Commit Graph

16378 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
dafa0848da Code review for early drop of orphaned temp relations in autovacuum.
Commit a734fd5d1 exposed some race conditions that existed previously
in the autovac code, but were basically harmless because autovac would
not try to delete orphaned relations immediately.  Specifically, the test
for orphaned-ness was made on a pg_class tuple that might be dead by now,
allowing autovac to try to remove a table that the owning backend had just
finished deleting.  This resulted in a hard crash due to inadequate caution
about accessing the table's catalog entries without any lock.  We must take
a relation lock and then recheck whether the table is still present and
still looks deletable before we do anything.

Also, it seemed to me that deleting multiple tables per transaction, and
trying to continue after errors, represented unjustifiable complexity.
We do not expect this code path to be taken often in the field, nor even
during testing, which means that prioritizing performance over correctness
is a bad tradeoff.  Rip all that out in favor of just starting a new
transaction after each successful temp table deletion.  If we're unlucky
enough to get an error, which shouldn't happen anyway now that we're being
more cautious, let the autovacuum worker fail as it normally would.

In passing, improve the order of operations in the initial scan loop.
Now that we don't care about whether a temp table is a wraparound hazard,
there's no need to perform extract_autovac_opts, get_pgstat_tabentry_relid,
or relation_needs_vacanalyze for temp tables.

Also, if GetTempNamespaceBackendId returns InvalidBackendId (indicating
it doesn't recognize the schema as temp), treat that as meaning it's NOT
an orphaned temp table, not that it IS one, which is what happened before
because BackendIdGetProc necessarily failed.  The case really shouldn't
come up for a table that has RELPERSISTENCE_TEMP, but the consequences
if it did seem undesirable.  (This might represent a back-patchable bug
fix; not sure if it's worth the trouble.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/21299.1480272347@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-11-27 21:23:39 -05:00
Tom Lane
182db07040 Fix test about ignoring extension dependencies during extension scripts.
Commit 08dd23cec introduced an exception to the rule that extension member
objects can only be dropped as part of dropping the whole extension,
intending to allow such drops while running the extension's own creation or
update scripts.  However, the exception was only applied at the outermost
recursion level, because it was modeled on a pre-existing check to ignore
dependencies on objects listed in pendingObjects.  Bug #14434 from Philippe
Beaudoin shows that this is inadequate: in some cases we can reach an
extension member object by recursion from another one.  (The bug concerns
the serial-sequence case; I'm not sure if there are other cases, but there
might well be.)

To fix, revert 08dd23cec's changes to findDependentObjects() and instead
apply the creating_extension exception regardless of stack level.

Having seen this example, I'm a bit suspicious that the pendingObjects
logic is also wrong and such cases should likewise be allowed at any
recursion level.  However, changing that would interact in subtle ways
with the recursion logic (at least it would need to be moved to after the
recursing-from check).  Given that the code's been like that a long time,
I'll refrain from touching it without a clear example showing it's wrong.

Back-patch to all active branches.  In HEAD and 9.6, where suitable
test infrastructure exists, add a regression test case based on the
bug report.

Report: <20161125151448.6529.33039@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
Discussion: <13224.1480177514@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-11-26 13:31:35 -05:00
Tom Lane
dbdfd114f3 Bring some clarity to the defaults for the xxx_flush_after parameters.
Instead of confusingly stating platform-dependent defaults for these
parameters in the comments in postgresql.conf.sample (with the main
entry being a lie on Linux), teach initdb to install the correct
platform-dependent value in postgresql.conf, similarly to the way
we handle other platform-dependent defaults.  This won't do anything
for existing 9.6 installations, but since it's effectively only a
documentation improvement, that seems OK.

Since this requires initdb to have access to the default values,
move the #define's for those to pg_config_manual.h; the original
placement in bufmgr.h is unworkable because that file can't be
included by frontend programs.

Adjust the default value for wal_writer_flush_after so that it is 1MB
regardless of XLOG_BLCKSZ, conforming to what is stated in both the
SGML docs and postgresql.conf.  (We could alternatively make it scale
with XLOG_BLCKSZ, but I'm not sure I see the point.)

Copy-edit related SGML documentation.

Fabien Coelho and Tom Lane, per a gripe from Tomas Vondra.

Discussion: <30ebc6e3-8358-09cf-44a8-578252938424@2ndquadrant.com>
2016-11-25 18:36:10 -05:00
Tom Lane
ab77a5a456 Mark a query's topmost Paths parallel-unsafe if they will have initPlans.
Andreas Seltenreich found another case where we were being too optimistic
about allowing a plan to be considered parallelizable despite it containing
initPlans.  It seems like the real issue here is that if we know we are
going to tack initPlans onto the topmost Plan node for a subquery, we
had better mark that subquery's result Paths as not-parallel-safe.  That
fixes this problem and allows reversion of a kluge (added in commit
7b67a0a49 and extended in f24cf960d) to not trust the parallel_safe flag
at top level.

