Commit Graph

41401 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tatsuo Ishii 36d154ecb2 Fix typo in sources.sgml.
Per Shinichi Matsuda.
2016-10-31 07:33:00 +09:00
Tom Lane 5ec81aceec Fix nasty performance problem in tsquery_rewrite().
tsquery_rewrite() tries to find matches to subsets of AND/OR conditions;
for example, in the query 'a | b | c' the substitution subquery 'a | c'
should match and lead to replacement of the first and third items.
That's fine, but the matching algorithm apparently takes about O(2^N)
for an N-clause query (I say "apparently" because the code is also both
unintelligible and uncommented).  We could probably do better than that
even without any extra assumptions --- but actually, we know that the
subclauses are sorted, indeed are depending on that elsewhere in this very
same function.  So we can just scan the two lists a single time to detect
matches, as though we were doing a merge join.

Also do a re-flattening call (QTNTernary()) in tsquery_rewrite_query, just
to make sure that the tree fits the expectations of the next search cycle.
I didn't try to devise a test case for this, but I'm pretty sure that the
oversight could have led to failure to match in some cases where a match
would be expected.

Improve comments, and also stick a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS into
dofindsubquery, just in case it's still too slow for somebody.

Per report from Andreas Seltenreich.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: <8760oasf2y.fsf@credativ.de>
2016-10-30 17:35:42 -04:00
Tom Lane 24ebc444c6 Fix bogus tree-flattening logic in QTNTernary().
QTNTernary() contains logic to flatten, eg, '(a & b) & c' into 'a & b & c',
which is all well and good, but it tries to do that to NOT nodes as well,
so that '!!a' gets changed to '!a'.  Explicitly restrict the conversion to
be done only on AND and OR nodes, and add a test case illustrating the bug.

In passing, provide some comments for the sadly naked functions in
tsquery_util.c, and simplify some baroque logic in QTNFree(), which
I think may have been leaking some items it intended to free.

Noted while investigating a complaint from Andreas Seltenreich.
Back-patch to all supported versions.
2016-10-30 15:24:40 -04:00
Tom Lane 9a00f03e47 Improve speed of aggregates that use array_append as transition function.
In the previous coding, if an aggregate's transition function returned an
expanded array, nodeAgg.c and nodeWindowAgg.c would always copy it and thus
force it into the flat representation.  This led to ping-ponging between
flat and expanded formats, which costs a lot.  For an aggregate using
array_append as transition function, I measured about a 15X slowdown
compared to the pre-9.5 code, when working on simple int[] arrays.
Of course, the old code was already O(N^2) in this usage due to copying
flat arrays all the time, but it wasn't quite this inefficient.

To fix, teach nodeAgg.c and nodeWindowAgg.c to allow expanded transition
values without copying, so long as the transition function takes care to
return the transition value already properly parented under the aggcontext.
That puts a bit of extra responsibility on the transition function, but
doing it this way allows us to not need any extra logic in the fast path
of advance_transition_function (ie, with a pass-by-value transition value,
or with a modified-in-place pass-by-reference value).  We already know
that that's a hot spot so I'm loath to add any cycles at all there.  Also,
while only array_append currently knows how to follow this convention,
this solution allows other transition functions to opt-in without needing
to have a whitelist in the core aggregation code.

(The reason we would need a whitelist is that currently, if you pass a
R/W expanded-object pointer to an arbitrary function, it's allowed to do
anything with it including deleting it; that breaks the core agg code's
assumption that it should free discarded values.  Returning a value under
aggcontext is the transition function's signal that it knows it is an
aggregate transition function and will play nice.  Possibly the API rules
for expanded objects should be refined, but that would not be a
back-patchable change.)

With this fix, an aggregate using array_append is no longer O(N^2), so it's
much faster than pre-9.5 code rather than much slower.  It's still a bit
slower than the bespoke infrastructure for array_agg, but the differential
seems to be only about 10%-20% rather than orders of magnitude.

Discussion: <6315.1477677885@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-10-30 12:27:41 -04:00
Magnus Hagander a775406ec4 Fix memory leak in tar file padding
Spotted by Coverity, patch by Michael Paquier
2016-10-30 14:10:39 +01:00
Robert Haas d4b5d4cadd pgstattuple: Don't take heavyweight locks when examining a hash index.
It's currently necessary to take a heavyweight lock when scanning a
hash bucket, but pgstattuple only examines individual pages, so it
doesn't need to do this.  If, for some hypothetical reason, it did
need to do any heavyweight locking here, this logic would probably
still be incorrect, because most of the locks that it is taking are
meaningless.  Only a heavyweight lock on a primary bucket page has any
meaning, but this takes heavyweight locks on all pages regardless of
function - and in particular overflow pages, where you might imagine
that we'd want to lock the primary bucket page if we needed to lock
anything at all.

This is arguably a bug that has existed since this code was added in
commit dab42382f4, but I'm not going to
bother back-patching it because in most cases the only consequence is
that running pgstattuple() on a hash index is a little slower than it
otherwise might be, which is no big deal.

