Commit Graph

1458 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andres Freund bbfd7edae5 Add macros wrapping all usage of gcc's __attribute__.
Until now __attribute__() was defined to be empty for all compilers but
gcc. That's problematic because it prevents using it in other compilers;
which is necessary e.g. for atomics portability.  It's also just
generally dubious to do so in a header as widely included as c.h.

Instead add pg_attribute_format_arg, pg_attribute_printf,
pg_attribute_noreturn macros which are implemented in the compilers that
understand them. Also add pg_attribute_noreturn and pg_attribute_packed,
but don't provide fallbacks, since they can affect functionality.

This means that external code that, possibly unwittingly, relied on
__attribute__ defined to be empty on !gcc compilers may now run into
warnings or errors on those compilers. But there shouldn't be many
occurances of that and it's hard to work around...

Discussion: 54B58BA3.8040302@ohmu.fi
Author: Oskari Saarenmaa, with some minor changes by me.
2015-03-11 14:30:01 +01:00
Tom Lane 2fbb286647 Clean up the mess from => patch.
Commit 865f14a2d3 was quite a few bricks
shy of a load: psql, ecpg, and plpgsql were all left out-of-step with
the core lexer.  Of these only the last was likely to be a fatal
problem; but still, a minimal amount of grepping, or even just reading
the comments adjacent to the places that were changed, would have found
the other places that needed to be changed.
2015-03-10 11:48:38 -04:00
Tom Lane 7f3014dce5 Change plpgsql's cast cache to consider source typmod as significant.
I had thought that there was no need to maintain separate cache entries
for different source typmods, but further experimentation shows that there
is an advantage to doing so in some cases.  In particular, if a domain has
a typmod (say, "CREATE DOMAIN d AS numeric(20,0)"), failing to notice the
source typmod leads to applying a length-coercion step even when the
source has the correct typmod.
2015-03-04 20:23:13 -05:00
Tom Lane 45f2c2fc4e Need to special-case RECORD as well as UNKNOWN in plpgsql's casting logic.
This is because can_coerce_type thinks that RECORD can be cast to any
composite type, but coerce_record_to_complex only works for inputs that are
RowExprs or whole-row Vars, so we get a hard failure on a CaseTestExpr.

Perhaps these corner cases ought to be fixed so that coerce_to_target_type
actually returns NULL as per its specification, rather than failing ...
but for the moment an extra check here is the path of least resistance.
2015-03-04 19:10:57 -05:00
Tom Lane 1345cc67bb Use standard casting mechanism to convert types in plpgsql, when possible.
plpgsql's historical method for converting datatypes during assignments was
to apply the source type's output function and then the destination type's
input function.  Aside from being miserably inefficient in most cases, this
method failed outright in many cases where a user might expect it to work;
an example is that "declare x int; ... x := 3.9;" would fail, not round the
value to 4.

Instead, let's convert by applying the appropriate assignment cast whenever
there is one.  To avoid breaking compatibility unnecessarily, fall back to
the I/O conversion method if there is no assignment cast.

So far as I can tell, there is just one case where this method produces a
different result than the old code in a case where the old code would not
have thrown an error.  That is assignment of a boolean value to a string
variable (type text, varchar, or bpchar); the old way gave boolean's output
representation, ie 't'/'f', while the new way follows the behavior of the
bool-to-text cast and so gives 'true' or 'false'.  This will need to be
called out as an incompatibility in the 9.5 release notes.

Aside from handling many conversion cases more sanely, this method is
often significantly faster than the old way.  In part that's because
of more effective caching of the conversion info.
2015-03-04 11:04:30 -05:00
Tom Lane e524cbdc45 Track typmods in plpgsql expression evaluation and assignment.
The main value of this change is to avoid expensive I/O conversions when
assigning to a variable that has a typmod specification, if the value
to be assigned is already known to have the right typmod.  This is
particularly valuable for arrays with typmod specifications; formerly,
in an assignment to an array element the entire array would invariably
get put through double I/O conversion to check the typmod, to absolutely
no purpose since we'd already properly coerced the new element value.

Extracted from my "expanded arrays" patch; this seems worth committing
separately, whatever becomes of that patch, since it's really an
independent issue.

As long as we're changing the function signatures, take the opportunity
to rationalize the argument lists of exec_assign_value, exec_cast_value,
and exec_simple_cast_value; that is, put the arguments into a saner order,
and get rid of the bizarre choice to pass exec_assign_value's isNull flag
by reference.
2015-02-28 14:34:35 -05:00
Noah Misch f5ef00aed4 Free SQLSTATE and SQLERRM no earlier than other PL/pgSQL variables.
"RETURN SQLERRM" prompted plpgsql_exec_function() to read from freed
memory.  Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).  Little code ran
between the premature free and the read, so non-assert builds are
unlikely to witness user-visible consequences.
2015-02-25 23:48:28 -05:00
Jeff Davis b419865a81 In array_agg(), don't create a new context for every group.
Previously, each new array created a new memory context that started
out at 8kB. This is incredibly wasteful when there are lots of small
groups of just a few elements each.

Change initArrayResult() and friends to accept a "subcontext" argument
to indicate whether the caller wants the ArrayBuildState allocated in
a new subcontext or not. If not, it can no longer be released
separately from the rest of the memory context.

Fixes bug report by Frank van Vugt on 2013-10-19.

Tomas Vondra. Reviewed by Ali Akbar, Tom Lane, and me.
2015-02-21 17:24:48 -08:00
Tom Lane f2874feb7c Some more FLEXIBLE_ARRAY_MEMBER fixes. 2015-02-21 01:46:43 -05:00
Tom Lane 9e3ad1aac5 Use fast path in plpgsql's RETURN/RETURN NEXT in more cases.
exec_stmt_return() and exec_stmt_return_next() have fast-path code for
handling a simple variable reference (i.e. "return var") without going
through the full expression evaluation machinery.  For some reason,
pl_gram.y was under the impression that this fast path only applied for
record/row variables; but in reality code for handling regular scalar
variables has been there all along.  Adjusting the logic to allow that
code to be used actually results in a net savings of code in pl_gram.y
(by eliminating some redundancy), and it buys a measurable though not
very impressive amount of speedup.

Noted while fooling with my expanded-array patch, wherein this makes a much
bigger difference because it enables returning an expanded array variable
without an extra flattening step.  But AFAICS this is a win regardless,
so commit it separately.
2015-02-16 15:28:48 -05:00
Tom Lane e983c4d1aa Rationalize the APIs of array element/slice access functions.
The four functions array_ref, array_set, array_get_slice, array_set_slice
have traditionally declared their array inputs and results as being of type
"ArrayType *".  This is a lie, and has been since Berkeley days, because
they actually also support "fixed-length array" types such as "name" and
"point"; not to mention that the inputs could be toasted.  These values
should be declared Datum instead to avoid confusion.  The current coding
already risks possible misoptimization by compilers, and it'll get worse
when "expanded" array representations become a valid alternative.

However, there's a fair amount of code using array_ref and array_set with
arrays that *are* known to be ArrayType structures, and there might be more
such places in third-party code.  Rather than cluttering those call sites
with PointerGetDatum/DatumGetArrayTypeP cruft, what I did was to rename the
existing functions to array_get_element/array_set_element, fix their
signatures, then reincarnate array_ref/array_set as backwards compatibility
wrappers.

array_get_slice/array_set_slice have no such constituency in the core code,
and probably not in third-party code either, so I just changed their APIs.
2015-02-16 12:23:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut f8948616c9 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 19c72ea8d856d7b1d4f5d759a766c8206bf9ce53
2015-02-01 23:23:40 -05:00
Tom Lane 599d00aa68 Fix volatile-safety issue in pltcl_SPI_execute_plan().
The "callargs" variable is modified within PG_TRY and then referenced
within PG_CATCH, which is exactly the coding pattern we've now found
to be unsafe.  Marking "callargs" volatile would be problematic because
it is passed by reference to some Tcl functions, so fix the problem
by not modifying it within PG_TRY.  We can just postpone the free()
till we exit the PG_TRY construct, as is already done elsewhere in this
same file.

Also, fix failure to free(callargs) when exiting on too-many-arguments
error.  This is only a minor memory leak, but a leak nonetheless.

In passing, remove some unnecessary "volatile" markings in the same
function.  Those doubtless are there because gcc 2.95.3 whinged about
them, but we now know that its algorithm for complaining is many bricks
shy of a load.

This is certainly a live bug with compilers that optimize similarly
to current gcc, so back-patch to all active branches.
2015-01-26 12:18:25 -05:00
Tom Lane 7391e2513f Fix some functions that were declared static then defined not-static.
Per testing with a compiler that whines about this.
2015-01-12 16:08:43 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 91539c5698 Fix thinko in plpython error message 2015-01-06 15:16:29 -03:00
Bruce Momjian 4baaf863ec Update copyright for 2015
Backpatch certain files through 9.0
2015-01-06 11:43:47 -05:00
Tom Lane 4a14f13a0a Improve hash_create's API for selecting simple-binary-key hash functions.
Previously, if you wanted anything besides C-string hash keys, you had to
specify a custom hashing function to hash_create().  Nearly all such
callers were specifying tag_hash or oid_hash; which is tedious, and rather
error-prone, since a caller could easily miss the opportunity to optimize
by using hash_uint32 when appropriate.  Replace this with a design whereby
callers using simple binary-data keys just specify HASH_BLOBS and don't
need to mess with specific support functions.  hash_create() itself will
take care of optimizing when the key size is four bytes.

This nets out saving a few hundred bytes of code space, and offers
a measurable performance improvement in tidbitmap.c (which was not
exploiting the opportunity to use hash_uint32 for its 4-byte keys).
There might be some wins elsewhere too, I didn't analyze closely.

In future we could look into offering a similar optimized hashing function
for 8-byte keys.  Under this design that could be done in a centralized
and machine-independent fashion, whereas getting it right for keys of
platform-dependent sizes would've been notationally painful before.

For the moment, the old way still works fine, so as not to break source
code compatibility for loadable modules.  Eventually we might want to
remove tag_hash and friends from the exported API altogether, since there's
no real need for them to be explicitly referenced from outside dynahash.c.

Teodor Sigaev and Tom Lane
2014-12-18 13:36:36 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut ee3bec5e22 Translation updates 2014-12-15 00:25:35 -05:00
Tom Lane 475aedd1ef Improve error messages for malformed array input strings.
Make the error messages issued by array_in() uniformly follow the style
	ERROR: malformed array literal: "actual input string"
	DETAIL: specific complaint here
and rewrite many of the specific complaints to be clearer.

