Commit Graph

40936 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane ef1b5af823 Do not let PostmasterContext survive into background workers.
We don't want postmaster child processes to contain a copy of the
postmaster's PostmasterContext.  That would be a waste of memory at least,
and at worst a security issue, since there are copies of the semi-sensitive
pg_hba and pg_ident data in there.  All other child process types delete
the PostmasterContext after forking, but the original coding of the
background worker patch (commit da07a1e85) did not do so.  It appears
that the only reason for that was to avoid copying the bgworker's
MyBgworkerEntry out of that context; but the couple of additional
statements needed to do so are hardly good justification for it.  Hence,
copy that data and then clear the context as other child processes do.

Because this patch changes the memory context in which a bgworker function
gains control, back-patching it would be a bit risky, so we won't fix this
in back branches.  The "security" complaint is pretty thin anyway for
generic bgworkers; only with the introduction of parallel query is there
any question of running untrusted code in a bgworker process.

Discussion: <14111.1470082717@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-08-03 14:48:13 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 6a9e09c49e Add missing casts in information schema
From: Clément Prévost <prevostclement@gmail.com>
2016-08-03 14:41:01 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 2b8fd4fa67 doc: Remove documentation of nonexistent information schema columns
These were probably copied in by accident.

From: Clément Prévost <prevostclement@gmail.com>
2016-08-03 13:50:13 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera b26f7fa6ae Fix assorted problems in recovery tests
In test 001_stream_rep we're using pg_stat_replication.write_location to
determine catch-up status, but we care about xlog having been applied
not just received, so change that to apply_location.

In test 003_recovery_targets, we query the database for a recovery
target specification and later for the xlog position supposedly
corresponding to that recovery specification.  If for whatever reason
more WAL is written between the two queries, the recovery specification
is earlier than the xlog position used by the query in the test harness,
so we wait forever, leading to test failures.  Deal with this by using a
single query to extract both items.  In 2a0f89cd71 we tried to deal
with it by giving them more tests to run, but in hindsight that was
obviously doomed to failure (no revert of that, though).

Per hamster buildfarm failures.

Author: Michaël Paquier
2016-08-03 13:21:23 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 69bdfc4090 doc: Change recommendation to put NOTIFY into a rule
Suggest a statement trigger instead.
2016-08-03 12:29:15 -04:00
Kevin Grittner c93d8737be Add OldSnapshotTimeMapLock to wait_event table in docs.
Ashutosh Sharma with minor fixes by me.
2016-08-03 09:58:50 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 6eb5b05d22 C comment: fix typo
Author: Amit Langote
2016-08-03 10:32:32 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 0a4d67b16c doc: Remove slightly confusing xreflabels
It seems clearer to refer to these tables in the normal way.
2016-08-02 22:34:45 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 0710499195 Small wording tweaks
Dmitry Igrishin
2016-08-02 22:33:56 -04:00
Tom Lane c6ea616ff7 Remove duplicate InitPostmasterChild() call while starting a bgworker.
This is apparently harmless on Windows, but on Unix it results in an
assertion failure.  We'd not noticed because this code doesn't get
used on Unix unless you build with -DEXEC_BACKEND.  Bug was evidently
introduced by sloppy refactoring in commit 31c453165.

Thomas Munro

Discussion: <CAEepm=1VOnbVx4wsgQFvj94hu9jVt2nVabCr7QiooUSvPJXkgQ@mail.gmail.com>
2016-08-02 18:39:14 -04:00
Bruce Momjian a253a88594 doc: OS collation changes can break indexes
Discussion: 20160702155517.GD18610@momjian.us

Reviewed-by: Christoph Berg

Backpatch-through: 9.1
2016-08-02 17:13:10 -04:00
Tom Lane b6a97b91ff Block interrupts during HandleParallelMessages().
As noted by Alvaro, there are CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() calls in the shm_mq.c
functions called by HandleParallelMessages().  I believe they're all
unreachable since we always pass nowait = true, but it doesn't seem like
a great idea to assume that no such call will ever be reachable from
HandleParallelMessages().  If that did happen, there would be a risk of a
recursive call to HandleParallelMessages(), which it does not appear to be
designed for --- for example, there's nothing that would prevent
out-of-order processing of received messages.  And certainly such cases
cannot easily be tested.  So let's prevent it by holding off interrupts for
the duration of the function.  Back-patch to 9.5 which contains identical
code.