Discussion: <874m2w4k5d.fsf@ex.ansel.ydns.eu>
2016-11-25 16:20:12 -05:00
Tom Lane
4e026b32d4 Check for pending trigger events on far end when dropping an FK constraint.
When dropping a foreign key constraint with ALTER TABLE DROP CONSTRAINT,
we refuse the drop if there are any pending trigger events on the named
table; this ensures that we won't remove the pg_trigger row that will be
consulted by those events.  But we should make the same check for the
referenced relation, else we might remove a due-to-be-referenced pg_trigger
row for that relation too, resulting in "could not find trigger NNN" or
"relation NNN has no triggers" errors at commit.  Per bug #14431 from
Benjie Gillam.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Report: <20161124114911.6530.31200@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-11-25 13:44:47 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
8afb811088 Fix typo in comment
Thomas Munro
2016-11-25 13:06:19 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera
4aaddf2f00 Fix commit_ts for FrozenXid and BootstrapXid
Previously, requesting commit timestamp for transactions
FrozenTransactionId and BootstrapTransactionId resulted in an error.
But since those values can validly appear in committed tuples' Xmin,
this behavior is unhelpful and error prone: each caller would have to
special-case those values before requesting timestamp data for an Xid.
We already have a perfectly good interface for returning "the Xid you
requested is too old for us to have commit TS data for it", so let's use
that instead.

Backpatch to 9.5, where commit timestamps appeared.

Author: Craig Ringer
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAMsr+YFM5Q=+ry3mKvWEqRTxrB0iU3qUSRnS28nz6FJYtBwhJg@mail.gmail.com
2016-11-24 15:39:55 -03:00
Tom Lane
6fa391be4e Avoid masking a function parameter name with a local variable name.
No actual bug here, but it might confuse readers, so change the name
of the local variable.

Ashutosh Bapat
2016-11-23 16:26:40 -05:00
Tom Lane
bd673e8e86 Make sure ALTER TABLE preserves index tablespaces.
When rebuilding an existing index, ALTER TABLE correctly kept the
physical file in the same tablespace, but it messed up the pg_class
entry if the index had been in the database's default tablespace
and "default_tablespace" was set to some non-default tablespace.
This led to an inaccessible index.

Fix by fixing pg_get_indexdef_string() to always include a tablespace
clause, whether or not the index is in the default tablespace.  The
previous behavior was installed in commit 537e92e41, and I think it just
wasn't thought through very clearly; certainly the possible effect of
default_tablespace wasn't considered.  There's some risk in changing the
behavior of this function, but there are no other call sites in the core
code.  Even if it's being used by some third party extension, it's fairly
hard to envision a usage that is okay with a tablespace clause being
appended some of the time but can't handle it being appended all the time.

Back-patch to all supported versions.

Code fix by me, investigation and test cases by Michael Paquier.

Discussion: <1479294998857-5930602.post@n3.nabble.com>
2016-11-23 13:45:55 -05:00
Robert Haas
e343dfa42b Remove barrier.h
A new thing also called a "barrier" is proposed, but whether we decide
to take that patch or not, this file seems to have outlived its
usefulness.

Thomas Munro
2016-11-22 20:28:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
906bfcad7b Improve handling of "UPDATE ... SET (column_list) = row_constructor".
Previously, the right-hand side of a multiple-column assignment, if it
wasn't a sub-SELECT, had to be a simple parenthesized expression list,
because gram.y was responsible for "bursting" the construct into
independent column assignments.  This had the minor defect that you
couldn't write ROW (though you should be able to, since the standard says
this is a row constructor), and the rather larger defect that unlike other
uses of row constructors, we would not expand a "foo.*" item into multiple
columns.

Fix that by changing the RHS to be just "a_expr" in the grammar, leaving
it to transformMultiAssignRef to separate the elements of a RowExpr;
which it will do only after performing standard transformation of the
RowExpr, so that "foo.*" behaves as expected.

The key reason we didn't do that before was the hard-wired handling of
DEFAULT tokens (SetToDefault nodes).  This patch deals with that issue by
allowing DEFAULT in any a_expr and having parse analysis throw an error
if SetToDefault is found in an unexpected place.  That's an improvement
anyway since the error can be more specific than just "syntax error".

The SQL standard suggests that the RHS could be any a_expr yielding a
suitable row value.  This patch doesn't really move the goal posts in that
respect --- you're still limited to RowExpr or a sub-SELECT --- but it does
fix the grammar restriction, so it provides some tangible progress towards
a full implementation.  And the limitation is now documented by an explicit
error message rather than an unhelpful "syntax error".

