Commit Graph

19713 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane 46e3442c9e Fix failures in validateForeignKeyConstraint's slow path.
The foreign-key-checking loop in ATRewriteTables failed to ignore
relations without storage (e.g., partitioned tables), unlike the
initial loop.  This accidentally worked as long as RI_Initial_Check
succeeded, which it does in most practical cases (including all the
ones exercised in the existing regression tests :-().  However, if
that failed, as for instance when there are permissions issues,
then we entered the slow fire-the-trigger-on-each-tuple path.
And that would try to read from the referencing relation, and fail
if it lacks storage.

A second problem, recently introduced in HEAD, was that this loop
had been broken by sloppy refactoring for the tableam API changes.

Repair both issues, and add a regression test case so we have some
coverage on this code path.  Back-patch as needed to v11.

(It looks like this code could do with additional bulletproofing,
but let's get a working test case in place first.)

Hadi Moshayedi, Tom Lane, Andres Freund

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAK=1=WrnNmBbe5D9sm3t0a6dnAq3cdbF1vXY816j1wsMqzC8bw@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19030.1554574075@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190325180405.jytoehuzkeozggxx%40alap3.anarazel.de
2019-04-06 15:09:09 -04:00
Michael Paquier 249d649996 Add support TCP user timeout in libpq and the backend server
Similarly to the set of parameters for keepalive, a connection parameter
for libpq is added as well as a backend GUC, called tcp_user_timeout.

Increasing the TCP user timeout is useful to allow a connection to
survive extended periods without end-to-end connection, and decreasing
it allows application to fail faster.  By default, the parameter is 0,
which makes the connection use the system default, and follows a logic
close to the keepalive parameters in its handling.  When connecting
through a Unix-socket domain, the parameters have no effect.

Author: Ryohei Nagaura
Reviewed-by: Fabien Coelho, Robert Haas, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Kirk
Jamison, Mikalai Keida, Takayuki Tsunakawa, Andrei Yahorau
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/EDA4195584F5064680D8130B1CA91C45367328@G01JPEXMBYT04
2019-04-06 15:23:37 +09:00
Tom Lane 959d00e9db Use Append rather than MergeAppend for scanning ordered partitions.
If we need ordered output from a scan of a partitioned table, but
the ordering matches the partition ordering, then we don't need to
use a MergeAppend to combine the pre-ordered per-partition scan
results: a plain Append will produce the same results.  This
both saves useless comparison work inside the MergeAppend proper,
and allows us to start returning tuples after istarting up just
the first child node not all of them.

However, all is not peaches and cream, because if some of the
child nodes have high startup costs then there will be big
discontinuities in the tuples-returned-versus-elapsed-time curve.
The planner's cost model cannot handle that (yet, anyway).
If we model the Append's startup cost as being just the first
child's startup cost, we may drastically underestimate the cost
of fetching slightly more tuples than are available from the first
child.  Since we've had bad experiences with over-optimistic choices
of "fast start" plans for ORDER BY LIMIT queries, that seems scary.
As a klugy workaround, set the startup cost estimate for an ordered
Append to be the sum of its children's startup costs (as MergeAppend
would).  This doesn't really describe reality, but it's less likely
to cause a bad plan choice than an underestimated startup cost would.
In practice, the cases where we really care about this optimization
will have child plans that are IndexScans with zero startup cost,
so that the overly conservative estimate is still just zero.

David Rowley, reviewed by Julien Rouhaud and Antonin Houska

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-hAqhPLRk_RaSFTgYxd=Tz5hA7kQ2h4-DhJufQk8TGuw@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-05 19:20:43 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 9f06d79ef8 Add facility to copy replication slots
This allows the user to create duplicates of existing replication slots,
either logical or physical, and even changing properties such as whether
they are temporary or the output plugin used.

There are multiple uses for this, such as initializing multiple replicas
using the slot for one base backup; when doing investigation of logical
replication issues; and to select a different output plugins.

Author: Masahiko Sawada
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Andres Freund, Petr Jelinek
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoAm7XX8y_tOPP6j4Nzzch12FvA1wPqiO690RCk+uYVstg@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-05 18:05:18 -03:00
Thomas Munro de2b38419c Wake up interested backends when a checkpoint fails.
Commit c6c9474a switched to condition variables instead of sleep
loops to notify backends of checkpoint start and stop, but forgot
to broadcast in case of checkpoint failure.

Author: Thomas Munro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJKbCd%2B_K%2BSEBsbHxVT60SG0ivWHHAdvL0bLTUt2xpA2w%40mail.gmail.com
2019-04-06 09:31:48 +13:00
Peter Eisentraut edda32ee25 Fix compiler warning
Rewrite get_attgenerated() to avoid compiler warning if the compiler
does not recognize that elog(ERROR) does not return.

Reported-by: David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com>
2019-04-05 09:23:07 +02:00
Noah Misch 82150a05be Revert "Consistently test for in-use shared memory."
This reverts commits 2f932f71d9,
16ee6eaf80 and
6f0e190056.  The buildfarm has revealed
several bugs.  Back-patch like the original commits.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190404145319.GA1720877@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-04-05 00:00:52 -07:00
Thomas Munro 794c543b17 Fix bugs in mdsyncfiletag().
Commit 3eb77eba moved a _mdfd_getseg() call from mdsync() into a new
callback function mdsyncfiletag(), but didn't get the arguments quite
right.  Without the EXTENSION_DONT_CHECK_SIZE flag we fail to open a
segment if lower-numbered segments have been truncated, and it wants
a block number rather than a segment number.

While comparing with the older coding, also remove an unnecessary
clobbering of errno, and adjust the code in mdunlinkfiletag() to
ressemble the original code from mdpostckpt() more closely instead
of using an unnecessary call to smgropen().

Author: Thomas Munro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGL%2BYLUOA0eYiBXBfwW%2BbH5kFgh94%3DgQH0jHEJ-t5Y91wQ%40mail.gmail.com
2019-04-05 17:41:58 +13:00
Andres Freund 57a7a3adfe Remove unused struct member, enforce multi_insert callback presence.
Author: David Rowley, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f9=9phmm66diAji4gvHnWSrK7BGFoNct+mEUT_c8pPOjw@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-04 17:39:39 -07:00
Andres Freund ea97e440b8 Harden tableam against nonexistant / wrong kind of AMs.
Previously it was allowed to set default_table_access_method to an
empty string. That makes sense for default_tablespace, where that was
copied from, as it signals falling back to the database's default
tablespace. As there is no equivalent for table AMs, forbid that.

Also make sure to throw a usable error when creating a table using an
index AM, by using get_am_type_oid() to implement get_table_am_oid()
instead of a separate copy. Previously we'd error out only later, in
GetTableAmRoutine().

Thirdly remove GetTableAmRoutineByAmId() - it was only used in an
earlier version of 8586bf7ed8.

Add tests for the above (some for index AMs as well).
2019-04-04 17:39:39 -07:00
Andres Freund 86b85044e8 tableam: Add table_multi_insert() and revamp/speed-up COPY FROM buffering.
This adds table_multi_insert(), and converts COPY FROM, the only user
of heap_multi_insert, to it.

A simple conversion of COPY FROM use slots would have yielded a
slowdown when inserting into a partitioned table for some
workloads. Different partitions might need different slots (both slot
types and their descriptors), and dropping / creating slots when
there's constant partition changes is measurable.

Thus instead revamp the COPY FROM buffering for partitioned tables to
allow to buffer inserts into multiple tables, flushing only when
limits are reached across all partition buffers. By only dropping
slots when there've been inserts into too many different partitions,
the aforementioned overhead is gone. By allowing larger batches, even
when there are frequent partition changes, we actuall speed such cases
up significantly.

By using slots COPY of very narrow rows into unlogged / temporary
might slow down very slightly (due to the indirect function calls).

Author: David Rowley, Andres Freund, Haribabu Kommi
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20190327054923.t3epfuewxfqdt22e@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-04-04 16:28:18 -07:00
Tom Lane 9c703c169a Make queries' locking of indexes more consistent.
The assertions added by commit b04aeb0a0 exposed that there are some
code paths wherein the executor will try to open an index without
holding any lock on it.  We do have some lock on the index's table,
so it seems likely that there's no fatal problem with this (for
instance, the index couldn't get dropped from under us).  Still,
it's bad practice and we should fix it.

To do so, remove the optimizations in ExecInitIndexScan and friends
that tried to avoid taking a lock on an index belonging to a target
relation, and just take the lock always.  In non-bug cases, this
will result in no additional shared-memory access, since we'll find
in the local lock table that we already have a lock of the desired
type; hence, no significant performance degradation should occur.

Also, adjust the planner and executor so that the type of lock taken
on an index is always identical to the type of lock taken for its table,
by relying on the recently added RangeTblEntry.rellockmode field.
This avoids some corner cases where that might not have been true
before (possibly resulting in extra locking overhead), and prevents
future maintenance issues from having multiple bits of logic that
all needed to be in sync.  In addition, this change removes all core
calls to ExecRelationIsTargetRelation, which avoids a possible O(N^2)
startup penalty for queries with large numbers of target relations.
(We'd probably remove that function altogether, were it not that we
advertise it as something that FDWs might want to use.)

Also adjust some places in selfuncs.c to not take any lock on indexes
they are transiently opening, since we can assume that plancat.c
did that already.

In passing, change gin_clean_pending_list() to take RowExclusiveLock
not AccessShareLock on its target index.  Although it's not clear that
that's actually a bug, it seemed very strange for a function that's
explicitly going to modify the index to use only AccessShareLock.

David Rowley, reviewed by Julien Rouhaud and Amit Langote,
a bit of further tweaking by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19465.1541636036@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-04 15:12:58 -04:00
Robert Haas a96c41feec Allow VACUUM to be run with index cleanup disabled.
This commit adds a new reloption, vacuum_index_cleanup, which
controls whether index cleanup is performed for a particular
relation by default.  It also adds a new option to the VACUUM
command, INDEX_CLEANUP, which can be used to override the
reloption.  If neither the reloption nor the VACUUM option is
used, the default is true, as before.

Masahiko Sawada, reviewed and tested by Nathan Bossart, Alvaro
Herrera, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Darafei Praliaskouski, and me.
The wording of the documentation is mostly due to me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoAt5R3DNUZSjOoXDUY=naYPUOuffVsRzuTYMz29yLzQCA@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-04 15:04:43 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 74eb2176bf Invalidate binary search bounds consistently.
_bt_check_unique() failed to invalidate binary search bounds in the
event of a live conflict following commit e5adcb78.  This resulted in
problems after waiting for the conflicting xact to commit or abort.  The
subsequent call to _bt_check_unique() would restore the initial binary
search bounds, rather than starting a new search.  Fix by explicitly
invalidating bounds when it becomes clear that there is a live conflict
that insertion will have to wait to resolve.

Ashutosh Sharma, with a few additional tweaks by me.

Author: Ashutosh Sharma
Reported-By: Ashutosh Sharma
Diagnosed-By: Ashutosh Sharma
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAE9k0PnQp-qr-UYKMSCzdC2FBzdE4wKP41hZrZvvP26dKLonLg@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-04 09:38:08 -07:00
Thomas Munro 3eb77eba5a Refactor the fsync queue for wider use.
Previously, md.c and checkpointer.c were tightly integrated so that
fsync calls could be handed off and processed in the background.
Introduce a system of callbacks and file tags, so that other modules
can hand off fsync work in the same way.

For now only md.c uses the new interface, but other users are being
proposed.  Since there may be use cases that are not strictly SMGR
implementations, use a new function table for sync handlers rather
than extending the traditional SMGR one.

Instead of using a bitmapset of segment numbers for each RelFileNode
in the checkpointer's hash table, make the segment number part of the
key.  This requires sending explicit "forget" requests for every
segment individually when relations are dropped, but suits the file
layout schemes of proposed future users better (ie sparse or high
segment numbers).

Author: Shawn Debnath and Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2gTANm=e3ARnJT=n0h8hf88wqmaZxk0JYkxw+b21fNrw@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-04 23:38:38 +13:00
Noah Misch 6f0e190056 Silence -Wimplicit-fallthrough in sysv_shmem.c.
Commit 2f932f71d9 added code that elicits
a warning on buildfarm member flaviventris.  Back-patch to 9.4, like
that commit.

Reported by Andres Freund.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190404020057.galelv7by75ekqrh@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-04-03 23:23:35 -07:00
Noah Misch ab9ed9be23 Assert that pgwin32_signal_initialize() has been called early enough.
Before the pgwin32_signal_initialize() call, the backend version of
pg_usleep() has no effect.  No in-tree code falls afoul of that today,
but temporary commit 23078689a9 did so.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190402135442.GA1173872@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-04-03 17:11:16 -07:00
Noah Misch 2f932f71d9 Consistently test for in-use shared memory.
postmaster startup scrutinizes any shared memory segment recorded in
postmaster.pid, exiting if that segment matches the current data
directory and has an attached process.  When the postmaster.pid file was
missing, a starting postmaster used weaker checks.  Change to use the
same checks in both scenarios.  This increases the chance of a startup
failure, in lieu of data corruption, if the DBA does "kill -9 `head -n1
postmaster.pid` && rm postmaster.pid && pg_ctl -w start".  A postmaster
will no longer recycle segments pertaining to other data directories.
That's good for production, but it's bad for integration tests that
crash a postmaster and immediately delete its data directory.  Such a
test now leaks a segment indefinitely.  No "make check-world" test does
that.  win32_shmem.c already avoided all these problems.  In 9.6 and
later, enhance PostgresNode to facilitate testing.  Back-patch to 9.4
(all supported versions).

Reviewed by Daniel Gustafsson and Kyotaro HORIGUCHI.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20130911033341.GD225735@tornado.leadboat.com
2019-04-03 17:03:46 -07:00
Tomas Vondra ea569d64ac Add SETTINGS option to EXPLAIN, to print modified settings.
Query planning is affected by a number of configuration options, and it
may be crucial to know which of those options were set to non-default
values.  With this patch you can say EXPLAIN (SETTINGS ON) to include
that information in the query plan.  Only options affecting planning,
with values different from the built-in default are printed.

This patch also adds auto_explain.log_settings option, providing the
same capability in auto_explain module.

Author: Tomas Vondra
Reviewed-by: Rafia Sabih, John Naylor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/e1791b4c-df9c-be02-edc5-7c8874944be0@2ndquadrant.com
2019-04-04 00:04:31 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera d1f04b96b9 Tweak docs for log_statement_sample_rate
Author: Justin Pryzby, partly after a suggestion from Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190328135918.GA27808@telsasoft.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoB9+y8N4+Fan-ne-_7J5yTybPttxeVKfwUocKp4zT1vNQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-03 18:56:56 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 799e220346 Log all statements from a sample of transactions
This is useful to obtain a view of the different transaction types in an
application, regardless of the durations of the statements each runs.

Author: Adrien Nayrat
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada, Hayato Kuroda, Andres Freund
2019-04-03 18:43:59 -03:00
Tomas Vondra c50b3158bf Reduce overhead of pg_mcv_list (de)serialization
Commit ea4e1c0e8f resolved issues with memory alignment in serialized
pg_mcv_list values, but it required copying data to/from the varlena
buffer during serialization and deserialization.  As the MCV lits may
be fairly large, the overhead (memory consumption, CPU usage) can get
rather significant too.

This change tweaks the serialization format so that the alignment is
correct with respect to the varlena value, and so the parts may be
accessed directly without copying the data.

Catversion bump, as it affects existing pg_statistic_ext data.
2019-04-03 21:23:40 +02:00
Stephen Frost b0b39f72b9 GSSAPI encryption support
On both the frontend and backend, prepare for GSSAPI encryption
support by moving common code for error handling into a separate file.
Fix a TODO for handling multiple status messages in the process.
Eliminate the OIDs, which have not been needed for some time.

Add frontend and backend encryption support functions.  Keep the
context initiation for authentication-only separate on both the
frontend and backend in order to avoid concerns about changing the
requested flags to include encryption support.

In postmaster, pull GSSAPI authorization checking into a shared
function.  Also share the initiator name between the encryption and
non-encryption codepaths.

For HBA, add "hostgssenc" and "hostnogssenc" entries that behave
similarly to their SSL counterparts.  "hostgssenc" requires either
"gss", "trust", or "reject" for its authentication.

Similarly, add a "gssencmode" parameter to libpq.  Supported values are
"disable", "require", and "prefer".  Notably, negotiation will only be
attempted if credentials can be acquired.  Move credential acquisition
into its own function to support this behavior.

Add a simple pg_stat_gssapi view similar to pg_stat_ssl, for monitoring
if GSSAPI authentication was used, what principal was used, and if
encryption is being used on the connection.

Finally, add documentation for everything new, and update existing
documentation on connection security.

Thanks to Michael Paquier for the Windows fixes.

Author: Robbie Harwood, with changes to the read/write functions by me.
Reviewed in various forms and at different times by: Michael Paquier,
   Andres Freund, David Steele.
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/jlg1tgq1ktm.fsf@thriss.redhat.com
2019-04-03 15:02:33 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 5f6fc34af5 Copy name when cloning FKs recurses to partitions
We were passing a string owned by a syscache entry, which was released
before recursing.  Fix by pstrdup'ing the string.

Per buildfarm member prion.
2019-04-03 15:35:54 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera f56f8f8da6 Support foreign keys that reference partitioned tables
Previously, while primary keys could be made on partitioned tables, it
was not possible to define foreign keys that reference those primary
keys.  Now it is possible to do that.

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Jesper Pedersen
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181102234158.735b3fevta63msbj@alvherre.pgsql
2019-04-03 14:40:21 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9155580fd5 Generate less WAL during GiST, GIN and SP-GiST index build.
Instead of WAL-logging every modification during the build separately,
first build the index without any WAL-logging, and make a separate pass
through the index at the end, to write all pages to the WAL. This
significantly reduces the amount of WAL generated, and is usually also
faster, despite the extra I/O needed for the extra scan through the index.
WAL generated this way is also faster to replay.

For GiST, the LSN-NSN interlock makes this a little tricky. All pages must
be marked with a valid (i.e. non-zero) LSN, so that the parent-child
LSN-NSN interlock works correctly. We now use magic value 1 for that during
index build. Change the fake LSN counter to begin from 1000, so that 1 is
safely smaller than any real or fake LSN. 2 would've been enough for our
purposes, but let's reserve a bigger range, in case we need more special
values in the future.

Author: Anastasia Lubennikova, Andrey V. Lepikhov
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas, Dmitry Dolgov
2019-04-03 17:03:15 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera 5f768045a1 Correctly initialize newly added struct member
Valgrind was rightly complaining that IndexVacuumInfo->report_progress
(added by commit ab0dfc961b) was not being initialized in some code
paths.  Repair.

Per buildfarm member lousyjack.
2019-04-03 09:58:47 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera e8abf97af7 Prevent use of uninitialized variable
Per buildfarm member longfin.
2019-04-02 16:03:26 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera ab0dfc961b Report progress of CREATE INDEX operations
This uses the progress reporting infrastructure added by c16dc1aca5,
adding support for CREATE INDEX and CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY.

There are two pieces to this: one is index-AM-agnostic, and the other is
AM-specific.  The latter is fairly elaborate for btrees, including
reportage for parallel index builds and the separate phases that btree
index creation uses; other index AMs, which are much simpler in their
building procedures, have simplistic reporting only, but that seems
sufficient, at least for non-concurrent builds.

The index-AM-agnostic part is fairly complete, providing insight into
the CONCURRENTLY wait phases as well as block-based progress during the
index validation table scan.  (The index validation index scan requires
patching each AM, which has not been included here.)

Reviewers: Rahila Syed, Pavan Deolasee, Tatsuro Yamada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181220220022.mg63bhk26zdpvmcj@alvherre.pgsql
2019-04-02 15:18:08 -03:00
Stephen Frost 4d0e994eed Add support for partial TOAST decompression
When asked for a slice of a TOAST entry, decompress enough to return the
slice instead of decompressing the entire object.

For use cases where the slice is at, or near, the beginning of the entry,
this avoids a lot of unnecessary decompression work.

This changes the signature of pglz_decompress() by adding a boolean to
indicate if it's ok for the call to finish before consuming all of the
source or destination buffers.

Author: Paul Ramsey
Reviewed-By: Rafia Sabih, Darafei Praliaskouski, Regina Obe
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACowWR07EDm7Y4m2kbhN_jnys%3DBBf9A6768RyQdKm_%3DNpkcaWg%40mail.gmail.com
2019-04-02 12:35:32 -04:00
Etsuro Fujita d50d172e51 postgres_fdw: Perform the (FINAL, NULL) upperrel operations remotely.
The upper-planner pathification allows FDWs to arrange to push down
different types of upper-stage operations to the remote side.  This
commit teaches postgres_fdw to do it for the (FINAL, NULL) upperrel,
which is responsible for doing LockRows, LIMIT, and/or ModifyTable.
This provides the ability for postgres_fdw to handle SELECT commands
so that it 1) skips the LockRows step (if any) (note that this is
safe since it performs early locking) and 2) pushes down the LIMIT
and/or OFFSET restrictions (if any) to the remote side.  This doesn't
handle the INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE cases.

Author: Etsuro Fujita
Reviewed-By: Antonin Houska and Jeff Janes
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87pnz1aby9.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2019-04-02 20:30:45 +09:00
Etsuro Fujita aef65db676 Refactor create_limit_path() to share cost adjustment code with FDWs.
This is in preparation for an upcoming commit.

Author: Etsuro Fujita
Reviewed-By: Antonin Houska and Jeff Janes
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87pnz1aby9.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2019-04-02 19:55:12 +09:00
Dean Rasheed e2d28c0f40 Perform RLS subquery checks as the right user when going via a view.
When accessing a table with RLS via a view, the RLS checks are
performed as the view owner. However, the code neglected to propagate
that to any subqueries in the RLS checks. Fix that by calling
setRuleCheckAsUser() for all RLS policy quals and withCheckOption
checks for RTEs with RLS.

Back-patch to 9.5 where RLS was added.

Per bug #15708 from daurnimator.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15708-d65cab2ce9b1717a@postgresql.org
2019-04-02 08:13:59 +01:00
Thomas Munro 475861b261 Add wal_recycle and wal_init_zero GUCs.
On at least ZFS, it can be beneficial to create new WAL files every
time and not to bother zero-filling them.  Since it's not clear which
other filesystems might benefit from one or both of those things,
add individual GUCs to control those two behaviors independently and
make only very general statements in the docs.

Author: Jerry Jelinek, with some adjustments by Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera, Andres Freund, Tomas Vondra, Robert Haas and others
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACPQ5Fo00QR7LNAcd1ZjgoBi4y97%2BK760YABs0vQHH5dLdkkMA%40mail.gmail.com
2019-04-02 14:37:14 +13:00
Andres Freund d45e401586 tableam: Add table_finish_bulk_insert().
This replaces the previous calls of heap_sync() in places using
bulk-insert. By passing in the flags used for bulk-insert the AM can
decide (first at insert time and then during the finish call) which of
the optimizations apply to it, and what operations are necessary to
finish a bulk insert operation.

Also change HEAP_INSERT_* flags to TABLE_INSERT, and rename hi_options
to ti_options.

These changes are made even in copy.c, which hasn't yet been converted
to tableam. There's no harm in doing so.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-04-01 14:41:42 -07:00
Thomas Munro 4fd05bb55b Fix deadlock in heap_compute_xid_horizon_for_tuples().
We can't call code that uses syscache while we hold buffer locks
on a catalog relation.  If passed such a relation, just fall back
to the general effective_io_concurrency GUC rather than trying to
look up the containing tablespace's IO concurrency setting.

We might find a better way to control prefetching in follow-up
work, but for now this is enough to avoid the deadlock introduced
by commit 558a9165e0.

Reviewed-by: Andres Freund
Diagnosed-by: Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGLCwPF0S4Mk7S8qw%2BDK0Bq65LueN9rofAA3HHSYikW-Zw%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/962831d8-c18d-180d-75fb-8b842e3a2742%40chrullrich.net
2019-04-02 09:29:49 +13:00
Tom Lane 12d46ac392 Improve documentation about our XML functionality.
Add a section explaining how our XML features depart from current
versions of the SQL standard.  Update and clarify the descriptions
of some XML functions.

Chapman Flack, reviewed by Ryan Lambert

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5BD1284C.1010305@anastigmatix.net
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5C81F8C0.6090901@anastigmatix.net
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAN-V+g-6JqUQEQZ55Q3toXEN6d5Ez5uvzL4VR+8KtvJKj31taw@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-01 16:20:22 -04:00
Tom Lane b2b819019f Add volatile qualifier missed in commit 2e616dee9.
Noted by Pavel Stehule

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRAaGO5FX7bnP3E=mRssoK8y5T78x7jKy-vDiyS68L888Q@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-01 14:37:25 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut cc8d415117 Unified logging system for command-line programs
This unifies the various ad hoc logging (message printing, error
printing) systems used throughout the command-line programs.

Features:

- Program name is automatically prefixed.

- Message string does not end with newline.  This removes a common
  source of inconsistencies and omissions.

- Additionally, a final newline is automatically stripped, simplifying
  use of PQerrorMessage() etc., another common source of mistakes.

- I converted error message strings to use %m where possible.

- As a result of the above several points, more translatable message
  strings can be shared between different components and between
  frontends and backend, without gratuitous punctuation or whitespace
  differences.

- There is support for setting a "log level".  This is not meant to be
  user-facing, but can be used internally to implement debug or
  verbose modes.

- Lazy argument evaluation, so no significant overhead if logging at
  some level is disabled.

- Some color in the messages, similar to gcc and clang.  Set
  PG_COLOR=auto to try it out.  Some colors are predefined, but can be
  customized by setting PG_COLORS.

- Common files (common/, fe_utils/, etc.) can handle logging much more
  simply by just using one API without worrying too much about the
  context of the calling program, requiring callbacks, or having to
  pass "progname" around everywhere.

- Some programs called setvbuf() to make sure that stderr is
  unbuffered, even on Windows.  But not all programs did that.  This
  is now done centrally.

Soft goals:

- Reduces vertical space use and visual complexity of error reporting
  in the source code.

- Encourages more deliberate classification of messages.  For example,
  in some cases it wasn't clear without analyzing the surrounding code
  whether a message was meant as an error or just an info.

- Concepts and terms are vaguely aligned with popular logging
  frameworks such as log4j and Python logging.

This is all just about printing stuff out.  Nothing affects program
flow (e.g., fatal exits).  The uses are just too varied to do that.
Some existing code had wrappers that do some kind of print-and-exit,
and I adapted those.

I tried to keep the output mostly the same, but there is a lot of
historical baggage to unwind and special cases to consider, and I
might not always have succeeded.  One significant change is that
pg_rewind used to write all error messages to stdout.  That is now
changed to stderr.

Reviewed-by: Donald Dong <xdong@csumb.edu>
Reviewed-by: Arthur Zakirov <a.zakirov@postgrespro.ru>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/6a609b43-4f57-7348-6480-bd022f924310@2ndquadrant.com
2019-04-01 20:01:35 +02:00
Alexander Korotkov b4cc19ab01 Throw error in jsonb_path_match() when result is not single boolean
jsonb_path_match() checks if jsonb document matches jsonpath query.  Therefore,
jsonpath query should return single boolean.  Currently, if result of jsonpath
is not a single boolean, NULL is returned independently whether silent mode
is on or off.  But that appears to be wrong when silent mode is off.  This
commit makes jsonb_path_match() throw an error in this case.

Author: Nikita Glukhov
2019-04-01 18:09:20 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 2e643501e5 Restrict some cases in parsing numerics in jsonpath
Jsonpath now accepts integers with leading zeroes and floats starting with
a dot.  However, SQL standard requires to follow JSON specification, which
doesn't allow none of these cases.  Our json[b] datatypes also restrict that.
So, restrict it in jsonpath altogether.

Author: Nikita Glukhov
2019-04-01 18:09:09 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 0a02e2ae02 GIN support for @@ and @? jsonpath operators
This commit makes existing GIN operator classes jsonb_ops and json_path_ops
support "jsonb @@ jsonpath" and "jsonb @? jsonpath" operators.  Basic idea is
to extract statements of following form out of jsonpath.

 key1.key2. ... .keyN = const

The rest of jsonpath is rechecked from heap.

Catversion is bumped.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fcc6fc6a-b497-f39a-923d-aa34d0c588e8%402ndQuadrant.com
Author: Nikita Glukhov, Alexander Korotkov
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Katz, Pavel Stehule
2019-04-01 18:08:52 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 7241911782 Catch syntax error in generated column definition
The syntax

    GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS (expr)

is not allowed but we have to accept it in the grammar to avoid
shift/reduce conflicts because of the similar syntax for identity
columns.  The existing code just ignored this, incorrectly.  Add an
explicit error check and a bespoke error message.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
2019-04-01 10:46:37 +02:00
Michael Paquier 4ae7f02b03 Fix thinko in allocation call during MVC list deserialization
Spotted by Coverity.
2019-04-01 14:16:27 +09:00
Noah Misch 5a907404b5 Update HINT for pre-existing shared memory block.
One should almost always terminate an old process, not use a manual
removal tool like ipcrm.  Removal of the ipcclean script eleven years
ago (39627b1ae6) and its non-replacement
corroborate that manual shm removal is now a niche goal.  Back-patch to
9.4 (all supported versions).

Reviewed by Daniel Gustafsson and Kyotaro HORIGUCHI.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180812064815.GB2301738@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-03-31 19:32:48 -07:00
Andres Freund bfbcad478f tableam: bitmap table scan.
This moves bitmap heap scan support to below an optional tableam
callback. It's optional as the whole concept of bitmap heapscans is
fairly block specific.

This basically moves the work previously done in bitgetpage() into the
new scan_bitmap_next_block callback, and the direct poking into the
buffer done in BitmapHeapNext() into the new scan_bitmap_next_tuple()
callback.

The abstraction is currently somewhat leaky because
nodeBitmapHeapscan.c's prefetching and visibilitymap based logic
remains - it's likely that we'll later have to move more into the
AM. But it's not trivial to do so without introducing a significant
amount of code duplication between the AMs, so that's a project for
later.

Note that now nodeBitmapHeapscan.c and the associated node types are a
bit misnamed. But it's not clear whether renaming wouldn't be a cure
worse than the disease. Either way, that'd be best done in a separate
commit.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas (in an older version)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-31 18:37:57 -07:00
Andres Freund 73c954d248 tableam: sample scan.
This moves sample scan support to below tableam. It's not optional as
there is, in contrast to e.g. bitmap heap scans, no alternative way to
perform tablesample queries. If an AM can't deal with the block based
API, it will have to throw an ERROR.

The tableam callbacks for this are block based, but given the current
TsmRoutine interface, that seems to be required.

The new interface doesn't require TsmRoutines to perform visibility
checks anymore - that requires the TsmRoutine to know details about
the AM, which we want to avoid.  To continue to allow taking the
returned number of tuples account SampleScanState now has a donetuples
field (which previously e.g. existed in SystemRowsSamplerData), which
is only incremented after the visibility check succeeds.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-31 18:37:57 -07:00
Andres Freund 4bb50236eb tableam: Formatting and other minor cleanups.
The superflous heapam_xlog.h includes were reported by Peter
Geoghegan.
2019-03-31 18:16:53 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan 76a39f2295 Fix nbtree high key "continuescan" row compare bug.
Commit 29b64d1d mishandled skipping over truncated high key attributes
during row comparisons.  The row comparison key matching loop would loop
forever when a truncated attribute was encountered for a row compare
subkey.  Fix by following the example of other code in the loop: advance
the current subkey, or break out of the loop when the last subkey is
reached.

Add test coverage for the relevant _bt_check_rowcompare() code path.
The new test case is somewhat tied to nbtree implementation details,
which isn't ideal, but seems unavoidable.
2019-03-31 17:24:04 -07:00
Tom Lane 9fd4de119c Compute root->qual_security_level in a less random place.
We can set this up once and for all in subquery_planner's initial survey
of the flattened rangetable, rather than incrementally adjusting it in
build_simple_rel.  The previous approach made it rather hard to reason
about exactly when the value would be available, and we were definitely
using it in some places before the final value was computed.

Noted while fooling around with Amit Langote's patch to delay creation
of inheritance child rels.  That didn't break this code, but it made it
even more fragile, IMO.
2019-03-31 13:47:41 -04:00
Michael Paquier 2aa6e331ea Skip redundant anti-wraparound vacuums
An anti-wraparound vacuum has to be by definition aggressive as it needs
to work on all the pages of a relation.  However it can happen that due
to some concurrent activity an anti-wraparound vacuum is marked as
non-aggressive, which makes it redundant with a previous run, and
it is actually useless as an anti-wraparound vacuum should process all
the pages of a relation.  This commit makes such vacuums to be skipped.

An anti-wraparound vacuum not aggressive can be found easily by mixing
low values of autovacuum_freeze_max_age (to control anti-wraparound) and
autovacuum_freeze_table_age (to control the aggressiveness).

28a8fa9 has added some extra logging printing all the possible
combinations of anti-wraparound and aggressive vacuums, which now gets
simplified as an anti-wraparound vacuum also non-aggressive gets
skipped.

Per discussion mainly between Andrew Dunstan, Robert Haas, Álvaro
Herrera, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Masahiko Sawada, and myself.

Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180914153554.562muwr3uwujno75@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-31 22:59:12 +09:00
Andres Freund 696d78469f tableam: Move heap specific logic from estimate_rel_size below tableam.
This just moves the table/matview[/toast] determination of relation
size to a callback, and uses a copy of the existing logic to implement
that callback for heap.

