Commit Graph

40799 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Thomas Munro
f2857af485 Use unnamed POSIX semaphores on Cygwin.
Testing on CI showed that Cygwin's semctl() can fail with EAGAIN
(possibly due to resource limits in cygserver that could be tuned, not
examined).  Switch to so-called POSIX semaphores instead, which don't
seem to fail in that way (possibly due to a more direct implementation
using Windows semaphore primitives instead of talking to cygserver,
based on a cursory glance at the source).

Other known problems still prevent PostgreSQL from running on Cygwin
without random crashes, but this rarer problem was noticed while
testing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BQ6DU4Ov9LrvUyDcF3oHS4KMRVSKmVGaeePq-kOyG9gA%40mail.gmail.com
2023-01-06 10:33:28 +13:00
Robert Haas
39cffe95f2 Pass down current user ID to AddRoleMems and DelRoleMems.
This is just refactoring; there should be no functonal change. It
might have the effect of slightly reducing the number of calls to
GetUserId(), but the real point is to facilitate future work in
this area.

Patch by me, reviewed by Mark Dilger.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobFzTLkLwOquFrAcdsWBsOWDr-_H-jw+qBvfx-wSzMwDA@mail.gmail.com
2023-01-05 14:33:35 -05:00
Robert Haas
25bb03166b Refactor permissions-checking for role grants.
Instead of having checks in AddRoleMems() and DelRoleMems(), have
the callers perform checks where it's required. In some cases it
isn't, either because the caller has already performed a check for
the same condition, or because the check couldn't possibly fail.

The "Skip permission check if nothing to do" check in each of
AddRoleMems() and DelRoleMems() is pointless. Some call sites
can't pass an empty list. Others can, but in those cases, the role
being modified is one that the current user has just created.
Therefore, they must have permission to modify it, and so no
permission check is required at all.

This patch is intended to have no user-visible consequences. It is
intended to simplify future work in this area.

Patch by me, reviewed by Mark Dilger.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobFzTLkLwOquFrAcdsWBsOWDr-_H-jw+qBvfx-wSzMwDA@mail.gmail.com
2023-01-05 14:30:40 -05:00
Tom Lane
3f7836ff65 Fix calculation of which GENERATED columns need to be updated.
We were identifying the updatable generated columns of inheritance
children by transposing the calculation made for their parent.
However, there's nothing that says a traditional-inheritance child
can't have generated columns that aren't there in its parent, or that
have different dependencies than are in the parent's expression.
(At present it seems that we don't enforce that for partitioning
either, which is likely wrong to some degree or other; but the case
clearly needs to be handled with traditional inheritance.)

Hence, drop the very-klugy-anyway "extraUpdatedCols" RTE field
in favor of identifying which generated columns depend on updated
columns during executor startup.  In HEAD we can remove
extraUpdatedCols altogether; in back branches, it's still there but
always empty.  Another difference between the HEAD and back-branch
versions of this patch is that in HEAD we can add the new bitmap field
to ResultRelInfo, but that would cause an ABI break in back branches.
Like 4b3e37993, add a List field at the end of struct EState instead.

Back-patch to v13.  The bogus calculation is also being made in v12,
but it doesn't have the same visible effect because we don't use it
to decide which generated columns to recalculate; as a consequence of
which the patch doesn't apply easily.  I think that there might still
be a demonstrable bug associated with trigger firing conditions, but
that's such a weird corner-case usage that I'm content to leave it
unfixed in v12.

Amit Langote and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqFshLKNvQUd1DgwJ-7tsTp=dwv7KZqXC4j2wYBV1aCDUA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2793383.1672944799@sss.pgh.pa.us
2023-01-05 14:12:17 -05:00
Alexander Korotkov
529da086ba Remove extra regress check arguments from test_pg_db_role_setting
They were accidentally copied from test_oat_hooks.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20230102154240.GL1153%40telsasoft.com
Reviewed-by: Pavel Borisov
2023-01-05 13:11:40 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov
afdd9f7f0e meson: Add 'running' test setup, as a replacement for installcheck
Do the same as 3f0e786ccb for test_pg_db_role_setting.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221227065456.GU1153@telsasoft.com
Author: Pavel Borisov
Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby, Tom Lane
2023-01-05 13:11:28 +03:00
David Rowley
b82557ecc2 Fix some compiler warnings in aset.c and generation.c
This fixes a couple of unused variable warnings that could be seen when
compiling with MEMORY_CONTEXT_CHECKING but not USE_ASSERT_CHECKING.
Defining MEMORY_CONTEXT_CHECKING without asserts is a little unusual,
however, we shouldn't be producing any warnings from such a build.

Author: Richard Guo
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4_D-vgLEh7eO47p=73u1jWO78NWf6Qfv1FndY1kG-Q-jA@mail.gmail.com
2023-01-05 12:56:17 +13:00
Peter Geoghegan
eb5ad4ff05 Check that xmax didn't commit in freeze check.
We cannot rely on TransactionIdDidAbort here, since in general it may
report transactions that were in-progress at the time of an earlier hard
crash as not aborted, effectively behaving as if they were still in
progress even after crash recovery completes.  Go back to defensively
verifying that xmax didn't commit instead.

Oversight in commit 79d4bf4e.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reported-By: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20230104035636.hy5djyr2as4gbc4q@awork3.anarazel.de
2023-01-03 21:48:27 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan
5212d447fa Update obsolete multixact.c comments.
Commit 4f627f89 switched SLRU truncation for multixacts back to being a
task performed during VACUUM, but missed some comments that continued to
reference truncation happening as part of checkpointing.  Update those
comments now.

Also update comments that became obsolete when commit c3ffa731 changed
the way that vacuum_multixact_freeze_min_age is applied by VACUUM as it
computes its MultiXactCutoff cutoff (which is used by VACUUM to decide
what to freeze).  Explain the same issues by referencing how OldestMxact
is the latest valid value that relminmxid can ever be advanced to at the
end of a VACUUM (following the work in commit 0b018fab).
2023-01-03 16:54:35 -08:00
Tom Lane
5f53b42cfd During pg_dump startup, acquire table locks in batches.
Combine multiple LOCK TABLE commands to reduce the number of
round trips to the server.  This is particularly helpful when
dumping from a remote server, but it seems useful even without
that.  In particular, shortening the time from seeing a table
in pg_class to acquiring lock on it reduces the window for
trouble from concurrent DDL.

Aleksander Alekseev, reviewed by Fabrízio de Royes Mello,
Gilles Darold, and Andres Freund

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ7c6TO4z1+OBa-R+fC8FnaUgbEWJUf2Kq=nRngTW5EXtKru2g@mail.gmail.com
2023-01-03 17:56:44 -05:00
David Rowley
b23837dde4 Fix typo in memutils_memorychunk.h
Author: Richard Guo
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs483CYjHoLH32_hd3Yq1NJfravNdL2zy7+e7pwvFPJF1RQ@mail.gmail.com
2023-01-04 09:23:19 +13:00
Peter Geoghegan
54afdcd618 vacuumlazy.c: Save get_database_name() in vacrel.
This brings dbname strings in line with namespace and relation name
strings.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkQ1TKU-DdNvnGeL870di3+CU1UTo-7nw7xFDpVE-XGjA@mail.gmail.com
2023-01-03 11:48:47 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan
79d4bf4eff Delay commit status checks until freezing executes.
pg_xact lookups are relatively expensive.  Move the xmin/xmax commit
status checks from the point that freeze plans are prepared to the point
that they're actually executed.  Otherwise we'll repeat many commit
status checks whenever multiple successive VACUUM operations scan the
same pages and decide against freezing each time, which is a waste of
cycles.

Oversight in commit 1de58df4, which added page-level freezing.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkZpe4K6qMfEt8H4qYJCKc2R7TPvKsBva7jc9w7iGXQSw@mail.gmail.com
2023-01-03 11:22:36 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan
b37a083239 Refine the definition of page-level freezing.
Improve comments added by commit 1de58df4 which describe the
lazy_scan_prune "freeze the page" path.  These newly revised comments
are based on suggestions from Jeff Davis.

In passing, remove nearby visibility_cutoff_xid comments left over from
commit 6daeeb1f.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Jeff Davis <pgsql@j-davis.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ebc857107fe3edd422ef8a65191ca4a8da568b9b.camel@j-davis.com
2023-01-03 10:08:55 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut
bf03cfd162 Windows support in pg_import_system_collations
Windows can enumerate the locales that are either installed or
supported by calling EnumSystemLocalesEx(), similar to what is already
done in the READ_LOCALE_A_OUTPUT switch.  We can refactor some of the
logic already used in that switch into a new function
create_collation_from_locale().

The enumerated locales have BCP 47 shape, that is with a hyphen
between language and territory, instead of POSIX's underscore.  The
created collations will retain the BCP 47 shape, but we will also
create a POSIX alias, so xx-YY will have an xx_YY alias.

A new test collate.windows.win1252 is added that is like
collate.linux.utf8.

Author: Juan Jose Santamaria Flecha <juanjo.santamaria@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Koval <d.koval@postgrespro.ru>
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/0050ec23-34d9-2765-9015-98c04f0e18ac@postgrespro.ru
2023-01-03 14:21:56 +01:00
Michael Paquier
33ab0a2a52 Fix typos in comments, code and documentation
While on it, newlines are removed from the end of two elog() strings.
The others are simple grammar mistakes.  One comment in pg_upgrade
referred incorrectly to sequences since a7e5457.

Author: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221230231257.GI1153@telsasoft.com
Backpatch-through: 11
2023-01-03 16:26:14 +09:00
Tom Lane
92957ed98c Avoid reference to nonexistent array element in ExecInitAgg().
When considering an empty grouping set, we fetched
phasedata->eqfunctions[-1].  Because the eqfunctions array is
palloc'd, that would always be an aset pointer in released versions,
and thus the code accidentally failed to malfunction (since it would
do nothing unless it found a null pointer).  Nonetheless this seems
like trouble waiting to happen, so add a check for length == 0.

It's depressing that our valgrind testing did not catch this.
Maybe we should reconsider the choice to not mark that word NOACCESS?

Richard Guo

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4-vZuuPOZsKOYnSAaPYGKhmacxhki+vpOKk0O7rymccXQ@mail.gmail.com
2023-01-02 16:17:00 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
c8e1ba736b Update copyright for 2023
Backpatch-through: 11
2023-01-02 15:00:37 -05:00
Peter Geoghegan
325bc54eed Adjust VACUUM hastup LP_REDIRECT comments.
The term "truncation" has been ambiguous since commit 10a8d13823 added
line pointer array truncation during heap pruning.  Clear things up by
specifying that we're talking about rel truncation here, to match nearby
comments that apply to tuples with storage.
2023-01-02 10:18:22 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan
6daeeb1f91 Avoid special XID snapshotConflictHorizon values.
Don't allow VACUUM to WAL-log the value FrozenTransactionId as the
snapshotConflictHorizon of freezing or visibility map related WAL
records.

The only special XID value that's an allowable snapshotConflictHorizon
is InvalidTransactionId, which is interpreted as "record definitely
doesn't require a recovery conflict".

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WznuNGSzF8v6OsgjaC5aYsb3cZ6HW6MLm30X0d65cmSH6A@mail.gmail.com
2023-01-02 10:16:51 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut
e351f85418 Push lpp variable closer to usage in heapgetpage()
Author: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAAKRu_YSOnhKsDyFcqJsKtBSrd32DP-jjXmv7hL0BPD-z0TGXQ@mail.gmail.com
2023-01-02 09:39:31 +01:00
Tom Lane
2ceea5adb0 Accept "+infinity" in date and timestamp[tz] input.
The float and numeric types accept this variant spelling of
"infinity", so it seems like the datetime types should too.

Vik Fearing, some cosmetic mods by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d0bef637-2dbd-0a5d-e539-48243b6f6c5e@postgresfriends.org
2023-01-01 14:16:07 -05:00
Tom Lane
d747dc85ae In plpgsql, don't preassign portal names to bound cursor variables.
A refcursor variable that is bound to a specific query (by declaring
it with "CURSOR FOR") now chooses a portal name in the same way as an
unbound, plain refcursor variable.  Its string value starts out as
NULL, and unless that's overridden by manual assignment, it will be
replaced by a unique-within-session portal name during OPEN.

The previous behavior was to initialize such variables to contain
their own name, resulting in that also being the portal name unless
the user overwrote it before OPEN.  The trouble with this is that
it causes failures due to conflicting portal names if the same
cursor variable name is used in different functions.  It is pretty
non-orthogonal to have bound and unbound refcursor variables behave
differently on this point, too, so let's change it.

This change can cause compatibility problems for applications that
open a bound cursor in a plpgsql function and then use it in the
calling code without explicitly passing back the refcursor value
(portal name).  If the calling code simply assumes that the portal
name matches the called function's variable name, it will now fail.
That can be fixed by explicitly assigning a string value to the
refcursor variable before OPEN, e.g.

    DECLARE myc CURSOR FOR SELECT ...;
    BEGIN
      myc := 'myc';  -- add this
      OPEN myc;

We have no documentation examples showing the troublesome usage
pattern, so we can hope it's rare in practice.

Patch by me; thanks to Pavel Stehule and Jan Wieck for review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1465101.1667345983@sss.pgh.pa.us
2023-01-01 13:22:34 -05:00
Thomas Munro
14d63dd252 ci: Change macOS builds from Intel to ARM.
Cirrus is about to shut down its macOS-on-Intel support, so it's time to
move our CI testing over to ARM instances.  The Homebrew package manager
changed its default installation prefix for the new architecture, so a
couple of tests need tweaks to find binaries.

Back-patch to 15, where in-tree CI began.

Author: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221122225744.GF11463%40telsasoft.com
2023-01-01 10:45:18 +13:00
Tomas Vondra
02699bc1fd Fix assert in BRIN build_distances
When brin_minmax_multi_union merges summaries, we may end up with just a
single range after merge_overlapping_ranges. The summaries may contain
just one range each, and they may overlap (or be exactly the same).

With a single range there's no distance to calculate, but we happen to
call build_distances anyway - which is fine, we don't calculate the
distance in this case, except that with asserts this failed due to a
check there are at least two ranges.

The assert is unnecessarily strict, so relax it a bit and bail out if
there's just a single range. The relaxed assert would be enough, but
this way we don't allocate unnecessary memory for distance.

Backpatch to 14, where minmax-multi opclasses were introduced.

Reported-by: Jaime Casanova
Backpatch-through: 14
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/YzVA55qS0hgz8P3r@ahch-to
2022-12-30 20:49:50 +01:00
Michael Paquier
7aa81c61ec Fix precision handling for some COERCE_SQL_SYNTAX functions
f193883 has been incorrectly setting up the precision used in the
timestamp compilations returned by the following functions:
- LOCALTIME
- LOCALTIMESTAMP
- CURRENT_TIME
- CURRENT_TIMESTAMP

Specifying an out-of-range precision for CURRENT_TIMESTAMP and
LOCALTIMESTAMP was raising a WARNING without adjusting the precision,
leading to a subsequent error.  LOCALTIME and CURRENT_TIME raised a
WARNING without an error, still the precision given to the internal
routines was not correct, so let's be clean.

Ian has reported the problems in timestamp.c, while I have noticed the
ones in date.c.  Regression tests are added for all of them with
precisions high enough to provide coverage for the warnings, something
that went missing up to this commit.

Author: Ian Lawrence Barwick, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB8KJ=jQEnn9sYG+N752spt68wMrhmT-ocHCh4oeNmHF82QMWA@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-30 20:47:57 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
1f605b82ba Change argument of appendBinaryStringInfo from char * to void *
There is some code that uses this function to assemble some kind of
packed binary layout, which requires a bunch of casts because of this.
Functions taking binary data plus length should take void * instead,
like memcpy() for example.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/a0086cfc-ff0f-2827-20fe-52b591d2666c%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-30 11:05:09 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
33a33f0ba4 Use appendStringInfoString instead of appendBinaryStringInfo where possible
For the jsonpath output, we don't need to squeeze out every bit of
performance, so instead use a more robust coding style.  There are
similar calls in jsonb.c, which we leave alone here since there is
indeed a performance impact for bulk exports.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/a0086cfc-ff0f-2827-20fe-52b591d2666c%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-30 11:05:09 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
faf3750657 Add const to BufFileWrite
Make data buffer argument to BufFileWrite a const pointer and bubble
this up to various callers and related APIs.  This makes the APIs
clearer and more consistent.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/11dda853-bb5b-59ba-a746-e168b1ce4bdb%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-30 10:12:24 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
5f2f99c9c6 Remove unnecessary casts
Some code carefully cast all data buffer arguments for data write and
read function calls to void *, even though the respective arguments
are already void *.  Remove this unnecessary clutter.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/11dda853-bb5b-59ba-a746-e168b1ce4bdb%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-30 10:12:24 +01:00
Andres Freund
388e80132c perl: Hide warnings inside perl.h when using gcc compatible compiler
New versions of perl trigger warnings within perl.h with our compiler
flags. At least -Wdeclaration-after-statement, -Wshadow=compatible-local are
known to be problematic.

To avoid these warnings, conditionally use #pragma GCC system_header before
including plperl.h.

Alternatively, we could add the include paths for problematic headers with
-isystem, but that is a larger hammer and is harder to search for.

A more granular alternative would be to use #pragma GCC diagnostic
push/ignored/pop, but gcc warns about unknown warnings being ignored, so every
to-be-ignored-temporarily compiler warning would require its own pg_config.h
symbol and #ifdef.

As the warnings are voluminous, it makes sense to backpatch this change. But
don't do so yet, we first want gather buildfarm coverage - it's e.g. possible
that some compiler claiming to be gcc compatible has issues with the pragma.

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221228182455.hfdwd22zztvkojy2@awork3.anarazel.de
2022-12-29 12:47:29 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan
1de58df4fe Add page-level freezing to VACUUM.
Teach VACUUM to decide on whether or not to trigger freezing at the
level of whole heap pages.  Individual XIDs and MXIDs fields from tuple
headers now trigger freezing of whole pages, rather than independently
triggering freezing of each individual tuple header field.

Managing the cost of freezing over time now significantly influences
when and how VACUUM freezes.  The overall amount of WAL written is the
single most important freezing related cost, in general.  Freezing each
page's tuples together in batch allows VACUUM to take full advantage of
the freeze plan WAL deduplication optimization added by commit 9e540599.

Also teach VACUUM to trigger page-level freezing whenever it detects
that heap pruning generated an FPI.  We'll have already written a large
amount of WAL just to do that much, so it's very likely a good idea to
get freezing out of the way for the page early.  This only happens in
cases where it will directly lead to marking the page all-frozen in the
visibility map.

In most cases "freezing a page" removes all XIDs < OldestXmin, and all
MXIDs < OldestMxact.  It doesn't quite work that way in certain rare
cases involving MultiXacts, though.  It is convenient to define "freeze
the page" in a way that gives FreezeMultiXactId the leeway to put off
the work of processing an individual tuple's xmax whenever it happens to
be a MultiXactId that would require an expensive second pass to process
aggressively (allocating a new multi is especially worth avoiding here).
FreezeMultiXactId is eager when processing is cheap (as it usually is),
and lazy in the event of an individual multi that happens to require
expensive second pass processing.  This avoids regressions related to
processing of multis that page-level freezing might otherwise cause.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Jeff Davis <pgsql@j-davis.com>
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkFok_6EAHuK39GaW4FjEFQsY=3J0AAd6FXk93u-Xq3Fg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-28 08:50:47 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut
24b55cd949 Reorder some object files in makefiles
This restores some once-intended alphabetical orders and makes the
lists consistent between the different build systems.
2022-12-28 15:10:27 +01:00
Tom Lane
adb5c32eb5 Suppress uninitialized-variable warning from a61b1f748.
Some compilers complain about sub_rteperminfos not being
initialized, evidently because they don't detect that it
is only used and set if isGeneralSelect is true.
Make it follow the long-established pattern for its
sibling variable sub_rtable.

Per reports from Pavel Stehule and the buildfarm.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRDOvGOi-n616kM0Cc7qSbg_nGoS=-haB+D785sUXADqSg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-27 18:07:48 -05:00
Tom Lane
a5434c5258 Remove new locale dependency in regproc regression test.
The modified error message for regcollationin failure includes
the database encoding, which it should've occurred to me is a
portability hazard for the regression tests.  Adjust the test
so the expected output doesn't include that.

In passing, fix a comment typo introduced in b8c0ffbd2.

Per buildfarm.
2022-12-27 13:06:42 -05:00
Tom Lane
3ea7329c9a Simplify the implementations of the to_reg* functions.
Given the soft-input-error feature, we can reduce these functions
to be just thin wrappers around a soft-error call of the
corresponding datatype input function.  This means less code and
more certainty that the to_reg* functions match the normal input
behavior.

Notably, it also means that they will accept numeric OID input,
which they didn't before.  It's not clear to me if that omission
had more than laziness behind it, but it doesn't seem like
something we need to work hard to preserve.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3910031.1672095600@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-27 12:33:04 -05:00
Tom Lane
858e776c84 Convert the reg* input functions to report (most) errors softly.
This is not really complete, but it catches most cases of practical
interest.  The main omissions are:

* regtype, regprocedure, and regoperator parse type names by
calling the main grammar, so any grammar-detected syntax error
will still be a hard error.  Also, if one includes a type
modifier in such a type specification, errors detected by the
typmodin function will be hard errors.

* Lookup errors are handled just by passing missing_ok = true
to the relevant catalog lookup function.  Because we've used
quite a restrictive definition of "missing_ok", this means that
edge cases such as "the named schema exists, but you lack
USAGE permission on it" are still hard errors.

It would make sense to me to replace most/all missing_ok
parameters with an escontext parameter and then allow these
additional lookup failure cases to be trapped too.  But that's
a job for some other day.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3342239.1671988406@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-27 12:26:01 -05:00
Tom Lane
78212f2101 Convert tsqueryin and tsvectorin to report errors softly.
This is slightly tedious because the adjustments cascade through
a couple of levels of subroutines, but it's not very hard.
I chose to avoid changing function signatures more than absolutely
necessary, by passing the escontext pointer in existing structs
where possible.

tsquery's nuisance NOTICEs about empty queries are suppressed in
soft-error mode, since they're not errors and we surely don't want
them to be shown to the user anyway.  Maybe that whole behavior
should be reconsidered.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3824377.1672076822@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-27 12:00:31 -05:00
Tom Lane
eb8312a22a Detect bad input for types xid, xid8, and cid.
Historically these input functions just called strtoul or strtoull
and returned the result, with no error detection whatever.  Upgrade
them to reject garbage input and out-of-range values, similarly to
our other numeric input routines.

To share the code for this with type oid, adjust the existing
"oidin_subr" to be agnostic about the SQL name of the type it is
handling, and move it to numutils.c; then clone it for 64-bit types.

Because the xid types previously accepted hex and octal input by
reason of calling strtoul[l] with third argument zero, I made the
common subroutine do that too, with the consequence that type oid
now also accepts hex and octal input.  In view of 6fcda9aba, that
seems like a good thing.

While at it, simplify the existing over-complicated handling of
syntax errors from strtoul: we only need one ereturn not three.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3526121.1672000729@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-27 11:40:01 -05:00
Peter Geoghegan
63c844a0a5 Remove overzealous MultiXact freeze assertion.
When VACUUM determines that an existing MultiXact should use a freeze
plan that sets xmax to InvalidTransactionId, the original Multi may or
may not be before OldestMxact.  Remove an incorrect assertion that
expected it to always be from before OldestMxact.

Oversight in commit 4ce3af.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reported-By: Hayato Kuroda <kuroda.hayato@fujitsu.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TYAPR01MB5866B24104FD80B5D7E65C3EF5ED9@TYAPR01MB5866.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
2022-12-26 23:36:02 -08:00
Michael Paquier
9814ff5500 Add custom filtering rules to the TAP tests of pg_upgrade
002_pg_upgrade.pl gains support for a new environment variable called
"filter_rules", that can be used to point to a file that includes a
set of custom regular expressions that would be applied to the dumps of
the origin and target clusters when doing a cross-version test (aka when
defining olddump and oldinstall), to give the possibility to reshape
dynamically the dumps in the same way as the internals of the buildfarm
code so as the tests are able to pass in scenarios where one expects
them to even if pg_dump generates slightly-different outputs depending
on the versions involved.

This option is not used when pg_upgrade runs with the same version for
the origin and target clusters, and it is the last piece I see as
required to be able to plug-in more efficiently the TAP tests of
pg_upgrade with the buildfarm or just a CI.

Author: Anton A. Melnikov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/49f389ba-95ce-8a9b-09ae-f60650c0e7c7@inbox.ru
2022-12-27 14:35:56 +09:00
Michael Paquier
2259c661dc Fix incorrect copy-pasto in error message of pg_waldump.c
The error message used on fclose() failure was incorrect, so fix it.
Oversight in d497093, that I have somehow managed to miss.
2022-12-27 12:16:24 +09:00
Michael Paquier
d497093cbe pg_waldump: Add --save-fullpage=PATH to save full page images from WAL records
This option extracts (potentially decompressing) full-page images
included in WAL records into a given target directory.  These images are
subject to the same filtering rules as the normal display of the WAL
records, hence with --relation one can for example extract only the FPIs
issued on the relation defined.  By default, the records are printed or
their stats computed (--stats), using --quiet would only save the images
without any output generated.

This is a tool aimed mostly for very experienced users, useful for
fixing page-level corruption or just analyzing the past state of a page,
and there were no easy way to do that with the in-core tools up to now
when looking at WAL.

Each block is saved in a separate file, to ease their manipulation, with
the file respecting <lsn>.<ts>.<db>.<rel>.<blk>_<fork> with as format.

For instance, 00000000-010000C0.1663.1.6117.123_main refers to:
- WAL record LSN in hexa format (00000000-010000C0).
- Tablespace OID (1663).
- Database OID (1).
- Relfilenode (6117).
- Block number (123).
- Fork name of the file this block came from (_main).

Author: David Christensen
Reviewed-by: Sho Kato, Justin Pryzby, Bharath Rupireddy, Matthias van de
Meent
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOxo6XKjQb2bMSBRpePf3ZpzfNTwjQUc4Tafh21=jzjX6bX8CA@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-27 08:27:53 +09:00
Amit Kapila
5de94a041e Add 'logical_decoding_mode' GUC.
This enables streaming or serializing changes immediately in logical
decoding. This parameter is intended to be used to test logical decoding
and replication of large transactions for which otherwise we need to
generate the changes till logical_decoding_work_mem is reached.

This helps in reducing the timing of existing tests related to logical
replication of in-progress transactions and will help in writing tests for
for the upcoming feature for parallelly applying large in-progress
transactions.

Author: Shi yu
Reviewed-by: Sawada Masahiko, Shveta Mallik, Amit Kapila, Dilip Kumar, Kuroda Hayato, Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/OSZPR01MB63104E7449DBE41932DB19F1FD1B9@OSZPR01MB6310.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
2022-12-26 08:58:16 +05:30
Michael Paquier
d3c0cc4447 Switch query fixing aclitems in ~15 from O(N^2) to O(N) in upgrade_adapt.sql
f4f2f2b was doing a sequential scan of pg_class before checking if a
relation had attributes dependent on aclitem as data typewhen building
the set of ALTER TABLE queries, but it would be costly on a regression
database.

While on it, make the query style more consistent with the rest.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221223032724.GQ1153@telsasoft.com
2022-12-26 08:00:55 +09:00
Tom Lane
442e25d248 Convert enum_in() to report errors softly.
I missed this in my initial survey, probably because I examined
the contents of pg_type in the postgres database, which lacks
any enumerated types.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b97KeDWUdpTKGOaFYPv0OicjOu6EW+QYWj-Ywrgj_aEy1g@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-25 14:32:30 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
e37fe1db6e Convert jsonpath's input function to report errors softly
Reviewed by Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a8dc5700-c341-3ba8-0507-cc09881e6200@dunslane.net
2022-12-24 15:21:20 -05:00
Tom Lane
780ec9f1b2 Make the numeric-OID cases of regprocin and friends be non-throwing.
While at it, use a common subroutine already.

This doesn't move the needle very far in terms of making these
functions non-throwing; the only case we're now able to trap is
numeric-OID-is-out-of-range.  Still, it seems like a pretty
non-controversial step in that direction.
2022-12-24 15:01:21 -05:00
David Rowley
b5aff92557 Fix recent accidental omission in pg_proc.dat
ed1a88dda added support functions for the ntile(), percent_rank() and
cume_dist() window functions but neglected to actually add these support
functions to the pg_proc entry for the corresponding window function.

Also, take this opportunity to add these window functions to one of the
regression tests added in ed1a88dda to give the support functions a little
bit of exercise.  If I'd done that in the first place then the omission
would have been more obvious.

Bump the catversion, again.
2022-12-24 13:18:35 +13:00
Alvaro Herrera
6602599ce2
Fix end LSN determination in recently added test
The test added in commit e44dae07f9 has a thinko: it wants to read
info about a few WAL records, but it obtains the LSN of the final record
to read by asking for the WAL insert position; however,
pg_get_wal_records_info only accepts to read up to the flush position
(cf. IsFutureLSN()).  In normal conditions there is no difference, since
the last record written by the preceding loop is known flushed and it's
the one the test wants; but it's possible to have some other process
insert another WAL record that isn't flushed, and that causes the whole
test to explode.

Fix by having pg_get_wal_records_info() read only up to the flushed
position.  Backpatch to 15, which is where pg_walinspect appeared.

Author: Karina Litskevich <litskevichkarina@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a5559c95-52c3-5eea-cd63-9b4f1c70ff96@gmail.com
2022-12-23 17:27:05 +01:00
David Rowley
bbfdf7180d Fix bug in translate_col_privs_multilevel
Fix incorrect code which was trying to convert a Bitmapset of columns at
the attnums according to a parent table and transform them into the
equivalent Bitmapset with same attnums according to the given child table.
This code is new as of a61b1f748 and was failing to do the correct
translation when there was an intermediate parent table between 'rel' and
'top_parent_rel'.

Reported-by: Ranier Vilela
Author: Richard Guo, Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEudQArohfB_Gy%2BhcH2-bANUkxgjJiP%3DABq01_LgTNTbcNijag%40mail.gmail.com
2022-12-24 00:58:34 +13:00
Thomas Munro
b5d0f8ec01 Allow parent's WaitEventSets to be freed after fork().
An epoll fd belonging to the parent should be closed in the child.  A
kqueue fd is automatically closed by fork(), but we should still adjust
our counter.  For poll and Windows systems, nothing special is required.
On all systems we free the memory.

No caller yet, but we'll need this if we start using WaitEventSet in the
postmaster as planned.

Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BZ-HpOj1JsO9eWUP%2Bar7npSVinsC_npxSy%2BjdOMsx%3DGg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-12-23 20:34:03 +13:00
Thomas Munro
1f0019de2f Don't leak a signalfd when using latches in the postmaster.
At the time of commit 6a2a70a02 we didn't use latch infrastructure in
the postmaster.  We're planning to start doing that, so we'd better make
sure that the signalfd inherited from a postmaster is not duplicated and
then leaked in the child.

Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BZ-HpOj1JsO9eWUP%2Bar7npSVinsC_npxSy%2BjdOMsx%3DGg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-12-23 20:24:41 +13:00
Thomas Munro
30829e52ff Add WL_SOCKET_ACCEPT event to WaitEventSet API.
To be able to handle incoming connections on a server socket with
the WaitEventSet API, we'll need a new kind of event to indicate that
the the socket is ready to accept a connection.

On Unix, it's just the same as WL_SOCKET_READABLE, but on Windows there
is a different underlying kernel event that we need to map our
abstraction to.

No user yet, but a proposed patch would use this.

Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BZ-HpOj1JsO9eWUP%2Bar7npSVinsC_npxSy%2BjdOMsx%3DGg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-12-23 20:21:47 +13:00
Michael Paquier
f4f2f2b84a Update upgrade_adapt.sql to handle tables using aclitem as data type
The regression test suite includes a table called "tab_core_types" that
has one attribute based on the type "aclitem".  Keeping this attribute
as-is causes hard failures when running pg_upgrade with an origin on
~15.  This commit updates upgrade_adapt.sql to automatically detect the
tables with such attributes and switch them to text so as pg_upgrade
is able to go through its run.