Discussion: <14869.1470083848@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-08-02 16:39:16 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c4d3a039f0 Change minimum max_worker_processes from 1 to 0
Setting it to 0 is probably not useful in practice, but it allows
testing of situations without available background worker slots.
2016-08-02 13:15:35 -04:00
Tom Lane e2e95f5ef3 Fix pg_dump's handling of public schema with both -c and -C options.
Since -c plus -C requests dropping and recreating the target database
as a whole, not dropping individual objects in it, we should assume that
the public schema already exists and need not be created.  The previous
coding considered only the state of the -c option, so it would emit
"CREATE SCHEMA public" anyway, leading to an unexpected error in restore.

Back-patch to 9.2.  Older versions did not accept -c with -C so the
issue doesn't arise there.  (The logic being patched here dates to 8.0,
cf commit 2193121fa, so it's not really wrong that it didn't consider
the case at the time.)

Note that versions before 9.6 will still attempt to emit REVOKE/GRANT
on the public schema; but that happens without -c/-C too, and doesn't
seem to be the focus of this complaint.  I considered extending this
stanza to also skip the public schema's ACL, but that would be a
misfeature, as it'd break cases where users intentionally changed that
ACL.  The real fix for this aspect is Stephen Frost's work to not dump
built-in ACLs, and that's not going to get back-ported.

Per bugs #13804 and #14271.  Solution found by David Johnston and later
rediscovered by me.

Report: <20151207163520.2628.95990@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
Report: <20160801021955.1430.47434@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-08-02 12:49:40 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e9888c2a48 doc: Whitespace fixes in man pages 2016-08-02 12:35:35 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut f6ced51f91 Consistently capitalize names of recovery tests 2016-08-02 10:47:03 -04:00
Tom Lane a5fe473ad7 Minor cleanup for access/transam/parallel.c.
ParallelMessagePending *must* be marked volatile, because it's set
by a signal handler.  On the other hand, it's pointless for
HandleParallelMessageInterrupt to save/restore errno; that must be,
and is, done at the outer level of the SIGUSR1 signal handler.

Calling CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() inside HandleParallelMessages, which itself
is called from CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS(), seems both useless and hazardous.
The comment claiming that this is needed to handle the error queue going
away is certainly misguided, in any case.

Improve a couple of error message texts, and use
ERRCODE_OBJECT_NOT_IN_PREREQUISITE_STATE to report loss of parallel worker
connection, since that's what's used in e.g. tqueue.c.  (Maybe it would be
worth inventing a dedicated ERRCODE for this type of failure?  But I do not
think ERRCODE_INTERNAL_ERROR is appropriate.)

Minor stylistic cleanups.
2016-08-01 16:12:01 -04:00
Tom Lane 887feefe87 Don't CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS between WaitLatch and ResetLatch.
This coding pattern creates a race condition, because if an interesting
interrupt happens after we've checked InterruptPending but before we reset
our latch, the latch-setting done by the signal handler would get lost,
and then we might block at WaitLatch in the next iteration without ever
noticing the interrupt condition.  You can put the CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS
before WaitLatch or after ResetLatch, but not between them.

Aside from fixing the bugs, add some explanatory comments to latch.h
to perhaps forestall the next person from making the same mistake.

In HEAD, also replace gather_readnext's direct call of
HandleParallelMessages with CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS.  It does not seem clean
or useful for this one caller to bypass ProcessInterrupts and go straight
to HandleParallelMessages; not least because that fails to consider the
InterruptPending flag, resulting in useless work both here
(if InterruptPending isn't set) and in the next CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS call
(if it is).

This thinko seems to have been introduced in the initial coding of
storage/ipc/shm_mq.c (commit ec9037df2), and then blindly copied into all
the subsequent parallel-query support logic.  Back-patch relevant hunks
to 9.4 to extirpate the error everywhere.

Discussion: <1661.1469996911@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-08-01 15:13:53 -04:00
Fujii Masao dd5eb805d5 Remove unused arguments from pg_replication_origin_xact_reset function.
The document specifies that pg_replication_origin_xact_reset function
doesn't have any argument variables. But previously it was actually
defined so as to have two argument variables, though they were not
used at all. That is, the pg_proc entry for that function was incorrect.
This patch fixes the pg_proc entry and removes those two arguments
from the function definition.