Discussion: <8542.1479742008@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-11-22 15:20:10 -05:00
Robert Haas
e8ac886c24 Support condition variables.
Condition variables provide a flexible way to sleep until a
cooperating process causes an arbitrary condition to become true.  In
simple cases, this can be accomplished with a WaitLatch/ResetLatch
loop; the cooperating process can call SetLatch after performing work
that might cause the condition to be satisfied, and the waiting
process can recheck the condition each time.  However, if the process
performing the work doesn't have an easy way to identify which
processes might be waiting, this doesn't work, because it can't
identify which latches to set.  Condition variables solve that problem
by internally maintaining a list of waiters; a process that may have
caused some waiter's condition to be satisfied must "signal" or
"broadcast" on the condition variable.

Robert Haas and Thomas Munro
2016-11-22 14:27:11 -05:00
Tom Lane
ae92a9a380 Fix uninitialized variable.
Oversight in a734fd5d1.

Michael Paquier
2016-11-21 19:59:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
a4930e7ca2 Fix PGLC_localeconv() to handle errors better.
The code was intentionally not very careful about leaking strdup'd
strings in case of an error.  That was forgivable probably, but it
also failed to notice strdup() failures, which could lead to subsequent
null-pointer-dereference crashes, since many callers unsurprisingly
didn't check for null pointers in the struct lconv fields.  An even
worse problem is that it could throw error while we were setlocale'd
to a non-C locale, causing unwanted behavior in subsequent libc calls.

Rewrite to ensure that we cannot throw elog(ERROR) until after we've
restored the previous locale settings, or at least attempted to.
(I'm sorely tempted to make restore failure be a FATAL error, but
will refrain for the moment.)  Having done that, it's not much more
work to ensure that we clean up strdup'd storage on the way out, too.

This code is substantially the same in all supported branches, so
back-patch all the way.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane

Discussion: <CAB7nPqRMbGqa_mesopcn4MPyTs34eqtVEK7ELYxvvV=oqS00YA@mail.gmail.com>
2016-11-21 18:21:55 -05:00
Tom Lane
4324ade9a6 Fix optimization for skipping searches for parallel-query hazards.
Fix thinko in commit da1c91631: even if the original query was free of
parallel hazards, we might introduce such a hazard by adding PARAM_EXEC
Param nodes.  Adjust is_parallel_safe() so that it will scan the given
expression whenever any such nodes have been created.  Per report from
Andreas Seltenreich.

Discussion: <878tse6yvf.fsf@credativ.de>
2016-11-21 13:19:23 -05:00
Robert Haas
a734fd5d1c autovacuum: Drop orphan temp tables more quickly but with more caution.
Previously, we only dropped an orphan temp table when it became old
enough to threaten wraparound; instead, doing it immediately.  The
only value of waiting is that someone might be able to examine the
contents of the orphan temp table for forensic purposes, but it's
pretty difficult to actually do that and few users will wish to do so.
On the flip side, not performing the drop immediately generates log
spam and bloats pg_class.

In addition, per a report from Grigory Smolkin, if a temporary schema
contains a very large number of temporary tables, a backend attempting
to clear the temporary schema might fail due to lock table exhaustion.
It's helpful for autovacuum to clean up after such cases, and we don't
want it to wait for wraparound to threaten before doing so.  To
prevent autovacuum from failing in the same manner as a backend trying
to drop an entire temp schema, remove orphan temp tables in batches of
50, committing after each batch, so that we don't accumulate an
unbounded number of locks.  If a drop fails, retry other orphan tables
that need to be dropped up to 10 times before giving up.  With this
system, if a backend does fail to clean a temporary schema due to
lock table exhaustion, autovacuum should hopefully put things right
the next time it processes the database.

Discussion: CAB7nPqSbYT6dRwsXVgiKmBdL_ARemfDZMPA+RPeC_ge0GK70hA@mail.gmail.com

Michael Paquier, with a bunch of comment changes by me.
2016-11-21 13:01:50 -05:00
Tom Lane
f24cf960d7 Fix test for subplans in force-parallel mode.
We mustn't force parallel mode if the query has any subplans, since
ExecSerializePlan doesn't transmit them to workers.  Testing
top_plan->initPlan is inadequate because (1) there might be initPlans
attached to lower plan nodes, and (2) non-initPlan subplans don't
work either.  There's certainly room for improvement in those
restrictions, but for the moment that's what we've got.

Amit Kapila, per report from Andreas Seltenreich

Discussion: <8737im6pmh.fsf@credativ.de>
2016-11-21 11:09:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
c5f365f3ab Prevent multicolumn expansion of "foo.*" in an UPDATE source expression.
Because we use transformTargetList() for UPDATE as well as SELECT
tlists, the code accidentally tried to expand a "*" reference into
several columns.  This is nonsensical, because the UPDATE syntax
provides exactly one target column to put the value into.  The
immediate result was that transformUpdateTargetList() got confused
and reported "UPDATE target count mismatch --- internal error".
It seems better to treat such a reference as a plain whole-row
variable, as it would be in other contexts.  (This could produce
useful results when the target column is of composite type.)