This does not provide the same detection coverage as pg_upgrade, where
we are able to find out aclitems used in arrays, domains or even
composite types, but this is (I guess) enough for most things like an
instance that had installcheck run on before the upgrade with a dump
generated from it.

Note that the buildfarm code has taken the simplest approach of just
dropping "tab_core_types", so what we have here is more modular.

Author: Anton A. Melnikov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/49f389ba-95ce-8a9b-09ae-f60650c0e7c7@inbox.ru
2022-12-23 11:36:57 +09:00
Michael Paquier
3022cb1433 Fix some incorrectness in upgrade_adapt.sql on query for WITH OIDS
The query used to disable WITH OIDS in all the relations making use of
it was checking for materialized views, but this is not a supported
operation.  On the contrary, this needs to be done on foreign tables.

While on it, use quote_ident() in the ALTER TABLE strings built on the
relation name.

Author: Anton A. Melnikov, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/49f389ba-95ce-8a9b-09ae-f60650c0e7c7@inbox.ru
Backpatch-through: 12
2022-12-23 11:26:49 +09:00
Michael Paquier
2fcf685f6d Fix come incorrect elog() messages in aclchk.c
Three error strings used with cache lookup failures were referring to
incorrect object types for ACL checks:
- Schemas
- Types
- Foreign Servers
There errors should never be triggered, but if they do incorrect
information would be reported.

Author: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221222153041.GN1153@telsasoft.com
Backpatch-through: 11
2022-12-23 10:04:18 +09:00
Michael Paquier
13e0d7a603 Rename pg_dissect_walfile_name() to pg_split_walfile_name()
The former name was discussed as being confusing, so use "split", as per
a suggestion from Magnus Hagander.

While on it, one of the output arguments is renamed from "segno" to
"segment_number", as per a suggestion from Kyotaro Horiguchi.

The documentation is updated to reflect all these changes.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABUevEytQVaOOhGdoh0D7hGwe3fuKcRF6NthsSW7ww04EmtFgQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-23 09:15:01 +09:00
David Rowley
ed1a88ddac Allow window functions to adjust their frameOptions
WindowFuncs such as row_number() don't care if it's called with ROWS
UNBOUNDED PRECEDING AND CURRENT ROW or with RANGE UNBOUNDED PRECEDING AND
CURRENT ROW.  The latter is less efficient as the RANGE option requires
that the executor check for peer rows, so using the ROW option instead
would cause less overhead.  Because RANGE is part of the default frame
options for WindowClauses, it means WindowAgg is, by default, working much
harder than it needs to for window functions where the ROWS / RANGE option
has no effect on the window function's result.

On a test query from the discussion thread, a performance improvement of
344% was seen by using ROWS instead of RANGE.

Here we add a new support function node type to allow support functions to
be called for window functions so that the most optimal version of the
frame options can be set.  The planner has been adjusted so that the frame
options are changed only if all window functions sharing the same window
clause agree on what the optimized frame options are.

Here we give the ability for row_number(), rank(), dense_rank(),
percent_rank(), cume_dist() and ntile() to alter their WindowClause's
frameOptions.

Reviewed-by: Vik Fearing, Erwin Brandstetter, Zhihong Yu
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGHENJ7LBBszxS+SkWWFVnBmOT2oVsBhDMB1DFrgerCeYa_DyA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvohAKEtTXxq7Pc-ic2dKT8oZfbRKeEJP64M0B6+S88z+A@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-23 12:43:52 +13:00
Thomas Munro
cc15059634 Improve notation of cacheinfo table in syscache.c.
Use C99 designated initializer syntax for the array elements, instead of
writing the enumerator name and position in a comment.  Replace nkeys
and key with a local variadic macro, for a shorter notation.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGKdpDjKL2jgC-GpoL4DGZU1YPqnOFHbDqFkfRQcPaR5DQ%40mail.gmail.com
2022-12-23 10:40:18 +13:00
Peter Geoghegan
07eef53955 Use scanned_pages to decide when to failsafe check.
Perform a failsafe check every time VACUUM's first heap scan scans a
further FAILSAFE_EVERY_PAGES pages, rather than using an approach based
on the number of physical blocks that our current blkno is from the
blkno at the time of the previous failsafe check.  That way VACUUM will
perform a failsafe check every time it has scanned a uniform number of
pages, without it mattering when or how VACUUM skipped pages using the
visibility map.

Sami Imseih, with changes to FAILSAFE_EVERY_PAGES comments added by me.

Author: Sami Imseih <simseih@amazon.com>
Reviewed-By: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/401CE010-4049-4B94-9961-0B610A5D254D%40amazon.com
2022-12-22 10:41:40 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan
4ce3afb82e Refactor how VACUUM passes around its XID cutoffs.
Use a dedicated struct for the XID/MXID cutoffs used by VACUUM, such as
FreezeLimit and OldestXmin.  This state is initialized in vacuum.c, and
then passed around by code from vacuumlazy.c to heapam.c freezing
related routines.  The new convention is that everybody works off of the
same cutoff state, which is passed around via pointers to const.

Also simplify some of the logic for dealing with frozen xmin in
heap_prepare_freeze_tuple: add dedicated "xmin_already_frozen" state to
clearly distinguish xmin XIDs that we're going to freeze from those that
were already frozen from before.  That way the routine's xmin handling
code is symmetrical with the existing xmax handling code.  This is
preparation for an upcoming commit that will add page level freezing.

Also refactor the control flow within FreezeMultiXactId(), while adding
stricter sanity checks.  We now test OldestXmin directly, instead of
using FreezeLimit as an inexact proxy for OldestXmin.  This is further
preparation for the page level freezing work, which will make the
function's caller cede control of page level freezing to the function
where appropriate (where heap_prepare_freeze_tuple sees a tuple that
happens to contain a MultiXactId in its xmax).

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Jeff Davis <pgsql@j-davis.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WznS9TxXmz2_=SY+SyJyDFbiOftKofM9=aDo68BbXNBUMA@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-22 09:37:59 -08:00
Tom Lane
e42e312430 Avoid O(N^2) cost when pulling up lots of UNION ALL subqueries.
perform_pullup_replace_vars() knows how to scan the whole parent
query tree when we are replacing Vars during a subquery flattening
operation.  However, for the specific case of flattening a
UNION ALL leaf query, that's mostly wasted work: the only place
where relevant Vars could exist is in the AppendRelInfo that we
just made for this leaf.  Teaching perform_pullup_replace_vars()
to just deal with that and exit is worthwhile because, if we have
N such subqueries to pull up, we were spending O(N^2) work uselessly
mutating the AppendRelInfos for all the other subqueries.

While we're at it, avoid calling substitute_phv_relids if there are no
PlaceHolderVars, and remove an obsolete check of parse->hasSubLinks.

Andrey Lepikhov and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/703c09a2-08f3-d2ec-b33d-dbecd62428b8@postgrespro.ru
2022-12-22 11:02:03 -05:00
Tom Lane
5beb7881fb Add some recursion and looping defenses in prepjointree.c.
Andrey Lepikhov demonstrated a case where we spend an unreasonable
amount of time in pull_up_subqueries().  Not only is that recursing
with no explicit check for stack overrun, but the code seems not
interruptable by control-C.  Let's stick a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS
there, along with sprinkling some stack depth checks.

An actual fix for the excessive time consumption seems a bit
risky to back-patch; but this isn't, so let's do so.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/703c09a2-08f3-d2ec-b33d-dbecd62428b8@postgrespro.ru
2022-12-22 10:35:02 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
73bb72f0ca Remove dead code
The second appearance of NamespaceRelationId in this if-else chain is
in error and can be removed.
2022-12-22 08:12:41 +01:00
Thomas Munro
3f28bd7337 Add work-around for VA_ARGS_NARGS() on MSVC.
The previous coding of VA_ARGS_NARGS() always returned 1 on Visual
Studio, because it treats __VA_ARGS__ as a single token unless you jump
through extra hoops.  Newer compilers have an option to fix that.  Add a
comment about that so that we can remember to clean this up in the
future when our minimum MSVC version advances.

Author: Victor Spirin <v.spirin@postgrespro.ru>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f450fc57-a147-19d0-e50c-33571c52cc13%40postgrespro.ru
2022-12-22 18:32:10 +13:00
Michael Paquier
01be9d498f Fix operator typo in tablecmds.c
A bitwise operator was getting used on two bools in
ATAddCheckConstraint() to track if constraints should be merged or not
with the existing ones of a relation, though obviously this should use
a boolean OR operator.  This led to the same result, but let's be
clean.

Oversight in 074c5cf.

Author: Ranier Vilela
Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEudQAp2R2fbbi0OHHhv_n4=Ch0t1VtjObR9YMqtGKHJ+faUFQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-22 12:08:45 +09:00
David Rowley
439f61757f Add palloc_aligned() to allow aligned memory allocations
This introduces palloc_aligned() and MemoryContextAllocAligned() which
allow callers to obtain memory which is allocated to the given size and
also aligned to the specified alignment boundary.  The alignment
boundaries may be any power-of-2 value.  Currently, the alignment is
capped at 2^26, however, we don't expect values anything like that large.
The primary expected use case is to align allocations to perhaps CPU
cache line size or to maybe I/O page size.  Certain use cases can benefit
from having aligned memory by either having better performance or more
predictable performance.

The alignment is achieved by requesting 'alignto' additional bytes from
the underlying allocator function and then aligning the address that is
returned to the requested alignment.  This obviously does waste some
memory, so alignments should be kept as small as what is required.

It's also important to note that these alignment bytes eat into the
maximum allocation size.  So something like:

palloc_aligned(MaxAllocSize, 64, 0);

will not work as we cannot request MaxAllocSize + 64 bytes.

Additionally, because we're just requesting the requested size plus the
alignment requirements from the given MemoryContext, if that context is
the Slab allocator, then since slab can only provide chunks of the size
that's specified when the slab context is created, then this is not going
to work.  Slab will generate an error to indicate that the requested size
is not supported.

The alignment that is requested in palloc_aligned() is stored along with
the allocated memory.  This allows the alignment to remain intact through
repalloc() calls.

Author: Andres Freund, David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Maxim Orlov, Andres Freund, John Naylor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvpxLPUMV1mhxs6g7GNwCP6Cs6hfnYQL5ffJQTuFAuxt8A%40mail.gmail.com
2022-12-22 13:32:05 +13:00
Andrew Dunstan
33dd895ef3 Introduce float4in_internal
This is the guts of float4in, callable as a routine to input floats,
which will be useful in an upcoming patch for allowing soft errors in
the seg module's input function.

A similar operation was performed some years ago for float8in in
commit 50861cd683.

Reviewed by Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/cee4e426-d014-c0b7-aa22-a659f2cd9130@dunslane.net
2022-12-21 16:55:52 -05:00
David Rowley
eb706fde83 Fix newly introduced bug in slab.c
d21ded75f changed the way slab.c works but introduced a bug that meant we
could end up with the slab's curBlocklistIndex pointing to the wrong list.
The condition which was checking for this was failing to account for two
things:

1. The curBlocklistIndex could be 0 as we've currently got no non-full
blocks to put chunks on.  In this case, the dlist_is_empty() check cannot
be performed as there can be any number of completely full blocks at that
index.

2. The curBlocklistIndex may be greater than the index we just moved the
block onto.  Since we need to ensure we fill up fuller blocks first, we
must reset curBlocklistIndex when changing any blocklist element that's
less than the curBlocklistIndex too.

Reported-by: Takamichi Osumi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TYCPR01MB8373329C6329768D7E093D68EDEB9@TYCPR01MB8373.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
2022-12-22 09:57:49 +13:00
Michael Paquier
f450695e88 Make more consistent some translated strings related to compression
This commit changes some of the bbstreamer files and pg_dump to use the
same style as a few other places (like common/compression.c), where the
name of the compression method is not part of the string, but an
argument of it.  This reduces a bit the translation work with less
string patterns.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y5/5tdK+4n3clvtU@paquier.xyz
2022-12-21 10:39:06 +09:00
Michael Paquier
22e3b55805 Switch some system functions to use get_call_result_type()
This shaves some code by replacing the combinations of
CreateTemplateTupleDesc()/TupleDescInitEntry() hardcoding a mapping of
the attributes listed in pg_proc.dat by get_call_result_type() to build
the TupleDesc needed for the rows generated.

get_call_result_type() is more expensive than the former style, but this
removes some duplication with the lists of OUT parameters (pg_proc.dat
and the attributes hardcoded in these code paths).  This is applied to
functions that are not considered as critical (aka that could be called
repeatedly for monitoring purposes).

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas, Álvaro Herrera, Tom Lane, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACV23HW5HP5hFjd89FNS-z5X8r2jNXdMXcpN2BgTtKd87w@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-21 10:11:22 +09:00
Andrew Dunstan
f03bd5717e Use existing SSL certs in LDAP tests instead of generating them
The SSL test suite has a bunch of pre-existing certificates, so it's
better simply to use what we already have than generate new certificates
each time the LDAP tests are run.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/bc305c7a-f390-44f2-2e82-9bcaec6108da@dunslane.net
2022-12-20 10:02:49 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
8284cf5f74 Add copyright notices to meson files
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/222b43a5-2fb3-2c1b-9cd0-375d376c8246@dunslane.net
2022-12-20 07:54:39 -05:00
Etsuro Fujita
594f8d3776 Allow batching of inserts during cross-partition updates.
Commit 927f453a9 disallowed batching added by commit b663a4136 to be
used for the inserts performed as part of cross-partition updates of
partitioned tables, mainly because the previous code in
nodeModifyTable.c couldn't handle pending inserts into foreign-table
partitions that are also UPDATE target partitions.  But we don't have
such a limitation anymore (cf. commit ffbb7e65a), so let's allow for
this by removing from execPartition.c the restriction added by commit
927f453a9 that batching is only allowed if the query command type is
CMD_INSERT.

In postgres_fdw, since commit 86dc90056 changed it to effectively
disable cross-partition updates in the case where a foreign-table
partition chosen to insert rows into is also an UPDATE target partition,
allow batching in the case where a foreign-table partition chosen to
do so is *not* also an UPDATE target partition.  This is enabled by the
"batch_size" option added by commit b663a4136, which is disabled by
default.

This patch also adjusts the test case added by commit 927f453a9 to
confirm that the inserts performed as part of a cross-partition update
of a partitioned table indeed uses batching.

Amit Langote, reviewed and/or tested by Georgios Kokolatos, Zhihong Yu,
Bharath Rupireddy, Hou Zhijie, Vignesh C, and me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA%2BHiwqH1Lz1yJmPs%3DaD-pzd_HLLynLHvq5iYeT9mB0bBV7oJ6w%40mail.gmail.com
2022-12-20 19:05:00 +09:00
David Rowley
3226f47282 Add enable_presorted_aggregate GUC
1349d279 added query planner support to allow more efficient execution of
aggregate functions which have an ORDER BY or a DISTINCT clause.  Prior to
that commit, the planner would only request that the lower planner produce
a plan with the order required for the GROUP BY clause and it would be
left up to nodeAgg.c to perform the final sort of records within each
group so that the aggregate transition functions were called in the
correct order.  Now that the planner requests the lower planner produce a
plan with the GROUP BY and the ORDER BY / DISTINCT aggregates in mind,
there is the possibility that the planner chooses a plan which could be
less efficient than what would have been produced before 1349d279.

While developing 1349d279, I had in mind that Incremental Sort would help
us in cases where an index exists only on the GROUP BY column(s).
Incremental Sort would just replace the implicit tuplesorts which are
being performed in nodeAgg.c.  However, because the planner has the
flexibility to instead choose a plan which just performs a full sort on
both the GROUP BY and ORDER BY / DISTINCT aggregate columns, there is
potential for the planner to make a bad choice.  The costing for
Incremental Sort is not perfect as it assumes an even distribution of rows
to sort within each sort group.

Here we add an escape hatch in the form of the enable_presorted_aggregate
GUC.  This will allow users to get the pre-PG16 behavior in cases where
they have no other means to convince the query planner to produce a plan
which only sorts on the GROUP BY column(s).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvr1Sm+g9hbv4REOVuvQKeDWXcKUAhmbK5K+dfun0s9CvA@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-20 22:28:58 +13:00
David Rowley
d21ded75fd Improve the performance of the slab memory allocator
Slab has traditionally been fairly slow when compared with the AllocSet or
Generation memory allocators.  Part of this slowness came from having to
write out an entire block when we allocate a new block in order to
populate the free list indexes within the block's memory.  Additional
slowness came from having to move a block onto another dlist each time we
palloc or pfree a chunk from it.

Here we optimize both of those cases and do a little bit extra to improve
the performance of the slab allocator.

Here, instead of writing out the free list indexes when allocating a new
block, we introduce the concept of "unused" chunks.  When a block is first
allocated all chunks are unused.  These chunks only make it onto the
free list when they are pfree'd.  When allocating new chunks on an
existing block, we have the choice of consuming a chunk from the free list
or an unused chunk.  When both exist, we opt to use one from the free
list, as these have been used already and the memory of them is more
likely to be cached by the CPU.

Here we also reduce the number of block lists from there being one for
every possible value of free chunks on a block to just having a small
fixed number of block lists.  We keep the 0th block list for completely
full blocks and anything else stores blocks for some range of free chunks
with fuller blocks appearing on lower block list array elements.  This
reduces how often we must move a block to another list when we allocate or
free chunks, but still allows us to prefer to put new chunks on fuller
blocks and perhaps allow blocks with fewer chunks to be free'd later
once all their remaining chunks have been pfree'd.

Additionally, we now store a list of "emptyblocks", which are blocks that
no longer contain any allocated chunks.  We now keep up to 10 of these
around to avoid having to thrash malloc/free when allocation patterns
continually cause blocks to become free of any allocated chunks only to
allocate more chunks again.  Now only once we have 10 of these, we free
the block.  This does raise the high water mark for the total memory that
a slab context can consume.  It does not seem entirely unreasonable that
we might one day want to make this a property of SlabContext rather than a
compile-time constant.  Let's wait and see if there is any evidence to
support that this is required before doing it.

Author: Andres Freund, David Rowley
Tested-by: Tomas Vondra, John Naylor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210717194333.mr5io3zup3kxahfm@alap3.anarazel.de
2022-12-20 21:48:51 +13:00
John Naylor
995a9fb14f Move variable increment to the end of the loop
This is less error prone and matches the placement of other code
in the file.

Justin Pryzby

Reviewed by Tom Lane
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20221123172436.GJ11463@telsasoft.com
2022-12-20 14:13:14 +07:00
Michael Paquier
cca1863489 Add pg_dissect_walfile_name()
This function takes in input a WAL segment name and returns a tuple made
of the segment sequence number (dependent on the WAL segment size of the
cluster) and its timeline, as of a thin SQL wrapper around the existing
XLogFromFileName().

This function has multiple usages, like being able to compile a LSN from
a file name and an offset, or finding the timeline of a segment without
having to do to some maths based on the first eight characters of the
segment.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Maxim Orlov, Michael
Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACWV=FCddsxcGbVOA=cvPyMr75YCFbSQT6g4KDj=gcJK4g@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-20 13:36:27 +09:00
Michael Paquier
b3bb7d12af Remove hardcoded dependency to cryptohash type in the internals of SCRAM
SCRAM_KEY_LEN was a variable used in the internal routines of SCRAM to
size a set of fixed-sized arrays used in the SHA and HMAC computations
during the SASL exchange or when building a SCRAM password.  This had a
hard dependency on SHA-256, reducing the flexibility of SCRAM when it
comes to the addition of more hash methods.  A second issue was that
SHA-256 is assumed as the cryptohash method to use all the time.

This commit renames SCRAM_KEY_LEN to a more generic SCRAM_KEY_MAX_LEN,
which is used as the size of the buffers used by the internal routines
of SCRAM.  This is aimed at tracking centrally the maximum size
necessary for all the hash methods supported by SCRAM.  A global
variable has the advantage of keeping the code in its simplest form,
reducing the need of more alloc/free logic for all the buffers used in
the hash calculations.

A second change is that the key length (SHA digest length) and hash
types are now tracked by the state data in the backend and the frontend,
the common portions being extended to handle these as arguments by the
internal routines of SCRAM.  There are a few RFC proposals floating
around to extend the SCRAM protocol, including some to use stronger
cryptohash algorithms, so this lifts some of the existing restrictions
in the code.

The code in charge of parsing and building SCRAM secrets is extended to
rely on the key length and on the cryptohash type used for the exchange,
assuming currently that only SHA-256 is supported for the moment.  Note
that the mock authentication simply enforces SHA-256.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut, Jonathan Katz
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y5k3Qiweo/1g9CG6@paquier.xyz
2022-12-20 08:53:22 +09:00
Robert Haas
eb60eb08a9 Fix comment that was missing a word.
Ted Yu

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CALte62wkFB05=RTWf7BL_6MfWs2=DY=ai-K7LWn_+0TJUuPJ2w@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-19 15:59:24 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
af6284a666 Fix typo in comment
Author: Ted Yu <yuzhihong@gmail.com>
2022-12-19 21:08:28 +01:00
Robert Haas
10ea0f924a Expose some information about backend subxact status.
A new function pg_stat_get_backend_subxact() can be used to get
information about the number of subtransactions in the cache of
a particular backend and whether that cache has overflowed. This
can be useful for tracking down performance problems that can
result from overflowed snapshots.

Dilip Kumar, reviewed by Zhihong Yu, Nikolay Samokhvalov,
Justin Pryzby, Nathan Bossart, Ashutosh Sharma, Julien
Rouhaud. Additional design comments from Andres Freund,
Tom Lane, Bruce Momjian, and David G. Johnston.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFiTN-ut0uwkRJDQJeDPXpVyTWD46m3gt3JDToE02hTfONEN=Q@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-19 14:43:09 -05:00
Tom Lane
7122f9d543 Fix bit-rotted planner test case.
While fooling with my pet outer-join-variables patch, I discovered
that the test case I added in commit 11086f2f2 no longer demonstrates
what it's supposed to.  The idea is to tempt the planner to reverse
the order of the two outer joins, which would leave noplace to
correctly evaluate the WHERE clause that's inserted between them.
Before the addition of the delay_upper_joins mechanism, it would
have taken the bait.

However, subsequent improvements broke the test in two different ways.
First, we now recognize the IS NULL coding pattern as an antijoin, and
we won't re-order antijoins; even if we did, the IS NULL test clauses
get removed so there would be no opportunity for them to misbehave.
Second, the planner now discovers that nested parameterized indexscans
are a lot cheaper than the double hash join it used back in the day,
and that approach doesn't want to re-order the joins anyway.  Thus,
in HEAD the test passes even if one dikes out delay_upper_joins.

To fix, change the IS NULL tests to COALESCE clauses, which produce
the same results but the planner isn't smart enough to convert them
to antijoins.  It'll still go for parameterized indexscans though,
so drop the index enabling that (don't know why I added that in the
first place), and disable nestloop joining just to be sure.

This time around, add an EXPLAIN to make the choice of plan visible.
2022-12-17 18:51:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
0efecb5518 Doc: update pg_list.h header comments to include XidLists.
I realize that the XidList infrastructure is rather incomplete,
but failing to mention it in adjacent comments takes that a bit
too far.
2022-12-17 10:31:25 -05:00
Tom Lane
935277b241 Fix inability to reference CYCLE column from inside its CTE.
Such references failed with "cache lookup failed for type 0"
because we didn't resolve the type of the CYCLE column until after
analyzing the CTE's query.  We can just move that processing
to before the recursive parse_sub_analyze call, though.

While here, invent a couple of local variables to make this
code less egregiously wider-than-80-columns.

Per bug #17723 from Vik Fearing.  Back-patch to v14 where
the CYCLE feature was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17723-2c4985ff111e7bba@postgresql.org
2022-12-16 13:07:42 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
b059a2409f pg_upgrade: Make testing different transfer modes easier
The environment variable PG_TEST_PG_UPGRADE_MODE can be set to
override the default transfer mode for the pg_upgrade tests.
(Automatically running the pg_upgrade tests for all supported modes
would be too slow.)

Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/50a97009-8ff9-ca4d-a0f6-6086a6775a5b%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-16 18:32:02 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
746915c686 pg_upgrade: Add --copy option
This option selects the default transfer mode.  Having an explicit
option is handy to make scripts and tests more explicit.  It also
makes it easier to talk about a "copy" mode rather than "the default
mode" or something like that, since until now the default mode didn't
have an externally visible name.

Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/50a97009-8ff9-ca4d-a0f6-6086a6775a5b%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-16 18:32:02 +01:00
Tom Lane
c4939f1215 Clean up dubious error handling in wellformed_xml().
This ancient bit of code was summarily trapping any ereport longjmp
whatsoever and assuming that it must represent an invalid-XML report.
It's not really appropriate to handle OOM-like situations that way:
maybe the input is valid or maybe not, but we couldn't find out.
And it'd be a seriously bad idea to ignore, say, a query cancel
error that way.  (Perhaps that can't happen because there is no
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS anywhere within xml_parse, but even if that's
true today it's obviously a very fragile assumption.)

But in the wake of the previous commit, we can drop the PG_TRY
here altogether, and use the soft error mechanism to catch only
the kinds of errors that are legitimate to treat as invalid-XML.

(This is our first use of the soft error mechanism for something
not directly related to a datatype input function.  It won't be
the last.)

xml_is_document can be converted in the same way.  That one is
not actively broken, because it was checking specifically for
ERRCODE_INVALID_XML_DOCUMENT rather than trapping everything;
but the code is still shorter and probably faster this way.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3564577.1671142683@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-16 11:10:40 -05:00
Tom Lane
37bef842f5 Convert xml_in to report errors softly.
The key idea here is that xml_parse must distinguish hard errors
from soft errors.  We want to throw a hard error for libxml
initialization failures: those might be out-of-memory, or something
else, but in any case they are not the fault of the input string.
If we get to the point of parsing the input, and something goes
wrong, we can fairly consider that to mean bad input.

One thing that arguably does mean bad input, but I didn't trouble
to handle softly, is encoding conversion failure while converting
the server encoding to UTF8.  This might be something to improve
later, but it seems like a pretty low-probability scenario.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3564577.1671142683@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-16 11:10:40 -05:00
Thomas Munro
e52f8b301e Fix typo in reference to __FreeBSD__.
Commit a2a8acd152 introduced a platform-dependent mechanism to prevent
developers from referencing errno in the argument list of
elog()/ereport(), but didn't use the right macro to detect FreeBSD, so
it didn't actually work there.

Reported-by: Japin Li <japinli@hotmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/MEYP282MB16693AAEEF84F47D8F7CA007B6E69%40MEYP282MB1669.AUSP282.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
2022-12-16 17:36:22 +13:00
David Rowley
4a29eabd1d Remove pessimistic cost penalization from Incremental Sort
When incremental sorts were added in v13 a 1.5x pessimism factor was added
to the cost modal.  Seemingly this was done because the cost modal only
has an estimate of the total number of input rows and the number of
presorted groups.  It assumes that the input rows will be evenly
distributed throughout the presorted groups.  The 1.5x pessimism factor
was added to slightly reduce the likelihood of incremental sorts being
used in the hope to avoid performance regressions where an incremental
sort plan was picked and turned out slower due to a large skew in the
number of rows in the presorted groups.

An additional quirk with the path generation code meant that we could
consider both a sort and an incremental sort on paths with presorted keys.
This meant that with the pessimism factor, it was possible that we opted
to perform a sort rather than an incremental sort when the given path had
presorted keys.

Here we remove the 1.5x pessimism factor to allow incremental sorts to
have a fairer chance at being chosen against a full sort.

Previously we would generally create a sort path on the cheapest input
path (if that wasn't sorted already) and incremental sort paths on any
path which had presorted keys.  This meant that if the cheapest input path
wasn't completely sorted but happened to have presorted keys, we would
create a full sort path *and* an incremental sort path on that input path.
Here we change this logic so that if there are presorted keys, we only
create an incremental sort path, and create sort paths only when a full
sort is required.

Both the removal of the cost pessimism factor and the changes made to the
path generation make it more likely that incremental sorts will now be
chosen.  That, of course, as with teaching the planner any new tricks,
means an increased likelihood that the planner will perform an incremental
sort when it's not the best method.  Our standard escape hatch for these
cases is an enable_* GUC.  enable_incremental_sort already exists for
this.

This came out of a report by Pavel Luzanov where he mentioned that the
master branch was choosing to perform a Seq Scan -> Sort -> Group
Aggregate for his query with an ORDER BY aggregate function.  The v15 plan
for his query performed an Index Scan -> Group Aggregate, of course, the
aggregate performed the final sort internally in nodeAgg.c for the
aggregate's ORDER BY.  The ideal plan would have been to use the index,
which provided partially sorted input then use an incremental sort to
provide the aggregate with the sorted input.  This was not being chosen
due to the pessimism in the incremental sort cost modal, so here we remove
that and rationalize the path generation so that sort and incremental sort
plans don't have to needlessly compete.  We assume that it's senseless
to ever use a full sort on a given input path where an incremental sort
can be performed.

Reported-by: Pavel Luzanov
Reviewed-by: Richard Guo
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9f61ddbf-2989-1536-b31e-6459370a6baa%40postgrespro.ru
2022-12-16 15:22:23 +13:00
David Rowley
8b6b043cee Re-adjust drop-index-concurrently-1 isolation test
It seems that drop-index-concurrently-1 has started to forget what it was
originally meant to be testing.  d2d8a229b, which added incremental sorts
changed the expected plan to be an Index Scan plan instead of a Seq Scan
plan.  This occurred as the primary key index of the table in question
provided presorted input and, because that index happened to be the
cheapest input path due to enable_seqscan being disabled, the incremental
sort changes just added a Sort on top of that.  It seems based on the name
of the PREPAREd statement that the intention here is that the query
produces a seqscan plan.

The reason this test has become broken seems to be due to how the test was
originally coded.  The test was trying to force a seqscan plan by
performing some casting to make it so the test_dc index couldn't be used
to perform the required filtering.  Trying to coax the planner into using
a plan which has costed in a disable_cost seems like it's always going to
be flakey as small changes in costs are drowned out by the large
disable_cost combined with add_path's STD_FUZZ_FACTOR.  Here we get rid of
the casts that we're using to try to trick the planner into a seqscan and
instead toggle enable_seqscan as and when required to get the desired
plan.

Additionally, rename a few things in the test and add some additional
wording to the comments to try and make it more clear in the future what
we expect this test to be doing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvrbDhObhLV+=U_K_-t+2Av2av1aL9d+2j_3AO-XndaviA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 13, where d2d8a229b changed the expected test output
2022-12-16 11:39:40 +13:00
David Rowley
ac99802080 Speed up creation of command completion tags
The building of command completion tags could often be seen showing up in
profiles when running high tps workloads.

The query completion tags were being built with snprintf, which is slow at
the best of times when compared with more manual ways of formatting
strings.  Here we introduce BuildQueryCompletionString() to do this job
for us.  We also now store the completion tag's strlen in the
CommandTagBehavior struct so that we can quickly memcpy this number of
bytes into the completion tag string.  Appending the rows affected is done
via pg_ulltoa_n.  BuildQueryCompletionString returns the length of the
built string.  This saves us having to call strlen to figure out how many
bytes to pass to pq_putmessage().

Author: David Rowley, Andres Freund
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHoyFK-Xwqc-iY52shj0G+8K9FJpse+FuZ36XBKy78wDVnd=Qg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-16 10:31:25 +13:00
Tom Lane
d35a1af468 Convert range_in and multirange_in to report errors softly.
This is mostly straightforward, except that if the range type
has a canonical function, that might throw an error during range
input.  (Such errors probably only occur for edge cases: in the
in-core canonical functions, it happens only if a bound has the
maximum valid value for the underlying type.)  Hence, this patch
extends the soft-error regime to allow canonical functions to
return errors softly as well.  Extensions implementing range
canonical functions will need modification anyway because of the
API change for range_serialize(); while at it, they might want
to do something similar to what's been done here in the in-core
canonical functions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3284599.1671075185@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-15 12:18:36 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
75f49221c2 Static assertions cleanup
Because we added StaticAssertStmt() first before StaticAssertDecl(),
some uses as well as the instructions in c.h are now a bit backwards
from the "native" way static assertions are meant to be used in C.
This updates the guidance and moves some static assertions to better
places.

Specifically, since the addition of StaticAssertDecl(), we can put
static assertions at the file level.  This moves a number of static
assertions out of function bodies, where they might have been stuck
out of necessity, to perhaps better places at the file level or in
header files.

