Commit Graph

12752 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bruce Momjian 3d564953cd Improve rule action ordering in gram.y, more cleanups. 2002-06-18 00:28:11 +00:00
Bruce Momjian e25f9e4f5d Mark noise keyword actions with {} rather than returning TRUE, like
opt_with and from_in.
2002-06-17 20:38:04 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 42423c7195 Manually indent gram.y to be consistent. 2002-06-17 20:27:43 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 134a1c8178 Use KAME accessor macros for addr8. 2002-06-17 15:55:09 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 9e1c5fba03 Fix missing 'buf' variable in SSL sources and add missing includes. 2002-06-17 15:23:36 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 7005e4c076 Fix SSL DEBUG levels to match CVS elog flags. 2002-06-17 15:19:28 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 0bb61f4af8 Back out accidental COPY data changes. 2002-06-17 15:01:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 507ed0332a Repair AlterTableOwner --- was failing for relations with indexes. 2002-06-17 14:31:32 +00:00
Michael Meskes 2fabb99388 Fixed parser bug concerning octal numbers in single quotes. 2002-06-17 13:23:27 +00:00
Bruce Momjian e4cd7c315f Rename DEBUG to DEBUG1 in SSL code. 2002-06-17 07:33:25 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 10f05d8127 Merge ALTER GROUP ADD/DROP rules by creating add_drop action. 2002-06-17 07:00:27 +00:00
Bruce Momjian f91ee129a7 Simplify optional WITH handling in CREATE USER, ALTER USER, CREATE
GROUP.  Make WITH optional in CREATE DATABASE for consistency.
2002-06-17 05:40:32 +00:00
Dave Cramer 0daee96ed1 implemented refresh row 2002-06-16 18:26:53 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 0dbfea39f3 Remove KSQO from GUC and move file to _deadcode. 2002-06-16 00:09:12 +00:00
Tom Lane b50cbbd66b Fix up memory leakage created by recent changes. 2002-06-15 22:25:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 62d4526114 Ooops, fix busted markup. 2002-06-15 22:15:03 +00:00
Tom Lane 32fecad80a Clean up gcc warnings. Avoid the bad habit of putting externs in .c
files rather than a header file where they belong.  Pay some modicum
of attention to picking global routine names that aren't likely to
conflict with surrounding applications.
2002-06-15 22:06:09 +00:00
Tom Lane c63bc32c2c Fix up gcc warnings, improve comments. 2002-06-15 21:52:31 +00:00
Tom Lane 2da3742cf5 Add a little more material to the new section about evaluation order. 2002-06-15 21:28:55 +00:00
Bruce Momjian eb1ad5b4b5 Patch for current_schemas to optionally include implicit ...
Second cut attached. This one just adds a boolean option to the existing
function to indicate that implicit schemas are to be included (or not).
I remembered the docs as well this time :-)

Dave Page
2002-06-15 20:03:51 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 79ff2e96de PATCH SSL_pending() checks in libpq/fe-misc.c:
I am no longer pursuing a total non-blocking implementation.  I haven't
found a good way to test it with the type of work that I do with
PostgreSQL.  I do use blocking SSL sockets with this mod and have had no
problem whatsoever.  The bug that I fixed in this patch is exceptionally
hard to reproduce reliably.

Jack Bates
2002-06-15 20:01:31 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 6e8a1a6717 WriteBuffer return value:
>I'd vote for changing WriteBuffer to
>return void, and have it elog() on bad argument.

Manfred Koizar
2002-06-15 19:59:59 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 82b14b62ca Update LOG_PID to mention it doesn't control syslog.
Oliver Elphick
2002-06-15 19:58:53 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 918e864f14 Remove some pre-WAL relics:
SharedBufferChanged
  BufferRelidLastDirtied
  BufferTagLastDirtied
  BufferDirtiedByMe

Manfred Koizar
2002-06-15 19:55:38 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 3c35face41 This patch wraps all accesses to t_xmin, t_cmin, t_xmax, and t_cmax in
HeapTupleHeaderData in setter and getter macros called
HeapTupleHeaderGetXmin, HeapTupleHeaderSetXmin etc.