It probably would make sense to also move the index specific logic
into a callback, so the metapage handling (and probably more) can be
index specific. But that's a separate task.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-30 19:26:36 -07:00
Andres Freund 737a292b5d tableam: VACUUM and ANALYZE support.
This is a relatively straightforward move of the current
implementation to sit below tableam. As the current analyze sampling
implementation is pretty inherently block based, the tableam analyze
interface is as well. It might make sense to generalize that at some
point, but that seems like a larger project that shouldn't be
undertaken at the same time as the introduction of tableam.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-30 19:25:58 -07:00
Tomas Vondra 0f5493fdf1 Fix typo
Author: John Naylor
2019-03-31 03:29:58 +02:00
Tom Lane 428b260f87 Speed up planning when partitions can be pruned at plan time.
Previously, the planner created RangeTblEntry and RelOptInfo structs
for every partition of a partitioned table, even though many of them
might later be deemed uninteresting thanks to partition pruning logic.
This incurred significant overhead when there are many partitions.
Arrange to postpone creation of these data structures until after
we've processed the query enough to identify restriction quals for
the partitioned table, and then apply partition pruning before not
after creation of each partition's data structures.  In this way
we need not open the partition relations at all for partitions that
the planner has no real interest in.

For queries that can be proven at plan time to access only a small
number of partitions, this patch improves the practical maximum
number of partitions from under 100 to perhaps a few thousand.

Amit Langote, reviewed at various times by Dilip Kumar, Jesper Pedersen,
Yoshikazu Imai, and David Rowley

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9d7c5112-cb99-6a47-d3be-cf1ee6862a1d@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-03-30 18:58:55 -04:00
Tomas Vondra ad3107b973 Fix compiler warnings in multivariate MCV code
Compiler warnings were observed on gcc 3.4.6 (on gaur).

The assert is unnecessary, as the indexes are uint16 and so always >= 0.

Reported-by: Tom Lane
2019-03-30 18:43:16 +01:00
Tomas Vondra ea4e1c0e8f Additional fixes of memory alignment in pg_mcv_list code
Commit d85e0f366a tried to fix memory alignment issues in serialization
and deserialization of pg_mcv_list values, but it was a few bricks shy.
The arrays of uint16 indexes in serialized items was not aligned, and
the both the values and isnull flags were using the same pointer.

Per investigation by Tom Lane on gaur.
2019-03-30 18:34:59 +01:00
Tom Lane 7ad6498fd5 Avoid crash in partitionwise join planning under GEQO.
While trying to plan a partitionwise join, we may be faced with cases
where one or both input partitions for a particular segment of the join
have been pruned away.  In HEAD and v11, this is problematic because
earlier processing didn't bother to make a pruned RelOptInfo fully
valid.  With an upcoming patch to make partition pruning more efficient,
this'll be even more problematic because said RelOptInfo won't exist at
all.

The existing code attempts to deal with this by retroactively making the
RelOptInfo fully valid, but that causes crashes under GEQO because join
planning is done in a short-lived memory context.  In v11 we could
probably have fixed this by switching to the planner's main context
while fixing up the RelOptInfo, but that idea doesn't scale well to the
upcoming patch.  It would be better not to mess with the base-relation
data structures during join planning, anyway --- that's just a recipe
for order-of-operations bugs.

In many cases, though, we don't actually need the child RelOptInfo,
because if the input is certainly empty then the join segment's result
is certainly empty, so we can skip making a join plan altogether.  (The
existing code ultimately arrives at the same conclusion, but only after
doing a lot more work.)  This approach works except when the pruned-away
partition is on the nullable side of a LEFT, ANTI, or FULL join, and the
other side isn't pruned.  But in those cases the existing code leaves a
lot to be desired anyway --- the correct output is just the result of
the unpruned side of the join, but we were emitting a useless outer join
against a dummy Result.  Pending somebody writing code to handle that
more nicely, let's just abandon the partitionwise-join optimization in
such cases.

When the modified code skips making a join plan, it doesn't make a
join RelOptInfo either; this requires some upper-level code to
cope with nulls in part_rels[] arrays.  We would have had to have
that anyway after the upcoming patch.

Back-patch to v11 since the crash is demonstrable there.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8305.1553884377@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-30 12:48:32 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut fc22b6623b Generated columns
This is an SQL-standard feature that allows creating columns that are
computed from expressions rather than assigned, similar to a view or
materialized view but on a column basis.

This implements one kind of generated column: stored (computed on
write).  Another kind, virtual (computed on read), is planned for the
future, and some room is left for it.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/b151f851-4019-bdb1-699e-ebab07d2f40a@2ndquadrant.com
2019-03-30 08:15:57 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 6b8b5364dd Small code simplification for REINDEX CONCURRENTLY
This was left over from an earlier code structure.
2019-03-30 07:16:24 +01:00
Peter Geoghegan 9c7fb7e6d8 Tweak some nbtree-related code comments. 2019-03-29 12:29:05 -07:00
Tomas Vondra d85e0f366a Fix memory alignment in pg_mcv_list serialization
Blind attempt at fixing ia64, hppa an sparc builds.

The serialized representation of MCV lists did not enforce proper memory
alignment for internal fields, resulting in deserialization issues on
platforms that are more sensitive to this (ia64, sparc and hppa).

This forces a catalog version bump, because the layout of serialized
pg_mcv_list changes.

Broken since 7300a699.
2019-03-29 19:06:38 +01:00
Andres Freund ffa8444ce4 tableam: Comment fixes.
Author: Haribabu Kommi
Discussion: CAJrrPGeeYOqP3hkZyohDx_8dot4zvPuPMDBmhJ=iC85cTBNeYw@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-29 08:17:26 -07:00
Robert Haas 41b54ba78e Allow existing VACUUM options to take a Boolean argument.
This makes VACUUM work more like EXPLAIN already does without changing
the meaning of any commands that already work.  It is intended to
facilitate the addition of future VACUUM options that may take
non-Boolean parameters or that default to false.

Masahiko Sawada, reviewed by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobpYrXr5sUaEe_T0boabV0DSm=utSOZzwCUNqfLEEm8Mw@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoBaFcKBAeL5_++j+Vzir2vBBcF4juW7qH8b3HsQY=Q6+w@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-29 08:22:49 -04:00
Robert Haas c900c15269 Warn more strongly about the dangers of exclusive backup mode.
Especially, warn about the hazards of mishandling the backup_label
file.  Adjust a couple of server messages to be more clear about
the hazards associated with removing backup_label files, too.

David Steele and Robert Haas, reviewed by Laurenz Albe, Martín
Marqués, Peter Eisentraut, and Magnus Hagander.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/7d85c387-000e-16f0-e00b-50bf83c22127@pgmasters.net
2019-03-29 08:15:16 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut bb76134b08 Fix incorrect code in new REINDEX CONCURRENTLY code
The previous code was adding pointers to transient variables to a
list, but by the time the list was read, the variable might be gone,
depending on the compiler.  Fix it by making copies in the proper
memory context.
2019-03-29 10:53:40 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 5dc92b844e REINDEX CONCURRENTLY
This adds the CONCURRENTLY option to the REINDEX command.  A REINDEX
CONCURRENTLY on a specific index creates a new index (like CREATE
INDEX CONCURRENTLY), then renames the old index away and the new index
in place and adjusts the dependencies, and then drops the old
index (like DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY).  The REINDEX command also has
the capability to run its other variants (TABLE, DATABASE) with the
CONCURRENTLY option (but not SYSTEM).

The reindexdb command gets the --concurrently option.

Author: Michael Paquier, Andreas Karlsson, Peter Eisentraut
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund, Fujii Masao, Jim Nasby, Sergei Kornilov
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/60052986-956b-4478-45ed-8bd119e9b9cf%402ndquadrant.com#74948a1044c56c5e817a5050f554ddee
2019-03-29 08:26:33 +01:00
Andres Freund d25f519107 tableam: relation creation, VACUUM FULL/CLUSTER, SET TABLESPACE.
This moves the responsibility for:
- creating the storage necessary for a relation, including creating a
  new relfilenode for a relation with existing storage
- non-transactional truncation of a relation
- VACUUM FULL / CLUSTER's rewrite of a table
below tableam.

This is fairly straight forward, with a bit of complexity smattered in
to move the computation of xid / multixid horizons below the AM, as
they don't make sense for every table AM.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-28 20:01:43 -07:00
Thomas Munro 7e69323bf7 Fix typo.
Author: Masahiko Sawada
2019-03-29 10:03:58 +13:00
Tomas Vondra 62bf0fb35c Fix deserialization of pg_mcv_list values
There were multiple issues in deserialization of pg_mcv_list values.

Firstly, the data is loaded from syscache, but the deserialization was
performed after ReleaseSysCache(), at which point the data might have
already disappeared.  Fixed by moving the calls in statext_mcv_load,
and using the same NULL-handling code as existing stats.

Secondly, the deserialized representation used pointers into the
serialized representation.  But that is also unsafe, because the data
may disappear at any time.  Fixed by reworking and simplifying the
deserialization code to always copy all the data.

And thirdly, when deserializing values for types passed by value, the
code simply did memcpy(d,s,typlen) which however does not work on
bigendian machines.  Fixed by using fetch_att/store_att_byval.
2019-03-28 20:03:14 +01:00
Thomas Munro ad308058cc Use FullTransactionId for the transaction stack.
Provide GetTopFullTransactionId() and GetCurrentFullTransactionId().
The intended users of these interfaces are access methods that use
xids for visibility checks but don't want to have to go back and
"freeze" existing references some time later before the 32 bit xid
counter wraps around.

Use a new struct to serialize the transaction state for parallel
query, because FullTransactionId doesn't fit into the previous
serialization scheme very well.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1%2BMv%2Bmb0HFfWM9Srtc6MVe160WFurXV68iAFMcagRZ0dQ%40mail.gmail.com
2019-03-28 18:24:43 +13:00
Thomas Munro 2fc7af5e96 Add basic infrastructure for 64 bit transaction IDs.
Instead of inferring epoch progress from xids and checkpoints,
introduce a 64 bit FullTransactionId type and use it to track xid
generation.  This fixes an unlikely bug where the epoch is reported
incorrectly if the range of active xids wraps around more than once
between checkpoints.

The only user-visible effect of this commit is to correct the epoch
used by txid_current() and txid_status(), also visible with
pg_controldata, in those rare circumstances.  It also creates some
basic infrastructure so that later patches can use 64 bit
transaction IDs in more places.

The new type is a struct that we pass by value, as a form of strong
typedef.  This prevents the sort of accidental confusion between
TransactionId and FullTransactionId that would be possible if we
were to use a plain old uint64.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund, Tom Lane, Heikki Linnakangas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1%2BMv%2Bmb0HFfWM9Srtc6MVe160WFurXV68iAFMcagRZ0dQ%40mail.gmail.com
2019-03-28 18:12:20 +13:00
Andres Freund 2a96909a4a tableam: Support for an index build's initial table scan(s).
To support building indexes over tables of different AMs, the scans to
do so need to be routed through the table AM.  While moving a fair
amount of code, nearly all the changes are just moving code to below a
callback.

Currently the range based interface wouldn't make much sense for non
block based table AMs. But that seems aceptable for now.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-27 19:59:06 -07:00
Tomas Vondra a63b29a1de Minor improvements for the multivariate MCV lists
The MCV build should always call get_mincount_for_mcv_list(), as the
there is no other logic to decide whether the MCV list represents all
the data. So just remove the (ngroups > nitems) condition.

Also, when building MCV lists, the number of items was limited by the
statistics target (i.e. up to 10000). But when deserializing the MCV
list, a different value (8192) was used to check the input, causing
an error.  Simply ensure that the same value is used in both places.

This should have been included in 7300a69950, but I forgot to include it
in that commit.
2019-03-27 20:07:41 +01:00
Tomas Vondra 7300a69950 Add support for multivariate MCV lists
Introduce a third extended statistic type, supported by the CREATE
STATISTICS command - MCV lists, a generalization of the statistic
already built and used for individual columns.

Compared to the already supported types (n-distinct coefficients and
functional dependencies), MCV lists are more complex, include column
values and allow estimation of much wider range of common clauses
(equality and inequality conditions, IS NULL, IS NOT NULL etc.).
Similarly to the other types, a new pseudo-type (pg_mcv_list) is used.

Author: Tomas Vondra
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed, David Rowley, Mark Dilger, Alvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/dfdac334-9cf2-2597-fb27-f0fb3753f435@2ndquadrant.com
2019-03-27 18:32:18 +01:00
Tom Lane 333ed246c6 Avoid passing query tlist around separately from root->processed_tlist.
In the dim past, the planner kept the fully-processed version of the query
targetlist (the result of preprocess_targetlist) in grouping_planner's
local variable "tlist", and only grudgingly passed it to individual other
routines as needed.  Later we discovered a need to still have it available
after grouping_planner finishes, and invented the root->processed_tlist
field for that purpose, but it wasn't used internally to grouping_planner;
the tlist was still being passed around separately in the same places as
before.

Now comes a proposed patch to allow appendrel expansion to add entries
to the processed tlist, well after preprocess_targetlist has finished
its work.  To avoid having to pass around the tlist explicitly, it's
proposed to allow appendrel expansion to modify root->processed_tlist.
That makes aliasing the tlist with assorted parameters and local
variables really scary.  It would accidentally work as long as the
tlist is initially nonempty, because then the List header won't move
around, but it's not exactly hard to think of ways for that to break.
Aliased values are poor programming practice anyway.

Hence, get rid of local variables and parameters that can be identified
with root->processed_tlist, in favor of just using that field directly.
And adjust comments to match.  (Some of the new comments speak as though
it's already possible for appendrel expansion to modify the tlist; that's
not true yet, but will happen in a later patch.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9d7c5112-cb99-6a47-d3be-cf1ee6862a1d@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-03-27 12:57:49 -04:00
Tom Lane a51cc7e9e6 Suppress uninitialized-variable warning.
Apparently Andres' compiler is smart enough to see that hpage
must be initialized before use ... but mine isn't.
2019-03-27 11:10:42 -04:00
Michael Paquier ecfed4a122 Improve error handling of column references in expression transformation
Column references are not allowed in default expressions and partition
bound expressions, and are restricted as such once the transformation of
their expressions is done.  However, trying to use more complex column
references can lead to confusing error messages.  For example, trying to
use a two-field column reference name for default expressions and
partition bounds leads to "missing FROM-clause entry for table", which
makes no sense in their respective context.

In order to make the errors generated more useful, this commit adds more
verbose messages when transforming column references depending on the
context.  This has a little consequence though: for example an
expression using an aggregate with a column reference as argument would
cause an error to be generated for the column reference, while the
aggregate was the problem reported before this commit because column
references get transformed first.

The confusion exists for default expressions for a long time, and the
problem is new as of v12 for partition bounds.  Still per the lack of
complaints on the matter no backpatch is done.

The patch has been written by Amit Langote and me, and Tom Lane has
provided the improvement of the documentation for default expressions on
the CREATE TABLE page.

Author: Amit Langote, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190326020853.GM2558@paquier.xyz
2019-03-27 21:04:25 +09:00
Thomas Munro d2fd7f74ee Fix off-by-one error in txid_status().
The transaction ID returned by GetNextXidAndEpoch() is in the future,
so we can't attempt to access its status or we might try to read a
CLOG page that doesn't exist.  The > vs >= confusion probably stemmed
from the choice of a variable name containing the word "last" instead
of "next", so fix that too.

Back-patch to 10 where the function arrived.

Author: Thomas Munro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2Buua_BV5cyfsioKVN2d61Lukg28ECsWTXKvh%3DBtN2DPA%40mail.gmail.com
2019-03-27 21:30:04 +13:00
Michael Paquier 1983af8e89 Switch some palloc/memset calls to palloc0
Some code paths have been doing some allocations followed by an
immediate memset() to initialize the allocated area with zeros, this is
a bit overkill as there are already interfaces to do both things in one
call.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/vN0OodBPkKs7g2Z1uyk3CUEmhdtspHgYCImhlmSxv1Xn6nY1ZnaaGHL8EWUIQ-NEv36tyc4G5-uA3UXUF2l4sFXtK_EQgLN1hcgunlFVKhA=@yesql.se
2019-03-27 12:02:50 +09:00
Tomas Vondra 6ca015f9f0 Track unowned relations in doubly-linked list
Relations dropped in a single transaction are tracked in a list of
unowned relations.  With large number of dropped relations this resulted
in poor performance at the end of a transaction, when the relations are
removed from the singly linked list one by one.

Commit b4166911 attempted to address this issue (particularly when it
happens during recovery) by removing the relations in a reverse order,
resulting in O(1) lookups in the list of unowned relations.  This did
not work reliably, though, and it was possible to trigger the O(N^2)
behavior in various ways.

Instead of trying to remove the relations in a specific order with
respect to the linked list, which seems rather fragile, switch to a
regular doubly linked.  That allows us to remove relations cheaply no
matter where in the list they are.

As b4166911 was a bugfix, backpatched to all supported versions, do the
same thing here.

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/80c27103-99e4-1d0c-642c-d9f3b94aaa0a%402ndquadrant.com
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2019-03-27 02:39:39 +01:00
Andres Freund 558a9165e0 Compute XID horizon for page level index vacuum on primary.
Previously the xid horizon was only computed during WAL replay. That
had two major problems:
1) It relied on knowing what the table pointed to looks like. That was
   easy enough before the introducing of tableam (we knew it had to be
   heap, although some trickery around logging the heap relfilenodes
   was required). But to properly handle table AMs we need
   per-database catalog access to look up the AM handler, which
   recovery doesn't allow.
2) Not knowing the xid horizon also makes it hard to support logical
   decoding on standbys. When on a catalog table, we need to be able
   to conflict with slots that have an xid horizon that's too old. But
   computing the horizon by visiting the heap only works once
   consistency is reached, but we always need to be able to detect
   conflicts.

There's also a secondary problem, in that the current method performs
redundant work on every standby. But that's counterbalanced by
potentially computing the value when not necessary (either because
there's no standby, or because there's no connected backends).

Solve 1) and 2) by moving computation of the xid horizon to the
primary and by involving tableam in the computation of the horizon.

To address the potentially increased overhead, increase the efficiency
of the xid horizon computation for heap by sorting the tids, and
eliminating redundant buffer accesses. When prefetching is available,
additionally perform prefetching of buffers.  As this is more of a
maintenance task, rather than something routinely done in every read
only query, we add an arbitrary 10 to the effective concurrency -
thereby using IO concurrency, when not globally enabled.  That's
possibly not the perfect formula, but seems good enough for now.

Bumps WAL format, as latestRemovedXid is now part of the records, and
the heap's relfilenode isn't anymore.

Author: Andres Freund, Amit Khandekar, Robert Haas
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20181212204154.nsxf3gzqv3gesl32@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20181214014235.dal5ogljs3bmlq44@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-26 16:52:54 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera 126d631222 Fix partitioned index creation bug with dropped columns
ALTER INDEX .. ATTACH PARTITION fails if the partitioned table where the
index is defined contains more dropped columns than its partition, with
this message:
  ERROR:  incorrect attribute map
The cause was that one caller of CompareIndexInfo was passing the number
of attributes of the partition rather than the parent, which confused
the length check.  Repair.

This can cause pg_upgrade to fail when used on such a database.  Leave
some more objects around after regression tests, so that the case is
detected by pg_upgrade test suite.

Remove some spurious empty lines noticed while looking for other cases
of the same problem.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190326213924.GA2322@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-26 20:19:28 -03:00
Tom Lane 53bcf5e3db Build "other rels" of appendrel baserels in a separate step.
Up to now, otherrel RelOptInfos were built at the same time as baserel
RelOptInfos, thanks to recursion in build_simple_rel().  However,
nothing in query_planner's preprocessing cares at all about otherrels,
only baserels, so we don't really need to build them until just before
we enter make_one_rel.  This has two benefits:

* create_lateral_join_info did a lot of extra work to propagate
lateral-reference information from parents to the correct children.
But if we delay creation of the children till after that, it's
trivial (and much harder to break, too).

* Since we have all the restriction quals correctly assigned to
parent appendrels by this point, it'll be possible to do plan-time
pruning and never make child RelOptInfos at all for partitions that
can be pruned away.  That's not done here, but will be later on.

Amit Langote, reviewed at various times by Dilip Kumar, Jesper Pedersen,
Yoshikazu Imai, and David Rowley

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9d7c5112-cb99-6a47-d3be-cf1ee6862a1d@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-03-26 18:21:10 -04:00
Tom Lane 7c366ac969 Fix oversight in data-type change for autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay.
Commit caf626b2c missed that the relevant reloptions entry needs
to be moved from the intRelOpts[] array to realRelOpts[].
Somewhat surprisingly, it seems to work anyway, perhaps because
the desired default and limit values are all integers.  We ought
to have either a simpler data structure or better cross-checking
here, but that's for another patch.

Nikolay Shaplov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4861742.12LTaSB3sv@x200m
2019-03-26 13:32:38 -04:00
Tom Lane e8d5dd6be7 Get rid of duplicate child RTE for a partitioned table.
We've been creating duplicate RTEs for partitioned tables just
because we do so for regular inheritance parent tables.  But unlike
regular-inheritance parents which are themselves regular tables
and thus need to be scanned, partitioned tables don't need the
extra RTE.

This makes the conditions for building a child RTE the same as those
for building an AppendRelInfo, allowing minor simplification in
expand_single_inheritance_child.  Since the planner's actual processing
is driven off the AppendRelInfo list, nothing much changes beyond that,
we just have one fewer useless RTE entry.

Amit Langote, reviewed and hacked a bit by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9d7c5112-cb99-6a47-d3be-cf1ee6862a1d@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-03-26 12:03:27 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c8c885b7a5 Fix misplaced const
These instances were apparently trying to carry the const qualifier
from the arguments through the complex casts, but for that the const
qualifier was misplaced.
2019-03-26 09:23:08 +01:00
Andres Freund 2ac1b2b175 Remove heap_hot_search().
After 71bdc99d0d, "tableam: Add helper for indexes to check if a
corresponding table tuples exist." there's no in-core user left. As
there's unlikely to be an external user, and such an external user
could easily be adjusted to use table_index_fetch_tuple_check(),
remove heap_hot_search().

Per complaint from Peter Geoghegan

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wzn0Oq4ftJrTqRAsWy2WGjv0QrJcwoZ+yqWsF_Z5vjUBFw@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-25 19:04:41 -07:00
Michael Paquier cdde886d36 Fix crash when using partition bound expressions
Since 7c079d7, partition bounds are able to use generalized expression
syntax when processed, treating "minvalue" and "maxvalue" as specific
cases as they get passed down for transformation as a column references.

The checks for infinite bounds in range expressions have been lax
though, causing crashes when trying to use column reference names with
more than one field.  Here is an example causing a crash:
CREATE TABLE list_parted (a int) PARTITION BY LIST (a);
CREATE TABLE part_list_crash PARTITION OF list_parted
  FOR VALUES IN (somename.somename);

Note that the creation of the second relation should fail as partition
bounds cannot have column references in their expressions, so when
finding an expression which does not match the expected infinite bounds,
then this commit lets the generic transformation machinery check after
it.  The error message generated in this case references as well a
missing RTE, which is confusing.  This problem will be treated
separately as it impacts as well default expressions for some time, and
for now only the cases where a crash can happen are fixed.

While on it, extend the set of regression tests in place for list
partition bounds and add an extra set for range partition bounds.

Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15668-0377b1981aa1a393@postgresql.org
2019-03-26 10:09:14 +09:00
Andres Freund 2e3da03e9e tableam: Add table_get_latest_tid, to wrap heap_get_latest_tid.
This primarily is to allow WHERE CURRENT OF to continue to work as it
currently does. It's not clear to me that these semantics make sense
for every AM, but it works for the in-core heap, and the out of core
zheap. We can refine it further at a later point if necessary.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-25 17:14:48 -07:00
Andres Freund 71bdc99d0d tableam: Add helper for indexes to check if a corresponding table tuples exist.
This is, likely exclusively, useful to verify that conflicts detected
in a unique index are with live tuples, rather than dead ones.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-25 16:52:55 -07:00
Tom Lane f7111f72d2 Improve planner's selectivity estimates for inequalities on CTID.
We were getting just DEFAULT_INEQ_SEL for comparisons such as
"ctid >= constant", but it's possible to do a lot better if we don't
mind some assumptions about the table's tuple density being reasonably
uniform.  There are already assumptions much like that elsewhere in
the planner, so that hardly seems like much of an objection.

Extracted from a patch set that also proposes to introduce a special
executor node type for such queries.  Not sure if that's going to make
it into v12, but improving the selectivity estimate is useful
independently of that.

Edmund Horner, reviewed by David Rowley

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMyN-kB-nFTkF=VA_JPwFNo08S0d-Yk0F741S2B7LDmYAi8eyA@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-25 18:42:52 -04:00
Tom Lane 8edd0e7946 Suppress Append and MergeAppend plan nodes that have a single child.
If there's only one child relation, the Append or MergeAppend isn't
doing anything useful, and can be elided.  It does have a purpose
during planning though, which is to serve as a buffer between parent
and child Var numbering.  Therefore we keep it all the way through
to setrefs.c, and get rid of it only after fixing references in the
plan level(s) above it.  This works largely the same as setrefs.c's
ancient hack to get rid of no-op SubqueryScan nodes, and can even
share some code with that.

Note the change to make setrefs.c use apply_tlist_labeling rather than
ad-hoc code.  This has the effect of propagating the child's resjunk
and ressortgroupref labels, which formerly weren't propagated when
removing a SubqueryScan.  Doing that is demonstrably necessary for
the [Merge]Append cases, and seems harmless for SubqueryScan, if only
because trivial_subqueryscan is afraid to collapse cases where the
resjunk marking differs.  (I suspect that restriction could now be
removed, though it's unclear that it'd make any new matches possible,
since the outer query can't have references to a child resjunk column.)

David Rowley, reviewed by Alvaro Herrera and Tomas Vondra

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_7u8ATyJ1JGTMHFoKDvZdeF-iEBhs+sM_SXowOr9cArg@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-25 15:42:35 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan f21668f328 Add "split after new tuple" nbtree optimization.
Add additional heuristics to the algorithm for locating an optimal split
location.  New logic identifies localized monotonically increasing
values in indexes with multiple columns.  When this insertion pattern is
detected, page splits split just after the new item that provoked a page
split (or apply leaf fillfactor in the style of a rightmost page split).
This optimization is a variation of the long established leaf fillfactor
optimization used during rightmost page splits.

50/50 page splits are only appropriate with a pattern of truly random
insertions, where the average space utilization ends up at 65% - 70%.
Without this patch, affected cases have leaf pages that are no more than
about 50% full on average.  Future insertions can never make use of the
free space left behind.  With this patch, affected cases have leaf pages
that are about 90% full on average (assuming a fillfactor of 90).

Localized monotonically increasing insertion patterns are presumed to be
fairly common in real-world applications.  There is a fair amount of
anecdotal evidence for this.  Both pg_depend system catalog indexes
(pg_depend_depender_index and pg_depend_reference_index) are at least
20% smaller after the regression tests are run when the optimization is
available.  Furthermore, many of the indexes created by a fair use
implementation of TPC-C for Postgres are consistently about 40% smaller
when the optimization is available.

Note that even pg_upgrade'd v3 indexes make use of this optimization.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
Reviewed-By: Heikki Linnakangas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkpKeZJrXvR_p7VSY1b-s85E3gHyTbZQzR0BkJ5LrWF_A@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-25 09:44:25 -07:00
Tom Lane f7ff0ae842 Further code review for new integerset code.
Mostly cosmetic adjustments, but I added a more reliable method of
detecting whether an iteration is in progress.
2019-03-25 12:23:48 -04:00
Robert Haas 5857be907d Fix use of wrong datatype with sizeof().
OID and int are the same size, but they are not the same thing.

David Rowley

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_MhS++XngkTvWL9X1v8M5t-0N0B-R465yHQY=TmNV0Ew@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-25 11:28:06 -04:00
Robert Haas 6f97457e0d Add progress reporting for CLUSTER and VACUUM FULL.
This uses the same progress reporting infrastructure added in commit
c16dc1aca5 and extends it to these
additional cases.  We lack the ability to track the internal progress
of sorts and index builds so the information reported is
coarse-grained for some parts of the operation, but it still seems
like a significant improvement over having nothing at all.

Tatsuro Yamada, reviewed by Thomas Munro, Masahiko Sawada, Michael
Paquier, Jeff Janes, Alvaro Herrera, Rafia Sabih, and by me.  A fair
amount of polishing also by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/59A77072.3090401@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-03-25 10:59:04 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov 1d88a75c42 Get rid of backtracking in jsonpath_scan.l
Non-backtracking flex parsers work faster than backtracking ones.  So, this
commit gets rid of backtracking in jsonpath_scan.l.  That required explicit
handling of some cases as well as manual backtracking for some cases.  More
regression tests for numerics are added.

Discussion: https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0?ik=a20b091faa&view=om&permmsgid=msg-f%3A1628425344167939063
Author: John Naylor, Nikita Gluknov, Alexander Korotkov
2019-03-25 15:43:56 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 8b17298f0b Cosmetic changes for jsonpath_gram.y and jsonpath_scan.l
This commit include formatting improvements, renamings and comments.  Also,
it makes jsonpath_scan.l be more uniform with other our lexers.  Firstly,
states names are renamed to more short alternatives.  Secondly, <INITIAL>
prefix removed from the rules.  Corresponding rules are moved to the tail, so
they would anyway work only in initial state.

Author: Alexander Korotkov
Reviewed-by: John Naylor
2019-03-25 15:42:51 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas d303122eab Clean up the Simple-8b encoder code.
Coverity complained that simple8b_encode() might read beyond the end of
the 'diffs' array, in the loop to encode the integers. That was a false
positive, because we never get into the loop in modes 0 or 1, and the
array is large enough for all the other modes. But I admit it's very
subtle, so it's not surprising that Coverity didn't see it, and it's not
very obvious to humans either. Refactor it, so that the second loop
re-computes the differences, instead of carrying them over from the first
loop in the 'diffs' array. This way, the 'diffs' array is not needed
anymore. It makes no measurable difference in performance, and seems more
straightforward this way.

Also, improve the comments in simple8b_encode(): fix the comment about its
return value that was flat-out wrong, and explain the condition when it
returns EMPTY_CODEWORD better.

In the passing, move the 'selector' from the codeword's low bits to the
high bits. It doesn't matter much, but looking at the original paper, and
googling around for other Simple-8b implementations, that's how it's
usually done.

Per Coverity, and Tom Lane's report off-list.
2019-03-25 11:39:51 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 481018f280 Add macro to cast away volatile without allowing changes to underlying type
This adds unvolatize(), which works just like unconstify() but for volatile.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/7a5cbea7-b8df-e910-0f10-04014bcad701%402ndquadrant.com
2019-03-25 09:37:03 +01:00
Andres Freund 9a8ee1dc65 tableam: Add and use table_fetch_row_version().
This is essentially the tableam version of heapam_fetch(),
i.e. fetching a tuple identified by a tid, performing visibility
checks.

Note that this different from table_index_fetch_tuple(), which is for
index lookups. It therefore has to handle a tid pointing to an earlier
version of a tuple if the AM uses an optimization like heap's HOT. Add
comments to that end.

This commit removes the stats_relation argument from heap_fetch, as
it's been unused for a long time.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Haribabu Kommi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-25 00:17:59 -07:00
Andres Freund 919e48b943 tableam: Use in CREATE TABLE AS and CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW.
Previously those directly performed a heap_insert(). Use
table_insert() instead.  The input slot of those routines is not of
the target relation - we could fix that by copying if necessary, but
that'd not be beneficial for performance. As those codepaths don't
access any AM specific tuple fields (say xmin/xmax), there's no need
to use an AM specific slot.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Haribabu Kommi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-24 18:58:37 -07:00
Tom Lane af6550d344 Sort dependent objects before reporting them in DROP ROLE.
Commit 8aa9dd74b didn't quite finish the job in this area after all,
because DROP ROLE has a code path distinct from DROP OWNED BY, and
it was still reporting dependent objects in whatever order the index
scan returned them in.

Buildfarm experience shows that index ordering of equal-keyed objects is
significantly less stable than before in the wake of using heap TIDs as
tie-breakers.  So if we try to hide the unstable ordering by suppressing
DETAIL reports, we're just going to end up having to do that for every
DROP that reports multiple objects.  That's not great from a coverage
or problem-detection standpoint, and it's something we'll inevitably
forget in future patches, leading to more iterations of fixing-an-
unstable-result.  So let's just bite the bullet and sort here too.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1h6eep-0001Mw-Vd@gemulon.postgresql.org
2019-03-24 18:17:53 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 59ab3be9e4 Remove dead code from nbtsplitloc.c.
It doesn't make sense to consider the possibility that there will only
be one candidate split point when choosing among split points to find
the split with the lowest penalty.  This is a vestige of an earlier
version of the patch that became commit fab25024.

Issue spotted while rereviewing coverage of the nbtree patch series
using gcov.
2019-03-24 12:28:58 -07:00
Michael Paquier 276d2e6c2d Make current_logfiles use permissions assigned to files in data directory
Since its introduction in 19dc233c, current_logfiles has been assigned
the same permissions as a log file, which can be enforced with
log_file_mode.  This setup can lead to incompatibility problems with
group access permissions as current_logfiles is not located in the log
directory, but at the root of the data folder.  Hence, if group
permissions are used but log_file_mode is more restrictive, a backup
with a user in the group having read access could fail even if the log
directory is located outside of the data folder.

Per discussion with the folks mentioned below, we have concluded that
current_logfiles should not be treated as a log file as it only stores
metadata related to log files, and that it should use the same
permissions as all other files in the data directory.  This solution has
the merit to be simple and fixes all the interaction problems between
group access and log_file_mode.