Also, when the static assertion appears in a position where a
declaration is allowed, then using StaticAssertDecl() is more native
than StaticAssertStmt().

Reviewed-by: John Naylor <john.naylor@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/941a04e7-dd6f-c0e4-8cdf-a33b3338cbda%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-15 10:10:32 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
2613dec4ed Move provariadic sanity check to a more appropriate place
35f059e9bd put the provariadic sanity
check into type_sanity.sql, even though it's not about types, and
moreover in the middle of some connected test group, which makes it
all very confusing.  Move it to opr_sanity.sql, where it is in better
company.
2022-12-15 07:54:48 +01:00
Tom Lane
3b9d2deb67 Convert a few more datatype input functions to report errors softly.
Convert the remaining string-category input functions
(bpcharin, varcharin, byteain) to the new style.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3038346.1671060258@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-14 19:42:05 -05:00
Tom Lane
90161dad4d Convert a few more datatype input functions to report errors softly.
Convert cash_in and uuid_in to the new style.

Amul Sul, minor mods by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b97KeDWUdpTKGOaFYPv0OicjOu6EW+QYWj-Ywrgj_aEy1g@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-14 18:03:11 -05:00
Tom Lane
47f3f97fcd Convert a few more datatype input functions to report errors softly.
Convert assorted internal-ish datatypes, namely aclitemin,
int2vectorin, oidin, oidvectorin, pg_lsn_in, pg_snapshot_in,
and tidin to the new style.

(Some others you might expect to find in this group, such as
cidin and xidin, need no changes because they never throw
errors at all.  That seems a little cheesy ... but it is not in
the charter of this patch series to add new error conditions.)

Amul Sul, minor mods by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b97KeDWUdpTKGOaFYPv0OicjOu6EW+QYWj-Ywrgj_aEy1g@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-14 17:50:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
332741e739 Convert the geometric input functions to report errors softly.
Convert box_in, circle_in, line_in, lseg_in, path_in, point_in,
and poly_in to the new style.

line_in still throws hard errors for overflows/underflows that can occur
when the input is specified as two points rather than in the canonical
"Ax + By + C = 0" style.  I'm not too concerned about that: it won't be
reached in normal dump/restore cases, and it's fairly debatable that
such conversion should ever have been made part of a type input function
in the first place.  But in any case, I don't want to extend the soft
error conventions into float.h without more discussion than this patch
has had.

Amul Sul, minor mods by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b97KeDWUdpTKGOaFYPv0OicjOu6EW+QYWj-Ywrgj_aEy1g@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-14 16:10:20 -05:00
Tom Lane
17407a8eaa Convert a few more datatype input functions to report errors softly.
Convert bit_in, varbit_in, inet_in, cidr_in, macaddr_in, and
macaddr8_in to the new style.

Amul Sul, minor mods by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b97KeDWUdpTKGOaFYPv0OicjOu6EW+QYWj-Ywrgj_aEy1g@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-14 13:22:08 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
b18c2decd7 Rearrange some static assertions for consistency
Put lengthof first.

Reported-by: Peter Smith <smithpb2250@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAHut+PsUDMySVRuRc=h+P5N3+=TGvj4W_mi32XXg9dt4o-BXbA@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-14 16:08:13 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
6fcda9aba8 Non-decimal integer literals
Add support for hexadecimal, octal, and binary integer literals:

    0x42F
    0o273
    0b100101

per SQL:202x draft.

This adds support in the lexer as well as in the integer type input
functions.

Reviewed-by: John Naylor <john.naylor@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Zhihong Yu <zyu@yugabyte.com>
Reviewed-by: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed <dean.a.rasheed@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/b239564c-cad0-b23e-c57e-166d883cb97d@enterprisedb.com
2022-12-14 06:17:07 +01:00
Jeff Davis
60684dd834 Add grantable MAINTAIN privilege and pg_maintain role.
Allows VACUUM, ANALYZE, REINDEX, REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW, CLUSTER,
and LOCK TABLE.

Effectively reverts 4441fc704d. Instead of creating separate
privileges for VACUUM, ANALYZE, and other maintenance commands, group
them together under a single MAINTAIN privilege.

Author: Nathan Bossart
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221212210136.GA449764@nathanxps13
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/45224.1670476523@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-13 17:33:28 -08:00
Michael Paquier
c6f6646bb0 Remove SHA256_HMAC_B from scram-common.h
This referred to the size of the buffers for k_ipad and k_opad in HMAC
computations.  This is unused since e6bdfd9, where SCRAM has switched to
the cryptohash routines for its HMAC calculations rather than its own
maths.

Reviewed-by: Jacob Champion
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y5gGMjXhyp0oK0mH@paquier.xyz
2022-12-14 09:51:19 +09:00
Tom Lane
20432f8731 Rethink handling of [Prevent|Is]InTransactionBlock in pipeline mode.
Commits f92944137 et al. made IsInTransactionBlock() set the
XACT_FLAGS_NEEDIMMEDIATECOMMIT flag before returning "false",
on the grounds that that kept its API promises equivalent to those of
PreventInTransactionBlock().  This turns out to be a bad idea though,
because it allows an ANALYZE in a pipelined series of commands to
cause an immediate commit, which is unexpected.

Furthermore, if we return "false" then we have another issue,
which is that ANALYZE will decide it's allowed to do internal
commit-and-start-transaction sequences, thus possibly unexpectedly
committing the effects of previous commands in the pipeline.

To fix the latter situation, invent another transaction state flag
XACT_FLAGS_PIPELINING, which explicitly records the fact that we
have executed some extended-protocol command and not yet seen a
commit for it.  Then, require that flag to not be set before allowing
InTransactionBlock() to return "false".

Having done that, we can remove its setting of NEEDIMMEDIATECOMMIT
without fear of causing problems.  This means that the API guarantees
of IsInTransactionBlock now diverge from PreventInTransactionBlock,
which is mildly annoying, but it seems OK given the very limited usage
of IsInTransactionBlock.  (In any case, a caller preferring the old
behavior could always set NEEDIMMEDIATECOMMIT for itself.)

For consistency also require XACT_FLAGS_PIPELINING to not be set
in PreventInTransactionBlock.  This too is meant to prevent commands
such as CREATE DATABASE from silently committing previous commands
in a pipeline.

Per report from Peter Eisentraut.  As before, back-patch to all
supported branches (which sadly no longer includes v10).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/65a899dd-aebc-f667-1d0a-abb89ff3abf8@enterprisedb.com
2022-12-13 14:23:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
369f09e420 Refactor ExecGrant_*() functions
Instead of half a dozen of mostly-duplicate ExecGrant_Foo() functions,
write one common function ExecGrant_generic() that can handle most of
them.  We already have all the information we need, such as which
system catalog corresponds to which catalog table and which column is
the ACL column.

Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Antonin Houska <ah@cybertec.at>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/22c7e802-4e7d-8d87-8b71-cba95e6f4bcf%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-13 07:52:04 +01:00
Tom Lane
b0feda79fd Fix jsonb subscripting to cope with toasted subscript values.
jsonb_get_element() was incautious enough to use VARDATA() and
VARSIZE() directly on an arbitrary text Datum.  That of course
fails if the Datum is short-header, compressed, or out-of-line.
The typical result would be failing to match any element of a
jsonb object, though matching the wrong one seems possible as well.

setPathObject() was slightly brighter, in that it used VARDATA_ANY
and VARSIZE_ANY_EXHDR, but that only kept it out of trouble for
short-header Datums.  push_path() had the same issue.  This could
result in faulty subscripted insertions, though keys long enough to
cause a problem are likely rare in the wild.

Having seen these, I looked around for unsafe usages in the rest
of the adt/json* files.  There are a couple of places where it's not
immediately obvious that the Datum can't be compressed or out-of-line,
so I added pg_detoast_datum_packed() to cope if it is.  Also, remove
some other usages of VARDATA/VARSIZE on Datums we just extracted from
a text array.  Those aren't actively broken, but they will become so
if we ever start allowing short-header array elements, which does not
seem like a terribly unreasonable thing to do.  In any case they are
not great coding examples, and they could also do with comments
pointing out that we're assuming we don't need pg_detoast_datum_packed.

Per report from exe-dealer@yandex.ru.  Patch by me, but thanks to
David Johnston for initial investigation.  Back-patch to v14 where
jsonb subscripting was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/205321670615953@mail.yandex.ru
2022-12-12 16:17:54 -05:00
Jeff Davis
2af33369e7 Remove extra space from dumped ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES.
Author: Nathan Bossart
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221206232744.GA3560301@nathanxps13
2022-12-12 09:49:24 -08:00
Robert Haas
45f5c81ad2 Fix failure to advance content pointer in sendFileWithContent.
If sendFileWithContent were used to send a file larger than the
bbsink buffer size, this would result in corruption. The only
files that are sent via sendFileWithContent are the backup label
file, the tablespace map file, and .done files for WAL segments
included in the backup. Of these, it seems that only the
tablespace_map file can become large enough to cause a problem,
and then only if you have a lot of tablespaces. If you do have
that situation, you might end up with a corrupted
tablespace_map file, which would be bad.

My commit bef47ff85d introduced
this problem.

Report and patch by Antonin Houska.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/15764.1670528645@antos
2022-12-12 10:26:48 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
df8b8968d4 Order getopt arguments
Order the letters in the arguments of getopt() and getopt_long(), as
well as in the subsequent switch statements.  In most cases, I used
alphabetical with lower case first.  In a few cases, existing
different orders (e.g., upper case first) was kept to reduce the diff
size.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/3efd0fe8-351b-f836-9122-886002602357%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-12 15:20:00 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera
840ff5f451
Get rid of recursion-marker values in enum AlterTableType
During ALTER TABLE execution, when prep-time handling of subcommands of
certain types determine that execution-time handling requires recursion,
they signal this by changing the subcommand type to a special value.
This can be done in a simpler way by using a separate flag introduced by
commit ec0925c22a, so do that.

Catversion bumped.  It's not clear to me that ALTER TABLE subcommands
are stored anywhere in catalogs (CREATE FUNCTION rejects it in BEGIN
ATOMIC function bodies), but we do have both write and read support for
them, so be safe.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220929090033.zxuaezcdwh2fgfjb@alvherre.pgsql
2022-12-12 11:13:26 +01:00
Michael Paquier
9d0cf57492 Add support for GRANT SET in psql tab completion
3d14e17 has added support for this query but psql was not able to
complete it.  Spotted while working on a different patch in the same
area.

Reviewed-by: Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y3hw7yvG0VwpC1jq@paquier.xyz
2022-12-12 16:47:24 +09:00
Michael Paquier
eae7fe4859 Remove direct call to GetNewObjectId() for pg_auth_members.oid
This routine should not be called directly as mentioned at its top, so
replace it by GetNewOidWithIndex().  Issue introduced by 6566133 when
pg_auth_members.oid got added, so no backpatch is needed.

Author: Maciek Sakrejda
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOtHd0Ckbih7Ur7XeVyLAJ26VZOfTNcq9qV403bNF4uTGtAN+Q@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-12 09:01:39 +09:00
Tom Lane
b8c0ffbd2c Convert domain_in to report errors softly.
This is straightforward as far as it goes.  However, it does not
attempt to trap errors occurring during the execution of domain
CHECK constraints.  Since those are general user-defined
expressions, the only way to do that would involve starting up a
subtransaction for each check.  Of course the entire point of
the soft-errors feature is to not need subtransactions, so that
would be self-defeating.  For now, we'll rely on the assumption
that domain checks are written to avoid throwing errors.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1181028.1670635727@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-11 12:56:54 -05:00
Tom Lane
c60c9badba Convert json_in and jsonb_in to report errors softly.
This requires a bit of further infrastructure-extension to allow
trapping errors reported by numeric_in and pg_unicode_to_server,
but otherwise it's pretty straightforward.

In the case of jsonb_in, we are only capturing errors reported
during the initial "parse" phase.  The value-construction phase
(JsonbValueToJsonb) can also throw errors if assorted implementation
limits are exceeded.  We should improve that, but it seems like a
separable project.

Andrew Dunstan and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3bac9841-fe07-713d-fa42-606c225567d6@dunslane.net
2022-12-11 11:28:15 -05:00
Tom Lane
50428a301d Change JsonSemAction to allow non-throw error reporting.
Formerly, semantic action functions for the JSON parser returned void,
so that there was no way for them to affect the parser's behavior.
That means in particular that they can't force an error exit except by
longjmp'ing.  That won't do in the context of our project to make input
functions return errors softly.  Hence, change them to return the same
JsonParseErrorType enum value as the parser itself uses.  If an action
function returns anything besides JSON_SUCCESS, the parse is abandoned
and that error code is returned.

Action functions can thus easily return the same error conditions that
the parser already knows about.  As an escape hatch for expansion, also
invent a code JSON_SEM_ACTION_FAILED that the core parser does not know
the exact meaning of.  When returning this code, an action function
must use some out-of-band mechanism for reporting the error details.

This commit simply makes the API change and causes all the existing
action functions to return JSON_SUCCESS, so that there is no actual
change in behavior here.  This is long enough and boring enough that
it seemed best to commit it separately from the changes that make
real use of the new mechanism.

In passing, remove a duplicate assignment of
transform_string_values_scalar.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1436686.1670701118@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-11 10:39:05 -05:00
Tom Lane
d02ef65bce Standardize error reports in unimplemented I/O functions.
We chose a specific wording of the not-implemented errors for
pseudotype I/O functions and other cases where there's little
value in implementing input and/or output.  gtsvectorin never
got that memo though, nor did most of contrib.  Make these all
fall in line, mostly because I'm a neatnik but also to remove
unnecessary translatable strings.

gbtreekey_in needs a bit of extra love since it supports
multiple SQL types.  Sadly, gbtreekey_out doesn't have the
ability to do that, but I think it's unreachable anyway.

Noted while surveying datatype input functions to see what we
have left to fix.
2022-12-10 18:26:43 -05:00
Tom Lane
e730718072 Use the macro, not handwritten code, to construct anymultirange_in().
Apparently anymultirange_in was written before we converted all
these pseudotype input functions to use a common macro, and it didn't
get fixed before committing.  Sloppy merging probably explains its
unintuitive ordering, too, so rearrange.

Noted while surveying datatype input functions to see what we
have left to fix.  I'm inclined to leave the pseudotypes as
throwing hard errors, because it's difficult to see a reason why
anyone would need something else.  But in any case, if we want
to change that, we shouldn't have to change multiple copies of
the code.
2022-12-10 17:22:16 -05:00
David Rowley
94985c2102 Add subquery pullup handling for WindowClause runCondition
9d9c02ccd added code to allow WindowAgg to take some shortcuts when a
monotonic WindowFunc reached some value that it could never come back
from due to the function's monotonic nature.  That commit added a
runCondition field to WindowClause to store the condition which, when it
becomes false we can start taking shortcuts in nodeWindowAgg.c.

Here we fix an issue where subquery pullups didn't properly update the
runCondition to update the Vars to properly reference the new query level.

Here we also add a missing call to preprocess_expression() for the
WindowClause's runCondtion.  The WindowFuncs in the targetlist will have
had this process done, so we must also do it for the WindowFuncs in the
runCondition so that they can be correctly found in the targetlist
during setrefs.c

Bug: #17709
Reported-by: Alexey Makhmutov
Author: Richard Guo, David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17709-4f557160e3e8ee9a@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 15, where 9d9c02ccd was introduced
2022-12-10 19:27:20 +13:00
Michael Paquier
66dcb09246 Fix macro definitions in pgstatfuncs.c
Buildfarm member wrasse has been complaining about empty declarations
as an effect of 8018ffb and 83a1a1b due to extra semicolons.

While on it, remove also the last backslash of the macros definitions,
causing more lines to be eaten in it than necessary, per comment from
Tom Lane.

Reported-by: Tom Lane, and buildfarm member wrasse
Author: Nathan Bossart, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1188769.1670640236@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-10 13:28:02 +09:00
Tom Lane
4dd687502d Restructure soft-error handling in formatting.c.
Replace the error trapping scheme introduced in 5bc450629 with our
shiny new errsave/ereturn mechanism.  This doesn't have any real
functional impact (although I think that the new coding is able
to report a few more errors softly than v15 did).  And I doubt
there's any measurable performance difference either.  But this
gets rid of an ad-hoc, one-of-a-kind design in favor of a mechanism
that will be widely used going forward, so it should be a net win
for code readability.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3bbbb0df-7382-bf87-9737-340ba096e034@postgrespro.ru
2022-12-09 20:15:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
c60488b474 Convert datetime input functions to use "soft" error reporting.
This patch converts the input functions for date, time, timetz,
timestamp, timestamptz, and interval to the new soft-error style.
There's some related stuff in formatting.c that remains to be
cleaned up, but that seems like a separable project.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3bbbb0df-7382-bf87-9737-340ba096e034@postgrespro.ru
2022-12-09 16:07:49 -05:00
Tom Lane
2661469d86 Allow DateTimeParseError to handle bad-timezone error messages.
Pay down some ancient technical debt (dating to commit 022fd9966):
fix a couple of places in datetime parsing that were throwing
ereport's immediately instead of returning a DTERR code that could be
interpreted by DateTimeParseError.  The reason for that was that there
was no mechanism for passing any auxiliary data (such as a zone name)
to DateTimeParseError, and these errors seemed to really need it.
Up to now it didn't matter that much just where the error got thrown,
but now we'd like to have a hard policy that datetime parse errors
get thrown from just the one place.

Hence, invent a "DateTimeErrorExtra" struct that can be used to
carry any extra values needed for specific DTERR codes.  Perhaps
in the future somebody will be motivated to use this to improve
the specificity of other DateTimeParseError messages, but for now
just deal with the timezone-error cases.

This is on the way to making the datetime input functions report
parse errors softly; but it's really an independent change, so
commit separately.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3bbbb0df-7382-bf87-9737-340ba096e034@postgrespro.ru
2022-12-09 13:30:47 -05:00
Tom Lane
bad5116957 Const-ify a couple of datetime parsing subroutines.
More could be done in this line, but I just grabbed some low-hanging
fruit.  Principal objective was to remove the need for several ugly
unconstify() usages in formatting.c.
2022-12-09 10:43:45 -05:00
Tom Lane
ccff2d20ed Convert a few datatype input functions to use "soft" error reporting.
This patch converts the input functions for bool, int2, int4, int8,
float4, float8, numeric, and contrib/cube to the new soft-error style.
array_in and record_in are also converted.  There's lots more to do,
but this is enough to provide proof-of-concept that the soft-error
API is usable, as well as reference examples for how to convert
input functions.

This patch is mostly by me, but it owes very substantial debt to
earlier work by Nikita Glukhov, Andrew Dunstan, and Amul Sul.
Thanks to Andres Freund for review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3bbbb0df-7382-bf87-9737-340ba096e034@postgrespro.ru
2022-12-09 10:14:53 -05:00
Tom Lane
1939d26282 Add test scaffolding for soft error reporting from input functions.
pg_input_is_valid() returns boolean, while pg_input_error_message()
returns the primary error message if the input is bad, or NULL
if the input is OK.  The main reason for having two functions is
so that we can test both the details-wanted and the no-details-wanted
code paths.

Although these are primarily designed with testing in mind,
it could well be that they'll be useful to end users as well.

This patch is mostly by me, but it owes very substantial debt to
earlier work by Nikita Glukhov, Andrew Dunstan, and Amul Sul.
Thanks to Andres Freund for review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3bbbb0df-7382-bf87-9737-340ba096e034@postgrespro.ru
2022-12-09 10:08:44 -05:00
Tom Lane
d9f7f5d32f Create infrastructure for "soft" error reporting.
Postgres' standard mechanism for reporting errors (ereport() or elog())
is used for all sorts of error conditions.  This means that throwing
an exception via ereport(ERROR) requires an expensive transaction or
subtransaction abort and cleanup, since the exception catcher dare not
make many assumptions about what has gone wrong.  There are situations
where we would rather have a lighter-weight mechanism for dealing
with errors that are known to be safe to recover from without a full
transaction cleanup.  This commit creates infrastructure to let us
adapt existing error-reporting code for that purpose.  See the
included documentation changes for details.  Follow-on commits will
provide test code and usage examples.

The near-term plan is to convert most if not all datatype input
functions to report invalid input "softly".  This will enable
implementing some SQL/JSON features cleanly and without the cost
of subtransactions, and it will also allow creating COPY options
to deal with bad input without cancelling the whole COPY.

This patch is mostly by me, but it owes very substantial debt to
earlier work by Nikita Glukhov, Andrew Dunstan, and Amul Sul.
Thanks also to Andres Freund for review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3bbbb0df-7382-bf87-9737-340ba096e034@postgrespro.ru
2022-12-09 09:58:38 -05:00
Alexander Korotkov
beecbe8e50 Fix invalid role names introduced in 096dd80f3c
096dd80f3c added new regression tests dealing with roles.  By oversight, role
names didn't start with regress_ prefix.  This commit fixes that.
2022-12-09 13:53:32 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov
096dd80f3c Add USER SET parameter values for pg_db_role_setting
The USER SET flag specifies that the variable should be set on behalf of an
ordinary role.  That lets ordinary roles set placeholder variables, which
permission requirements are not known yet.  Such a value wouldn't be used if
the variable finally appear to require superuser privileges.

The new flags are stored in the pg_db_role_setting.setuser array.  Catversion
is bumped.

This commit is inspired by the previous work by Steve Chavez.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPpHfdsLd6E--epnGqXENqLP6dLwuNZrPMcNYb3wJ87WR7UBOQ%40mail.gmail.com
Author: Alexander Korotkov, Steve Chavez
Reviewed-by: Pavel Borisov, Steve Chavez
2022-12-09 13:12:20 +03:00
Dean Rasheed
5defdef8aa Update MERGE docs to mention that ONLY is supported.
Commit 7103ebb7aa added support for MERGE, which included support for
inheritance hierarchies, but didn't document the fact that ONLY could
be specified before the source and/or target tables to exclude tables
inheriting from the tables specified.

Update merge.sgml to mention this, and while at it, add some
regression tests to cover it.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Nathan Bossart.

Backpatch to 15, where MERGE was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEZATCU0XM-bJCvpJuVRU3UYNRqEBS6g4-zH%3Dj9Ye0caX8F6uQ%40mail.gmail.com
2022-12-09 10:00:01 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
07c29ca7fe Remove unnecessary casts
Some code carefully cast all data buffer arguments for BufFileWrite()
and BufFileRead() to void *, even though the arguments are already
void * (and AFAICT were never anything else).  Remove this unnecessary
clutter.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/11dda853-bb5b-59ba-a746-e168b1ce4bdb%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-08 08:58:15 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
2d4f1ba6cf Update types in File API
Make the argument types of the File API match stdio better:

- Change the data buffer to void *, from char *.
- Change FileWrite() data buffer to const on top of that.
- Change amounts to size_t, from int.

In passing, change the FilePrefetch() amount argument from int to
off_t, to match the underlying posix_fadvise().

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/11dda853-bb5b-59ba-a746-e168b1ce4bdb%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-08 08:58:15 +01:00
Etsuro Fujita
4b3e379932 Remove new structure member from ResultRelInfo.
In commit ffbb7e65a, I added a ModifyTableState member to ResultRelInfo
to save the owning ModifyTableState for use by nodeModifyTable.c when
performing batch inserts, but as pointed out by Tom Lane, that changed
the array stride of es_result_relations, and that would break any
previously-compiled extension code that accesses that array.  Fix by
removing that member from ResultRelInfo and instead adding a List member
at the end of EState to save such ModifyTableStates.

Per report from Tom Lane.  Back-patch to v14, like the previous commit;
I chose to apply the patch to HEAD as well, to make back-patching easy.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/4065383.1669395453%40sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-08 16:15:00 +09:00
Amit Kapila
bf07ab492c Avoid unnecessary streaming of transactions during logical replication.
After restart, we don't perform streaming of an in-progress transaction if
it was previously decoded and confirmed by the client. To achieve that we
were comparing the END location of the WAL record being decoded with the
WAL location we have already decoded and confirmed by the client. While
decoding the commit record, to decide whether to process and send the
complete transaction, we compare its START location with the WAL location
we have already decoded and confirmed by the client. Now, if we need to
queue some change in the transaction while decoding the commit record
(e.g. snapshot), it is possible that we decide to stream the transaction
but later commit processing decides to skip it. In such a case, we would
needlessly send the changes and later when we decide to skip it, we will
send stream abort.

We also sometimes decide to stream the changes when we actually just need
to process them locally like a change for invalidations. This will lead us
to send empty streams. To avoid this, while queuing each change for
decoding, we remember whether the transaction has any change that actually
needs to be sent downstream and use that information later to decide
whether to stream the transaction or not.

Note, we can't avoid all cases where we have to send empty streams like
the case where the plugin later decides that the change is not
publishable. However, we will no longer need to send stream_abort when we
skip sending a particular transaction.

Author: Dilip Kumar
Reviewed-by: Hou Zhijie, Ashutosh Bapat, Shi yu, Amit Kapila
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFiTN-tHK=7LzfrPs8fbT2ksrOJGQbzywcgXst2bM9-rJJAAUg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-08 06:05:09 +05:30
Andres Freund
3f0e786ccb meson: Add 'running' test setup, as a replacement for installcheck
To run all tests that support running against existing server:
$ meson test --setup running

To run just the main pg_regress tests against existing server:
$ meson test --setup running regress-running/regress

To ensure the 'running' setup continues to work, test it as part of the
freebsd CI task.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=XDQcmLoo7RR_i6FKQdDmcyb9q5gStnfuuQXrOGhB2sQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-07 12:13:35 -08:00
Tom Lane
8305629afe Minor code refactoring in elog.c (no functional change).
Combine some duplicated code stanzas by creating small functions.
Most of these duplications arose at a time when I wouldn't have
trusted C compilers to auto-inline small functions intelligently,
but they're probably poor practice now.  Similarly split out some
bits that aren't actually duplicative as the code stands, but would
become so after an upcoming patch to add another error-handling
code path.

Take the opportunity to add some lengthier comments about what
we're doing here, too.  Re-order one function that seemed not
very well-placed.

Patch by me, per suggestions from Andres Freund.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3bbbb0df-7382-bf87-9737-340ba096e034@postgrespro.ru
2022-12-07 14:39:25 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
5e9b122059 Fix FK comment think-o
from commit d6f96ed94e

Author: Paul Jungwirth <pj@illuminatedcomputing.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lawrence Barwick <barwick@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/6a7c7338-1aa2-4689-d171-0b0b294fdd84%40illuminatedcomputing.com
2022-12-07 17:06:50 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera
29861e228a
Update outdated comment in ApplyRetrieveRule
After a61b1f7482.

Author: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqGZm7hb2VAy8HGM22-fTDaQzqE6T=5GbAk=GkT9H0hJEg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-07 12:35:59 +01:00
Andres Freund
5bdd0cfb91 meson: Add basic PGXS compatibility
Generate a Makefile.global that's complete enough for PGXS to work for some
extensions. It is likely that this compatibility layer will not suffice for
every extension and not all platforms - we can expand it over time.

This allows extensions to use a single buildsystem across all the supported
postgres versions. Once all supported PG versions support meson, we can remove
the compatibility layer.

Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221005200710.luvw5evhwf6clig6@awork3.anarazel.de
2022-12-06 18:56:46 -08:00
Andres Freund
9db49fc5bf autoconf: Move export_dynamic determination to configure
Previously export_dynamic was set in src/makefiles/Makefile.$port. For solaris
this required exporting with_gnu_ld. The determination of with_gnu_ld would be
nontrivial to copy for meson PGXS compatibility.  It's also nice to delete
libtool.m4.

This uses -Wl,--export-dynamic on all platforms, previously all platforms but
FreeBSD used -Wl,-E. The likelihood of a name conflict seems lower with the
longer spelling.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221005200710.luvw5evhwf6clig6@awork3.anarazel.de
2022-12-06 18:55:28 -08:00
Michael Paquier
8018ffbf58 Generate pg_stat_get*() functions for databases using macros
The same code pattern is repeated 21 times for int64 counters (0 for
missing entry) and 5 times for doubles (0 for missing entry) on database
entries.  This code is switched to use macros for the basic code
instead, shaving a few hundred lines of originally-duplicated code
patterns.  The function names remain the same, but some fields of
PgStat_StatDBEntry have to be renamed to cope with the new style.

This is in the same spirit as 83a1a1b.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Bertrand Drouvot
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y46stlxQ2LQE20Na@paquier.xyz
2022-12-07 09:11:48 +09:00
Andres Freund
79f7c482f6 meson: Basic cygwin support
There likely are further issues, but as evidenced by the CI task proposed by
Justin in the referenced thread, this suffices to build and run basic tests in
cygwin (some fixes for the test infrastructure are needed, but that's
independent of the meson aspect).

Author: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221021034040.GT16921@telsasoft.com
2022-12-06 11:25:54 -08:00
Alvaro Herrera
a61b1f7482
Rework query relation permission checking
Currently, information about the permissions to be checked on relations
mentioned in a query is stored in their range table entries.  So the
executor must scan the entire range table looking for relations that
need to have permissions checked.  This can make the permission checking
part of the executor initialization needlessly expensive when many
inheritance children are present in the range range.  While the
permissions need not be checked on the individual child relations, the
executor still must visit every range table entry to filter them out.

This commit moves the permission checking information out of the range
table entries into a new plan node called RTEPermissionInfo.  Every
top-level (inheritance "root") RTE_RELATION entry in the range table
gets one and a list of those is maintained alongside the range table.
This new list is initialized by the parser when initializing the range
table.  The rewriter can add more entries to it as rules/views are
expanded.  Finally, the planner combines the lists of the individual
subqueries into one flat list that is passed to the executor for
checking.

To make it quick to find the RTEPermissionInfo entry belonging to a
given relation, RangeTblEntry gets a new Index field 'perminfoindex'
that stores the corresponding RTEPermissionInfo's index in the query's
list of the latter.

ExecutorCheckPerms_hook has gained another List * argument; the
signature is now:
typedef bool (*ExecutorCheckPerms_hook_type) (List *rangeTable,
					      List *rtePermInfos,
					      bool ereport_on_violation);
The first argument is no longer used by any in-core uses of the hook,
but we leave it in place because there may be other implementations that
do.  Implementations should likely scan the rtePermInfos list to
determine which operations to allow or deny.

Author: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqGjJDmUhDSfv-U2qhKJjt9ST7Xh9JXC_irsAQ1TAUsJYg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-06 16:09:24 +01:00
David Rowley
a858327221 Fix 32-bit build dangling pointer issue in WindowAgg
9d9c02ccd added window "run conditions", which allows the evaluation of
monotonic window functions to be skipped when the run condition is no
longer true.  Prior to this commit, once the run condition was no longer
true and we stopped evaluating the window functions, we simply just left
the ecxt_aggvalues[] and ecxt_aggnulls[] arrays alone to store whatever
value was stored there the last time the window function was evaluated.
Leaving a stale value in there isn't really a problem on 64-bit builds as
all of the window functions which we recognize as monotonic all return
int8, which is passed by value on 64-bit builds.  However, on 32-bit
builds, this was a problem as the value stored in the ecxt_values[]
element would be a by-ref value and it would be pointing to some memory
which would get reset once the tuple context is destroyed.  Since the
WindowAgg node will output these values in the resulting tupleslot, this
could be problematic for the top-level WindowAgg node which must look at
these values to filter out the rows that don't meet its filter condition.

Here we fix this by just zeroing the ecxt_aggvalues[] and setting the
ecxt_aggnulls[] array to true when the run condition first becomes false.
This results in the WindowAgg's output having NULLs for the WindowFunc's
columns rather than the stale or pointer pointing to possibly freed
memory.  These tuples with the NULLs can only make it as far as the
top-level WindowAgg node before they're filtered out.  To ensure that
these tuples *are* always filtered out, we now insist that OpExprs making
up the run condition are strict OpExprs.  Currently, all the window
functions which the planner recognizes as monotonic return INT8 and the
operator which is used for the run condition must be a member of a btree
opclass.  In reality, these restrictions exclude nothing that's built-in
to Postgres and are unlikely to exclude anyone's custom operators due to
the requirement that the operator is part of a btree opclass.  It would be
unusual if those were not strict.