The immediate motivation for doing this is a complaint from Josh Berkus
that json_to_record() produced an unintelligible error message when
dealing with an array item, because it tries to feed the JSON-format
array value to array_in().  Really it ought to be smart enough to
perform JSON-to-Postgres array conversion, but that's a future feature
not a bug fix.  In the meantime, this change is something we agreed
we could back-patch into 9.4, and it should help de-confuse things a bit.
2014-12-02 18:23:27 -05:00
Tom Lane f4e031c662 Add bms_next_member(), and use it where appropriate.
This patch adds a way of iterating through the members of a bitmapset
nondestructively, unlike the old way with bms_first_member().  While
bms_next_member() is very slightly slower than bms_first_member()
(at least for typical-size bitmapsets), eliminating the need to palloc
and pfree a temporary copy of the target bitmapset is a significant win.
So this method should be preferred in all cases where a temporary copy
would be necessary.

Tom Lane, with suggestions from Dean Rasheed and David Rowley
2014-11-28 13:37:25 -05:00
Tom Lane bb1b8f694a De-reserve most statement-introducing keywords in plpgsql.
Add a bit of context sensitivity to plpgsql_yylex() so that it can
recognize when the word it is looking at is the first word of a new
statement, and if so whether it is the target of an assignment statement.
When we are at start of statement and it's not an assignment, we can
prefer recognizing unreserved keywords over recognizing variable names,
thereby allowing most statements' initial keywords to be demoted from
reserved to unreserved status.  This is rather useful already (there are
15 such words that get demoted here), and what's more to the point is
that future patches proposing to add new plpgsql statements can avoid
objections about having to add new reserved words.

The keywords BEGIN, DECLARE, FOR, FOREACH, LOOP, WHILE need to remain
reserved because they can be preceded by block labels, and the logic
added here doesn't understand about block labels.  In principle we
could probably fix that, but it would take more than one token of
lookback and the benefit doesn't seem worth extra complexity.

Also note I didn't de-reserve EXECUTE, because it is used in more places
than just statement start.  It's possible it could be de-reserved with
more work, but that would be an independent fix.

In passing, also de-reserve COLLATE and DEFAULT, which shouldn't have
been reserved in the first place since they only need to be recognized
within DECLARE sections.
2014-11-25 15:02:09 -05:00
Tom Lane bac27394a1 Support arrays as input to array_agg() and ARRAY(SELECT ...).
These cases formerly failed with errors about "could not find array type
for data type".  Now they yield arrays of the same element type and one
higher dimension.

The implementation involves creating functions with API similar to the
existing accumArrayResult() family.  I (tgl) also extended the base family
by adding an initArrayResult() function, which allows callers to avoid
special-casing the zero-inputs case if they just want an empty array as
result.  (Not all do, so the previous calling convention remains valid.)
This allowed simplifying some existing code in xml.c and plperl.c.

Ali Akbar, reviewed by Pavel Stehule, significantly modified by me
2014-11-25 12:21:28 -05:00
Tom Lane e2dc3f5772 Get rid of redundant production in plpgsql grammar.
There may once have been a reason for the intermediate proc_stmts
production in the plpgsql grammar, but it isn't doing anything useful
anymore, so let's collapse it into proc_sect.  Saves some code and
probably a small number of nanoseconds per statement list.

In passing, correctly alphabetize keyword lists to match pl_scanner.c;
note that for "rowtype" vs "row_count", pl_scanner.c must sort on the
basis of the lower-case spelling.

Noted while fooling with a patch to de-reserve more plpgsql keywords.
2014-11-23 15:31:36 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 7466a1b75f Translation updates 2014-11-16 21:32:51 -05:00
Noah Misch 00c07e497f Re-remove dependency on the DLL of pythonxx.def file.
The reasons behind commit 0d147e43ad still
stand, so this reverts the non-cosmetic portion of commit
a7983e989d.  Back-patch to 9.4, where the
latter commit first appeared.
2014-11-02 21:43:30 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 1ec4a970fe Translation updates 2014-10-05 23:23:50 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas c1008f0037 Check number of parameters in RAISE statement at compile time.
The number of % parameter markers in RAISE statement should match the number
of parameters given. We used to check that at execution time, but we have
all the information needed at compile time, so let's check it at compile
time instead. It's generally better to find mistakes earlier.

Marko Tiikkaja, reviewed by Fabien Coelho
2014-09-02 15:56:50 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut f25e0bf5e0 Small message fixes 2014-08-09 00:07:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut cac0d5193b Translation updates 2014-07-21 01:08:04 -04:00
Noah Misch 0ffc201a51 Add file version information to most installed Windows binaries.
Prominent binaries already had this metadata.  A handful of minor
binaries, such as pg_regress.exe, still lack it; efforts to eliminate
such exceptions are welcome.

Michael Paquier, reviewed by MauMau.
2014-07-14 14:07:52 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 6a605cd6bd Adjust blank lines around PG_MODULE_MAGIC defines, for consistency
Report by Robert Haas
2014-07-10 14:02:08 -04:00
Kevin Grittner e254ff21d1 Remove dead typeStruct variable from plpy_spi.c.
Left behind by 8b6010b835.
2014-07-05 10:59:08 -05:00
Tom Lane 8b6010b835 Improve support for composite types in PL/Python.
Allow PL/Python functions to return arrays of composite types.
Also, fix the restriction that plpy.prepare/plpy.execute couldn't
handle query parameters or result columns of composite types.

In passing, adopt a saner arrangement for where to release the
tupledesc reference counts acquired via lookup_rowtype_tupdesc.
The callers of PLyObject_ToCompositeDatum were doing the lookups,
but then the releases happened somewhere down inside subroutines
of PLyObject_ToCompositeDatum, which is bizarre and bug-prone.
Instead release in the same function that acquires the refcount.

Ed Behn and Ronan Dunklau, reviewed by Abhijit Menon-Sen
2014-07-03 16:10:50 -04:00
Tom Lane 2dfa15de55 Make plpython_unicode regression test work in more database encodings.
This test previously used a data value containing U+0080, and would
therefore fail if the database encoding didn't have an equivalent to
that; which only about half of our supported server encodings do.
We could fall back to using some plain-ASCII character, but that seems
like it's losing most of the point of the test.  Instead switch to using
U+00A0 (no-break space), which translates into all our supported encodings
except the four in the EUC_xx family.

Per buildfarm testing.  Back-patch to 9.1, which is as far back as this
test is expected to succeed everywhere.  (9.0 has the test, but without
back-patching some 9.1 code changes we could not expect to get consistent
results across platforms anyway.)
2014-06-03 12:01:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 20561acf93 On OS X, link libpython normally, ignoring the "framework" framework.
As of Xcode 5.0, Apple isn't including the Python framework as part of the
SDK-level files, which means that linking to it might fail depending on
whether Xcode thinks you've selected a specific SDK version.  According to
their Tech Note 2328, they've basically deprecated the framework method of
linking to libpython and are telling people to link to the shared library
normally.  (I'm pretty sure this is in direct contradiction to the advice
they were giving a few years ago, but whatever.)  Testing says that this
approach works fine at least as far back as OS X 10.4.11, so let's just
rip out the framework special case entirely.  We do still need a special
case to decide that OS X provides a shared library at all, unfortunately
(I wonder why the distutils check doesn't work ...).  But this is still
less of a special case than before, so it's fine.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since we'll doubtless be hearing
about this more as more people update to recent Xcode.
2014-05-30 18:19:06 -04:00
Tom Lane 71ed8b3ca7 Revert "Fix bogus %name-prefix option syntax in all our Bison files."
This reverts commit 45b7abe59e.

It turns out that the %name-prefix syntax without "=" does not work
at all in pre-2.4 Bison.  We are not prepared to make such a large
jump in minimum required Bison version just to suppress a warning
message in a version hardly any developers are using yet.
When 3.0 gets more popular, we'll figure out a way to deal with this.
In the meantime, BISONFLAGS=-Wno-deprecated is recommendable for
anyone using 3.0 who doesn't want to see the warning.
2014-05-28 19:21:01 -04:00
Tom Lane 45b7abe59e Fix bogus %name-prefix option syntax in all our Bison files.
%name-prefix doesn't use an "=" sign according to the Bison docs, but it
silently accepted one anyway, until Bison 3.0.  This was originally a
typo of mine in commit 012abebab1, and we
seem to have slavishly copied the error into all the other grammar files.

Per report from Vik Fearing; analysis by Peter Eisentraut.

Back-patch to all active branches, since somebody might try to build
a back branch with up-to-date tools.
2014-05-28 15:41:53 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 0a78320057 pgindent run for 9.4
This includes removing tabs after periods in C comments, which was
applied to back branches, so this change should not effect backpatching.
2014-05-06 12:12:18 -04:00
Tom Lane 3f8c8e3c61 Fix failure to detoast fields in composite elements of structured types.
If we have an array of records stored on disk, the individual record fields
cannot contain out-of-line TOAST pointers: the tuptoaster.c mechanisms are
only prepared to deal with TOAST pointers appearing in top-level fields of
a stored row.  The same applies for ranges over composite types, nested
composites, etc.  However, the existing code only took care of expanding
sub-field TOAST pointers for the case of nested composites, not for other
structured types containing composites.  For example, given a command such
as

UPDATE tab SET arraycol = ARRAY[(ROW(x,42)::mycompositetype] ...

where x is a direct reference to a field of an on-disk tuple, if that field
is long enough to be toasted out-of-line then the TOAST pointer would be
inserted as-is into the array column.  If the source record for x is later
deleted, the array field value would become a dangling pointer, leading
to errors along the line of "missing chunk number 0 for toast value ..."
when the value is referenced.  A reproducible test case for this was
provided by Jan Pecek, but it seems likely that some of the "missing chunk
number" reports we've heard in the past were caused by similar issues.

Code-wise, the problem is that PG_DETOAST_DATUM() is not adequate to
produce a self-contained Datum value if the Datum is of composite type.
Seen in this light, the problem is not just confined to arrays and ranges,
but could also affect some other places where detoasting is done in that
way, for example form_index_tuple().

I tried teaching the array code to apply toast_flatten_tuple_attribute()
along with PG_DETOAST_DATUM() when the array element type is composite,
but this was messy and imposed extra cache lookup costs whether or not any
TOAST pointers were present, indeed sometimes when the array element type
isn't even composite (since sometimes it takes a typcache lookup to find
that out).  The idea of extending that approach to all the places that
currently use PG_DETOAST_DATUM() wasn't attractive at all.