Author: Haribabu Kommi
Reviewed-by: Stephen Frost, Robert Haas, Tom Lane, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJrrPGcEotF1P7AWoeQyD3Pqr-0xkQg_Herv98DjbaMj+naozw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 11, where group access has been added.
2019-03-24 21:00:35 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 280a408b48 Transaction chaining
Add command variants COMMIT AND CHAIN and ROLLBACK AND CHAIN, which
start new transactions with the same transaction characteristics as the
just finished one, per SQL standard.

Support for transaction chaining in PL/pgSQL is also added.  This
functionality is especially useful when running COMMIT in a loop in
PL/pgSQL.

Reviewed-by: Fabien COELHO <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/28536681-324b-10dc-ade8-ab46f7645a5a@2ndquadrant.com
2019-03-24 11:33:02 +01:00
Andres Freund 5db6df0c01 tableam: Add tuple_{insert, delete, update, lock} and use.
This adds new, required, table AM callbacks for insert/delete/update
and lock_tuple. To be able to reasonably use those, the EvalPlanQual
mechanism had to be adapted, moving more logic into the AM.

Previously both delete/update/lock call-sites and the EPQ mechanism had
to have awareness of the specific tuple format to be able to fetch the
latest version of a tuple. Obviously that needs to be abstracted
away. To do so, move the logic that find the latest row version into
the AM. lock_tuple has a new flag argument,
TUPLE_LOCK_FLAG_FIND_LAST_VERSION, that forces it to lock the last
version, rather than the current one.  It'd have been possible to do
so via a separate callback as well, but finding the last version
usually also necessitates locking the newest version, making it
sensible to combine the two. This replaces the previous use of
EvalPlanQualFetch().  Additionally HeapTupleUpdated, which previously
signaled either a concurrent update or delete, is now split into two,
to avoid callers needing AM specific knowledge to differentiate.

The move of finding the latest row version into tuple_lock means that
encountering a row concurrently moved into another partition will now
raise an error about "tuple to be locked" rather than "tuple to be
updated/deleted" - which is accurate, as that always happens when
locking rows. While possible slightly less helpful for users, it seems
like an acceptable trade-off.

As part of this commit HTSU_Result has been renamed to TM_Result, and
its members been expanded to differentiated between updating and
deleting. HeapUpdateFailureData has been renamed to TM_FailureData.

The interface to speculative insertion is changed so nodeModifyTable.c
does not have to set the speculative token itself anymore. Instead
there's a version of tuple_insert, tuple_insert_speculative, that
performs the speculative insertion (without requiring a flag to signal
that fact), and the speculative insertion is either made permanent
with table_complete_speculative(succeeded = true) or aborted with
succeeded = false).

Note that multi_insert is not yet routed through tableam, nor is
COPY. Changing multi_insert requires changes to copy.c that are large
enough to better be done separately.

Similarly, although simpler, CREATE TABLE AS and CREATE MATERIALIZED
VIEW are also only going to be adjusted in a later commit.

Author: Andres Freund and Haribabu Kommi
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20190313003903.nwvrxi7rw3ywhdel@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20160812231527.GA690404@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-23 19:55:57 -07:00
Tom Lane f778e537a0 Remove inadequate check for duplicate "xml" PI.
I failed to think about PIs starting with "xml".  We don't really
need this check at all, so just take it out.  Oversight in
commit 8d1dadb25 et al.
2019-03-23 17:40:19 -04:00
Tom Lane 8d1dadb25b Accept XML documents when xmloption = content, as required by SQL:2006+.
Previously we were using the SQL:2003 definition, which doesn't allow
this, but that creates a serious dump/restore gotcha: there is no
setting of xmloption that will allow all valid XML data.  Hence,
switch to the 2006 definition.

Since libxml doesn't accept <!DOCTYPE> directives in the mode we
use for CONTENT parsing, the implementation is to detect <!DOCTYPE>
in the input and switch to DOCUMENT parsing mode.  This should not
cost much, because <!DOCTYPE> should be close to the front of the
input if it's there at all.  It's possible that this causes the
error messages for malformed input to be slightly different than
they were before, if said input includes <!DOCTYPE>; but that does
not seem like a big problem.

In passing, buy back a few cycles in parsing of large XML documents
by not doing strlen() of the whole input in parse_xml_decl().

Back-patch because dump/restore failures are not nice.  This change
shouldn't break any cases that worked before, so it seems safe to
back-patch.

Chapman Flack (revised a bit by me)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAN-V+g-6JqUQEQZ55Q3toXEN6d5Ez5uvzL4VR+8KtvJKj31taw@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-23 16:51:37 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 29b64d1de7 Add nbtree high key "continuescan" optimization.
Teach nbtree forward index scans to check the high key before moving to
the right sibling page in the hope of finding that it isn't actually
necessary to do so.  The new check may indicate that the scan definitely
cannot find matching tuples to the right, ending the scan immediately.
We already opportunistically force a similar "continuescan orientated"
key check of the final non-pivot tuple when it's clear that it cannot be
returned to the scan due to being dead-to-all.  The new high key check
is complementary.

The new approach for forward scans is more effective than checking the
final non-pivot tuple, especially with composite indexes and non-unique
indexes.  The improvements to the logic for picking a split point added
by commit fab25024 make it likely that relatively dissimilar high keys
will appear on a page.  A distinguishing key value that can only appear
on non-pivot tuples on the right sibling page will often be present in
leaf page high keys.

Since forcing the final item to be key checked no longer makes any
difference in the case of forward scans, the existing extra key check is
now only used for backwards scans.  Backward scans continue to
opportunistically check the final non-pivot tuple, which is actually the
first non-pivot tuple on the page (not the last).

Note that even pg_upgrade'd v3 indexes make use of this optimization.

Author: Peter Geoghegan, Heikki Linnakangas
Reviewed-By: Heikki Linnakangas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkOmUduME31QnuTFpimejuQoiZ-HOf0pOWeFZNhTMctvA@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-23 11:01:53 -07:00
Tom Lane fb50d3f03f Add unreachable "break" to satisfy -Wimplicit-fallthrough.
gcc is a bit pickier about this than perhaps it should be.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1h6zzT-0003ft-DD@gemulon.postgresql.org
2019-03-23 01:32:58 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 7b084b3831 Revert "Add gitignore entries for jsonpath_gram.h"
This reverts commit 4e274a043f.

These files aren't actually built anymore since 550b9d26f.
2019-03-23 00:19:34 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 4e274a043f Add gitignore entries for jsonpath_gram.h 2019-03-22 23:19:30 +01:00
Tom Lane 734308a220 Rearrange make_partitionedrel_pruneinfo to avoid work when we can't prune.
Postpone most of the effort of constructing PartitionedRelPruneInfos
until after we have found out whether run-time pruning is needed at all.
This costs very little duplicated effort (basically just an extra
find_base_rel() call per partition) and saves quite a bit when we
can't do run-time pruning.

Also, merge the first loop (for building relid_subpart_map) into
the second loop, since we don't need the map to be valid during
that loop.

Amit Langote

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9d7c5112-cb99-6a47-d3be-cf1ee6862a1d@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-03-22 14:56:12 -04:00
Tom Lane c8151e6423 Don't copy PartitionBoundInfo in set_relation_partition_info.
I (tgl) remain dubious that it's a good idea for PartitionDirectory
to hold a pin on a relcache entry throughout planning, rather than
copying the data or using some kind of refcount scheme.  However, it's
certainly the responsibility of the PartitionDirectory code to ensure
that what it's handing back is a stable data structure, not that of
its caller.  So this is a pretty clear oversight in commit 898e5e329,
and one that can cost a lot of performance when there are many
partitions.

Amit Langote (extracted from a much larger patch set)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoY3bRmGB6-DUnoVy5fJoreiBJ43rwMrQRCdPXuKt4Ykaw@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9d7c5112-cb99-6a47-d3be-cf1ee6862a1d@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-03-22 14:16:58 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas b5fd4972a3 Fix yet more portability bugs in integerset and its tests.
There were more large constants that needed UINT64CONST. And one variable
was declared as "int", when it needed to be uint64. These bugs were only
visible on 32-bit systems; clearly I should've tested on one, given that
this code does a lot of work with 64-bit integers.

Also, in the test "huge distances" test, the code created some values with
random distances between them, but the test logic didn't take into account
the possibility that the random distance was exactly 1. That never actually
happens with the seed we're using, but let's be tidy.
2019-03-22 17:59:19 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas d1b9ee4e44 Fix bug in the GiST vacuum's 2nd stage.
We mustn't assume that the IndexVacuumInfo pointer passed to bulkdelete()
stage is still valid in the vacuumcleanup() stage.

Per very pink buildfarm.
2019-03-22 14:11:46 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7df159a620 Delete empty pages during GiST VACUUM.
To do this, we scan GiST two times. In the first pass we make note of
empty leaf pages and internal pages. At second pass we scan through
internal pages, looking for downlinks to the empty pages.

Deleting internal pages is still not supported, like in nbtree, the last
child of an internal page is never deleted. That means that if you have a
workload where new keys are always inserted to different area than where
old keys are removed, the index will still grow without bound. But the rate
of growth will be an order of magnitude slower than before.

Author: Andrey Borodin
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/B1E4DF12-6CD3-4706-BDBD-BF3283328F60@yandex-team.ru
2019-03-22 13:21:45 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas df816f6ad5 Add IntegerSet, to hold large sets of 64-bit ints efficiently.
The set is implemented as a B-tree, with a compact representation at leaf
items, using Simple-8b algorithm, so that clusters of nearby values use
less memory.

The IntegerSet isn't used for anything yet, aside from the test code, but
we have two patches in the works that would benefit from this: A patch to
allow GiST vacuum to delete empty pages, and a patch to reduce heap
VACUUM's memory usage, by storing the list of dead TIDs more efficiently
and lifting the 1 GB limit on its size.

This includes a unit test module, in src/test/modules/test_integerset.
It can be used to verify correctness, as a regression test, but if you run
it manully, it can also print memory usage and execution time of some of
the tests.

Author: Heikki Linnakangas, Andrey Borodin
Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/b5e82599-1966-5783-733c-1a947ddb729f@iki.fi
2019-03-22 13:21:45 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 5e1963fb76 Collations with nondeterministic comparison
This adds a flag "deterministic" to collations.  If that is false,
such a collation disables various optimizations that assume that
strings are equal only if they are byte-wise equal.  That then allows
use cases such as case-insensitive or accent-insensitive comparisons
or handling of strings with different Unicode normal forms.

This functionality is only supported with the ICU provider.  At least
glibc doesn't appear to have any locales that work in a
nondeterministic way, so it's not worth supporting this for the libc
provider.

The term "deterministic comparison" in this context is from Unicode
Technical Standard #10
(https://unicode.org/reports/tr10/#Deterministic_Comparison).

This patch makes changes in three areas:

- CREATE COLLATION DDL changes and system catalog changes to support
  this new flag.

- Many executor nodes and auxiliary code are extended to track
  collations.  Previously, this code would just throw away collation
  information, because the eventually-called user-defined functions
  didn't use it since they only cared about equality, which didn't
  need collation information.

- String data type functions that do equality comparisons and hashing
  are changed to take the (non-)deterministic flag into account.  For
  comparison, this just means skipping various shortcuts and tie
  breakers that use byte-wise comparison.  For hashing, we first need
  to convert the input string to a canonical "sort key" using the ICU
  analogue of strxfrm().

Reviewed-by: Daniel Verite <daniel@manitou-mail.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1ccc668f-4cbc-0bef-af67-450b47cdfee7@2ndquadrant.com
2019-03-22 12:12:43 +01:00
Michael Paquier 2ab6d28d23 Fix crash with pg_partition_root
Trying to call the function with the top-most parent of a partition tree
was leading to a crash.  In this case the correct result is to return
the top-most parent itself.

Reported-by: Álvaro Herrera
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190322032612.GA323@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-22 17:27:38 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 7e7c57bbb2 Fix dependency recording bug for partitioned PKs
When DefineIndex recurses to create constraints on partitions, it needs
to use the value returned by index_constraint_create to set up partition
dependencies.  However, in the course of fixing the DEPENDENCY_INTERNAL_AUTO
mess, commit 1d92a0c9f7 introduced some code to that function that
clobbered the return value, causing the recorded OID to be of the wrong
object.  Close examination of pg_depend after creating the tables leads
to indescribable objects :-( My sin (in commit bdc3d7fa23, while
preparing for DDL deparsing in event triggers) was to use a variable
name for the return value that's typically used for throwaway objects in
dependency-setting calls ("referenced").  Fix by changing the variable
names to match extended practice (the return value is "myself" rather
than "referenced".)

The pg_upgrade test notices the problem (in an indirect way: the pg_dump
outputs are in different order), but only if you create the objects in a
specific way that wasn't being used in the existing tests.  Add a stanza
to leave some objects around that shows the bug.

Catversion bump because preexisting databases might have bogus pg_depend
entries.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190318204235.GA30360@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-21 18:34:29 -03:00
Tom Lane bfb456c1b9 Improve error reporting for DROP FUNCTION/PROCEDURE/AGGREGATE/ROUTINE.
These commands allow the argument type list to be omitted if there is
just one object that matches by name.  However, if that syntax was
used with DROP IF EXISTS and there was more than one match, you got
a "function ... does not exist, skipping" notice message rather than a
truthful complaint about the ambiguity.  This was basically due to
poor factorization and a rats-nest of logic, so refactor the relevant
lookup code to make it cleaner.

Note that this amounts to narrowing the scope of which sorts of
error conditions IF EXISTS will bypass.  Per discussion, we only
intend it to skip no-such-object cases, not multiple-possible-matches
cases.

Per bug #15572 from Ash Marath.  Although this definitely seems like
a bug, it's not clear that people would thank us for changing the
behavior in minor releases, so no back-patch.

David Rowley, reviewed by Julien Rouhaud and Pavel Stehule

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15572-ed1b9ed09503de8a@postgresql.org
2019-03-21 11:52:08 -04:00
Thomas Munro 0f086f84ad Add DNS SRV support for LDAP server discovery.
LDAP servers can be advertised on a network with RFC 2782 DNS SRV
records.  The OpenLDAP command-line tools automatically try to find
servers that way, if no server name is provided by the user.  Teach
PostgreSQL to do the same using OpenLDAP's support functions, when
building with OpenLDAP.

For now, we assume that HAVE_LDAP_INITIALIZE (an OpenLDAP extension
available since OpenLDAP 2.0 and also present in Apple LDAP) implies
that you also have ldap_domain2hostlist() (which arrived in the same
OpenLDAP version and is also present in Apple LDAP).

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2hAnSfhdsd6vXsM6VZVN0br-FbAZ-O+Swk18S5HkCP=A@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-21 15:28:17 +13:00
Tom Lane 8aa9dd74b3 Sort the dependent objects before deletion in DROP OWNED BY.
This finishes a task we left undone in commit f1ad067fc, by extending
the delete-in-descending-OID-order rule to deletions triggered by
DROP OWNED BY.  We've coped with machine-dependent deletion orders
one time too many, and the new issues caused by Peter G's recent
nbtree hacking seem like the last straw.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1h6eep-0001Mw-Vd@gemulon.postgresql.org
2019-03-20 18:06:29 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera a6da004715 Add index_get_partition convenience function
This new function simplifies some existing coding, as well as supports
future patches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/201901222145.t6wws6t6vrcu@alvherre.pgsql
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Jesper Pedersen
2019-03-20 18:18:50 -03:00
Peter Geoghegan 3d0dcc5c7f Fix spurious compiler warning in nbtxlog.c.
Cleanup from commit dd299df8.

Per complaint from Tom Lane.
2019-03-20 14:04:35 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera 815b20ae0c Restore RI trigger sanity check
I unnecessarily removed this check in 3de241dba8 because I
misunderstood what the final representation of constraints across a
partitioning hierarchy was to be.  Put it back (in both branches).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/201901222145.t6wws6t6vrcu@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-20 17:28:43 -03:00
Peter Geoghegan fab2502433 Consider secondary factors during nbtree splits.
Teach nbtree to give some consideration to how "distinguishing"
candidate leaf page split points are.  This should not noticeably affect
the balance of free space within each half of the split, while still
making suffix truncation truncate away significantly more attributes on
average.

The logic for choosing a leaf split point now uses a fallback mode in
the case where the page is full of duplicates and it isn't possible to
find even a minimally distinguishing split point.  When the page is full
of duplicates, the split should pack the left half very tightly, while
leaving the right half mostly empty.  Our assumption is that logical
duplicates will almost always be inserted in ascending heap TID order
with v4 indexes.  This strategy leaves most of the free space on the
half of the split that will likely be where future logical duplicates of
the same value need to be placed.

The number of cycles added is not very noticeable.  This is important
because deciding on a split point takes place while at least one
exclusive buffer lock is held.  We avoid using authoritative insertion
scankey comparisons to save cycles, unlike suffix truncation proper.  We
use a faster binary comparison instead.

Note that even pg_upgrade'd v3 indexes make use of these optimizations.
Benchmarking has shown that even v3 indexes benefit, despite the fact
that suffix truncation will only truncate non-key attributes in INCLUDE
indexes.  Grouping relatively similar tuples together is beneficial in
and of itself, since it reduces the number of leaf pages that must be
accessed by subsequent index scans.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
Reviewed-By: Heikki Linnakangas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzmmoLNQOj9mAD78iQHfWLJDszHEDrAzGTUMG3mVh5xWPw@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-20 10:12:19 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan dd299df818 Make heap TID a tiebreaker nbtree index column.
Make nbtree treat all index tuples as having a heap TID attribute.
Index searches can distinguish duplicates by heap TID, since heap TID is
always guaranteed to be unique.  This general approach has numerous
benefits for performance, and is prerequisite to teaching VACUUM to
perform "retail index tuple deletion".

Naively adding a new attribute to every pivot tuple has unacceptable
overhead (it bloats internal pages), so suffix truncation of pivot
tuples is added.  This will usually truncate away the "extra" heap TID
attribute from pivot tuples during a leaf page split, and may also
truncate away additional user attributes.  This can increase fan-out,
especially in a multi-column index.  Truncation can only occur at the
attribute granularity, which isn't particularly effective, but works
well enough for now.  A future patch may add support for truncating
"within" text attributes by generating truncated key values using new
opclass infrastructure.

Only new indexes (BTREE_VERSION 4 indexes) will have insertions that
treat heap TID as a tiebreaker attribute, or will have pivot tuples
undergo suffix truncation during a leaf page split (on-disk
compatibility with versions 2 and 3 is preserved).  Upgrades to version
4 cannot be performed on-the-fly, unlike upgrades from version 2 to
version 3.  contrib/amcheck continues to work with version 2 and 3
indexes, while also enforcing stricter invariants when verifying version
4 indexes.  These stricter invariants are the same invariants described
by "3.1.12 Sequencing" from the Lehman and Yao paper.

A later patch will enhance the logic used by nbtree to pick a split
point.  This patch is likely to negatively impact performance without
smarter choices around the precise point to split leaf pages at.  Making
these two mostly-distinct sets of enhancements into distinct commits
seems like it might clarify their design, even though neither commit is
particularly useful on its own.

The maximum allowed size of new tuples is reduced by an amount equal to
the space required to store an extra MAXALIGN()'d TID in a new high key
during leaf page splits.  The user-facing definition of the "1/3 of a
page" restriction is already imprecise, and so does not need to be
revised.  However, there should be a compatibility note in the v12
release notes.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
Reviewed-By: Heikki Linnakangas, Alexander Korotkov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkVb0Kom=R+88fDFb=JSxZMFvbHVC6Mn9LJ2n=X=kS-Uw@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-20 10:04:01 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan e5adcb789d Refactor nbtree insertion scankeys.
Use dedicated struct to represent nbtree insertion scan keys.  Having a
dedicated struct makes the difference between search type scankeys and
insertion scankeys a lot clearer, and simplifies the signature of
several related functions.  This is based on a suggestion by Andrey
Lepikhov.

Streamline how unique index insertions cache binary search progress.
Cache the state of in-progress binary searches within _bt_check_unique()
for later instead of having callers avoid repeating the binary search in
an ad-hoc manner.  This makes it easy to add a new optimization:
_bt_check_unique() now falls out of its loop immediately in the common
case where it's already clear that there couldn't possibly be a
duplicate.

The new _bt_check_unique() scheme makes it a lot easier to manage cached
binary search effort afterwards, from within _bt_findinsertloc().  This
is needed for the upcoming patch to make nbtree tuples unique by
treating heap TID as a final tiebreaker column.  Unique key binary
searches need to restore lower and upper bounds.  They cannot simply
continue to use the >= lower bound as the offset to insert at, because
the heap TID tiebreaker column must be used in comparisons for the
restored binary search (unlike the original _bt_check_unique() binary
search, where scankey's heap TID column must be omitted).

Author: Peter Geoghegan, Heikki Linnakangas
Reviewed-By: Heikki Linnakangas, Andrey Lepikhov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzmE6AhUdk9NdWBf4K3HjWXZBX3+umC7mH7+WDrKcRtsOw@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-20 09:30:57 -07:00
Alexander Korotkov 550b9d26f8 Get rid of jsonpath_gram.h and jsonpath_scanner.h
Jsonpath grammar and scanner are both quite small.  It doesn't worth complexity
to compile them separately.  This commit makes grammar and scanner be compiled
at once.  Therefore, jsonpath_gram.h and jsonpath_gram.h are no longer needed.
This commit also does some reorganization of code in jsonpath_gram.y.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d47b2023-3ecb-5f04-d253-d557547cf74f%402ndQuadrant.com
2019-03-20 11:13:34 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 5e28b778bf Rename typedef in jsonpath_gram.y from "string" to "JsonPathString"
Reason is the same as in 75c57058b0.
2019-03-19 21:01:10 +03:00
Peter Geoghegan 1009920aaa Tweak nbtsearch.c function prototype order.
nbtsearch.c's static function prototypes were slightly out of order.
Make the order consistent with static function definition order.
2019-03-19 09:59:05 -07:00
Tom Lane 0dfe3d0ef5 Make checkpoint requests more robust.
Commit 6f6a6d8b1 introduced a delay of up to 2 seconds if we're trying
to request a checkpoint but the checkpointer hasn't started yet (or,
much less likely, our kill() call fails).  However buildfarm experience
shows that that's not quite enough for slow or heavily-loaded machines.
There's no good reason to assume that the checkpointer won't start
eventually, so we may as well make the timeout much longer, say 60 sec.

However, if the caller didn't say CHECKPOINT_WAIT, it seems like a bad
idea to be waiting at all, much less for as long as 60 sec.  We can
remove the need for that, and make this whole thing more robust, by
adjusting the code so that the existence of a pending checkpoint
request is clear from the contents of shared memory, and making sure
that the checkpointer process will notice it at startup even if it did
not get a signal.  In this way there's no need for a non-CHECKPOINT_WAIT
call to wait at all; if it can't send the signal, it can nonetheless
assume that the checkpointer will eventually service the request.

A potential downside of this change is that "kill -INT" on the checkpointer
process is no longer enough to trigger a checkpoint, should anyone be
relying on something so hacky.  But there's no obvious reason to do it
like that rather than issuing a plain old CHECKPOINT command, so we'll
assume that nobody is.  There doesn't seem to be a way to preserve this
undocumented quasi-feature without introducing race conditions.

Since a principal reason for messing with this is to prevent intermittent
buildfarm failures, back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/27830.1552752475@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-19 12:49:27 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov 75c57058b0 Rename typedef in jsonpath_scan.l from "keyword" to "JsonPathKeyword"
Typedef name should be both unique and non-intersect with variable names
across all the sources.  That makes both pg_indent and debuggers happy.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/23865.1552936099%40sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-19 13:40:55 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 590a87025b Ignore attempts to add TOAST table to shared or catalog tables
Running ALTER TABLE on any table will check if a TOAST table needs to be
added.  On shared tables, this would previously fail, thus effectively
disabling ALTER TABLE for those tables.  On (non-shared) system
catalogs, on the other hand, it would add a TOAST table, even though we
don't really want TOAST tables on some system catalogs.  In some cases,
it would also fail with an error "AccessExclusiveLock required to add
toast table.", depending on what locks the ALTER TABLE actions had
already taken.

So instead, just ignore attempts to add TOAST tables to such tables,
outside of bootstrap mode, pretending they don't need one.

This allows running ALTER TABLE on such tables without messing up the
TOAST situation.  Legitimate uses for ALTER TABLE on system catalogs
include setting reloptions (say, fillfactor or autovacuum settings).

(All this still requires allow_system_table_mods, which is independent
of this.)

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/e49f825b-fb25-0bc8-8afc-d5ad895c7975@2ndquadrant.com
2019-03-19 11:15:50 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut e537ac5182 Fix whitespace 2019-03-19 10:28:34 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 1f050c08f9 Fix bug in support for collation attributes on older ICU versions
Unrecognized attribute names are supposed to be ignored.  But the code
would error out on an unrecognized attribute value even if it did not
recognize the attribute name.  So unrecognized attributes wouldn't
really be ignored unless the value happened to be one that matched a
recognized value.  This would break some important cases where the
attribute would be processed by ucol_open() directly.  Fix that and
add a test case.

The restructured code should also avoid compiler warnings about
initializing a UColAttribute value to -1, because the type might be an
unsigned enum.  (reported by Andres Freund)
2019-03-19 09:37:46 +01:00
Robert Haas 53680c116c Fix copyfuncs/equalfuncs support for VacuumStmt.
Commit 6776142a07 failed to do this,
and the buildfarm broke.

Patch by me, per advice from Tom Lane and Michael Paquier.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/13988.1552960403@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-18 23:21:36 -04:00
Andrew Gierth 01bde4fa4c Implement OR REPLACE option for CREATE AGGREGATE.
Aggregates have acquired a dozen or so optional attributes in recent
years for things like parallel query and moving-aggregate mode; the
lack of an OR REPLACE option to add or change these for an existing
agg makes extension upgrades gratuitously hard. Rectify.
2019-03-19 01:16:50 +00:00
Tom Lane f2004f19ed Fix memory leak in printtup.c.
Commit f2dec34e1 changed things so that printtup's output stringinfo
buffer was allocated outside the per-row temporary context, not inside
it.  This creates a need to free that buffer explicitly when the temp
context is freed, but that was overlooked.  In most cases, this is all
happening inside a portal or executor context that will go away shortly
anyhow, but that's not always true.  Notably, the stringinfo ends up
getting leaked when JDBC uses row-at-a-time fetches.  For a query
that returns wide rows, that adds up after awhile.

Per bug #15700 from Matthias Otterbach.  Back-patch to v11 where the
faulty code was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15700-8c408321a87d56bb@postgresql.org
2019-03-18 17:54:41 -04:00
Robert Haas 6776142a07 Revise parse tree representation for VACUUM and ANALYZE.
Like commit f41551f61f, this aims
to make it easier to add non-Boolean options to VACUUM (or, in
this case, to ANALYZE).  Instead of building up a bitmap of
options directly in the parser, build up a list of DefElem
objects and let ExecVacuum() sort it out; right now, we make
no use of the fact that a DefElem can carry an associated value,
but it will be easy to make that change in the future.

Masahiko Sawada

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoATE4sn0jFFH3NcfUZXkU2BMbjBWB_kDj-XWYA-LXDcQA@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-18 15:14:52 -04:00
Robert Haas f41551f61f Fold vacuum's 'int options' parameter into VacuumParams.
Many places need both, so this allows a few functions to take one
fewer parameter.  More importantly, as soon as we add a VACUUM
option that takes a non-Boolean parameter, we need to replace
'int options' with a struct, and it seems better to think
of adding more fields to VacuumParams rather than passing around
both VacuumParams and a separate struct as well.

Patch by me, reviewed by Masahiko Sawada

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmob6g6-s50fyv8E8he7APfwCYYJ4z0wbZC2yZeSz=26CYQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-18 13:57:33 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 1ffa59a85c Fix optimization of foreign-key on update actions
In RI_FKey_pk_upd_check_required(), we check among other things
whether the old and new key are equal, so that we don't need to run
cascade actions when nothing has actually changed.  This was using the
equality operator.  But the effect of this is that if a value in the
primary key is changed to one that "looks" different but compares as
equal, the update is not propagated.  (Examples are float -0 and 0 and
case-insensitive text.)  This appears to violate the SQL standard, and
it also behaves inconsistently if in a multicolumn key another key is
also updated that would cause the row to compare as not equal.

To fix, if we are looking at the PK table in ri_KeysEqual(), then do a
bytewise comparison similar to record_image_eq() instead of using the
equality operators.  This only makes a difference for ON UPDATE
CASCADE, but for consistency we treat all changes to the PK the same.  For
the FK table, we continue to use the equality operators.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/3326fc2e-bc02-d4c5-e3e5-e54da466e89a@2ndquadrant.com
2019-03-18 17:19:21 +01:00
Alexander Korotkov a0478b6998 Revert 4178d8b91c
As it was agreed to worsen the code readability.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ecfcfb5f-3233-eaa9-0c83-07056fb49a83%402ndquadrant.com
2019-03-18 09:54:29 +03:00
Michael Paquier 8b938d36f7 Refactor more code logic to update the control file
ce6afc6 has begun the refactoring work by plugging pg_rewind into a
central routine to update the control file, and left around two extra
copies, with one in xlog.c for the backend and one in pg_resetwal.c.  By
adding an extra option to the central routine in controldata_utils.c to
control if a flush of the control file needs to be done, it is proving
to be straight-forward to make xlog.c and pg_resetwal.c use the central
code path at the condition of moving the wait event tracking there.
Hence, this allows to have only one central code path to update the
control file, shaving the code from the duplicates.

This refactoring actually fixes a problem in pg_resetwal.  Previously,
the control file was first removed before being recreated.  So if a
crash happened between the moment the file was removed and the moment
the file was created, then it would have been possible to not have a
control file anymore in the database folder.

Author: Fabien Coelho
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.21.1903170935210.2506@lancre
2019-03-18 12:59:35 +09:00
Alexander Korotkov 4178d8b91c Beautify initialization of JsonValueList and JsonLikeRegexContext
Instead of tricky assignment to {0} introduce special macros, which
explicitly initialize every field.
2019-03-17 12:58:26 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov aa1b7f3866 Apply const qualifier to keywords of jsonpath_scan.l
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEeOP_a-Pfy%3DU9-f%3DgQ0AsB8FrxrC8xCTVq%2BeO71-2VoWP5cag%40mail.gmail.com
Author: Mark G
2019-03-17 12:50:38 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov c183a07f27 Remove some make rules added in 142c400d72
Because they fail build of jsonpath_scan.c.
2019-03-17 11:16:42 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 142c400d72 Fix make rules for jsonpath grammar making them similar to SQL grammar
Reported-by: Jeff Janes, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU%3D1w1qBvoW82ZTFpAKae027R-2OHw-m6ALe0VQRNAFueBVA%40mail.gmail.com
2019-03-17 10:55:52 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut b8f9a2a69a Add support for collation attributes on older ICU versions
Starting in ICU 54, collation customization attributes can be
specified in the locale string, for example
"@colStrength=primary;colCaseLevel=yes".  Add support for this for
older ICU versions as well, by adding some minimal parsing of the
attributes in the locale string and calling ucol_setAttribute() on
them.  This is essentially what never ICU versions do internally in
ucol_open().  This was we can offer this functionality in a consistent
way in all ICU versions supported by PostgreSQL.

Also add some tests for ICU collation customization.

Reported-by: Daniel Verite <daniel@manitou-mail.org>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/0270ebd4-f67c-8774-1a5a-91adfb9bb41f@2ndquadrant.com
2019-03-17 08:47:15 +01:00
Alexander Korotkov 042162d628 Fix compiler warning in jsonpath_exec.c
Warning was observed in gcc 4.4.6, gcc 4.4.7 and probably others.

Reported-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25151.1552751426%40sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-17 10:12:06 +03:00
Tom Lane 20f7c3d560 Suppress -Wimplicit-fallthrough warnings in new jsonpath code.
Per buildfarm.  See commit 41c912cad for precedent.
2019-03-16 12:34:46 -04:00
Amit Kapila f27314ff9a Update copyright year in files added by 1bb5e78218. 2019-03-16 16:00:38 +05:30
Alexander Korotkov 16d489b0fe Numeric error suppression in jsonpath
Add support of numeric error suppression to jsonpath as it's required by
standard.  This commit doesn't use PG_TRY()/PG_CATCH() in order to implement
that.  Instead, it provides internal versions of numeric functions used, which
support error suppression.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fcc6fc6a-b497-f39a-923d-aa34d0c588e8%402ndQuadrant.com
Author: Alexander Korotkov, Nikita Glukhov
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra
2019-03-16 12:21:19 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 72b6460336 Partial implementation of SQL/JSON path language
SQL 2016 standards among other things contains set of SQL/JSON features for
JSON processing inside of relational database.  The core of SQL/JSON is JSON
path language, allowing access parts of JSON documents and make computations
over them.  This commit implements partial support JSON path language as
separate datatype called "jsonpath".  The implementation is partial because
it's lacking datetime support and suppression of numeric errors.  Missing
features will be added later by separate commits.

Support of SQL/JSON features requires implementation of separate nodes, and it
will be considered in subsequent patches.  This commit includes following
set of plain functions, allowing to execute jsonpath over jsonb values:

 * jsonb_path_exists(jsonb, jsonpath[, jsonb, bool]),
 * jsonb_path_match(jsonb, jsonpath[, jsonb, bool]),
 * jsonb_path_query(jsonb, jsonpath[, jsonb, bool]),
 * jsonb_path_query_array(jsonb, jsonpath[, jsonb, bool]).
 * jsonb_path_query_first(jsonb, jsonpath[, jsonb, bool]).