Reported-by: Sergey Shinderuk, using valgrind
Reviewed-by: Richard Guo, Sergey Shinderuk
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/29184c50-429a-ebd7-f1fb-0589c6723a35@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch-through: 15, where 9d9c02ccd was added
2022-12-07 00:09:36 +13:00
Michael Paquier
83a1a1b566 Generate pg_stat_get*() functions for tables using macros
The same code pattern is repeated 17 times for int64 counters (0 for
missing entry) and 5 times for timestamps (NULL for missing entry) on
table entries.  This code is switched to use a macro for the basic code
instead, shaving a few hundred lines of originally-duplicated code.  The
function names remain the same, but some fields of PgStat_StatTabEntry
have to be renamed to cope with the new style.

Author: Bertrand Drouvot
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart
Discussion: https:/postgr.es/m/20221204173207.GA2669116@nathanxps13
2022-12-06 10:46:35 +09:00
Alexander Korotkov
941aa6a626 Check the snapshot argument of index_beginscan and family
Passing a NULL snapshot (InvalidSnapshot) is going to work but only as long
as the index can't find any matching rows.  This can be confusing for
the extension authors, so add an explicit check for this argument.  The check
is implemented with Assert() in order to avoid overhead in release builds.

Reported-by: Sven Klemm
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ7c6TPxitD4vbKyP-mpmC1XwyHdPPqvjLzm%2BVpB88h8LGgneQ%40mail.gmail.com
Author: Aleksander Alekseev
Reviewed-by: Pavel Borisov
2022-12-06 03:29:18 +03:00
Michael Paquier
a7885c9bb2 Provide test coverage in pg_dump for default behaviors with compression
By default, the contents generated by the custom and directory dump
formats are compressed.  However, with the existing test facility, the
restore program will succeed regardless of whether the dumped output was
compressed or not without checking if anything has been compressed.

This commit implements a portable way to check the contents of the
custom and directory dump formats:
- glob_patterns, that can be defined for each test as an array of
glob()-compilable strings, tracking the contents that should or should
not be compressed.  While this is useful to make sure that the table
data is compressed, this also checks that blobs.toc and toc.dat are
never compressed.
- command_like, to execute a command on a dump and check its generated
output.  This is used here in correlation with pg_restore -l to check if
the dumps have been compressed or not, depending on if the build
supports gzip, or not.

This hole in the tests has come up when working on 5e73a60, where
compression has to be applied by default, if available, for both dump
formats.

The idea of glob_patterns comes from me, and Georgios has come up with
the design for command_like.

Author: Georgios Kokolatos, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/DQn4czCWR1rcbGPLL7p3LfEr5-kGmlySm-H05VgroINdikvhtS5r9EdI6b8D8sjnbKdJ09k-cxs2AqijBeHAWk9Q8gvEAxPRHuLRhwONcGc=@pm.me
2022-12-06 09:20:13 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
1bd47d0dca initdb: Refactor PG_CMD_PUTS loops
Keeping the SQL commands that initdb runs in string arrays before
feeding them to PG_CMD_PUTS() seems unnecessarily verbose and
inflexible.  In some cases, the array only has one member.  In other
cases, one might want to use PG_CMD_PRINTF() instead, to parametrize a
command, but that would require breaking up the loop or using
workarounds like replace_token().  Unwind all that; it's much simpler
that way.

Reviewed-by: John Naylor <john.naylor@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/2c50823b-f453-bb97-e38b-34751c51dcdf%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-05 23:33:31 +01:00
Tom Lane
d69d01ba9d Fix Memoize to work with partitionwise joining.
A couple of places weren't up to speed for this.  By sheer good
luck, we didn't fail but just selected a non-memoized join plan,
at least in the test case we have.  Nonetheless, it's a bug,
and I'm not quite sure that it couldn't have worse consequences
in other examples.  So back-patch to v14 where Memoize came in.

Richard Guo

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs48GkNom272sfp0-WeD6_0HSR19BJ4H1c9ZKSfbVnJsvRg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-05 12:36:40 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
35ce24c333 pg_dump: Remove "blob" terminology
For historical reasons, pg_dump refers to large objects as "BLOBs".
This term is not used anywhere else in PostgreSQL, and it also means
something different in the SQL standard and other SQL systems.

This patch renames internal functions, code comments, documentation,
etc. to use the "large object" or "LO" terminology instead.  There is
no functionality change, so the archive format still uses the name
"BLOB" for the archive entry.  Additional long command-line options
are added with the new naming.

Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/868a381f-4650-9460-1726-1ffd39a270b4%40enterprisedb.com
2022-12-05 08:52:55 +01:00
Michael Paquier
71cb84ec69 Add LSN location in some error messages related to WAL pages
The error messages reported during any failures while reading or
validating the header of a WAL currently includes only the offset of the
page but not the compiled LSN referring to the page, requiring an extra
step to compile it if looking at the surroundings with pg_waldump or
similar.  Adding this information costs a bit in translation, but also
eases debugging.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by:  Álvaro Herrera, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Maxim Orlov, Michael
Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACWV=FCddsxcGbVOA=cvPyMr75YCFbSQT6g4KDj=gcJK4g@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-05 09:28:29 +09:00
David Rowley
8692f6644e Fix thinko introduced in 6b423ec67
As pointed out by Dean Rasheed, we really should be using tmp >
-(PG_INTNN_MIN / 10) rather than tmp > (PG_INTNN_MAX / 10) for checking
for overflows in the accumulation in the pg_strtointNN functions.  This
does happen to be the same number when dividing by 10, but there is a
pending patch which adds other bases and this is not the same number if we
were to divide by 2 rather than 10, for example.  If the base 2 parsing
was to follow this example then we could accidentally think a string
containing the value of PG_INT32_MIN was an overflow in pg_strtoint32.
Clearly that shouldn't overflow.

This does not fix any actual live bugs, only some bad examples of overflow
checks for future bases.

Reported-by: Dean Rasheed
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEZATCVEtwfhdm-K-etZYFB0=qsR0nT6qXta_W+GQx4RYph1dg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-05 11:55:05 +13:00
Tom Lane
92c4dafe1e Re-pgindent a few files.
Just because I'm a neatnik, and I'm currently working on
code in this area.  It annoys me to not be able to pgindent
my patches without working around unrelated changes.
2022-12-04 14:25:53 -05:00
Tom Lane
e76913802c Fix broken MemoizePath support in reparameterize_path().
It neglected to recurse to the subpath, meaning you'd get back
a path identical to the input.  This could produce wrong query
results if the omission meant that the subpath fails to enforce
some join clause it should be enforcing.  We don't have a test
case for this at the moment, but the code is obviously broken
and the fix is equally obvious.  Back-patch to v14 where
Memoize was introduced.

Richard Guo

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4_R=ORpz=Lkn2q3ebPC5EuWyfZF+tmfCPVLBVK5W39mHA@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-04 13:48:12 -05:00
Tom Lane
6eb2f0ed4c Add missing MaterialPath support in reparameterize_path[_by_child].
These two functions failed to cover MaterialPath.  That's not a
fatal problem, but we can generate better plans in some cases
if we support it.

Tom Lane and Richard Guo

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1854233.1669949723@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-04 13:35:42 -05:00
Tom Lane
fe12f2f8fa Fix generate_partitionwise_join_paths() to tolerate failure.
We might fail to generate a partitionwise join, because
reparameterize_path_by_child() does not support all path types.
This should not be a hard failure condition: we should just fall back
to a non-partitioned join.  However, generate_partitionwise_join_paths
did not consider this possibility and would emit the (misleading)
error "could not devise a query plan for the given query" if we'd
failed to make any paths for a child join.  Fix it to give up on
partitionwise joining if so.  (The accepted technique for giving up
appears to be to set rel->nparts = 0, which I find pretty bizarre,
but there you have it.)

I have not added a test case because there'd be little point:
any omissions of this sort that we identify would soon get fixed
by extending reparameterize_path_by_child(), so the test would stop
proving anything.  However, right now there is a known test case based
on failure to cover MaterialPath, and with that I've found that this
is broken in all supported versions.  Hence, patch all the way back.

Original report and patch by me; thanks to Richard Guo for
identifying a test case that works against committed versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1854233.1669949723@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-04 13:17:18 -05:00
David Rowley
6b423ec677 Improve performance of pg_strtointNN functions
Experiments have shown that modern versions of both gcc and clang are
unable to fully optimize the multiplication by 10 that we're doing in the
pg_strtointNN functions.  Both compilers seem to be making use of "imul",
which is not the most efficient way to multiply by 10.  This seems to be
due to the overflow checking that we're doing.  Without the overflow
checks, both those compilers switch to a more efficient method of
multiplying by 10.  In absence of overflow concern, integer multiplication
by 10 can be done by bit-shifting left 3 places to multiply by 8 and then
adding the original value twice.

To allow compilers this flexibility, here we adjust the code so that we
accumulate the number as an unsigned version of the type and remove the
use of pg_mul_sNN_overflow() and pg_sub_sNN_overflow().  The overflow
checking can be done simply by checking if the accumulated value has gone
beyond a 10th of the maximum *signed* value for the given type.  If it has
then the accumulation of the next digit will cause an overflow.  After
this is done, we do a final overflow check before converting the unsigned
version of the number back to its signed counterpart.

Testing has shown about an 8% speedup of a COPY into a table containing 2
INT columns.

Author: David Rowley, Dean Rasheed
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvrL6_+wKgPqRHr7gH_6xy3hXM6a3QCsZ5ForurjDFfenA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvrdYByjfj-=WbmVNFgmVZg88-dE7heukw8p55aJ+W=qxQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-04 16:18:18 +13:00
Tom Lane
29452de734 Doc: flesh out fmgr/README's description of context-node usage.
I wrote this to provide a home for a planned discussion of error
return conventions for non-error-throwing functions.  But it seems
useful as documentation of existing code no matter what becomes of
that proposal, so commit separately.
2022-12-03 10:50:39 -05:00
Dean Rasheed
2605643a3a Fix DEFAULT handling for multi-row INSERT rules.
When updating a relation with a rule whose action performed an INSERT
from a multi-row VALUES list, the rewriter might skip processing the
VALUES list, and therefore fail to replace any DEFAULTs in it. This
would lead to an "unrecognized node type" error.

The reason was that RewriteQuery() assumed that a query doing an
INSERT from a multi-row VALUES list would necessarily only have one
item in its fromlist, pointing to the VALUES RTE to read from. That
assumption is correct for the original query, but not for product
queries produced for rule actions. In such cases, there may be
multiple items in the fromlist, possibly including multiple VALUES
RTEs.

What is required instead is for RewriteQuery() to skip any RTEs from
the product query's originating query, which might include one or more
already-processed VALUES RTEs. What's left should then include at most
one VALUES RTE (from the rule action) to be processed.

Patch by me. Thanks to Tom Lane for reviewing.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEZATCV39OOW7LAR_Xq4i%2BLc1Byux%3DeK3Q%3DHD_pF1o9LBt%3DphA%40mail.gmail.com
2022-12-03 12:11:33 +00:00
David Rowley
f73bd5fd08 Add missing const qualifier
This is present in the declaration for ReadDataFromArchive, so we'd better
have it in the definition too in order to avoid compilers from complaining
about the mismatch of function signatures.
2022-12-03 20:33:22 +13:00
Andres Freund
cb2e7ddfe5 Prevent pgstats from getting confused when relkind of a relation changes
When the relkind of a relache entry changes, because a table is converted into
a view, pgstats can get confused in 15+, leading to crashes or assertion
failures.

For HEAD, Tom fixed this in b23cd185fd, by removing support for converting a
table to a view, removing the source of the inconsistency. This commit just
adds an assertion that a relcache entry's relkind does not change, just in
case we end up with another case of that in the future. As there's no cases of
changing relkind anymore, we can't add a test that that's handled correctly.

For 15, fix the problem by not maintaining the association with the old pgstat
entry when the relkind changes during a relcache invalidation processing. In
that case the pgstat entry needs to be unlinked first, to avoid
PgStat_TableStatus->relation getting out of sync. Also add a test reproducing
the issues.

No known problem exists in 11-14, so just add the test there.

Reported-by: vignesh C <vignesh21@gmail.com>
Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm2yXz+zOtv7y5zBd5WKT8O0Ld3YxikuU3dcyCvxF7gypA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm3oZA-8Wbps2Jd1g5_Gjrr-x3YWrJPek-mF5Asrrvz2Dg@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 15-
2022-12-02 18:10:30 -08:00
Jeff Davis
7ac0f8d384 Fix broken hash function hashbpcharextended().
Ignore trailing spaces for non-deterministic collations when
hashing.

The previous behavior could lead to tuples falling into the wrong
partitions when hash partitioning is combined with the BPCHAR type and
a non-deterministic collation. Fortunately, it did not affect hash
indexes, because hash indexes do not use extended hash functions.

Decline to backpatch, per discussion.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/eb83d0ac7b299eb08f9b900dd08a5a0c5d90e517.camel@j-davis.com
Reviewed-by: Richard Guo, Tom Lane
2022-12-02 14:06:31 -08:00
Tom Lane
4c689a69ee Remove gen_node_support.pl's special treatment of EquivalenceClasses.
It seems better to deal with this by explicit annotations on the
fields in question, instead of magic knowledge embedded in the
script.  While that creates a risk-of-omission from failing to
annotate fields, the preceding commit should catch any such
oversights.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/263413.1669513145@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-02 15:20:30 -05:00
Tom Lane
b6bd5def3a Add some error cross-checks to gen_node_support.pl.
Check that if we generate a call to copy, compare, write, or read
a specific node type, that node type does have the appropriate
support function.  (This doesn't protect against trying to invoke
nonexistent code when considering generic field types such as
"Node *", but it seems like a useful check anyway.)

Check that array_size() refers to a field appearing earlier in
the struct.  Aside from catching obvious errors like a misspelled
field name, this protects against a more subtle mistake: if the
size field appears later in the struct than the array field, then
compare and read functions would misbehave.  There is actually
exactly that situation in PlannerInfo, but it's okay since we
do not need compare or read functionality for that (today anyway).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/263413.1669513145@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-12-02 15:09:51 -05:00
Tom Lane
cabfb8241d Fix psql's \sf and \ef for new-style SQL functions.
Some options of these commands need to be able to identify the start
of the function body within the output of pg_get_functiondef().
It used to be that that always began with "AS", but since the
introduction of new-style SQL functions, it might also start with
"BEGIN" or "RETURN".  Fix that on the psql side, and add some
regression tests.

Noted by me awhile ago, but I didn't do anything about it.
Thanks to David Johnston for a nag.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/AM9PR01MB8268D5CDABDF044EE9F42173FE8C9@AM9PR01MB8268.eurprd01.prod.exchangelabs.com
2022-12-02 14:24:44 -05:00
Tom Lane
b23cd185fd Remove logic for converting a table to a view.
Up to now we have allowed manual creation of an ON SELECT rule on
a table to convert it into a view.  That was never anything but a
horrid, error-prone hack though.  pg_dump used to rely on that
behavior to deal with cases involving circular dependencies,
where a dependency loop could be broken by separating the creation
of a view from installation of its ON SELECT rule.  However, we
changed pg_dump to use CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW for that in commit
d8c05aff5 (which was later back-patched as far as 9.4), so there's
not a good argument anymore for continuing to support the behavior.

The proximate reason for axing it now is that we found that the
new statistics code has failure modes associated with the relkind
change caused by this behavior.  We'll patch around that in v15,
but going forward it seems like a better idea to get rid of the
need to support relkind changes.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm2yXz+zOtv7y5zBd5WKT8O0Ld3YxikuU3dcyCvxF7gypA@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-02 12:14:32 -05:00
Daniel Gustafsson
c76da690ba Report incompatible roles in pg_upgrade checking
When checking for roles with a pg_ prefix in <= 9.5 servers, report
all found roles in a text file as how other checks are done instead
of just reporting that they exist. Rolenames are printed with their
Oids to match other reports.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Reviewed-by: Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4BB2735C-C347-4CF7-AFB1-8573BE930066@yesql.se
2022-12-02 13:10:21 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera
fb958b5da8
Generalize ri_RootToPartitionMap to use for non-partition children
ri_RootToPartitionMap is currently only initialized for tuple routing
target partitions, though a future commit will need the ability to use
it even for the non-partition child tables, so make adjustments to the
decouple it from the partitioning code.

Also, make it lazily initialized via ExecGetRootToChildMap(), making
that function its preferred access path.  Existing third-party code
accessing it directly should no longer do so; consequently, it's been
renamed to ri_RootToChildMap, which also makes it consistent with
ri_ChildToRootMap.

ExecGetRootToChildMap() houses the logic of setting the map appropriately
depending on whether a given child relation is partition or not.

To support this, also add a separate entry point for TupleConversionMap
creation that receives an AttrMap.  No new code here, just split an
existing function in two.

Author: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqEYUhDXSK5BTvG_xk=eaAEJCD4GS3C6uH7ybBvv+Z_Tmg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-02 10:35:55 +01:00
Amit Kapila
40b1491357 Fix incorrect output from pgoutput when using column lists.
For Updates and Deletes, we were not honoring the columns list for old
tuple values while sending tuple data via pgoutput. This results in
pgoutput emitting more columns than expected.

This is not a problem for built-in logical replication as we simply ignore
additional columns based on the relation information sent previously which
didn't have those columns. However, some other users of pgoutput plugin
may expect the columns as per the column list. Also, sending extra columns
unnecessarily consumes network bandwidth defeating the purpose of the
column list feature.

Reported-by: Gunnar Morling
Author: Hou Zhijie
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 15
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADGJaX9kiRZ-OH0EpWF5Fkyh1ZZYofoNRCrhapBfdk02tj5EKg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-02 10:52:58 +05:30
Andres Freund
069de07eae autoconf: Don't AC_SUBST() LD in configure
The only use of $(LD) in Makefiles is for AIX, to generate the export file for
the backend. We only support the system linker on AIX and we already hardcode
the path to a number of other binaries. Removing LD substitution will simplify
the upcoming meson PGXS compatibility.

While at it, add a comment why -r is used.

A subsequent commit will remove the determination of LD from configure as
well.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221005200710.luvw5evhwf6clig6@awork3.anarazel.de
2022-12-01 19:03:26 -08:00
Andres Freund
e0f0e08e17 autoconf: Unify CFLAGS_SSE42 and CFLAGS_ARMV8_CRC32C
Until now we emitted the cflags to build the CRC objects into architecture
specific variables. That doesn't make a whole lot of sense to me - we're never
going to target x86 and arm at the same time, so they don't need to be
separate variables.

It might be better to instead continue to have CFLAGS_SSE42 /
CFLAGS_ARMV8_CRC32C be computed by PGAC_ARMV8_CRC32C_INTRINSICS /
PGAC_SSE42_CRC32_INTRINSICS and then set CFLAGS_CRC based on those. But it
seems unlikely that we'd need other sets of CRC specific flags for those two
architectures at the same time.

This simplifies the upcoming meson PGXS compatibility.

Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221005200710.luvw5evhwf6clig6@awork3.anarazel.de
2022-12-01 18:46:55 -08:00
Michael Paquier
5e73a60488 Switch pg_dump to use compression specifications
Compression specifications are currently used by pg_basebackup and
pg_receivewal, and are able to let the user control in an extended way
the method and level of compression used.  As an effect of this commit,
pg_dump's -Z/--compress is now able to use more than just an integer, as
of the grammar "method[:detail]".

The method can be either "none" or "gzip", and can optionally take a
detail string.  If the detail string is only an integer, it defines the
compression level.  A comma-separated list of keywords can also be used
method allows for more options, the only keyword supported now is
"level".

The change is backward-compatible, hence specifying only an integer
leads to no compression for a level of 0 and gzip compression when the
level is greater than 0.

Most of the code changes are straight-forward, as pg_dump was relying on
an integer tracking the compression level to check for gzip or no
compression.  These are changed to use a compression specification and
the algorithm stored in it.

As of this change, note that the dump format is not bumped because there
is no need yet to track the compression algorithm in the TOC entries.
Hence, we still rely on the compression level to make the difference
when reading them.  This will be mandatory once a new compression method
is added, though.

In order to keep the code simpler when parsing the compression
specification, the code is changed so as pg_dump now fails hard when
using gzip on -Z/--compress without its support compiled, rather than
enforcing no compression without the user knowing about it except
through a warning.  Like before this commit, archive and custom formats
are compressed by default when the code is compiled with gzip, and left
uncompressed without gzip.

Author: Georgios Kokolatos
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/O4mutIrCES8ZhlXJiMvzsivT7ztAMja2lkdL1LJx6O5f22I2W8PBIeLKz7mDLwxHoibcnRAYJXm1pH4tyUNC4a8eDzLn22a6Pb1S74Niexg=@pm.me
2022-12-02 10:45:02 +09:00
Jeff Davis
edf12e7bbd Fix memory leak for hashing with nondeterministic collations.
Backpatch through 12, where nondeterministic collations were
introduced (5e1963fb76).

Backpatch-through: 12
2022-12-01 11:49:15 -08:00
Tom Lane
1dd6700f44 Fix under-parenthesized display of AT TIME ZONE constructs.
In commit 40c24bfef, I forgot to use get_rule_expr_paren() for the
arguments of AT TIME ZONE, resulting in possibly not printing parens
for expressions that need it.  But get_rule_expr_paren() wouldn't have
gotten it right anyway, because isSimpleNode() hadn't been taught that
COERCE_SQL_SYNTAX parent nodes don't guarantee sufficient parentheses.
Improve all that.  Also use this methodology for F_IS_NORMALIZED, so
that we don't print useless parens for that.

In passing, remove a comment that was obsoleted later.

Per report from Duncan Sands.  Back-patch to v14 where this code
came in.  (Before that, we didn't try to print AT TIME ZONE that way,
so there was no bug just ugliness.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f41566aa-a057-6628-4b7c-b48770ecb84a@deepbluecap.com
2022-12-01 11:38:14 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
ec38694894
Move PartitioPruneInfo out of plan nodes into PlannedStmt
The planner will now add a given PartitioPruneInfo to
PlannedStmt.partPruneInfos instead of directly to the
Append/MergeAppend plan node.  What gets set instead in the
latter is an index field which points to the list element
of PlannedStmt.partPruneInfos containing the PartitioPruneInfo
belonging to the plan node.

A later commit will make AcquireExecutorLocks() do the initial
partition pruning to determine a minimal set of partitions to be
locked when validating a plan tree and it will need to consult the
PartitioPruneInfos referenced therein to do so.  It would be better
for the PartitioPruneInfos to be accessible directly than requiring
a walk of the plan tree to find them, which is easier when it can be
done by simply iterating over PlannedStmt.partPruneInfos.

Author: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqFGkMSge6TgC9KQzde0ohpAycLQuV7ooitEEpbKB0O_mg@mail.gmail.com
2022-12-01 12:56:21 +01:00
Michael Paquier
43351557d0 Make materialized views participate in predicate locking
Matviews have been discarded from needing predicate locks since 3bf3ab8
and their introduction.  At this point, there was no concurrent flavor
of REFRESH yet, hence there was no meaning in having materialized views
look at read/write conflicts with concurrent transactions using
themselves the serializable isolation level because they could only be
refreshed with an access exclusive lock.  CONCURRENTLY, on the contrary,
allows reads and writes during a refresh as it holds a share update
exclusive lock.

Some isolation tests are added to show the effect of the change, with a
combination of one table and a matview based on it, using a mix of
REFRESH CONCURRENTLY and read/write queries.

This could arguably be considered as a bug, but as it is a subtle
behavior change potentially impacting applications no backpatch is
done.

Author: Yugo Nagata
Reviewed-by: Richard Guo, Dilip Kumar, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220726164434.42d4e33911b4b4fcf751c4e7@sraoss.co.jp
2022-12-01 15:41:13 +09:00
Tom Lane
d5515ca7cf Reject missing database name in pg_regress and cohorts.
Writing "pg_regress --dbname= ..." led to a crash, because
we weren't expecting there to be no database name supplied.
It doesn't seem like a great idea to run regression tests
in whatever is the user's default database; so rather than
supporting this case let's explicitly reject it.

Per report from Xing Guo.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACpMh+A8cRvtvtOWVAZsCM1DU81GK4DL26R83y6ugZ1osV=ifA@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-30 13:01:41 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
8f2e74bf87
Bump catalog version for previous commit 2022-11-30 12:09:13 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera
599b33b949
Stop accessing checkAsUser via RTE in some cases
A future commit will move the checkAsUser field from RangeTblEntry
to a new node that, unlike RTEs, will only be created for tables
mentioned in the query but not for the inheritance child relations
added to the query by the planner.  So, checkAsUser value for a
given child relation will have to be obtained by referring to that
for its ancestor mentioned in the query.

In preparation, it seems better to expand the use of RelOptInfo.userid
during planning in place of rte->checkAsUser so that there will be
fewer places to adjust for the above change.

Given that the child-to-ancestor mapping is not available during the
execution of a given "child" ForeignScan node, add a checkAsUser
field to ForeignScan to carry the child relation's RelOptInfo.userid.

Author: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqGFCs2uq7VRKi7g+FFKbP6Ea_2_HkgZb2HPhUfaAKT3ng@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-30 12:07:03 +01:00
Michael Paquier
d2a4490401 Add regression tests for psql's \o and \g on files
This adds coverage for a few scenarios not checked yet in psql, with
multiple query combined across files defined by \o, \g or both at the
same time.  The results are saved in the output files defined, then
reloaded back to check what has been written to them.

Author: Daniel Verite
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25c2bb5b-9012-40f8-8088-774cb764046d@manitou-mail.org
2022-11-30 14:46:43 +09:00
Michael Paquier
d18655cc03 Refactor code parsing compression option values (-Z/--compress)
This commit moves the code in charge of deparsing the method and detail
strings fed later to parse_compress_specification() to a common routine,
where the backward-compatible case of only an integer being found (N
= 0 => "none", N > 1 => gzip at level N) is handled.

Note that this has a side-effect for pg_basebackup, as we now attempt to
detect "server-" and "client-" before checking for the integer-only
pre-14 grammar, where values like server-N and client-N (without the
follow-up detail string) are now valid rather than failing because of an
unsupported method name.  Past grammars are still handled the same way,
but these flavors are now authorized, and would now switch to consider N
= 0 as no compression and N > 1 as gzip with the compression level used
as N, with the caller still controlling if the compression method should
be done server-side, client-side or is unspecified.  The documentation
of pg_basebackup is updated to reflect that.

This benefits other code paths that would like to rely on the same logic
as pg_basebackup and pg_receivewal with option values used for
compression specifications, one area discussed lately being pg_dump.

Author: Georgios Kokolatos, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/O4mutIrCES8ZhlXJiMvzsivT7ztAMja2lkdL1LJx6O5f22I2W8PBIeLKz7mDLwxHoibcnRAYJXm1pH4tyUNC4a8eDzLn22a6Pb1S74Niexg=@pm.me
2022-11-30 09:34:32 +09:00
Michael Paquier
d74a366aa2 Fix comment in fe-auth-scram.c
The frontend-side routine in charge of building a SCRAM verifier
mentioned that the restrictions applying to SASLprep on the password
with the encoding are described at the top of fe-auth-scram.c, but this
information is in auth-scram.c.

This is wrong since 8f8b9be, so backpatch all the way down as this is an
important documentation bit.

Spotted while reviewing a different patch.

Backpatch-through: 11
2022-11-30 08:37:59 +09:00
Tom Lane
8242752f9c Improve heuristics for compressing the KnownAssignedXids array.
Previously, we'd compress only when the active range of array entries
reached Max(4 * PROCARRAY_MAXPROCS, 2 * pArray->numKnownAssignedXids).
If max_connections is large, the first term could result in not
compressing for a long time, resulting in much wastage of cycles in
hot-standby backends scanning the array to take snapshots.  Get rid
of that term, and just bound it to 2 * pArray->numKnownAssignedXids.

That however creates the opposite risk, that we might spend too much
effort compressing.  Hence, consider compressing only once every 128
commit records.  (This frequency was chosen by benchmarking.  While
we only tried one benchmark scenario, the results seem stable over
a fairly wide range of frequencies.)

Also, force compression when processing RecoveryInfo WAL records
(which should be infrequent); the old code could perform compression
then, but would do so only after the same array-range check as for
the transaction-commit path.

Also, opportunistically run compression if the startup process is about
to wait for WAL, though not oftener than once a second.  This should
prevent cases where we waste lots of time by leaving the array
not-compressed for long intervals due to low WAL traffic.

Lastly, add a simple check to keep us from uselessly compressing
when the array storage is already compact.

Back-patch, as the performance problem is worse in pre-v14 branches
than in HEAD.

Simon Riggs and Michail Nikolaev, with help from Tom Lane and
Andres Freund.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALdSSPgahNUD_=pB_j=1zSnDBaiOtqVfzo8Ejt5J_k7qZiU1Tw@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-29 15:43:17 -05:00
Tom Lane
8b47ccb624 Prevent clobbering of utility statements in SQL function caches.
This is an oversight in commit 7c337b6b5: I apparently didn't think
about the possibility of a SQL function being executed multiple
times within a query.  In that case, functions.c's primitive caching
mechanism allows the same utility parse tree to be presented for
execution more than once.  We have to tell ProcessUtility to make
a working copy of the parse tree, or bad things happen.

Normally I'd add a regression test, but I think the reported crasher
is dependent on some rather random implementation choices that are
nowhere near functions.c, so its usefulness as a long-lived test
feels questionable.  In any case, this fix is clearly correct given
the design choices of 7c337b6b5.

Per bug #17702 from Xin Wen.  Thanks to Daniel Gustafsson for
analysis.  Back-patch to v14 where the faulty commit came in
(before that, the responsibility for copying scribble-able
utility parse trees lay elsewhere).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17702-ad24fdcdd1e9047a@postgresql.org
2022-11-29 11:46:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
51dfaa0b01 Remove bogus Assert and dead code in remove_useless_results_recurse().
The JOIN_SEMI case Assert'ed that there are no PlaceHolderVars that
need to be evaluated at the semijoin's RHS, which is wrong because
there could be some in the semijoin's qual condition.  However, there
could not be any references further up than that, and within the qual
there is not any way that such a PHV could have gone to null yet, so
we don't really need the PHV and there is no need to avoid making the
RHS-removal optimization.  The upshot is that there's no actual bug
in production code, and we ought to just remove this misguided Assert.

While we're here, also drop the JOIN_RIGHT case, which is dead code
because reduce_outer_joins() already got rid of JOIN_RIGHT.

Per bug #17700 from Xin Wen.  Uselessness of the JOIN_RIGHT case
pointed out by Richard Guo.  Back-patch to v12 where this code
was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17700-2b5c10d917c30687@postgresql.org
2022-11-29 10:52:44 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
ad86d159b6
Add 'missing_ok' argument to build_attrmap_by_name
When it's given as true, return a 0 in the position of the missing
column rather than raising an error.

This is currently unused, but it allows us to reimplement column
permission checking in a subsequent commit.  It seems worth breaking
into a separate commit because it affects unrelated code.

Author: Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqFfiai=qBxPDTjaio_ZcaqUKh+FC=prESrB8ogZgFNNNQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-29 09:39:36 +01:00
Michael Paquier
00ae5d6f58 meson: Add some missing env settings for tests of pg_dump and pg_verifybackup
The commands used for the compression tests were missing in a few
places, causing the tests related to these to never run.

Georgios has spotted GZIP_PROGRAM missing in pg_dump, while I have
noticed the ones missing in pg_verifybackup while looking at the rest of
the tree.

Author: Georgios Kokolatos, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/O4mutIrCES8ZhlXJiMvzsivT7ztAMja2lkdL1LJx6O5f22I2W8PBIeLKz7mDLwxHoibcnRAYJXm1pH4tyUNC4a8eDzLn22a6Pb1S74Niexg=@pm.me
2022-11-29 13:33:31 +09:00
Michael Paquier
8aa03f3caa Fix comment in snapbuild.c
Author: Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoAmf-PkSnMGAJg2DtGhp7O7vpHoexCxfQLKZg8xrbRwsg@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-29 08:53:01 +09:00
Thomas Munro
cd4329d939 Remove promote_trigger_file.
Previously, an idle startup (recovery) process would wake up every 5
seconds to have a chance to poll for promote_trigger_file, even if that
GUC was not configured.  That promotion triggering mechanism was
effectively superseded by pg_ctl promote and pg_promote() a long time
ago.  There probably aren't many users left and it's very easy to change
to the modern mechanisms, so we agreed to remove the feature.

