Added:
- variable now might contain integer, double, boolean and null values
- functions ln, exp
- logical AND/OR/NOT
- bitwise AND/OR/NOT/XOR
- bit right/left shift
- comparison operators
- IS [NOT] (NULL|TRUE|FALSE)
- conditional choice (in form of when/case/then)
New operations and functions allow to implement more complicated test scenario.
Author: Fabien Coelho with minor editorization by me
Reviewed-By: Pavel Stehule, Jeevan Ladhe, me
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/alpine.DEB.2.10.1604030742390.31618@sto
Previously an inaccurate but harmless error was generated when running
--check on a live server before reporting the servers as compatible.
The fix is to split error reporting and exit control in the exec_prog()
API.
Reported-by: Daniel Westermann
Backpatch-through: 10
Upcoming versions of glibc will contain copy_file_range(2), a wrapper
around a new linux syscall for in-kernel copying of data ranges. This
conflicts with pg_rewinds function of the same name.
Therefore rename pg_rewinds version. As our version isn't a generic
copying facility we decided to choose a rewind specific function name.
Per buildfarm animal caiman and subsequent discussion with Tom Lane.
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion:
https://postgr.es/m/20180103033425.w7jkljth3e26sduc@alap3.anarazel.dehttps://postgr.es/m/31122.1514951044@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch: 9.5-, where pg_rewind was introduced
Various Perl scripts we use to generate files were in the habit of
printing things like "generated by $0" into their output files.
That looks like a fine idea at first glance, but it results in
non-reproducible output, because in VPATH builds $0 won't be just
the name of the script file, but a full path for it. We'd prefer
that you get identical results whether using VPATH or not, so this
is a bad thing.
Some of these places also printed their input file name(s), causing
an additional hazard of the same type.
Hence, establish a policy that thou shalt not print $0, nor input file
pathnames, into output files (they're still allowed in error messages,
though). Instead just write the script name verbatim. While we are at
it, we can make these annotations more useful by giving the script's
full relative path name within the PG source tree, eg instead of
Gen_fmgrtab.pl let's print src/backend/utils/Gen_fmgrtab.pl.
Not all of the changes made here actually affect any files shipped
in finished tarballs today, but it seems best to apply the policy
everyplace so that nobody copies unsafe code into places where it
could matter.
Christoph Berg and Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171215102223.GB31812@msg.df7cb.de
The progress messages print out \r to keep overwriting the same line on
the screen. But this does not yield useful results when writing the
output to a file. So in that case, print out \n instead.
Author: Martín Marqués <martin@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Arthur Zakirov <a.zakirov@postgrespro.ru>
This adds a new object type "procedure" that is similar to a function
but does not have a return type and is invoked by the new CALL statement
instead of SELECT or similar. This implementation is aligned with the
SQL standard and compatible with or similar to other SQL implementations.
This commit adds new commands CALL, CREATE/ALTER/DROP PROCEDURE, as well
as ALTER/DROP ROUTINE that can refer to either a function or a
procedure (or an aggregate function, as an extension to SQL). There is
also support for procedures in various utility commands such as COMMENT
and GRANT, as well as support in pg_dump and psql. Support for defining
procedures is available in all the languages supplied by the core
distribution.
While this commit is mainly syntax sugar around existing functionality,
future features will rely on having procedures as a separate object
type.
Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan <andrew.dunstan@2ndquadrant.com>
Doing this suppresses Coverity warnings and might allow improved
code in some cases. The prospects of that are not so bright as
to warrant back-patching, though.
Michael Paquier, per Coverity
pgbench can skip some transactions when both -R and -L options are used.
Previously, this resulted in slightly silly statistics both in progress
reports and final output, because the skipped transactions were counted
as executed for TPS and related stats. Discount skipped xacts in TPS
numbers, and also when figuring the percentage of xacts exceeding the
latency limit.
Also, don't print per-script skipped-transaction counts when there is
only one script. That's redundant with the overall count, and it's
inconsistent with the fact that we don't print other per-script stats
when there's only one script. Clean up some unnecessary interactions
between what should be independent options that were due to that
decision.