This patch instead solves the problem by decreeing that composite Datum
values must not contain any out-of-line TOAST pointers in the first place;
that is, we expand out-of-line fields at the point of constructing a
composite Datum, not at the point where we're about to insert it into a
larger tuple.  This rule is applied only to true composite Datums, not
to tuples that are being passed around the system as tuples, so it's not
as invasive as it might sound at first.  With this approach, the amount
of code that has to be touched for a full solution is greatly reduced,
and added cache lookup costs are avoided except when there actually is
a TOAST pointer that needs to be inlined.

The main drawback of this approach is that we might sometimes dereference
a TOAST pointer that will never actually be used by the query, imposing a
rather large cost that wasn't there before.  On the other side of the coin,
if the field value is used multiple times then we'll come out ahead by
avoiding repeat detoastings.  Experimentation suggests that common SQL
coding patterns are unaffected either way, though.  Applications that are
very negatively affected could be advised to modify their code to not fetch
columns they won't be using.

In future, we might consider reverting this solution in favor of detoasting
only at the point where data is about to be stored to disk, using some
method that can drill down into multiple levels of nested structured types.
That will require defining new APIs for structured types, though, so it
doesn't seem feasible as a back-patchable fix.

Note that this patch changes HeapTupleGetDatum() from a macro to a function
call; this means that any third-party code using that macro will not get
protection against creating TOAST-pointer-containing Datums until it's
recompiled.  The same applies to any uses of PG_RETURN_HEAPTUPLEHEADER().
It seems likely that this is not a big problem in practice: most of the
tuple-returning functions in core and contrib produce outputs that could
not possibly be toasted anyway, and the same probably holds for third-party
extensions.

This bug has existed since TOAST was invented, so back-patch to all
supported branches.
2014-05-01 15:19:06 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut d0765d50f4 PL/Python: Adjust the regression tests for Python 3.4
The error test case in the plpython_do test resulted in a slightly
different error message with Python 3.4.  So pick a different way to
test it that avoids that and is perhaps also a bit clearer.
2014-04-29 22:16:16 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e7128e8dbb Create function prototype as part of PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1 macro
Because of gcc -Wmissing-prototypes, all functions in dynamically
loadable modules must have a separate prototype declaration.  This is
meant to detect global functions that are not declared in header files,
but in cases where the function is called via dfmgr, this is redundant.
Besides filling up space with boilerplate, this is a frequent source of
compiler warnings in extension modules.

We can fix that by creating the function prototype as part of the
PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1 macro, which such modules have to use anyway.  That
makes the code of modules cleaner, because there is one less place where
the entry points have to be listed, and creates an additional check that
functions have the right prototype.

Remove now redundant prototypes from contrib and other modules.
2014-04-18 00:03:19 -04:00
Robert Haas 0886fc6a5c Add new to_reg* functions for error-free OID lookups.
These functions won't throw an error if the object doesn't exist,
or if (for functions and operators) there's more than one matching
object.

Yugo Nagata and Nozomi Anzai, reviewed by Amit Khandekar, Marti
Raudsepp, Amit Kapila, and me.
2014-04-08 10:27:56 -04:00
Simon Riggs 7d8f1de1bc Extra warnings and errors for PL/pgSQL
Infrastructure to allow
 plpgsql.extra_warnings
 plpgsql.extra_errors

Initial extra checks only for shadowed_variables

Marko Tiikkaja and Petr Jelinek
Reviewed by Simon Riggs and Pavel Stěhule
2014-04-06 12:21:51 -04:00
Tom Lane 2d5e0f07de Fix refcounting bug in PLy_modify_tuple().
We must increment the refcount on "plntup" as soon as we have the
reference, not sometime later.  Otherwise, if an error is thrown in
between, the Py_XDECREF(plntup) call in the PG_CATCH block removes a
refcount we didn't add, allowing the object to be freed even though
it's still part of the plpython function's parsetree.

This appears to be the cause of crashes seen on buildfarm member
prairiedog.  It's a bit surprising that we've not seen it fail repeatably
before, considering that the regression tests have been exercising the
faulty code path since 2009.

The real-world impact is probably minimal, since it's unlikely anyone would
be provoking the "TD["new"] is not a dictionary" error in production, and
that's the only case that is actually wrong.  Still, it's a bug affecting
the regression tests, so patch all supported branches.

In passing, remove dead variable "plstr", and demote "platt" to a local
variable inside the PG_TRY block, since we don't need to clean it up
in the PG_CATCH path.
2014-03-26 16:41:32 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera bd1154edec plperl: Fix memory leak in hek2cstr
Backpatch all the way back to 9.1, where it was introduced by commit
50d89d42.

Reported by Sergey Burladyan in #9223
Author: Alex Hunsaker
2014-03-16 23:22:21 -03:00
Bruce Momjian 886c0be3f6 C comments: remove odd blank lines after #ifdef WIN32 lines 2014-03-13 01:34:42 -04:00
Tom Lane 769065c1b2 Prefer pg_any_to_server/pg_server_to_any over pg_do_encoding_conversion.
A large majority of the callers of pg_do_encoding_conversion were
specifying the database encoding as either source or target of the
conversion, meaning that we can use the less general functions
pg_any_to_server/pg_server_to_any instead.

The main advantage of using the latter functions is that they can make use
of a cached conversion-function lookup in the common case that the other
encoding is the current client_encoding.  It's notationally cleaner too in
most cases, not least because of the historical artifact that the latter
functions use "char *" rather than "unsigned char *" in their APIs.

Note that pg_any_to_server will apply an encoding verification step in
some cases where pg_do_encoding_conversion would have just done nothing.
This seems to me to be a good idea at most of these call sites, though
it partially negates the performance benefit.

Per discussion of bug #9210.
2014-02-23 16:59:05 -05:00
Noah Misch 537cbd35c8 Prevent privilege escalation in explicit calls to PL validators.
The primary role of PL validators is to be called implicitly during
CREATE FUNCTION, but they are also normal functions that a user can call
explicitly.  Add a permissions check to each validator to ensure that a
user cannot use explicit validator calls to achieve things he could not
otherwise achieve.  Back-patch to 8.4 (all supported versions).
Non-core procedural language extensions ought to make the same two-line
change to their own validators.

Andres Freund, reviewed by Tom Lane and Noah Misch.

Security: CVE-2014-0061
2014-02-17 09:33:31 -05:00
Tom Lane 56caaf195e On Windows, expect to find Tcl DLL in bin directory not lib directory.
Still another step in the continuing saga of trying to get
--disable-auto-import to work.

Hiroshi Inoue
2014-02-16 11:24:38 -05:00
Tom Lane 638b153f2a Fix fat-fingered makefile changes for pltcl.
I put the OBJS assignments in the wrong order.  Per buildfarm.
2014-02-14 17:10:53 -05:00
Tom Lane dcbf39774f In mingw builds, make our own import library for libtcl, too.
Per buildfarm results.
2014-02-14 13:13:06 -05:00
Tom Lane 02b61dd08f In mingw builds, make our own import library for libperl.
Borrow the method already used by plpython.  This is pretty ugly, but
it might fix the build failure exhibited by buildfarm member narwhal
since commit 846e91e022.

Hiroshi Inoue
2014-02-14 11:51:02 -05:00
Tom Lane a7983e989d Cosmetic improvements in plpython's make rule for libpython import library.
This build technique is remarkably ugly, but that doesn't mean it has
to be unreadable too.  Be a bit more liberal with the vertical whitespace,
and give the .def file a proper dependency, just in case.
2014-02-14 11:31:35 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 2fc80e8e83 Rename 'gmake' to 'make' in docs and recommended commands
This simplifies the docs and makes it easier to cut/paste command lines.
2014-02-12 17:29:19 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 4e18236180 PL/Perl: Fix compiler warning
The code was assigning a (Datum) 0 to a void pointer.  That creates a
warning from clang 3.4.  It was probably a thinko to begin with.
2014-02-04 20:08:39 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera b152c6cd0d Make DROP IF EXISTS more consistently not fail
Some cases were still reporting errors and aborting, instead of a NOTICE
that the object was being skipped.  This makes it more difficult to
cleanly handle pg_dump --clean, so change that to instead skip missing
objects properly.

Per bug #7873 reported by Dave Rolsky; apparently this affects a large
number of users.

Authors: Pavel Stehule and Dean Rasheed.  Some tweaks by Álvaro Herrera
2014-01-23 14:40:29 -03:00
Bruce Momjian 7e1955b861 docs: update PL/pgSQL docs about the use of := and = 2014-01-16 16:40:58 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 7e04792a1c Update copyright for 2014
Update all files in head, and files COPYRIGHT and legal.sgml in all back
branches.
2014-01-07 16:05:30 -05:00
Robert Haas 37484ad2aa Change the way we mark tuples as frozen.
Instead of changing the tuple xmin to FrozenTransactionId, the combination
of HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED and HEAP_XMIN_INVALID, which were previously never
set together, is now defined as HEAP_XMIN_FROZEN.  A variety of previous
proposals to freeze tuples opportunistically before vacuum_freeze_min_age
is reached have foundered on the objection that replacing xmin by
FrozenTransactionId might hinder debugging efforts when things in this
area go awry; this patch is intended to solve that problem by keeping
the XID around (but largely ignoring the value to which it is set).

Third-party code that checks for HEAP_XMIN_INVALID on tuples where
HEAP_XMIN_COMMITTED might be set will be broken by this change.  To fix,
use the new accessor macros in htup_details.h rather than consulting the
bits directly.  HeapTupleHeaderGetXmin has been modified to return
FrozenTransactionId when the infomask bits indicate that the tuple is
frozen; use HeapTupleHeaderGetRawXmin when you already know that the
tuple isn't marked commited or frozen, or want the raw value anyway.
We currently do this in routines that display the xmin for user consumption,
in tqual.c where it's known to be safe and important for the avoidance of
extra cycles, and in the function-caching code for various procedural
languages, which shouldn't invalidate the cache just because the tuple
gets frozen.

Robert Haas and Andres Freund
2013-12-22 15:49:09 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas dde6282500 Fix more instances of "the the" in comments.
Plus one instance of "to to" in the docs.
2013-12-13 20:02:01 +02:00
Tom Lane 6bff0e7d92 Add a regression test case for plpython function returning setof RECORD.
We had coverage for functions returning setof a named composite type,
but not for anonymous records, which is a somewhat different code path.
In view of recent crash report from Sergey Konoplev, this seems worth
testing, though I doubt there's any deterministic bug here today.
2013-12-11 17:22:55 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut e5dc4cc24d PL/Perl: Add event trigger support
From: Dimitri Fontaine <dimitri@2ndQuadrant.fr>
2013-12-11 08:11:59 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 3e3520cf7a Translation updates 2013-12-02 00:17:07 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4118f7e8ed Fix plpython3 expected output.
I neglected this in the previous commit that updated the plpython2 output,
which I forgot to "git add" earlier.