This is part of a campaign to reduce wakeups on idle systems.

Author: Simon Riggs <simon.riggs@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy <bharath.rupireddyforpostgres@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lawrence Barwick <barwick@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANbhV-FsjnzVOQGBpQ589%3DnWuL1Ex0Ykn74Nh1hEjp2usZSR5g%40mail.gmail.com
2022-11-29 12:08:38 +13:00
Andrew Dunstan
4441fc704d Provide non-superuser predefined roles for vacuum and analyze
This provides two new predefined roles: pg_vacuum_all_tables and
pg_analyze_all_tables. Roles which have been granted these roles can
perform vacuum or analyse respectively on any or all tables as if they
were a superuser. This removes the need to grant superuser privilege to
roles just so they can perform vacuum and/or analyze.

Nathan Bossart

Reviewed by: Bharath Rupireddy, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Stephen Frost, Robert
Haas, Mark Dilger, Tom Lane, Corey Huinker, David G. Johnston, Michael
Paquier.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220722203735.GB3996698@nathanxps13
2022-11-28 12:08:14 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
b5d6382496 Provide per-table permissions for vacuum and analyze.
Currently a table can only be vacuumed or analyzed by its owner or
a superuser. This can now be extended to any user by means of an
appropriate GRANT.

Nathan Bossart

Reviewed by: Bharath Rupireddy, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Stephen Frost, Robert
Haas, Mark Dilger, Tom Lane, Corey Huinker, David G. Johnston, Michael
Paquier.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220722203735.GB3996698@nathanxps13
2022-11-28 12:08:14 -05:00
Michael Paquier
cbe6e482d7 Add TAP tests for include directives in HBA end ident files
This commit adds a basic set of authentication tests to check after the
new keywords added by a54b658 for the HBA and ident files, aka
"include", "include_if_exists" and "include_dir".

This includes checks for all the positive cases originally proposed,
where valid contents are generated for the HBA and ident files without
any errors happening in the server, checking as well the contents of
their respective system views.  The error handling will be evaluated
separately (-DEXEC_BACKEND makes that trickier), and what we have here
covers most of the ground I would like to see covered if one manipulates
the tokenization logic of hba.c in the future.

While on it, some coverage is added for files included with '@' for
database or user name lists.

Author: Julien Rouhaud
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220223045959.35ipdsvbxcstrhya@jrouhaud
2022-11-28 15:19:06 +09:00
Andrew Dunstan
ccc59a83cd Fix binary mismatch for MSVC plperl vs gcc built perl libs
When loading plperl built against Strawberry perl or the msys2 ucrt perl
that have been built with gcc, a binary mismatch has been encountered
which looks like this:

loadable library and perl binaries are mismatched (got handshake key 0000000012800080, needed 0000000012900080)

To cure this we bring the handshake keys into sync by adding
NO_THREAD_SAFE_LOCALE to the defines used to build plperl.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20211005004334.tgjmro4kuachwiuc@alap3.anarazel.de
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c2da86a0-2906-744c-923d-16da6047875e@dunslane.net

Backpatch to all live branches.
2022-11-27 09:03:22 -05:00
Michael Paquier
1e314847dd Mark two signal flags as sig_atomic_t in pgbench and pg_test_fsync
Two booleans used for timeout tracking were used within some SIGALRM
signal handlers, but they were not declared as sig_atomic_t, so mark
them as such.  This has no consequence on WIN32 for both tools.

Author: Ranier Vilela
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEudQArCDQQiPiFR16=yu9k5s2tp4tgEe1U1ZbkW4ofx81AWWQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-26 20:12:33 +09:00
Michael Paquier
02ac05b4c0 Fix typo in hba.c
Spotted while reading through the git history.
2022-11-26 10:14:18 +09:00
Andrew Dunstan
341f4e002d Allow building with MSVC and Strawberry perl
Strawberry uses __builtin_expect which Visual C doesn't have. For this
case define it as a noop. Solution taken from vim sources.

Backpatch to all live branches
2022-11-25 15:28:38 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
d94f29cb89 Correct some SQL feature names
Maybe these were initially typos or they have been changed upstream
since we first added them.  This brings it all in line with SQL:2016.
2022-11-25 16:56:05 +01:00
Andrew Dunstan
50617a9aa3 Fix gen_node_support.pl for changed AclMode size
omitted from 7b378237aa, mea culpa.

Complaint and fix from Amit Langote.
2022-11-25 08:55:56 -05:00
Dean Rasheed
7b2ccc5e03 Fix rule-detection code for MERGE.
Use the relation's rd_rules structure to test whether it has rules,
rather than the relhasrules flag, which might be out of date.

Reviewed by Tom Lane.

Backpatch to 15, where MERGE was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEZATCVkBVZABfw71sYvkcPf6tarcOFST5Bc6AOi-LFT9YdccQ%40mail.gmail.com
2022-11-25 13:31:48 +00:00
Etsuro Fujita
ffbb7e65a8 Fix handling of pending inserts in nodeModifyTable.c.
Commit b663a4136, which allowed FDWs to INSERT rows in bulk, added to
nodeModifyTable.c code to flush pending inserts to the foreign-table
result relation(s) before completing processing of the ModifyTable node,
but the code failed to take into account the case where the INSERT query
has modifying CTEs, leading to incorrect results.

Also, that commit failed to flush pending inserts before firing BEFORE
ROW triggers so that rows are visible to such triggers.

In that commit we scanned through EState's
es_tuple_routing_result_relations or es_opened_result_relations list to
find the foreign-table result relations to which pending inserts are
flushed, but that would be inefficient in some cases.  So to fix, 1) add
a List member to EState to record the insert-pending result relations,
and 2) modify nodeModifyTable.c so that it adds the foreign-table result
relation to the list in ExecInsert() if appropriate, and flushes pending
inserts properly using the list where needed.

While here, fix a copy-and-pasteo in a comment in ExecBatchInsert(),
which was added by that commit.

Back-patch to v14 where that commit appeared.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPmGK16qutyCmyJJzgQOhfBq%3DNoGDqTB6O0QBZTihrbqre%2BoxA%40mail.gmail.com
2022-11-25 17:45:00 +09:00
Michael Paquier
9e492d6b69 Skip TAP test for peer authentication if there are no unix-domain sockets
Peer connections require support for local connections to work, but the
test missed the same check as the other ones in this suite.  The
buildfarm does not run the authentication tests on Windows, and, more
surprisingly, the CI with meson was already able to skip it.

Author: Anton A. Melnikov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/28b9d685-9590-45b1-fe87-358d61c6950a@inbox.ru
2022-11-25 16:37:49 +09:00
Michael Paquier
d13b684117 Introduce variables for initial and max nesting depth on configuration files
The code has been assuming already in a few places that the initial
recursion nesting depth is 0, and the recent changes in hba.c (mainly
783e8c6) have relies on this assumption in more places.  The maximum
recursion nesting level is assumed to be 10 for hba.c and GUCs.

Author: Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221124090724.n7amf5kpdhx6vb76@jrouhaud
2022-11-25 07:40:12 +09:00
David Rowley
2d1f3bce97 Fix some 32-bit shift warnings in MSVC
7b378237a widened AclMode to 64 bits which resulted in 3 new additional
warnings on MSVC.  Here we make use of UINT64CONST to reassure the
compiler that we do intend the bit shift expression to yield a 64-bit
result.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvo=pn01Y_3zASZZqn+cotF1c4QFCwWgk6MiF0VscaE5ug@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-25 11:05:22 +13:00
David Rowley
ec5affdbc2 Improve indenting in _hash_pgaddtup
The Assert added in d09dbeb9b came out rather ugly after having run
pgindent on that code.  Here we adjust things to use some local variables
so that the Assert remains within the 80-character margin.

Author: Ted Yu
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALte62wLSir1=x93Jf0xZvHaO009FEJfhVMFwnaR8q=csPP8kQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-25 10:10:44 +13:00
Alvaro Herrera
2cf41cd309
Make multixact error message more explicit
There are recent reports involving a very old error message that we have
no history of hitting -- perhaps a recently introduced bug.  Improve the
error message in an attempt to improve our chances of investigating the
bug.

Per reports from Dimos Stamatakis and Bob Krier.

Backpatch to 11.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CO2PR0801MB2310579F65529380A4E5EDC0E20A9@CO2PR0801MB2310.namprd08.prod.outlook.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17518-04e368df5ad7f2ee@postgresql.org
2022-11-24 10:45:10 +01:00
Michael Paquier
af205152ef Add the database name to the ps display of logical WAL senders
Logical WAL senders display now as follows, gaining a database name:
postgres: walsender USER DATABASE HOST(PORT) STATE

Physical WAL senders show up the same, as of:
postgres: walsender USER HOST(PORT) STATE

This information was missing, hence it was not possible to know from ps
if a WAL sender was a logical or a physical one, and on which database
it is connected when it is logical.

Author: Tatsuhiro Nakamori
Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao, Bharath Rupireddy
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/36a3b137e82e0ea9fe7e4234f03b64a1@oss.nttdata.com
2022-11-24 16:07:59 +09:00
Michael Paquier
a54b658ce7 Add support for file inclusions in HBA and ident configuration files
pg_hba.conf and pg_ident.conf gain support for three record keywords:
- "include", to include a file.
- "include_if_exists", to include a file, ignoring it if missing.
- "include_dir", to include a directory of files.  These are classified
by name (C locale, mostly) and need to be prefixed by ".conf", hence
following the same rules as GUCs.

This commit relies on the refactoring pieces done in efc9816, ad6c528,
783e8c6 and 1b73d0b, adding a small wrapper to build a list of
TokenizedAuthLines (tokenize_include_file), and the code is shaped to
offer some symmetry with what is done for GUCs with the same options.

pg_hba_file_rules and pg_ident_file_mappings gain a new field called
file_name, to track from which file a record is located, taking
advantage of the addition of rule_number in c591300 to offer an
organized view of the HBA or ident records loaded.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Julien Rouhaud
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220223045959.35ipdsvbxcstrhya@jrouhaud
2022-11-24 13:51:34 +09:00
David Rowley
d09dbeb9bd Speedup hash index builds by skipping needless binary searches
When building hash indexes using the spool method, tuples are added to the
index page in hashkey order.  Because of this, we can safely skip
performing the binary search on the existing tuples on the page to find
the location to insert the tuple based on its hashkey value.  For this
case, we can just always put the tuple at the end of the item array as the
tuples will always arrive in hashkey order.

Testing has shown that this can improve hash index build speeds by 5-15%
with a unique set of integer values.

Author: Simon Riggs
Reviewed-by: David Rowley
Tested-by: David Zhang, Tomas Vondra
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANbhV-GBc5JoG0AneUGPZZW3o4OK5LjBGeKe_icpC3R1McrZWQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-24 17:21:44 +13:00
Michael Paquier
d46ad72f46 Create memory context for tokenization after opening top-level file in hba.c
The memory context was created before attempting to open the first HBA
or ident file, which would cause it to leak.  This had no consequences
for the system views for HBA and ident files, but this would cause
memory leaks in the postmaster on reload if the initial HBA and/or ident
files are missing, which is a valid behavior while the backend is
running.

Oversight in efc9816.

Author: Ted Yu
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALte62xH6ivgiKKzPRJgfekPZC6FKLB3xbnf3=tZmc_gKj78dw@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-24 10:27:38 +09:00
Michael Paquier
d5566fbfeb Add missing initialization in tokenize_expand_file() for output list
This should have been added in efc9816, but it looks like I have found a
way to mess up a bit a patch split.  This should have no consequence in
practice, but let's be clean.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y324HvGKiWxW2yxe@paquier.xyz
2022-11-24 10:03:11 +09:00
Michael Paquier
efc981627a Rework memory contexts in charge of HBA/ident tokenization
The list of TokenizedAuthLines generated at parsing for the HBA and
ident files is now stored in a static context called tokenize_context,
where only all the parsed tokens are stored.  This context is created
when opening the first authentication file of a HBA/ident set (hba_file
or ident_file), and is cleaned up once we are done all the work around
it through a new routine called free_auth_file().  One call of
open_auth_file() should have one matching call of free_auth_file(), the
creation and deletion of the tokenization context is controlled by the
recursion depth of the tokenization.

Rather than having tokenize_auth_file() return a memory context that
includes all the records, the tokenization logic now creates and deletes
one memory context each time this function is called.  This will
simplify recursive calls to this routine for the upcoming inclusion
record logic.

While on it, rename tokenize_inc_file() to tokenize_expand_file() as
this would conflict with the upcoming patch that will add inclusion
records for HBA/ident files.  An '@' file has its tokens added to an
existing list.

Reloading HBA/indent configuration in a tight loop shows no leaks, as of
one type of test done (with and without -DEXEC_BACKEND).

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y324HvGKiWxW2yxe@paquier.xyz
2022-11-24 08:21:55 +09:00
Alexander Korotkov
cee1209514 Support for custom slots in the custom executor nodes
Some custom table access method may have their tuple format and use custom
executor nodes for their custom scan types. The ability to set a custom slot
would save them from tuple format conversion. Other users of custom executor
nodes may also benefit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPpHfduJUU6ToecvTyRE_yjxTS80FyPpct4OHaLFk3OEheMTNA@mail.gmail.com
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Reviewed-by: Pavel Borisov
2022-11-24 00:36:11 +03:00
Andrew Dunstan
b7a5ef17cf Simplify WARNING messages from skipped vacuum/analyze on a table
This will more easily accomodate adding new permissions for vacuum and
analyze.

Nathan Bossart following a suggestion from Kyotaro Horiguchi

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220726.104712.912995710251150228.horikyota.ntt@gmail.com
2022-11-23 14:43:16 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
7b378237aa Expand AclMode to 64 bits
We're running out of bits for new permissions. This change doubles the
number of permissions we can accomodate from 16 to 32, so the
forthcoming new ones for vacuum/analyze don't exhaust the pool.

Nathan Bossart

Reviewed by: Bharath Rupireddy, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Stephen Frost, Robert
Haas, Mark Dilger, Tom Lane, Corey Huinker, David G. Johnston, Michael
Paquier.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220722203735.GB3996698@nathanxps13
2022-11-23 14:43:16 -05:00
Peter Geoghegan
b6074846ce Simplify vacuum_set_xid_limits() signature.
Pass VACUUM parameters (VacuumParams state) to vacuum_set_xid_limits()
directly, rather than passing most individual VacuumParams fields as
separate arguments.

Also make vacuum_set_xid_limits() output parameter symbol names match
those used by its vacuumlazy.c caller.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=TE7gW5DgSahDkf0UEZigFGAoHNNN6EvSrdzC=Kn+hrA@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-23 11:10:06 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan
02d647bbf0 Don't test HEAP_XMAX_INVALID when freezing xmax.
We shouldn't ever need to rely on whether HEAP_XMAX_INVALID is set in
t_infomask when considering whether or not an xmax should be deemed
already frozen, since that status flag is just a hint.  The only
acceptable representation for an "xmax_already_frozen" raw xmax field is
the transaction ID value zero (also known as InvalidTransactionId).

Adjust code that superficially appeared to rely on HEAP_XMAX_INVALID to
make the rule about xmax_already_frozen clear.  Also avoid needlessly
rereading the tuple's raw xmax.

Oversight in bugfix commit d2599ecf.  There is no evidence that this
ever led to incorrect behavior, so no backpatch.  The worst consequence
of this bug was that VACUUM could hypothetically fail to notice and
report on certain kinds of corruption, which seems fairly benign.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wzkh3DMCDRPfhZxj9xCq9v3WmzvmbiCpf1dNKUBPadhCbQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-23 10:49:39 -08:00
Andrew Dunstan
b425bf0081
Fix perl warning from commit 9b4eafcaf4
per gripe from Andres Freund and Tom Lane

Backpatch to all live branches.
2022-11-23 07:03:06 -05:00
Tom Lane
56d0ed3b75 Give better hints for ambiguous or unreferenceable columns.
Examine ParseNamespaceItem flags to detect whether a column name
is unreferenceable for lack of LATERAL, or could be referenced if
a qualified name were used, and give better hints for such cases.
Also, don't phrase the message to imply that there's only one
matching column when there is really more than one.

Many of the regression test output changes are not very interesting,
but just reflect reclassifying the "There is a column ... but it
cannot be referenced from this part of the query" messages as DETAIL
rather than HINT.  They are details per our style guide, in the sense
of being factual rather than offering advice; and this change provides
room to offer actual HINTs about what to do.

While here, adjust the fuzzy-name-matching code to be a shade less
impenetrable.  It was overloading the meanings of FuzzyAttrMatchState
fields way too much IMO, so splitting them into multiple fields seems
to make it clearer.  It's not like we need to shave bytes in that
struct.

Per discussion of bug #17233 from Alexander Korolev.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17233-afb9d806aaa64b17@postgresql.org
2022-11-22 18:46:31 -05:00
Tom Lane
9c6ad5eaa9 YA attempt at taming worst-case behavior of get_actual_variable_range.
We've made multiple attempts at preventing get_actual_variable_range
from taking an unreasonable amount of time (3ca930fc3, fccebe421).
But there's still an issue for the very first planning attempt after
deletion of a large number of extremal-valued tuples.  While that
planning attempt will set "killed" bits on the tuples it visits and
thereby reduce effort for next time, there's still a lot of work it
has to do to visit the heap and then set those bits.  It's (usually?)
not worth it to do that much work at plan time to have a slightly
better estimate, especially in a context like this where the table
contents are known to be mutating rapidly.

Therefore, let's bound the amount of work to be done by giving up
after we've visited 100 heap pages.  Giving up just means we'll
fall back on the extremal value recorded in pg_statistic, so it
shouldn't mean that planner estimates suddenly become worthless.

Note that this means we'll still gradually whittle down the problem
by setting a few more index "killed" bits in each planning attempt;
so eventually we'll reach a good state (barring further deletions),
even in the absence of VACUUM.

Simon Riggs, per a complaint from Jakub Wartak (with cosmetic
adjustments by me).  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKZiRmznOwi0oaV=4PHOCM4ygcH4MgSvt8=5cu_vNCfc8FSUug@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-22 14:40:20 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
0538d4c0c3
Remove useless MERGE test
This was trying to exercise an ERROR we don't actually have.

Backpatch to 15.

Reported by Teja Mupparti <Tejeswar.Mupparti@microsoft.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/SN6PR2101MB1040BDAF740EA4389484E92BF0079@SN6PR2101MB1040.namprd21.prod.outlook.com
2022-11-22 11:26:47 +01:00
Amit Kapila
a1efcda7c3 Improve comments atop pg_get_replication_slots.
Update comments atop pg_get_replication_slots to make it clear that it
shows all replication slots that currently exist on the database cluster.

Author: sirisha chamarthi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKrAKeXRuFpeiWS+STGFm-RFfW19sUDxju66JkyRi13kdQf94Q@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-22 15:22:00 +05:30
Alvaro Herrera
0557e17702
Ignore invalidated slots while computing oldest catalog Xmin
Once a logical slot has acquired a catalog_xmin, it doesn't let go of
it, even when invalidated by exceeding the max_slot_wal_keep_size, which
means that dead catalog tuples are not removed by vacuum anymore since
the point is invalidated, until the slot is dropped.  This could be
catastrophic if catalog churn is high.

Change the computation of Xmin to ignore invalidated slots,
to prevent dead rows from accumulating.

Backpatch to 13, where slot invalidation appeared.

Author: Sirisha Chamarthi <sirichamarthi22@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat.oss@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKrAKeUEDeqquN9vwzNeG-CN8wuVsfRYbeOUV9qKO_RHok=j+g@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-22 10:56:07 +01:00
Andres Freund
92daeca45d Add wait event for pg_usleep() in perform_spin_delay()
The lwlock wait queue scalability issue fixed in a4adc31f69 was quite hard to
find because of the exponential backoff and because we adjust spins_per_delay
over time within a backend.

To make it easier to find similar issues in the future, add a wait event for
the pg_usleep() in perform_spin_delay(). Showing a wait event while spinning
without sleeping would increase the overhead of spinlocks, which we do not
want.

We may at some later point want to have more granular wait events, but that'd
be a substantial amount of work. This provides at least some insights into
something currently hard to observe.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Korotkov <aekorotkov@gmail.com>
https://postgr.es/m/20221120204310.xywrhyxyytsajuuq@awork3.anarazel.de
2022-11-21 20:34:17 -08:00
Daniel Gustafsson
f1d042b21d Replace link to Hunspell with the current homepage
The Hunspell project moved from Sourceforge to Github sometime
in 2016, so update our links to match the new URL.  Backpatch
the doc changes to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/DC9A662A-360D-4125-A453-5A6CB9C6C4B4@yesql.se
Backpatch-through: v11
2022-11-21 23:25:48 +01:00
Tom Lane
5644d6f909 Add comments and a missing CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS in ts_headline.
I just spent an annoying amount of time reverse-engineering the
100%-undocumented API between ts_headline and the text search
parser's prsheadline function.  Add some commentary about that
while it's fresh in mind.  Also remove some unused macros in
wparser_def.c.

While at it, I noticed that when commit 78e73e875 added a
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS call in TS_execute_recurse, it missed
doing so in the parallel function TS_phrase_execute, which
surely needs one just as much.

Back-patch because of the missing CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS.
Might as well back-patch the rest of this too.
2022-11-21 17:07:29 -05:00
Andres Freund
f686ae82f2 Add workaround to make ubsan and ps_status.c compatible
At least on linux, set_ps_display() breaks /proc/$pid/environ. The sanitizer's
helper library uses /proc/$pid/environ to implement getenv(), as it wants to
work independent of libc. When just using undefined and alignment sanitizers,
the sanitizer library is only initialized when the first error occurs, by
which time we've often already called set_ps_display(), preventing the
sanitizer libraries from seeing the options.

We can work around that by defining __ubsan_default_options, a weak symbol
libsanitizer uses to get defaults from the application, and return
getenv("UBSAN_OPTIONS"). But only if main already was reached, so that we
don't end up relying on a not-yet-working getenv().

As it's just a function that won't get called when not running a sanitizer, it
doesn't seem necessary to make compilation of the function conditional.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220323173537.ll7klrglnp4gn2um@alap3.anarazel.de
2022-11-21 13:56:23 -08:00
Tom Lane
51b5834cd5 Provide options for postmaster to kill child processes with SIGABRT.
The postmaster normally sends SIGQUIT to force-terminate its
child processes after a child crash or immediate-stop request.
If that doesn't result in child exit within a few seconds,
we follow it up with SIGKILL.  This patch provides GUC flags
that allow either of these signals to be replaced with SIGABRT.
On typically-configured Unix systems, that will result in a
core dump being produced for each such child.  This can be
useful for debugging problems, although it's not something you'd
want to have on in production due to the risk of disk space
bloat from lots of core files.

The old postmaster -T switch, which sent SIGSTOP in place of
SIGQUIT, is changed to be the same as send_abort_for_crash.
As far as I can tell from the code comments, the intent of
that switch was just to block things for long enough to force
core dumps manually, which seems like an unnecessary extra step.
(Maybe at the time, there was no way to get most kernels to
produce core files with per-PID names, requiring manual core
file renaming after each one.  But now it's surely the hard way.)

I also took the opportunity to remove the old postmaster -n
(skip shmem reinit) switch, which hasn't actually done anything
in decades, though the documentation still claimed it did.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2251016.1668797294@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-11-21 11:59:29 -05:00
Michael Paquier
f193883fc9 Replace SQLValueFunction by COERCE_SQL_SYNTAX
This switch impacts 9 patterns related to a SQL-mandated special syntax
for function calls:
- LOCALTIME [ ( typmod ) ]
- LOCALTIMESTAMP [ ( typmod ) ]
- CURRENT_TIME [ ( typmod ) ]
- CURRENT_TIMESTAMP [ ( typmod ) ]
- CURRENT_DATE

Five new entries are added to pg_proc to compensate the removal of
SQLValueFunction to provide backward-compatibility and making this
change transparent for the end-user (for example for the attribute
generated when a keyword is specified in a SELECT or in a FROM clause
without an alias, or when specifying something else than an Iconst to
the parser).

The parser included a set of checks coming from the files in charge of
holding the C functions used for the SQLValueFunction calls (as of
transformSQLValueFunction()), which are now moved within each function's
execution path, so this reduces the dependencies between the execution
and the parsing steps.  As of this change, all the SQL keywords use the
same paths for their work, relying only on COERCE_SQL_SYNTAX.  Like
fb32748, no performance difference has been noticed, while the perf
profiles get reduced with ExecEvalSQLValueFunction() gone.

Bump catalog version.

Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker, Ted Yu
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/YzaG3MoryCguUOym@paquier.xyz
2022-11-21 18:31:59 +09:00
Amit Kapila
240e0dbacd Add additional checks while creating the initial decoding snapshot.
As per one of the CI reports, there is an assertion failure which
indicates that we were trying to use an unenforced xmin horizon for
decoding snapshots. Though, we couldn't figure out the reason for
assertion failure these checks would help us in finding the reason if the
problem happens again in the future.

Author: Amit Kapila based on suggestions by Andres Freund
Reviewd by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1L8wYcyTPxNzPGkhuO52WBGoOZbT0A73Le=ZUWYAYmdfw@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-21 08:54:43 +05:30
Andres Freund
a4adc31f69 lwlock: Fix quadratic behavior with very long wait lists
Until now LWLockDequeueSelf() sequentially searched the list of waiters to see
if the current proc is still is on the list of waiters, or has already been
removed. In extreme workloads, where the wait lists are very long, this leads
to a quadratic behavior. #backends iterating over a list #backends
long. Additionally, the likelihood of needing to call LWLockDequeueSelf() in
the first place also increases with the increased length of the wait queue, as
it becomes more likely that a lock is released while waiting for the wait list
lock, which is held for longer during lock release.

Due to the exponential back-off in perform_spin_delay() this is surprisingly
hard to detect. We should make that easier, e.g. by adding a wait event around
the pg_usleep() - but that's a separate patch.

The fix is simple - track whether a proc is currently waiting in the wait list
or already removed but waiting to be woken up in PGPROC->lwWaiting.

In some workloads with a lot of clients contending for a small number of
lwlocks (e.g. WALWriteLock), the fix can substantially increase throughput.

As the quadratic behavior arguably is a bug, we might want to decide to
backpatch this fix in the future.

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy <bharath.rupireddyforpostgres@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221027165914.2hofzp4cvutj6gin@awork3.anarazel.de
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACXktNbG=K8Xi7PSqbofTZozavhaxjatVc14iYaLu4Maag@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-20 11:56:32 -08:00
Andres Freund
061bf98fb8 pgstat: replace double lookup with IsSharedRelation()
As the list of shared relations is fixed, we can just dispatch based
IsSharedRelation(), instead of first trying to look up stats for a non-shared
rel and falling back to shared stats.

Author: "Drouvot, Bertrand" <bertranddrouvot.pg@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy <bharath.rupireddyforpostgres@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8c1851a2-a98e-e1bc-7729-37b0b95f66ec@gmail.com
2022-11-20 10:56:32 -08:00
Tom Lane
b62303794e Fix sloppy cleanup of roles in privileges.sql.
Commit 3d14e171e dropped regress_roleoption_donor twice and
regress_roleoption_protagonist not at all.  Leaving roles behind
after "make installcheck" is unfriendly in its own right, plus
it causes repeated runs of "make installcheck" to fail.
2022-11-20 11:30:50 -05:00
Tom Lane
75b8d3de98 Fix long-obsolete comment.
Commit c94959d41 fixed DROP OPERATOR to reset oprcom/oprnegate links
to the dropped operator; but it missed updating this old comment that
claimed we allow such links to dangle.
2022-11-20 11:22:22 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
9b4eafcaf4 Prevent port collisions between concurrent TAP tests
Currently there is a race condition where if concurrent TAP tests both
test that they can open a port they will assume that it is free and use
it, causing one of them to fail. To prevent this we record a reservation
using an exclusive lock, and any TAP test that discovers a reservation
checks to see if the reserving process is still alive, and looks for
another free port if it is.

Ports are reserved in a directory set by the environment setting
PG_TEST_PORT_DIR, or if that doesn't exist a subdirectory of the top
build directory as set by meson or Makefile.global, or its own
tmp_check directory.

The prove_check recipe in Makefile.global.in is extended to export
top_builddir to the TAP tests. This was already exported by the
prove_installcheck recipes.

Per complaint from Andres Freund

This will be backpatched in due course after some testing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221002164931.d57hlutrcz4d2zi7@awork3.anarazel.de
2022-11-20 10:07:35 -05:00
Michael Paquier
fb32748e32 Switch SQLValueFunction on "name" to use COERCE_SQL_SYNTAX
This commit changes six SQL keywords to use COERCE_SQL_SYNTAX rather
than relying on SQLValueFunction:
- CURRENT_ROLE
- CURRENT_USER
- USER
- SESSION_USER
- CURRENT_CATALOG
- CURRENT_SCHEMA

Among the six, "user", "current_role" and "current_catalog" require
specific SQL functions to allow ruleutils.c to map them to the SQL
keywords these require when using COERCE_SQL_SYNTAX.  Having
pg_proc.proname match with the keyword ensures that the compatibility
remains the same when projecting any of these keywords in a FROM clause
to an attribute name when an alias is not specified.  This is covered by
the tests added in 2e0d80c, making sure that a correct mapping happens
with each SQL keyword.  The three others (current_schema, session_user
and current_user) already have pg_proc entries for this job, so this
brings more consistency between the way such keywords are treated in the
parser, the executor and ruleutils.c.

SQLValueFunction is reduced to half its contents after this change,
simplifying its logic a bit as there is no need to enforce a C collation
anymore for the entries returning a name as a result.  I have made a few
performance tests, with a million-ish calls to these keywords without
seeing a difference in run-time or in perf profiles
(ExecEvalSQLValueFunction() is removed from the profiles).  The
remaining SQLValueFunctions are now related to timestamps and dates.

Bump catalog version.

Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/YzaG3MoryCguUOym@paquier.xyz
2022-11-20 10:58:28 +09:00
Joe Conway
ed1d3132d2 Fix catversion
Commit 2fb6154fc didn't quite get the catversion correct per usual
norms. Fix it. Reported by Rishu Bagga.
2022-11-19 17:55:52 -05:00
Andres Freund
8c954168cf Fix mislabeling of PROC_QUEUE->links as PGPROC, fixing UBSan on 32bit
ProcSleep() used a PGPROC* variable to point to PROC_QUEUE->links.next,
because that does "the right thing" with SHMQueueInsertBefore(). While that
largely works, it's certainly not correct and unnecessary - we can just use
SHM_QUEUE* to point to the insertion point.

Noticed when testing a 32bit of postgres with undefined behavior
sanitizer. UBSan noticed that sometimes the supposed PGPROC wasn't
sufficiently aligned (required since 46d6e5f567, ensured indirectly, via
ShmemAllocRaw() guaranteeing cacheline alignment).

For now fix this by using a SHM_QUEUE* for the insertion point. Subsequently
we should replace all the use of PROC_QUEUE and SHM_QUEUE with ilist.h, but
that's a larger change that we don't want to backpatch.

Backpatch to all supported versions - it's useful to be able to run postgres
under UBSan.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221117014230.op5kmgypdv2dtqsf@awork3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 11-
2022-11-19 12:22:04 -08:00
Tom Lane
3efc82e289 Disable debug_discard_caches in test_oat_hooks test.
The test output varies when debug_discard_caches is enabled,
because that causes extra executions of recomputeNamespacePath.
Maybe putting a hook in that was a bad idea, but as a stopgap,
just turn off debug_discard_caches in this test.

Per buildfarm (now that we have debug_discard_caches coverage
again).  Back-patch to v15 where this module was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2267406.1668804934@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-11-19 13:42:53 -05:00
Tom Lane
3b8ad00853 Doc: sync src/tutorial/basics.source with SGML documentation.
basics.source is supposed to be pretty closely in step with
the examples in chapter 2 of the tutorial, but I forgot to
update it in commit f05a5e000.  Fix that, and adjust a couple
of other discrepancies that had crept in over time.

(I notice that advanced.source is nowhere near being in sync
with chapter 3, but I lack the ambition to do something
about that right now.)
2022-11-19 13:09:14 -05:00
Robert Haas
2fb6154fcd Fix typos and bump catversion.
Typos reported by Álvaro Herrera and Erik Rijkers.