While at it, avoid division-by-zero in cases where no transactions were
executed. While on modern platforms this would generally result in
printing "NaN" rather than a crash, that isn't spelled consistently
across platforms and it would confuse many people. Skip the relevant
output entirely when practical, else print zeroes.
Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Steve Singer, additional hacking by me
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26654.1505232433@sss.pgh.pa.us
Commit 9be95ef15 failed to cure all of the redundancy here: we were
actually calling get_major_server_version() three times for each
of the old and new data directories. While that's not enormously
expensive, it's still sloppy.
A. Akenteva
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f9266a85d918a3cf3a386b5148aee666@postgrespro.ru
This continues the work of commit 91aec93e6 by getting rid of a lot of
Windows-specific funny business in "section 0". Instead of including
pg_config_os.h in different places depending on platform, let's
standardize on putting it before the system headers, and in consequence
reduce win32.h to just what has to appear before the system headers or
the body of c.h (the latter category seems to include only PGDLLIMPORT
and PGDLLEXPORT). The rest of what was in win32.h is moved to a new
sub-include of port.h, win32_port.h. Some of what was in port.h seems
to better belong there too.
It's possible that I missed some declaration ordering dependency that
needs to be preserved, but hopefully the buildfarm will find that
out in short order.
Unlike the previous commit, no back-patch, since this is just cleanup
not a prerequisite for a bug fix.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/29650.1510761080@sss.pgh.pa.us
This feature caters to specialized use-cases such as running the normal
pgbench scenario with nonstandard indexes, or inserting other actions
between steps of the initialization sequence. The normal sequence of
initialization actions is broken down into half a dozen steps which can
be executed in a user-specified order, to the extent to which that's
sensible. The actions themselves aren't changed, except to make them
more robust against nonstandard uses:
* all four tables are now dropped in one DROP command, to reduce
assumptions about what foreign key relationships exist;
* all four tables are now truncated at the start of the data load
step, for consistency;
* the foreign key creation commands now specify constraint names, to
prevent accidentally creating duplicate constraints by executing the
'f' step twice.
Make some cosmetic adjustments in the messages emitted by pgbench
so that it's clear which steps are getting run, and so that the
messages agree with the documented names of the steps.
In passing, fix failure to enforce that the -v option is used only
in benchmarking mode.
Masahiko Sawada, reviewed by Fabien Coelho, editorialized a bit by me
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoCsz0ZzfCFcxYZ+PUdpkDd5VsCSG0Pre_-K1EgokCDFYA@mail.gmail.com
Hash partitioning is useful when you want to partition a growing data
set evenly. This can be useful to keep table sizes reasonable, which
makes maintenance operations such as VACUUM faster, or to enable
partition-wise join.
At present, we still depend on constraint exclusion for partitioning
pruning, and the shape of the partition constraints for hash
partitioning is such that that doesn't work. Work is underway to fix
that, which should both improve performance and make partitioning
pruning work with hash partitioning.
Amul Sul, reviewed and tested by Dilip Kumar, Ashutosh Bapat, Yugo
Nagata, Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, Jesper Pedersen, and by me. A few
final tweaks also by me.
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b96fhpJAP=ALbETmeLk1Uni_GFZD938zgenhF49qgDTjaQ@mail.gmail.com
Somebody messed up a refactoring here. As it stood, we'd check pg_ctl's
--version output twice for each cluster. Worse, the first check for the
new cluster's version happened before we'd done any validate_exec checks
there, breaking the check ordering the code intended.
A. Akenteva
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f9266a85d918a3cf3a386b5148aee666@postgrespro.ru
The lower case spellings are C and C++ standard and are used in most
parts of the PostgreSQL sources. The upper case spellings are only used
in some files/modules. So standardize on the standard spellings.
The APIs for ICU, Perl, and Windows define their own TRUE and FALSE, so
those are left as is when using those APIs.
In code comments, we use the lower-case spelling for the C concepts and
keep the upper-case spelling for the SQL concepts.
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Previously server reserved WAL for last two checkpoints,
which used too much disk space for small servers.