As pointed out by Rodolfo Campero and Marko Kreen.
2013-11-27 14:25:13 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4c83e0353f Oops, forgot to "git add" last minute changes to regression test. 2013-11-26 23:05:48 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 37364c6311 Handle domains over arrays like plain arrays in PL/python.
Domains over arrays are now converted to/from python lists when passed as
arguments or return values. Like regular arrays.

This has some potential to break applications that rely on the old behavior
that they are passed as strings, but in practice there probably aren't many
such applications out there.

Rodolfo Campero
2013-11-26 14:33:31 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut a5036ca998 PL/Tcl: Add event trigger support
From: Dimitri Fontaine <dimitri@2ndQuadrant.fr>
2013-11-23 21:32:00 -05:00
Tom Lane c7b849a896 Prevent leakage of cached plans and execution trees in plpgsql DO blocks.
plpgsql likes to cache query plans and simple-expression execution state
trees across calls.  This is a considerable win for multiple executions
of the same function.  However, it's useless for DO blocks, since by
definition those are executed only once and discarded.  Nonetheless,
we were allowing a DO block's expression execution trees to survive
until end of transaction, resulting in a significant intra-transaction
memory leak, as reported by Yeb Havinga.  Worse, if the DO block exited
with an error, the compiled form of the block's code was leaked till
end of session --- along with subsidiary plancache entries.

To fix, make DO blocks keep their expression execution trees in a private
EState that's deleted at exit from the block, and add a PG_TRY block
to plpgsql_inline_handler to make sure that memory cleanup happens
even on error exits.  Also add a regression test covering error handling
in a DO block, because my first try at this broke that.  (The test is
not meant to prove that we don't leak memory anymore, though it could
be used for that with a much larger loop count.)

Ideally we'd back-patch this into all versions supporting DO blocks;
but the patch needs to add a field to struct PLpgSQL_execstate, and that
would break ABI compatibility for third-party plugins such as the plpgsql
debugger.  Given the small number of complaints so far, fixing this in
HEAD only seems like an acceptable choice.
2013-11-15 13:52:03 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 001e114b8d Fix whitespace issues found by git diff --check, add gitattributes
Set per file type attributes in .gitattributes to fine-tune whitespace
checks.  With the associated cleanups, the tree is now clean for git
2013-11-10 14:48:29 -05:00
Tom Lane 3147acd63e Use improved vsnprintf calling logic in more places.
When we are using a C99-compliant vsnprintf implementation (which should be
most places, these days) it is worth the trouble to make use of its report
of how large the buffer needs to be to succeed.  This patch adjusts
stringinfo.c and some miscellaneous usages in pg_dump to do that, relying
on the logic recently added in libpgcommon's psprintf.c.  Since these
places want to know the number of bytes written once we succeed, modify the
API of pvsnprintf() to report that.

There remains near-duplicate logic in pqexpbuffer.c, but since that code
is in libpq, psprintf.c's approach of exit()-on-error isn't appropriate
for use there.  Also note that I didn't bother touching the multitude
of places that call (v)snprintf without any attempt to provide a resizable
buffer.

Release-note-worthy incompatibility: the API of appendStringInfoVA()
changed.  If there's any third-party code that's calling that directly,
it will need tweaking along the same lines as in this patch.

David Rowley and Tom Lane
2013-10-24 21:43:57 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 382b694175 Translation updates to fix build failures
Now that msgfmt is run with -c by default, older versions of gettext are
complaining about the PO headers Last-Translator and Language-Team
still having their default values.  Newer gettext versions fail to catch
this because of a bug (https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?40261), which is
why this hasn't been noticed before.

Copy updated versions of affected translation files from the
pgtranslations repository, were those files have been fixed.
2013-10-13 22:14:26 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 0b109c822b Translation updates 2013-10-07 16:51:52 -04:00
Robert Haas 689746c045 plpgsql: Add new option print_strict_params.
This option provides more detailed error messages when STRICT is used
and the number of rows returned is not one.

Marko Tiikkaja, reviewed by Ian Lawrence Barwick
2013-10-07 15:38:49 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 6a007fa1eb Translation updates 2013-09-02 02:43:18 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a2f2e902b8 Translation updates 2013-08-18 23:41:03 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 527ea66849 PL/Python: Adjust the regression tests for Python 3.3
Similar to 2cfb1c6f77, the order in which
dictionary elements are printed is not reliable.  This reappeared in the
tests of the string representation of result objects.  Reduce the test
case to one result set column so that there is no question of order.
2013-08-11 09:20:16 -04:00
Stephen Frost ddef1a39c6 Allow a context to be passed in for error handling
As pointed out by Tom Lane, we can allow other users of the error
handler callbacks to provide their own memory context by adding
the context to use to ErrorData and using that instead of explicitly
using ErrorContext.

This then allows GetErrorContextStack() to be called from inside
exception handlers, so modify plpgsql to take advantage of that and
add an associated regression test for it.
2013-08-01 01:07:20 -04:00
Tom Lane 3d13623d75 Prevent leakage of SPI tuple tables during subtransaction abort.
plpgsql often just remembers SPI-result tuple tables in local variables,
and has no mechanism for freeing them if an ereport(ERROR) causes an escape
out of the execution function whose local variable it is.  In the original
coding, that wasn't a problem because the tuple table would be cleaned up
when the function's SPI context went away during transaction abort.
However, once plpgsql grew the ability to trap exceptions, repeated
trapping of errors within a function could result in significant
intra-function-call memory leakage, as illustrated in bug #8279 from
Chad Wagner.

We could fix this locally in plpgsql with a bunch of PG_TRY/PG_CATCH
coding, but that would be tedious, probably slow, and prone to bugs of
omission; moreover it would do nothing for similar risks elsewhere.
What seems like a better plan is to make SPI itself responsible for
freeing tuple tables at subtransaction abort.  This patch attacks the
problem that way, keeping a list of live tuple tables within each SPI
function context.  Currently, such freeing is automatic for tuple tables
made within the failed subtransaction.  We might later add a SPI call to
mark a tuple table as not to be freed this way, allowing callers to opt
out; but until someone exhibits a clear use-case for such behavior, it
doesn't seem worth bothering.

A very useful side-effect of this change is that SPI_freetuptable() can
now defend itself against bad calls, such as duplicate free requests;
this should make things more robust in many places.  (In particular,
this reduces the risks involved if a third-party extension contains
now-redundant SPI_freetuptable() calls in error cleanup code.)

Even though the leakage problem is of long standing, it seems imprudent
to back-patch this into stable branches, since it does represent an API
semantics change for SPI users.  We'll patch this in 9.3, but live with
the leakage in older branches.
2013-07-25 16:46:14 -04:00
Stephen Frost 8312832567 Add GET DIAGNOSTICS ... PG_CONTEXT in PL/PgSQL
This adds the ability to get the call stack as a string from within a
PL/PgSQL function, which can be handy for logging to a table, or to
include in a useful message to an end-user.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Rushabh Lathia and rather heavily whacked
around by Stephen Frost.
2013-07-24 18:53:27 -04:00
Tom Lane b3b10c3903 Fix error handling in PLy_spi_execute_fetch_result().
If an error is thrown out of the datatype I/O functions called by this
function, we need to do subtransaction cleanup, which the previous coding
entirely failed to do.  Fortunately, both existing callers of this function
already have proper cleanup logic, so re-throwing the exception is enough.

Also, postpone creation of the resultset tupdesc until after the I/O
conversions are complete, so that we won't leak memory in TopMemoryContext
when such an error happens.
2013-07-20 12:44:37 -04:00
Noah Misch 448fee2e23 Make comments reflect that omission of SPI_gettypmod() is intentional. 2013-07-12 18:07:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 8182ffde5a PL/Python: Make regression tests pass with older Python versions
Avoid output formatting differences by printing str() instead of repr()
of the value.
2013-07-06 20:37:58 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 7919398bac PL/Python: Convert numeric to Decimal
The old implementation converted PostgreSQL numeric to Python float,
which was always considered a shortcoming.  Now numeric is converted to
the Python Decimal object.  Either the external cdecimal module or the
standard library decimal module are supported.

From: Szymon Guz <mabewlun@gmail.com>
From: Ronan Dunklau <rdunklau@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Steve Singer <steve@ssinger.info>
2013-07-05 22:41:25 -04:00
Noah Misch 02d2b694ee Update messages, comments and documentation for materialized views.
All instances of the verbiage lagging the code.  Back-patch to 9.3,
where materialized views were introduced.
2013-07-05 15:37:51 -04:00
Noah Misch 7cd9b1371d Expose object name error fields in PL/pgSQL.
Specifically, permit attaching them to the error in RAISE and retrieving
them from a caught error in GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS.  RAISE enforces
nothing about the content of the fields; for its purposes, they are just
additional string fields.  Consequently, clarify in the protocol and
libpq documentation that the usual relationships between error fields,
like a schema name appearing wherever a table name appears, are not
universal.  This freedom has other applications; consider a FDW
propagating an error from an RDBMS having no schema support.

Back-patch to 9.3, where core support for the error fields was
introduced.  This prevents the confusion of having a release where libpq
exposes the fields and PL/pgSQL does not.

Pavel Stehule, lexical revisions by Noah Misch.
2013-07-03 07:29:56 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas d2e71ff757 Silence compiler warning in assertion-enabled builds.
With -Wtype-limits, gcc correctly points out that size_t can never be < 0.
Backpatch to 9.3 and 9.2. It's been like this forever, but in <= 9.1 you got
a lot other warnings with -Wtype-limits anyway (at least with my version of
gcc).

Andres Freund
2013-07-02 17:53:08 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut fa2fc066f3 PL/Python: Fix type mixup
Memory was allocated based on the sizeof a type that was not the type of
the pointer that the result was being assigned to.  The types happen to
be of the same size, but it's still wrong.
2013-06-13 21:42:42 -04:00
Tom Lane 035a5e1e8c Add semicolons to eval'd strings to hide a minor Perl behavioral change.
"eval q{foo}" used to complain that the error was on line 2 of the eval'd
string, because eval internally tacked on "\n;" so that the end of the
erroneous command was indeed on line 2.  But as of Perl 5.18 it more
sanely says that the error is on line 1.  To avoid Perl-version-dependent
regression test results, use "eval q{foo;}" instead in the two places
where this matters.  Per buildfarm.