It also introduces a "virtual" field xvac by defining
HeapTupleHeaderGetXvac and HeapTupleHeaderSetXvac.  Xvac is used by
VACUUM, in fact it is stored in t_cmin.

Manfred Koizar
2002-06-15 19:54:24 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 7882179994 The normal operation of our servers is to have tcpip_sockets enabled,
but occasionally I may need to shut down the server and restart it
w/o tcpip sockets. Postmaster has the -i option to turn on tcpip
connections, but it wasn't immediately clear how to easily or
temporarily turn it off (when it's been enabled in postgresql.conf).

In fact, it wasn't clear to me until digging in to postmaster.c that
I could pass '-c tcpip_socket=false' or '--tcpip_socket=false'.
(And then of course when I looked more closely at the man page I
realized I'd missed the proper part of the documentation.) What I'd
been looking for is a flag that would have the opposite effect of
'-i', and it's conceivable that others will be looking for specific
flags to do the opposite of '-F' and '-S'.

I was preparing to add options to postmaster until I realized that
maybe the solution is just to add some documentation.

If you'd rather have 1 character options to accomplish this, I'd be
happy to do that-- adding those 9 lines of code is definitely within
my ability. :)  (Although, the "right" letter to be the opposite of -S
isn't clear to me, since -s is already taken.)

Ron Snyder.
2002-06-15 19:52:56 +00:00
Bruce Momjian dbbd13bdb5 Fix for TAB completion using GRANT DELETE in psql.
Oliver Elphick
2002-06-15 19:43:47 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 6b9e742458 The macaddr datatype understands most formats of MAC address, except 12
hex digits with no separators, eg 00AABBCCDDEE. This is easily remedied
with the following patch (against 7.2.1):

Mike Wyer
2002-06-15 19:39:33 +00:00
Bruce Momjian cd7be4d947 Noted with versions 7.0.3, 7.1.3, and 7.2.1:
The psql interpreter becomes unstable if variable substitutions
are used.  The debugger GDB was unable to help however mpatrol
reports that the sprintf at mainloop.c:389 is steping one byte
farther than the allocation.

William K. Volkman
2002-06-15 19:37:48 +00:00
Bruce Momjian eeb1dd5068 On Wed, 2002-05-29 at 01:41, Tom Lane wrote:
>
> > Is it a good idea to provide an example (such as the above), or should I
> > just try and describe the behaviour?
>
> Examples are generally good things ...

OK, the attached documentation patch provides some simple examples of
use of tablename as a parameter, %ROWTYPE and %TYPE.

In the end I decided that the documentation is literally correct, but
hard to follow without any examples explicitly showing the use of a
table name as a parameter.

Andrew McMillan
2002-06-15 19:34:51 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 240de617fb The method PgLargeObject::LOid() is missing an implementation in the .cc
file.


The program seems to compile ok, but when linking a program that uses
the call,
g++ chokes with an undefined reference error.


If you know how this problem might be fixed, list the solution below:
---------------------------------------------------------------------
I include the code:

Oid PgLargeObject::LOid(){
  return pgObject;
}

in the .cc file.

Chris Traylor
2002-06-15 19:30:40 +00:00
Bruce Momjian d54ae2aff2 Add C++ indent tool. 2002-06-15 19:13:04 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 2e58024066 This patch fixes a few minor problems with libpq++: remove the deprecated
PQExec(" ") in the wrapper around PQnotifies(), fix the Makefile for
the examples so that they will actually compile properly (with the
exception of #5, which depends on internal headers), make a minor change
to libpq++.h so that "make examples" now works on my machine, update
some documentation, fix some grammatical problems, and remove some of
the more hideous comments.