Fix by tweaking transformTargetList() to perform *-expansion only
conditionally, depending on its exprKind parameter.

Back-patch to 9.3.  The problem exists further back, but a fix would be
much more invasive before that, because transformTargetList() wasn't
told what kind of list it was working on.  Doesn't seem worth the
trouble given the lack of field reports.  (I only noticed it because
I was checking the code while trying to improve the documentation about
how we handle "foo.*".)

Discussion: <4308.1479595330@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-11-20 14:26:19 -05:00
Tom Lane
0832f2db68 Fix latent costing error in create_merge_append_path.
create_merge_append_path should use the path rowcount it just computed,
not rel->tuples, for costing purposes.  Those numbers should always be
the same at present, but if we ever support parameterized MergeAppend
paths (a case this function is otherwise prepared for), the former would
be right and the latter wrong.

No need for back-patch since the problem is only latent.

Ashutosh Bapat

Discussion: <CAFjFpRek+cLCnTo24youuGtsq4zRphEB8EUUPjDxZjnL4n4HYQ@mail.gmail.com>
2016-11-19 15:06:45 -05:00
Tom Lane
13671b4b22 Code review for GUC serialization/deserialization code.
The serialization code dumped core for a string-valued GUC whose value
is NULL, which is a legal state.  The infrastructure isn't capable of
transmitting that state exactly, but fortunately, transmitting an empty
string instead should be close enough (compare, eg, commit e45e990e4).

The code potentially underestimated the space required to format a
real-valued variable, both because it made an unwarranted assumption that
%g output would never be longer than %e output, and because it didn't count
right even for %e format.  In practice this would pretty much always be
masked by overestimates for other variables, but it's still wrong.

Also fix boundary-case error in read_gucstate, incorrect handling of the
case where guc_sourcefile is non-NULL but zero length (not clear that can
happen, but if it did, this code would get totally confused), and
confusingly useless check for a NULL result from read_gucstate.

Andreas Seltenreich discovered the core dump; other issues noted while
reading nearby code.  Back-patch to 9.5 where this code was introduced.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane

Discussion: <871sy78wno.fsf@credativ.de>
2016-11-19 14:26:19 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
67dc4ccbb2 Add pg_sequences view
Like pg_tables, pg_views, and others, this view contains information
about sequences in a way that is independent of the system catalog
layout but more comprehensive than the information schema.

To help implement the view, add a new internal function
pg_sequence_last_value() to return the last value of a sequence.  This
is kept separate from pg_sequence_parameters() to separate querying
run-time state from catalog-like information.

Reviewed-by: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
2016-11-18 14:59:03 -05:00
Robert Haas
a43f1939d5 Remove or reduce verbosity of some debug messages.
The debug messages that merely print StartTransactionCommand,
CommitTransactionCommand, ProcessUtilty, or ProcessQuery with no
additional details seem to be useless.  Get rid of them.

The transaction status messages produced by ShowTransactionState are
occasionally useful, but they are extremely verbose, producing
multiple lines of log output every time they fire, which can happens
multiple times per transaction.  So, reduce the level to DEBUG5; avoid
emitting an extra line just to explain which debug point is at issue;
and tighten up the rest of the message so it doesn't use quite so much
horizontal space.

With these changes, it's possible to run a somewhat busy system with a
log level even as high as DEBUG4, whereas previously anything above
DEBUG2 would flood the log with output that probably wasn't really all
that useful.
2016-11-17 17:05:16 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
f65b94f639 Avoid pin scan for replay of XLOG_BTREE_VACUUM in all cases
Replay of XLOG_BTREE_VACUUM during Hot Standby was previously thought to
require complex interlocking that matched the requirements on the
master. This required an O(N) operation that became a significant
problem with large indexes, causing replication delays of seconds or in
some cases minutes while the XLOG_BTREE_VACUUM was replayed.

This commit skips the “pin scan” that was previously required, by
observing in detail when and how it is safe to do so, with full
documentation. The pin scan is skipped only in replay; the VACUUM code
path on master is not touched here.

No tests included. Manual tests using an additional patch to view WAL records
and their timing have shown the change in WAL records and their handling has
successfully reduced replication delay.

This is a back-patch of commits 687f2cd7a0, 3e4b7d8798, b602842613
by Simon Riggs, to branches 9.4 and 9.5.  No further backpatch is
possible because this depends on catalog scans being MVCC.  I (Álvaro)
additionally updated a slight problem in the README, which explains why
this touches the 9.6 and master branches.
2016-11-17 13:31:30 -03:00
Robert Haas
b40b4dd9e1 Reserve zero as an invalid DSM handle.
Previously, the handle for the control segment could not be zero, but
some other DSM segment could potentially have a handle value of zero.
However, that means that if someone wanted to store a dsm_handle that
might or might not be valid, they would need a separate boolean to
keep track of whether the associated value is legal.  That's annoying,
so change things so that no DSM segment can ever have a handle of 0 -
or as we call it here, DSM_HANDLE_INVALID.