This commit also implements "jsonb @? jsonpath" and "jsonb @@ jsonpath", which
are wrappers over jsonpath_exists(jsonb, jsonpath) and jsonpath_predicate(jsonb,
jsonpath) correspondingly.  These operators will have an index support
(implemented in subsequent patches).

Catversion bumped, to add new functions and operators.

Code was written by Nikita Glukhov and Teodor Sigaev, revised by me.
Documentation was written by Oleg Bartunov and Liudmila Mantrova.  The work
was inspired by Oleg Bartunov.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fcc6fc6a-b497-f39a-923d-aa34d0c588e8%402ndQuadrant.com
Author: Nikita Glukhov, Teodor Sigaev, Alexander Korotkov, Oleg Bartunov, Liudmila Mantrova
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra, Andrew Dunstan, Pavel Stehule, Alexander Korotkov
2019-03-16 12:16:48 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 893d6f8a1f Avoid casting away a const 2019-03-16 10:13:03 +01:00
Amit Kapila 06c8a5090e Improve code comments in b0eaa4c51b.
Author: John Naylor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACPNZCswjyGJxTT=mxHgK=Z=mJ9uJ4WEx_UO=bNwpR_i0EaHHg@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-16 06:55:56 +05:30
Tom Lane d3f48dfae4 Further reduce memory footprint of CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS testing.
Some buildfarm members using CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS have been having OOM
problems of late.  Commit 2455ab488 addressed this problem by recovering
space transiently used within RelationBuildPartitionDesc, but it turns
out that leaves quite a lot on the table, because other subroutines of
RelationBuildDesc also leak memory like mad.  Let's move the temp-context
management into RelationBuildDesc so that leakage from the other
subroutines is also recovered.

I examined this issue by arranging for postgres.c to dump the size of
MessageContext just before resetting it in each command cycle, and
then running the update.sql regression test (which is one of the two
that are seeing buildfarm OOMs) with and without CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS.
Before 2455ab488, the peak space usage with CCA was as much as 250MB.
That patch got it down to ~80MB, but with this patch it's about 0.5MB,
and indeed the space usage now seems nearly indistinguishable from a
non-CCA build.

RelationBuildDesc's traditional behavior of not worrying about leaking
transient data is of many years' standing, so I'm pretty hesitant to
change that without more evidence that it'd be useful in a normal build.
(So far as I can see, non-CCA memory consumption is about the same with
or without this change, whuch if anything suggests that it isn't useful.)
Hence, configure the patch so that we recover space only when
CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS or CLOBBER_CACHE_RECURSIVELY is defined.  However,
that choice can be overridden at compile time, in case somebody would
like to do some performance testing and try to develop evidence for
changing that decision.

It's possible that we ought to back-patch this change, but in the
absence of back-branch OOM problems in the buildfarm, I'm not in
a hurry to do that.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoY3bRmGB6-DUnoVy5fJoreiBJ43rwMrQRCdPXuKt4Ykaw@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-15 13:46:26 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 69039fda83 Add walreceiver API to get remote server version
Add a separate walreceiver API function walrcv_server_version() to get
the version of the remote server, instead of doing it as part of
walrcv_identify_system().  This allows the server version to be
available even for uses that don't call IDENTIFY_SYSTEM, and it seems
cleaner anyway.

This is for an upcoming patch, not currently used.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20190115071359.GF1433@paquier.xyz
2019-03-15 10:16:26 +01:00
Thomas Munro bb16aba50c Enable parallel query with SERIALIZABLE isolation.
Previously, the SERIALIZABLE isolation level prevented parallel query
from being used.  Allow the two features to be used together by
sharing the leader's SERIALIZABLEXACT with parallel workers.

An extra per-SERIALIZABLEXACT LWLock is introduced to make it safe to
share, and new logic is introduced to coordinate the early release
of the SERIALIZABLEXACT required for the SXACT_FLAG_RO_SAFE
optimization, as follows:

The first backend to observe the SXACT_FLAG_RO_SAFE flag (set by
some other transaction) will 'partially release' the SERIALIZABLEXACT,
meaning that the conflicts and locks it holds are released, but the
SERIALIZABLEXACT itself will remain active because other backends
might still have a pointer to it.

Whenever any backend notices the SXACT_FLAG_RO_SAFE flag, it clears
its own MySerializableXact variable and frees local resources so that
it can skip SSI checks for the rest of the transaction.  In the
special case of the leader process, it transfers the SERIALIZABLEXACT
to a new variable SavedSerializableXact, so that it can be completely
released at the end of the transaction after all workers have exited.

Remove the serializable_okay flag added to CreateParallelContext() by
commit 9da0cc35, because it's now redundant.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Haribabu Kommi, Robert Haas, Masahiko Sawada, Kevin Grittner
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0gXGYhtrVDWOTHS8SQQy_=S9xo+8oCxGLWZAOoeJ=yzQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-15 17:47:04 +13:00
Tom Lane de57004799 Fix some oversights in commit 2455ab488.
The idea was to generate all the junk in a destroyable subcontext rather
than leaking it in the caller's context, but partition_bounds_create was
still being called in the caller's context, allowing plenty of scope for
leakage.  Also, get_rel_relkind() was still being called in the rel's
rd_pdcxt, creating a risk of session-lifespan memory wastage.

Simplify the logic a bit while at it.  Also, reduce rd_pdcxt to
ALLOCSET_SMALL_SIZES, since it seems likely to not usually be big.

Probably something like this needs to be back-patched into v11,
but for now let's get some buildfarm testing on this.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15943.1552601288@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-14 18:36:33 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 61dc407893 Improve code comment 2019-03-14 22:44:21 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 8bee36708f Remove unused #include 2019-03-14 22:03:14 +01:00
Tom Lane 0a9d7e1f6d Ensure dummy paths have correct required_outer if rel is parameterized.
The assertions added by commits 34ea1ab7f et al found another problem:
set_dummy_rel_pathlist and mark_dummy_rel were failing to label
the dummy paths they create with the correct outer_relids, in case
the relation is necessarily parameterized due to having lateral
references in its tlist.  It's likely that this has no user-visible
consequences in production builds, at the moment; but still an assertion
failure is a bad thing, so back-patch the fix.

Per bug #15694 from Roman Zharkov (via Alexander Lakhin)
and an independent report by Tushar Ahuja.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15694-74f2ca97e7044f7f@postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7d72ab20-c725-3ce2-f99d-4e64dd8a0de6@enterprisedb.com
2019-03-14 12:16:36 -04:00
Robert Haas 2455ab4884 Defend against leaks into RelationBuildPartitionDesc.
In normal builds, this isn't very important, because the leaks go
into fairly short-lived contexts, but under CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS,
this can result in leaking hundreds of megabytes into MessageContext,
which probably explains recent failures on hyrax.

This may or may not be the best long-term strategy for dealing
with this leak, but we can change it later if we come up with
something better.  For now, do this to make the buildfarm green
again (hopefully).  Commit 898e5e3290
seems to have exacerbated this problem for reasons that are not
quite clear, but I don't believe it's actually the cause.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoY3bRmGB6-DUnoVy5fJoreiBJ43rwMrQRCdPXuKt4Ykaw@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-14 12:14:47 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c6ff0b892c Refactor ParamListInfo initialization
There were six copies of identical nontrivial code.  Put it into a
function.
2019-03-14 13:30:09 +01:00
Tom Lane 401b87a24f Sync commentary in transam.h and bki.sgml.
Commit a6417078c missed updating some comments in transam.h about
reservation of high OIDs for development purposes.  Also tamp down
an over-optimistic comment there about how easy it'd be to change
FirstNormalObjectId.

Earlier, commit 09568ec3d failed to update bki.sgml for the split
between genbki.pl-assigned OIDs and those assigned during initdb.

Also fix genbki.pl so that it will complain if it overruns
that split.  It's possible that doing so would have no very bad
consequences, but that's no excuse for not detecting it.
2019-03-14 00:23:40 -04:00
Thomas Munro c6c9474aaf Use condition variables to wait for checkpoints.
Previously we used a polling/sleeping loop to wait for checkpoints
to begin and end, which leads to up to a couple hundred milliseconds
of needless thumb-twiddling.  Use condition variables instead.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGLY7sDe%2Bbg1K%3DbnEzOofGoo4bJHYh9%2BcDCXJepb6DQmLw%40mail.gmail.com
2019-03-14 10:59:33 +13:00
Peter Eisentraut f177660ab0 Include all columns in default names for foreign key constraints
When creating a name for a foreign key constraint when none is
specified, use all column names instead of only the first one, similar
to how it is already done for index names.

Author: Paul Martinez <hellopfm@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@2ndquadrant.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAF+2_SFjky6XRfLNRXpkG97W6PRbOO_mjAxqXzAAimU=c7w7_A@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-13 14:25:42 +01:00
Robert Haas bbb96c3704 Allow ALTER TABLE .. SET NOT NULL to skip provably unnecessary scans.
If existing CHECK or NOT NULL constraints preclude the presence
of nulls, we need not look to see whether any are present.

Sergei Kornilov, reviewed by Stephen Frost, Ildar Musin, David Rowley,
and by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/81911511895540@web58j.yandex.ru
2019-03-13 08:55:00 -04:00
Michael Paquier 6dd263cfaa Rename pg_verify_checksums to pg_checksums
The current tool name is too restrictive and focuses only on verifying
checksums.  As more options to control checksums for an offline cluster
are planned to be added, switch to a more generic name.  Documentation
as well as all past references to the tool are updated.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Michael Banck, Fabien Coelho, Seigei Kornilov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181221201616.GD4974@nighthawk.caipicrew.dd-dns.de
2019-03-13 10:43:20 +09:00
Peter Geoghegan 3f34283973 Correct obsolete nbtree page split comment.
Commit 40dae7ec53, which made the nbtree page split algorithm more
robust, made _bt_insert_parent() only unlock the right child of the
parent page before inserting a new downlink into the parent.  Update a
comment from the Berkeley days claiming that both left and right child
pages are unlocked before the new downlink actually gets inserted.

The claim that it is okay to release both locks early based on Lehman
and Yao's say-so never made much sense.  Lehman and Yao must sometimes
"couple" buffer locks across a pair of internal pages when relocating a
downlink, unlike the corresponding code within _bt_getstack().
2019-03-12 16:40:05 -07:00
Tom Lane f1d85aa98e Add support for hyperbolic functions, as well as log10().
The SQL:2016 standard adds support for the hyperbolic functions
sinh(), cosh(), and tanh().  POSIX has long required libm to
provide those functions as well as their inverses asinh(),
acosh(), atanh().  Hence, let's just expose the libm functions
to the SQL level.  As with the trig functions, we only implement
versions for float8, not numeric.

For the moment, we'll assume that all platforms actually do have
these functions; if experience teaches otherwise, some autoconf
effort may be needed.

SQL:2016 also adds support for base-10 logarithm, but with the
function name log10(), whereas the name we've long used is log().
Add aliases named log10() for the float8 and numeric versions.

Lætitia Avrot

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB_COdguG22LO=rnxDQ2DW1uzv8aQoUzyDQNJjrR4k00XSgm5w@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-12 15:55:09 -04:00
Tom Lane 3aa0395d4e Remove remaining hard-wired OID references in the initial catalog data.
In the v11-era commits that taught genbki.pl to resolve symbolic
OID references in the initial catalog data, we didn't bother to
make every last reference symbolic; some of the catalogs have so
few initial rows that it didn't seem worthwhile.

However, the new project policy that OIDs assigned by new patches
should be automatically renumberable changes this calculus.
A patch that wants to add a row in one of these catalogs would have
a problem when the OID it assigns gets renumbered.  Hence, do the
mop-up work needed to make all OID references in initial data be
symbolic, and establish an associated project policy that we'll
never again write a hard-wired OID reference there.

No catversion bump since the contents of postgres.bki aren't
actually changed by this commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzmMTGMcPuph4OvsO7Ykut0AOCF_i-=eaochT0dd2BN9CQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-12 12:30:35 -04:00
Tom Lane a6417078c4 Create a script that can renumber manually-assigned OIDs.
This commit adds a Perl script renumber_oids.pl, which can reassign a
range of manually-assigned OIDs to someplace else by modifying OID
fields of the catalog *.dat files and OID-assigning macros in the
catalog *.h files.

Up to now, we've encouraged new patches that need manually-assigned
OIDs to use OIDs just above the range of existing OIDs.  Predictably,
this leads to patches stepping on each others' toes, as whichever
one gets committed first creates an OID conflict that other patch
author(s) have to resolve manually.  With the availability of
renumber_oids.pl, we can eliminate a lot of this hassle.
The new project policy, therefore, is:

* Encourage new patches to use high OIDs (the documentation suggests
choosing a block of OIDs at random in 8000..9999).

* After feature freeze in each development cycle, run renumber_oids.pl
to move all such OIDs down to lower numbers, thus freeing the high OID
range for the next development cycle.

This plan should greatly reduce the risk of OID collisions between
concurrently-developed patches.  Also, if such a collision happens
anyway, we have the option to resolve it without much effort by doing
an off-schedule OID renumbering to get the first-committed patch out
of the way.  Or a patch author could use renumber_oids.pl to change
their patch's assignments without much pain.

This approach does put a premium on not hard-wiring any OID values
in places where renumber_oids.pl and genbki.pl can't fix them.
Project practice in that respect seems to be pretty good already,
but a follow-on patch will sand down some rough edges.

John Naylor and Tom Lane, per an idea of Peter Geoghegan's

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzmMTGMcPuph4OvsO7Ykut0AOCF_i-=eaochT0dd2BN9CQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-12 10:50:48 -04:00
Etsuro Fujita b5afdde6a7 Fix testing of parallel-safety of scan/join target.
In commit 960df2a971 ("Correctly assess parallel-safety of tlists when
SRFs are used."), the testing of scan/join target was done incorrectly,
which caused a plan-quality problem.  Backpatch through to v11 where
the aforementioned commit went in, since this is a regression from v10.

Author: Etsuro Fujita
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas and Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5C75303E.8020303@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-03-12 16:21:57 +09:00
Tom Lane 1a83a80a2f Allow fractional input values for integer GUCs, and improve rounding logic.
Historically guc.c has just refused examples like set work_mem = '30.1GB',
but it seems more useful for it to take that and round off the value to
some reasonable approximation of what the user said.  Just rounding to
the parameter's native unit would work, but it would lead to rather
silly-looking settings, such as 31562138kB for this example.  Instead
let's round to the nearest multiple of the next smaller unit (if any),
producing 30822MB.

Also, do the units conversion math in floating point and round to integer
(if needed) only at the end.  This produces saner results for inputs that
aren't exact multiples of the parameter's native unit, and removes another
difference in the behavior for integer vs. float parameters.

In passing, document the ability to use hex or octal input where it
ought to be documented.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1798.1552165479@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-11 19:13:55 -04:00
Tom Lane d9c5e9629b Give up on testing guc.c's behavior for "infinity" inputs.
Further buildfarm testing shows that on the machines that are failing
ac75959cd's test case, what we're actually getting from strtod("-infinity")
is a syntax error (endptr == value) not ERANGE at all.  This test case
is not worth carrying two sets of expected output for, so just remove it,
and revert commit b212245f9's misguided attempt to work around the platform
dependency.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1h33xk-0001Og-Gs@gemulon.postgresql.org
2019-03-11 17:53:09 -04:00
Andres Freund 8cacea7a72 Ensure sufficient alignment for ParallelTableScanDescData in BTShared.
Previously ParallelTableScanDescData was just a member in BTShared,
but after c2fe139c2 that doesn't guarantee sufficient alignment as
specific AMs might (are likely to) need atomic variables in the
struct.

One might think that MAXALIGNing would be sufficient, but as a
comment in shm_toc_allocate() explains, that's not enough. For now,
copy the hack described there.

For parallel sequential scans no such change is needed, as its
allocations go through shm_toc_allocate().

An alternative approach would have been to allocate the parallel scan
descriptor in a separate TOC entry, but there seems little benefit in
doing so.

Per buildfarm member dromedary.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190311203126.ty5gbfz42gjbm6i6@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-11 14:26:43 -07:00
Andres Freund c2fe139c20 tableam: Add and use scan APIs.
Too allow table accesses to be not directly dependent on heap, several
new abstractions are needed. Specifically:

1) Heap scans need to be generalized into table scans. Do this by
   introducing TableScanDesc, which will be the "base class" for
   individual AMs. This contains the AM independent fields from
   HeapScanDesc.

   The previous heap_{beginscan,rescan,endscan} et al. have been
   replaced with a table_ version.

   There's no direct replacement for heap_getnext(), as that returned
   a HeapTuple, which is undesirable for a other AMs. Instead there's
   table_scan_getnextslot().  But note that heap_getnext() lives on,
   it's still used widely to access catalog tables.

   This is achieved by new scan_begin, scan_end, scan_rescan,
   scan_getnextslot callbacks.

2) The portion of parallel scans that's shared between backends need
   to be able to do so without the user doing per-AM work. To achieve
   that new parallelscan_{estimate, initialize, reinitialize}
   callbacks are introduced, which operate on a new
   ParallelTableScanDesc, which again can be subclassed by AMs.

   As it is likely that several AMs are going to be block oriented,
   block oriented callbacks that can be shared between such AMs are
   provided and used by heap. table_block_parallelscan_{estimate,
   intiialize, reinitialize} as callbacks, and
   table_block_parallelscan_{nextpage, init} for use in AMs. These
   operate on a ParallelBlockTableScanDesc.

3) Index scans need to be able to access tables to return a tuple, and
   there needs to be state across individual accesses to the heap to
   store state like buffers. That's now handled by introducing a
   sort-of-scan IndexFetchTable, which again is intended to be
   subclassed by individual AMs (for heap IndexFetchHeap).

   The relevant callbacks for an AM are index_fetch_{end, begin,
   reset} to create the necessary state, and index_fetch_tuple to
   retrieve an indexed tuple.  Note that index_fetch_tuple
   implementations need to be smarter than just blindly fetching the
   tuples for AMs that have optimizations similar to heap's HOT - the
   currently alive tuple in the update chain needs to be fetched if
   appropriate.

   Similar to table_scan_getnextslot(), it's undesirable to continue
   to return HeapTuples. Thus index_fetch_heap (might want to rename
   that later) now accepts a slot as an argument. Core code doesn't
   have a lot of call sites performing index scans without going
   through the systable_* API (in contrast to loads of heap_getnext
   calls and working directly with HeapTuples).

   Index scans now store the result of a search in
   IndexScanDesc->xs_heaptid, rather than xs_ctup->t_self. As the
   target is not generally a HeapTuple anymore that seems cleaner.

To be able to sensible adapt code to use the above, two further
callbacks have been introduced:

a) slot_callbacks returns a TupleTableSlotOps* suitable for creating
   slots capable of holding a tuple of the AMs
   type. table_slot_callbacks() and table_slot_create() are based
   upon that, but have additional logic to deal with views, foreign
   tables, etc.

   While this change could have been done separately, nearly all the
   call sites that needed to be adapted for the rest of this commit
   also would have been needed to be adapted for
   table_slot_callbacks(), making separation not worthwhile.

b) tuple_satisfies_snapshot checks whether the tuple in a slot is
   currently visible according to a snapshot. That's required as a few
   places now don't have a buffer + HeapTuple around, but a
   slot (which in heap's case internally has that information).

Additionally a few infrastructure changes were needed:

I) SysScanDesc, as used by systable_{beginscan, getnext} et al. now
   internally uses a slot to keep track of tuples. While
   systable_getnext() still returns HeapTuples, and will so for the
   foreseeable future, the index API (see 1) above) now only deals with
   slots.

The remainder, and largest part, of this commit is then adjusting all
scans in postgres to use the new APIs.

Author: Andres Freund, Haribabu Kommi, Alvaro Herrera
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20160812231527.GA690404@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-11 12:46:41 -07:00
Amit Kapila a6e48da088 Fix typos in commit 8586bf7ed8.
Author: Amit Kapila
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1KNv1Mg2krf4E9ssWFnE=8A9mZ1VbVywXBZTFSzb+wP2g@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-11 09:58:46 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera af38498d4c Move hash_any prototype from access/hash.h to utils/hashutils.h
... as well as its implementation from backend/access/hash/hashfunc.c to
backend/utils/hash/hashfn.c.

access/hash is the place for the hash index AM, not really appropriate
for generic facilities, which is what hash_any is; having things the old
way meant that anything using hash_any had to include the AM's include
file, pointlessly polluting its namespace with unrelated, unnecessary
cruft.

Also move the HTEqual strategy number to access/stratnum.h from
access/hash.h.

To avoid breaking third-party extension code, add an #include
"utils/hashutils.h" to access/hash.h.  (An easily removed line by
committers who enjoy their asbestos suits to protect them from angry
extension authors.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/201901251935.ser5e4h6djt2@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-11 13:17:50 -03:00
Tom Lane b212245f96 In guc.c, ignore ERANGE errors from strtod().
Instead, just proceed with the infinity or zero result that it should
return for overflow/underflow.  This avoids a platform dependency,
in that various versions of strtod are inconsistent about whether they
signal ERANGE for a value that's specified as infinity.

It's possible this won't be enough to remove the buildfarm failures
we're seeing from ac75959cd, in which case I'll take out the infinity
test case that commit added.  But first let's see if we can fix it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1h33xk-0001Og-Gs@gemulon.postgresql.org
2019-03-11 11:25:26 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 3c06715447 Remove unused macro
Use was removed in 25ca5a9a54.
2019-03-11 09:29:50 +01:00
Michael Paquier f2d84a4a6b Adjust error message for partial writes in WAL segments
93473c6 has removed openLogOff, changing on the way the error message
which is used to report partial writes to WAL segments.  The
newly-introduced error message used the offset up to which the write has
happened, keeping always the same total length to write.  This changes
the error message so as the number of bytes left to write are reported.

Reported-by: Michael Paquier
Author: Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190306235251.GA17293@paquier.xyz
2019-03-11 09:31:25 +09:00
Tom Lane cbccac371c Reduce the default value of autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay to 2ms.
This is a better way to implement the desired change of increasing
autovacuum's default resource consumption.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/28720.1552101086@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-10 15:16:21 -04:00
Tom Lane 52985e4fea Revert "Increase the default vacuum_cost_limit from 200 to 2000"
This reverts commit bd09503e63.

Per discussion, it seems like what we should do instead is to
reduce the default value of autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay by the
same factor.  That's functionally equivalent as long as the
platform can accurately service the smaller delay request, which
should be true on anything released in the last 10 years or more.
And smaller, more-closely-spaced delays are better in terms of
providing a steady I/O load.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/28720.1552101086@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-10 15:05:25 -04:00
Tom Lane caf626b2cd Convert [autovacuum_]vacuum_cost_delay into floating-point GUCs.
This change makes it possible to specify sub-millisecond delays,
which work well on most modern platforms, though that was not true
when the cost-delay feature was designed.

To support this without breaking existing configuration entries,
improve guc.c to allow floating-point GUCs to have units.  Also,
allow "us" (microseconds) as an input/output unit for time-unit GUCs.
(It's not allowed as a base unit, at least not yet.)

Likewise change the autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay reloption to be
floating-point; this forces a catversion bump because the layout of
StdRdOptions changes.

This patch doesn't in itself change the default values or allowed
ranges for these parameters, and it should not affect the behavior
for any already-allowed setting for them.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1798.1552165479@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-10 15:01:39 -04:00
Tom Lane 28a65fc360 Include GUC's unit, if it has one, in out-of-range error messages.
This should reduce confusion in cases where we've applied a units
conversion, so that the number being reported (and the quoted range
limits) are in some other units than what the user gave in the
setting we're rejecting.

Some of the changes here assume that float GUCs can have units,
which isn't true just yet, but will be shortly.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3811.1552169665@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-10 13:18:17 -04:00
Tom Lane ac75959cdc Disallow NaN as a value for floating-point GUCs.
None of the code that uses GUC values is really prepared for them to
hold NaN, but parse_real() didn't have any defense against accepting
such a value.  Treat it the same as a syntax error.

I haven't attempted to analyze the exact consequences of setting any
of the float GUCs to NaN, but since they're quite unlikely to be good,
this seems like a back-patchable bug fix.

Note: we don't need an explicit test for +-Infinity because those will
be rejected by existing range checks.  I added a regression test for
that in HEAD, but not older branches because the spelling of the value
in the error message will be platform-dependent in branches where we
don't always use port/snprintf.c.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1798.1552165479@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-10 12:59:16 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov f2e403803f Support for INCLUDE attributes in GiST indexes
Similarly to B-tree, GiST index access method gets support of INCLUDE
attributes.  These attributes aren't used for tree navigation and aren't
present in non-leaf pages.  But they are present in leaf pages and can be
fetched during index-only scan.

The point of having INCLUDE attributes in GiST indexes is slightly different
from the point of having them in B-tree.  The main point of INCLUDE attributes
in B-tree is to define UNIQUE constraint over part of attributes enabled for
index-only scan.  In GiST the main point of INCLUDE attributes is to use
index-only scan for attributes, whose data types don't have GiST opclasses.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/73A1A452-AD5F-40D4-BD61-978622FF75C1%40yandex-team.ru
Author: Andrey Borodin, with small changes by me
Reviewed-by: Andreas Karlsson
2019-03-10 11:37:17 +03:00
Magnus Hagander 0516c61b75 Add new clientcert hba option verify-full
This allows a login to require both that the cn of the certificate
matches (like authentication type cert) *and* that another
authentication method (such as password or kerberos) succeeds as well.

The old value of clientcert=1 maps to the new clientcert=verify-ca,
clientcert=0 maps to the new clientcert=no-verify, and the new option
erify-full will add the validation of the CN.

Author: Julian Markwort, Marius Timmer
Reviewed by: Magnus Hagander, Thomas Munro
2019-03-09 12:19:47 -08:00
Magnus Hagander 6b9e875f72 Track block level checksum failures in pg_stat_database
This adds a column that counts how many checksum failures have occurred
on files belonging to a specific database. Both checksum failures
during normal backend processing and those created when a base backup
detects a checksum failure are counted.

Author: Magnus Hagander
Reviewed by: Julien Rouhaud
2019-03-09 10:47:30 -08:00
Noah Misch 3c5926301a Avoid some table rewrites for ALTER TABLE .. SET DATA TYPE timestamp.
When the timezone is UTC, timestamptz and timestamp are binary coercible
in both directions.  See b8a18ad485 and
c22ecc6562 for the previous attempt in
this problem space.  Skip the table rewrite; for now, continue to
needlessly rewrite any index on an affected column.

Reviewed by Simon Riggs and Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190226061450.GA1665944@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-03-08 20:16:27 -08:00
Michael Paquier 82a5649fb9 Tighten use of OpenTransientFile and CloseTransientFile
This fixes two sets of issues related to the use of transient files in
the backend:
1) OpenTransientFile() has been used in some code paths with read-write
flags while read-only is sufficient, so switch those calls to be
read-only where necessary.  These have been reported by Joe Conway.
2) When opening transient files, it is up to the caller to close the
file descriptors opened.  In error code paths, CloseTransientFile() gets
called to clean up things before issuing an error.  However in normal
exit paths, a lot of callers of CloseTransientFile() never actually
reported errors, which could leave a file descriptor open without
knowing about it.  This is an issue I complained about a couple of
times, but never had the courage to write and submit a patch, so here we
go.

Note that one frontend code path is impacted by this commit so as an
error is issued when fetching control file data, making backend and
frontend to be treated consistently.

Reported-by: Joe Conway, Michael Paquier
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, Georgios Kokolatos, Joe Conway
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190301023338.GD1348@paquier.xyz
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c49b69ec-e2f7-ff33-4f17-0eaa4f2cef27@joeconway.com
2019-03-09 08:50:55 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 2e616dee9e Fix crash with old libxml2
Certain libxml2 versions (such as the 2.7.6 commonly seen in older
distributions, but apparently only on x86_64) contain a bug that causes
xmlCopyNode, when called on a XML_DOCUMENT_NODE, to return a node that
xmlFreeNode crashes on.  Arrange to call xmlFreeDoc instead of
xmlFreeNode for those nodes.

Per buildfarm members lapwing and grison.

Author: Pavel Stehule, light editing by Álvaro.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190308024436.GA2374@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-08 19:13:25 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 251cf2e27b Fix minor deficiencies in XMLTABLE, xpath(), xmlexists()
Correctly process nodes of more types than previously.  In some cases,
nodes were being ignored (nothing was output); in other cases, trying to
return them resulted in errors about unrecognized nodes.  In yet other
cases, necessary escaping (of XML special characters) was not being
done.  Fix all those (as far as the authors could find) and add
regression tests cases verifying the new behavior.

I (Álvaro) was of two minds about backpatching these changes.  They do
seem bugfixes that would benefit most users of the affected functions;
but on the other hand it would change established behavior in minor
releases, so it seems prudent not to.

Authors: Pavel Stehule, Markus Winand, Chapman Flack
Discussion:
   https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRA6J25CtAZ2TuRvxK3gat7-bBUYh0rfE2yM7Hj9GD14Dg@mail.gmail.com
   https://postgr.es/m/8BDB0627-2105-4564-AA76-7849F028B96E@winand.at

The elephant in the room as pointed out by Chapman Flack, not fixed in
this commit, is that we still have XMLTABLE operating on XPath 1.0
instead of the standard-mandated XQuery (or even its subset XPath 2.0).
Fixing that is a major undertaking, however.
2019-03-07 18:16:34 -03:00
Tom Lane 1d33858406 Fix handling of targetlist SRFs when scan/join relation is known empty.
When we introduced separate ProjectSetPath nodes for application of
set-returning functions in v10, we inadvertently broke some cases where
we're supposed to recognize that the result of a subquery is known to be
empty (contain zero rows).  That's because IS_DUMMY_REL was just looking
for a childless AppendPath without allowing for a ProjectSetPath being
possibly stuck on top.  In itself, this didn't do anything much worse
than produce slightly worse plans for some corner cases.

Then in v11, commit 11cf92f6e rearranged things to allow the scan/join
targetlist to be applied directly to partial paths before they get
gathered.  But it inserted a short-circuit path for dummy relations
that was a little too short: it failed to insert a ProjectSetPath node
at all for a targetlist containing set-returning functions, resulting in
bogus "set-valued function called in context that cannot accept a set"
errors, as reported in bug #15669 from Madelaine Thibaut.

The best way to fix this mess seems to be to reimplement IS_DUMMY_REL
so that it drills down through any ProjectSetPath nodes that might be
there (and it seems like we'd better allow for ProjectionPath as well).

While we're at it, make it look at rel->pathlist not cheapest_total_path,
so that it gives the right answer independently of whether set_cheapest
has been done lately.  That dependency looks pretty shaky in the context
of code like apply_scanjoin_target_to_paths, and even if it's not broken
today it'd certainly bite us at some point.  (Nastily, unsafe use of the
old coding would almost always work; the hazard comes down to possibly
looking through a dangling pointer, and only once in a blue moon would
you find something there that resulted in the wrong answer.)

It now looks like it was a mistake for IS_DUMMY_REL to be a macro: if
there are any extensions using it, they'll continue to use the old
inadequate logic until they're recompiled, after which they'll fail
to load into server versions predating this fix.  Hopefully there are
few such extensions.

Having fixed IS_DUMMY_REL, the special path for dummy rels in
apply_scanjoin_target_to_paths is unnecessary as well as being wrong,
so we can just drop it.

Also change a few places that were testing for partitioned-ness of a
planner relation but not using IS_PARTITIONED_REL for the purpose; that
seems unsafe as well as inconsistent, plus it required an ugly hack in
apply_scanjoin_target_to_paths.

In passing, save a few cycles in apply_scanjoin_target_to_paths by
skipping processing of pre-existing paths for partitioned rels,
and do some cosmetic cleanup and comment adjustment in that function.

I renamed IS_DUMMY_PATH to IS_DUMMY_APPEND with the intention of breaking
any code that might be using it, since in almost every case that would
be wrong; IS_DUMMY_REL is what to be using instead.

In HEAD, also make set_dummy_rel_pathlist static (since it's no longer
used from outside allpaths.c), and delete is_dummy_plan, since it's no
longer used anywhere.

Back-patch as appropriate into v11 and v10.

Tom Lane and Julien Rouhaud

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15669-02fb3296cca26203@postgresql.org
2019-03-07 14:22:13 -05:00
Robert Haas 898e5e3290 Allow ATTACH PARTITION with only ShareUpdateExclusiveLock.
We still require AccessExclusiveLock on the partition itself, because
otherwise an insert that violates the newly-imposed partition
constraint could be in progress at the same time that we're changing
that constraint; only the lock level on the parent relation is
weakened.

To make this safe, we have to cope with (at least) three separate
problems. First, relevant DDL might commit while we're in the process
of building a PartitionDesc.  If so, find_inheritance_children() might
see a new partition while the RELOID system cache still has the old
partition bound cached, and even before invalidation messages have
been queued.  To fix that, if we see that the pg_class tuple seems to
be missing or to have a null relpartbound, refetch the value directly
from the table. We can't get the wrong value, because DETACH PARTITION
still requires AccessExclusiveLock throughout; if we ever want to
change that, this will need more thought. In testing, I found it quite
difficult to hit even the null-relpartbound case; the race condition
is extremely tight, but the theoretical risk is there.

Second, successive calls to RelationGetPartitionDesc might not return
the same answer.  The query planner will get confused if lookup up the
PartitionDesc for a particular relation does not return a consistent
answer for the entire duration of query planning.  Likewise, query
execution will get confused if the same relation seems to have a
different PartitionDesc at different times.  Invent a new
PartitionDirectory concept and use it to ensure consistency.  This
ensures that a single invocation of either the planner or the executor
sees the same view of the PartitionDesc from beginning to end, but it
does not guarantee that the planner and the executor see the same
view.  Since this allows pointers to old PartitionDesc entries to
survive even after a relcache rebuild, also postpone removing the old
PartitionDesc entry until we're certain no one is using it.