Since people might try to use newer Perl versions with older PG releases,
back-patch as far as 9.0 where these test cases were added.
2013-06-03 14:19:26 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 9af4159fce pgindent run for release 9.3
This is the first run of the Perl-based pgindent script.  Also update
pgindent instructions.
2013-05-29 16:58:43 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 539ecc9241 Translation updates 2013-05-05 22:34:23 -04:00
Tom Lane da5aeccf64 Move pqsignal() to libpgport.
We had two copies of this function in the backend and libpq, which was
already pretty bogus, but it turns out that we need it in some other
programs that don't use libpq (such as pg_test_fsync).  So put it where
it probably should have been all along.  The signal-mask-initialization
support in src/backend/libpq/pqsignal.c stays where it is, though, since
we only need that in the backend.
2013-03-17 12:06:42 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 0d147e43ad Remove dependency on the DLL of pythonxx.def file.
This confused Cygwin's make because of the colon in the path. The
DLL isn't likely to change under us so preserving the dependency
doesn't gain us much, and it's useful to be able to do a native
Windows build with the Cygwin mingw toolset.

Noah Misch.
2013-03-05 19:24:29 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 3bf3ab8c56 Add a materialized view relations.
A materialized view has a rule just like a view and a heap and
other physical properties like a table.  The rule is only used to
populate the table, references in queries refer to the
materialized data.

This is a minimal implementation, but should still be useful in
many cases.  Currently data is only populated "on demand" by the
CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW and REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW statements.
It is expected that future releases will add incremental updates
with various timings, and that a more refined concept of defining
what is "fresh" data will be developed.  At some point it may even
be possible to have queries use a materialized in place of
references to underlying tables, but that requires the other
above-mentioned features to be working first.

Much of the documentation work by Robert Haas.
Review by Noah Misch, Thom Brown, Robert Haas, Marko Tiikkaja
Security review by KaiGai Kohei, with a decision on how best to
implement sepgsql still pending.
2013-03-03 18:23:31 -06:00
Tom Lane a4d3a504e7 Eliminate memory leaks in plperl's spi_prepare() function.
Careless use of TopMemoryContext for I/O function data meant that repeated
use of spi_prepare and spi_freeplan would leak memory at the session level,
as per report from Christian Schröder.  In addition, spi_prepare
leaked a lot of transient data within the current plperl function's SPI
Proc context, which would be a problem for repeated use of spi_prepare
within a single plperl function call; and it wasn't terribly careful
about releasing permanent allocations in event of an error, either.

In passing, clean up some copy-and-pasteos in query-lookup error messages.

Alex Hunsaker and Tom Lane
2013-03-01 21:34:17 -05:00
Tom Lane fdaf44862b Invent pre-commit/pre-prepare/pre-subcommit events for xact callbacks.
Currently it's only possible for loadable modules to get control during
post-commit cleanup of a transaction.  That doesn't work too well if they
want to do something that could throw an error; for example, an FDW might
need to issue a remote commit, which could well fail.  To improve matters,
extend the existing APIs for XactCallback and SubXactCallback functions
to provide new pre-commit events for this purpose.

The release notes will need to mention that existing callback functions
should be checked to make sure they don't do something unwanted when one
of the new event types occurs.  In the examples within our source tree,
contrib/sepgsql was fine but plpgsql had been a bit too cute.
2013-02-14 20:35:08 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 0cb1fac3b1 Add noreturn attributes to some error reporting functions 2013-02-12 07:13:22 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 330ed4ac6c PL/Python: Add result object str handler
This is intended so that say plpy.debug(rv) prints something useful for
debugging query execution results.

reviewed by Steve Singer
2013-02-03 00:31:01 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut b1980f6d03 PL/Tcl: Fix compiler warnings with Tcl 8.6
Some constification was added in the Tcl APIs, so add the modifiers in
PL/Tcl as well.
2013-01-31 22:08:53 -05:00
Tom Lane 2ab218b576 Don't use spi_priv.h in plpython.
There may once have been a reason to violate modularity like that,
but it doesn't appear that there is anymore.
2013-01-30 20:11:58 -05:00
Tom Lane 0900ac2d0d Fix plpgsql's reporting of plan-time errors in possibly-simple expressions.
exec_simple_check_plan and exec_eval_simple_expr attempted to call
GetCachedPlan directly.  This meant that if an error was thrown during
planning, the resulting context traceback would not include the line
normally contributed by _SPI_error_callback.  This is already inconsistent,
but just to be really odd, a re-execution of the very same expression
*would* show the additional context line, because we'd already have cached
the plan and marked the expression as non-simple.

The problem is easy to demonstrate in 9.2 and HEAD because planning of a
cached plan doesn't occur at all until GetCachedPlan is done.  In earlier
versions, it could only be an issue if initial planning had succeeded, then
a replan was forced (already somewhat improbable for a simple expression),
and the replan attempt failed.  Since the issue is mainly cosmetic in older
branches anyway, it doesn't seem worth the risk of trying to fix it there.
It is worth fixing in 9.2 since the instability of the context printout can
affect the results of GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS, as per a recent discussion
on pgsql-novice.

To fix, introduce a SPI function that wraps GetCachedPlan while installing
the correct callback function.  Use this instead of calling GetCachedPlan
directly from plpgsql.

Also introduce a wrapper function for extracting a SPI plan's
CachedPlanSource list.  This lets us stop including spi_priv.h in
pl_exec.c, which was never a very good idea from a modularity standpoint.

In passing, fix a similar inconsistency that could occur in SPI_cursor_open,
which was also calling GetCachedPlan without setting up a context callback.
2013-01-30 20:02:23 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 316186f289 Handle SPIErrors raised directly in PL/Python code.
If a PL/Python function raises an SPIError (or one if its subclasses)
directly with python's raise statement, treat it the same as an SPIError
generated internally. In particular, if the user sets the sqlstate
attribute, preserve that.

Oskari Saarenmaa and Jan Urbański, reviewed by Karl O. Pinc.
2013-01-28 09:46:23 +02:00
Tom Lane 08be00fabe Fix plpython's handling of functions used as triggers on multiple tables.
plpython tried to use a single cache entry for a trigger function, but it
needs a separate cache entry for each table the trigger is applied to,
because there is table-dependent data in there.  This was done correctly
before 9.1, but commit 46211da1b8 broke it
by simplifying the lookup key from "function OID and triggered table OID"
to "function OID and is-trigger boolean".  Go back to using both OIDs
as the lookup key.  Per bug report from Sandro Santilli.

Andres Freund
2013-01-25 16:59:36 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 7fb97ecd13 Detect Windows perl linkage parameters in configure script.
This means we can now construct a configure test for the library
presence. Previously these parameters were only figured out at
build time in plperl's GnuMakefile.
2013-01-09 17:49:23 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut f31d5baff6 Fix typo 2013-01-07 21:34:30 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut fc8745070a PL/Python: Make build on OS X more flexible
The PL/Python build on OS X was previously hardcoded to use the system
installation of Python, ignoring whatever was specified to configure.
Except that it would use the header files from configure, which could
lead to mismatches.  It was not possible to build against a custom
Python installation.

Now, we check in configure how the specified Python installation was
built and use that, supporting framework and non-framework builds.
2013-01-05 08:56:14 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 7e938e3c56 Revert "PL/Python: Remove workaround for returning booleans in Python <2.3"
This reverts commit be0dfbad36.

The previous information that Py_RETURN_TRUE and Py_RETURN_FALSE are
supported in Python 2.3 is wrong.  They require Python 2.4.  Update the
comment about that.
2013-01-05 08:50:58 -05:00
Bruce Momjian bd61a623ac Update copyrights for 2013
Fully update git head, and update back branches in ./COPYRIGHT and
legal.sgml files.
2013-01-01 17:15:01 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 1a5f04dd7e Remove allow_nonpic_in_shlib
This was used in a time when a shared libperl or libpython was difficult
to come by.  That is obsolete, and the idea behind the flag was never
fully portable anyway and will likely fail on more modern CPU
architectures.
2012-12-18 01:13:59 -05:00
Tom Lane 31a891857a Improve pl/pgsql to support composite-type expressions in RETURN.
For some reason lost in the mists of prehistory, RETURN was only coded to
allow a simple reference to a composite variable when the function's return
type is composite.  Allow an expression instead, while preserving the
efficiency of the original code path in the case where the expression is
indeed just a composite variable's name.  Likewise for RETURN NEXT.

As is true in various other places, the supplied expression must yield
exactly the number and data types of the required columns.  There was some
discussion of relaxing that for pl/pgsql, but no consensus yet, so this
patch doesn't address that.

Asif Rehman, reviewed by Pavel Stehule
2012-12-06 23:09:52 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 8521d13194 Refactor flex and bison make rules
Numerous flex and bison make rules have appeared in the source tree
over time, and they are all virtually identical, so we can replace
them by pattern rules with some variables for customization.

Users of pgxs will also be able to benefit from this.
2012-10-11 06:57:04 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 05346c131a PL/pgSQL: rename gram.y to pl_gram.y
This makes the naming inside plpgsql consistent and distinguishes the
file from the backend's gram.y file.  It will also allow easier
refactoring of the bison make rules later on.
2012-10-04 22:40:33 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut be0dfbad36 PL/Python: Remove workaround for returning booleans in Python <2.3
Since Python 2.2 is no longer supported, we can now use Py_RETURN_TRUE
and Py_RETURN_FALSE instead of the old workaround.
2012-09-29 12:55:42 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut db0af74af2 PL/Python: Convert oid to long/int
oid is a numeric type, so transform it to the appropriate Python
numeric type like the other ones.
2012-09-29 12:41:00 -04:00
Tom Lane bac95fd474 Make plpgsql's unreserved keywords more unreserved.
There were assorted places where unreserved keywords were not treated the
same as T_WORD (that is, a random unrecognized identifier).  Fix them.
It might not always be possible to allow this, but it is in all these
places, so I don't see any downside.