No back-patch because this change needs a catalog version bump
although the issue exists in 9.5 as well. Instead, a note about those
unused argument variables will be added to 9.5 document later.

Catalog version bumped due to the change of pg_proc.
2016-08-02 02:43:17 +09:00
Bruce Momjian 878bd9accb pg_rewind docs: clarify handling of remote servers 2016-08-01 12:52:22 -04:00
Michael Meskes 3ebc88e568 Fixed array checking code for "unsigned long long" datatypes in libecpg. 2016-08-01 15:08:12 +02:00
Fujii Masao 74d8c95b74 Fix pg_basebackup so that it accepts 0 as a valid compression level.
The help message for pg_basebackup specifies that the numbers 0 through 9
are accepted as valid values of -Z option. But, previously -Z 0 was rejected
as an invalid compression level.

Per discussion, it's better to make pg_basebackup treat 0 as valid
compression level meaning no compression, like pg_dump.

Back-patch to all supported versions.

Reported-By: Jeff Janes
Reviewed-By: Amit Kapila
Discussion: CAMkU=1x+GwjSayc57v6w87ij6iRGFWt=hVfM0B64b1_bPVKRqg@mail.gmail.com
2016-08-01 17:36:14 +09:00
Tom Lane 11653cd87f Doc: remove claim that hash index creation depends on effective_cache_size.
This text was added by commit ff213239c, and not long thereafter obsoleted
by commit 4adc2f72a (which made the test depend on NBuffers instead); but
nobody noticed the need for an update.  Commit 9563d5b5e adds some further
dependency on maintenance_work_mem, but the existing verbiage seems to
cover that with about as much precision as we really want here.  Let's
just take it all out rather than leaving ourselves open to more errors of
omission in future.  (That solution makes this change back-patchable, too.)

Noted by Peter Geoghegan.

Discussion: <CAM3SWZRVANbj9GA9j40fAwheQCZQtSwqTN1GBTVwRrRbmSf7cg@mail.gmail.com>
2016-07-31 18:32:34 -04:00
Tom Lane a9ed875fdc Code review for tqueue.c: fix memory leaks, speed it up, other fixes.
When doing record typmod remapping, tqueue.c did fresh catalog lookups
for each tuple it processed, which was pretty horrible performance-wise
(it seemed to about halve the already none-too-quick speed of bulk reads
in parallel mode).  Worse, it insisted on putting bits of that data into
TopMemoryContext, from where it never freed them, causing a
session-lifespan memory leak.  (I suppose this was coded with the idea
that the sender process would quit after finishing the query ---
but the receiver uses the same code.)

Restructure to avoid repetitive catalog lookups and to keep that data
in a query-lifespan context, in or below the context where the
TQueueDestReceiver or TupleQueueReader itself lives.

Fix some other bugs such as continuing to use a tupledesc after
releasing our refcount on it.  Clean up cavalier datatype choices
(typmods are int32, please, not int, and certainly not Oid).  Improve
comments and error message wording.
2016-07-31 16:05:12 -04:00
Stephen Frost f9e439b1ca Correctly handle owned sequences with extensions
With the refactoring of pg_dump to handle components, getOwnedSeqs needs
to be a bit more intelligent regarding which components to dump when.
Specifically, we can't simply use the owning table's components as the
set of components to dump as the table might only be including certain
components while all components of the sequence should be dumped, for
example, when the table is a member of an extension while the sequence
is not.

Handle this by combining the set of components to be dumped for the
sequence explicitly and those to be dumped for the table when setting
the components to be dumped for the sequence.

Also add a number of regression tests around this to, hopefully, catch
any future changes which break the expected behavior.