For the most part, it seems to be OK for the planner and executor to
have different views of the PartitionDesc, because the executor will
just ignore any concurrently added partitions which were unknown at
plan time; those partitions won't be part of the inheritance
expansion, but invalidation messages will trigger replanning at some
point.  Normally, this happens by the time the very next command is
executed, but if the next command acquires no locks and executes a
prepared query, it can manage not to notice until a new transaction is
started.  We might want to tighten that up, but it's material for a
separate patch.  There would still be a small window where a query
that started just after an ATTACH PARTITION command committed might
fail to notice its results -- but only if the command starts before
the commit has been acknowledged to the user. All in all, the warts
here around serializability seem small enough to be worth accepting
for the considerable advantage of being able to add partitions without
a full table lock.

Although in general the consequences of new partitions showing up
between planning and execution are limited to the query not noticing
the new partitions, run-time partition pruning will get confused in
that case, so that's the third problem that this patch fixes.
Run-time partition pruning assumes that indexes into the PartitionDesc
are stable between planning and execution.  So, add code so that if
new partitions are added between plan time and execution time, the
indexes stored in the subplan_map[] and subpart_map[] arrays within
the plan's PartitionedRelPruneInfo get adjusted accordingly.  There
does not seem to be a simple way to generalize this scheme to cope
with partitions that are removed, mostly because they could then get
added back again with different bounds, but it works OK for added
partitions.

This code does not try to ensure that every backend participating in
a parallel query sees the same view of the PartitionDesc.  That
currently doesn't matter, because we never pass PartitionDesc
indexes between backends.  Each backend will ignore the concurrently
added partitions which it notices, and it doesn't matter if different
backends are ignoring different sets of concurrently added partitions.
If in the future that matters, for example because we allow writes in
parallel query and want all participants to do tuple routing to the same
set of partitions, the PartitionDirectory concept could be improved to
share PartitionDescs across backends.  There is a draft patch to
serialize and restore PartitionDescs on the thread where this patch
was discussed, which may be a useful place to start.

Patch by me.  Thanks to Alvaro Herrera, David Rowley, Simon Riggs,
Amit Langote, and Michael Paquier for discussion, and to Alvaro
Herrera for some review.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmobt2upbSocvvDej3yzokd7AkiT+PvgFH+a9-5VV1oJNSQ@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoZE0r9-cyA-aY6f8WFEROaDLLL7Vf81kZ8MtFCkxpeQSw@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoY13KQZF-=HNTrt9UYWYx3_oYOQpu9ioNT49jGgiDpUEA@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-07 11:13:12 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera eaaa5986ad Fix the BY {REF,VALUE} clause of XMLEXISTS/XMLTABLE
This clause is used to indicate the passing mode of a XML document, but
we were doing it wrong: we accepted BY REF and ignored it, and rejected
BY VALUE as a syntax error.  The reality, however, is that documents are
always passed BY VALUE, so rejecting that clause was silly.  Change
things so that we accept BY VALUE.

BY REF continues to be accepted, and continues to be ignored.

Author: Chapman Flack
Reviewed-by: Pavel Stehule
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5C297BB7.9070509@anastigmatix.net
2019-03-07 11:20:35 -03:00
Thomas Munro 91595f9d49 Drop the vestigial "smgr" type.
Before commit 3fa2bb31 this type appeared in the catalogs to
select which of several block storage mechanisms each relation
used.

New features under development propose to revive the concept of
different block storage managers for new kinds of data accessed
via bufmgr.c, but don't need to put references to them in the
catalogs.  So, avoid useless maintenance work on this type by
dropping it.  Update some regression tests that were referencing
it where any type would do.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BDE0mmiBZMtZyvwWtgv1sZCniSVhXYsXkvJ_Wo%2B83vvw%40mail.gmail.com
2019-03-07 15:44:04 +13:00
Andres Freund 277cb78983 Don't reuse slots between root and partition in ON CONFLICT ... UPDATE.
Until now the the slot to store the conflicting tuple, and the result
of the ON CONFLICT SET, where reused between partitions. That
necessitated changing slots descriptor when switching partitions.

Besides the overhead of switching descriptors on a slot (which
requires memory allocations and prevents JITing), that's importantly
also problematic for tableam. There individual partitions might belong
to different tableams, needing different kinds of slots.

In passing also fix ExecOnConflictUpdate to clear the existing slot at
exit. Otherwise that slot could continue to hold a pin till the query
ends, which could be far too long if the input data set is large, and
there's no further conflicts. While previously also problematic, it's
now more important as there will be more such slots when partitioned.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas, David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-06 15:43:33 -08:00
Andres Freund d16a74c20c Fix equalfuncs for accessMethod addition in 8586bf7ed8.
In a complete brown paper bag moment, I forgot to include equalfuncs
in my previous fix of copy/out/readfuncs.  Thanks Tom for noticing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1659.1551903210@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-06 13:04:09 -08:00
Andrew Dunstan 342cb650e0 Don't log incomplete startup packet if it's empty
This will stop logging cases where, for example, a monitor opens a
connection and immediately closes it. If the packet contains any data an
incomplete packet will still be logged.

Author: Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a1379a72-2958-1ed0-ef51-09a21219b155@2ndQuadrant.com
2019-03-06 15:36:41 -05:00
Andres Freund b172342321 Fix copy/out/readfuncs for accessMethod addition in 8586bf7ed8.
This includes a catversion bump, as IntoClause is theoretically
speaking part of storable rules. In practice I don't think that can
happen, but there's no reason to be stingy here.

Per buildfarm member calliphoridae.
2019-03-06 11:55:28 -08:00
Andres Freund 8586bf7ed8 tableam: introduce table AM infrastructure.
This introduces the concept of table access methods, i.e. CREATE
  ACCESS METHOD ... TYPE TABLE and
  CREATE TABLE ... USING (storage-engine).
No table access functionality is delegated to table AMs as of this
commit, that'll be done in following commits.

Subsequent commits will incrementally abstract table access
functionality to be routed through table access methods. That change
is too large to be reviewed & committed at once, so it'll be done
incrementally.

Docs will be updated at the end, as adding them incrementally would
likely make them less coherent, and definitely is a lot more work,
without a lot of benefit.

Table access methods are specified similar to index access methods,
i.e. pg_am.amhandler returns, as INTERNAL, a pointer to a struct with
callbacks. In contrast to index AMs that struct needs to live as long
as a backend, typically that's achieved by just returning a pointer to
a constant struct.

Psql's \d+ now displays a table's access method. That can be disabled
with HIDE_TABLEAM=true, which is mainly useful so regression tests can
be run against different AMs.  It's quite possible that this behaviour
still needs to be fine tuned.

For now it's not allowed to set a table AM for a partitioned table, as
we've not resolved how partitions would inherit that. Disallowing
allows us to introduce, if we decide that's the way forward, such a
behaviour without a compatibility break.

Catversion bumped, to add the heap table AM and references to it.

Author: Haribabu Kommi, Andres Freund, Alvaro Herrera, Dimitri Golgov and others
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20160812231527.GA690404@alvherre.pgsql
    https://postgr.es/m/20190107235616.6lur25ph22u5u5av@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20190304234700.w5tmhducs5wxgzls@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-06 09:54:38 -08:00
Andres Freund f217761856 Fix bug in clearing of virtual tuple slot.
I broke/typoed this in 4da597edf1. Astonishingly this mostly
doesn't cause breakage, except when trying to change the tuple
descriptor of a slot (because TTS_FLAG_FIXED is assumed to be set).

Author: Andres Freund
2019-03-06 09:54:38 -08:00
Robert Haas 93473c6ac8 Removed unused variable, openLogOff.
Antonin Houska

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/30413.1551870730@localhost
2019-03-06 09:44:08 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan bd09503e63 Increase the default vacuum_cost_limit from 200 to 2000
The original 200 default value was set back in f425b605f4 when the cost
delay settings were first added.  Hardware has improved quite a bit since
then and we've also made improvements such as sorting buffers during
checkpoints (9cd00c457e) which should result in less random writes.

This low default value was reportedly causing problems with badly
configured servers and in the absence of a native method to remove
excessive bloat from tables without incurring an AccessExclusiveLock, this
often made cleaning up the damage caused by badly configured auto-vacuums
difficult.

It seems more likely that someone will notice that auto-vacuum is running
too quickly than too slowly, so let's go all out and multiple the default
value for the setting by 10.  With the default vacuum_cost_page_dirty and
autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay (assuming a page size of 8192 bytes), this
allows autovacuum a theoretical maximum dirty write rate of around 39MB/s
instead of just 3.9MB/s.

Author: David Rowley

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_YbXC2qTMPyCbmsPiKvZYwpuQNQMohiRXLj1r=8_rYvw@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-06 09:10:12 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas fe280694d0 Scan GiST indexes in physical order during VACUUM.
Scanning an index in physical order is faster than walking it in logical
order, because sequential I/O is faster than random I/O. The idea and code
structure is borrowed from B-tree vacuum code.

Patch by Andrey Borodin, with changes by me. Based on early work by
Konstantin Kuznetsov, although the patch has been rewritten multiple times
since his original version.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/1B9FAC6F-FA19-4A24-8C1B-F4F574844892%40yandex-team.ru
2019-03-05 15:19:48 +02:00
Peter Geoghegan 35bc0ec7c8 Note case where nbtree VACUUM finishes splits.
The nbtree README claims that VACUUM can never finish interrupted page
splits by design.  That isn't entirely accurate, though.  Note an
exception to the general rule.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wz=_Xvv8byzK_LvY4ci76OgsHCQzoKF7We8yG9waO7j6rA@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-04 17:57:36 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan 72c7c4e386 Correct obsolete nbtree page split WAL comment.
Commit 2c03216d83, which revamped the WAL record format, failed to
update a comment referencing the old API.  Update the comment.
2019-03-04 12:32:40 -08:00
Alvaro Herrera b96f6b1948 pg_partition_ancestors
Adds another introspection feature for partitioning, necessary for
further psql patches.

Reviewed-by: Michaël Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190226222757.GA31622@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-04 16:14:29 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut 278584b526 Remove volatile from latch API
This was no longer useful since the latch functions use memory
barriers already, which are also compiler barriers, and volatile does
not help with cross-process access.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20190218202511.qsfpuj5sy4dbezcw%40alap3.anarazel.de#18783c27d73e9e40009c82f6e0df0974
2019-03-04 11:30:41 +01:00
Tom Lane 80b9e9c466 Improve performance of index-only scans with many index columns.
StoreIndexTuple was a loop over index_getattr, which is O(N^2)
if the index columns are variable-width, and the performance
impact is already quite visible at ten columns.  The obvious
move is to replace that with a call to index_deform_tuple ...
but that's *also* a loop over index_getattr.  Improve it to
be essentially a clone of heap_deform_tuple.

(There are a few other places that loop over all index columns
with index_getattr, and perhaps should be changed likewise,
but most of them don't seem performance-critical.  Anyway, the
rest would mostly only be interested in the index key columns,
which there aren't likely to be so many of.  Wide index tuples
are a new thing with INCLUDE.)

Konstantin Knizhnik

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/e06b2d27-04fc-5c0e-bb8c-ecd72aa24959@postgrespro.ru
2019-03-03 16:57:14 -05:00
Dean Rasheed ed4653db8c Further fixing for multi-row VALUES lists for updatable views.
Previously, rewriteTargetListIU() generated a list of attribute
numbers from the targetlist, which were passed to rewriteValuesRTE(),
which expected them to contain the same number of entries as there are
columns in the VALUES RTE, and to be in the same order. That was fine
when the target relation was a table, but for an updatable view it
could be broken in at least three different ways ---
rewriteTargetListIU() could insert additional targetlist entries for
view columns with defaults, the view columns could be in a different
order from the columns of the underlying base relation, and targetlist
entries could be merged together when assigning to elements of an
array or composite type. As a result, when recursing to the base
relation, the list of attribute numbers generated from the rewritten
targetlist could no longer be relied upon to match the columns of the
VALUES RTE. We got away with that prior to 41531e42d3 because it used
to always be the case that rewriteValuesRTE() did nothing for the
underlying base relation, since all DEFAULTS had already been replaced
when it was initially invoked for the view, but that was incorrect
because it failed to apply defaults from the base relation.

Fix this by examining the targetlist entries more carefully and
picking out just those that are simple Vars referencing the VALUES
RTE. That's sufficient for the purposes of rewriteValuesRTE(), which
is only responsible for dealing with DEFAULT items in the VALUES
RTE. Any DEFAULT item in the VALUES RTE that doesn't have a matching
simple-Var-assignment in the targetlist is an error which we complain
about, but in theory that ought to be impossible.

Additionally, move this code into rewriteValuesRTE() to give a clearer
separation of concerns between the 2 functions. There is no need for
rewriteTargetListIU() to know about the details of the VALUES RTE.

While at it, fix the comment for rewriteValuesRTE() which claimed that
it doesn't support array element and field assignments --- that hasn't
been true since a3c7a993d5 (9.6 and later).

Back-patch to all supported versions, with minor differences for the
pre-9.6 branches, which don't support array element and field
assignments to the same column in multi-row VALUES lists.

Reviewed by Amit Langote.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15623-5d67a46788ec8b7f@postgresql.org
2019-03-03 10:51:13 +00:00
Michael Paquier 3422955735 Consider only relations part of partition trees in partition functions
This changes the partition functions so as tables and indexes which are
not part of partition trees are handled the same way as what is done for
undefined objects and unsupported relkinds: pg_partition_tree() returns
no rows and pg_partition_root() returns a NULL result.  Hence,
partitioned tables, partitioned indexes and relations whose flag
pg_class.relispartition is set are considered as valid objects to
process.

Previously, tables and indexes not included in a partition tree were
processed the same way as a partition or a partitioned table, which
caused the functions to return inconsistent results for inherited
tables, especially when inheriting from multiple tables.

Reported-by: Álvaro Herrera
Author: Amit Langote, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190228193203.GA26151@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-02 18:18:59 +09:00
Andres Freund 70b9bda65f Use a virtual rather than a heap slot in two places where that suffices.
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-01 17:26:43 -08:00
Tom Lane 65ce07e020 Teach optimizer's predtest.c more things about ScalarArrayOpExpr.
In particular, make it possible to prove/refute "x IS NULL" and
"x IS NOT NULL" predicates from a clause involving a ScalarArrayOpExpr
even when we are unable or unwilling to deconstruct the expression
into an AND/OR tree.  This avoids a former unexpected degradation of
plan quality when the size of an ARRAY[] expression or array constant
exceeded the arbitrary MAX_SAOP_ARRAY_SIZE limit.  For IS-NULL proofs,
we don't really care about the values of the individual array elements;
at most, we care whether there are any, and for some common cases we
needn't even know that.

The main user-visible effect of this is to let the optimizer recognize
applicability of partial indexes with "x IS NOT NULL" predicates to
queries with "x IN (array)" clauses in some cases where it previously
failed to recognize that.  The structure of predtest.c is such that a
bunch of related proofs will now also succeed, but they're probably
much less useful in the wild.

James Coleman, reviewed by David Rowley

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAaqYe8yKSvzbyu8w-dThRs9aTFMwrFxn_BkTYeXgjqe3CbNjg@mail.gmail.com
2019-03-01 17:14:17 -05:00
Andres Freund ad0bda5d24 Store tuples for EvalPlanQual in slots, rather than as HeapTuples.
For the upcoming pluggable table access methods it's quite
inconvenient to store tuples as HeapTuples, as that'd require
converting tuples from a their native format into HeapTuples. Instead
use slots to manage epq tuples.

To fit into that scheme, change the foreign data wrapper callback
RefetchForeignRow, to store the tuple in a slot. Insist on using the
caller provided slot, so it conveniently can be stored in the
corresponding EPQ slot.  As there is no in core user of
RefetchForeignRow, that change was done blindly, but we plan to test
that soon.

To avoid duplicating that work for row locks, move row locks to just
directly use the EPQ slots - it previously temporarily stored tuples
in LockRowsState.lr_curtuples, but that doesn't seem beneficial, given
we'd possibly end up with a significant number of additional slots.

The behaviour of es_epqTupleSet[rti -1] is now checked by
es_epqTupleSlot[rti -1] != NULL, as that is distinguishable from a
slot containing an empty tuple.

Author: Andres Freund, Haribabu Kommi, Ashutosh Bapat
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-03-01 10:37:57 -08:00
Amit Kapila 9c32e4c350 Clear the local map when not used.
After commit b0eaa4c51b, we use a local map of pages to find the required
space for small relations.  We do clear this map when we have found a block
with enough free space, when we extend the relation, or on transaction
abort so that it can be used next time.  However, we miss to clear it when
we didn't find any pages to try from the map which leads to an assertion
failure when we later tried to use it after relation extension.

In the passing, I have improved some comments in this area.

Reported-by: Tom Lane based on buildfarm results
Author: Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: John Naylor
Tested-by: Kuntal Ghosh
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/32368.1551114120@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-03-01 07:38:47 +05:30
Michael Paquier 0f3cdf873e Make pg_partition_tree return no rows on unsupported and undefined objects
The function was tweaked so as it returned one row full of NULLs when
working on an unsupported relkind or an undefined object as of cc53123,
and after discussion with Amit and Álvaro it looks more natural to make
it return no rows.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190227184808.GA17357@alvherre.pgsql
2019-03-01 09:07:07 +09:00
Andres Freund 253655116b Don't superfluously materialize slot after DELETE from an FDW.
Previously that was needed to safely store the table oid, but after
b8d71745ea that's not necessary anymore.

Author: Andres Freund
2019-02-28 14:54:12 -08:00
Andres Freund 8f0577386e Don't force materializing when copying a buffer tuple table slot.
After 5408e233f0 it's not necessary to force materializing the
target slot when copying from one buffer slot to another. Previously
that was required because the HeapTupleData portion of the source slot
wasn't guaranteed to stay valid long enough, but now we can simply
copy that part into the destination slot's tupdata.

Author: Andres Freund
2019-02-28 14:54:12 -08:00
Andres Freund f414abd62d Allow buffer tuple table slots to materialize after ExecStoreVirtualTuple().
While not common, it can be useful to store a virtual tuple into a
buffer tuple table slot, and then materialize that slot. So far we've
asserted out, which surprisingly wasn't a problem for anything in
core. But that seems fragile, and it also breaks redis_fdw after
ff11e7f4b9.

Thus, allow materializing a virtual tuple stored in a buffer tuple
table slot.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20190227181621.xholonj7ff7ohxsg@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-02-28 12:28:03 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut 3f61999cc9 Merge near-duplicate code in RI triggers
Merge ri_setnull and ri_setdefault into one function ri_set.  These
functions were to a large part identical.

This is a continuation in spirit of
4797f9b519.

Author: Corey Huinker <corey.huinker@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/0ccdd3e1-10b0-dd05-d8a7-183507c11eb1%402ndquadrant.com
2019-02-28 20:35:55 +01:00
Tom Lane c94fb8e8ac Standardize some more loops that chase down parallel lists.
We have forboth() and forthree() macros that simplify iterating
through several parallel lists, but not everyplace that could
reasonably use those was doing so.  Also invent forfour() and
forfive() macros to do the same for four or five parallel lists,
and use those where applicable.

The immediate motivation for doing this is to reduce the number
of ad-hoc lnext() calls, to reduce the footprint of a WIP patch.
However, it seems like good cleanup and error-proofing anyway;
the places that were combining forthree() with a manually iterated
loop seem particularly illegible and bug-prone.

There was some speculation about restructuring related parsetree
representations to reduce the need for parallel list chasing of
this sort.  Perhaps that's a win, or perhaps not, but in any case
it would be considerably more invasive than this patch; and it's
not particularly related to my immediate goal of improving the
List infrastructure.  So I'll leave that question for another day.

Patch by me; thanks to David Rowley for review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11587.1550975080@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-28 14:25:01 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 0a271df705 Clean up some variable names in ri_triggers.c
There was a mix of old_slot/oldslot, new_slot/newslot.  Since we've
changed everything from row to slot, we might as well take this
opportunity to clean this up.

Also update some more comments for the slot change.
2019-02-28 15:29:00 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 554ebf6878 Compact for loops
Declare loop variable in for loop, for readability and to save space.

Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker <corey.huinker@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/0ccdd3e1-10b0-dd05-d8a7-183507c11eb1%402ndquadrant.com
2019-02-28 11:06:33 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 05d604718f Reduce comments
Reduce the vertical space used by comments in ri_triggers.c, making
the file longer and more tedious to read than it needs to be.  Update
some comments to use a more common style.

Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker <corey.huinker@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/0ccdd3e1-10b0-dd05-d8a7-183507c11eb1%402ndquadrant.com
2019-02-28 11:06:33 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 0afdecc1e5 Remove unnecessary unused MATCH PARTIAL code
ri_triggers.c spends a lot of space catering to a not-yet-implemented
MATCH PARTIAL option.  An actual implementation would probably not use
the existing code structure anyway, so let's just simplify this for
now.

First, have ri_FetchConstraintInfo() check that riinfo->confmatchtype
is valid.  Then we don't have to repeat that everywhere.

In the various referential action functions, we don't need to pay
attention to the match type at all right now, so remove all that code.
A future MATCH PARTIAL implementation would probably have some
conditions added to the present code, but it won't need an entirely
separate switch branch in each case.

In RI_FKey_fk_upd_check_required(), reorganize the code to make it
much simpler.

Reviewed-by: Corey Huinker <corey.huinker@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/0ccdd3e1-10b0-dd05-d8a7-183507c11eb1%402ndquadrant.com
2019-02-28 11:06:33 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 22c0d52b8d Update comment
for ff11e7f4b9
2019-02-28 10:43:00 +01:00
Michael Paquier b3a156858a Improve documentation of data_sync_retry
Reflecting an updated parameter value requires a server restart, which
was not mentioned in the documentation and in postgresql.conf.sample.

Reported-by: Thomas Poty
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15659-0cd812f13027a2d8@postgresql.org
2019-02-28 11:02:11 +09:00
Andres Freund 5963b29e03 Initialize variable to silence compiler warning.
After ff11e7f4b9 Tom's compiler warns about accessing a potentially
uninitialized rInfo. That's not actually possible, but it's
understandable the compiler would get this wrong. NULL initialize too.

Reported-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11199.1551285318@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-27 09:14:34 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut 6ae578a91e Set fallback_application_name for a walreceiver to cluster_name
By default, the fallback_application_name for a physical walreceiver
is "walreceiver".  This means that multiple standbys cannot be
distinguished easily on a primary, for example in pg_stat_activity or
synchronous_standby_names.

If cluster_name is set, use that for fallback_application_name in the
walreceiver.  (If it's not set, it remains "walreceiver".)  If someone
set cluster_name to identify their instance, we might as well use that
by default to identify the node remotely as well.  It's still possible
to specify another application_name in primary_conninfo explicitly.

Reviewed-by: Euler Taveira <euler@timbira.com.br>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1257eaee-4874-e791-e83a-46720c72cac7@2ndquadrant.com
2019-02-27 10:59:25 +01:00
Michael Paquier 414a9d3cf3 Fix memory leak when inserting tuple at relation creation for CTAS
The leak has been introduced by 763f2ed which has addressed the problem
for transient tables, and forgot CREATE TABLE AS which shares a similar
logic when receiving a new tuple to store into the newly-created
relation.

Author: Jeff Janes
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU=1xZXtz3mziPEPD2Fubbas4G2RWkZm5HHABtfKVcbu1=Sg@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-27 14:14:06 +09:00
Andres Freund ff11e7f4b9 Use slots in trigger infrastructure, except for the actual invocation.
In preparation for abstracting table storage, convert trigger.c to
track tuples in slots. Which also happens to make code calling
triggers simpler.

As the calling interface for triggers themselves is not changed in
this patch, HeapTuples still are extracted from the slot at that
time. But that's handled solely inside trigger.c, not visible to
callers. It's quite likely that we'll want to revise the external
trigger interface, but that's a separate large project.

As part of this work the slots used for old/new/return tuples are
moved from EState into ResultRelInfo, as different updated tables
might need different slots. The slots are now also now created
on-demand, which is good both from an efficiency POV, but also makes
the modifying code simpler.

Author: Andres Freund, Amit Khandekar and Ashutosh Bapat
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-02-26 20:31:38 -08:00
Andres Freund b8d71745ea Store table oid and tuple's tid in tuple slots directly.
After the introduction of tuple table slots all table AMs need to
support returning the table oid of the tuple stored in a slot created
by said AM. It does not make sense to re-implement that in every AM,
therefore move handling of table OIDs into the TupleTableSlot
structure itself.  It's possible that we, at a later date, might want
to get rid of HeapTupleData.t_tableOid entirely, but doing so before
the abstractions for table AMs are integrated turns out to be too
hard, so delay that for now.

Similarly, every AM needs to support the concept of a tuple
identifier (tid / item pointer) for its tuples. It's quite possible
that we'll generalize the exact form of a tid at a future point (to
allow for things like index organized tables), but for now many parts
of the code know about tids, so there's not much point in abstracting
tids away. Therefore also move into slot (rather than providing API to
set/get the tid associated with the tuple in a slot).

Once table AM includes insert/updating/deleting tuples, the
responsibility to set the correct tid after such an action will move
into that. After that change, code doing such modifications, should
not have to deal with HeapTuples directly anymore.

Author: Andres Freund, Haribabu Kommi and Ashutosh Bapat
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-02-26 20:31:16 -08:00
Andres Freund 8aa02b52db Add ExecStorePinnedBufferHeapTuple.
This allows to avoid an unnecessary pin/unpin cycle when storing a
tuple in an already pinned buffer into a slot, when the pin isn't
further needed at the call site.

Only a single caller for now (to ensure coverage), but upcoming
patches will increase use of the new function.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-02-26 17:59:01 -08:00
Robert Haas f4b6341d5f Change lock acquisition order in expand_inherited_rtentry.
Previously, this function acquired locks in the order using
find_all_inheritors(), which locks the children of each table that it
processes in ascending OID order, and which processes the inheritance
hierarchy as a whole in a breadth-first fashion.  Now, it processes
the inheritance hierarchy in a depth-first fashion, and at each level
it proceeds in the order in which tables appear in the PartitionDesc.
If table inheritance rather than table partitioning is used, the old
order is preserved.

This change moves the locking of any given partition much closer to
the code that actually expands that partition.  This seems essential
if we ever want to allow concurrent DDL to add or remove partitions,
because if the set of partitions can change, we must use the same data
to decide which partitions to lock as we do to decide which partitions
to expand; otherwise, we might expand a partition that we haven't
locked.  It should hopefully also facilitate efforts to postpone
inheritance expansion or locking for performance reasons, because
there's really no way to postpone locking some partitions if
we're blindly locking them all using find_all_inheritors().

The only downside of this change which is known to me is that it
further deviates from the principle that we should always lock the
inheritance hierarchy in find_all_inheritors() order to avoid deadlock
risk.  However, we've already crossed that bridge in commit
9eefba181f and there are futher patches
pending that make similar changes, so this isn't really giving up
anything that we haven't surrendered already -- and it seems entirely
worth it, given the performance benefits some of those changes seem
likely to bring.

Patch by me; thanks to David Rowley for discussion of these issues.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_eEYVEq5tM8sm1k-HOwG0AyCPwX54XG9x4w0zy_N4Q_Q@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoZUwPf_uanjF==gTGBMJrn8uCq52XYvAEorNkLrUdoawg@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-26 12:22:57 -05:00
Peter Geoghegan 2ab23445bc Remove unneeded argument from _bt_getstackbuf().
_bt_getstackbuf() is called at exactly two points following commit
efada2b8e9 (one call site is concerned with page splits, while the
other is concerned with page deletion).  The parent buffer returned by
_bt_getstackbuf() is write-locked in both cases.  Remove the 'access'
argument and make _bt_getstackbuf() assume that callers require a
write-lock.
2019-02-25 17:47:43 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan 067786cea0 Correct obsolete nbtree page deletion comment.
Commit efada2b8e9, which made the nbtree page deletion algorithm more
robust, removed _bt_getstackbuf() calls from _bt_pagedel().  It failed
to update a comment that referenced the earlier approach.  Update the
comment to explain that the _bt_getstackbuf() page deletion call site
mirrors the only other remaining _bt_getstackbuf() call site, which is
reached during page splits.
2019-02-25 16:54:18 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut bc09d5e4cc Remove unnecessary use of PROCEDURAL
Remove some unnecessary, legacy-looking use of the PROCEDURAL keyword
before LANGUAGE.  We mostly don't use this anymore, so some of these
look a bit old.

There is still some use in pg_dump, which is harder to remove because
it's baked into the archive format, so I'm not touching that.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/2330919b-62d9-29ac-8de3-58c024fdcb96@2ndquadrant.com
2019-02-25 08:38:59 +01:00
Michael Paquier effe7d9552 Make release of 2PC identifier and locks consistent in COMMIT PREPARED
When preparing a transaction in two-phase commit, a dummy PGPROC entry
holding the GID used for the transaction is registered, which gets
released once COMMIT PREPARED is run.  Prior releasing its shared memory
state, all the locks taken in the prepared transaction are released
using a dedicated set of callbacks (pgstat and multixact having similar
callbacks), which may cause the locks to be released before the GID is
set free.

Hence, there is a small window where lock conflicts could happen, for
example:
- Transaction A releases its locks, still holding its GID in shared
memory.
- Transaction B held a lock which conflicted with locks of transaction
A.
- Transaction B continues its processing, reusing the same GID as
transaction A.
- Transaction B fails because of a conflicting GID, already in use by
transaction A.

This commit changes the shared memory state release so as post-commit
callbacks and predicate lock cleanup happen consistently with the shared
memory state cleanup for the dummy PGPROC entry.  The race window is
small and 2PC had this issue from the start, so no backpatch is done.
On top if that fixes discussed involved ABI breakages, which are not
welcome in stable branches.

Reported-by: Oleksii Kliukin, Ildar Musin
Diagnosed-by: Oleksii Kliukin, Ildar Musin
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada, Oleksii Kliukin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/BF9B38A4-2BFF-46E8-BA87-A2D00A8047A6@hintbits.com
2019-02-25 14:19:34 +09:00
Thomas Munro 29ddb548f6 Fix inconsistent out-of-memory error reporting in dsa.c.
Commit 16be2fd1 introduced the flag DSA_ALLOC_NO_OOM to control whether
the DSA allocator would raise an error or return InvalidDsaPointer on
failure to allocate.  One edge case was not handled correctly: if we
fail to allocate an internal "span" object for a large allocation, we
would always return InvalidDsaPointer regardless of the flag; a caller
not expecting that could then dereference a null pointer.

This is a plausible explanation for a one-off report of a segfault.

Remove a redundant pair of braces so that all three stanzas that handle
DSA_ALLOC_NO_OOM match in style, for visual consistency.

While fixing inconsistencies, if FreePageManagerGet() can't supply the
pages that our book-keeping says it should be able to supply, then we
should always report a FATAL error.  Previously we treated that as a
regular allocation failure in one code path, but as a FATAL condition
in another.

Back-patch to 10, where dsa.c landed.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Jakub Glapa
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2oPqXxyWQ-1o60tpOLrwkw=VpgNXqqF1VN2EyO9zKGQw@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-25 11:11:40 +13:00
Tom Lane 9e138a401d Fix ecpg bugs caused by missing semicolons in the backend grammar.
The Bison documentation clearly states that a semicolon is required
after every grammar rule, and our scripts that generate ecpg's
grammar from the backend's implicitly assumed this is true.  But it
turns out that only ancient versions of Bison actually enforce that.
There have been a couple of rules without trailing semicolons in
gram.y for some time, and as a consequence, ecpg's grammar was faulty
and produced wrong output for the affected statements.

To fix, add the missing semis, and add some cross-checks to ecpg's
scripts so that they'll bleat if we mess this up again.

The cases that were broken were:
* "SET variable = DEFAULT" (but not "SET variable TO DEFAULT"),
  as well as allied syntaxes such as ALTER SYSTEM SET ... DEFAULT.
  These produced syntactically invalid output that the server
  would reject.
* Multiple type names in DROP TYPE/DOMAIN commands.  Only the
  first type name would be listed in the emitted command.

Per report from Daisuke Higuchi.  Back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1803D792815FC24D871C00D17AE95905DB51CE@g01jpexmbkw24
2019-02-24 12:51:50 -05:00
Thomas Munro f16735d80d Tolerate EINVAL when calling fsync() on a directory.
Previously, we tolerated EBADF as a way for the operating system to
indicate that it doesn't support fsync() on a directory.  Tolerate
EINVAL too, for older versions of Linux CIFS.

Bug #15636.  Back-patch all the way.

Reported-by: John Klann
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15636-d380890dafd78fc6@postgresql.org
2019-02-24 23:50:20 +13:00
Thomas Munro 483520eca4 Tolerate ENOSYS failure from sync_file_range().
One unintended consequence of commit 9ccdd7f6 was that Windows WSL
users started getting a panic whenever we tried to initiate data
flushing with sync_file_range(), because WSL does not implement that
system call.  Previously, they got a stream of periodic warnings,
which was also undesirable but at least ignorable.

Prevent the panic by handling ENOSYS specially and skipping the panic
promotion with data_sync_elevel().  Also suppress future attempts
after the first such failure so that the pre-existing problem of
noisy warnings is improved.

Back-patch to 9.6 (older branches were not affected in this way by
9ccdd7f6).