Bumps PG_CONTROL_VERSION
Author: Simon Riggs <simon@2ndQuadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Add docs to explain this for other backup mechanisms
Author: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
Reviewed-by: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndQuadrant.com> et al
configure computed PG_VERSION_NUM incorrectly. (Coulda sworn I tested
that logic back when, but it had an obvious thinko.)
pg_upgrade had not been taught about the new dispensation with just
one part in the major version number.
Both things accidentally failed to fail with 10.0, but with 10.1 we
got the wrong results.
Per buildfarm.
Change message for restarting a server from a directory without a PID
file. This accounts for the case where a restart happens after an
initdb. The new message indicates that the start has not completed yet
and might fail.
Author: Jesper Pedersen <jesper.pedersen@redhat.com>
This is only used in the pg_rewind tests, so only set it there. It's
better if other tests run closer to a default configuration.
Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
A candidate path needs to be canonicalized before being checked against
the mappings, because the mappings are also canonicalized. This is
especially relevant on Windows
Reported-by: nb <nbedxp@gmail.com>
Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Sharma <ashu.coek88@gmail.com>
Queries running with some non-pg_catalog schema frontmost in their search
path need to be careful to schema-qualify type names that should be sought
in pg_catalog. Vitaly Burovoy reported an oversight of this sort in
pg_dump's dumpSequence, and grepping detected another one in psql's
describeOneTableDetails, both introduced by sequence-related changes in
v10. In pg_dump, we can fix things by removing the cast altogether, since
it doesn't really matter what data types are reported for these query
result columns. Likewise in psql, the query seemed to be working unduly
hard to get a result that's guaranteed to be exactly 'bigint'.
I also changed a couple of occurrences of "::char" similarly. These are
not bugs, since "char" is a typename keyword and not subject to search_path
rules, but it seems better to use uniform style.
Vitaly Burovoy and Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKOSWN=ds66zLw2SqkLTM8wbXFgDbc_OdkmT3dJfPT2mE5kipA@mail.gmail.com
It seems that the parray_gin extension has seen fit to introduce a
"text[] @> text[]" operator, which conflicts with the core
"anyarray @> anyarray" operator, causing ambiguous-operator failures
if the input arguments are coercible to text[] without being exactly
that type. This strikes me as a bad idea, but it's out there and
people use it. As of v10, that breaks psql's query that tries to
test "pg_statistic_ext.stxkind @> '{d}'", since stxkind is char[].
The best workaround seems to be to avoid use of that operator.
We can use a scalar-vs-array test "'d' = any(stxkind)" instead;
that's arguably more readable anyway.
Per report from Justin Pryzby. Backpatch to v10 where this
query was added.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171022181525.GA21884@telsasoft.com
Flex generates a lot of functions that are not actually used. In order
to avoid coverage figures being ruined by that, mark up the part of the
.l files where the generated code appears by lcov exclusion markers.
That way, lcov will typically only reported on coverage for the .l file,
which is under our control, but not for the .c file.
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Up to now, there's been hard-wired assumptions that normal aggregates'
final functions never modify their transition states, while ordered-set
aggregates' final functions always do. This has always been a bit
limiting, and in particular it's getting in the way of improving the
built-in ordered-set aggregates to allow merging of transition states.
Therefore, let's introduce catalog and CREATE AGGREGATE infrastructure
that lets the finalfn's behavior be declared explicitly.
There are now three possibilities for the finalfn behavior: it's purely
read-only, it trashes the transition state irrecoverably, or it changes
the state in such a way that no more transfn calls are possible but the
state can still be passed to other, compatible finalfns. There are no
examples of this third case today, but we'll shortly make the built-in
OSAs act like that.
This change allows user-defined aggregates to explicitly disclaim support
for use as window functions, and/or to prevent transition state merging,
if their implementations cannot handle that. While it was previously
possible to handle the window case with a run-time error check, there was
not any way to prevent transition state merging, which in retrospect is
something commit 804163bc2 should have provided for. But better late
than never.
In passing, split out pg_aggregate.c's extern function declarations into
a new header file pg_aggregate_fn.h, similarly to what we've done for
some other catalog headers, so that pg_aggregate.h itself can be safe
for frontend files to include. This lets pg_dump use the symbolic
names for relevant constants.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4834.1507849699@sss.pgh.pa.us
This pg_send_history() call is unreachable, since the block it's in
is currently only entered in !cur_cmd_interactive mode. But rather
than just delete it, make it #ifdef NOT_USED, in hopes that we'll
remember to enable it if we ever change that decision.