Catversion bump for 3d14e171e9 was
inadvertently omitted.
2022-11-18 16:16:21 -05:00
Robert Haas
3d14e171e9 Add a SET option to the GRANT command.
Similar to how the INHERIT option controls whether or not the
permissions of the granted role are automatically available to the
grantee, the new SET permission controls whether or not the grantee
may use the SET ROLE command to assume the privileges of the granted
role.

In addition, the new SET permission controls whether or not it
is possible to transfer ownership of objects to the target role
or to create new objects owned by the target role using commands
such as CREATE DATABASE .. OWNER. We could alternatively have made
this controlled by the INHERIT option, or allow it when either
option is given. An advantage of this approach is that if you
are granted a predefined role with INHERIT TRUE, SET FALSE, you
can't go and create objects owned by that role.

The underlying theory here is that the ability to create objects
as a target role is not a privilege per se, and thus does not
depend on whether you inherit the target role's privileges. However,
it's surely something you could do anyway if you could SET ROLE
to the target role, and thus making it contingent on whether you
have that ability is reasonable.

Design review by Nathan Bossat, Wolfgang Walther, Jeff Davis,
Peter Eisentraut, and Stephen Frost.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmob+zDSRS6JXYrgq0NWdzCXuTNzT5eK54Dn2hhgt17nm8A@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-18 12:32:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
f84ff0c6d4 Don't read MCV stats needlessly in eqjoinsel().
eqjoinsel() currently makes use of MCV stats only when we have such
stats for both sides of the clause.  As coded, though, it would
fetch those stats even when they're present for just one side.
This can be a bit expensive with high statistics targets, leading
to wasted effort in common cases such as joining a unique column
to a non-unique column.  So it seems worth the trouble to do a quick
pre-check to confirm that both sides have MCVs before fetching either.

Also, tweak the API spec for get_attstatsslot() to document the
method we're using here.

David Geier, Tomas Vondra, Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/b9846ca0-5f1c-9b26-5881-aad3f42b07f0@gmail.com
2022-11-18 11:01:03 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
d8678aba2e Make object_address test output easier to update
The object_address test file turns to psql unaligned output for some
tests to avoid huge diffs for changes.  But this is useful also to the
other large test in that file, so apply it there as well.  This also
makes verifying the null and whitespace behavior easier.
2022-11-18 16:00:52 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
d0ca708540 Clean up SQL code indentation in test file
This makes the code layout more consistent inside the same file.
2022-11-18 15:31:55 +01:00
Andrew Dunstan
97ee956416 Fix version comparison in Version.pm
Version strings with unequal numbers of parts were being compared
incorrectly. We cure this by treating a missing part in the shorter
version as 0.

per complaint from Jehan-Guillaume de Rorthais, but the fix is mine, not
his.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220628225325.53d97b8d@karst

Backpatch to release 14 where this code was introduced.
2022-11-18 08:45:58 -05:00
Michael Paquier
07f7237c2a psql: Improve tab completion for GRANT/REVOKE
This commit improves the handling of the following clauses:
- Addition of "CREATE" for ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES .. GRANT/REVOKE.
- Addition of GRANT|ADMIN|INHERIT OPTION FOR for REVOKE, with some
completion for roles, INHERIT being added recently by e3ce2de.
- Addition of GRANT WITH ADMIN|INHERIT.

The list of privilege options common to GRANT and REVOKE is refactored
to avoid its duplication.

Author: Shi Yu
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Michael Paquier, Peter Smith
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/OSZPR01MB6310FCE8609185A56344EED2FD559@OSZPR01MB6310.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
2022-11-18 11:26:49 +09:00
Andres Freund
967db242c2 ci: Add task testing windows with mingw
For now the task has been set to be manually triggered, as we are already
limited by the amount of CI time available for windows, particularly on cfbot.

Author: Melih Mutlu <m.melihmutlu@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan <andrew@dunslane.net>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
Reviewed-by: Nazir Bilal Yavuz <byavuz81@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGPVpCSKS9E0An4=e7ZDnme+y=WOcQFJYJegKO8kE9=gh8NJKQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-17 16:22:25 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan
1489b1ce72 Standardize rmgrdesc recovery conflict XID output.
Standardize on the name snapshotConflictHorizon for all XID fields from
WAL records that generate recovery conflicts when in hot standby mode.
This supersedes the previous latestRemovedXid naming convention.

The new naming convention places emphasis on how the values are actually
used by REDO routines.  How the values are generated during original
execution (details of which vary by record type) is deemphasized.  Users
of tools like pg_waldump can now grep for snapshotConflictHorizon to see
all potential sources of recovery conflicts in a standardized way,
without necessarily having to consider which specific record types might
be involved.

Also bring a couple of WAL record types that didn't follow any kind of
naming convention into line.  These are heapam's VISIBLE record type and
SP-GiST's VACUUM_REDIRECT record type.  Now every WAL record whose REDO
routine calls ResolveRecoveryConflictWithSnapshot() passes through the
snapshotConflictHorizon field from its WAL record.  This is follow-up
work to the refactoring from commit 9e540599 that made FREEZE_PAGE WAL
records use a standard snapshotConflictHorizon style XID cutoff.

No bump in XLOG_PAGE_MAGIC, since the underlying format of affected WAL
records doesn't change.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wzm2CQUmViUq7Opgk=McVREHSOorYaAjR1ZpLYkRN7_dPw@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-17 14:55:08 -08:00
Alvaro Herrera
6ff5aa1299
Fix MERGE tuple count with DO NOTHING
Reporting tuples for which nothing is done is useless and goes against
the documented behavior, so don't do it.

Backpatch to 15.

Reported by: Luca Ferrari
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKoxK+42MmACUh6s8XzASQKizbzrtOGA6G1UjzCP75NcXHsiNw@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-17 18:56:11 +01:00
Peter Geoghegan
813492dacc Use correct type name in comments about freezing.
Oversight in commit 9e540599, which added freeze plan deduplication.
2022-11-17 09:34:12 -08:00
Noah Misch
aca93b5f18 Account for IPC::Run::result() Windows behavior change.
This restores compatibility with the not-yet-released successor of
version 20220807.0.  Back-patch to 9.4, which introduced this code.

Reviewed by Andrew Dunstan.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221117061805.GA4020280@rfd.leadboat.com
2022-11-17 07:35:06 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut
bbf9c282ce libpq: Handle NegotiateProtocolVersion message
Before, receiving a NegotiateProtocolVersion message would result in a
confusing error message like

    expected authentication request from server, but received v

This adds proper handling of this protocol message and produces an
on-topic error message from it.

Reviewed-by: Jacob Champion <jchampion@timescale.com>
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/f9c7862f-b864-8ef7-a861-c4638c83e209%40enterprisedb.com
2022-11-17 15:42:09 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
dce92e59b1 libpq: Correct processing of startup response messages
After sending a startup message, libpq expects either an error
response ('E') or an authentication request ('R').  Before processing
the message, it ensures it has read enough bytes to correspond to the
length specified in the message.  However, when processing the 'R'
message, if an EOF status is returned it loops back waiting for more
input, even though we already checked that we have enough input.  In
this particular case, this is probably not reachable anyway, because
other code ensures we have enough bytes for an authentication request
message, but the code is wrong and misleading.  In the more general
case, processing a faulty message could result in an EOF status, which
would then result in an infinite loop waiting for the end of a message
that will never come.  The correction is to make this an error.

Reported-by: Jacob Champion <jchampion@timescale.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/f9c7862f-b864-8ef7-a861-c4638c83e209@enterprisedb.com
2022-11-17 14:12:04 +01:00
Daniel Gustafsson
3d0c95bc89 Fix wording in comment
Author: vignesh C <vignesh21@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm0jKY__83tUsem79+YqfjTWTAkDfiPS0T_Z4y0AYGd_HQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-17 13:17:19 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera
01755490cf
Fix outdated comment in ExecDelete
This commend references a struct that disappeared before MERGE was
merged ... and ExecDelete is not called by the committed MERGE anyway.
Revert to the original wording.

Backpatch to 15
2022-11-17 12:52:20 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
af3abca029 Allow initdb to complete on systems without "locale" command
This partially reverts 2fe3bdbd69, which
added an error check on the "locale -a" execution.  This is removed
again, adding a comment explaining why.  We already had code that
shows a warning if no system locales could be found, which should be
sufficient for feedback to the user.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/b2b491d1-3b36-15b9-6910-5b5540b27f5c%40enterprisedb.com
2022-11-17 12:12:11 +01:00
Daniel Gustafsson
3b304547a9 doc: Fix wording of MERGE actions in README
UPDATE was listed twice and DELETE was omitted, replace one UPDATE
with DELETE instead.

Backpatch through v15 where MERGE was added.

Author: Myo Wai Thant <myo.waithant@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard Guo <guofenglinux@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/OSAPR01MB43247E46931E9E9CFC4AA0F29A079@OSAPR01MB4324.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
Backpatch-through: 15
2022-11-17 10:07:06 +01:00
Daniel Gustafsson
aba2dbb3cf Fix typos in comments
Fix various misspellings of xl_running_xacts.

Author: Japin Li <japinli@hotmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/MEYP282MB1669CA2A39ACF0172774ED27B6069@MEYP282MB1669.AUSP282.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
2022-11-17 09:12:51 +01:00
Michael Paquier
3894d21d22 Remove unneeded include in test_slru.c
As introduced in 006b69f, the order of the headers was incorrect.
However, it happens that lwlock.h can just be dropped from the list, so
let's be clean and remove it, fixing the order of the listed headers.
2022-11-17 16:00:09 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
1d87037ac8 Export with_icu when running src/bin/scripts tests with meson
Author: Marina Polyakova <m.polyakova@postgrespro.ru>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/534fed4a262fee534662bd07a691c5ef@postgrespro.ru
2022-11-17 07:43:50 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
aca9920409 Update some more ObjectType switch statements to not have default
This allows the compiler to complain if a case has been missed.  In
these instances, the tradeoff of having to list a few unneeded cases
to silence the compiler seems better than the risk of actually missing
one.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/fce5c98a-45da-19e7-dad0-21096bccd66e%40enterprisedb.com
2022-11-17 07:12:37 +01:00
Tom Lane
adaf34241a Improve ruleutils' printout of LATERAL references within subplans.
Commit 1cc29fe7c, which taught EXPLAIN to print PARAM_EXEC Params as
the referenced expressions, included some checks to prevent matching
Params found in SubPlans or InitPlans to NestLoopParams of upper query
levels.  At the time, this seemed possibly necessary to avoid false
matches because of the planner's habit of re-using the same PARAM_EXEC
slot in multiple places in a plan.  Furthermore, in the absence of
LATERAL no such reference could be valid anyway.  But it's possible
now that we have LATERAL, and in the wake of 46c508fbc and 1db5667ba
I believe the false-match hazard is gone.  Hence, remove the
in_same_plan_level checks.  As shown in the regression test changes,
this provides a useful improvement in readability for EXPLAIN of
LATERAL-using subplans.

Richard Guo, reviewed by Greg Stark and myself

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4-YSOcQXAagJetP95cAeZPqzOy5kM5yijG0PVW5ztRb4w@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-16 20:06:09 -05:00
Thomas Munro
5db195f76f Fix slowdown in TAP tests due to recent walreceiver change.
Commit 05a7be93 changed the timing of the first reply sent by a
walreceiver, which caused a few TAP tests that call wait_for_catchup()
when they haven't actually streamed anything yet to wait ~10 seconds
(wal_receiver_status_interval).

Before commit 05a7be93 the initial reply was sent after 100ms, but
there's no reason not to send it immediately as a slight improvement.
Do the same for HS feedback for consistency.

Author: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/742545.1668377284%40sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-11-17 11:30:14 +13:00
Tom Lane
e9e26b5e71 Invent "multibitmapsets", and use them to speed up antijoin detection.
Implement a data structure that is a List of Bitmapsets, which is
essentially a 2-D boolean array except that the rows need not all
be the same width.  Operations such as union and intersection are
meaningful for these, just as they are for Bitmapsets.  Eventually
we might build many of the same operations that we have written for
Bitmapsets, but for the first use-case we just need a few.

That first use-case is for antijoin detection: reduce_outer_joins
needs to find the set of Vars that are certain to be non-null in a
successfully joined (not null-extended) left join row, and also
find the set of Vars subject to higher-level IS NULL constraints,
and intersect them.  We had been doing this by making Lists of
the Var nodes and then using list_intersect, which works but is
pretty inefficient compared to a bitmapset-like intersection.
Potentially it's O(N^2) if there are a lot of Vars involved,
which fortunately there generally aren't; still it's not great.
Moreover, that method requires the Vars of interest to be exactly
equal() in the join condition and the upper IS NULL condition,
which is problematic for my WIP patch that labels Vars according
to which outer joins have possibly nulled them.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/892228.1668437838@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4-mvPPCJ1W6iK6dD5HiNwoJdi6mZp=-7mE8N9Sh+cd0tQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-16 13:58:44 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
90e4f308b4 Add missing object classes to object_address test
Per the comment, fill in classes mentioned in getObjectIdentityParts()
but not in the test.
2022-11-16 19:44:38 +01:00
Tom Lane
fccaf259f2 Shave some cycles off subscription/t/100_bugs.pl tests.
We can re-use the clusters set up for this test script's first test,
instead of generating new ones.  On my machine this is good for
about a 20% reduction in this script's runtime, from ~6.5 sec to
~5.2 sec.

This idea could be taken further, but it'd require a much more invasive
patch.  These cases are easy because the Perl variable names were
already being re-used.

Anton A. Melnikov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/eb7aa992-c2d7-6ce7-4942-0c784231a362@inbox.ru
2022-11-16 12:35:25 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
8e1db29cdb Variable renaming in preparation for refactoring
Rename page -> block and dp -> page where appropriate.  The old naming
mixed up block and page in confusing ways.

Author: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAAKRu_YSOnhKsDyFcqJsKtBSrd32DP-jjXmv7hL0BPD-z0TGXQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-16 16:40:34 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
d1cb4e9f92 Remove useless casts
Maybe these are left from when PageGetItem() was a macro, but now they
are clearly useless.
2022-11-16 16:01:06 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
4eb3b11200 Turn HeapKeyTest macro into inline function
It is easier to read as a function.

Author: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAAKRu_YSOnhKsDyFcqJsKtBSrd32DP-jjXmv7hL0BPD-z0TGXQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-16 13:26:48 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
c0f1e51ac7 Remove unused include
Author: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAAKRu_YSOnhKsDyFcqJsKtBSrd32DP-jjXmv7hL0BPD-z0TGXQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-16 11:28:44 +01:00
Daniel Gustafsson
5f80cd287c doc: update metacpan.org links to avoid redirects
The /release/ links are redirected to /dist/ and /pod/release/ to
/release/../view/, so update our links accordingly to avoid 301
redirects.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA672723-BAD2-436E-B6E6-163841E11A1B@yesql.se
2022-11-16 10:24:37 +01:00
Michael Paquier
63c833f4bd Use multi-inserts for pg_ts_config_map
Two locations working on pg_ts_config_map are switched from
CatalogTupleInsert() to a multi-insert approach with tuple slots:
- ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION ADD/ALTER MAPPING when inserting new
entries.  The number of entries to insert is known in advance, so is the
number of slots needed.  Note that CatalogTupleInsertWithInfo() is now
used for the entry updates.
- CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION, where up to ~20-ish records could be
inserted at once.  The number of slots is not known in advance, hence
a slot initialization is delayed until a tuple is stored in it.

Like all the changes of this kind (1ff4161, 63110c6 or e3931d01), an
insert batch is capped at 64kB.

Author: Michael Paquier, Ranier Vilela
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y3M5bovrkTQbAO4W@paquier.xyz
2022-11-16 14:32:09 +09:00
Jeff Davis
36e0358e70 Fix test in ae168c794f, per buildfarm.
Reported-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y3Q8SGMXhInL4o3X@paquier.xyz
2022-11-15 20:07:18 -08:00
Michael Paquier
1ff4161218 Use multi-inserts for pg_enum
This allows to insert at once all the enum values defined with a given
type into pg_enum, reducing the WAL produced by roughly 10%~.  pg_enum's
indexes are opened and closed now once rather than N times.  The number
of items to insert is known in advance, making this change
straight-forward, and would happen on a CREATE TYPE .. AS ENUM.

The amount of data inserted is capped at 64kB for each insert batch.
This is similar to commits 63110c6 and e3931d01, that worked on
different catalogs.

Reported-by: Ranier Vilela
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Ranier Vilela
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y3M5bovrkTQbAO4W@paquier.xyz
2022-11-16 12:41:29 +09:00
Michael Paquier
09a72188cd Avoid some overhead with open and close of catalog indexes
This commit improves two code paths to open and close indexes a
minimum amount of times when doing a series of catalog updates or
inserts.  CatalogTupleInsert() is costly when using it for multiple
inserts or updates compared to CatalogTupleInsertWithInfo(), as it would
need to open and close the indexes of the catalog worked each time an
operation is done.

This commit updates the following places:
- REINDEX CONCURRENTLY when copying statistics from one index relation
to the other.  Multi-INSERTs are avoided here, as this would begin to
show benefits only for indexes with multiple expressions, for example,
which may not be the most common pattern.  This change is noticeable in
profiles with indexes having many expressions, for example, and it would
improve any callers of CopyStatistics().
- Update of statistics on ANALYZE, that mixes inserts and updates.
In each case, the catalog indexes are opened only if at least one
insertion and/or update is required, to minimize the cost of the
operation.  Like the previous coding, no indexes are opened as long as
at least one insert or update of pg_statistic has happened.

Author: Ranier Vilela
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEudQAqh0F9y6Di_Wc8xW4zkWm_5SDd-nRfVsCn=h0Nm1C_mrg@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-16 10:49:05 +09:00
Michael Paquier
006b69fd91 Add test module for SLRUs
This commit introduces a basic facility to test SLRUs, in terms of
initialization, page reads, writes, flushes, truncation and deletions,
using SQL wrappers around the APIs of slru.c.  This should be easily
extensible at will, and it can be used as a starting point for someone
willing to implement an external module that makes use of SLRUs (LWLock
tranche registering and SLRU initialization particularly).

As this requires a loaded library, the tests use a custom configuration
file and are disabled under installcheck.

Author: Aleksander Alekseev, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Pavel Borisov, Daniel Gustafsson, Noah Misch, Maxim Orlov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ7c6TOFoWcHOW4BVe3BG_uikCrO9B91ayx9d6rh5JZr_tPESg@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-16 09:52:21 +09:00
Jeff Davis
1eda3ce802 Mark argument of RegisterCustomRmgr() as const. 2022-11-15 16:01:35 -08:00
Jeff Davis
ae168c794f Add test module for Custom WAL Resource Manager feature.
Author: Bharath Rupireddy, Jeff Davis
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACVTBNA1wfVCsikfhygAbZe6kFY8Oz6PhOyhHyA4vAGouA%40mail.gmail.com
2022-11-15 15:26:14 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan
9e5405993c Deduplicate freeze plans in freeze WAL records.
Make heapam WAL records that describe freezing performed by VACUUM more
space efficient by storing each distinct "freeze plan" once, alongside
an array of associated page offset numbers (one per freeze plan).  The
freeze plans required for most heap pages tend to naturally have a great
deal of redundancy, so this technique is very effective in practice.  It
often leads to freeze WAL records that are less than 20% of the size of
equivalent WAL records generated using the previous approach.

The freeze plan concept was introduced by commit 3b97e6823b, which fixed
bugs in VACUUM's handling of MultiXacts.  We retain the concept of
freeze plans, but go back to using page offset number arrays.  There is
no loss of generality here because deduplication is an additive process
that gets applied mechanically when FREEZE_PAGE WAL records are built.

More than anything else, freeze plan deduplication is an optimization
that reduces the marginal cost of freezing additional tuples on pages
that will need to have at least one or two tuples frozen in any case.
Ongoing work that adds page-level freezing to VACUUM will take full
advantage of the improved cost profile through batching.

Also refactor some of the details surrounding recovery conflicts needed
to REDO freeze records in passing: make original execution responsible
for generating a standard latestRemovedXid cutoff, rather than working
backwards to get the same cutoff in the REDO routine.  Bugfix commit
66fbcb0d2e did it the other way around, which is equivalent but obscures
what's going on.

Also rename the cutoff field from the WAL record/struct (rename the
field cutoff_xid to latestRemovedXid to match similar WAL records).
Processing of conflicts by REDO routines is already completely uniform,
so tools like pg_waldump should present the information driving the
process uniformly.  There are two remaining WAL record types that still
don't quite follow this convention (heapam's VISIBLE record type and
SP-GiST's VACUUM_REDIRECT record type).  They can be brought into line
by later work that totally standardizes how the cutoffs are presented.

Bump XLOG_PAGE_MAGIC.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=XytErMnb8FAyFd+OQEbiipB0Q2FmFdXrggPL4VBnRYQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-15 07:48:41 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut
2fe3bdbd69 Check return value of pclose() correctly
Some callers didn't check the return value of pclose() or
ClosePipeStream() correctly.  Either they didn't check it at all or
they treated it like the return of fclose().

The correct way is to first check whether the return value is -1, and
then report errno, and then check the return value like a result from
system(), for which we already have wait_result_to_str() to make it
simpler.  To make this more compact, expand wait_result_to_str() to
also handle -1 explicitly.

Reviewed-by: Ankit Kumar Pandey <itsankitkp@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/8cd9fb02-bc26-65f1-a809-b1cb360eef73@enterprisedb.com
2022-11-15 15:36:51 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
5b66de3433 psql: Add command to use extended query protocol
This adds a new psql command \bind that sets query parameters and
causes the next query to be sent using the extended query protocol.
Example:

    SELECT $1, $2 \bind 'foo' 'bar' \g

This may be useful for psql scripting, but one of the main purposes is
also to be able to test various aspects of the extended query protocol
from psql and to write tests more easily.

Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker <corey.huinker@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/e8dd1cd5-0e04-3598-0518-a605159fe314@enterprisedb.com
2022-11-15 14:27:46 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
a9e9a9f32b libpq error message refactoring, part 2
This applies the new APIs to the code.

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/7c0232ef-7b44-68db-599d-b327d0640a77@enterprisedb.com
2022-11-15 12:16:50 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
0873b2d354 libpq error message refactoring
libpq now contains a mix of error message strings that end with
newlines and don't end with newlines, due to some newer code paths
with new ways of passing errors around.  This leads to confusion and
mistakes both during development and translation.

This adds new functions libpq_append_error() and
libpq_append_conn_error() that encapsulate common code paths for
producing error message strings.  Notably, these functions append the
newline, so that the string appearing in the code does not end with a
newline.  This makes (almost) all error message strings in libpq
uniform in this regard (and also consistent with how we handle it
outside of libpq code).  (There are a few exceptions that are
difficult to fit into this scheme, but they are only a few.)

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/7c0232ef-7b44-68db-599d-b327d0640a77@enterprisedb.com
2022-11-15 12:16:50 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
d627ce3b70 Disallow setting archive_library and archive_command at the same time
Setting archive_library and archive_command at the same time is now an
error.  Before, archive_library would take precedence over
archive_command.

Author: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy <bharath.rupireddyforpostgres@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20220914222736.GA3042279%40nathanxps13
2022-11-15 10:03:47 +01:00
Amit Kapila
8b5262fa0e Improve comments referring snapshot's subxip array.
It was referred to as subxact array in a few places and subxip array in
others. By changing it to subxip array, we make it consistent with similar
references to xip array.

Author: Japin Li
Reviewd by: Julien Rouhaud, Richard Guo
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/MEYP282MB1669DCE7AC193A947CED2A95B6009@MEYP282MB1669.AUSP282.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
2022-11-15 09:37:19 +05:30
Amit Kapila
e848be60b5 Fix cleanup lock acquisition in SPLIT_ALLOCATE_PAGE replay.
During XLOG_HASH_SPLIT_ALLOCATE_PAGE replay, we were checking for a
cleanup lock on the new bucket page after acquiring an exclusive lock on
it and raising a PANIC error on failure. However, it is quite possible
that checkpointer can acquire the pin on the same page before acquiring a
lock on it, and then the replay will lead to an error. So instead, directly
acquire the cleanup lock on the new bucket page during
XLOG_HASH_SPLIT_ALLOCATE_PAGE replay operation.

Reported-by: Andres Freund
Author: Robert Haas
Reviewed-By: Amit Kapila, Andres Freund, Vignesh C
Backpatch-through: 11
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220810022617.fvjkjiauaykwrbse@awork3.anarazel.de
2022-11-14 10:43:33 +05:30
Michael Paquier
ad6c52846f Add error context callback when tokenizing authentication files
The parsing of the authentication files for HBA and ident entries
happens in two phases:
- Tokenization of the files, creating a list of TokenizedAuthLines.
- Validation of the HBA and ident entries, building a set of HbaLines or
IdentLines.

The second phase doing the validation provides already some error
context about the configuration file and the line where a problem
happens, but there is no such information in the first phase when
tokenizing the files.  This commit adds an ErrorContextCallback in
tokenize_auth_file(), with a context made of the line number and the
configuration file name involved in a problem.  This is useful for files
included in an HBA file for user and database lists, and it will become
much more handy to track problems for files included via a potential
@include[_dir,_if_exists].

The error context is registered so as the full chain of events is
reported when using cascaded inclusions when for example
tokenize_auth_file() recurses over itself on new files, displaying one
context line for each file gone through when tokenizing things.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y2xUBJ+S+Z0zbxRW@paquier.xyz
2022-11-14 11:58:10 +09:00
Michael Paquier
783e8c69cb Invent open_auth_file() in hba.c to refactor authentication file opening
This adds a check on the recursion depth when including authentication
configuration files, something that has never been done when processing
'@' files for database and user name lists in pg_hba.conf.  On HEAD,
this was leading to a rather confusing error, as of:
FATAL:  exceeded maxAllocatedDescs (NN) while trying to open file "/path/blah.conf"

This refactors the code so as the error reported is now the following,
which is the same as for GUCs:
FATAL: could not open file "/path/blah.conf": maximum nesting depth exceeded

This reduces a bit the verbosity of the error message used for files
included in user and database lists, reporting only the file name of
what's failing to load, without mentioning the relative or absolute path
specified after '@' in a HBA file.  The absolute path is built upon what
'@' defines anyway, so there is no actual loss of information.  This
makes the future inclusion logic much simpler.  A follow-up patch will
add an error context to be able to track on which line of which file the
inclusion is failing, to close the loop, providing all the information
needed to know the full chain of events.

This logic has been extracted from a larger patch written by Julien,
rewritten by me to have a unique code path calling AllocateFile() on
authentication files, and is useful on its own.  This new interface
will be used later for authentication files included with
@include[_dir,_if_exists], in a follow-up patch.

Author: Michael Paquier, Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/Y2xUBJ+S+Z0zbxRW@paquier.xyz
2022-11-14 10:21:42 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
45d5ecab49 libpq: Add missing newlines to error messages 2022-11-13 21:09:09 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
062e133f6d libpq: Remove unneeded cast and adjust format placeholder 2022-11-13 21:09:05 +01:00
Tom Lane
5e1f3b9ebf Make Bitmapsets be valid Nodes.
Add a NodeTag field to struct Bitmapset.  This is free because of
alignment considerations on 64-bit hardware.  While it adds some
space on 32-bit machines, we aren't optimizing for that case anymore.
The advantage is that data structures such as Lists of Bitmapsets
are now first-class objects to the Node infrastructure, and don't
require special-case code to handle.

This patch includes removal of one such special case, in indxpath.c:
bms_equal_any() can now be replaced by list_member().  There may be
more existing code that could be simplified, but I didn't look very
hard.  We also get to drop the read_write_ignore annotations on a
couple of RelOptInfo fields.

The outfuncs/readfuncs support is arranged so that nothing changes
in the string representation of a Bitmapset field; therefore, this
doesn't need a catversion bump.

Amit Langote and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/109089.1668197158@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-11-13 10:22:45 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
9c7eb9d85a Use installed postgresql.conf.sample for GUC sanity TAP test
The current code looks for the sample file in the source directory, but
it seems better to test against the installed sample file.

Backpatch to release 15 where the test was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/73eea68e-3b6f-5f63-6024-25ed26b52016@dunslane.net

Reviewed by Tom Lane, Alvaro Herrera, Michael Paquier.
2022-11-13 09:07:53 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
a688c39e1d Make PostgreSQL::Test::Cluster::config_data more flexible
Currently this only allows for one argument, which must be present, and
always returns a single string. With this change the following now all
work:

  $all_config = $node->config_data;
  %config_map = ($node->config_data);
  $incdir = $node->config_data('--include-dir');
  ($incdir, $sharedir) = $node->config_data(
      qw(--include-dir --share-dir));

Backpatch to release 15 where this was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/73eea68e-3b6f-5f63-6024-25ed26b52016@dunslane.net

Reviewed by Tom Lane, Alvaro Herrera, Michael Paquier.
2022-11-13 09:00:38 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
c727f511bd Refactor aclcheck functions
Instead of dozens of mostly-duplicate pg_foo_aclcheck() functions,
write one common function object_aclcheck() that can handle almost all
of them.  We already have all the information we need, such as which
system catalog corresponds to which catalog table and which column is
the ACL column.

There are a few pg_foo_aclcheck() that don't work via the generic
function and have special APIs, so those stay as is.

I also changed most pg_foo_aclmask() functions to static functions,
since they are not used outside of aclchk.c.

Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker <corey.huinker@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Antonin Houska <ah@cybertec.at>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/95c30f96-4060-2f48-98b5-a4392d3b6066@enterprisedb.com
2022-11-13 09:02:41 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
afbfc02983 Refactor ownercheck functions
Instead of dozens of mostly-duplicate pg_foo_ownercheck() functions,
write one common function object_ownercheck() that can handle almost
all of them.  We already have all the information we need, such as
which system catalog corresponds to which catalog table and which
column is the owner column.

Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker <corey.huinker@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Antonin Houska <ah@cybertec.at>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/95c30f96-4060-2f48-98b5-a4392d3b6066@enterprisedb.com
2022-11-13 08:12:37 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
b4b7ce8061 Add repalloc0 and repalloc0_array
These zero out the space added by repalloc.  This is a common pattern
that is quite hairy to code by hand.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/b66dfc89-9365-cb57-4e1f-b7d31813eeec@enterprisedb.com
2022-11-12 20:34:44 +01:00
Noah Misch
30d98e14a8 If wait_for_catchup fails under has_wal_read_bug, skip balance of test.
Test files should now ignore has_wal_read_bug() so long as
wait_for_catchup() is their only known way of reaching the bug.  That's
at least five files today, a number expected to grow over time.  This
commit removes skip logic from three.  By doing so, systems having the
bug regain the ability to catch other kinds of defects via those three
tests.  The other two, 002_databases.pl and 031_recovery_conflict.pl,
have been unprotected.  Back-patch to v15, where done_testing() first
became our standard.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221030031639.GA3082137@rfd.leadboat.com
2022-11-12 11:19:50 -08:00
Tom Lane
533e02e927 Fix volatility marking of timestamptz_trunc_zone.
It's safe to mark this as immutable, because it does not depend
on the timezone GUC setting.  Oversight in commit 600b04d6b.

(There's an argument that timezone definitions do change from
time to time, but we have not worried about that in marking
other timestamp-related functions; for example AT TIME ZONE
has always been considered immutable.  The situation is no
worse than our problems with time-varying locales, surely.)

Przemysław Sztoch

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/eaa3fabe-50fc-bbe8-b096-ce62ddadab85@sztoch.pl
2022-11-12 13:29:52 -05:00
Jeff Davis
97c61f70d1 Document WAL rules related to PD_ALL_VISIBLE in README.
Also improve comments.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a50005c1c537f89bb359057fd70e66bb83bce969.camel@j-davis.com
Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan
2022-11-12 08:37:50 -08:00
Jeff Davis
d6a3dbe14f Fix theoretical torn page hazard.
The original report was concerned with a possible inconsistency
between the heap and the visibility map, which I was unable to
confirm. The concern has been retracted.

However, there did seem to be a torn page hazard when using
checksums. By not setting the heap page LSN during redo, the
protections of minRecoveryPoint were bypassed. Fixed, along with a
misleading comment.

It may have been impossible to hit this problem in practice, because
it would require a page tear between the checksum and the flags, so I
am marking this as a theoretical risk. But, as discussed, it did
violate expectations about the page LSN, so it may have other
consequences.