Neil Conway
2002-06-15 18:49:29 +00:00
Thomas G. Lockhart 133df7ce70 Add LOCALTIME and LOCALTIMESTAMP functions per SQL99 standard.
Remove ODBC-compatible empty parentheses from calls to SQL99 functions
 for which these parentheses do not match the standard.
Update the ODBC driver to ensure compatibility with the ODBC standard
 for these functions (e.g. CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, CURRENT_USER, etc).
Include a new appendix in the User's Guide which lists the labeled features
 for SQL99 (the labeled features replaced the "basic", "intermediate",
 and "advanced" categories from SQL92). features.sgml does not yet split
 this list into "supported" and "unsupported" lists.
2002-06-15 03:00:09 +00:00
Thomas G. Lockhart bad5fe9797 Search the existing regular expression cache as a ring buffer.
Will optimize the case for repeated calls for the same expression,
 which seems to be the most common case. Formerly, always searched
 from the first entry.
May want to look at the least-recently-used algorithm to make sure it
 is identifying the right slots to reclaim. Seems silly to do math when
 it seems that we could simply use an incrementing counter...
2002-06-15 02:49:47 +00:00
Thomas G. Lockhart e62660080c Add NetBSD/MIPS as a supported platform. 2002-06-15 02:41:56 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 63a354c4bb Make encryption of stored passwords the default, as discussed months ago. 2002-06-15 01:29:50 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 579eab9880 Remove pfrees of cached pg_pwd file, per Tom Lane. 2002-06-15 00:52:23 +00:00
Dave Cramer fd8b153912 added empty result set testing 2002-06-14 14:01:36 +00:00
Dave Cramer 6e2fab0a41 added empty result set testing 2002-06-14 10:56:13 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 1ed4a922b8 Yet another SSL patch. :-) This one adds some informational messages
on the server, if DebugLvl >= 2.

The patch also includes a late addition to the last patch
(X509_check_private_key()).  I'm not sure why it the currect
revision wasn't tagged.


Bear Giles
2002-06-14 04:38:04 +00:00
Bruce Momjian eb7afc1407 SSL patch that adds support for optional client certificates.
If the user has certificates in $HOME/.postgresql/postgresql.crt
and $HOME/.postgresql/postgresql.key exist, they are provided
to the server.  The certificate used to sign this cert must be
known to the server, in $DataDir/root.crt.  If successful, the
cert's "common name" is logged.

Client certs are not used for authentication, but they could be
via the port->peer (X509 *), port->peer_dn (char *) or
port->peer_cn (char *) fields.  Or any other function could be
used, e.g., many sites like the issuer + serial number hash.

Bear Giles
2002-06-14 04:36:58 +00:00
Bruce Momjian b8b6691e52 Patch that checks ownership and permissions on server static
private key.  (You want it to be a regular file owned by the
database process, with 0400 or 0600 permissions.)

Bear Giles
2002-06-14 04:35:02 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 8f44024639 SSL patch to periodically renegotiate session key.
In order to reduce the risk of cryptanalysis during extended
sessions (or brief ones involving a substantial amount of data),
this patch renegotiates the session key after 64kib has been
transferred.

Bear Giles
2002-06-14 04:33:53 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 55d053233c SSL support for ephemeral DH keys.
As the comment headers in be-secure.c discusses, EPH preserves
confidentiality even if the static private key (which is usually
kept unencrypted) is compromised.

Because of the value of this, common default values are hard-coded
to protect the confidentiality of the data even if an attacker
successfully deletes or modifies the external file.

Bear Giles
2002-06-14 04:31:49 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 19570420f5 UPDATED PATCH:
Attached are a revised set of SSL patches.  Many of these patches
are motivated by security concerns, it's not just bug fixes.  The key
differences (from stock 7.2.1) are:

*) almost all code that directly uses the OpenSSL library is in two
   new files,

     src/interfaces/libpq/fe-ssl.c
     src/backend/postmaster/be-ssl.c

   in the long run, it would be nice to merge these two files.

*) the legacy code to read and write network data have been
   encapsulated into read_SSL() and write_SSL().  These functions
   should probably be renamed - they handle both SSL and non-SSL
   cases.

   the remaining code should eliminate the problems identified
   earlier, albeit not very cleanly.