Per report from David Binderman. Since this is basically cosmetic,
I see no great need to back-patch.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/HE1PR0802MB233122B61F00A15E035C83BE9C710@HE1PR0802MB2331.eurprd08.prod.outlook.com
All postgres internal usages are replaced, it's just libpq example
usages that haven't been converted. External users of libpq can't
generally rely on including postgres internal headers.
Note that this includes replacing open-coded byte swapping of 64bit
integers (using two 32 bit swaps) with a single 64bit swap.
Where it looked applicable, I have removed netinet/in.h and
arpa/inet.h usage, which previously provided the relevant
functionality. It's perfectly possible that I missed other reasons for
including those, the buildfarm will tell.
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170927172019.gheidqy6xvlxb325@alap3.anarazel.de
Previously that was disallowed out of an abundance of
caution. Providing KILL support however is helpful to make the
013_crash_restart.pl test portable, and there's no actual issue with
allowing it. SIGABRT, which has similar consequences except it also
dumps core, was already allowed.
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/45d42d41-6145-9be1-7261-84acf6d9e344@2ndQuadrant.com
Buildfarm members skink and sungazer have both recently failed this
test, with symptoms indicating that the default 3-second timeout
isn't quite enough for those very slow systems. There's no reason
to be miserly with this timeout, so boost it to 60 seconds.
Back-patch to all versions containing this test. That may be overkill,
because the failure has only been observed in the v10 branch, but
I don't feel like having to revisit this later.
If --rate was used to throttle pgbench, it failed to sleep when it had
nothing to do, leading to a busy-wait with 100% CPU usage. This bug was
introduced in the refactoring in v10. Before that, sleep() was called with
a timeout, even when there were no file descriptors to wait for.
Reported by Jeff Janes, patch by Fabien COELHO. Backpatch to v10.
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAMkU%3D1x5hoX0pLLKPRnXCy0T8uHoDvXdq%2B7kAM9eoC9_z72ucw%40mail.gmail.com
During a binary upgrade, all type OIDs are supposed to be assigned by
pg_dump based on their values in the old cluster. But now that domains
have arrays, there's nothing to base the arrays' type OIDs on, if we're
upgrading from a pre-v11 cluster. Make pg_dump search for an unused type
OID to use for this purpose. Per buildfarm.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1dyLlE-0002gT-H5@gemulon.postgresql.org
If \d rather than \d+ is used, then verbose is false and we don't ask
the server for the partition constraint; so we shouldn't print it in
that case either.
Maksim Milyutin, per a report from Jesper Pedersen. Reviewed by
Jesper Pedersen and Amit Langote.
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/2af5fc4d-7bcc-daa8-4fe6-86274bea363c@redhat.com
For \d sequencename, the psql code just did SELECT * FROM sequencename
to get the information to display, but this does not contain much
interesting information anymore in PostgreSQL 10, because the metadata
has been moved to a separate system catalog.
This patch creates a newly designed sequence display that is not merely
an extension of the general relation/table display as it was previously.
Example:
PostgreSQL 9.6:
=> \d foobar
Sequence "public.foobar"
Column | Type | Value
---------------+---------+---------------------
sequence_name | name | foobar
last_value | bigint | 1
start_value | bigint | 1
increment_by | bigint | 1
max_value | bigint | 9223372036854775807
min_value | bigint | 1
cache_value | bigint | 1
log_cnt | bigint | 0
is_cycled | boolean | f
is_called | boolean | f
PostgreSQL 10 before this change:
=> \d foobar
Sequence "public.foobar"
Column | Type | Value
------------+---------+-------
last_value | bigint | 1
log_cnt | bigint | 0
is_called | boolean | f
New:
=> \d foobar
Sequence "public.foobar"
Type | Start | Minimum | Maximum | Increment | Cycles? | Cache
--------+-------+---------+---------------------+-----------+---------+-------
bigint | 1 | 1 | 9223372036854775807 | 1 | no | 1
Reviewed-by: Fabien COELHO <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
When requesting a particular replication slot, the new pg_basebackup
option -C/--create-slot creates it before starting to replicate from it.