Thomas Munro.  This was submitted as part of a much larger patch to
add an malloc-like allocator for dynamic shared memory, but this part
seems like a good idea independently of the rest of the patch.
2016-11-15 16:33:29 -05:00
Tom Lane
ffaa44cb55 Account for catalog snapshot in PGXACT->xmin updates.
The CatalogSnapshot was not plugged into SnapshotResetXmin()'s accounting
for whether MyPgXact->xmin could be cleared or advanced.  In normal
transactions this was masked by the fact that the transaction snapshot
would be older, but during backend startup and certain utility commands
it was possible to re-use the CatalogSnapshot after MyPgXact->xmin had
been cleared, meaning that recently-deleted rows could be pruned even
though this snapshot could still see them, causing unexpected catalog
lookup failures.  This effect appears to be the explanation for a recent
failure on buildfarm member piculet.

To fix, add the CatalogSnapshot to the RegisteredSnapshots heap whenever
it is valid.

In the previous logic, it was possible for the CatalogSnapshot to remain
valid across waits for client input, but with this change that would mean
it delays advance of global xmin in cases where it did not before.  To
avoid possibly causing new table-bloat problems with clients that sit idle
for long intervals, add code to invalidate the CatalogSnapshot before
waiting for client input.  (When the backend is busy, it's unlikely that
the CatalogSnapshot would be the oldest snap for very long, so we don't
worry about forcing early invalidation of it otherwise.)

In passing, remove the CatalogSnapshotStale flag in favor of using
"CatalogSnapshot != NULL" to represent validity, as we do for the other
special snapshots in snapmgr.c.  And improve some obsolete comments.

No regression test because I don't know a deterministic way to cause this
failure.  But the stress test shown in the original discussion provokes
"cache lookup failed for relation 1255" within a few dozen seconds for me.

Back-patch to 9.4 where MVCC catalog scans were introduced.  (Note: it's
quite easy to produce similar failures with the same test case in branches
before 9.4.  But MVCC catalog scans were supposed to fix that.)

Discussion: <16447.1478818294@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-11-15 15:55:35 -05:00
Robert Haas
fc19c1801b Limit the number of number of tapes used for a sort to 501.
Gigantic numbers of tapes don't work out well.

Original patch by Peter Geoghegan; comments entirely rewritten by me.
2016-11-15 10:30:33 -05:00
Robert Haas
00c6d8077f Fix broken statement in UCS_to_most.pl.
This has been wrong for a very long time, and it's puzzling to me how
it ever worked for anyone.

Kyotaro Horiguchi
2016-11-15 09:41:53 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
c99f876e9a Fix typo in comment
The function was renamed in 908e23473, but the comment never learned
about it.
2016-11-14 17:31:35 +01:00
Tom Lane
24aef33804 Cleanup of rewriter and planner handling of Query.hasRowSecurity flag.
Be sure to pull up the subquery's hasRowSecurity flag when flattening a
subquery in pull_up_simple_subquery().  This isn't a bug today because
we don't look at the hasRowSecurity flag during planning, but it could
easily be a bug tomorrow.

Likewise, make rewriteRuleAction() pull up the hasRowSecurity flag when
absorbing RTEs from a rule action.  This isn't a bug either, for the
opposite reason: the flag should never be set yet.  But again, it seems
like good future proofing.

Add a comment explaining why rewriteTargetView() should *not* set
hasRowSecurity when adding stuff to securityQuals.

Improve some nearby comments about securityQuals processing, and document
that field more completely in parsenodes.h.

Patch by me, analysis by Dean Rasheed.

Discussion: <CAEZATCXZ8tb2DV6f=bkhsMV6u_gRcZ0CZBw2J-qU84RxSukZog@mail.gmail.com>
2016-11-10 16:16:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
279c439c7f Support "COPY view FROM" for views with INSTEAD OF INSERT triggers.
We just pass the data to the INSTEAD trigger.

Haribabu Kommi, reviewed by Dilip Kumar

Patch: <CAJrrPGcSQkrNkO+4PhLm4B8UQQQmU9YVUuqmtgM=pmzMfxWaWQ@mail.gmail.com>
2016-11-10 14:13:43 -05:00
Tom Lane
e1b449bea9 Fix partial aggregation for the case of a degenerate GROUP BY clause.
The plan generated for sorted partial aggregation with "GROUP BY constant"
included a Sort node with no sort keys, which the executor does not like.

Per report from Steve Randall.  I'd add a regression test case if I could
think of a compact one, but it doesn't seem worth expending lots of cycles
on.