Per gripe from Jim Wilson.  Arguably this is a bug fix, but given the lack
of other complaints and the ease of working around it (just quote the
word), I won't risk back-patching.
2012-09-26 22:27:36 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut b2e3bea3af PL/Python: Improve Python 3 regression test setup
Currently, we are making mangled copies of plpython/{expected,sql} to
plpython/python3/{expected,sql}, and run the tests in
plpython/python3.  This has the disadvantage that the regression.diffs
file, if any, ends up in plpython/python3, which is not the normal
location.  If we instead make the mangled copies in
plpython/{expected,sql}/python3/, we can run the tests from the normal
directory, regression.diffs ends up the normal place, and the
pg_regress invocation also becomes a lot simpler.  It's also more
obvious at run time what's going on, because the tests end up being
named "python3/something" in the test output.
2012-09-16 22:26:33 -04:00
Tom Lane b8fbbcf37f Add a regression test case based on bug #7516.
Given what we now know about the cause of this bug, it seems like it'd
be a real good idea to include it in the plperl regression tests, so as
to catch any platform-specific cases where the code gets misoptimized.
2012-09-14 11:05:53 -04:00
Tom Lane 9afc648111 Keep plperl's current_call_data record on the stack, instead of palloc'ing.
This at least saves some palloc overhead, and should furthermore reduce
the risk of anything going wrong, eg somebody resetting the context the
current_call_data record was in.
2012-09-13 13:44:20 -04:00
Tom Lane 59f23fe8d4 Make plperl safe against functions that are redefined while running.
validate_plperl_function() supposed that it could free an old
plperl_proc_desc struct immediately upon detecting that it was stale.
However, if a plperl function is called recursively, this could result
in deleting the struct out from under an outer invocation, leading to
misbehavior or crashes.  Add a simple reference-count mechanism to
ensure that such structs are freed only when the last reference goes
away.

Per investigation of bug #7516 from Marko Tiikkaja.  I am not certain
that this error explains his report, because he says he didn't have
any recursive calls --- but it's hard to see how else it could have
crashed right there.  In any case, this definitely fixes some problems
in the area.

Back-patch to all active branches.
2012-09-09 20:32:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 45d1f1e024 Adjust PL/Python regression tests some more for Python 3.3.
Commit 2cfb1c6f77 fixed some issues caused
by Python 3.3 choosing to iterate through dict entries in a different order
than before.  But here's another one: the test cases adjusted here made two
bad entries in a dict and expected the one complained of would always be
the same.

Possibly this should be back-patched further than 9.2, but there seems
little point unless the earlier fix is too.
2012-09-08 17:39:02 -04:00
Tom Lane 28ab4a5aab Restore SIGFPE handler after initializing PL/Perl.
Perl, for some unaccountable reason, believes it's a good idea to reset
SIGFPE handling to SIG_IGN.  Which wouldn't be a good idea even if it
worked; but on some platforms (Linux at least) it doesn't work at all,
instead resulting in forced process termination if the signal occurs.
Given the lack of other complaints, it seems safe to assume that Perl
never actually provokes SIGFPE and so there is no value in the setting
anyway.  Hence, reset it to our normal handler after initializing Perl.

Report, analysis and patch by Andres Freund.
2012-09-05 16:43:37 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera c219d9b0a5 Split tuple struct defs from htup.h to htup_details.h
This reduces unnecessary exposure of other headers through htup.h, which
is very widely included by many files.

I have chosen to move the function prototypes to the new file as well,
because that means htup.h no longer needs to include tupdesc.h.  In
itself this doesn't have much effect in indirect inclusion of tupdesc.h
throughout the tree, because it's also required by execnodes.h; but it's
something to explore in the future, and it seemed best to do the htup.h
change now while I'm busy with it.
2012-08-30 16:52:35 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 0a664ec27f add #includes to plpy_subxactobject.h to make it compile standalone 2012-08-28 16:13:41 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 1d9a6ae855 Add C comment that '=' is not documented for plpgsql assignment. 2012-08-15 12:00:56 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3ff15883b1 Perform conversion from Python unicode to string/bytes object via UTF-8.
We used to convert the unicode object directly to a string in the server
encoding by calling Python's PyUnicode_AsEncodedString function. In other
words, we used Python's routines to do the encoding. However, that has a
few problems. First of all, it required keeping a mapping table of Python
encoding names and PostgreSQL encodings. But the real killer was that Python
doesn't support EUC_TW and MULE_INTERNAL encodings at all.

Instead, convert the Python unicode object to UTF-8, and use PostgreSQL's
encoding conversion functions to convert from UTF-8 to server encoding. We
were already doing the same in the other direction in PLyUnicode_FromString,
so this is more consistent, too.

Note: This makes SQL_ASCII to behave more leniently. We used to map
SQL_ASCII to Python's 'ascii', which on Python means strict 7-bit ASCII
only, so you got an error if the python string contained anything but pure
ASCII. You no longer get an error; you get the UTF-8 representation of the
string instead.

Backpatch to 9.0, where these conversions were introduced.

Jan Urbański
2012-08-06 14:09:50 +03:00
Tom Lane 1f115d98b9 Suppress volatile-related warning seen in some compilers.
Antique versions of gcc complain about vars that are initialized outside
PG_TRY and then modified within it.  Rather than marking the var volatile,
expend one more line of code.
2012-07-21 19:39:03 -04:00
Robert Haas ed0af33247 Revert temporary patch to debug Windows breakage.
This reverts commit 0a248208a0.
2012-07-20 22:31:19 -04:00
Robert Haas 0635c0b524 Repair plpgsql_validator breakage.
Commit 3a0e4d36eb arranged to
reference stack-allocated variables after they were out of scope.
That's no good, so let's arrange to not do that after all.
2012-07-20 21:28:26 -04:00
Robert Haas 0a248208a0 Temporary patch to try to debug why event trigger patch broke Windows.
Apologies for the ugliness.
2012-07-20 16:22:11 -04:00
Robert Haas 3a0e4d36eb Make new event trigger facility actually do something.
Commit 3855968f32 added syntax, pg_dump,
psql support, and documentation, but the triggers didn't actually fire.
With this commit, they now do.  This is still a pretty basic facility
overall because event triggers do not get a whole lot of information
about what the user is trying to do unless you write them in C; and
there's still no option to fire them anywhere except at the very
beginning of the execution sequence, but it's better than nothing,
and a good building block for future work.

Along the way, add a regression test for ALTER LARGE OBJECT, since
testing of event triggers reveals that we haven't got one.

Dimitri Fontaine and Robert Haas
2012-07-20 11:39:01 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 71f2dd2321 PL/Python: Remove PLy_result_ass_item
It is apparently no longer used after the new slicing support was
implemented (a97207b690), so let's
remove the dead code and see if anything cares.
2012-07-17 23:26:49 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera 65558995a2 Remove recently added PL/Perl encoding tests
These only pass cleanly on UTF8 and SQL_ASCII encodings, besides the
Japanese encoding in which they were originally written, which is clearly
not good enough.  Since the functionality they test has not ever been
tested from PL/Perl, the best answer seems to be to remove the new tests
completely.

Per buildfarm results and ensuing discussion.
2012-07-17 13:26:25 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut dd16f9480a Remove unreachable code
The Solaris Studio compiler warns about these instances, unlike more
mainstream compilers such as gcc.  But manual inspection showed that
the code is clearly not reachable, and we hope no worthy compiler will
complain about removing this code.
2012-07-16 22:15:03 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut a76c857eba Add comment why seemingly dead code is necessary 2012-07-16 22:08:04 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera 379607c9e8 plperl: Skip setting UTF8 flag when in SQL_ASCII encoding
When in SQL_ASCII encoding, strings passed around are not necessarily
UTF8-safe.  We had already fixed this in some places, but it looks like
we missed some.

I had to backpatch Peter Eisentraut's a8b92b60 to 9.1 in order for this
patch to cherry-pick more cleanly.

Patch from Alex Hunsaker, tweaked by Kyotaro HORIGUCHI and myself.

Some desultory cleanup and comment addition by me, during patch review.

Per bug report from Christoph Berg in
20120209102116.GA14429@msgid.df7cb.de
2012-07-10 15:15:16 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas de479e2ed2 Revert part of the previous patch that avoided using PLy_elog().
That caused the plpython_unicode regression test to fail on SQL_ASCII
encoding, as evidenced by the buildfarm. The reason is that with the patch,
you don't get the detail in the error message that you got before. That
detail is actually very informative, so rather than just adjust the expected
output, let's revert that part of the patch for now to make the buildfarm
green again, and figure out some other way to avoid the recursion of
PLy_elog() that doesn't lose the detail.
2012-07-05 23:40:25 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas b66de4c6d7 Fix mapping of PostgreSQL encodings to Python encodings.
Windows encodings, "win1252" and so forth, are named differently in Python,
like "cp1252". Also, if the PyUnicode_AsEncodedString() function call fails
for some reason, use a plain ereport(), not a PLy_elog(), to report that
error. That avoids recursion and crash, if PLy_elog() tries to call
PLyUnicode_Bytes() again.

This fixes bug reported by Asif Naeem. Backpatch down to 9.0, before that
plpython didn't even try these conversions.

Jan Urbański, with minor comment improvements by me.
2012-07-05 22:31:29 +03:00
Bruce Momjian 042d9ffc28 Run newly-configured perltidy script on Perl files.
Run on HEAD and 9.2.
2012-07-04 21:47:49 -04:00
Robert Haas d7c734841b Reduce messages about implicit indexes and sequences to DEBUG1.
Per recent discussion on pgsql-hackers, these messages are too
chatty for most users.
2012-07-04 20:35:29 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 2b44306315 Assorted message style improvements 2012-07-02 21:12:46 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut b344c651fb Make init-po and update-po recursive make targets
This is for convenience, now that adding recursive targets is much
easier than it used to be when the NLS stuff was initially added.
2012-06-29 14:01:54 +03:00
Bruce Momjian 927d61eeff Run pgindent on 9.2 source tree in preparation for first 9.3
commit-fest.
2012-06-10 15:20:04 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a8b92b6090 PL/Perl: Avoid compiler warning from clang
Use SvREFCNT_inc_simple_void() instead of SvREFCNT_inc() to avoid
warning about unused return value.
2012-05-27 22:30:34 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut c8e086795a Remove whitespace from end of lines
pgindent and perltidy should clean up the rest.
2012-05-15 22:19:41 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 2cfb1c6f77 PL/Python: Adjust the regression tests for Python 3.3
The string representation of ImportError changed.  Remove printing
that; it's not necessary for the test.

The order in which members of a dict are printed changed.  But this
was always implementation-dependent, so we have just been lucky for a
long time.  Do the printing the hard way to ensure sorted order.
2012-05-11 23:04:47 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut a97207b690 PL/Python: Fix slicing support for result objects for Python 3
The old way of implementing slicing support by implementing
PySequenceMethods.sq_slice no longer works in Python 3.  You now have
to implement PyMappingMethods.mp_subscript.  Do this by simply
proxying the call to the wrapped list of result dictionaries.
Consolidate some of the subscripting regression tests.