*) both front- and back-ends will send a SSL shutdown via the
   new close_SSL() function.  This is necessary for sessions to
   work properly.

   (Sessions are not yet fully supported, but by cleanly closing
   the SSL connection instead of just sending a TCP FIN packet
   other SSL tools will be much happier.)

*) The client certificate and key are now expected in a subdirectory
   of the user's home directory.  Specifically,

	- the directory .postgresql must be owned by the user, and
	  allow no access by 'group' or 'other.'

	- the file .postgresql/postgresql.crt must be a regular file
	  owned by the user.

	- the file .postgresql/postgresql.key must be a regular file
	  owned by the user, and allow no access by 'group' or 'other'.

   At the current time encrypted private keys are not supported.
   There should also be a way to support multiple client certs/keys.

*) the front-end performs minimal validation of the back-end cert.
   Self-signed certs are permitted, but the common name *must*
   match the hostname used by the front-end.  (The cert itself
   should always use a fully qualified domain name (FDQN) in its
   common name field.)

   This means that

	  psql -h eris db

   will fail, but

	  psql -h eris.example.com db

   will succeed.  At the current time this must be an exact match;
   future patches may support any FQDN that resolves to the address
   returned by getpeername(2).

   Another common "problem" is expiring certs.  For now, it may be
   a good idea to use a very-long-lived self-signed cert.

   As a compile-time option, the front-end can specify a file
   containing valid root certificates, but it is not yet required.

*) the back-end performs minimal validation of the client cert.
   It allows self-signed certs.  It checks for expiration.  It
   supports a compile-time option specifying a file containing
   valid root certificates.

*) both front- and back-ends default to TLSv1, not SSLv3/SSLv2.

*) both front- and back-ends support DSA keys.  DSA keys are
   moderately more expensive on startup, but many people consider
   them preferable than RSA keys.  (E.g., SSH2 prefers DSA keys.)

*) if /dev/urandom exists, both client and server will read 16k
   of randomization data from it.

*) the server can read empheral DH parameters from the files

     $DataDir/dh512.pem
     $DataDir/dh1024.pem
     $DataDir/dh2048.pem
     $DataDir/dh4096.pem

   if none are provided, the server will default to hardcoded
   parameter files provided by the OpenSSL project.

Remaining tasks:

*) the select() clauses need to be revisited - the SSL abstraction
   layer may need to absorb more of the current code to avoid rare
   deadlock conditions.  This also touches on a true solution to
   the pg_eof() problem.

*) the SIGPIPE signal handler may need to be revisited.

*) support encrypted private keys.

*) sessions are not yet fully supported.  (SSL sessions can span
   multiple "connections," and allow the client and server to avoid
   costly renegotiations.)

*) makecert - a script that creates back-end certs.

*) pgkeygen - a tool that creates front-end certs.

*) the whole protocol issue, SASL, etc.

 *) certs are fully validated - valid root certs must be available.
    This is a hassle, but it means that you *can* trust the identity
    of the server.

 *) the client library can handle hardcoded root certificates, to
    avoid the need to copy these files.

 *) host name of server cert must resolve to IP address, or be a
    recognized alias.  This is more liberal than the previous
    iteration.

 *) the number of bytes transferred is tracked, and the session
    key is periodically renegotiated.

 *) basic cert generation scripts (mkcert.sh, pgkeygen.sh).  The
    configuration files have reasonable defaults for each type
    of use.

Bear Giles
2002-06-14 04:23:17 +00:00
Bruce Momjian eb43af3210 Back out SSL changes. Newer patch available. 2002-06-14 04:09:37 +00:00
Bruce Momjian a9bd17616e Attached are a revised set of SSL patches. Many of these patches
are motivated by security concerns, it's not just bug fixes.  The key
differences (from stock 7.2.1) are:

*) almost all code that directly uses the OpenSSL library is in two
   new files,

     src/interfaces/libpq/fe-ssl.c
     src/backend/postmaster/be-ssl.c

   in the long run, it would be nice to merge these two files.