Author: Thomas Munro and James Sewell
Tested-by: James Sewell
Reported-by: Bruce Klein
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+mCpegfOUph2U4ZADtQT16dfbkjjYNJL1bSTWErsazaFjQW9A@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-24 22:37:20 +13:00
Michael Paquier 4c23216002 Fix incorrect function reference in comment of twophase.c
The header block of TwoPhaseGetDummyBackendId mentioned incorrectly
TwoPhaseGetDummyProc.

Reported-by: Oleksii Kliukin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/D8336E40-BBE1-4954-98BB-7830D3F5CB36@hintbits.com
2019-02-23 08:40:01 +09:00
Tom Lane ab5fcf2b04 Fix plan created for inherited UPDATE/DELETE with all tables excluded.
In the case where inheritance_planner() finds that every table has
been excluded by constraints, it thought it could get away with
making a plan consisting of just a dummy Result node.  While certainly
there's no updating or deleting to be done, this had two user-visible
problems: the plan did not report the correct set of output columns
when a RETURNING clause was present, and if there were any
statement-level triggers that should be fired, it didn't fire them.

Hence, rather than only generating the dummy Result, we need to
stick a valid ModifyTable node on top, which requires a tad more
effort here.

It's been broken this way for as long as inheritance_planner() has
known about deleting excluded subplans at all (cf commit 635d42e9c),
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Amit Langote and Tom Lane, per a report from Petr Fedorov.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5da6f0f0-1364-1876-6978-907678f89a3e@phystech.edu
2019-02-22 12:23:19 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 98098faaff Report correct name in autovacuum "work items" activity
We were reporting the database name instead of the relation name to
pg_stat_activity.  Repair.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190220185552.GR28750@telsasoft.com
2019-02-22 13:00:16 -03:00
Tom Lane 0c7d537930 Move estimate_hashagg_tablesize to selfuncs.c, and widen result to double.
It seems to make more sense for this to be in selfuncs.c, since it's
largely a statistical-estimation thing, and it's related to other
functions like estimate_hash_bucket_stats that are there.

While at it, change the result type from Size to double.  Perhaps at one
point it was impossible for the result to overflow an integer, but
I've got no confidence in that proposition anymore.  Nothing's actually
done with the result except to compare it to a work_mem-based limit,
so as long as we don't get an overflow on the way to that comparison,
things should be fine even with very large dNumGroups.

Code movement proposed by Antonin Houska, type change by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25767.1549359615@localhost
2019-02-21 14:59:12 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut f9692a769b Hide other user's pg_stat_ssl rows
Change pg_stat_ssl so that an unprivileged user can only see their own
rows; other rows will be all null.  This makes the behavior consistent
with pg_stat_activity, where information about where the connection
came from is also restricted.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/63117976-d02c-c8e2-3aef-caa31a5ab8d3%402ndquadrant.com
2019-02-21 19:51:52 +01:00
Robert Haas 1bb5e78218 Move code for managing PartitionDescs into a new file, partdesc.c
This is similar in spirit to the existing partbounds.c file in the
same directory, except that there's a lot less code in the new file
created by this commit.  Pending work in this area proposes to add a
bunch more code related to PartitionDescs, though, and this will give
us a good place to put it.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoZUwPf_uanjF==gTGBMJrn8uCq52XYvAEorNkLrUdoawg@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-21 11:45:02 -05:00
Robert Haas 9eefba181f Delay lock acquisition for partitions until we route a tuple to them.
Instead of locking all partitions to which we might route a tuple at
executor startup, just lock them as we use them.  In some cases such a
partition might get locked at executor startup anyway because it
appears in the query's range table for some other reason, but in other
cases this is a bit savings.

This changes the order in which partitions are locked in some cases,
which might conceivably create deadlock hazards that don't exist
today, but per discussion, it seems like such cases should be rare
enough that we can neglect them in favor of improving performance.

David Rowley, reviewed and tested by Tomas Vondra, Sho Kato, John
Naylor, Tom Lane, and me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-=FnMqmQP6qitkD+xEddxw22ySLP-0xFk3JAqUX2yfMw@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-21 11:24:40 -05:00
Tom Lane fa86238f1e Speed up match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() when there are many ECs.
Check ec_relids before bothering to iterate through the EC members.
On a perhaps extreme, but still real-world, query in which
match_eclasses_to_foreign_key_col() accounts for the bulk of the
planner's runtime, this saves nearly 40% of the runtime.  It's a bit
of a stopgap fix, but it's simple enough to be back-patched to 9.6
where this code came in; so let's do that.

David Rowley

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6970.1545327857@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-20 20:53:17 -05:00
Tom Lane e04a3905e4 Improve planner's understanding of strictness of type coercions.
PG type coercions are generally strict, ie a NULL input must produce
a NULL output (or, in domain cases, possibly an error).  The planner's
understanding of that was a bit incomplete though, so improve it:

* Teach contain_nonstrict_functions() that CoerceViaIO can always be
considered strict.  Previously it believed that only if the underlying
I/O functions were marked strict, which is often but not always true.

* Teach clause_is_strict_for() that CoerceViaIO, ArrayCoerceExpr,
ConvertRowtypeExpr, CoerceToDomain can all be considered strict.
Previously it knew nothing about any of them.

The main user-visible impact of this is that IS NOT NULL predicates
can be proven to hold from expressions involving casts in more cases
than before, allowing partial indexes with such predicates to be used
without extra pushups.  This reduces the surprise factor for users,
who may well be used to ordinary (function-call-based) casts being
known to be strict.

Per a gripe from Samuel Williams.  This doesn't rise to the level of
a bug, IMO, so no back-patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/27571.1550617881@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-20 14:39:11 -05:00
Tom Lane 1571bc0f06 Fix incorrect strictness test for ArrayCoerceExpr expressions.
The recursion in contain_nonstrict_functions_walker() was done wrong,
causing the strictness check to be bypassed for a parse node that
is the immediate input of an ArrayCoerceExpr node.  This could allow,
for example, incorrect decisions about whether a strict SQL function
can be inlined.

I didn't add a regression test, because (a) the bug is so narrow
and (b) I couldn't think of a test case that wasn't dependent on a
large number of other behaviors, to the point where it would likely
soon rot to the point of not testing what it was intended to.

I broke this in commit c12d570fa, so back-patch to v11.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/27571.1550617881@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-20 13:36:55 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 5721b9b3ce Make object address handling more robust
pg_identify_object_as_address crashes when passed certain tuples from
inconsistent system catalogs.  Make it more defensive.

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Michaël Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190218202743.GA12392@alvherre.pgsql
2019-02-20 11:26:08 -03:00
Dean Rasheed 41531e42d3 Fix DEFAULT-handling in multi-row VALUES lists for updatable views.
INSERT ... VALUES for a single VALUES row is implemented differently
from a multi-row VALUES list, which causes inconsistent behaviour in
the way that DEFAULT items are handled. In particular, when inserting
into an auto-updatable view on top of a table with a column default, a
DEFAULT item in a single VALUES row gets correctly replaced with the
table column's default, but for a multi-row VALUES list it is replaced
with NULL.

Fix this by allowing rewriteValuesRTE() to leave DEFAULT items in the
VALUES list untouched if the target relation is an auto-updatable view
and has no column default, deferring DEFAULT-expansion until the query
against the base relation is rewritten. For all other types of target
relation, including tables and trigger- and rule-updatable views, we
must continue to replace DEFAULT items with NULL in the absence of a
column default.

This is somewhat complicated by the fact that if an auto-updatable
view has DO ALSO rules attached, the VALUES lists for the product
queries need to be handled differently from the original query, since
the product queries need to act like rule-updatable views whereas the
original query has auto-updatable view semantics.

Back-patch to all supported versions.

Reported by Roger Curley (bug #15623). Patch by Amit Langote and me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15623-5d67a46788ec8b7f@postgresql.org
2019-02-20 08:30:21 +00:00
Michael Paquier 56fadbedbd Mark correctly initial slot snapshots with MVCC type when built
When building an initial slot snapshot, snapshots are marked with
historic MVCC snapshots as type with the marker field being set in
SnapBuildBuildSnapshot() but not overriden in SnapBuildInitialSnapshot().
Existing callers of SnapBuildBuildSnapshot() do not care about the type
of snapshot used, but extensions calling it actually may, as reported.

While on it, mark correctly the snapshot type when importing one.  This
is cosmetic as the field is enforced to 0.

Author: Antonin Houska
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/23215.1527665193@localhost
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2019-02-20 12:31:07 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 90cfa49003 Use varargs macro for CACHEDEBUG
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
2019-02-19 11:42:39 +01:00
Andres Freund 22bc403029 Remove line duplicated during conflict resolution.
I included the duplicated ExecTypeFromTL in 578b2297 "Remove WITH OIDS
support".

Reported-By: Peter Eisentraut
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ba819888-63c6-7f98-6acb-3731142d9414@2ndquadrant.com
2019-02-18 11:07:30 -08:00
Etsuro Fujita 3fdc374b5d Save PathTargets for distinct/ordered relations in root->upper_targets[].
For the convenience of extensions, we previously only saved PathTargets
for grouped, window, and final relations in root->upper_targets[] in
grouping_planner().  To improve the convenience, save PathTargets for
distinct and ordered relations as well.

Author: Antonin Houska, with an additional change by me
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10994.1549559088@localhost
2019-02-18 16:13:46 +09:00
Michael Paquier 0dd6ff0ac8 Avoid some unnecessary block reads in WAL reader
When reading a new page internally and depending on the way the WAL
reader facility gets used by plugins, the current implementation of the
WAL reader may finish by reading a block multiple times while it is not
actually necessary as the requested data length may be equal to what has
been already read.  This can happen for any size, but is more likely to
happen at the end of a page.  This can cause performance penalties in
plugins which rely on the block reads to be purely sequential, zlib not
liking backward reads for example.  The new behavior also shaves some
cycles when doing recovery.

Author: Arthur Zakirov
Reviewed-by: Andrey Lepikhov, Michael Paquier, Grigory Smolkin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2ddf4a32-517e-d6f4-d992-4a63b6035bfd@postgrespro.ru
2019-02-18 09:52:02 +09:00
Thomas Munro 0b55aaacec Fix race in dsm_unpin_segment() when handles are reused.
Teach dsm_unpin_segment() to skip segments that are in the process
of being destroyed by another backend, when searching for a handle.
Such a segment cannot possibly be the one we are looking for, even
if its handle matches.  Another slot might hold a recently created
segment that has the same handle value by coincidence, and we need
to keep searching for that one.

The bug caused rare "cannot unpin a segment that is not pinned"
errors on 10 and 11.  Similar to commit 6c0fb941 for dsm_attach().

Back-patch to 10, where dsm_unpin_segment() landed.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Tested-by: Justin Pryzby (along with other recent DSA/DSM fixes)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190216023854.GF30291@telsasoft.com
2019-02-18 09:58:29 +13:00
Tom Lane a32ca78836 Fix CREATE VIEW to allow zero-column views.
We should logically have allowed this case when we allowed zero-column
tables, but it was overlooked.

Although this might be thought a feature addition, it's really a bug
fix, because it was possible to create a zero-column view via
the convert-table-to-view code path, and then you'd have a situation
where dump/reload would fail.  Hence, back-patch to all supported
branches.

Arrange the added test cases to provide coverage of the related
pg_dump code paths (since these views will be dumped and reloaded
during the pg_upgrade regression test).  I also made them test
the case where pg_dump has to postpone the view rule into post-data,
which disturbingly had no regression coverage before.

Report and patch by Ashutosh Sharma (test case by me)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAE9k0PkmHdeSaeZt2ujnb_cKucmK3sDDceDzw7+d5UZoNJPYOg@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-17 12:37:31 -05:00
Tom Lane 608b167f9f Allow user control of CTE materialization, and change the default behavior.
Historically we've always materialized the full output of a CTE query,
treating WITH as an optimization fence (so that, for example, restrictions
from the outer query cannot be pushed into it).  This is appropriate when
the CTE query is INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE, or is recursive; but when the CTE
query is non-recursive and side-effect-free, there's no hazard of changing
the query results by pushing restrictions down.

Another argument for materialization is that it can avoid duplicate
computation of an expensive WITH query --- but that only applies if
the WITH query is called more than once in the outer query.  Even then
it could still be a net loss, if each call has restrictions that
would allow just a small part of the WITH query to be computed.

Hence, let's change the behavior for WITH queries that are non-recursive
and side-effect-free.  By default, we will inline them into the outer
query (removing the optimization fence) if they are called just once.
If they are called more than once, we will keep the old behavior by
default, but the user can override this and force inlining by specifying
NOT MATERIALIZED.  Lastly, the user can force the old behavior by
specifying MATERIALIZED; this would mainly be useful when the query had
deliberately been employing WITH as an optimization fence to prevent a
poor choice of plan.

Andreas Karlsson, Andrew Gierth, David Fetter

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87sh48ffhb.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2019-02-16 16:11:12 -05:00
Tom Lane 02a6a54ecd Make use of compiler builtins and/or assembly for CLZ, CTZ, POPCNT.
Test for the compiler builtins __builtin_clz, __builtin_ctz, and
__builtin_popcount, and make use of these in preference to
handwritten C code if they're available.  Create src/port
infrastructure for "leftmost one", "rightmost one", and "popcount"
so as to centralize these decisions.

On x86_64, __builtin_popcount generally won't make use of the POPCNT
opcode because that's not universally supported yet.  Provide code
that checks CPUID and then calls POPCNT via asm() if available.
This requires indirecting through a function pointer, which is
an annoying amount of overhead for a one-instruction operation,
but it's probably not worth working harder than this for our
current use-cases.

I'm not sure we've found all the existing places that could profit
from this new infrastructure; but we at least touched all the
ones that used copied-and-pasted versions of the bitmapset.c code,
and got rid of multiple copies of the associated constant arrays.

While at it, replace c-compiler.m4's one-per-builtin-function
macros with a single one that can handle all the cases we need
to worry about so far.  Also, because I'm paranoid, make those
checks into AC_LINK checks rather than just AC_COMPILE; the
former coding failed to verify that libgcc has support for the
builtin, in cases where it's not inline code.

David Rowley, Thomas Munro, Alvaro Herrera, Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f9WTAGG1tPeJnD18hiQW5gAk59fQ6WK-vfdAKEHyRg2RA@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-15 23:22:33 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 457aef0f1f Revert attempts to use POPCNT etc instructions
This reverts commits fc6c72747a, 109de05cbb, d0b4663c23 and
711bab1e4d.

Somebody will have to try harder before submitting this patch again.
I've spent entirely too much time on it already, and the #ifdef maze yet
to be written in order for it to build at all got on my nerves.  The
amount of work needed to get a platform-specific performance improvement
that's barely above the noise level is not worth it.
2019-02-15 16:32:30 -03:00
Tom Lane e89f14e2bb Refactor index cost estimation functions in view of IndexClause changes.
Get rid of deconstruct_indexquals() in favor of just iterating over the
IndexClause list directly.  The extra services that that function used to
provide, such as hiding clause commutation and associating the right index
column with each clause, are no longer useful given the new data structure.
I'd originally thought that it'd provide a useful amount of abstraction
by freeing callers from paying attention to the exact clause type of each
indexqual, but that hope proves to have been vain, because few callers can
ignore the semantic differences between different clause types.  Indeed,
removing it results in a net code savings, and probably some cycles shaved
by not having to build an extra list-of-structs data structure.

Also, export a few formerly-static support functions, with the goal
of allowing extension AMs to write functionality equivalent to
genericcostestimate() without pointless code duplication.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/24586.1550106354@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-15 13:05:19 -05:00
Michael Paquier 331a613e9d Fix support for CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS AS EXECUTE
The grammar IF NOT EXISTS for CTAS is supported since 9.5 and documented
as such, however the case of using EXECUTE as query has never been
covered as EXECUTE CTAS statements and normal CTAS statements are parsed
separately.

Author: Andreas Karlsson
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2ddcc188-e37c-a0be-32bf-a56b07c3559e@proxel.se
Backpatch-through: 9.5
2019-02-15 17:12:24 +09:00
Thomas Munro 6c0fb94189 Fix race in dsm_attach() when handles are reused.
DSM handle values can be reused as soon as the underlying shared memory
object has been destroyed.  That means that for a brief moment we
might have two DSM slots with the same handle.  While trying to attach,
if we encounter a slot with refcnt == 1, meaning that it is currently
being destroyed, we should continue our search in case the same handle
exists in another slot.

The race manifested as a rare "dsa_area could not attach to segment"
error, and was more likely in 10 and 11 due to the lack of distinct
seed for random() in parallel workers.  It was made very unlikely in
in master by commit 197e4af9, and older releases don't usually create
new DSM segments in background workers so it was also unlikely there.

This fixes the root cause of bug report #15585, in which the error
could also sometimes result in a self-deadlock in the error path.
It's not yet clear if further changes are needed to avoid that failure
mode.

Back-patch to 9.4, where dsm.c arrived.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Justin Pryzby, Sergei Kornilov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190207014719.GJ29720@telsasoft.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15585-324ff6a93a18da46@postgresql.org
2019-02-15 14:05:09 +13:00
Tom Lane 8fd3fdd85a Simplify the planner's new representation of indexable clauses a little.
In commit 1a8d5afb0, I thought it'd be a good idea to define
IndexClause.indexquals as NIL in the most common case where the given
clause (IndexClause.rinfo) is usable exactly as-is.  It'd be more
consistent to define the indexquals in that case as being a one-element
list containing IndexClause.rinfo, but I thought saving the palloc
overhead for making such a list would be worthwhile.

In hindsight, that was a great example of "premature optimization is the
root of all evil": it's complicated everyplace that needs to deal with
the indexquals, requiring duplicative code to handle both the simple
case and the not-simple case.  I'd initially found that tolerable but
it's getting less so as I mop up some areas that I'd not touched in
1a8d5afb0.  In any case, two more pallocs during a planner run are
surely at the noise level (a conclusion confirmed by a bit of
microbenchmarking).  So let's change this decision before it becomes
set in stone, and insist that IndexClause.indexquals always be a valid
list of the actual index quals for the clause.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/24586.1550106354@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-14 19:37:30 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 86eea78694 Get rid of another unconstify through API changes
This also makes the code in read_client_first_message() more similar
to read_client_final_message().

Reported-by: Mark Dilger <hornschnorter@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/53a28052-f9f3-1808-fed9-460fd43035ab%402ndquadrant.com
2019-02-14 20:44:47 +01:00
Tom Lane 49fa99e54e Move pattern selectivity code from selfuncs.c to like_support.c.
While at it, refactor patternsel() a bit so that it can be used from
the LIKE/regex planner support functions as well.  This makes the
planner able to deal equally well with either operator or function
syntax for these operations.  I'm not excited about that as a feature
in itself, but it provides a nice model for extensions to follow if
they want such behavior for their operations.

This change localizes the use of pattern_fixed_prefix() and
make_greater_string() so that they no longer need be exported.
(We might get pushback from extensions about that, perhaps,
in which case I'd be inclined to re-export them in a new header
file like_support.h.)

This reduces the bulk of selfuncs.c a fair amount, removing ~1370
lines or about one-sixth of that file; it's still too big, but this
is progress.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/24537.1550093915@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-14 10:51:59 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 711bab1e4d Add basic support for using the POPCNT and SSE4.2s LZCNT opcodes
These opcodes have been around in the AMD world since 2007, and 2008 in
the case of intel.  They're supported in GCC and Clang via some __builtin
macros.  The opcodes may be unavailable during runtime, in which case we
fall back on a C-based implementation of the code.  In order to get the
POPCNT instruction we must pass the -mpopcnt option to the compiler.  We
do this only for the pg_bitutils.c file.

David Rowley (with fragments taken from a patch by Thomas Munro)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f9WTAGG1tPeJnD18hiQW5gAk59fQ6WK-vfdAKEHyRg2RA@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-13 16:10:06 -03:00
Andrew Gierth 02ddd49932 Change floating-point output format for improved performance.
Previously, floating-point output was done by rounding to a specific
decimal precision; by default, to 6 or 15 decimal digits (losing
information) or as requested using extra_float_digits. Drivers that
wanted exact float values, and applications like pg_dump that must
preserve values exactly, set extra_float_digits=3 (or sometimes 2 for
historical reasons, though this isn't enough for float4).

Unfortunately, decimal rounded output is slow enough to become a
noticable bottleneck when dealing with large result sets or COPY of
large tables when many floating-point values are involved.

Floating-point output can be done much faster when the output is not
rounded to a specific decimal length, but rather is chosen as the
shortest decimal representation that is closer to the original float
value than to any other value representable in the same precision. The
recently published Ryu algorithm by Ulf Adams is both relatively
simple and remarkably fast.

Accordingly, change float4out/float8out to output shortest decimal
representations if extra_float_digits is greater than 0, and make that
the new default. Applications that need rounded output can set
extra_float_digits back to 0 or below, and take the resulting
performance hit.

We make one concession to portability for systems with buggy
floating-point input: we do not output decimal values that fall
exactly halfway between adjacent representable binary values (which
would rely on the reader doing round-to-nearest-even correctly). This
is known to be a problem at least for VS2013 on Windows.

Our version of the Ryu code originates from
https://github.com/ulfjack/ryu/ at commit c9c3fb1979, but with the
following (significant) modifications:

 - Output format is changed to use fixed-point notation for small
   exponents, as printf would, and also to use lowercase 'e', a
   minimum of 2 exponent digits, and a mandatory sign on the exponent,
   to keep the formatting as close as possible to previous output.

 - The output of exact midpoint values is disabled as noted above.

 - The integer fast-path code is changed somewhat (since we have
   fixed-point output and the upstream did not).

 - Our project style has been largely applied to the code with the
   exception of C99 declaration-after-statement, which has been
   retained as an exception to our present policy.

 - Most of upstream's debugging and conditionals are removed, and we
   use our own configure tests to determine things like uint128
   availability.

Changing the float output format obviously affects a number of
regression tests. This patch uses an explicit setting of
extra_float_digits=0 for test output that is not expected to be
exactly reproducible (e.g. due to numerical instability or differing
algorithms for transcendental functions).

Conversions from floats to numeric are unchanged by this patch. These
may appear in index expressions and it is not yet clear whether any
change should be made, so that can be left for another day.

This patch assumes that the only supported floating point format is
now IEEE format, and the documentation is updated to reflect that.

Code by me, adapting the work of Ulf Adams and other contributors.

References:
https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3192369

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Andres Freund, Donald Dong
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87r2el1bx6.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2019-02-13 15:20:33 +00:00
Andrew Gierth f397e08599 Use strtof() and not strtod() for float4 input.
Using strtod() creates a double-rounding problem; the input decimal
value is first rounded to the nearest double; rounding that to the
nearest float may then give an incorrect result.

An example is that 7.038531e-26 when input via strtod and then rounded
to float4 gives 0xAE43FEp-107 instead of the correct 0xAE43FDp-107.

Values output by earlier PG versions with extra_float_digits=3 should
all be read in with the same values as previously. However, values
supplied by other software using shortest representations could be
mis-read.

On platforms that lack a strtof() entirely, we fall back to the old
incorrect rounding behavior. (As strtof() is required by C99, such
platforms are considered of primarily historical interest.) On VS2013,
some workarounds are used to get correct error handling.

The regression tests now test for the correct input values, so
platforms that lack strtof() will need resultmap entries. An entry for
HP-UX 10 is included (more may be needed).

Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/871s5emitx.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87d0owlqpv.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2019-02-13 15:19:44 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 37d9916020 More unconstify use
Replace casts whose only purpose is to cast away const with the
unconstify() macro.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/53a28052-f9f3-1808-fed9-460fd43035ab%402ndquadrant.com
2019-02-13 11:50:16 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut cf40dc65b6 Remove useless casts
Some of these were uselessly casting away "const", some were just
nearby, but they where all unnecessary anyway.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/53a28052-f9f3-1808-fed9-460fd43035ab%402ndquadrant.com
2019-02-13 11:50:09 +01:00
Michael Paquier 6ea95166a0 Fix comment related to calculation location of total_table_pages
As of commit c6e4133, the calculation happens in make_one_rel() and not
query_planner().

Author: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c7a04a90-42e6-28a4-811a-a7e352831ba1@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-02-13 16:31:20 +09:00
Thomas Munro 7215efdc00 Fix rare dsa_allocate() failures due to freepage.c corruption.
In a corner case, a btree page was allocated during a clean-up operation
that could cause the tracking of the largest contiguous span of free
space to get out of whack.  That was supposed to be prevented by the use
of the "soft" flag to avoid allocating internal pages during incidental
clean-up work, but the flag was ignored in the case where the FPM was
promoted from singleton format to btree format.  Repair.

Remove an obsolete comment in passing.

Back-patch to 10, where freepage.c arrived (as support for dsa.c).

Author: Robert Haas
Diagnosed-by: Thomas Munro and Robert Haas
Reported-by: Justin Pryzby, Rick Otten, Sand Stone, Arne Roland and others
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMAYy4%2Bw3NTBM5JLWFi8twhWK4%3Dk_5L4nV5%2BbYDSPu8r4b97Zg%40mail.gmail.com
2019-02-13 13:24:11 +13:00
Tom Lane 75c46149fc Clean up planner confusion between ncolumns and nkeycolumns.
We're only going to consider key columns when creating indexquals,
so there is no point in having the outer loops in indxpath.c iterate
further than nkeycolumns.

Doing so in match_pathkeys_to_index() is actually wrong, and would have
caused crashes by now, except that we have no index AMs supporting both
amcanorderbyop and amcaninclude.

It's also wrong in relation_has_unique_index_for().  The effect there is
to fail to prove uniqueness even when the index does prove it, if there
are extra columns.

Also future-proof examine_variable() for the day when extra columns can
be expressions, and fix what's either a thinko or just an oversight in
btcostestimate(): we should consider the number of key columns, not the
total, when deciding whether to derate correlation.

None of these things seemed important enough to risk changing in a
just-before-wrap patch, but since we're past the release wrap window,
time to fix 'em.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25526.1549847928@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-12 18:38:32 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 8c67d29fd5 Relax overly strict assertion
Ever since its birth, ReorderBufferBuildTupleCidHash() has contained an
assertion that a catalog tuple cannot change Cmax after acquiring one.  But
that's wrong: if a subtransaction executes DDL that affects that catalog
tuple, and later aborts and another DDL affects the same tuple, it will
change Cmax.  Relax the assertion to merely verify that the Cmax remains
valid and monotonically increasing, instead.

Add a test that tickles the relevant code.

Diagnosed by, and initial patch submitted by: Arseny Sher
Co-authored-by: Arseny Sher
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/874l9p8hyw.fsf@ars-thinkpad
2019-02-12 18:42:37 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera fe33a196de Use Getopt::Long for catalog scripts
Replace hand-rolled option parsing with the Getopt module. This is
shorter and easier to read. In passing, make some cosmetic adjustments
for consistency.

Author: John Naylor
Reviewed-by: David Fetter
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACPNZCvRjepXh5b2N50njN+rO_2Nzcf=jhMkKX7=79XWUKJyKA@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-12 12:22:08 -03:00
Tom Lane 232a8e233f Fix erroneous error reports in snapbuild.c.
It's pretty unhelpful to report the wrong file name in a complaint
about syscall failure, but SnapBuildSerialize managed to do that twice
in a span of 50 lines.  Also fix half a dozen missing or poorly-chosen
errcode assignments; that's mostly cosmetic, but still wrong.

Noted while studying recent failures on buildfarm member nightjar.
I'm not sure whether those reports are actually giving the wrong
filename, because there are two places here with identically
spelled error messages.  The other one is specifically coded not
to report ENOENT, but if it's this one, how could we be getting
ENOENT from open() with O_CREAT?  Need to sit back and await results.

However, these ereports are clearly broken from birth, so back-patch.
2019-02-12 01:12:52 -05:00
Michael Paquier b7ec820559 Fix description of WAL record XLOG_PARAMETER_CHANGE
max_wal_senders and max_worker_processes got reversed in the output
generated because of ea92368.

Reported-by: Kevin Hale Boyes
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADAecHVAD4=26KAx4nj5DBvxqqvJkuwsy+riiiNhQqwnZg2K8Q@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-12 13:10:59 +09:00
Tom Lane 74dfe58a59 Allow extensions to generate lossy index conditions.
For a long time, indxpath.c has had the ability to extract derived (lossy)
index conditions from certain operators such as LIKE.  For just as long,
it's been obvious that we really ought to make that capability available
to extensions.  This commit finally accomplishes that, by adding another
API for planner support functions that lets them create derived index
conditions for their functions.  As proof of concept, the hardwired
"special index operator" code formerly present in indxpath.c is pushed
out to planner support functions attached to LIKE and other relevant
operators.

A weak spot in this design is that an extension needs to know OIDs for
the operators, datatypes, and opfamilies involved in the transformation
it wants to make.  The core-code prototypes use hard-wired OID references
but extensions don't have that option for their own operators etc.  It's
usually possible to look up the required info, but that may be slow and
inconvenient.  However, improving that situation is a separate task.

I want to do some additional refactorization around selfuncs.c, but
that also seems like a separate task.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15193.1548028093@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-11 21:26:14 -05:00
Michael Paquier ea92368cd1 Move max_wal_senders out of max_connections for connection slot handling
Since its introduction, max_wal_senders is counted as part of
max_connections when it comes to define how many connection slots can be
used for replication connections with a WAL sender context.  This can
lead to confusion for some users, as it could be possible to block a
base backup or replication from happening because other backend sessions
are already taken for other purposes by an application, and
superuser-only connection slots are not a correct solution to handle
that case.

This commit makes max_wal_senders independent of max_connections for its
handling of PGPROC entries in ProcGlobal, meaning that connection slots
for WAL senders are handled using their own free queue, like autovacuum
workers and bgworkers.

One compatibility issue that this change creates is that a standby now
requires to have a value of max_wal_senders at least equal to its
primary.  So, if a standby created enforces the value of
max_wal_senders to be lower than that, then this could break failovers.
Normally this should not be an issue though, as any settings of a
standby are inherited from its primary as postgresql.conf gets normally
copied as part of a base backup, so parameters would be consistent.

Author: Alexander Kukushkin
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Petr Jelínek, Masahiko Sawada, Oleksii
Kliukin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFh8B=nBzHQeYAu0b8fjK-AF1X4+_p6GRtwG+cCgs6Vci2uRuQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-12 10:07:56 +09:00
Tom Lane 1d92a0c9f7 Redesign the partition dependency mechanism.
The original setup for dependencies of partitioned objects had
serious problems:

1. It did not verify that a drop cascading to a partition-child object
also cascaded to at least one of the object's partition parents.  Now,
normally a child object would share all its dependencies with one or
another parent (e.g. a child index's opclass dependencies would be shared
with the parent index), so that this oversight is usually harmless.
But if some dependency failed to fit this pattern, the child could be
dropped while all its parents remain, creating a logically broken
situation.  (It's easy to construct artificial cases that break it,
such as attaching an unrelated extension dependency to the child object
and then dropping the extension.  I'm not sure if any less-artificial
cases exist.)

2. Management of partition dependencies during ATTACH/DETACH PARTITION
was complicated and buggy; for example, after detaching a partition
table it was possible to create cases where a formerly-child index
should be dropped and was not, because the correct set of dependencies
had not been reconstructed.

Less seriously, because multiple partition relationships were
represented identically in pg_depend, there was an order-of-traversal
dependency on which partition parent was cited in error messages.
We also had some pre-existing order-of-traversal hazards for error
messages related to internal and extension dependencies.  This is
cosmetic to users but causes testing problems.

To fix #1, add a check at the end of the partition tree traversal
to ensure that at least one partition parent got deleted.  To fix #2,
establish a new policy that partition dependencies are in addition to,
not instead of, a child object's usual dependencies; in this way
ATTACH/DETACH PARTITION need not cope with adding or removing the
usual dependencies.

To fix the cosmetic problem, distinguish between primary and secondary
partition dependency entries in pg_depend, by giving them different
deptypes.  (They behave identically except for having different
priorities for being cited in error messages.)  This means that the
former 'I' dependency type is replaced with new 'P' and 'S' types.

This also fixes a longstanding bug that after handling an internal
dependency by recursing to the owning object, findDependentObjects
did not verify that the current target was now scheduled for deletion,
and did not apply the current recursion level's objflags to it.
Perhaps that should be back-patched; but in the back branches it
would only matter if some concurrent transaction had removed the
internal-linkage pg_depend entry before the recursive call found it,
or the recursive call somehow failed to find it, both of which seem
unlikely.

Catversion bump because the contents of pg_depend change for
partitioning relationships.

Patch HEAD only.  It's annoying that we're not fixing #2 in v11,
but there seems no practical way to do so given that the problem
is exactly a poor choice of what entries to put in pg_depend.
We can't really fix that while staying compatible with what's
in pg_depend in existing v11 installations.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wzkypv1R+teZrr71U23J578NnTBt2X8+Y=Odr4pOdW1rXg@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-11 14:41:17 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 256fc004af Adjust gratuitously different error message wording 2019-02-11 14:01:05 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 78b0cac74d Remove unused macro
Last use was removed in 2c66f9924c.
2019-02-11 10:07:25 +01:00
Tom Lane 6bdc3005b5 Fix indexable-row-comparison logic to account for covering indexes.
indxpath.c needs a good deal more attention for covering indexes than
it's gotten.  But so far as I can tell, the only really awful breakage
is in expand_indexqual_rowcompare (nee adjust_rowcompare_for_index),
which was only half fixed in c266ed31a.  The other problems aren't
bad enough to take the risk of a just-before-wrap fix.