Report: <CABVd52UAdGXpg_rCk46egpNKYdXOzCjuJ1zG26E2xBe_8bj+Fg@mail.gmail.com>
2016-11-10 11:31:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
1833f1a1c3 Simplify code by getting rid of SPI_push, SPI_pop, SPI_restore_connection.
The idea behind SPI_push was to allow transitioning back into an
"unconnected" state when a SPI-using procedure calls unrelated code that
might or might not invoke SPI.  That sounds good, but in practice the only
thing it does for us is to catch cases where a called SPI-using function
forgets to call SPI_connect --- which is a highly improbable failure mode,
since it would be exposed immediately by direct testing of said function.
As against that, we've had multiple bugs induced by forgetting to call
SPI_push/SPI_pop around code that might invoke SPI-using functions; these
are much harder to catch and indeed have gone undetected for years in some
cases.  And we've had to band-aid around some problems of this ilk by
introducing conditional push/pop pairs in some places, which really kind
of defeats the purpose altogether; if we can't draw bright lines between
connected and unconnected code, what's the point?

Hence, get rid of SPI_push[_conditional], SPI_pop[_conditional], and the
underlying state variable _SPI_curid.  It turns out SPI_restore_connection
can go away too, which is a nice side benefit since it was never more than
a kluge.  Provide no-op macros for the deleted functions so as to avoid an
API break for external modules.

A side effect of this removal is that SPI_palloc and allied functions no
longer permit being called when unconnected; they'll throw an error
instead.  The apparent usefulness of the previous behavior was a mirage
as well, because it was depended on by only a few places (which I fixed in
preceding commits), and it posed a risk of allocations being unexpectedly
long-lived if someone forgot a SPI_push call.

Discussion: <20808.1478481403@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-11-08 17:39:57 -05:00
Tom Lane
9257f07872 Replace uses of SPI_modifytuple that intend to allocate in current context.
Invent a new function heap_modify_tuple_by_cols() that is functionally
equivalent to SPI_modifytuple except that it always allocates its result
by simple palloc.  I chose however to make the API details a bit more
like heap_modify_tuple: pass a tupdesc rather than a Relation, and use
bool convention for the isnull array.

Use this function in place of SPI_modifytuple at all call sites where the
intended behavior is to allocate in current context.  (There actually are
only two call sites left that depend on the old behavior, which makes me
wonder if we should just drop this function rather than keep it.)

This new function is easier to use than heap_modify_tuple() for purposes
of replacing a single column (or, really, any fixed number of columns).
There are a number of places where it would simplify the code to change
over, but I resisted that temptation for the moment ... everywhere except
in plpgsql's exec_assign_value(); changing that might offer some small
performance benefit, so I did it.

This is on the way to removing SPI_push/SPI_pop, but it seems like
good code cleanup in its own right.

Discussion: <9633.1478552022@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-11-08 15:36:44 -05:00
Robert Haas
dce429b117 Fix typo.
Michael Paquier
2016-11-08 15:33:57 -05:00
Tom Lane
6d30fb1f75 Make SPI_fnumber() reject dropped columns.
There's basically no scenario where it's sensible for this to match
dropped columns, so put a test for dropped-ness into SPI_fnumber()
itself, and excise the test from the small number of callers that
were paying attention to the case.  (Most weren't :-(.)

In passing, normalize tests at call sites: always reject attnum <= 0
if we're disallowing system columns.  Previously there was a mixture
of "< 0" and "<= 0" tests.  This makes no practical difference since
SPI_fnumber() never returns 0, but I'm feeling pedantic today.

Also, in the places that are actually live user-facing code and not
legacy cruft, distinguish "column not found" from "can't handle
system column".

Per discussion with Jim Nasby; thi supersedes his original patch
that just changed the behavior at one call site.

Discussion: <b2de8258-c4c0-1cb8-7b97-e8538e5c975c@BlueTreble.com>
2016-11-08 13:11:26 -05:00
Robert Haas
60379f66c8 Fix mistake in XLOG_SEG_SIZE test.
The intent of the test is to check whether XLOG_SEG_SIZE is in a
particular range, but actually in one case it compares XLOG_BLCKSZ
by mistake.  Repair.

Commit 88e9823026 introduced this
faulty test.

Kuntal Ghosh, reviewed by Michael Paquier.
2016-11-08 12:12:19 -05:00
Robert Haas
f0e72a25b0 Improve handling of dead tuples in hash indexes.
When squeezing a bucket during vacuum, it's not necessary to retain
any tuples already marked as dead, so ignore them when deciding which
tuples must be moved in order to empty a bucket page.  Similarly, when
splitting a bucket, relocating dead tuples to the new bucket is a
waste of effort; instead, just ignore them.

