash) is not
specified as output directory. This means that the combination of
three options "-D -", "-F t" and "-X stream" is invalid. However,
previously, even when those options were specified at the same time,
pg_basebackup background process unexpectedly started streaming WAL.
And then it exited with an error.

This commit changes pg_basebackup so that it errors out on such
invalid combination of options at the beginning.

Reviewed by Magnus Hagander, and patch by me.
2016-12-21 20:27:37 +09:00
Tom Lane c080b223a7 Fix minor oversights in nodeAgg.c.
aggstate->evalproj is always set up by ExecInitAgg, so there's no
need to test.  Doing so led Coverity to think that we might be
intending "slot" to be possibly NULL here, and it quite properly
complained that the rest of combine_aggregates() wasn't prepared
for that.

Also fix a couple of obvious thinkos in Asserts checking that
"inputoff" isn't past the end of the slot.

Errors introduced in commit 8ed3f11bb, so no need for back-patch.
2016-12-20 19:22:02 -05:00
Tom Lane 7d41a2bd3e Fix minor error message style violation.
Primary error messages should not end with a period, since they're
generally not written as full sentences.  Oversight in 41493bac3.
2016-12-20 18:54:13 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 1753b1b027 Add pg_sequence system catalog
Move sequence metadata (start, increment, etc.) into a proper system
catalog instead of storing it in the sequence heap object.  This
separates the metadata from the sequence data.  Sequence metadata is now
operated on transactionally by DDL commands, whereas previously
rollbacks of sequence-related DDL commands would be ignored.

Reviewed-by: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
2016-12-20 08:28:18 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas db80acfc9d Fix sharing Agg transition state of DISTINCT or ordered aggs.
If a query contained two aggregates that could share the transition value,
we would correctly collect the input into a tuplesort only once, but
incorrectly run the transition function over the accumulated input twice,
in finalize_aggregates(). That caused a crash, when we tried to call
tuplesort_performsort() on an already-freed NULL tuplestore.

Backport to 9.6, where sharing of transition state and this bug were
introduced.

Analysis by Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/ac5b0b69-744c-9114-6218-8300ac920e61@iki.fi
2016-12-20 09:20:17 +02:00
Robert Haas 7cd0fd655d Invalid parent's relcache after CREATE TABLE .. PARTITION OF.
Otherwise, subsequent commands in the same transaction see the wrong
partition descriptor.

Amit Langote.  Reported by Tomas Vondra and David Fetter.  Reviewed
by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/22dd313b-d7fd-22b5-0787-654845c8f849%402ndquadrant.com
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/20161215090916.GB20659%40fetter.org
2016-12-19 22:53:30 -05:00
Robert Haas e13029a5ce Provide a DSA area for all parallel queries.
This will allow future parallel query code to dynamically allocate
storage shared by all participants.

Thomas Munro, with assorted changes by me.
2016-12-19 17:11:46 -05:00