Discovered by: Philippe BEAUDOIN
Reviewed by: Michael Paquier
2016-07-31 10:57:15 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 6335c80ef4 doc: improve wording of Error Message Style Guide
Reported-by: Daniel Gustafsson

Discussion: 48DB4EDA-96F8-4B2F-99C4-110900FC7540@yesql.se

Author: Daniel Gustafsson
2016-07-30 21:34:28 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 9e765bb10f pgbench docs: fix incorrect "last two" fields text
Reported-by: Alexander Law

Discussion: 5786638C.8080508@gmail.com

Backpatch-through: 9.4
2016-07-30 16:59:34 -04:00
Bruce Momjian ca0c37b56f docs: properly capitalize and space kB, MB, GB, TB 2016-07-30 12:27:39 -04:00
Tom Lane af33039317 Fix worst memory leaks in tqueue.c.
TupleQueueReaderNext() leaks like a sieve if it has to do any tuple
disassembly/reconstruction.  While we could try to clean up its allocations
piecemeal, it seems like a better idea just to insist that it should be run
in a short-lived memory context, so that any transient space goes away
automatically.  I chose to have nodeGather.c switch into its existing
per-tuple context before the call, rather than inventing a separate
context inside tqueue.c.

This is sufficient to stop all leakage in the simple case I exhibited
earlier today (see link below), but it does not deal with leaks induced
in more complex cases by tqueue.c's insistence on using TopMemoryContext
for data that it's not actually trying hard to keep track of.  That issue
is intertwined with another major source of inefficiency, namely failure
to cache lookup results across calls, so it seems best to deal with it
separately.

In passing, improve some comments, and modify gather_readnext's method for
deciding when it's visited all the readers so that it's more obviously
correct.  (I'm not actually convinced that the previous code *is*
correct in the case of a reader deletion; it certainly seems fragile.)

Discussion: <32763.1469821037@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-07-29 19:31:06 -04:00
Tom Lane bf4ae685ae Fix tqueue.c's range-remapping code.
It's depressingly clear that nobody ever tested this.
2016-07-29 14:13:19 -04:00
Tom Lane 80b346c208 Fix pq_putmessage_noblock() to not block.
An evident copy-and-pasteo in commit 2bd9e412f broke the non-blocking
aspect of pq_putmessage_noblock(), causing it to behave identically to
pq_putmessage().  That function is nowadays used only in walsender.c,
so that the net effect was to cause walsenders to hang up waiting for
the receiver in situations where they should not.

Kyotaro Horiguchi

Patch: <20160728.185228.58375982.horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
2016-07-29 12:52:57 -04:00
Robert Haas 3153b1a52f Eliminate a few more user-visible "cache lookup failed" errors.
Michael Paquier
2016-07-29 12:06:18 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5676da2d01 Documentation spell checking and markup improvements 2016-07-28 22:46:15 -04:00
Tom Lane ed0b228d7a Guard against empty buffer in gets_fromFile()'s check for a newline.
Per the fgets() specification, it cannot return without reading some data
unless it reports EOF or error.  So the code here assumed that the data
buffer would necessarily be nonempty when we go to check for a newline
having been read.  However, Agostino Sarubbo noticed that this could fail
to be true if the first byte of the data is a NUL (\0).  The fgets() API
doesn't really work for embedded NULs, which is something I don't feel
any great need for us to worry about since we generally don't allow NULs
in SQL strings anyway.  But we should not access off the end of our own
buffer if the case occurs.  Normally this would just be a harmless read,
but if you were unlucky the byte before the buffer would contain '\n'
and we'd overwrite it with '\0', and if you were really unlucky that
might be valuable data and psql would crash.

Agostino reported this to pgsql-security, but after discussion we concluded
that it isn't worth treating as a security bug; if you can control the
input to psql you can do far more interesting things than just maybe-crash
it.  Nonetheless, it is a bug, so back-patch to all supported versions.
2016-07-28 18:57:24 -04:00
Tom Lane 8d19d0e139 Teach parser to transform "x IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM NULL" to a NullTest.
Now that we've nailed down the principle that NullTest with !argisrow
is fully equivalent to SQL's IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM NULL, let's teach
the parser about it.  This produces a slightly more compact parse tree
and is much more amenable to optimization than a DistinctExpr, since
the planner knows a good deal about NullTest and next to nothing about
DistinctExpr.

I'm not sure that there are all that many queries in the wild that could
be improved by this, but at least one source of such cases is the patch
just made to postgres_fdw to emit IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM NULL when
IS [NOT] NULL isn't semantically correct.