Amit Kapila, reviewed by me.  Testing help provided by Ashutosh
Sharma.
2016-11-08 10:52:51 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
a5954de105 Save redundant code for pseudotype I/O functions
Use a macro to generate the in and out functions for pseudotypes that
reject all input and output, saving many lines of redundant code.
Parameterize the error messages to reduce translatable strings.
2016-11-07 09:21:00 -05:00
Tom Lane
5485c99e7f Fix silly nil-pointer-dereference bug introduced in commit d5f6f13f8.
Don't fetch record->xl_info before we've verified that record isn't
NULL.  Per Coverity.

Michael Paquier
2016-11-06 11:29:40 -05:00
Tom Lane
34ca090570 Adjust cost_merge_append() to reflect use of binaryheap_replace_first().
Commit 7a2fe9bd0 improved merge append so that replacement of a tuple
takes log(N) operations, not twice log(N).  Since cost_merge_append knew
about that explicitly, we should adjust it.  This probably makes little
difference in practice, but the obsolete comment is confusing.

Ideally this would have been put in in 9.3 with the underlying behavior
change; but I'm not going to back-patch it, since there's some small chance
of changing a plan choice that somebody's optimized for.

Thomas Munro

Discussion: <CAEepm=0WQBSvuYcMOUj4Ga4NXpu2J=ejZcE=e=eiTjTX-6_gDw@mail.gmail.com>
2016-11-05 13:48:11 -04:00
Tom Lane
d5f6f13f8e Be more consistent about masking xl_info with ~XLR_INFO_MASK.
Generally, WAL resource managers are only supposed to examine the
top 4 bits of a WAL record's xl_info; the rest are reserved for
the WAL mechanism itself.  A few places were not consistent about
doing this with respect to XLOG_CHECKPOINT and XLOG_SWITCH records.
There's no bug currently, since no additional bits ever get set in
these specific record types, but that might not be true forever.
Let's follow the generic coding rule here too.

Michael Paquier
2016-11-04 13:26:49 -04:00
Kevin Grittner
8c48375e5f Implement syntax for transition tables in AFTER triggers.
This is infrastructure for the complete SQL standard feature.  No
support is included at this point for execution nodes or PLs.  The
intent is to add that soon.

As this patch leaves things, standard syntax can create tuplestores
to contain old and/or new versions of rows affected by a statement.
References to these tuplestores are in the TriggerData structure.
C triggers can access the tuplestores directly, so they are usable,
but they cannot yet be referenced within a SQL statement.
2016-11-04 10:49:50 -05:00
Robert Haas
f2e6a2ccf1 Add API to check if an existing exclusive lock allows cleanup.
LockBufferForCleanup() acquires a cleanup lock unconditionally, and
ConditionalLockBufferForCleanup() acquires a cleanup lock if it is
possible to do so without waiting; this patch adds a new API,
IsBufferCleanupOK(), which tests whether an exclusive lock already
held happens to be a cleanup lock.  This is possible because a cleanup
lock simply means an exclusive lock plus the assurance any other pins
on the buffer are newer than our own pin.  Therefore, just as the
existing functions decide that the exclusive lock that they've just
taken is a cleanup lock if they observe the pin count to be 1, this
new function allows us to observe that the pin count is 1 on a buffer
we've already locked.

This is useful in situations where a backend definitely wishes to
modify the buffer and also wishes to perform cleanup operations if
possible.  The patch to eliminate heavyweight locking by hash indexes
uses this, and it may have other applications as well.

Amit Kapila, per a suggestion from me.  Some comment adjustments by me
as well.
2016-11-04 09:32:24 -04:00
Tom Lane
770671062f Don't make FK-based selectivity estimates in inheritance situations.
The foreign-key-aware logic for estimation of join sizes (added in commit
100340e2d) blindly tried to apply the concept to rels that are actually
parents of inheritance trees.  This is just plain wrong so far as the
referenced relation is concerned, since the inheritance scan may well
produce lots of rows that are not participating in the constraint.  It's
wrong for the referencing relation too, for the same reason; although on
that end we could conceivably detect whether all members of the inheritance
tree have equivalent FK constraints pointing to the same referenced rel,
and then proceed more or less as we do now.  But pending somebody writing
code to do that, we must disable this, because it's producing completely
silly estimates when there's an FK linking the heads of inheritance trees.

Per bug #14404 from Clinton Adams.  Back-patch to 9.6 where the new
estimation logic came in.

Report: <20161028200412.15987.96482@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-11-02 15:50:15 -04:00
Tom Lane
da8f3ebf30 Don't convert Consts into Vars during setrefs.c processing.
While converting expressions in an upper-level plan node so that they
reference Vars and expressions provided by the input plan node(s),
don't convert plain Const items, even if there happens to be a matching
Const in the input.  It's silly to do so because a Var is more expensive to
execute than a Const.  Moreover, converting can fool ExecCheckPlanOutput's
check that an insert or update query inserts nulls into dropped columns,
leading to "query provides a value for a dropped column" errors during
INSERT or UPDATE on a table with a dropped column.  We could solve this
by making that check more complicated, but I don't see the point; this fix
should save a marginal number of cycles, and it also makes for less messy
EXPLAIN output, as shown by the ensuing regression test result changes.