Further refactor the slot creation logic to include the temporary slot
creation logic into the same function. Add new arguments is_temporary
and preserve_wal to CreateReplicationSlot(). Print in --verbose mode
that a slot has been created.
Author: Michael Banck <michael.banck@credativ.de>
Add some more tests for the --create-slot and --drop-slot options,
verifying that the right kind of slot was created and that the slot was
dropped. While working on an unrelated patch for pg_basebackup, some of
this was temporarily broken without any tests noticing.
The --slot option somehow ended up under options controlling the output,
and some other options were in a nonsensical place or were not moved
after recent renamings, so tidy all that up a bit.
One test case was meant to check that pg_basebackup does not succeed
when a slot is specified with -S but WAL streaming is not selected,
which used to require specifying -X stream. Since -X stream is the
default in PostgreSQL 10, this test case no longer covers that meaning,
but the pg_basebackup invocation happened to fail anyway for the
unrelated reason that the specified replication slot does not exist. To
fix, move the test case to later in the file where the slot does exist,
and add -X none to the invocation so that it covers the originally meant
behavior.
extracted from a patch by Michael Banck <michael.banck@credativ.de>
Buildfarm member skink shows that this is even more flaky than
I thought. There are probably some actual pgbench bugs here
as well as a timing dependency. But we can't have stuff this
unstable in the buildfarm, it obscures other issues.
This reverts commit f41e56c76e.
The build farm client would run the pg_upgrade tests twice, once as part
of the existing pg_upgrade check run and once as part of picking up all
TAP tests by looking for "t" directories. Since the pg_upgrade tests
are pretty slow, we will need a better solution or possibly a build farm
client change before we can proceed with this.
There seems to be some considerable imprecision in the timing of -P
progress reports. Nominally each thread ought to produce 2 reports
in this test, but about 10% of the time we only get one, and 1% of
the time we get three, as per buildfarm results so far. Pending
further investigation, treat the last case as a "pass". (I, tgl,
am suspicious that this still might not be lax enough, now that it's
obvious that the behavior is load-dependent; but there's not yet
buildfarm evidence to confirm that suspicion.)
Fabien Coelho
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26654.1505232433@sss.pgh.pa.us
"\if :{?variable_name}" will be translated to "\if TRUE" if the variable
exists and "\if FALSE" otherwise. Thus it will be possible to execute code
conditionally on the existence of the variable, regardless of its value.
Fabien Coelho, with some review by Robins Tharakan and some light text
editing by me.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1708260835520.3627@lancre
For performance reasons a larger segment size than the default 16MB
can be useful. A larger segment size has two main benefits: Firstly,
in setups using archiving, it makes it easier to write scripts that
can keep up with higher amounts of WAL, secondly, the WAL has to be
written and synced to disk less frequently.
But at the same time large segment size are disadvantageous for
smaller databases. So far the segment size had to be configured at
compile time, often making it unrealistic to choose one fitting to a
particularly load. Therefore change it to a initdb time setting.
This includes a breaking changes to the xlogreader.h API, which now
requires the current segment size to be configured. For that and
similar reasons a number of binaries had to be taught how to recognize
the current segment size.
Author: Beena Emerson, editorialized by Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund, David Steele, Kuntal Ghosh, Michael
Paquier, Peter Eisentraut, Robert Hass, Tushar Ahuja
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOG9ApEAcQ--1ieKbhFzXSQPw_YLmepaa4hNdnY5+ZULpt81Mw@mail.gmail.com
The plan is to convert the current pg_upgrade test to the TAP
framework. This commit just puts a basic TAP test in place so that we
can see how the build farm behaves, since the build farm client has some
special knowledge of the pg_upgrade tests.
Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
The order in which GRANTs are output is important as GRANTs which have
been GRANT'd by individuals via WITH GRANT OPTION GRANTs have to come
after the GRANT which included the WITH GRANT OPTION. This happens
naturally in the backend during normal operation as we only change
existing ACLs in-place, only add new ACLs to the end, and when removing
an ACL we remove any which depend on it also.
Also, adjust the comments in acl.h to make this clear.