The problem here is that if the leading column of a row comparison
matches an index (allowing this code to be reached), and some later
column doesn't match the index, it'll nonetheless believe that that
column matches the first included index column.  Typically that'll
lead to an error like "operator M is not a member of opfamily N" as
a result of fetching a garbage opfamily OID.  But with enough bad
luck, maybe a broken plan would be generated.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25526.1549847928@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-10 22:51:32 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera cb90de1aac Fix trigger drop procedure
After commit 123cc697a8, we remove redundant FK action triggers during
partition ATTACH by merely deleting the catalog tuple, but that's wrong:
it should use performDeletion() instead.  Repair, and make the comments
more explicit.

Per code review from Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18885.1549642539@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-10 10:00:11 -03:00
Tom Lane a391ff3c3d Build out the planner support function infrastructure.
Add support function requests for estimating the selectivity, cost,
and number of result rows (if a SRF) of the target function.

The lack of a way to estimate selectivity of a boolean-returning
function in WHERE has been a recognized deficiency of the planner
since Berkeley days.  This commit finally fixes it.

In addition, non-constant estimates of cost and number of output
rows are now possible.  We still fall back to looking at procost
and prorows if the support function doesn't service the request,
of course.

To make concrete use of the possibility of estimating output rowcount
for SRFs, this commit adds support functions for array_unnest(anyarray)
and the integer variants of generate_series; the lack of plausible
rowcount estimates for those, even when it's obvious to a human,
has been a repeated subject of complaints.  Obviously, much more
could now be done in this line, but I'm mostly just trying to get
the infrastructure in place.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15193.1548028093@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-09 18:32:23 -05:00
Tom Lane 1fb57af920 Create the infrastructure for planner support functions.
Rename/repurpose pg_proc.protransform as "prosupport".  The idea is
still that it names an internal function that provides knowledge to
the planner about the behavior of the function it's attached to;
but redesign the API specification so that it's not limited to doing
just one thing, but can support an extensible set of requests.

The original purpose of simplifying a function call is handled by
the first request type to be invented, SupportRequestSimplify.
Adjust all the existing transform functions to handle this API,
and rename them fron "xxx_transform" to "xxx_support" to reflect
the potential generalization of what they do.  (Since we never
previously provided any way for extensions to add transform functions,
this change doesn't create an API break for them.)

Also add DDL and pg_dump support for attaching a support function to a
user-defined function.  Unfortunately, DDL access has to be restricted
to superusers, at least for now; but seeing that support functions
will pretty much have to be written in C, that limitation is just
theoretical.  (This support is untested in this patch, but a follow-on
patch will add cases that exercise it.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15193.1548028093@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-09 18:08:48 -05:00
Tom Lane 1a8d5afb0d Refactor the representation of indexable clauses in IndexPaths.
In place of three separate but interrelated lists (indexclauses,
indexquals, and indexqualcols), an IndexPath now has one list
"indexclauses" of IndexClause nodes.  This holds basically the same
information as before, but in a more useful format: in particular, there
is now a clear connection between an indexclause (an original restriction
clause from WHERE or JOIN/ON) and the indexquals (directly usable index
conditions) derived from it.

We also change the ground rules a bit by mandating that clause commutation,
if needed, be done up-front so that what is stored in the indexquals list
is always directly usable as an index condition.  This gets rid of repeated
re-determination of which side of the clause is the indexkey during costing
and plan generation, as well as repeated lookups of the commutator
operator.  To minimize the added up-front cost, the typical case of
commuting a plain OpExpr is handled by a new special-purpose function
commute_restrictinfo().  For RowCompareExprs, generating the new clause
properly commuted to begin with is not really any more complex than before,
it's just different --- and we can save doing that work twice, as the
pretty-klugy original implementation did.

Tracking the connection between original and derived clauses lets us
also track explicitly whether the derived clauses are an exact or lossy
translation of the original.  This provides a cheap solution to getting
rid of unnecessary rechecks of boolean index clauses, which previously
seemed like it'd be more expensive than it was worth.

Another pleasant (IMO) side-effect is that EXPLAIN now always shows
index clauses with the indexkey on the left; this seems less confusing.

This commit leaves expand_indexqual_conditions() and some related
functions in a slightly messy state.  I didn't bother to change them
any more than minimally necessary to work with the new data structure,
because all that code is going to be refactored out of existence in
a follow-on patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/22182.1549124950@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-09 17:30:43 -05:00
Tom Lane 6401583863 Call set_rel_pathlist_hook before generate_gather_paths, not after.
The previous ordering of these steps satisfied the nominal requirement
that set_rel_pathlist_hook could editorialize on the whole set of Paths
constructed for a base relation.  In practice, though, trying to change
the set of partial paths was impossible.  Adding one didn't work because
(a) it was too late to be included in Gather paths made by the core code,
and (b) calling add_partial_path after generate_gather_paths is unsafe,
because it might try to delete a path it thinks is dominated, but that
is already embedded in some Gather path(s).  Nor could the hook safely
remove partial paths, for the same reason that they might already be
embedded in Gathers.

Better to call extensions first, let them add partial paths as desired,
and then gather.  In v11 and up, we already doubled down on that ordering
by postponing gathering even further for single-relation queries; so even
if the hook wished to editorialize on Gather path construction, it could
not.

Report and patch by KaiGai Kohei.  Back-patch to 9.6 where Gather paths
were added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOP8fzahwpKJRTVVTqo2AE=mDTz_efVzV6Get_0=U3SO+-ha1A@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-09 11:41:09 -05:00
Andres Freund 356687bd82 Reset, not recreate, execGrouping.c style hashtables.
This uses the facility added in the preceding commit to fix
performance issues caused by rebuilding the hashtable (with its
comparator expression being the most expensive bit), after every
reset. That's especially important when the comparator is JIT
compiled.

Bug: #15592 #15486
Reported-By: Jakub Janeček, Dmitry Marakasov
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/15486-05850f065da42931@postgresql.org
    https://postgr.es/m/20190114180423.ywhdg2iagzvh43we@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 11, where I broke this in bf6c614a2f
2019-02-09 01:05:49 -08:00
Andres Freund 317ffdfeaa Allow to reset execGrouping.c style tuple hashtables.
This has the advantage that the comparator expression, the table's
slot, etc do not have to be rebuilt. Additionally the simplehash.h
hashtable within the tuple hashtable now keeps its previous size and
doesn't need to be reallocated. That both reduces allocator overhead,
and improves performance in cases where the input estimation was off
by a significant factor.

To avoid an API/ABI break, the new parameter is exposed via the new
BuildTupleHashTableExt(), and BuildTupleHashTable() now is a wrapper
around the former, that continues to allocate the table itself in the
tablecxt.

Using this fixes performance issues discovered in the two bugs
referenced. This commit however has not converted the callers, that's
done in a separate commit.

Bug: #15592 #15486
Reported-By: Jakub Janeček, Dmitry Marakasov
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/15486-05850f065da42931@postgresql.org
    https://postgr.es/m/20190114180423.ywhdg2iagzvh43we@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 11, this is a prerequisite for other fixes
2019-02-09 01:05:49 -08:00
Andres Freund 5567d12ce0 Plug leak in BuildTupleHashTable by creating ExprContext in correct context.
In bf6c614a2f I added a expr context to evaluate the grouping
expression. Unfortunately the code I added initialized them while in
the calling context, rather the table context.  Additionally, I used
CreateExprContext() rather than CreateStandaloneExprContext(), which
creates the econtext in the estate's query context.

Fix that by using CreateStandaloneExprContext when in the table's
tablecxt. As we rely on the memory being freed by a memory context
reset that means that the econtext's shutdown callbacks aren't being
called, but that seems ok as the expressions are tightly controlled
due to ExecBuildGroupingEqual().

Bug: #15592
Reported-By: Dmitry Marakasov
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190114222838.h6r3fuyxjxkykf6t@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 11, where I broke this in bf6c614a2f
2019-02-09 01:05:49 -08:00
Tom Lane 0edef16d76 Defend against null error message reported by libxml2.
While this isn't really supposed to happen, it can occur in OOM
situations and perhaps others.  Instead of crashing, substitute
"(no message provided)".

I didn't worry about localizing this text, since we aren't
localizing anything else here; besides, if we're on the edge of
OOM, it's unlikely gettext() would work.

Report and fix by Sergio Conde Gómez in bug #15624.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15624-4dea54091a2864e6@postgresql.org
2019-02-08 13:30:42 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 3d462f0861 Fix error handling around ssl_*_protocol_version settings
In case of a reload, we just want to LOG errors instead of FATAL when
processing SSL configuration, but the more recent code for the
ssl_*_protocol_version settings didn't behave like that.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
2019-02-08 11:58:19 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 08d25d7850 Add some const decorations
These mainly help understanding the function signatures better.
2019-02-08 10:13:24 +01:00
Michael Paquier 3677a0b26b Add pg_partition_root to display top-most parent of a partition tree
This is useful when looking at partition trees with multiple layers, and
combined with pg_partition_tree, it provides the possibility to show up
an entire tree by just knowing one member at any level.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181207014015.GP2407@paquier.xyz
2019-02-08 08:56:14 +09:00
Tom Lane 34ea1ab7fd Split create_foreignscan_path() into three functions.
Up to now postgres_fdw has been using create_foreignscan_path() to
generate not only base-relation paths, but also paths for foreign joins
and foreign upperrels.  This is wrong, because create_foreignscan_path()
calls get_baserel_parampathinfo() which will only do the right thing for
baserels.  It accidentally fails to fail for unparameterized paths, which
are the only ones postgres_fdw (thought it) was handling, but we really
need different APIs for the baserel and join cases.

In HEAD, the best thing to do seems to be to split up the baserel,
joinrel, and upperrel cases into three functions so that they can
have different APIs.  I haven't actually given create_foreign_join_path
a different API in this commit: we should spend a bit of time thinking
about just what we want to do there, since perhaps FDWs would want to
do something different from the build-up-a-join-pairwise approach that
get_joinrel_parampathinfo expects.  In the meantime, since postgres_fdw
isn't prepared to generate parameterized joins anyway, just give it a
defense against trying to plan joins with lateral refs.

In addition (and this is what triggered this whole mess) fix bug #15613
from Srinivasan S A, by teaching file_fdw and postgres_fdw that plain
baserel foreign paths still have outer refs if the relation has
lateral_relids.  Add some assertions in relnode.c to catch future
occurrences of the same error --- in particular, to catch other FDWs
doing that, but also as backstop against core-code mistakes like the
one fixed by commit bdd9a99aa.

Bug #15613 also needs to be fixed in the back branches, but the
appropriate fix will look quite a bit different there, since we don't
want to assume that existing FDWs get the word right away.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15613-092be1be9576c728@postgresql.org
2019-02-07 13:11:12 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 0c1f8f166c Use EXECUTE FUNCTION syntax for triggers more
Change pg_dump and ruleutils.c to use the FUNCTION keyword instead of
PROCEDURE in trigger and event trigger definitions.

This completes the pieces of the transition started in
0a63f996e0 that were kept out of
PostgreSQL 11 because of the required catversion change.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/381bef53-f7be-29c8-d977-948e389161d6@2ndquadrant.com
2019-02-07 09:21:34 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 13b89f96d0 Allow some recovery parameters to be changed with reload
Change

archive_cleanup_command
promote_trigger_file
recovery_end_command
recovery_min_apply_delay

from PGC_POSTMASTER to PGC_SIGHUP.  This did not require any further
changes.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/ca28011a-cfaa-565c-d622-c1907c33ecf7%402ndquadrant.com
2019-02-07 08:34:48 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut cd5afd8175 Add collation assignment to CALL statement
Otherwise functions that require collation information will not have
it if they are called in arguments to a CALL statement.

Reported-by: Jean-Marc Voillequin <Jean-Marc.Voillequin@moodys.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1EC8157EB499BF459A516ADCF135ADCE39FFAC54%40LON-WGMSX712.ad.moodys.net
2019-02-07 08:25:47 +01:00
Tom Lane bdd9a99aac Propagate lateral-reference information to indirect descendant relations.
create_lateral_join_info() computes a bunch of information about lateral
references between base relations, and then attempts to propagate those
markings to appendrel children of the original base relations.  But the
original coding neglected the possibility of indirect descendants
(grandchildren etc).  During v11 development we noticed that this was
wrong for partitioned-table cases, but failed to realize that it was just
as wrong for any appendrel.  While the case can't arise for appendrels
derived from traditional table inheritance (because we make a flat
appendrel for that), nested appendrels can arise from nested UNION ALL
subqueries.  Failure to mark the lower-level relations as having lateral
references leads to confusion in add_paths_to_append_rel about whether
unparameterized paths can be built.  It's not very clear whether that
leads to any user-visible misbehavior; the lack of field reports suggests
that it may cause nothing worse than minor cost misestimation.  Still,
it's a bug, and it leads to failures of Asserts that I intend to add
later.

To fix, we need to propagate information from all appendrel parents,
not just those that are RELOPT_BASERELs.  We can still do it in one
pass, if we rely on the append_rel_list to be ordered with ancestor
relationships before descendant ones; add assertions checking that.
While fixing this, we can make a small performance improvement by
traversing the append_rel_list just once instead of separately for
each appendrel parent relation.

Noted while investigating bug #15613, though this patch does not fix
that (which is why I'm not committing the related Asserts yet).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3951.1549403812@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-02-06 12:45:21 -05:00
Andres Freund 171e0418b0 Fix heap_getattr() handling of fast defaults.
Previously heap_getattr() returned NULL for attributes with a fast
default value (c.f. 16828d5c02), as it had no handling whatsoever
for that case.

A previous fix, 7636e5c60f, attempted to fix issues caused by this
oversight, but just expanding OLD tuples for triggers doesn't actually
solve the underlying issue.

One known consequence of this bug is that the check for HOT updates
can return the wrong result, when a previously fast-default'ed column
is set to NULL. Which in turn means that an index over a column with
fast default'ed columns might be corrupt if the underlying column(s)
allow NULLs.

Fix by handling fast default columns in heap_getattr(), remove now
superfluous expansion in GetTupleForTrigger().

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190201162404.onngi77f26baem4g@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 11, where fast defaults were introduced
2019-02-06 01:09:32 -08:00
Andrew Dunstan 8916b33e52 Keep perl style checker happy
It doesn't like code before "use strict;".
2019-02-05 15:16:55 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan f884a96819 Fix searchpath for modern Perl for genbki.pl
This was fixed for MSVC tools by commit 1df92eeafe, but per
buildfarm member bowerbird genbki.pl needs the same treatment.

Backpatch to all live branches.
2019-02-05 09:59:46 -05:00
Tom Lane 24114e8b4d Remove unnecessary "inline" marker introduced in commit 4be058fe9.
Some of our older buildfarm members bleat about this coding,
along the lines of

prepjointree.c:112: warning: 'get_result_relid' declared inline after being called
prepjointree.c:112: warning: previous declaration of 'get_result_relid' was here

Modern compilers will probably inline this function without being
prompted, so rather than move the function, let's just drop the
marking.
2019-02-04 21:45:39 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut f602cf49c2 Remove unused macro
Use was removed in 6d46f4783e but
definition was forgotten.
2019-02-04 21:29:31 +01:00
Amit Kapila b0eaa4c51b Avoid creation of the free space map for small heap relations, take 2.
Previously, all heaps had FSMs. For very small tables, this means that the
FSM took up more space than the heap did. This is wasteful, so now we
refrain from creating the FSM for heaps with 4 pages or fewer. If the last
known target block has insufficient space, we still try to insert into some
other page before giving up and extending the relation, since doing
otherwise leads to table bloat. Testing showed that trying every page
penalized performance slightly, so we compromise and try every other page.
This way, we visit at most two pages. Any pages with wasted free space
become visible at next relation extension, so we still control table bloat.
As a bonus, directly attempting one or two pages can even be faster than
consulting the FSM would have been.

Once the FSM is created for a heap we don't remove it even if somebody
deletes all the rows from the corresponding relation.  We don't think it is
a useful optimization as it is quite likely that relation will again grow
to the same size.

Author: John Naylor, Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Tested-by: Mithun C Y
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAJVSVGWvB13PzpbLEecFuGFc5V2fsO736BsdTakPiPAcdMM5tQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-04 07:49:15 +05:30
Thomas Munro f1bebef60e Add shared_memory_type GUC.
Since 9.3 we have used anonymous shared mmap for our main shared memory
region, except in EXEC_BACKEND builds.  Provide a GUC so that users
can opt for System V shared memory once again, like in 9.2 and earlier.

A later patch proposes to add huge/large page support for AIX, which
requires System V shared memory and provided the motivation to revive
this possibility.  It may also be useful on some BSDs.

Author: Andres Freund (revived and documented by Thomas Munro)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/HE1PR0202MB28126DB4E0B6621CC6A1A91286D90%40HE1PR0202MB2812.eurprd02.prod.outlook.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2AE143D2-87D3-4AD1-AC78-CE2258230C05%40FreeBSD.org
2019-02-03 12:47:26 +01:00
Andres Freund 0d1fe9f74e Move page initialization from RelationAddExtraBlocks() to use, take 2.
Previously we initialized pages when bulk extending in
RelationAddExtraBlocks(). That has a major disadvantage: It ties
RelationAddExtraBlocks() to heap, as other types of storage are likely
to need different amounts of special space, have different amount of
free space (previously determined by PageGetHeapFreeSpace()).

That we're relying on initializing pages, but not WAL logging the
initialization, also means the risk for getting
"WARNING:  relation \"%s\" page %u is uninitialized --- fixing"
style warnings in vacuums after crashes/immediate shutdowns, is
considerably higher. The warning sounds much more serious than what
they are.

Fix those two issues together by not initializing pages in
RelationAddExtraPages() (but continue to do so in
RelationGetBufferForTuple(), which is linked much more closely to
heap), and accepting uninitialized pages as normal in
vacuumlazy.c. When vacuumlazy encounters an empty page it now adds it
to the FSM, but does nothing else.  We chose to not issue a debug
message, much less a warning in that case - it seems rarely useful,
and quite likely to scare people unnecessarily.

For now empty pages aren't added to the VM, because standbys would not
re-discover such pages after a promotion. In contrast to other sources
for empty pages, there's no corresponding WAL records triggering FSM
updates during replay.

Previously when extending the relation, there was a moment between
extending the relation, and acquiring an exclusive lock on the new
page, in which another backend could lock the page. To avoid new
content being put on that new page, vacuumlazy needed to acquire the
extension lock for a brief moment when encountering a new page. A
second corner case, only working somewhat by accident, was that
RelationGetBufferForTuple() sometimes checks the last page in a
relation for free space, without consulting the FSM; that only worked
because PageGetHeapFreeSpace() interprets the zero page header in a
new page as no free space.  The lack of handling this properly
required reverting the previous attempt in 684200543b.

This issue can be solved by using RBM_ZERO_AND_LOCK when extending the
relation, thereby avoiding this window. There's some added complexity
when RelationGetBufferForTuple() is called with another buffer (for
updates), to avoid deadlocks, but that's rarely hit at runtime.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181219083945.6khtgm36mivonhva@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-02-03 01:27:19 -08:00
Amit Kapila 0b8bdb3c3e Avoid possible deadlock while locking multiple heap pages.
To avoid deadlock, backend acquires a lock on heap pages in block
number order.  In certain cases, lock on heap pages is dropped and
reacquired.  In this case, the locks are dropped for reading in
corresponding VM page/s. The issue is we re-acquire locks in bufferId
order whereas the intention was to acquire in blockid order.

This commit ensures that we will always acquire locks on heap pages in
blockid order.

Reported-by: Nishant Fnu
Author: Nishant Fnu
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila and Robert Haas
Backpatch-through: 9.4
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5883C831-2ED1-47C8-BFAC-2D5BAE5A8CAE@amazon.com
2019-02-02 15:47:00 +05:30
Alvaro Herrera 558d77f20e Renaming for new subscripting mechanism
Over at patch https://commitfest.postgresql.org/21/1062/ Dmitry wants to
introduce a more generic subscription mechanism, which allows
subscripting not only arrays but also other object types such as JSONB.
That functionality is introduced in a largish invasive patch, out of
which this internal renaming patch was extracted.

Author: Dmitry Dolgov
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Arthur Zakirov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+q6zcUK4EqPAu7XRRO5CCjMwhz5zvg+rfWuLzVoxp_5sKS6=w@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-01 12:50:32 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 80579f9bb1 Move building of child base quals out into a new function
An upcoming patch which changes how inheritance planning works requires
adding a new function that does a similar job to set_append_rel_size() but
for child target relations.  To save it from having to duplicate the qual
building code, move that to a separate function first.

Here we also change things so that we never attempt to build security quals
after detecting some const false child quals.  We needlessly used to do this
just before we marked the child relation as a dummy rel.

In passing, this also moves the partition pruned check to before the qual
building code.  We don't need to build the child quals before we check if
the partition has been pruned.

Author: David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_i+jrrD+if8qC7KPuTAAWsd=dtepgY_7u=P86GDEwm7A@mail.gmail.com
2019-02-01 06:47:49 -03:00
Michael Paquier c93001b3f9 Adjust comment about timeout when waiting for WAL at recovery
A timeout of 5s is used when waiting for WAL to become available at
recovery so as the startup process is able to react promptly if a
trigger file shows up.  However this missed the fact that the startup
process also relies on the timeout to check periodically the status of
any active WAL receiver.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190131070956.GE13429@paquier.xyz
2019-02-01 10:46:45 +09:00
Michael Paquier eb8c9f0bc3 Fix use of dangling pointer in heap_delete() when logging replica identity
When logging the replica identity of a deleted tuple, XLOG_HEAP_DELETE
records include references of the old tuple.  Its data is stored in an
intermediate variable used to register this information for the WAL
record, but this variable gets away from the stack when the record gets
actually inserted.

Spotted by clang's AddressSanitizer.

Author: Stas Kelvish
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/085C8825-AD86-4E93-AF80-E26CDF03D1EA@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2019-02-01 10:35:16 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut f60a0e9677 Add more columns to pg_stat_ssl
Add columns client_serial and issuer_dn to pg_stat_ssl.  These allow
uniquely identifying the client certificate.

Rename the existing column clientdn to client_dn, to make the naming
more consistent and easier to read.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/398754d8-6bb5-c5cf-e7b8-22e5f0983caf@2ndquadrant.com/
2019-02-01 00:33:47 +01:00
Tom Lane 5f5c014590 Allow RECORD and RECORD[] to be specified in function coldeflists.
We can't allow these pseudo-types to be used as table column types,
because storing an anonymous record value in a table would result
in data that couldn't be understood by other sessions.  However,
it seems like there's no harm in allowing the case in a column
definition list that's specifying what a function-returning-record
returns.  The data involved is all local to the current session,
so we should be just as able to resolve its actual tuple type as
we are for the function-returning-record's top-level tuple output.

Elvis Pranskevichus, with cosmetic changes by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11038447.kQ5A9Uj5xi@hammer.magicstack.net
2019-01-30 19:25:33 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 689d15e95e Log PostgreSQL version number on startup
Logging the PostgreSQL version on startup is useful for two reasons:
There is a clear marker in the log file that a new postmaster is
beginning, and it's useful for tracking the server version across
startup while upgrading.

Author: Christoph Berg <christoph.berg@credativ.de>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20181121144611.GJ15795@msg.credativ.de/
2019-01-30 23:26:10 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 57431a911d postmaster: Start syslogger earlier
When the syslogger was originally
added (bdf8ef6925), nothing was normally
logged before the point where it was started.  But since
f9dfa5c977, the creation of sockets
causes messages of level LOG to be written routinely, so those don't
go to the syslogger now.

To improve that, arrange the sequence in PostmasterMain() slightly so
that the syslogger is started early enough to capture those messages.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/d5d50936-20b9-85f1-06bc-94a01c5040c1%402ndquadrant.com
Reviewed-by: Christoph Berg <christoph.berg@credativ.de>
2019-01-30 21:10:56 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut dfa774ff9a Fix a crash in logical replication
The bug was that determining which columns are part of the replica
identity index using RelationGetIndexAttrBitmap() would run
eval_const_expressions() on index expressions and predicates across
all indexes of the table, which in turn might require a snapshot, but
there wasn't one set, so it crashes.  There were actually two separate
bugs, one on the publisher and one on the subscriber.

To trigger the bug, a table that is part of a publication or
subscription needs to have an index with a predicate or expression
that lends itself to constant expressions simplification.

The fix is to avoid the constant expressions simplification in
RelationGetIndexAttrBitmap(), so that it becomes safe to call in these
contexts.  The constant expressions simplification comes from the
calls to RelationGetIndexExpressions()/RelationGetIndexPredicate() via
BuildIndexInfo().  But RelationGetIndexAttrBitmap() calling
BuildIndexInfo() is overkill.  The latter just takes pg_index catalog
information, packs it into the IndexInfo structure, which former then
just unpacks again and throws away.  We can just do this directly with
less overhead and skip the troublesome calls to
eval_const_expressions().  This also removes the awkward
cross-dependency between relcache.c and index.c.

Bug: #15114
Reported-by: Петър Славов <pet.slavov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Noah Misch <noah@leadboat.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/152110589574.1223.17983600132321618383@wrigleys.postgresql.org/
2019-01-30 08:49:54 +01:00
Tom Lane fa2cf164aa Rename nodes/relation.h to nodes/pathnodes.h.
The old name of this file was never a very good indication of what it
was for.  Now that there's also access/relation.h, we have a potential
confusion hazard as well, so let's rename it to something more apropos.
Per discussion, "pathnodes.h" is reasonable, since a good fraction of
the file is Path node definitions.

While at it, tweak a couple of other headers that were gratuitously
importing relation.h into modules that don't need it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7719.1548688728@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-29 16:49:25 -05:00
Tom Lane f09346a9c6 Refactor planner's header files.
Create a new header optimizer/optimizer.h, which exposes just the
planner functions that can be used "at arm's length", without need
to access Paths or the other planner-internal data structures defined
in nodes/relation.h.  This is intended to provide the whole planner
API seen by most of the rest of the system; although FDWs still need
to use additional stuff, and more thought is also needed about just
what selfuncs.c should rely on.

The main point of doing this now is to limit the amount of new
#include baggage that will be needed by "planner support functions",
which I expect to introduce later, and which will be in relevant
datatype modules rather than anywhere near the planner.

This commit just moves relevant declarations into optimizer.h from
other header files (a couple of which go away because everything
got moved), and adjusts #include lists to match.  There's further
cleanup that could be done if we want to decide that some stuff
being exposed by optimizer.h doesn't belong in the planner at all,
but I'll leave that for another day.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11460.1548706639@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-29 15:48:51 -05:00
Tom Lane a1b8c41e99 Make some small planner API cleanups.
Move a few very simple node-creation and node-type-testing functions
from the planner's clauses.c to nodes/makefuncs and nodes/nodeFuncs.
There's nothing planner-specific about them, as evidenced by the
number of other places that were using them.

While at it, rename and_clause() etc to is_andclause() etc, to clarify
that they are node-type-testing functions not node-creation functions.
And use "static inline" implementations for the shortest ones.

Also, modify flatten_join_alias_vars() and some subsidiary functions
to take a Query not a PlannerInfo to define the join structure that
Vars should be translated according to.  They were only using the
"parse" field of the PlannerInfo anyway, so this just requires removing
one level of indirection.  The advantage is that now parse_agg.c can
use flatten_join_alias_vars() without the horrid kluge of creating an
incomplete PlannerInfo, which will allow that file to be decoupled from
relation.h in a subsequent patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11460.1548706639@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-29 15:26:44 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut e77cfa54d7 Fix pg_stat_ssl.clientdn
Return null if there is no client certificate.  This is how it has
always been documented, but in reality it returned an empty string.

Reviewed-by: Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/398754d8-6bb5-c5cf-e7b8-22e5f0983caf@2ndquadrant.com/
2019-01-29 13:06:33 +01:00
Andres Freund 684200543b Revert "Move page initialization from RelationAddExtraBlocks() to use."
This reverts commit fc02e6724f and
e6799d5a53.

Parts of the buildfarm error out with
ERROR: page %u of relation "%s" should be empty but is not
errors, and so far I/we do not know why. fc02e672 didn't fix the
issue.  As I cannot reproduce the issue locally, it seems best to get
the buildfarm green again, and reproduce the issue without time
pressure.
2019-01-28 17:16:56 -08:00
Andres Freund fc02e6724f Fix race condition between relation extension and vacuum.
In e6799d5a53 I removed vacuumlazy.c trickery around re-checking
whether a page is actually empty after acquiring an extension lock on
the relation, because the page is not PageInit()ed anymore, and
entries in the FSM ought not to lead to user-visible errors.

As reported by various buildfarm animals that is not correct, given
the way to code currently stands: If vacuum processes a page that's
just been newly added by either RelationGetBufferForTuple() or
RelationAddExtraBlocks(), it could add that page to the FSM and it
could be reused by other backends, before those two functions check
whether the newly added page is actually new.  That's a relatively
narrow race, but several buildfarm machines appear to be able to hit
it.

While it seems wrong that the FSM, given it's lack of durability and
approximative nature, can trigger errors like this, that seems better
fixed in a separate commit. Especially given that a good portion of
the buildfarm is red, and this is just re-introducing logic that
existed a few hours ago.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190128222259.zhi7ovzgtkft6em6@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-28 15:44:12 -08:00
Tomas Vondra 36a1281f86 Separate per-batch and per-tuple memory contexts in COPY
In batching mode, COPY was using the same (per-tuple) memory context for
allocations with longer lifetime. This was confusing but harmless, until
commit 31f3817402 added COPY FROM ... WHERE feature, introducing a risk
of memory leak.

The "per-tuple" memory context was reset only when starting new batch,
but as the rows may be filtered out by the WHERE clauses, that may not
happen at all.  The WHERE clause however has to be evaluated for all
rows, before filtering them out.

This commit separates the per-tuple and per-batch contexts, removing the
ambiguity.  Expressions (both defaults and WHERE clause) are evaluated
in the per-tuple context, while tuples are formed in the batch context.
This allows resetting the contexts at appropriate times.

The main complexity is related to partitioning, in which case we need to
reset the batch context after forming the tuple (which happens before
routing to leaf partition).  Instead of switching between two contexts
as before, we simply copy the last tuple aside, reset the context and
then copy the tuple back.  The performance impact is negligible, and
juggling with two contexts is not free either.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CALAY4q_DdpWDuB5-Zyi-oTtO2uSk8pmy+dupiRe3AvAc++1imA@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-29 00:00:47 +01:00
Tom Lane 4be058fe9e In the planner, replace an empty FROM clause with a dummy RTE.
The fact that "SELECT expression" has no base relations has long been a
thorn in the side of the planner.  It makes it hard to flatten a sub-query
that looks like that, or is a trivial VALUES() item, because the planner
generally uses relid sets to identify sub-relations, and such a sub-query
would have an empty relid set if we flattened it.  prepjointree.c contains
some baroque logic that works around this in certain special cases --- but
there is a much better answer.  We can replace an empty FROM clause with a
dummy RTE that acts like a table of one row and no columns, and then there
are no such corner cases to worry about.  Instead we need some logic to
get rid of useless dummy RTEs, but that's simpler and covers more cases
than what was there before.

For really trivial cases, where the query is just "SELECT expression" and
nothing else, there's a hazard that adding the extra RTE makes for a
noticeable slowdown; even though it's not much processing, there's not
that much for the planner to do overall.  However testing says that the
penalty is very small, close to the noise level.  In more complex queries,
this is able to find optimizations that we could not find before.

The new RTE type is called RTE_RESULT, since the "scan" plan type it
gives rise to is a Result node (the same plan we produced for a "SELECT
expression" query before).  To avoid confusion, rename the old ResultPath
path type to GroupResultPath, reflecting that it's only used in degenerate
grouping cases where we know the query produces just one grouped row.
(It wouldn't work to unify the two cases, because there are different
rules about where the associated quals live during query_planner.)

Note: although this touches readfuncs.c, I don't think a catversion
bump is required, because the added case can't occur in stored rules,
only plans.

Patch by me, reviewed by David Rowley and Mark Dilger

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15944.1521127664@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-28 17:54:23 -05:00
Andres Freund e6799d5a53 Move page initialization from RelationAddExtraBlocks() to use.
Previously we initialized pages when bulk extending in
RelationAddExtraBlocks(). That has a major disadvantage: It ties
RelationAddExtraBlocks() to heap, as other types of storage are likely
to need different amounts of special space, have different amount of
free space (previously determined by PageGetHeapFreeSpace()).

That we're relying on initializing pages, but not WAL logging the
initialization, also means the risk for getting
"WARNING:  relation \"%s\" page %u is uninitialized --- fixing"
style warnings in vacuums after crashes/immediate shutdowns, is
considerably higher. The warning sounds much more serious than what
they are.

Fix those two issues together by not initializing pages in
RelationAddExtraPages() (but continue to do so in
RelationGetBufferForTuple(), which is linked much more closely to
heap), and accepting uninitialized pages as normal in
vacuumlazy.c. When vacuumlazy encounters an empty page it now adds it
to the FSM, but does nothing else.  We chose to not issue a debug
message, much less a warning in that case - it seems rarely useful,
and quite likely to scare people unnecessarily.

For now empty pages aren't added to the VM, because standbys would not
re-discover such pages after a promotion. In contrast to other sources
for empty pages, there's no corresponding WAL records triggering FSM
updates during replay.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181219083945.6khtgm36mivonhva@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-28 13:15:11 -08:00
Amit Kapila a23676503b Revert "Avoid creation of the free space map for small heap relations."
This reverts commit ac88d2962a.
2019-01-28 11:31:44 +05:30
Amit Kapila ac88d2962a Avoid creation of the free space map for small heap relations.
Previously, all heaps had FSMs. For very small tables, this means that the
FSM took up more space than the heap did. This is wasteful, so now we
refrain from creating the FSM for heaps with 4 pages or fewer. If the last
known target block has insufficient space, we still try to insert into some
other page before giving up and extending the relation, since doing
otherwise leads to table bloat. Testing showed that trying every page
penalized performance slightly, so we compromise and try every other page.
This way, we visit at most two pages. Any pages with wasted free space
become visible at next relation extension, so we still control table bloat.
As a bonus, directly attempting one or two pages can even be faster than
consulting the FSM would have been.