Per report from Pavel Hanák.  I have not incorporated a test case based
on that example, as there doesn't seem to be a simple way of checking
this in isolation without making a bunch of assumptions about other
planner and SQL-function behavior.

Back-patch to 9.6.  This setrefs.c behavior exists much further back,
but there is not currently reason to think that it causes problems
before 9.6.

Discussion: <83shraampf.fsf@is-it.eu>
2016-11-02 14:32:13 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
3a47c704fb Add make rules to download raw Unicode mapping files
This serves as implicit documentation and is handy if someone wants to
tweak things.  The rules are not part of a normal build, like this
entire directory.
2016-11-01 11:54:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
5ec81aceec Fix nasty performance problem in tsquery_rewrite().
tsquery_rewrite() tries to find matches to subsets of AND/OR conditions;
for example, in the query 'a | b | c' the substitution subquery 'a | c'
should match and lead to replacement of the first and third items.
That's fine, but the matching algorithm apparently takes about O(2^N)
for an N-clause query (I say "apparently" because the code is also both
unintelligible and uncommented).  We could probably do better than that
even without any extra assumptions --- but actually, we know that the
subclauses are sorted, indeed are depending on that elsewhere in this very
same function.  So we can just scan the two lists a single time to detect
matches, as though we were doing a merge join.

Also do a re-flattening call (QTNTernary()) in tsquery_rewrite_query, just
to make sure that the tree fits the expectations of the next search cycle.
I didn't try to devise a test case for this, but I'm pretty sure that the
oversight could have led to failure to match in some cases where a match
would be expected.

Improve comments, and also stick a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS into
dofindsubquery, just in case it's still too slow for somebody.

Per report from Andreas Seltenreich.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: <8760oasf2y.fsf@credativ.de>
2016-10-30 17:35:42 -04:00
Tom Lane
24ebc444c6 Fix bogus tree-flattening logic in QTNTernary().
QTNTernary() contains logic to flatten, eg, '(a & b) & c' into 'a & b & c',
which is all well and good, but it tries to do that to NOT nodes as well,
so that '!!a' gets changed to '!a'.  Explicitly restrict the conversion to
be done only on AND and OR nodes, and add a test case illustrating the bug.

In passing, provide some comments for the sadly naked functions in
tsquery_util.c, and simplify some baroque logic in QTNFree(), which
I think may have been leaking some items it intended to free.

Noted while investigating a complaint from Andreas Seltenreich.
Back-patch to all supported versions.
2016-10-30 15:24:40 -04:00
Tom Lane
9a00f03e47 Improve speed of aggregates that use array_append as transition function.
In the previous coding, if an aggregate's transition function returned an
expanded array, nodeAgg.c and nodeWindowAgg.c would always copy it and thus
force it into the flat representation.  This led to ping-ponging between
flat and expanded formats, which costs a lot.  For an aggregate using
array_append as transition function, I measured about a 15X slowdown
compared to the pre-9.5 code, when working on simple int[] arrays.
Of course, the old code was already O(N^2) in this usage due to copying
flat arrays all the time, but it wasn't quite this inefficient.

To fix, teach nodeAgg.c and nodeWindowAgg.c to allow expanded transition
values without copying, so long as the transition function takes care to
return the transition value already properly parented under the aggcontext.
That puts a bit of extra responsibility on the transition function, but
doing it this way allows us to not need any extra logic in the fast path
of advance_transition_function (ie, with a pass-by-value transition value,
or with a modified-in-place pass-by-reference value).  We already know
that that's a hot spot so I'm loath to add any cycles at all there.  Also,
while only array_append currently knows how to follow this convention,
this solution allows other transition functions to opt-in without needing
to have a whitelist in the core aggregation code.

(The reason we would need a whitelist is that currently, if you pass a
R/W expanded-object pointer to an arbitrary function, it's allowed to do
anything with it including deleting it; that breaks the core agg code's
assumption that it should free discarded values.  Returning a value under
aggcontext is the transition function's signal that it knows it is an
aggregate transition function and will play nice.  Possibly the API rules
for expanded objects should be refined, but that would not be a
back-patchable change.)

With this fix, an aggregate using array_append is no longer O(N^2), so it's
much faster than pre-9.5 code rather than much slower.  It's still a bit
slower than the bespoke infrastructure for array_agg, but the differential
seems to be only about 10%-20% rather than orders of magnitude.

Discussion: <6315.1477677885@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-10-30 12:27:41 -04:00
Robert Haas
33839b5ffb Fix leftover reference to background writer performing checkpoints.
This was changed in PostgreSQL 9.2, but somehow this comment never
got updated.
2016-10-28 09:09:00 -04:00