Unfortunately, the updates to pg_dump to handle initial privileges
involved pulling apart ACLs and then combining them back together and
could end up putting them back together in an invalid order, leading to
dumps which wouldn't restore.
Fix this by adjusting the queries used by pg_dump to ensure that the
ACLs are rebuilt in the same order in which they were originally.
Back-patch to 9.6 where the changes for initial privileges were done.
This patch adds ERROR, SQLSTATE, and ROW_COUNT, which are updated after
every query, as well as LAST_ERROR_MESSAGE and LAST_ERROR_SQLSTATE,
which are updated only when a query fails. The expected usage of these
is for scripting.
Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Pavel Stehule
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1704042158020.12290@lancre
This is primarily useful for making tests of this utility more
deterministic, to avoid the complexity of starting pg_receivewal as a
deamon in TAP tests.
While this is less useful than the equivalent pg_recvlogical option,
users can as well use it for example to enforce WAL streaming up to a
end-of-backup position, to save only a minimal amount of WAL.
Use this new option to stream WAL data in a deterministic way within a
new set of TAP tests.
Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Not completely sure, but I think bowerbird is spitting up on attempting
to include ">" in a temporary file name. (Why in the world are we
writing this stuff into files at all? A hash would be a better answer.)
* Remove no-such-user test case, output isn't stable, and we really
don't need to be testing such cases here anyway.
* Fix the process exit code test logic to match PostgresNode::psql
(but I didn't bother with looking at the "core" flag).
* Give up on inf/nan tests.
Per buildfarm.
The encoding ID was converted between string and number too many times,
probably a remnant from the shell script days.
Reviewed-by: Aleksandr Parfenov <a.parfenov@postgrespro.ru>
* Our own version of getopt_long doesn't support abbreviation of
long options.
* It doesn't do automatic rearrangement of non-option arguments to the end,
either.
* Test was way too optimistic about the platform independence of
NaN and Infinity outputs. I rather imagine we might have to lose
those tests altogether, but for the moment just allow case variation
and fully spelled out Infinity.
Per buildfarm.
It is equivalent in ANSI C to write (*funcptr) () and funcptr(). These
two styles have been applied inconsistently. After discussion, we'll
use the more verbose style for plain function pointer variables, to make
it clear that it's a variable, and the shorter style when the function
pointer is in a struct (s.func() or s->func()), because then it's clear
that it's not a plain function name, and otherwise the excessive
punctuation makes some of those invocations hard to read.
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/f52c16db-14ed-757d-4b48-7ef360b1631d@2ndquadrant.com
Index columns are referenced by ordinal number rather than name, e.g.
CREATE INDEX coord_idx ON measured (x, y, (z + t));
ALTER INDEX coord_idx ALTER COLUMN 3 SET STATISTICS 1000;
Incompatibility note for release notes:
\d+ for indexes now also displays Stats Target
Authors: Alexander Korotkov, with contribution by Adrien NAYRAT
Review: Adrien NAYRAT, Simon Riggs
Wordsmith: Simon Riggs
This command acts somewhat like \g, but instead of executing the query
buffer, it merely prints a description of the columns that the query
result would have. (Of course, this still requires parsing the query;
if parse analysis fails, you get an error anyway.) We accomplish this
using an unnamed prepared statement, which should be invisible to psql
users.
Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Fabien Coelho
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRBhYVvO34FU=EKb=nAF5t3b++krKt1FneCmR0kuF5m-QA@mail.gmail.com
This moves the data directories from using temporary directories with
randomness in the directory name to a static name, to make it easier to
debug. The data directory will be retained if tests fail or the test
code dies/exits with failure, and is automatically removed on the next
make check.
If the environment variable PG_TEST_NOCLEAN is defined, the data
directories will be retained regardless of test or exit status.
Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
We already had a psql variable VERSION that shows the verbose form of
psql's own version. Add VERSION_NAME to show the short form (e.g.,
"11devel") and VERSION_NUM to show the numeric form (e.g., 110000).
Also add SERVER_VERSION_NAME and SERVER_VERSION_NUM to show the short and
numeric forms of the server's version. (We'd probably add SERVER_VERSION
with the verbose string if it were readily available; but adding another
network round trip to get it seems too expensive.)