No back-patch, since to the extent that this does affect planning results,
it might be considered undesirable plan destabilization.
2016-07-28 17:23:13 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut ef5d4a3cfa Message style improvements 2016-07-28 16:34:44 -04:00
Tom Lane 9492cf86e4 Fix assorted fallout from IS [NOT] NULL patch.
Commits 4452000f3 et al established semantics for NullTest.argisrow that
are a bit different from its initial conception: rather than being merely
a cache of whether we've determined the input to have composite type,
the flag now has the further meaning that we should apply field-by-field
testing as per the standard's definition of IS [NOT] NULL.  If argisrow
is false and yet the input has composite type, the construct instead has
the semantics of IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM NULL.  Update the comments in
primnodes.h to clarify this, and fix ruleutils.c and deparse.c to print
such cases correctly.  In the case of ruleutils.c, this merely results in
cosmetic changes in EXPLAIN output, since the case can't currently arise
in stored rules.  However, it represents a live bug for deparse.c, which
would formerly have sent a remote query that had semantics different
from the local behavior.  (From the user's standpoint, this means that
testing a remote nested-composite column for null-ness could have had
unexpected recursive behavior much like that fixed in 4452000f3.)

In a related but somewhat independent fix, make plancat.c set argisrow
to false in all NullTest expressions constructed to represent "attnotnull"
constructs.  Since attnotnull is actually enforced as a simple null-value
check, this is a more accurate representation of the semantics; we were
previously overpromising what it meant for composite columns, which might
possibly lead to incorrect planner optimizations.  (It seems that what the
SQL spec expects a NOT NULL constraint to mean is an IS NOT NULL test, so
arguably we are violating the spec and should fix attnotnull to do the
other thing.  If we ever do, this part should get reverted.)

Back-patch, same as the previous commit.

Discussion: <10682.1469566308@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-07-28 16:09:15 -04:00
Tom Lane 46b773d4fe Improve documentation about CREATE TABLE ... LIKE.
The docs failed to explain that LIKE INCLUDING INDEXES would not preserve
the names of indexes and associated constraints.  Also, it wasn't mentioned
that EXCLUDE constraints would be copied by this option.  The latter
oversight seems enough of a documentation bug to justify back-patching.

In passing, do some minor copy-editing in the same area, and add an entry
for LIKE under "Compatibility", since it's not exactly a faithful
implementation of the standard's feature.

Discussion: <20160728151154.AABE64016B@smtp.hushmail.com>
2016-07-28 13:26:58 -04:00
Tom Lane d9e74959a7 Register atexit hook only once in pg_upgrade.
start_postmaster() registered stop_postmaster_atexit as an atexit(3)
callback each time through, although the obvious intention was to do
so only once per program run.  The extra registrations were harmless,
so long as we didn't exceed ATEXIT_MAX, but still it's a bug.

Artur Zakirov, with bikeshedding by Kyotaro Horiguchi and me

Discussion: <d279e817-02b5-caa6-215f-cfb05dce109a@postgrespro.ru>
2016-07-28 11:39:10 -04:00
Fujii Masao de8c92e6ca Fix incorrect description of udt_privileges view in documentation.
The description of udt_privileges view contained an incorrect copy-pasted word.

Back-patch to 9.2 where udt_privileges view was added.

Author: Alexander Law
2016-07-28 22:34:42 +09:00
Tom Lane e1a93dd6ae tqueue.c's record-typmod hashtables need the HASH_BLOBS option.
The keys are integers, not strings.  The code accidentally worked on
little-endian machines, at least up to 256 distinct record types within
a session, but failed utterly on big-endian.  This was unexpectedly
exposed by a test case added by commit 4452000f3, which apparently is the
only parallelizable query in the regression suite that uses more than one
anonymous record type.  Fortunately, buildfarm member mandrill is
big-endian and is running with force_parallel_mode on, so it failed.
2016-07-28 02:08:52 -04:00
Tom Lane 69995c3b3f Fix cost_rescan() to account for multi-batch hashing correctly.
cost_rescan assumed that we don't need to rebuild the hash table when
rescanning a hash join.  However, that's currently only true for
single-batch joins; for a multi-batch join we must charge full freight.

This probably has escaped notice because we'd be unlikely to put a hash
join on the inside of a nestloop anyway.  Nonetheless, it's wrong.
Fix in HEAD, but don't backpatch for fear of destabilizing plans in
stable releases.
2016-07-27 17:45:05 -04:00
Robert Haas b31875b1fe Fix thinko in copyParamList.
There's no point in consulting retval->paramMask; it's always NULL.
Instead, we should consult from->paramMask.