Backpatch to all supported versions.

Reported-by: Konstantin Knizhnik
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Knizhnik
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fed17dac-8cb8-4f5b-d462-1bb4908c029e@garret.ru
Backpatch-through: 11
2022-11-11 12:38:29 -08:00
Jeff Davis
3eb8eeccbe Remove obsolete comments and code from prior to f8f4227976.
XLogReadBufferForRedo() and XLogReadBufferForRedoExtended() only return
BLK_NEEDS_REDO if the record LSN is greater than the page LSN, so
the redo routine doesn't need to do the LSN check again.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0c37b80e62b1f3007d5a6d1292bd8fa0c275627a.camel@j-davis.com
2022-11-11 08:49:30 -08:00
Tom Lane
b9424d014e Support writing "CREATE/ALTER TABLE ... SET STORAGE DEFAULT".
We already allow explicitly writing DEFAULT for SET COMPRESSION,
so it seems a bit inflexible and non-orthogonal to not have it
for STORAGE.

Aleksander Alekseev

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ7c6TMX9ui+6y3TQFaXJYVpZyBukvqhQbVDJ8OUokeLRhtnpA@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-10 18:20:49 -05:00
Tom Lane
b158e0b1b1 Fix alter_table.sql test case to test what it claims to.
The stanza "SET STORAGE may need to add a TOAST table" does not
test what it's supposed to, and hasn't done so since we added
the ability to store constant column default values as metadata.
We need to use a non-constant default to get the expected table
rewrite to actually happen.

Fix that, and add the missing checks that would have exposed the
problem to begin with.

Noted while reviewing a patch that made changes in this test case.
Back-patch to v11 where the problem came in.
2022-11-10 17:24:26 -05:00
Amit Kapila
36e545cd05 Fix comments atop ReorderBufferAddInvalidations.
The comments atop seem to indicate that we always accumulate invalidation
messages in a top-level transaction which is neither required nor matches
with the code.

Author: Amit Kapila
Reviewd by: Masahiko Sawada
Backpatch-through: 14, where it was introduced in commit c55040ccd0
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1LxGgnUroPz8STb6OfjVU1yaHoSA+T63URwmGCLdMJ0LA@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-10 16:56:49 +05:30
Michael Paquier
5ca3645cb3 Fix comment of SimpleLruInit() in slru.c
sync_handler was not mentioned in the comment block of the function.

Oversight in dee663f.

Author: Aleksander Alekseev
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ7c6TPUd9BwNY47TtMxaijLHSbyHNdhu=kvbGnvO_bi+oC6_Q@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 14
2022-11-10 16:32:29 +09:00
Tom Lane
85d8b30724 Apply a better fix to mdunlinkfork().
Replace the stopgap fix I made in 0e758ae89 with a cleaner one.

The real problem with 4ab5dae94 is that it contorted this function's
logic substantially, by introducing a third code path that required
different behavior in the function's main loop.  That seems quite
unnecessary on closer inspection: the new IsBinaryUpgrade case can
just share the behavior of the other immediate-unlink cases.  Hence,
revert 4ab5dae94 and most of 0e758ae89 (keeping the latter's
save/restore errno fix), and add IsBinaryUpgrade to the set of
conditions tested to choose immediate unlink.

Also fix some additional places with sloppy handling of errno,
to ensure we have an invariant that we always continue processing
after any non-ENOENT failure of do_truncate.  I doubt that that's
fixing any bug of field importance, so I don't feel it necessary to
back-patch; but we might as well get it right while we're here.

Also improve the comments, which had drifted a bit from what the
code actually does, and neglected to mention some important
considerations.

Back-patch to v15, not because this is fixing any bug but because
it doesn't seem like a good idea for v15's mdunlinkfork logic to be
significantly different from both v14 and v16.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3797575.1667924888@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-11-09 14:15:38 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
ff0d8f27f4
Remove redundant declaration for XidInMVCCSnapshot
This was added for no good reason by c91560defc, after b7eda3e0e3
had just moved the prototype from utils/tqual.h to utils/snapmgr.h.

Author: Japin Li <japinli@hotmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/MEYP282MB16693A409F3282A9DB287BADB63E9@MEYP282MB1669.AUSP282.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
2022-11-09 18:30:09 +01:00
Tom Lane
4f981df8e0 Report a more useful error for reloptions on a partitioned table.
Previously, trying to set storage parameters on a partitioned table
always led to "unrecognized parameter foo", because the code expected
there might be some valid parameters; but there aren't any.  The docs
make clear that it's intended that there never will be any, so let's
replace this useless search with a more to-the-point message.

Simon Riggs and Karina Litskevich

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANbhV-H=eZ9kTR9mUgKGK0Qv9uXP=U+dQg3rinQHfTdFMhBA2A@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-09 12:28:34 -05:00
Tom Lane
e613ace1f0 Doc: add comments about PreventInTransactionBlock/IsInTransactionBlock.
Add a little to the header comments for these functions to make it
clearer what guarantees about commit behavior are provided to callers.
(See commit f92944137 for context.)

Although this is only a comment change, it's really documentation
aimed at authors of extensions, so it seems appropriate to back-patch.

Yugo Nagata and Tom Lane, per further discussion of bug #17434.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17434-d9f7a064ce2a88a3@postgresql.org
2022-11-09 11:08:52 -05:00
Thomas Munro
b28ac1d24d Provide sigaction() for Windows.
Commit 9abb2bfc left behind code to block signals inside signal
handlers on Windows, because our signal porting layer didn't have
sigaction().  Provide a minimal implementation that is capable of
blocking signals, to get rid of platform differences.  See also related
commit c94ae9d8.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGKKKfcgx6jzok9AYenp2TNti_tfs8FMoJpL8%2B0Gsy%3D%3D_A%40mail.gmail.com
2022-11-09 13:06:31 +13:00
Michael Paquier
6bbd8b7385 Use AbsoluteConfigLocation() when building an included path in hba.c
The code building an absolute path to a file included, as prefixed by
'@' in authentication files, for user and database lists uses the same
logic as for GUCs, except that it has no need to know about DataDir as
there is always a calling file to rely to build the base directory path.
The refactoring done in a1a7bb8 makes this move straight-forward, and
unifies the code used for GUCs and authentication files, and the
intention is to rely also on that for the upcoming patch to be able to
include full files from HBA or ident files.

Note that this gets rid of an inconsistency introduced in 370f909, that
copied the logic coming from GUCs but applied it for files included in
authentication files, where the result buffer given to
join_path_components() must have a size of MAXPGPATH.  Based on a
double-check of the existing code, all the other callers of
join_path_components() already do that, except the code path changed
here.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y2igk7q8OMpg+Yta@paquier.xyz
2022-11-09 08:47:02 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
b5621b66e7 Unify some internal error message wordings 2022-11-08 18:45:29 +01:00
Tom Lane
042c9091f0 Produce more-optimal plans for bitmap scans on boolean columns.
The planner simplifies boolean comparisons such as "x = true" and
"x = false" down to "x" and "NOT x" respectively, to have a canonical
form to ease comparisons.  However, if we want to use an index on x,
the index AM APIs require us to reconstitute the comparison-operator
form of the indexqual.  While that works, in bitmap indexscans the
canonical form of the qual was emitted as a "filter" condition
although it really only needs to be a "recheck" condition, because
create_bitmap_scan_plan didn't recognize the equivalence of that
form with the generated indexqual.  booleq() is pretty cheap so that
likely doesn't make very much difference, but it's unsightly so
let's clean it up.

To fix, add a case to predicate_implied_by() to recognize the
equivalence of such clauses.  This is a relatively low-cost place to
add a check, and perhaps it will have additional use cases in future.

Richard Guo and Tom Lane, per discussion of bug #17618 from Sindy
Senorita.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17618-7a2240bfaa7e84ae@postgresql.org
2022-11-08 10:36:04 -05:00
Thomas Munro
05a7be9355 Suppress useless wakeups in walreceiver.
Instead of waking up 10 times per second to check for various timeout
conditions, keep track of when we next have periodic work to do.

Author: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Author: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy <bharath.rupireddyforpostgres@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJGhX4r2LPUE3Oy9BX71Eum6PBcS8L3sJpScR9oKaTVaA%40mail.gmail.com
2022-11-08 20:36:36 +13:00
Michael Paquier
bd95816f74 psql: Add information in \d+ about foreign partitions and child tables
\d+ is already able to show if a partition or a child table is
"PARTITIONED" via its relkind, hence the addition of a keyword for
"FOREIGN" in the relation description is basically free.

Author: Ian Lawrence Barwick
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB8KJ=iwzbEz2HR9EhNxQLVhMk2G_OYtQPJ9V=jWLadseggrOA@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-08 14:19:09 +09:00
Michael Paquier
28cc2976a9 Use pg_pwrite_zeros() in walmethods.c
This change impacts pg_receivewal and pg_basebackup, for the pre-padding
with zeros of all the new non-compressed WAL segments, so as the code is
more robust on partial writes.  This makes the code consistent with the
backend (XLogFileInitInternal) when wal_init_zeros is enabled for the
WAL segment initialization.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Andres Freund, Thomas Munro, Michael
Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACUq7nAb7=bJNbK3yYmp-SZhJcXFR_pLk8un6XgDzDF3OA@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-08 12:37:11 +09:00
Michael Paquier
3bdbdf5d06 Introduce pg_pwrite_zeros() in fileutils.c
This routine is designed to write zeros to a file using vectored I/O,
for a size given by its caller, being useful when it comes to
initializing a file with a final size already known.

XLogFileInitInternal() in xlog.c is changed to use this new routine when
initializing WAL segments with zeros (wal_init_zero enabled).  Note that
the aligned buffers used for the vectored I/O writes have a size of
XLOG_BLCKSZ, and not BLCKSZ anymore, as pg_pwrite_zeros() relies on
PGAlignedBlock while xlog.c originally used PGAlignedXLogBlock.

This routine will be used in a follow-up patch to do the pre-padding of
WAL segments for pg_receivewal and pg_basebackup when these are not
compressed.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Andres Freund, Thomas Munro, Michael
Paquier
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CALj2ACUq7nAb7%3DbJNbK3yYmp-SZhJcXFR_pLk8un6XgDzDF3OA%40mail.gmail.com
2022-11-08 12:23:46 +09:00
Michael Paquier
d7744d50a5 Fix initialization of pg_stat_get_lastscan()
A NULL result should be reported when a stats timestamp is set to 0, but
c037471 missed that, leading to a confusing timestamp value after for
example a DML on a freshly-created relation with no scans done on it
yet.

This impacted the following attributes for two system views:
- pg_stat_all_tables.last_idx_scan
- pg_stat_all_tables.last_seq_scan
- pg_stat_all_indexes.last_idx_scan

Reported-by: Robert Treat
Analyzed-by: Peter Eisentraut
Author: Dave Page
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABV9wwPzMfSaz3EfKXXDxKmMprbxwF5r6WPuxqA=5mzRUqfTGg@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-08 10:50:09 +09:00
David Rowley
1613de8bc3 Fix compiler warning on MSVC
MSVC does not understand that ereport(ERROR) does not return, so just
return the first enum PartitionStrategy value to keep the compiler from
complaining about the missing return.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221104161934.GB16921@telsasoft.com
2022-11-08 10:54:04 +13:00
Tom Lane
0e758ae89a Fix failure to remove non-first segments of temporary tables.
Commit 4ab5dae94 broke mdunlinkfork's logic for removing additional
segments of a multi-gigabyte table, because it neglected to advance
"segno" after unlinking the first segment, in the code path where it
chooses to unlink that one immediately.  Then the main remove loop
gets ENOENT at segment zero and figures it's done, so we never remove
whatever additional segments might exist.

The main problem here is with large temporary tables, but WAL replay
of a drop of a large regular table would also fail to remove extra
segments.  The third case where this path is taken is for non-main
forks; but I doubt it matters for those since they probably never
exceed 1GB.

The simplest fix is just to increment segno after that unlink().
(Probably this logic could do with a more thorough rethink, but not
with mere hours to go before 15.1 wraps.)

While here, also fix an incautious assumption that
register_forget_request cannot change errno.  I don't think that
that has any really bad consequences, as we'd end up trying to unlink
the zero'th segment either way, but it greatly complicates reasoning
about what could happen here.  Also make a couple of other cosmetic
fixes.

Per bug #17679 from Balazs Szilfai.  Back-patch into v15, as the
faulty patch was.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17679-1095d04450cf6a6e@postgresql.org
2022-11-07 11:36:45 -05:00
Michael Paquier
a1a7bb8f16 Move code related to configuration files in directories to new file
The code in charge of listing and classifying a set of configuration
files in a directory was located in guc-file.l, being used currently for
GUCs under "include_dir".  This code is planned to be used for an
upcoming feature able to include configuration files for ident and HBA
files from a directory, similarly to GUCs.  In both cases, the file
names, suffixed by ".conf", have to be ordered alphabetically.  This
logic is moved to a new file, called conffiles.c, so as it is easier to
share this facility between GUCs and the HBA/ident parsing logic.

Author: Julien Rouhaud, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y2IgaH5YzIq2b+iR@paquier.xyz
2022-11-07 12:31:38 +09:00
Tom Lane
b0b72c64a0 Don't pass down nonnullable_vars while reducing outer joins.
We weren't actually using the passed-down list for anything, other
than computing the new value to be passed down further.  I (tgl)
probably had the idea that we'd need this data eventually; but
no use-case has emerged in a good long while, so let's just stop
expending useless cycles here.

Richard Guo

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs48KLy9aBb=sZ5MoNmnqAcGHaW_JTGWLCgoE_uMW7S6C-A@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-05 15:58:51 -04:00
Tom Lane
ff8fa0bf7e Handle SubPlan cases in find_nonnullable_rels/vars.
We can use some variants of SubPlan to deduce that Vars appearing
in the testexpr must be non-null.

Richard Guo

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4-jV=199A2Y_6==99dYnpnmaO_Wz_RGkRTTaCB=Pihw2w@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-05 15:24:36 -04:00
Andres Freund
c3652cd84a Remove redundant breaks in HeapTupleSatisfiesVisibility
Author: Melanie Plageman <melanieplageman@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAKRu_ZJg_N7zHtWP+JoSY_hrce4+GKioL137Y2c2En-kuXQ7g@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-05 01:31:17 -07:00
Michael Paquier
2a71de8915 Remove unneeded includes of <sys/stat.h>
Since bfb9dfd, none of the files updated in this commit have any stat()
calls, so these inclusions are not necessary, for the same reasons as
233cf6e.

Per discussion with John Naylor.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFBsxsGGGX7KD6RxbNoSJzuSc8Gz3hOxcfhTOMLB_hJcm68dKQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-05 12:31:28 +09:00
Andres Freund
a5ac3e76fe meson: Split 'main' suite into 'regress' and 'isolation'
Several people didn't like the 'main' name and found it confusing that the
main regression and isolation tests were in one suite.

Author: Justin Pryzby <pryzbyj@telsasoft.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221001221514.2yy257v4zdfhwiy2@awork3.anarazel.de
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221021123435.GU16921@telsasoft.com
2022-11-04 18:08:44 -07:00
Tom Lane
34fa0ddae5 Fix CREATE DATABASE so we can pg_upgrade DBs with OIDs above 2^31.
Commit aa0105141 repeated one of the oldest mistakes in our book:
thinking that OID is the same as int32.  It isn't of course, and
unsurprisingly the first person who came along with a database
OID above 2 billion broke it.  Repair.

Per bug #17677 from Sergey Pankov.  Back-patch to v15.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17677-a99fa067d7ed71c9@postgresql.org
2022-11-04 10:39:52 -04:00
Etsuro Fujita
8c71467908 Correct error message for row-level triggers with transition tables on partitioned tables.
"Triggers on partitioned tables cannot have transition tables." is
incorrect as we allow statement-level triggers on partitioned tables to
have transition tables.

This has been wrong since commit 86f575948; back-patch to v11 where that
commit came in.

Reviewed by Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPmGK17gk4vXLzz2iG%2BG4LWRWCoVyam70nZ3OuGm1hMJwDrhcg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-11-04 19:15:00 +09:00
John Naylor
233cf6e8ad Remove outdated include
In the wake of bfb9dfd93, there are no longer any stat() calls in
guc-file.l, but the work leading to dac048f71 did not get the memo.

Noted by Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/Y2OosGi1Xh9x/lEn%40paquier.xyz
2022-11-04 07:50:57 +07:00
Alvaro Herrera
b0284bfb1d
Create FKs properly when attaching table as partition
Commit f56f8f8da6 added some code in CloneFkReferencing that's way too
lax about a Constraint node it manufactures, not initializing enough
struct members -- initially_valid in particular was forgotten.  This
causes some FKs in partitions added by ALTER TABLE ATTACH PARTITION to
be marked as not validated.  Set initially_valid true, which fixes the
bug.

While at it, make the struct initialization more complete.  Very similar
code was added in two other places by the same commit; make them all
follow the same pattern for consistency, though no bugs are apparent
there.

This bug has never been reported: I only happened to notice while
working on commit 614a406b4f.  The test case that was added there with
the improper result is repaired.

Backpatch to 12.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221005105523.bhuhkdx4olajboof@alvherre.pgsql
2022-11-03 20:40:21 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
2fe4c7384f Make AssertPointerAlignment available to frontend code
We don't need separate definitions for frontend and backend, since the
contained Assert() will take care of the difference.  So this also
makes it simpler overall.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/f64365b1-d5f9-ef83-41fe-404810f10e5a@enterprisedb.com
2022-11-03 12:04:22 -04:00
Tom Lane
dea8349380 Avoid crash after function syntax error in a replication worker.
If a syntax error occurred in a SQL-language or PL/pgSQL-language
CREATE FUNCTION or DO command executed in a logical replication worker,
we'd suffer a null pointer dereference or assertion failure.  That
seems like a rather contrived case, but nonetheless worth fixing.

The cause is that function_parse_error_transpose assumes it must be
executing within the context of a Portal, but logical/worker.c
doesn't create a Portal since it's not running the standard executor.
We can just back off the hard Assert check and make it fail gracefully
if there's not an ActivePortal.  (I have a feeling that the aggressive
check here was my fault originally, probably because I wasn't sure if
the case would always hold and wanted to find out.  Well, now we know.)

The hazard seems to exist in all branches that have logical replication,
so back-patch to v10.

Maxim Orlov, Anton Melnikov, Masahiko Sawada, Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/b570c367-ba38-95f3-f62d-5f59b9808226@inbox.ru
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/adf0452f-8c6b-7def-d35e-ab516c80088e@inbox.ru
2022-11-03 12:02:14 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
5fca91025e
Resolve partition strategy during early parsing
This has little practical value, but there's no reason to let the
partition strategy names travel through DDL as strings.

Reviewed-by: Japin Li <japinli@hotmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221021093216.ffupd7epy2mytkux@alvherre.pgsql
2022-11-03 16:25:54 +01:00
Tom Lane
cf8b7d374a Add casts to simplehash.h to silence C++ warnings.
Casting the result of palloc etc. to the intended type is more per
project style anyway.

(The fact that cpluspluscheck doesn't notice these problems is
because it doesn't expand any macros, which seems like a troubling
shortcoming.  Don't have a good idea about improving that.)

Back-patch to v13, which is as far as the patch applies cleanly;
doesn't seem worth working harder.

David Geier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/aa5d88a3-71f4-3455-11cf-82de0372c941@gmail.com
2022-11-03 10:47:31 -04:00
John Naylor
062eef3a9b Straighten include order in guc-file.l
Oversight in dac048f71e

Michael Paquier

Reviewed by Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/Y2IATvRGo347Lvd1%40paquier.xyz
2022-11-03 12:38:44 +07:00
Tom Lane
1c72d82c25 Allow use of __sync_lock_test_and_set for spinlocks on any machine.
If we have no special-case code in s_lock.h for the current platform,
but the compiler has __sync_lock_test_and_set, use that instead of
failing.  It's unlikely that anybody's __sync_lock_test_and_set
would be so awful as to be worse than our semaphore-based fallback,
but if it is, they can (continue to) use --disable-spinlocks.

This allows removal of the RISC-V special case installed by commit
c32fcac56, which generated exactly the same code but only on that
platform.  Usefully, the RISC-V buildfarm animals should now test
at least the int variant of this patch.

I've manually tested both variants on ARM by dint of removing the
ARM-specific stanza.  We don't want to drop that, because it already
has some special knowledge and is likely to grow more over time.
Likewise, this is not meant to preclude installing special cases
for other arches if that proves worthwhile.

Per discussion of a request to install the same code for loongarch64.
Like the previous patch, we might as well back-patch to supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/761ac43d44b84d679ba803c2bd947cc0@HSMAILSVR04.hs.handsome.com.cn
2022-11-02 17:37:29 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
3655b46aa0 pg_dump: Refactor code that constructs ALTER ... OWNER TO commands
Avoid having to list all the possible object types twice.  Instead,
only _getObjectDescription() needs to know about specific object
types.  It communicates back to _printTocEntry() whether an owner is
to be set.

In passing, remove the logic to use ALTER TABLE to set the owner of
views and sequences.  This is no longer necessary.  Furthermore, if
pg_dump doesn't recognize the object type, this is now a fatal error,
not a warning.

Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker <corey.huinker@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/0a00f923-599a-381b-923f-0d802a727715@enterprisedb.com
2022-11-02 17:24:38 -04:00
Tom Lane
be541efbfd Defend against unsupported partition relkind in logical replication worker.
Since partitions can be foreign tables not only plain tables, but
logical replication only supports plain tables, we'd better check the
relkind of a partition after we find it.  (There was some discussion
of checking this when adding a partitioned table to a subscription;
but that would be inadequate since the troublesome partition could be
added later.)  Without this, the situation leads to a segfault or
assertion failure.

In passing, add a separate variable for the target Relation of
a cross-partition UPDATE; reusing partrel seemed mighty confusing
and error-prone.

Shi Yu and Tom Lane, per report from Ilya Gladyshev.  Back-patch
to v13 where logical replication into partitioned tables became
a thing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6b93e3748ba43298694f376ca8797279d7945e29.camel@gmail.com
2022-11-02 12:29:39 -04:00
Tom Lane
26ee7fb368 pg_dump: fix failure to dump comments on constraints in some cases.
Thinko in commit 5209c0ba0: I checked the wrong object's
DUMP_COMPONENT_COMMENT bit in two places.

Per bug #17675 from Franz-Josef Färber.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17675-c69c001e06390867@postgresql.org
2022-11-02 11:30:04 -04:00
Etsuro Fujita
d54e79ba28 Fix copy-and-pasteo in comment. 2022-11-02 18:15:00 +09:00
Amit Kapila
568546f7e4 Improve the description of XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS.
Previously, the description of XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS showed only
top-transaction XIDs and whether subtransactions overflowed. This commit
improves it to show individual subtransaction XIDs. This also improves the
description of overflowed subtransactions.

This additional information can be helpful for testing and debugging
purposes.

Author: Masahiko Sawada
Reviewd by: Fujii Masao, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Ashutosh Bapat, Bharath Rupireddy
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoAqvaE+XEeXHHPdAGQPcCoGXxuoeutq_nWhUSQvTt5+tA@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-02 10:06:55 +05:30
David Rowley
3712e0ed47 Fix outdated comment in tuplesort.h
This was outdated by 77bae396d.

Backpatch-through: 15, where 77bae396d was added
2022-11-02 15:29:31 +13:00
Michael Paquier
8e621c10c7 Remove code handling FORCE_NULL and FORCE_NOT_NULL for COPY TO
These two options are only available with COPY FROM, so the extra logic
in charge of checking the validity of the attributes given has no
purpose.

Author: Zhang Mingli
Reviewed-by: Richard Guo, Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/F28F0B5A-766F-4D33-BF44-43B3A052D833@gmail.com
2022-11-02 10:15:19 +09:00
David Rowley
7c335b7a20 Add doubly linked count list implementation
We have various requirements when using a dlist_head to keep track of the
number of items in the list.  This, traditionally, has been done by
maintaining a counter variable in the calling code.  Here we tidy this up
by adding "dclist", which is very similar to dlist but also keeps track of
the number of items stored in the list.

Callers may use the new dclist_count() function when they need to know how
many items are stored. Obtaining the count is an O(1) operation.

For simplicity reasons, dclist and dlist both use dlist_node as their node
type and dlist_iter/dlist_mutable_iter as their iterator type. dclists
have all of the same functionality as dlists except there is no function
named dclist_delete().  To remove an item from a list dclist_delete_from()
must be used.  This requires knowing which dclist the given item is stored
in.

Additionally, here we also convert some dlists where additional code
exists to keep track of the number of items stored and to make these use
dclists instead.

Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy, Aleksander Alekseev
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvrtVxr+FXEX0VbViCFKDGxA3tWDgw9oFewNXCJMmwLjLg@mail.gmail.com
2022-11-02 14:06:05 +13:00
Michael Paquier
451d1164b9 Add more tests for COPY with incorrect option combinations
Based on the existing coverage report, some combinations were not
checked at all, so add some tests to do so.  Spotted while looking at
the area.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y2DNm9u7hzIxCXHn@paquier.xyz
2022-11-02 09:57:54 +09:00
Tom Lane
e7c7605a76 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2022f.
DST law changes in Chile, Fiji, Iran, Jordan, Mexico, Palestine,
and Syria.  Historical corrections for Chile, Crimea, Iran, and
Mexico.

Also, the Europe/Kiev zone has been renamed to Europe/Kyiv
(retaining the old name as a link).

The following zones have been merged into nearby, more-populous zones
whose clocks have agreed since 1970: Antarctica/Vostok, Asia/Brunei,
Asia/Kuala_Lumpur, Atlantic/Reykjavik, Europe/Amsterdam,
Europe/Copenhagen, Europe/Luxembourg, Europe/Monaco, Europe/Oslo,
Europe/Stockholm, Indian/Christmas, Indian/Cocos, Indian/Kerguelen,
Indian/Mahe, Indian/Reunion, Pacific/Chuuk, Pacific/Funafuti,
Pacific/Majuro, Pacific/Pohnpei, Pacific/Wake and Pacific/Wallis.
(This indirectly affects zones that were already links to one of
these: Arctic/Longyearbyen, Atlantic/Jan_Mayen, Iceland,
Pacific/Ponape, Pacific/Truk, and Pacific/Yap.)  America/Nipigon,
America/Rainy_River, America/Thunder_Bay, Europe/Uzhgorod, and
Europe/Zaporozhye were also merged into nearby zones after discovering
that their claimed post-1970 differences from those zones seem to have
been errors.

While the IANA crew have been working on merging zones that have no
post-1970 differences for some time, this batch of changes affects
some zones that are significantly more populous than those merged
in the past, notably parts of Europe.  The loss of pre-1970 timezone
history for those zones may be troublesome for applications
expecting consistency of timestamptz display.  As an example, the
stored value '1944-06-01 12:00 UTC' would previously display as
'1944-06-01 13:00:00+01' if the Europe/Stockholm zone is selected,
but now it will read out as '1944-06-01 14:00:00+02'.

There exists a "packrat" option that will build the timezone data
files with this old data preserved, but the problem is that it also
resurrects a bunch of other, far less well-attested data; so much so
that actually more zones' contents change from 2022a with that option
than without it.  I have chosen not to do that here, for that reason
and because it appears that no major OS distributions are using the
"packrat" option, so that doing so would cause Postgres' behavior
to diverge significantly depending on whether it was built with
--with-system-tzdata.  However, for anyone for whom these changes pose
significant problems, there is a solution: build a set of timezone
files with the "packrat" option and use those with Postgres.
2022-11-01 17:08:28 -04:00
Tom Lane
f4857082bc Fix planner failure with extended statistics on partitioned tables.
Some cases would result in "cache lookup failed for statistics object",
due to trying to fetch inherited statistics when only non-inherited
ones are available or vice versa.

Richard Guo and Justin Pryzby

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221030170520.GM16921@telsasoft.com
2022-11-01 14:34:44 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
2ea5de296e psql: Improve tab completion for ALTER TABLE on identity columns
- Add tab completion for ALTER SEQUENCE … START …
- Add tab completion for ALTER COLUMN … SET GENERATED …
- Add tab completion for ALTER COLUMN … SET <sequence option>
- Add tab completion for ALTER COLUMN … ADD GENERATED … AS IDENTITY

Author: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker <ilmari@ilmari.org>
Reviewed-by: Matheus Alcantara <mths.dev@pm.me>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/87mta1jfax.fsf@wibble.ilmari.org
2022-11-01 12:07:40 +01:00
Tom Lane
0043aa6b85 Add basic regression tests for semi/antijoin recognition.
Add some simple tests that the planner recognizes all the
standard idioms for SEMI and ANTI joins.  Failure to optimize
in this way won't necessarily cause any visible change in
query results, so check the plans.  We had no similar coverage
before, at least for some variants of antijoin, as noted by
Richard Guo.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4-mvPPCJ1W6iK6dD5HiNwoJdi6mZp=-7mE8N9Sh+cd0tQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-31 19:52:33 -04:00
Jeff Davis
0717f2fedb Fix ALTER COLLATION "default" REFRESH VERSION.
Issue a helpful error message rather than an internal error.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/51fb77507cafd43fc1a2e733c23045873d93ae60.camel%40j-davis.com
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro
2022-10-31 15:44:52 -07:00
Jeff Davis
10932ed5e5 Enable pg_collation_actual_version() to work on the default collation.
Previously, it would simply return NULL, which was less useful.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/51fb77507cafd43fc1a2e733c23045873d93ae60.camel%40j-davis.com
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro
2022-10-31 15:43:23 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut
6e10631d1e pg_dump test: Make concatenated create_sql commands more readable
When the pg_dump 002_pg_dump.pl test generates the command to load the
schema, it does

    # Add terminating semicolon
    $create_sql{$test_db} .= $tests{$test}->{create_sql} . ";";

In some cases, this creates a duplicate semicolon, but more
importantly, this doesn't add any newline.  So if you look at the
result in either the server log or in
tmp_check/log/regress_log_002_pg_dump, it looks like a complete mess.
This patch makes the output look cleaner for manual inspection: add
semicolon only if necessary, and add two newlines.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/d6aec95a-8729-43cc-2578-f2a5e46640e0%40enterprisedb.com
2022-10-31 14:19:08 +01:00
Michael Paquier
a73952b795 Add check on initial and boot values when loading GUCs
This commit adds a function to perform a cross-check between the initial
value of the C declaration associated to a GUC and its actual boot
value in assert-enabled builds.  The purpose of this is to prevent
anybody reading these C declarations from being fooled by mismatched
values before they are loaded at program startup.

The following rules apply depending on the GUC type:
* bool - can be false, or same as boot_val.
* int - can be 0, or same as the boot_val.
* real - can be 0.0, or same as the boot_val.
* string - can be NULL, or strcmp'd equal to the boot_val.
* enum - equal to the boot_val.

This is done for the system as well custom GUCs loaded by external
modules, which may require extension developers to adapt the C
declaration of the variables used by these GUCs (testing this change
with some of my own modules has allowed me to catch some stupid typos,
FWIW).  This may finish by being a bad experiment depending on the
feedbcak received, but let's see how it goes.

Author: Peter Smith
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Tom Lane, Michael Paquier, Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHut+PtHE0XSfjjRQ6D4v7+dqzCw=d+1a64ujra4EX8aoc_Z+w@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-31 13:54:23 +09:00
Michael Paquier
d9d873bac6 Clean up some inconsistencies with GUC declarations
This is similar to 7d25958, and this commit takes care of all the
remaining inconsistencies between the initial value used in the C
variable associated to a GUC and its default value stored in the GUC
tables (as of pg_settings.boot_val).

Some of the initial values of the GUCs updated rely on a compile-time
default.  These are refactored so as the GUC table and its C declaration
use the same values.  This makes everything consistent with other
places, backend_flush_after, bgwriter_flush_after, port,
checkpoint_flush_after doing so already, for example.

Extracted from a larger patch by Peter Smith.  The spots updated in the
modules are from me.