Once the FSM is created for a heap we don't remove it even if somebody
deletes all the rows from the corresponding relation.  We don't think it is
a useful optimization as it is quite likely that relation will again grow
to the same size.

Author: John Naylor with design inputs and some code contribution by Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Tested-by: Mithun C Y
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAJVSVGWvB13PzpbLEecFuGFc5V2fsO736BsdTakPiPAcdMM5tQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-28 08:14:06 +05:30
Amit Kapila d66e3664b8 In bootstrap mode, don't allow the creation of files if they don't already
exist.

In commit's b9d01fe288 and 3908473c80, we have added some code where we
allowed the creation of files during mdopen even if they didn't exist
during the bootstrap mode.  The later commit obviates the need for same.

This was harmless code till now but with an upcoming feature where we don't
allow to create FSM for small tables, this will needlessly create FSM
files.

Author: John Naylor
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAJVSVGWvB13PzpbLEecFuGFc5V2fsO736BsdTakPiPAcdMM5tQ@mail.gmail.com
	    https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAA4eK1KsET6sotf+rzOTQfb83pzVEzVhbQi1nxGFYVstVWXUGw@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-28 07:52:51 +05:30
Andres Freund a9c35cf85c Change function call information to be variable length.
Before this change FunctionCallInfoData, the struct arguments etc for
V1 function calls are stored in, always had space for
FUNC_MAX_ARGS/100 arguments, storing datums and their nullness in two
arrays.  For nearly every function call 100 arguments is far more than
needed, therefore wasting memory. Arg and argnull being two separate
arrays also guarantees that to access a single argument, two
cachelines have to be touched.

Change the layout so there's a single variable-length array with pairs
of value / isnull. That drastically reduces memory consumption for
most function calls (on x86-64 a two argument function now uses
64bytes, previously 936 bytes), and makes it very likely that argument
value and its nullness are on the same cacheline.

Arguments are stored in a new NullableDatum struct, which, due to
padding, needs more memory per argument than before. But as usually
far fewer arguments are stored, and individual arguments are cheaper
to access, that's still a clear win.  It's likely that there's other
places where conversion to NullableDatum arrays would make sense,
e.g. TupleTableSlots, but that's for another commit.

Because the function call information is now variable-length
allocations have to take the number of arguments into account. For
heap allocations that can be done with SizeForFunctionCallInfoData(),
for on-stack allocations there's a new LOCAL_FCINFO(name, nargs) macro
that helps to allocate an appropriately sized and aligned variable.

Some places with stack allocation function call information don't know
the number of arguments at compile time, and currently variably sized
stack allocations aren't allowed in postgres. Therefore allow for
FUNC_MAX_ARGS space in these cases. They're not that common, so for
now that seems acceptable.

Because of the need to allocate FunctionCallInfo of the appropriate
size, older extensions may need to update their code. To avoid subtle
breakages, the FunctionCallInfoData struct has been renamed to
FunctionCallInfoBaseData. Most code only references FunctionCallInfo,
so that shouldn't cause much collateral damage.

This change is also a prerequisite for more efficient expression JIT
compilation (by allocating the function call information on the stack,
allowing LLVM to optimize it away); previously the size of the call
information caused problems inside LLVM's optimizer.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180605172952.x34m5uz6ju6enaem@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-26 14:17:52 -08:00
Tom Lane ebfe20dc70 Allow UNLISTEN in hot-standby mode.
Since LISTEN is (still) disallowed, UNLISTEN must be a no-op in a
hot-standby session, and so there's no harm in allowing it.  This
change allows client code to not worry about whether it's connected
to a primary or standby server when performing session-state-reset
type activities.  (Note that DISCARD ALL, which includes UNLISTEN,
was already allowed, making it inconsistent to reject UNLISTEN.)

Per discussion, back-patch to all supported versions.

Shay Rojansky, reviewed by Mi Tar

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADT4RqCf2gA_TJtPAjnGzkC3ZiexfBZiLmA-mV66e4UyuVv8bA@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-25 21:14:49 -05:00
Michael Paquier c9b75c5838 Simplify restriction handling of two-phase commit for temporary objects
There were two flags used to track the access to temporary tables and
to the temporary namespace of a session which are used to restrict
PREPARE TRANSACTION, however the first control flag is a concept
included in the second.  This removes the flag for temporary table
tracking, keeping around only the one at namespace level.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190118053126.GH1883@paquier.xyz
2019-01-26 10:45:23 +09:00
Tom Lane 18c0da88a5 Split QTW_EXAMINE_RTES flag into QTW_EXAMINE_RTES_BEFORE/_AFTER.
This change allows callers of query_tree_walker() to choose whether
to visit an RTE before or after visiting the contents of the RTE
(i.e., prefix or postfix tree order).  All existing users of
QTW_EXAMINE_RTES want the QTW_EXAMINE_RTES_BEFORE behavior, but
an upcoming patch will want QTW_EXAMINE_RTES_AFTER, and it seems
like a potentially useful change on its own.

Andreas Karlsson (extracted from CTE inlining patch)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8810.1542402910@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-25 17:09:45 -05:00
Tom Lane ff750ce2d8 Teach nulltestsel() that system columns are never NULL.
While it's perhaps unlikely that users would write an explicit test
like "ctid IS NULL", this function is also used in range estimation,
and an incorrect answer can throw off the results for tight ranges.
Anyway it's not much code so we might as well do it.

Edmund Horner

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMyN-kCa3BFUFrCTtQeprxTU1anCd3Pua7zXstGCKq4pXgjukw@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-25 11:44:26 -05:00
Tom Lane 6119060d01 Fix possibly-uninitialized-variable warning from commit 9556aa01c.
Heikki's compiler doesn't complain about end_ptr, apparently,
but mine does.

In passing, I failed to resist the temptation to remove the
no-longer-used fldnum variable, and relocate chunk_len's
declaration to a narrower scope.
2019-01-25 11:27:44 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9556aa01c6 Use single-byte Boyer-Moore-Horspool search even with multibyte encodings.
The old implementation first converted the input strings to arrays of
wchars, and performed the conversion on those. However, the conversion is
expensive, and for a large input string, consumes a lot of memory.
Allocating the large arrays also meant that these functions could not be
used on strings larger 1 GB / pg_encoding_max_length() (256 MB for UTF-8).

Avoid the conversion, and instead use the single-byte algorithm even with
multibyte encodings. That can get fooled, if there is a matching byte
sequence in the middle of a multi-byte character, so to eliminate false
positives like that, we verify any matches by walking the string character
by character with pg_mblen(). Also, if the caller needs the position of
the match, as a character-offset, we also need to walk the string to count
the characters.

Performance testing shows that walking the whole string with pg_mblen() is
somewhat slower than converting the whole string to wchars. It's still
often a win, though, because we don't need to do it if there is no match,
and even when there is, we only need to walk up to the point where the
match is, not the whole string. Even in the worst case, there would be
room for optimization: Much of the CPU time in the current loop with
pg_mblen() is function call overhead, and could be improved by inlining
pg_mblen() and/or the encoding-specific mblen() functions. But I didn't
attempt to do that as part of this patch.

Most of the callers of text_position_setup/next functions were actually
not interested in the position of the match, counted in characters. To
cater for them, refactor the text_position_next() interface into two
parts: searching for the next match (text_position_next()), and returning
the current match's position as a pointer (text_position_get_match_ptr())
or as a character offset (text_position_get_match_pos()). Getting the
pointer to the match is a more convenient API for many callers, and with
UTF-8, it allows skipping the character-walking step altogether, because
UTF-8 can't have false matches even when treated like raw byte strings.

Reviewed-by: John Naylor
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/3173d989-bc1c-fc8a-3b69-f24246f73876%40iki.fi
2019-01-25 16:25:05 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas a5be6e9a1d Fix comments that claimed that mblen() only looks at first byte.
GB18030's mblen() function looks at the first and the second byte of the
multibyte character, to determine its length. copy.c had made the
assumption that mblen() only looks at the first byte, but it turns out to
work out fine, because of the way the GB18030 encoding works. COPY will
see a 4-byte encoded character as two 2-byte encoded characters, which is
enough for COPY's purposes. It cannot mix those up with delimiter or
escaping characters, because only single-byte ASCII characters are
supported as delimiters or escape characters.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/7704d099-9643-2a55-fb0e-becd64400dcb%40iki.fi
2019-01-25 14:54:38 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 7c079d7417 Allow generalized expression syntax for partition bounds
Previously, only literals were allowed.  This change allows general
expressions, including functions calls, which are evaluated at the
time the DDL command is executed.

Besides offering some more functionality, it simplifies the parser
structures and removes some inconsistencies in how the literals were
handled.

Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Tom Lane, Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@2ndquadrant.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/9f88b5e0-6da2-5227-20d0-0d7012beaa1c@lab.ntt.co.jp/
2019-01-25 11:28:49 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera efd9366dce Fix droppability of constraints upon partition detach
We were failing to set conislocal correctly for constraints in
partitions after partition detach, leading to those constraints becoming
undroppable.  Fix by setting the flag correctly.  Existing databases
might contain constraints with the conislocal wrongly set to false, for
partitions that were detached; this situation should be fixable by
applying an UPDATE on pg_constraint to set conislocal true.  This
problem should otherwise be innocuous and should disappear across a
dump/restore or pg_upgrade.

Secondarily, when constraint drop was attempted in a partitioned table,
ATExecDropConstraint would try to recurse to partitions after doing
performDeletion() of the constraint in the partitioned table itself; but
since the constraint in the partitions are dropped by the initial call
of performDeletion() (because of following dependencies), the recursion
step would fail since it would not find the constraint, causing the
whole operation to fail.  Fix by preventing recursion.

Reported-by: Amit Langote
Diagnosed-by: Amit Langote
Author: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f2b8ead5-4131-d5a8-8016-2ea0a31250af@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-01-24 14:09:56 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 19184fcc09 Simplify coding to detach constraints when detaching partition
The original coding was too baroque and led to an use-after-release
mistake, noticed by buildfarm member prion.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/21693.1548305934@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-24 11:25:29 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera ae366aa577 Detach constraints when partitions are detached
I (Álvaro) forgot to do this in eb7ed3f306, leading to undroppable
constraints after partitions are detached.  Repair.

Reported-by: Amit Langote
Author: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c1c9b688-b886-84f7-4048-1e4ebe9b1d06@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-01-24 00:01:32 -03:00
Michael Paquier 289198c0d9 Remove argument isprimary from index_build()
The flag was introduced in 3fdeb18, but f66e8bf actually forgot to
finish the cleanup as index_update_stats() has simplified its
interface.

Author: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190122080852.GB3873@paquier.xyz
2019-01-24 07:57:09 +09:00
Heikki Linnakangas 95931133a9 Fix misc typos in comments.
Spotted mostly by Fabien Coelho.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/alpine.DEB.2.21.1901230947050.16643@lancre
2019-01-23 13:39:00 +02:00
Tomas Vondra 4a8283d0ec Fix handling of volatile expressions in COPY FROM ... WHERE
The checking for calls to volatile functions in the COPY FROM ... WHERE
expression was treating all WHERE clauses as if containing such calls.
While that does not produce incorrect results, this disables batching
which may result in significant performance regression.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CALAY4q_DdpWDuB5-Zyi-oTtO2uSk8pmy+dupiRe3AvAc++1imA@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-22 23:11:17 +01:00
Andres Freund 005881033d llvm: Fix file-ending in IDENTIFICATION comments.
Author: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9a54dcef-c799-ce89-2e47-0a7fc12d5fc2@lab.ntt.co.jp
Backpatch: 11-, where llvm was introduced.
2019-01-22 11:49:48 -08:00
Andres Freund 346ed70b0a Rename RelationData.rd_amroutine to rd_indam.
The upcoming table AM support makes rd_amroutine to generic, as its
only about index AMs. The new name makes that clear, and is shorter to
boot.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-21 17:36:55 -08:00
Andres Freund ebcc7bf949 Rephrase references to "time qualification".
Now that the relevant code has, for other reasons, moved out of
tqual.[ch], it seems time to refer to visiblity rather than time
qualification.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-21 17:07:10 -08:00
Andres Freund c91560defc Move remaining code from tqual.[ch] to heapam.h / heapam_visibility.c.
Given these routines are heap specific, and that there will be more
generic visibility support in via table AM, it makes sense to move the
prototypes to heapam.h (routines like HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum will
not be exposed in a generic fashion, because they are too storage
specific).

Similarly, the code in tqual.c is specific to heap, so moving it into
access/heap/ makes sense.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-21 17:07:10 -08:00
Andres Freund b7eda3e0e3 Move generic snapshot related code from tqual.h to snapmgr.h.
The code in tqual.c is largely heap specific. Due to the upcoming
pluggable storage work, it therefore makes sense to move it into
access/heap/ (as the file's header notes, the tqual name isn't very
good).

But the various statically allocated snapshot and snapshot
initialization functions are now (see previous commit) generic and do
not depend on functions declared in tqual.h anymore. Therefore move.
Also move XidInMVCCSnapshot as that's useful for future AMs, and
already used outside of tqual.c.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-21 17:06:41 -08:00
Andres Freund 63746189b2 Change snapshot type to be determined by enum rather than callback.
This is in preparation for allowing the same snapshot be used for
different table AMs. With the current callback based approach we would
need one callback for each supported AM, which clearly would not be
extensible.  Thus add a new Snapshot->snapshot_type field, and move
the dispatch into HeapTupleSatisfiesVisibility() (which is now a
function). Later work will then dispatch calls to
HeapTupleSatisfiesVisibility() and other AMs visibility functions
depending on the type of the table.  The central SnapshotType enum
also seems like a good location to centralize documentation about the
intended behaviour of various types of snapshots.

As tqual.h isn't included by bufmgr.h any more (as HeapTupleSatisfies*
isn't referenced by TestForOldSnapshot() anymore) a few files now need
to include it directly.

Author: Andres Freund, loosely based on earlier work by Haribabu Kommi
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20160812231527.GA690404@alvherre.pgsql
2019-01-21 17:03:15 -08:00
Tom Lane 8f9e934ab7 Remove useless bms_copy step in RelationGetIndexAttrBitmap.
Seems to be from a bad case of copy-and-paste-itis in commit 665d1fad9.
It wouldn't be quite so annoying if it didn't contradict the comment
half a dozen lines above.

David Rowley

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f95Dyf8Qkdz4W+PbCmT-HTb54tkqUCC8isa2RVgSJ_pXQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-21 18:33:41 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 0464fdf07f Create action triggers when partitions are detached
Detaching a partition from a partitioned table that's constrained by
foreign keys requires additional action triggers on the referenced side;
otherwise, DELETE/UPDATE actions there fail to notice rows in the table
that was partition, and so are incorrectly allowed through.  With this
commit, those triggers are now created.  Conversely, when a table that
has a foreign key is attached as a partition to a table that also has
the same foreign key, those action triggers are no longer needed, so we
remove them.

Add a minimal test case verifying (part of) this.

Authors: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f2b8ead5-4131-d5a8-8016-2ea0a31250af@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-01-21 20:08:52 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 1755440935 Flush relcache entries when their FKs are meddled with
Back in commit 100340e2dc, we made relcache entries keep lists of the
foreign keys applying to the relation -- but we forgot to update
CacheInvalidateHeapTuple to flush those entries when new FKs got created
or existing ones updated/deleted.  No bugs appear to have been reported
that would be explained by this ommission, but I noticed the problem
while working on an unrelated bugfix which clearly showed it.  Fix by
adding relcache flush on relevant foreign key changes.

Backpatch to 9.6, like the aforementioned commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/201901211927.7mmhschxlejh@alvherre.pgsql
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
2019-01-21 19:34:11 -03:00
Andres Freund 527114e51e Fix "Remove superfluous tqual.h includes" by adding back one include.
I removed one include too many in e7cc78ad43, not sure why that
escaped my test script.

Author: Andres Freund
2019-01-21 12:59:31 -08:00
Andres Freund e7cc78ad43 Remove superfluous tqual.h includes.
Most of these had been obsoleted by 568d4138c / the SnapshotNow
removal.

This is is preparation for moving most of tqual.[ch] into either
snapmgr.h or heapam.h, which in turn is in preparation for pluggable
table AMs.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-21 12:15:02 -08:00
Andres Freund e0c4ec0728 Replace uses of heap_open et al with the corresponding table_* function.
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190111000539.xbv7s6w7ilcvm7dp@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-21 10:51:37 -08:00
Andres Freund 111944c5ee Replace heapam.h includes with {table, relation}.h where applicable.
A lot of files only included heapam.h for relation_open, heap_open etc
- replace the heapam.h include in those files with the narrower
header.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190111000539.xbv7s6w7ilcvm7dp@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-21 10:51:37 -08:00
Andres Freund 4b21acf522 Introduce access/{table.h, relation.h}, for generic functions from heapam.h.
access/heapam contains functions that are very storage specific (say
heap_insert() and a lot of lower level functions), and fairly generic
infrastructure like relation_open(), heap_open() etc.  In the upcoming
pluggable storage work we're introducing a layer between table
accesses in general and heapam, to allow for different storage
methods. For a bit cleaner separation it thus seems advantageous to
move generic functions like the aforementioned to their own headers.

access/relation.h will contain relation_open() etc, and access/table.h
will contain table_open() (formerly known as heap_open()). I've decided
for table.h not to include relation.h, but we might change that at a
later stage.

relation.h already exists in another directory, but the other
plausible name (rel.h) also conflicts. It'd be nice if there were a
non-conflicting name, but nobody came up with a suggestion. It's
possible that the appropriate way to address the naming conflict would
be to rename nodes/relation.h, which isn't particularly well named.

To avoid breaking a lot of extensions that just use heap_open() etc,
table.h has macros mapping the old names to the new ones, and heapam.h
includes relation, table.h.  That also allows to keep the
bulk renaming of existing callers in a separate commit.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190111000539.xbv7s6w7ilcvm7dp@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-21 10:51:36 -08:00
Tom Lane f1ad067fc3 Sort the dependent objects before recursing in findDependentObjects().
Historically, the notices output by DROP CASCADE tended to come out
in uncertain order, and in some cases you might get different claims
about which object depends on which other one.  This is because we
just traversed the dependency tree in the order in which pg_depend
entries are seen, and nbtree has never promised anything about the
order of equal-keyed index entries.  We've put up with that for years,
hacking regression tests when necessary to prevent them from emitting
unstable output.  However, it's a problem for pending work that will
change nbtree's behavior for equal keys, as that causes unexpected
changes in the regression test results.

Hence, adjust findDependentObjects to sort the results of each
indexscan before processing them.  The sort is on descending OID of
the dependent objects, hence more or less reverse creation order.
While this rule could still result in bogus regression test failures
if an OID wraparound occurred mid-test, that seems unlikely to happen
in any plausible development or packaging-test scenario.

This is enough to ensure output stability for ordinary DROP CASCADE
commands, but not for DROP OWNED BY, because that has a different
code path with the same problem.  We might later choose to sort in
the DROP OWNED BY code as well, but this patch doesn't do so.

I've also not done anything about reverting the existing hacks to
suppress unstable DROP CASCADE output in specific regression tests.
It might be worth undoing those, but it seems like a distinct question.

The first indexscan loop in findDependentObjects is not touched,
meaning there is a hazard of unstable error reports from that too.
However, said hazard is not the fault of that code: it was designed
on the assumption that there could be at most one "owning" object
to complain about, and that assumption does not seem unreasonable.
The recent patch that added the possibility of multiple
DEPENDENCY_INTERNAL_AUTO links broke that assumption, but we should
fix that situation not band-aid around it.  That's a matter for
another patch, though.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12244.1547854440@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-21 13:48:14 -05:00
Andres Freund 8cc157b234 Fix ALTER TRIGGER ... RENAME, broken in WITH OIDS removal.
I (Andres) broke this in 578b229718.

Author: Rushabh Lathia
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGPqQf04PywZX3sVQaF6H=oLiW9GJncRW+=e78vTy4MokEWcZw@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-21 09:13:43 -08:00
Andres Freund 93507e67c9 Adjust some more comments for WITH OIDS removal.
I missed these in 578b229718.

Author: Andres Freund
2019-01-21 09:13:43 -08:00
Etsuro Fujita 8d8dcead12 Postpone generating tlists and EC members for inheritance dummy children.
Previously, in set_append_rel_size(), we generated tlists and EC members
for dummy children for possible use by partition-wise join, even if
partition-wise join was disabled or the top parent was not a partitioned
table, but adding such EC members causes noticeable planning speed
degradation for queries with certain kinds of join quals like
"(foo.x + bar.y) = constant" where foo and bar are partitioned tables in
cases where there are lots of dummy children, as the EC members lists
grow huge, especially for the ECs derived from such join quals, which
makes the search for the parent EC members in add_child_rel_equivalences()
very time-consuming.  Postpone the work until such children are actually
involved in a partition-wise join.

Reported-by: Sanyo Capobiango
Analyzed-by: Justin Pryzby and Alvaro Herrera
Author: Amit Langote, with a few additional changes by me
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat
Backpatch-through: v11 where partition-wise join was added
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAO698qZnrxoZu7MEtfiJmpmUtz3AVYFVnwzR%2BpqjF%3DrmKBTgpw%40mail.gmail.com
2019-01-21 17:12:40 +09:00
Tomas Vondra 31f3817402 Allow COPY FROM to filter data using WHERE conditions
Extends the COPY FROM command with a WHERE condition, which allows doing
various types of filtering while importing the data (random sampling,
condition on a data column, etc.).  Until now such filtering required
either preprocessing of the input data, or importing all data and then
filtering in the database. COPY FROM ... WHERE is an easy-to-use and
low-overhead alternative for most simple cases.

Author: Surafel Temesgen
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra, Masahiko Sawada, Lim Myungkyu
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CALAY4q_DdpWDuB5-Zyi-oTtO2uSk8pmy+dupiRe3AvAc++1imA@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-20 00:22:14 +01:00
Magnus Hagander 0301db623d Replace @postgresql.org with @lists.postgresql.org for mailinglists
Commit c0d0e54084 replaced the ones in the documentation, but missed out
on the ones in the code. Replace those as well, but unlike c0d0e54084,
don't backpatch the code changes to avoid breaking translations.
2019-01-19 19:06:35 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 3bed67bed1 Fix outdated comment
The issue the comment is referring to was fixed by
08859bb5c2.
2019-01-19 09:34:24 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera 0325d7a595 Fix creation of duplicate foreign keys on partitions
When creating a foreign key in a partitioned table, if some partitions
already have equivalent constraints, we wastefully create duplicates of
the constraints instead of attaching to the existing ones.  That's
inconsistent with the de-duplication that is applied when a table is
attached as a partition.  To fix, reuse the FK-cloning code instead of
having a separate code path.

Backpatch to Postgres 11.  This is a subtle behavior change, but surely
a welcome one since there's no use in having duplicate foreign keys.

Discovered by Álvaro Herrera while thinking about a different problem
reported by Jesper Pedersen (bug #15587).

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/201901151935.zfadrzvyof4k@alvherre.pgsql
2019-01-18 15:00:45 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 03afae201f Move CloneForeignKeyConstraints to tablecmds.c
My commit 3de241dba8 introduced some code to create a clone of a
foreign key to a partition, but I put it in pg_constraint.c because it
was too close to the contents of the pg_constraint row.  With the
previous commit that split out the constraint tuple deconstruction into
its own routine, it makes more sense to have the FK-cloning function in
tablecmds.c, mostly because its static subroutine can then be used by a
future bugfix.

My initial posting of this patch had this routine as static in
tablecmds.c, but sadly this function is already part of the Postgres 11
ABI as exported from pg_constraint.c, so keep it as exported also just
to avoid breaking any possible users of it.
2019-01-18 15:00:06 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 0080396dad Refactor duplicate code into DeconstructFkConstraintRow
My commit 3de241dba8 introduced some code (in tablecmds.c) to obtain
data from a pg_constraint row for a foreign key, that already existed in
ri_triggers.c.  Split it out into its own routine in pg_constraint.c,
where it naturally belongs.

No functional code changes, only code movement.

Backpatch to pg11, because a future bugfix is simpler after this.
2019-01-18 14:59:44 -03:00
Tom Lane 9194c4270b Avoid sometimes printing both tables and their columns in DROP CASCADE.
A cascaded drop might find independent reasons to drop both a table
and some column of the table (for instance, a schema drop might include
dropping a data type used in some table in the schema).  Depending on
the order of visitation of pg_depend entries, we might report the
table column and the whole table as separate objects-to-be-dropped,
or we might only report the table.  This is confusing and leads to
unstable regression test output, so fix it to report only the table
regardless of visitation order.

Per gripe from Peter Geoghegan.  This is just cosmetic from a user's
standpoint, and we haven't actually seen regression test problems in
practice (yet), so I'll refrain from back-patching.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15908.1547762076@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-18 11:05:11 -05:00
Michael Paquier 80971bc206 Fix incorrect relation name in comment of vacuumlazy.c
Author: Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoBiOiapB7YGbWRfNZji3cs1gkEwv=uGLTemaZ9yNKK1DA@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-18 13:53:43 +09:00
Michael Paquier c5660e0aa5 Restrict the use of temporary namespace in two-phase transactions
Attempting to use a temporary table within a two-phase transaction is
forbidden for ages.  However, there have been uncovered grounds for
a couple of other object types and commands which work on temporary
objects with two-phase commit.  In short, trying to create, lock or drop
an object on a temporary schema should not be authorized within a
two-phase transaction, as it would cause its state to create
dependencies with other sessions, causing all sorts of side effects with
the existing session or other sessions spawned later on trying to use
the same temporary schema name.

Regression tests are added to cover all the grounds found, the original
report mentioned function creation, but monitoring closer there are many
other patterns with LOCK, DROP or CREATE EXTENSION which are involved.
One of the symptoms resulting in combining both is that the session
which used the temporary schema is not able to shut down completely,
waiting for being able to drop the temporary schema, something that it
cannot complete because of the two-phase transaction involved with
temporary objects.  In this case the client is able to disconnect but
the session remains alive on the backend-side, potentially blocking
connection backend slots from being used.  Other problems reported could
also involve server crashes.

This is back-patched down to v10, which is where 9b013dc has introduced
MyXactFlags, something that this patch relies on.

Reported-by: Alexey Bashtanov
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5d910e2e-0db8-ec06-dd5f-baec420513c3@imap.cc
Backpatch-through: 10
2019-01-18 09:21:44 +09:00
Andrew Gierth d16d453870 Postpone aggregate checks until after collation is assigned.
Previously, parseCheckAggregates was run before
assign_query_collations, but this causes problems if any expression
has already had a collation assigned by some transform function (e.g.
transformCaseExpr) before parseCheckAggregates runs. The differing
collations would cause expressions not to be recognized as equal to
the ones in the GROUP BY clause, leading to spurious errors about
unaggregated column references.

The result was that CASE expr WHEN val ... would fail when "expr"
contained a GROUPING() expression or matched one of the group by
expressions, and where collatable types were involved; whereas the
supposedly identical CASE WHEN expr = val ... would succeed.

Backpatch all the way; this appears to have been wrong ever since
collations were introduced.

Per report from Guillaume Lelarge, analysis and patch by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAECtzeVSO_US8C2Khgfv54ZMUOBR4sWq+6_bLrETnWExHT=rFg@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87muo0k0c7.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2019-01-17 06:46:10 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera d723f56872 Reorganize planner code moved in b60c397599
It seems modules are better defined like this instead of the original
split.

Per complaints from David Rowley as well as Amit Langote's self review.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f988rsyhwvLgfT-y1UCYUfXDOv67ENQk=v24OxhsZOzZw@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-16 16:27:44 -03:00
Andres Freund 90525d7b4e Don't duplicate parallel seqscan shmem sizing logic in nbtree.
This is architecturally mildly problematic, which becomes more
pronounced with the upcoming introduction of pluggable storage.

To fix, teach heap_parallelscan_estimate() to deal with SnapshotAny
snapshots, and then use it from _bt_parallel_estimate_shared().

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-15 12:19:21 -08:00
Andres Freund 285d8e1205 Move vacuumlazy.c into access/heap.
It's heap table storage specific code that can't realistically be
generalized into table AM agnostic code.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180703070645.wchpu5muyto5n647@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-15 12:06:19 -08:00
Andres Freund 148e632c05 Fix parent of WCO qual.
The parent of some WCO expressions was, apparently by accident, set to
the the source of DML queries, rather than the target table.  This
causes problems for the upcoming pluggable storage work, because the
target and source table might be of different storage types.

It's possible that this is already problematic, but neither
experimenting nor inquiries on -hackers have found them. So don't
backpatch for now.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181205225213.hiwa3kgoxeybqcqv@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-15 12:04:32 -08:00
Tom Lane 1c53c4dec3 Finish reverting "recheck_on_update" patch.
This reverts commit c203d6cf8 and some follow-on fixes, completing the
task begun in commit 5d28c9bd7.  If that feature is ever resurrected,
the code will look quite a bit different from this, so it seems best
to start from a clean slate.

The v11 branch is not touched; in that branch, the recheck_on_update
storage option remains present, but nonfunctional and undocumented.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190114223409.3tcvejfhlvbucrv5@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-15 12:07:10 -05:00
Andres Freund 0944ec54de Don't include genam.h from execnodes.h and relscan.h anymore.
This is the genam.h equivalent of 4c850ecec6 (which removed
heapam.h from a lot of other headers).  There's still a few header
includes of genam.h, but not from central headers anymore.

As a few headers are not indirectly included anymore, execnodes.h and
relscan.h need a few additional includes. Some of the depended on
types were replacable by using the underlying structs, but e.g. for
Snapshot in execnodes.h that'd have gotten more invasive than
reasonable in this commit.

Like the aforementioned commit 4c850ecec6, this requires adding new
genam.h includes to a number of backend files, which likely is also
required in a few external projects.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190114000701.y4ttcb74jpskkcfb@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-14 17:02:12 -08:00
Andres Freund 774a975c9a Make naming of tupdesc related structs more consistent with the rest of PG.
We usually don't change the name of structs between the struct name
itself and the name of the typedef. Additionally, structs that are
usually used via a typedef that hides being a pointer, are commonly
suffixed Data.  Change tupdesc code to follow those convention.

This is triggered by a future patch that intends to forward declare
TupleDescData in another header - keeping with the naming scheme makes
that easier to understand.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190114000701.y4ttcb74jpskkcfb@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-14 16:25:50 -08:00
Andres Freund 4c850ecec6 Don't include heapam.h from others headers.
heapam.h previously was included in a number of widely used
headers (e.g. execnodes.h, indirectly in executor.h, ...). That's
problematic on its own, as heapam.h contains a lot of low-level
details that don't need to be exposed that widely, but becomes more
problematic with the upcoming introduction of pluggable table storage
- it seems inappropriate for heapam.h to be included that widely
afterwards.

heapam.h was largely only included in other headers to get the
HeapScanDesc typedef (which was defined in heapam.h, even though
HeapScanDescData is defined in relscan.h). The better solution here
seems to be to just use the underlying struct (forward declared where
necessary). Similar for BulkInsertState.

Another problem was that LockTupleMode was used in executor.h - parts
of the file tried to cope without heapam.h, but due to the fact that
it indirectly included it, several subsequent violations of that goal
were not not noticed. We could just reuse the approach of declaring
parameters as int, but it seems nicer to move LockTupleMode to
lockoptions.h - that's not a perfect location, but also doesn't seem
bad.

As a number of files relied on implicitly included heapam.h, a
significant number of files grew an explicit include. It's quite
probably that a few external projects will need to do the same.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Alvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190114000701.y4ttcb74jpskkcfb@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-14 16:24:41 -08:00
Michael Paquier 42e2a58071 Fix typos in documentation and for one wait event
These have been found while cross-checking for the use of unique words
in the documentation, and a wait event was not getting generated in a way
consistent to what the documentation provided.

Author: Alexander Lakhin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9b5a3a85-899a-ae62-dbab-1e7943aa5ab1@gmail.com
2019-01-15 08:47:01 +09:00
Andres Freund de66987adb Re-add default_with_oids GUC to avoid breaking old dump files.
After 578b229718 / the removal of WITH OIDS support, older dump files
containing
    SET default_with_oids = false;
either report unnecessary errors (as the subsequent tables have no
oids) or even fail to restore entirely (when using transaction mode).
To avoid that, re-add the GUC, but don't allow setting it to true.

Per complaint from Tom Lane.

Author: Amit Khandekar, editorialized by me
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9dZyxrtL0rJfoNoOj6v7fJSDaXBngi9wy5XU8m-ioXhAA@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-14 15:30:24 -08:00
Alvaro Herrera 0ad41cf537 Fix unique INCLUDE indexes on partitioned tables
We were considering the INCLUDE columns as part of the key, allowing
unicity-violating rows to be inserted in different partitions.

Concurrent development conflict in eb7ed3f306 and 8224de4f42.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190109065109.GA4285@telsasoft.com
2019-01-14 19:28:10 -03:00
Michael Paquier 9f527a6e9a Fix error message for logical replication targets
This fixes an oversight from 373bda6.

Noted by Erik Rijkers.
2019-01-13 22:36:23 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 0acb3bc33a Change default of recovery_target_timeline to 'latest'
This is what one usually wants for recovery and almost always wants
for a standby.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/6dd2c23a-4162-8469-410f-bfe146e28c0c@2ndquadrant.com/
Reviewed-by: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
2019-01-13 10:01:05 +01:00