The numeric forms, in particular, are expected to be useful for scripting
purposes, now that psql can do conditional tests.
Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Pavel Stehule
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1704020917220.4632@lancre
The previous format with variable names and descriptions in separate
columns was extremely constraining about the length of the descriptions.
We'd dealt with that in several inconsistent ways over the years,
including letting the lines run over 80 characters, breaking descriptions
into multiple lines, or shoving the description onto a separate line.
But it's been a long time since the output could realistically fit onto
a single screen vertically, so let's just rely even more heavily on the
pager to deal with the vertical distance, and split each entry into two
(or more) lines, in the format
variable-name
variable description goes here
Each variable name + description remains a single translatable string,
in hopes of reducing translator confusion; we're just changing the
embedded whitespace.
I failed to resist the temptation to copy-edit one or two of the
descriptions while at it.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2947.1504542679@sss.pgh.pa.us
process_backslash_command would drop the last character of the input
command on the assumption that it was a newline. Given a non newline
terminated input file, this could result in dropping the last character
of the command. Fix that by doing an actual test that we're removing
a newline.
While at it, allow for Windows newlines (\r\n), and suppress multiple
newlines if any. I do not think either of those cases really occur,
since (a) we read script files in text mode and (b) the lexer stops
when it hits a newline. But it's cheap enough and it provides a
stronger guarantee about what the result string looks like.
This is just cosmetic, I think, since the possibly-overly-chomped
line was only used for display not for further processing. So
it doesn't seem necessary to back-patch.
Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Nikolay Shaplov, whacked around a bit by me
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1704171422500.4025@lancre
With --latency-limit, transactions might get skipped even beyond the
transaction count limit specified by -t, throwing off the expected
number of transactions and thus the denominator for later stats.
Be sure to stop skipping transactions once -t is reached.
Also, include skipped transactions in the "cnt" fields; this requires
discounting them again in a couple of places, but most places are
better off with this definition. In particular this is needed to
get correct overall stats for the combination of -R/-L/-t options.
Merge some more processing into processXactStats() to simplify this.
In passing, add a check that --progress-timestamp is specified only
when --progress is.
We might consider back-patching this, but given that it only matters
for a combination of options, and given the lack of field complaints,
consensus seems to be not to bother.
Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Nikolay Shaplov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1704171422500.4025@lancre
The string "% of total" was marked by xgettext to be a c-format, but it
is actually not, so mark up the source to prevent that.
Compute the column widths of the final display dynamically based on the
translated strings, so that translations don't mess up the display
accidentally.
Remove code meant for upgrading to a particular version of PostgreSQL
9.0. Since pg_upgrade only supports upgrading to the current major
version, this code is no longer useful.
Commit 3eb9a5e7c unintentionally introduced an ordering dependency
into restore_toc_entries_prefork(). The existing coding of
reduce_dependencies() contains a check to skip moving a TOC entry
to the ready_list if it wasn't initially in the pending_list.
This used to suffice to prevent reduce_dependencies() from trying to
move anything into the ready_list during restore_toc_entries_prefork(),
because the pending_list stayed empty throughout that phase; but it no
longer does. The problem doesn't manifest unless the TOC has been
reordered by SortTocFromFile, which is how I missed it in testing.
To fix, just add a test for ready_list == NULL, converting the call
with NULL from a poor man's sanity check into an explicit command
not to touch TOC items' list membership. Clarify some of the comments
around this; in particular, note the primary purpose of the check for
pending_list membership, which is to ensure that we can't try to restore
the same item twice, in case a TOC list forces it to be restored before
its dependency count goes to zero.
Per report from Fabrízio de Royes Mello. Back-patch to 9.3, like the
previous commit.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFcNs+pjuv0JL_x4+=71TPUPjdLHOXA4YfT32myj_OrrZb4ohA@mail.gmail.com
This became possible by commit
6c2003f8a1. This just makes pg_dump aware
of it and updates the documentation.
Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
Change to appendStringInfoChar() or appendStringInfoString() where those
can be used.
Author: David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat@enterprisedb.com>
Some informational messages showed up even if verbose mode was not
used. Move them to verbose mode.
Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>