Author: Peter Smith, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Tom Lane, Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHut+PtHE0XSfjjRQ6D4v7+dqzCw=d+1a64ujra4EX8aoc_Z+w@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-31 12:44:48 +09:00
Noah Misch
a9f8ca6005 Under has_wal_read_bug, skip recovery/t/032_relfilenode_reuse.pl.
Per buildfarm member kittiwake.  Back-patch to v15, where this test
first appeared.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220116210241.GC756210@rfd.leadboat.com
2022-10-29 10:42:16 -07:00
David Rowley
5543677ec9 Use Limit instead of Unique to implement DISTINCT, when possible
When all of the query's DISTINCT pathkeys have been marked as redundant
due to EquivalenceClasses existing which contain constants, we can just
implement the DISTINCT operation on a query by just limiting the number of
returned rows to 1 instead of performing a Unique on all of the matching
(duplicate) rows.

This applies in cases such as:

SELECT DISTINCT col,col2 FROM tab WHERE col = 1 AND col2 = 10;

If there are any matching rows, then they must all be {1,10}.  There's no
point in fetching all of those and running a Unique operator on them to
leave only a single row.  Here we effectively just find the first row and
then stop.  We are obviously unable to apply this optimization if either
the col = 1 or col2 = 10 were missing from the WHERE clause or if there
were any additional columns in the SELECT clause.

Such queries are probably not all that common, but detecting when we can
apply this optimization amounts to checking if the distinct_pathkeys are
NULL, which is very cheap indeed.

Nothing is done here to check if the query already has a LIMIT clause.  If
it does then the plan may end up with 2 Limits nodes.  There's no harm in
that and it's probably not worth the complexity to unify them into a
single Limit node.

Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Richard Guo
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvqS0j8RUWRUSgCAXxOqnYjHUXmKwspRj4GzVfOO25ByHA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/MEYPR01MB7101CD5DA0A07C9DE2B74850A4239@MEYPR01MB7101.ausprd01.prod.outlook.com
2022-10-28 23:04:38 +13:00
Peter Eisentraut
b1099eca8f Remove AssertArg and AssertState
These don't offer anything over plain Assert, and their usage had
already been declared obsolescent.

Author: Nathan Bossart <nathandbossart@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20221009210148.GA900071@nathanxps13
2022-10-28 09:19:06 +02:00
David Rowley
d37aa3d358 Allow nodeSort to perform Datum sorts for byref types
Here we add a new 'copy' parameter to tuplesort_getdatum so that we can
instruct the function not to datumCopy() byref Datums before returning.

Similar to 91e9e89dc, this can provide significant performance
improvements in nodeSort when sorting by a single byref column and the
sort's targetlist contains only that column.

This allows us to re-enable Datum sorts for byref types which was disabled
in 3a5817695 due to a reported memory leak.

Additionally, here we slightly optimize DISTINCT aggregates so that we no
longer perform any datumCopy() when we find the current value not to be
distinct from the previous value.  Previously the code would always take a
copy of the most recent Datum and pfree the previous value, even when the
values were the same.  Testing shows a small but noticeable performance
increase when aggregate transitions are skipped due to the current
transition value being the same as the prior one.

Author: David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvqS6wC5U==k9Hd26E4EQXH3QR67-T4=Q1rQ36NGvjfVSg@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvqHonfe9G1cVaKeHbDx70R_zCrM3qP2AGXpGrieSKGnhA@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-28 09:25:12 +13:00
Tom Lane
a5fc46414d Avoid making commutatively-duplicate clauses in EquivalenceClasses.
When we decide we need to make a derived clause equating a.x and
b.y, we already will re-use a previously-made clause "a.x = b.y".
But we might instead have "b.y = a.x", which is perfectly usable
because equivclass.c has never promised anything about the
operand order in clauses it builds.  Saving construction of a
new RestrictInfo doesn't matter all that much in itself --- but
because we cache selectivity estimates and so on per-RestrictInfo,
there's a possibility of saving a fair amount of duplicative
effort downstream.

Hence, check for commutative matches as well as direct ones when
seeing if we have a pre-existing clause.  This changes the visible
clause order in several regression test cases, but they're all
clearly-insignificant changes.

Checking for the reverse operand order is simple enough, but
if we wanted to check for operator OID match we'd need to call
get_commutator here, which is not so cheap.  I concluded that
we don't really need the operator check anyway, so I just
removed it.  It's unlikely that an opfamily contains more than
one applicable operator for a given pair of operand datatypes;
and if it does they had better give the same answers, so there
seems little need to insist that we use exactly the one
select_equality_operator chose.

Using the current core regression suite as a test case, I see
this change reducing the number of new join clauses built by
create_join_clause from 9673 to 5142 (out of 26652 calls).
So not quite 50% savings, but pretty close to it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/78062.1666735746@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-10-27 14:42:18 -04:00
Michael Paquier
4ab8c81bd9 Move pg_pwritev_with_retry() to src/common/file_utils.c
This commit moves pg_pwritev_with_retry(), a convenience wrapper of
pg_writev() able to handle partial writes, to common/file_utils.c so
that the frontend code is able to use it.  A first use-case targetted
for this routine is pg_basebackup and pg_receivewal, for the
zero-padding of a newly-initialized WAL segment.  This is used currently
in the backend when the GUC wal_init_zero is enabled (default).

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Thomas Munro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACUq7nAb7=bJNbK3yYmp-SZhJcXFR_pLk8un6XgDzDF3OA@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-27 14:39:42 +09:00
Michael Paquier
1b9cd69c5b Add some tests to check the SQL functions of control file
As the recent commit 05d4cbf (reverted after as a448e49) has proved,
there is zero coverage for the four SQL functions that can scan the
control file data:
- pg_control_checkpoint()
- pg_control_init()
- pg_control_recovery()
- pg_control_system()

This commit adds a minimal coverage for these functions, checking that
their execution is able to complete.  This would have been enough to
catch the problems introduced in the commit mentioned above.  More
checks could be done for each individual fields, but it is unclear
whether this would be better than the other checks in place in the
backend code.

Per discussion with Bharath Rupireddy.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y1d2FZmQmyAhPSRG@paquier.xyz
2022-10-27 09:58:44 +09:00
Michael Paquier
c591300a8f Add rule_number to pg_hba_file_rules and map_number to pg_ident_file_mappings
These numbers are strictly-monotone identifiers assigned to each rule
of pg_hba_file_rules and each map of pg_ident_file_mappings when loading
the HBA and ident configuration files, indicating the order in which
they are checked at authentication time, until a match is found.

With only one file loaded currently, this is equivalent to the line
numbers assigned to the entries loaded if one wants to know their order,
but this becomes mandatory once the inclusion of external files is
added to the HBA and ident files to be able to know in which order the
rules and/or maps are applied at authentication.  Note that NULL is used
when a HBA or ident entry cannot be parsed or validated, aka when an
error exists, contrary to the line number.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220223045959.35ipdsvbxcstrhya@jrouhaud
2022-10-26 15:22:15 +09:00
Michael Paquier
37d264478a Fix variable assignment thinko in hba.c
The intention behind 1b73d0b was to limit the use of TokenizedAuthLine,
but I have fat-fingered one location in parse_hba_line() when creating
the HbaLine, where this should use the local variable and not the value
coming from TokenizedAuthLine.  This logic is the exactly the same, but
let's be clean about all that on consistency grounds.

Reported-by: Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221026032730.k3sib5krgm7l6njk@jrouhaud
2022-10-26 12:57:40 +09:00
Michael Paquier
1b73d0b1c3 Refactor code handling the names of files loaded in hba.c
This has the advantage to limit the presence of the GUC values
hba_file and ident_file to the code paths where these files are loaded,
easing the introduction of an upcoming feature aimed at adding inclusion
logic for files and directories in HBA and ident files.

Note that this needs the addition of the source file name to HbaLine, in
addition to the line number, which is something needed by the backend in
two places of auth.c (authentication failure details and auth_id log
when log_connections is enabled).

While on it, adjust a log generated on authentication failure to report
the name of the actual HBA file on which the connection attempt matched,
where the line number and the raw line written in the HBA file were
already included.  This was previously hardcoded as pg_hba.conf, which
would be incorrect when a custom value is used at postmaster startup for
the GUC hba_file.

Extracted from a larger patch by the same author.

Author: Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220223045959.35ipdsvbxcstrhya@jrouhaud
2022-10-26 11:42:13 +09:00
Tom Lane
13d53aa7a8 Doc/improve confusing, inefficient tests to locate CTID variable.
The IsCTIDVar() tests in nodeTidscan.c and nodeTidrangescan.c
look buggy at first sight: they aren't checking that the varno
matches the table to be scanned.  Actually they're safe because
any Var in a scan-level qual must be for the correct table ...
but if we're depending on that, it's pretty pointless to verify
varlevelsup.  (Besides which, varlevelsup is *always* zero at
execution, since we've flattened the rangetable long since.)

Remove the useless varlevelsup check, and instead add some
commentary explaining why we don't need to check varno.

Noted while fooling with a planner change that causes the order
of "t1.ctid = t2.ctid" to change in some tidscan.sql tests;
I was briefly fooled into thinking there was a live bug here.
2022-10-25 17:35:19 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
0e972f50fd Update outdated comment for TransactionIdSetTreeStatus
Commit 06da3c570f changed the way subtransactions are marked as
SUBCOMMITTED, but the example it included actually documented the old
way. Update it.

Author: Japin Li
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/MEYP282MB16690BC96DFBE08CC857E1E3B6319%40MEYP282MB1669.AUSP282.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
2022-10-25 21:43:52 +02:00
Michael Paquier
7d25958453 Clean up some GUC declarations and comments
This adjusts a few things for GUCs related to logical replication,
replication slots and WAL senders, in the shape of incorrect comments
and values inconsistent with their initial default value.

Author: Peter Smith
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Tom Lane, Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHut+PtHE0XSfjjRQ6D4v7+dqzCw=d+1a64ujra4EX8aoc_Z+w@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-25 14:06:07 +09:00
Thomas Munro
e109e43921 Fix unlink() for STATUS_DELETE_PENDING on Windows.
Commit f357233c assumed that it was OK to return ENOENT directly if
lstat() failed that way.  If we got STATUS_DELETE_PENDING while trying
to unlink a file that we had already unlinked successfully once before
but someone else still had open (on a kernel version that has "pending"
unlinks by default), then we would no longer reach the retry loop in
pgunlink().  That loop claims to be only for handling sharing violations
(a different phenomenon), but the errno is the same.

Restore that behavior with an explicit check, to see if it fixes the
occasional 'directory not empty' failures seen in the pg_upgrade tests
on CI.  Further improvements are possible with proposed upgrades to
modern Windows APIs that would replace this convoluted code.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220920013122.GA31833%40telsasoft.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BajSQ_8eu2AogTncOnZ5me2D-Cn66iN_-wZnRjLN%2Bicg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-10-25 16:26:58 +13:00
Thomas Munro
4517358ee7 Fix stat() for recursive junction points on Windows.
Commit c5cb8f3b supposed that we'd only ever have to follow one junction
point in stat(), because we don't construct longer chains of them ourselves.
When examining a parent directory supplied by the user, we should really be
able to cope with longer chains, just in case someone has their system
set up that way.  Choose an arbitrary cap of 8, to match the minimum
acceptable value of SYMLOOP_MAX in POSIX.

Previously I'd avoided reporting ELOOP thinking Windows didn't have it,
but it turns out that it does, so we can use the proper error number.

Reviewed-by: Roman Zharkov <r.zharkov@postgrespro.ru>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJ7JDGWYFt9%3D-TyJiRRy5q9TtPfqeKkneWDr1XPU1%2Biqw%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BajSQ_8eu2AogTncOnZ5me2D-Cn66iN_-wZnRjLN%2Bicg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-10-25 16:19:05 +13:00
Thomas Munro
f71007fbb3 Fix readlink() for non-PostgreSQL junction points on Windows.
Since commit c5cb8f3b taught stat() to follow symlinks, and since initdb
uses pg_mkdir_p(), and that examines parent directories, our humble
readlink() implementation can now be exposed to junction points not of
PostgreSQL origin.  Those might be corrupted by our naive path mangling,
which doesn't really understand NT paths in general.

Simply decline to transform paths that don't look like a drive absolute
path.  That means that readlink() returns the NT path directly when
checking a parent directory of PGDATA that happen to point to a drive
using "rooted" format.  That  works for the purposes of our stat()
emulation.

Reported-by: Roman Zharkov <r.zharkov@postgrespro.ru>
Reviewed-by: Roman Zharkov <r.zharkov@postgrespro.ru>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4590c37927d7b8ee84f9855d83229018%40postgrespro.ru
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BajSQ_8eu2AogTncOnZ5me2D-Cn66iN_-wZnRjLN%2Bicg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-10-25 16:19:05 +13:00
Thomas Munro
387803d81d Fix lstat() for broken junction points on Windows.
When using junction points to emulate symlinks on Windows, one edge case
was not handled correctly by commit c5cb8f3b: if a junction point is
broken (pointing to a non-existent path), we'd report ENOENT.  This
doesn't break any known use case, but was noticed while developing a
test suite for these functions and is fixed here for completeness.

Also add translation ERROR_CANT_RESOLVE_FILENAME -> ENOENT, as that is
one of the errors Windows can report for some kinds of broken paths.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BajSQ_8eu2AogTncOnZ5me2D-Cn66iN_-wZnRjLN%2Bicg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-10-25 16:19:01 +13:00
Thomas Munro
4650036f5a Fix readlink() return value on Windows.
Ancient bug noticed while working on a test suite for these functions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BajSQ_8eu2AogTncOnZ5me2D-Cn66iN_-wZnRjLN%2Bicg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-10-25 15:13:52 +13:00
Thomas Munro
359d601095 Fix symlink() errno on Windows.
Ancient bug noticed while working on a test suite for these functions.

https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BajSQ_8eu2AogTncOnZ5me2D-Cn66iN_-wZnRjLN%2Bicg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-10-25 15:10:49 +13:00
Alvaro Herrera
3b2db22fe2
Update some comments that should've covered MERGE
Oversight in 7103ebb7aa.  Backpatch to 15.

Author: Richard Guo <guofenglinux@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs48gnDjZXq3-b56dVpQCNUJ5hD9kdtWN4QFwKCEapspNsA@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-24 12:52:43 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera
8328a15f8f
Fix recently added incorrect assertion
Commit df3737a651 added an incorrect assertion about the preconditions
for invoking the backup cleanup callback: it misfires at session end in
case a backup completes successfully.  Fix it, using coding from Michaël
Paquier.  Also add some tests for the various cases.

Reported by Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221021.161038.1277961198945653224.horikyota.ntt@gmail.com
2022-10-24 12:02:33 +02:00
Michael Paquier
2e0d80c5bb Improve coverage of ruleutils.c for SQLValueFunctions
While looking at how these are handled in the parser and the executor, I
have noticed that there is no test coverage for most of these when
reverse-engineering an expression for a SQLValueFunction node in
ruleutils.c, including how these are reparsed when included in a FROM
clause.  Some hacking in this area has showed me that these could break
easily, so add some coverage to track the existing compatibility.

Extracted from a much larger patch by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/YzaG3MoryCguUOym@paquier.xyz
2022-10-24 16:53:54 +09:00
Michael Paquier
3cf2f7af7f Improve tab completion for ALTER STATISTICS <name> SET in psql
The code was completing this pattern with a list of settable characters,
and it was possible to reach this state after completing a "ALTER
STATISTICS <name>" with SET.

Author: Vignesh C
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm2HHF_371o+EeSjxDDS17Cx7d-ko2h1fLU94=ob=4_ktg@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-24 15:46:42 +09:00
Michael Paquier
14a737bfdb Fix and improve TAP tests for pg_hba.conf and regexps
The new tests have been reporting a warning hidden in the logs, as of
"Odd number of elements in hash assignment" (perlcritic or similar did
not report an issue, actually).  This comes down to a typo in the test
"matching regexp for username" for a double-quoted regexp using commas,
where we passed an extra argument.  The test is intended to pass, but
this was causing the test to fail.  This also pointed out that the
newly-added role "md5,role" lacks an entry in the password file used to
provide the password, so add one.

While on it, make the tests pickier by checking the contents of the logs
generated on successful authentication.

Oversights in 8fea868.
2022-10-24 13:56:34 +09:00
Michael Paquier
8fea86830e Add support for regexps on database and user entries in pg_hba.conf
As of this commit, any database or user entry beginning with a slash (/)
is considered as a regular expression.  This is particularly useful for
users, as now there is no clean way to match pattern on multiple HBA
lines.  For example, a user name mapping with a regular expression needs
first to match with a HBA line, and we would skip the follow-up HBA
entries if the ident regexp does *not* match with what has matched in
the HBA line.

pg_hba.conf is able to handle multiple databases and roles with a
comma-separated list of these, hence individual regular expressions that
include commas need to be double-quoted.

At authentication time, user and database names are now checked in the
following order:
- Arbitrary keywords (like "all", the ones beginning by '+' for
membership check), that we know will never have a regexp.  A fancy case
is for physical WAL senders, we *have* to only match "replication" for
the database.
- Regular expression matching.
- Exact match.
The previous logic did the same, but without the regexp step.

We have discussed as well the possibility to support regexp pattern
matching for host names, but these happen to lead to tricky issues based
on what I understand, particularly with host entries that have CIDRs.

This commit relies heavily on the refactoring done in a903971 and
fc579e1, so as the amount of code required to compile and execute
regular expressions is now minimal.  When parsing pg_hba.conf, all the
computed regexps needs to explicitely free()'d, same as pg_ident.conf.

Documentation and TAP tests are added to cover this feature, including
cases where the regexps use commas (for clarity in the docs, coverage
for the parsing logic in the tests).

Note that this introduces a breakage with older versions, where a
database or user name beginning with a slash are treated as something to
check for an equal match.  Per discussion, we have discarded this as
being much of an issue in practice as it would require a cluster to
have database and/or role names that begin with a slash, as well as HBA
entries using these.  Hence, the consistency gained with regexps in
pg_ident.conf is more appealing in the long term.

**This compatibility change should be mentioned in the release notes.**

Author: Bertrand Drouvot
Reviewed-by: Jacob Champion, Tom Lane, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fff0d7c1-8ad4-76a1-9db3-0ab6ec338bf7@amazon.com
2022-10-24 11:45:31 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
5035c93c8a Remove pgpid_t type, use pid_t instead
It's unclear why a separate type would be needed here.  We use plain
pid_t (or int) everywhere else.

(The only relevant platform where pid_t is not int is 64-bit MinGW,
where it is long long int.  So defining pid_t as long (which is 32-bit
on Windows), as was done here, doesn't even accommodate that one.)

Reverts 66fa6eba5a.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/289c2e45-c7d9-5ce4-7eff-a9e2a33e1580@enterprisedb.com
2022-10-22 10:45:19 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
2598b76bf2 psql: Fix exit status when query is canceled
Because of a small thinko in 7844c9918a,
psql -c would exit successfully when a query is canceled.  Fix this so
that it exits with a nonzero status, just like for all other errors.
2022-10-22 09:42:52 +02:00
Michael Paquier
6cc66197ff Improve memory handling across SQL-callable backup functions
Since pg_backup_start() and pg_backup_stop() exist, the tablespace map
data and the backup state data (backup_label string until 7d70809) have
been allocated in the TopMemoryContext.  This approach would cause
memory leaks in the session calling these functions if failures happen
before pg_backup_stop() ends, leaking more memory on repeated failures.
Both things need little memory so that would not be really noticeable
for most users, except perhaps connection poolers with long-lived
connections able to trigger backup failures with these functions.

This commit improves the logic in this area by not allocating anymore
the backup-related data that needs to travel across the SQL-callable
backup functions in TopMemoryContext, by using instead a dedicated
memory context child of TopMemoryContext.  The memory context is created
in pg_backup_start() and deleted when finishing pg_backup_stop().  In
the event of an in-flight failure, this memory context gets reset in the
follow-up pg_backup_start() call, so as we are sure that only one run
worth of data is leaked at any time.  Some cleanup was already done for
the backup data on a follow-up call of pg_backup_start(), but using a
memory context makes the whole simpler.

BASE_BACKUP commands are executed in isolation, relying on the memory
context created for replication commands, hence these do not need such
an extra logic.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas, Alvaro Herrera, Cary Huang, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACXqvfKF2B0beQ=aJMdWnpNohmBPsRg=EDQj_6y1t2O8mQ@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-22 11:54:02 +09:00
Robert Haas
1f0c4fa255 pg_basebackup: Fix cross-platform tablespace relocation.
Specifically, when pg_basebackup is invoked with -Tx=y, don't error
out if x could plausibly be an absolute path either on Windows or on
non-Windows systems. We don't know whether the remote system is
running the same OS as the local system, so it's not appropriate to
assume that our local rule about absolute pathnames is the same as
the rule on the remote system.

Patch by me, reviewed by Tom Lane, Andrew Dunstan, and
Davinder Singh.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoY+jC3YiskomvYKDPK3FbrmsDU7_8+wMHt02HOdJeRb0g@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-21 08:21:55 -04:00
Amit Kapila
ce20f8b9f4 Add CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS while restoring changes during decoding.
Previously in commit 42681dffaf, we added CFI during decoding changes but
missed another similar case that can happen while restoring changes
spilled to disk back into memory in a loop.

Reported-by: Robert Haas
Author: Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 10
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoaLObg0QbstbC8ykDwOdD1bDkr4AbPpB=0DPgA2JW0mFg@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-21 12:57:18 +05:30
Michael Paquier
a903971351 Refactor more logic for compilation of regular expressions in hba.c
It happens that the parts of hba.conf that are planned to be extended
to support regular expressions would finish by using the same error
message as the one used currently for pg_ident.conf when a regular
expression cannot be compiled, as long as the routine centralizing the
logic, regcomp_auth_token(), knows from which file the regexp comes from
and its line location in the so-said file.

This change makes the follow-up patches slightly simpler, and the logic
remains the same.  I suspect that this makes the proposal to add support
for file inclusions in pg_ident.conf and pg_hba.conf slightly simpler,
as well.

Extracted from a larger patch by the same author.  This is similar to
the refactoring done in fc579e1.

Author: Bertrand Drouvot
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fff0d7c1-8ad4-76a1-9db3-0ab6ec338bf7@amazon.com
2022-10-21 09:55:56 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
c8e4030d1b Make finding openssl program a configure or meson option
Various test suites use the "openssl" program as part of their setup.
There isn't a way to override which openssl program is to be used,
other than by fiddling with the path, perhaps.  This has gotten
increasingly problematic because different versions of openssl have
different capabilities and do different things by default.

This patch checks for an openssl binary in configure and meson setup,
with appropriate ways to override it.  This is similar to how "lz4"
and "zstd" are handled, for example.  The meson build system actually
already did this, but the result was only used in some places.  This
is now applied more uniformly.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/dc638b75-a16a-007d-9e1c-d16ed6cf0ad2%40enterprisedb.com
2022-10-20 21:05:42 +02:00
Dean Rasheed
40c7fcbbed Improve the accuracy of numeric power() for integer exponents.
This makes the choice of result scale of numeric power() for integer
exponents consistent with the choice for non-integer exponents, and
with the result scale of other numeric functions. Specifically, the
result scale will be at least as large as the scale of either input,
and sufficient to ensure that the result has at least 16 significant
digits.

Formerly, the result scale was based only on the scale of the first
input, without taking into account the weight of the result. For
results with negative weight, that could lead to results with very few
or even no non-zero significant digits (e.g., 10.0 ^ (-18) produced
0.0000000000000000).

Fix this by moving responsibility for the choice of result scale into
power_var_int(), which already has code to estimate the result weight.

Per report by Adrian Klaver and suggested fix by Tom Lane.

No back-patch -- arguably this is a bug fix, but one which is easy to
work around, so it doesn't seem worth the risk of changing query
results in stable branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12a40226-70ac-3a3b-3d3a-fdaf9e32d312%40aklaver.com
2022-10-20 10:10:17 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera
7fd1ae987a
Use proper macro to access TransactionId
In commit f10a025cfe I mistakenly used list_member_oid in a place
where list_member_xid is called for.  (Currently innocuous as both
typedefs are pretty much identical, but if we change either, it'll
become broken.)  Repair.

Author: Hou Zhijie <houzj.fnst@fujitsu.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/OS0PR01MB5716E2399494D4CB1A28A091942A9@OS0PR01MB5716.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
2022-10-20 09:41:03 +02:00
Amit Kapila
16b1fe0037 Fix assertion failures while processing NEW_CID record in logical decoding.
When the logical decoding restarts from NEW_CID, since there is no
association between the top transaction and its subtransaction, both are
created as top transactions and have the same LSN. This caused the
assertion failure in AssertTXNLsnOrder().

This patch skips the assertion check until we reach the LSN at which we
start decoding the contents of the transaction, specifically
start_decoding_at LSN in SnapBuild. This is okay because we don't
guarantee to make the association between top transaction and
subtransaction until we try to decode the actual contents of transaction.
The ordering of the records prior to the start_decoding_at LSN should have
been checked before the restart.

The other assertion failure is due to the reason that we forgot to track
that we have considered top-level transaction id in the list of catalog
changing transactions that were committed when one of its subtransactions
is marked as containing catalog change.

Reported-by: Tomas Vondra, Osumi Takamichi
Author: Masahiko Sawada, Kuroda Hayato
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila, Dilip Kumar, Kuroda Hayato, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Masahiko Sawada
Backpatch-through: 10
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a89b46b6-0239-2fd5-71a9-b19b1f7a7145%40enterprisedb.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TYCPR01MB83733C6CEAE47D0280814D5AED7A9%40TYCPR01MB8373.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
2022-10-20 08:49:48 +05:30
Alvaro Herrera
460c0076e8
Better handle interrupting TAP tests
Set up a signal handler for INT/TERM so that we run our END block if we
get them.  In END, if the exit status indicates a problem, call
_update_pid(-1) to improve chances of the stop working in case start()
hasn't returned yet.

Also, change END's teardown_node() so that it passes fail_ok=>1, so that
if a node fails to stop, we still stop the other nodes in the same test.

Per complaint from Andres Freund.

This doesn't seem important enough to backpatch, at least for now.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220930040734.mbted42oiynhn2t6@awork3.anarazel.de
2022-10-19 17:09:51 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera
342bb38bfe
Get rid of XLogCtlInsert->forcePageWrites
After commit 39969e2a1e, ->forcePageWrites is no longer very
interesting: we can just test whether runningBackups is different from 0.
This simplifies some code, so do away with it.

Reviewed-by: Bharath Rupireddy <bharath.rupireddyforpostgres@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/39969e2a1e4d7f5a37f3ef37d53bbfe171e7d77a
2022-10-19 12:35:00 +02:00
Thomas Munro
c2ae01f695 Track LLVM 15 changes.
Per https://llvm.org/docs/OpaquePointers.html, support for non-opaque
pointers still exists and we can request that on our context.  We have
until LLVM 16 to move to opaque pointers, a much larger change.

Back-patch to 11, where LLVM support arrived.

Author: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMHz58Sf_xncdyqsekoVsNeKcruKootLtVH6cYXVhhUR1oKPCg%40mail.gmail.com
2022-10-19 22:18:26 +13:00
Alvaro Herrera
df3737a651
Remove pg_backup_start_callback and reuse similar code
We had two copies of almost identical logic to revert shared memory
state when a running backup aborts; we can remove
pg_backup_start_callback if we adapt do_pg_abort_backup so that it can
be used for this purpose too.

However, in order for this to work, we have to repurpose the flag passed
to do_pg_abort_backup.  It used to indicate whether to throw a warning
(and the only caller always passed true).  It now indicates whether the
callback is being called at start time (in which case the session backup
state is known not to have been set to RUNNING yet, so action is always
taken) or shmem time (in which case action is only taken if the session
backup state is RUNNING).  Thus the meaning of the flag is no longer
superfluous, but it's actually quite critical to get right.  I (Álvaro)
chose to change the polarity and the code flow re. the flag from what
Bharath submitted, for coding clarity.

Co-authored-by: Bharath Rupireddy <bharath.rupireddyforpostgres@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20221013111330.564fk5tkwe3ha77l%40alvherre.pgsql
2022-10-19 10:37:06 +02:00
Michael Paquier
9668c4a661 Rework shutdown callback of archiver modules
As currently designed, with a callback registered in a ERROR_CLEANUP
block, the shutdown callback would get called twice when updating
archive_library on SIGHUP, which is something that we want to avoid to
ease the life of extension writers.

Anyway, an ERROR in the archiver process is treated as a FATAL, stopping
it immediately, hence there is no need for a ERROR_CLEANUP block.
Instead of that, the shutdown callback is not called upon
before_shmem_exit(), giving to the modules the opportunity to do any
cleanup actions before the server shuts down its subsystems.

While on it, this commit adds some testing coverage for the shutdown
callback.  Neither shell_archive nor basic_archive have been using it,
and one is added to shell_archive, whose trigger is checked in a TAP
test through a shutdown sequence.

Author: Nathan Bossart, Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221015221328.GB1821022@nathanxps13
Backpatch-through: 15
2022-10-19 14:06:56 +09:00
Tatsuo Ishii
d1e2a380cb Enhance make_ctags and make_etags.
make_ctags did not include field members of structs since the commit
964d01ae90.

For example, in the following field of RestrictInfo:

   Selectivity norm_selec pg_node_attr(equal_ignore);

pg_node_attr was mistakenly interpreted to be the name of the field.
To fix this, add -I option to ctags command if the command is
Exuberant ctags or Universal ctags (for plain old ctags, struct
members are not included in the tags file anyway).

Also add "-e" and "-n" options to make_ctags. The -e option invokes
ctags command with -e option, which produces TAGS file for emacs. This
allows to eliminate duplicate codes in make_etags so that make_etags
just exec make_ctags with -e option.

The -n option allows not to produce symbolic links in each
sub directory (the default is producing symbolic links).

Author: Yugo Nagata
Reviewers: Alvaro Herrera, Tatsuo Ishii
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/20221007154442.76233afc7c5b255c4de6528a%40sraoss.co.jp
2022-10-19 12:59:29 +09:00
Michael Paquier
c68ec1b027 Fix typos in logical/launcher.c
Author: Peter Smith
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHut+Pvbma5HCc7==-B1ycyLQVyu7Fqq-qV=jhC5Zx4pWqk3uw@mail.gmail.com
2022-10-19 10:27:23 +09:00
Michael Paquier
fc579e11c6 Refactor regular expression handling in hba.c
AuthToken gains a regular expression, and IdentLine is changed so as it
uses an AuthToken rather than tracking separately the ident user string
used for the regex compilation and its generated regex_t.  In the case
of pg_ident.conf, a set of AuthTokens is built in the pre-parsing phase
of the file, and an extra regular expression is compiled when building
the list of IdentLines, after checking the sanity of the fields in a
pre-parsed entry.

The logic in charge of computing and executing regular expressions is
now done in a new set of routines called respectively
regcomp_auth_token() and regexec_auth_token() that are wrappers around
pg_regcomp() and pg_regexec(), working on AuthTokens.  While on it, this
patch adds a routine able to free an AuthToken, free_auth_token(), to
simplify a bit the logic around the requirement of using a specific free
routine for computed regular expressions.  Note that there are no
functional or behavior changes introduced by this commit.

The goal of this patch is to ease the use of regular expressions with
more items of pg_hba.conf (user list, database list, potentially
hostnames) where AuthTokens are used extensively.  This will be tackled
later in a separate patch.

Author: Bertrand Drouvot, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fff0d7c1-8ad4-76a1-9db3-0ab6ec338bf7@amazon.com
2022-10-19 10:08:49 +09:00
Tom Lane
8bf66dedd8 Fix confusion about havingQual vs hasHavingQual in planner.
Preprocessing of the HAVING clause will reduce havingQual to NIL
if the clause is constant-TRUE.  This is one case where that
convention is rather unfortunate, because "HAVING TRUE" is not at all
the same as not having any HAVING clause at all.  (Per the SQL spec,
it still forces the query to be grouped.)  The planner deals with this
by having a boolean hasHavingQual that records whether havingQual was
originally nonempty; places that just want to check whether HAVING
was specified are supposed to consult that.

I found three places that got that wrong.  Fortunately, these could
only affect cost estimates not correctness.  It'd be hard even
to demonstrate the errors; for example, the one in allpaths.c would
only matter in a query that has HAVING TRUE but no GROUP BY and no
aggregates, which would require a completely variable-free SELECT
list, making the case probably of only academic interest.  Hence,
while these are worth fixing before someone copies the incorrect
coding somewhere more critical, they don't seem worth back-patching.
I didn't bother trying to devise regression tests, either.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2503888.1666042643@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-10-18 10:44:34 -04:00