Reported by Andrew Gierth.
2016-07-27 10:20:40 -04:00
Tom Lane d8411a6c8b Allow functions that return sets of tuples to return simple NULLs.
ExecMakeTableFunctionResult(), which is used in SELECT FROM function(...)
cases, formerly treated a simple NULL output from a function that both
returnsSet and returnsTuple as a violation of the SRF protocol.  What seems
better is to treat a NULL output as equivalent to ROW(NULL,NULL,...).
Without this, cases such as SELECT FROM unnest(...) on an array of
composite are vulnerable to unexpected and not-very-helpful failures.
Old code comments here suggested an alternative of just ignoring
simple-NULL outputs, but that doesn't seem very principled.

This change had been hung up for a long time due to uncertainty about
how much we wanted to buy into the equivalence of simple NULL and
ROW(NULL,NULL,...).  I think that's been mostly resolved by the discussion
around bug #14235, so let's go ahead and do it.

Per bug #7808 from Joe Van Dyk.  Although this is a pretty old report,
fixing it smells a bit more like a new feature than a bug fix, and the
lack of other similar complaints suggests that we shouldn't take much risk
of destabilization by back-patching.  (Maybe that could be revisited once
this patch has withstood some field usage.)

Andrew Gierth and Tom Lane

Report: <E1TurJE-0006Es-TK@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-07-26 21:34:02 -04:00
Robert Haas 976b24fb47 Change various deparsing functions to return NULL for invalid input.
Previously, some functions returned various fixed strings and others
failed with a cache lookup error.  Per discussion, standardize on
returning NULL.  Although user-exposed "cache lookup failed" error
messages might normally qualify for bug-fix treatment, no back-patch;
the risk of breaking user code which is accustomed to the current
behavior seems too high.

Michael Paquier
2016-07-26 16:07:02 -04:00
Robert Haas fe5e3fce79 Repair damage done by citext--1.1--1.2.sql.
That script is incorrect in that it sets the combine function for
max(citext) twice instead of setting the combine function for
max(citext) once and the combine functon for min(citext) once.  The
consequence is that if you install 1.0 or 1.1 and then update to 1.2,
you end up with min(citext) not having a combine function, contrary to
what was intended.  If you install 1.2 directly, you're OK.

Fix things up by defining a new 1.3 version.  Upgrading from 1.2 to
1.3 won't change anything for people who first installed the 1.2
version, but people upgrading from 1.0 or 1.1 will get the right
catalog contents once they reach 1.3.

Report and patch by David Rowley, reviewed by Andreas Karlsson.
2016-07-26 15:32:57 -04:00
Tom Lane 4452000f31 Fix constant-folding of ROW(...) IS [NOT] NULL with composite fields.
The SQL standard appears to specify that IS [NOT] NULL's tests of field
nullness are non-recursive, ie, we shouldn't consider that a composite
field with value ROW(NULL,NULL) is null for this purpose.
ExecEvalNullTest got this right, but eval_const_expressions did not,
leading to weird inconsistencies depending on whether the expression
was such that the planner could apply constant folding.

Also, adjust the docs to mention that IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM NULL can be
used as a substitute test if a simple null check is wanted for a rowtype
argument.  That motivated reordering things so that IS [NOT] DISTINCT FROM
is described before IS [NOT] NULL.  In HEAD, I went a bit further and added
a table showing all the comparison-related predicates.

Per bug #14235.  Back-patch to all supported branches, since it's certainly
undesirable that constant-folding should change the semantics.

Report and patch by Andrew Gierth; assorted wordsmithing and revised
regression test cases by me.

Report: <20160708024746.1410.57282@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-07-26 15:25:02 -04:00
Fujii Masao c1a9542578 Fix improper example of using psql() function in TAP tests documentation.
In an example of TAP test scripts, there is the test checking whether
the result of the query is expected or not. But, in previous example,
the exit code of psql instead of the query result was checked unexpectedly.

Author: Ildar Musin
2016-07-26 21:17:38 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 43c2c40497 Fix typo 2016-07-25 22:07:53 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 40fcfec82c Message style improvements 2016-07-25 22:07:44 -04:00