Jan Urbański
2012-05-10 20:40:30 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 1540d3bf4d PL/Python: Update incorrect comment
Jan Urbański
2012-05-10 20:40:30 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 1d158d7f98 Python 2.2 is no longer supported
It was already on its last legs, and it turns out that it was
accidentally broken in commit 89e850e6fd
and no one cared.  So remove the rest the support for it and update
the documentation to indicate that Python 2.3 is now required.
2012-05-10 20:02:57 +03:00
Joe Conway b58bacdacb PL/pgSQL RETURN NEXT was leaking converted tuples, causing
out of memory when looping through large numbers of rows.
Flag the converted tuples to be freed. Complaint and patch
by Joe.
2012-05-09 22:57:19 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut dcb2c58381 Fix misleading comments
Josh Kupershmidt
2012-05-08 19:35:22 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut e6c2e8cb87 PL/Python: Improve test coverage
Add test cases for inline handler of plython2u (when using that
language name), and for result object element assignment.  There is
now at least one test case for every top-level functionality, except
plpy.Fatal (annoying to use in regression tests) and result object
slice retrieval and slice assignment (which are somewhat broken).
2012-05-02 21:09:03 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 52aa334fcd PL/Python: Fix crash in functions returning SETOF and using SPI
Allocate PLyResultObject.tupdesc in TopMemoryContext, because its
lifetime is the lifetime of the Python object and it shouldn't be
freed by some other memory context, such as one controlled by SPI.  We
trust that the Python object will clean up its own memory.

Before, this would crash the included regression test case by trying
to use memory that was already freed.

reported by Asif Naeem, analysis by Tom Lane
2012-05-02 20:59:51 +03:00
Robert Haas e01e66f808 More duplicate word removal. 2012-05-02 09:28:16 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut ba3e4157a7 PL/Python: Accept strings in functions returning composite types
Before 9.1, PL/Python functions returning composite types could return
a string and it would be parsed using record_in.  The 9.1 changes made
PL/Python only expect dictionaries, tuples, or objects supporting
getattr as output of composite functions, resulting in a regression
and a confusing error message, as the strings were interpreted as
sequences and the code for transforming lists to database tuples was
used.  Fix this by treating strings separately as before, before
checking for the other types.

The reason why it's important to support string to database tuple
conversion is that trigger functions on tables with composite columns
get the composite row passed in as a string (from record_out).
Without supporting converting this back using record_in, this makes it
impossible to implement pass-through behavior for these columns, as
PL/Python no longer accepts strings for composite values.

A better solution would be to fix the code that transforms composite
inputs into Python objects to produce dictionaries that would then be
correctly interpreted by the Python->PostgreSQL counterpart code.  But
that would be too invasive to backpatch to 9.1, and it is too late in
the 9.2 cycle to attempt it.  It should be revisited in the future,
though.

Reported as bug #6559 by Kirill Simonov.

Jan Urbański
2012-04-26 21:03:48 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 65ca8e68b7 PL/Python: Improve error messages 2012-04-25 21:11:59 +03:00
Robert Haas 5d4b60f2f2 Lots of doc corrections.
Josh Kupershmidt
2012-04-23 22:43:09 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 49440fff08 Install plpgsql.h to to include/server at "make install".
The header file is needed by any module that wants to use the PL/pgSQL
instrumentation plugin interface. Most notably, the pldebugger plugin needs
this. With this patch, it can be built using pgxs, without having the full
server source tree available.
2012-04-16 13:03:16 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 0f48e06751 PL/Python: Improve documentation of nrows() method
Clarify that nrows() is the number of rows processed, versus the
number of rows returned, which can be obtained using len.  Also add
tests about that.
2012-04-16 11:30:32 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut c03523ed3f PL/Python: Fix crash when colnames() etc. called without result set
The result object methods colnames() etc. would crash when called
after a command that did not produce a result set.  Now they throw an
exception.

discovery and initial patch by Jean-Baptiste Quenot
2012-04-15 20:23:08 +03:00
Tom Lane 05dbd4a773 Fix plpgsql named-cursor-parameter feature for variable name conflicts.
The parser got confused if a cursor parameter had the same name as
a plpgsql variable.  Reported and diagnosed by Yeb Havinga, though
this isn't exactly his proposed fix.

Also, some mostly-but-not-entirely-cosmetic adjustments to the original
named-cursor-parameter patch, for code readability and better error
diagnostics.
2012-04-04 21:50:31 -04:00
Tom Lane 88a4cb30a4 Fix GET DIAGNOSTICS for case of assignment to function's first variable.
An incorrect and entirely unnecessary "safety check" in exec_stmt_getdiag()
caused the code to treat an assignment to a variable with dno zero as a
no-op.  Unfortunately, that's a perfectly valid dno.  This has been broken
since GET DIAGNOSTICS was invented.  It's not terribly surprising that the
bug went unnoticed for so long, since in most cases you probably wouldn't
use the function's first-created variable (normally its first parameter)
as a GET DIAGNOSTICS target.  Nonetheless, it's broken.  Per bug #6551
from Adam Buraczewski.
2012-03-22 14:13:17 -04:00
Tom Lane 9dbf2b7d75 Restructure SELECT INTO's parsetree representation into CreateTableAsStmt.
Making this operation look like a utility statement seems generally a good
idea, and particularly so in light of the desire to provide command
triggers for utility statements.  The original choice of representing it as
SELECT with an IntoClause appendage had metastasized into rather a lot of
places, unfortunately, so that this patch is a great deal more complicated
than one might at first expect.

In particular, keeping EXPLAIN working for SELECT INTO and CREATE TABLE AS
subcommands required restructuring some EXPLAIN-related APIs.  Add-on code
that calls ExplainOnePlan or ExplainOneUtility, or uses
ExplainOneQuery_hook, will need adjustment.

Also, the cases PREPARE ... SELECT INTO and CREATE RULE ... SELECT INTO,
which formerly were accepted though undocumented, are no longer accepted.
The PREPARE case can be replaced with use of CREATE TABLE AS EXECUTE.
The CREATE RULE case doesn't seem to have much real-world use (since the
rule would work only once before failing with "table already exists"),
so we'll not bother with that one.

Both SELECT INTO and CREATE TABLE AS still return a command tag of
"SELECT nnnn".  There was some discussion of returning "CREATE TABLE nnnn",
but for the moment backwards compatibility wins the day.

Andres Freund and Tom Lane
2012-03-19 21:38:12 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 814e08e895 plperl: Package-qualify _TD
Failing to do so causes trigger invocation to fail when they are nested
within a function invocation that changes the current package.

Backpatch to 9.1; previous releases used a different method to obtain
_TD.  Per bug report from Mark Murawski (bug #6511)

Author: Alex Hunsaker
2012-03-19 17:29:05 -03:00
Tom Lane 5cd72c7a7c Patch some corner-case bugs in pl/python.
Dave Malcolm of Red Hat is working on a static code analysis tool for
Python-related C code.  It reported a number of problems in plpython,
most of which were failures to check for NULL results from object-creation
functions, so would only be an issue in very-low-memory situations.

Patch in HEAD and 9.1.  We could go further back but it's not clear that
these issues are important enough to justify the work.

Jan Urbański
2012-03-13 15:26:32 -04:00
Tom Lane a14fa84693 Fix minor memory leak in PLy_typeinfo_dealloc().
We forgot to free the per-attribute array element descriptors.

Jan Urbański
2012-03-13 13:28:11 -04:00
Tom Lane ed75380bda Create a stack of pl/python "execution contexts".
This replaces the former global variable PLy_curr_procedure, and provides
a place to stash per-call-level information.  In particular we create a
per-call-level scratch memory context.

For the moment, the scratch context is just used to avoid leaking memory
from datatype output function calls in PLyDict_FromTuple.  There probably
will be more use-cases in future.

Although this is a fix for a pre-existing memory leakage bug, it seems
sufficiently invasive to not want to back-patch; it feels better as part
of the major rearrangement of plpython code that we've already done as
part of 9.2.

Jan Urbański
2012-03-13 13:19:06 -04:00
Tom Lane 58a9596ed4 Fix I/O-conversion-related memory leaks in plpgsql.
Datatype I/O functions are allowed to leak memory in CurrentMemoryContext,
since they are generally called in short-lived contexts.  However, plpgsql
calls such functions for purposes of type conversion, and was calling them
in its procedure context.  Therefore, any leaked memory would not be
recovered until the end of the plpgsql function.  If such a conversion
was done within a loop, quite a bit of memory could get consumed.  Fix by
calling such functions in the transient "eval_econtext", and adjust other
logic to match.  Back-patch to all supported versions.

Andres Freund, Jan Urbański, Tom Lane
2012-02-11 18:06:24 -05:00
Tom Lane bef47331b6 Code review for plpgsql fn_signature patch.
Don't quote the output of format_procedure(); it's already quoted quite
enough.  Remove the fn_name field, which was now just dead weight.  Fix
remaining expected-output files.
2012-02-01 02:14:37 -05:00
Robert Haas 5ae88c65da Adjust expected regression test outputs for PL/python.
This got broken by commit 4c6cedd1b0,
which caused PL/pgsql error messages to print the function
signature, not just the name.

Per buildfarm.
2012-01-31 13:16:38 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4c6cedd1b0 Print function signature, not just name, in PL/pgSQL error messages.
This makes it unambiguous which function the message is coming from, if you
have overloaded functions.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Abhijit Menon-Sen.
2012-01-31 10:36:20 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut ee7fa66b19 PL/Python: Add result metadata functions
Add result object functions .colnames, .coltypes, .coltypmods to
obtain information about the result column names and types, which was
previously not possible in the PL/Python SPI interface.

reviewed by Abhijit Menon-Sen
2012-01-30 21:38:52 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan 01d83ffdca Improve efficiency of recent changes to plperl's sv2cstr().
Along the way, add a missing dependency in the GNUmakefile.

Alex Hunsaker, with a slight adjustment by me.
2012-01-15 16:15:04 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 26e89e7f23 Fix typos 2012-01-10 22:49:17 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan bd0e74a9ce Fix breakage from earlier plperl fix.
Apparently the perl garbage collector was a bit too eager, so here
we control when the new SV is garbage collected.
2012-01-05 17:59:19 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 2abefd9a92 Work around perl bug in SvPVutf8().
Certain things like typeglobs or readonly things like $^V cause
perl's SvPVutf8() to die nastily and crash the backend. To avoid
that bug we make a copy of the object, which will subsequently be
garbage collected.