*) the legacy code to read and write network data have been
   encapsulated into read_SSL() and write_SSL().  These functions
   should probably be renamed - they handle both SSL and non-SSL
   cases.

   the remaining code should eliminate the problems identified
   earlier, albeit not very cleanly.

*) both front- and back-ends will send a SSL shutdown via the
   new close_SSL() function.  This is necessary for sessions to
   work properly.

   (Sessions are not yet fully supported, but by cleanly closing
   the SSL connection instead of just sending a TCP FIN packet
   other SSL tools will be much happier.)

*) The client certificate and key are now expected in a subdirectory
   of the user's home directory.  Specifically,

	- the directory .postgresql must be owned by the user, and
	  allow no access by 'group' or 'other.'

	- the file .postgresql/postgresql.crt must be a regular file
	  owned by the user.

	- the file .postgresql/postgresql.key must be a regular file
	  owned by the user, and allow no access by 'group' or 'other'.

   At the current time encrypted private keys are not supported.
   There should also be a way to support multiple client certs/keys.

*) the front-end performs minimal validation of the back-end cert.
   Self-signed certs are permitted, but the common name *must*
   match the hostname used by the front-end.  (The cert itself
   should always use a fully qualified domain name (FDQN) in its
   common name field.)

   This means that

	  psql -h eris db

   will fail, but

	  psql -h eris.example.com db

   will succeed.  At the current time this must be an exact match;
   future patches may support any FQDN that resolves to the address
   returned by getpeername(2).

   Another common "problem" is expiring certs.  For now, it may be
   a good idea to use a very-long-lived self-signed cert.

   As a compile-time option, the front-end can specify a file
   containing valid root certificates, but it is not yet required.

*) the back-end performs minimal validation of the client cert.
   It allows self-signed certs.  It checks for expiration.  It
   supports a compile-time option specifying a file containing
   valid root certificates.

*) both front- and back-ends default to TLSv1, not SSLv3/SSLv2.

*) both front- and back-ends support DSA keys.  DSA keys are
   moderately more expensive on startup, but many people consider
   them preferable than RSA keys.  (E.g., SSH2 prefers DSA keys.)

*) if /dev/urandom exists, both client and server will read 16k
   of randomization data from it.

*) the server can read empheral DH parameters from the files

     $DataDir/dh512.pem
     $DataDir/dh1024.pem
     $DataDir/dh2048.pem
     $DataDir/dh4096.pem

   if none are provided, the server will default to hardcoded
   parameter files provided by the OpenSSL project.

Remaining tasks:

*) the select() clauses need to be revisited - the SSL abstraction
   layer may need to absorb more of the current code to avoid rare
   deadlock conditions.  This also touches on a true solution to
   the pg_eof() problem.

*) the SIGPIPE signal handler may need to be revisited.

*) support encrypted private keys.

*) sessions are not yet fully supported.  (SSL sessions can span
   multiple "connections," and allow the client and server to avoid
   costly renegotiations.)

*) makecert - a script that creates back-end certs.

*) pgkeygen - a tool that creates front-end certs.

*) the whole protocol issue, SASL, etc.

 *) certs are fully validated - valid root certs must be available.
    This is a hassle, but it means that you *can* trust the identity
    of the server.

 *) the client library can handle hardcoded root certificates, to
    avoid the need to copy these files.

 *) host name of server cert must resolve to IP address, or be a
    recognized alias.  This is more liberal than the previous
    iteration.

 *) the number of bytes transferred is tracked, and the session
    key is periodically renegotiated.

 *) basic cert generation scripts (mkcert.sh, pgkeygen.sh).  The
    configuration files have reasonable defaults for each type
    of use.

Bear Giles
2002-06-14 03:56:47 +00:00
Tatsuo Ishii 15378a53f8 Add support for GB18030 2002-06-14 03:30:56 +00:00
Tom Lane b1313e3474 Suppress 'owner of datatype appears to be invalid' warning message for
undefined (shell) types.
2002-06-13 20:02:31 +00:00