Back patched to 9.1 where we first started using SvPVutf8().

Per -hackers discussion. Original problem reported by David Wheeler.
2012-01-05 12:01:18 -05:00
Bruce Momjian e126958c2e Update copyright notices for year 2012. 2012-01-01 18:01:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut f9de1e9a96 PL/Python: Add argument names to function declarations
For easier source reading
2011-12-29 22:55:49 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut c317a3ac16 Run "make all" as a prerequisite of "make check"
This is the standard behavior but was forgotten in some places.
2011-12-27 20:27:24 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 19d2231718 PL/Python: One more file renaming fix to unbreak the build 2011-12-18 22:34:53 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 147c248254 Split plpython.c into smaller pieces
This moves the code around from one huge file into hopefully logical
and more manageable modules.  For the most part, the code itself was
not touched, except: PLy_function_handler and PLy_trigger_handler were
renamed to PLy_exec_function and PLy_exec_trigger, because they were
not actually handlers in the PL handler sense, and it makes the naming
more similar to the way PL/pgSQL is organized.  The initialization of
the procedure caches was separated into a new function
init_procedure_caches to keep the hash tables private to
plpy_procedures.c.

Jan Urbański and Peter Eisentraut
2011-12-18 21:24:00 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut fc9959701b PL/Python: Refactor subtransaction handling
Lots of repetitive code was moved into new functions
PLy_spi_subtransaction_{begin,commit,abort}.

Jan Urbański
2011-12-15 16:52:57 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4adead1d22 Add support for passing cursor parameters in named notation in PL/pgSQL.
Yeb Havinga, reviewed by Kevin Grittner, with small changes by me.
2011-12-14 15:55:37 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 89e850e6fd plpython: Add SPI cursor support
Add a function plpy.cursor that is similar to plpy.execute but uses an
SPI cursor to avoid fetching the entire result set into memory.

Jan Urbański, reviewed by Steve Singer
2011-12-05 19:52:15 +02:00
Robert Haas 2ad36c4e44 Improve table locking behavior in the face of current DDL.
In the previous coding, callers were faced with an awkward choice:
look up the name, do permissions checks, and then lock the table; or
look up the name, lock the table, and then do permissions checks.
The first choice was wrong because the results of the name lookup
and permissions checks might be out-of-date by the time the table
lock was acquired, while the second allowed a user with no privileges
to interfere with access to a table by users who do have privileges
(e.g. if a malicious backend queues up for an AccessExclusiveLock on
a table on which AccessShareLock is already held, further attempts
to access the table will be blocked until the AccessExclusiveLock
is obtained and the malicious backend's transaction rolls back).

To fix, allow callers of RangeVarGetRelid() to pass a callback which
gets executed after performing the name lookup but before acquiring
the relation lock.  If the name lookup is retried (because
invalidation messages are received), the callback will be re-executed
as well, so we get the best of both worlds.  RangeVarGetRelid() is
renamed to RangeVarGetRelidExtended(); callers not wishing to supply
a callback can continue to invoke it as RangeVarGetRelid(), which is
now a macro.  Since the only one caller that uses nowait = true now
passes a callback anyway, the RangeVarGetRelid() macro defaults nowait
as well.  The callback can also be used for supplemental locking - for
example, REINDEX INDEX needs to acquire the table lock before the index
lock to reduce deadlock possibilities.

There's a lot more work to be done here to fix all the cases where this
can be a problem, but this commit provides the general infrastructure
and fixes the following specific cases: REINDEX INDEX, REINDEX TABLE,
LOCK TABLE, and and DROP TABLE/INDEX/SEQUENCE/VIEW/FOREIGN TABLE.

Per discussion with Noah Misch and Alvaro Herrera.
2011-11-30 10:27:00 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 04e5cb629b plpython: Fix sed expression in python3 build
The old expression sed 's,$(srcdir),python3,' would normally resolve
as sed 's,.,python3,', which is not really what we wanted.  While it
doesn't actually break anything right now, it's still wrong, so put in
a bit more work to make it more robust.
2011-11-29 06:39:05 +02:00
Tom Lane 8722a1a06a Use the proper macro to convert a bool to a Datum.
The original coding was
	var->value = (Datum) state;
which is bogus, and then in commit 2f0f7b4bce
it was "corrected" to
	var->value = PointerGetDatum(state);
which is a faithful translation but still wrong.

This seems purely cosmetic, though, so no need for a back-patch.

Pavel Stehule
2011-11-27 12:57:11 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan efb0423cc7 Use the right interpreter for encoding test. 2011-11-26 18:39:12 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan ba00ab0b11 Use the preferred version of xsubpp, not necessarily the one that came with the
distro version of perl.

David Wheeler and Alex Hunsaker.

Backpatch to 9.1 where it applies cleanly. A simple workaround is available for earlier
branches, and further effort doesn't seem warranted.
2011-11-26 15:22:32 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 4cdb41b54e Ensure plperl strings are always correctly UTF8 encoded.
Amit Khandekar and Alex Hunsaker.

Backpatched to 9.1 where the problem first occurred.
2011-11-26 12:19:38 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas f21fc7f9fc Preserve SQLSTATE when an SPI error is propagated through PL/python
exception handler. This was a regression in 9.1, when the capability
to catch specific SPI errors was added, so backpatch to 9.1.

Mika Eloranta, with some editing by Jan Urbański.
2011-11-24 17:18:43 +02:00
Tom Lane b985d48779 Further code review for range types patch.
Fix some bugs in coercion logic and pg_dump; more comment cleanup;
minor cosmetic improvements.
2011-11-20 23:50:27 -05:00
Tom Lane 02d88efea1 In plpgsql, allow foreign tables to define row types.
This seems to have been just an oversight in previous foreign-table work.
A quick grep didn't turn up any other places where RELKIND_FOREIGN_TABLE
was obviously omitted.

One change noted by Alexander Soudakov, the other by me.
Back-patch to 9.1.
2011-11-12 18:49:09 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 6f2efcd557 Only install the extension files for the current Python major version 2011-11-09 21:46:15 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4429f6a9e3 Support range data types.
Selectivity estimation functions are missing for some range type operators,
which is a TODO.

Jeff Davis
2011-11-03 13:42:15 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 654e1f96b0 Clean up whitespace and indentation in parser and scanner files
These are not touched by pgindent, so clean them up a bit manually.
2011-11-01 21:51:30 +02:00
Tom Lane 051d1ba7a0 Avoid recursion while processing ELSIF lists in plpgsql.
The original implementation of ELSIF in plpgsql converted the construct
into nested simple IF statements.  This was prone to stack overflow with
long ELSIF lists, in two different ways.  First, it's difficult to generate
the parsetree without using right-recursion in the bison grammar, and
that's prone to parser stack overflow since nothing can be reduced until
the whole list has been read.  Second, we'd recurse during execution, thus
creating an unnecessary risk of execution-time stack overflow.  Rewrite
so that the ELSIF list is represented as a flat list, scanned via iteration
not recursion, and generated through left-recursion in the grammar.
Per a gripe from Håvard Kongsgård.
2011-10-27 15:21:51 -04:00
Tom Lane 23610daf8a Fix up Perl-to-Postgres datatype conversions in pl/perl.
This patch restores the pre-9.1 behavior that pl/perl functions returning
VOID ignore the result value of their last Perl statement.  9.1.0
unintentionally threw an error if the last statement returned a reference,
as reported by Amit Khandekar.

Also, make sure it works to return a string value for a composite type,
so long as the string meets the type's input format.  We already allowed
the equivalent behavior for arrays, so it seems inconsistent to not allow
it for composites.

In addition, ensure we throw errors for attempts to return arrays or hashes
when the function's declared result type is not an array or composite type,
respectively.  Pre-9.1 versions rather uselessly returned strings like
ARRAY(0x221a9a0) or HASH(0x221aa90), while 9.1.0 threw an error for the
hash case and returned a garbage value for the array case.

Also, clean up assorted grotty coding in Perl array conversion, including
use of a session-lifespan memory context to accumulate the array value
(resulting in session-lifespan memory leak on error), failure to apply the
declared typmod if any, and failure to detect some cases of non-rectangular
multi-dimensional arrays.

Alex Hunsaker and Tom Lane
2011-10-13 18:04:40 -04:00
Tom Lane 9f5836d224 Remember the source GucContext for each GUC parameter.
We used to just remember the GucSource, but saving GucContext too provides
a little more information --- notably, whether a SET was done by a
superuser or regular user.  This allows us to rip out the fairly dodgy code
that define_custom_variable used to use to try to infer the context to
re-install a pre-existing setting with.  In particular, it now works for
a superuser to SET a extension's SUSET custom variable before loading the
associated extension, because GUC can remember whether the SET was done as
a superuser or not.  The plperl regression tests contain an example where
this is useful.
2011-10-04 16:13:50 -04:00
Tom Lane 1a00c0ef53 Remove the custom_variable_classes parameter.
This variable provides only marginal error-prevention capability (since
it can only check the prefix of a qualified GUC name), and the consensus
is that that isn't worth the amount of hassle that maintaining the setting
creates for DBAs.  So, let's just remove it.

With this commit, the system will silently accept a value for any qualified
GUC name at all, whether it has anything to do with any known extension or
not.  (Unqualified names still have to match known built-in settings,
though; and you will get a WARNING at extension load time if there's an
unrecognized setting with that extension's prefix.)

There's still some discussion ongoing about whether to tighten that up and
if so how; but if we do come up with a solution, it's not likely to look
anything like custom_variable_classes.
2011-10-04 12:36:55 -04:00
Tom Lane 16762b519c Speed up array element assignment in plpgsql by caching type information.
Cache assorted data in the PLpgSQL_arrayelem struct to avoid repetitive
catalog lookups over multiple executions of the same statement.

Pavel Stehule
2011-09-26 15:38:07 -04:00
Tom Lane faf5cee7f0 Fix another Assert issue exposed by CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS.
plpgsql's exec_stmt_execsql was Assert'ing that a CachedPlanSource was
is_valid immediately after exec_prepare_plan.  The risk factor in this case
is that after building the prepared statement, exec_prepare_plan calls
exec_simple_check_plan, which might try to generate a generic plan --- and
with CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS or other unusual causes of invalidation, that
could result in an invalidation.  However, that path could only be taken
for a SELECT query, for which we need not set mod_stmt.  So in this case
I think it's best to just remove the Assert; it's okay to look at a
slightly-stale querytree for what we need here.  Per buildfarm testing.
2011-09-18 23:46:04 -04:00