Extracted from a vastly larger patch by Amit Kapila which heavyweight
locking for hash indexes entirely; analysis of why this can be done
independently of the rest by me.
2016-10-28 12:21:15 -04:00
Robert Haas 33839b5ffb Fix leftover reference to background writer performing checkpoints.
This was changed in PostgreSQL 9.2, but somehow this comment never
got updated.
2016-10-28 09:09:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a94b70356b doc: Small style improvements 2016-10-27 20:33:47 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut ce4dc97056 Remove invitation to report a bug about unknown encoding
The error message when we couldn't determine the encoding from a locale
said to report a bug about that.  That might have been appropriate when
this code was first added, but by now this works pretty solidly and any
encodings we don't recognize we probably just don't support.  We still
print the warning, but no longer invite the bug report.
2016-10-27 18:43:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut eaed88ce12 Add function name to PyArg_ParseTuple()
This causes the supplied function name to appear in any error message,
making the error message friendlier and relieving us from having to
provide our own in some cases.
2016-10-27 15:41:29 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 84d457edaf Format PL/Python module contents test vertically
It makes it readable again and makes merges more manageable.
2016-10-27 15:41:29 -04:00
Robert Haas 4f714b2fd2 If the stats collector dies during Hot Standby, restart it.
This bug exists as far back as 9.0, when Hot Standby was introduced,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Report and patch by Takayuki Tsunakawa, reviewed by Michael Paquier
and Kuntal Ghosh.
2016-10-27 14:27:40 -04:00
Robert Haas f267c1c244 Fix possible pg_basebackup failure on standby with "include WAL".
If a restartpoint flushed no dirty buffers, it could fail to update
the minimum recovery point, leading to a minimum recovery point prior
to the starting REDO location.  perform_base_backup() would interpret
that as meaning that no WAL files at all needed to be included in the
backup, failing an internal sanity check.  To fix, have restartpoints
always update the minimum recovery point to just after the checkpoint
record itself, so that the file (or files) containing the checkpoint
record will always be included in the backup.

Code by Amit Kapila, per a design suggestion by me, with some
additional work on the code comment by me.  Test case by Michael
Paquier.  Report by Kyotaro Horiguchi.
2016-10-27 11:19:51 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c32fe432af Avoid using a C++ keyword in header file
per cpluspluscheck
2016-10-26 22:41:56 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 586a46c22c Properly indent postgresql.conf comments to align
A few comments were misaligned.
2016-10-26 21:16:50 -04:00
Tom Lane a522fc3d80 Fix incorrect trigger-property updating in ALTER CONSTRAINT.
The code to change the deferrability properties of a foreign-key constraint
updated all the associated triggers to match; but a moment's examination of
the code that creates those triggers in the first place shows that only
some of them should track the constraint's deferrability properties.  This
leads to odd failures in subsequent exercise of the foreign key, as the
triggers are fired at the wrong times.  Fix that, and add a regression test
comparing the trigger properties produced by ALTER CONSTRAINT with those
you get by creating the constraint as-intended to begin with.

Per report from James Parks.  Back-patch to 9.4 where this ALTER
functionality was introduced.

Report: <CAJ3Xv+jzJ8iNNUcp4RKW8b6Qp1xVAxHwSXVpjBNygjKxcVuE9w@mail.gmail.com>
2016-10-26 17:05:06 -04:00
Tom Lane 19b2094d96 Fix not-HAVE_SYMLINK code in zic.c.
I broke this in commit f3094920a.  Apparently it's dead code anyway,
at least as far as our buildfarm is concerned (and the upstream IANA
code doesn't worry at all about symlink() not being present).
But as long as the rest of our code is willing to guard against not
having symlink(), this should too.  Noted while investigating a
tangentially-related complaint from Sandeep Thakkar.

Back-patch to keep branches in sync.
2016-10-26 13:40:41 -04:00
Tom Lane 162477a63d Doc: improve documentation about inheritance.
Clarify documentation about inheritance of check constraints, in
particular mentioning the NO INHERIT option, which didn't exist when
this text was written.

Document that in an inherited query, the applicable row security policies
are those of the explicitly-named table, not its children.  This is the
intended behavior (per off-list discussion with Stephen Frost), and there
are regression tests for it, but it wasn't documented anywhere user-facing
as far as I could find.

Do a bit of wordsmithing on the description of inherited access-privilege
checks.

Back-patch to 9.5 where RLS was added.
2016-10-26 11:46:25 -04:00
Tom Lane 8529686ccb Suppress unused-variable warning in non-assert builds.
Introduced in commit 7012b132d.

Kyotaro Horiguchi
2016-10-26 10:19:41 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 8eb6337f9f Remove platform-dependent PL/python test case.
Turns out that the output format of Python Decimal isn't totally platform-
independent either. There are other tests for multi-dimensional arrays,
so rather than try to fix this test case, just remove it.

Per buildfarm member prairiedog.
2016-10-26 17:09:18 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas cfd9c87a54 Only treat Python Lists as array dimensions.
Instead of treating all python sequence types as array dimensions, except
for tuples and various kinds of strings, only treat Python lists as
dimensions. The PyBytes_Check() function used previously is only available
on Python 2.6 and newer, and it was a bit fiddly anyway. The list of
exceptions would require adjustment if Python got a new kind of a sequence
similar to bytes/unicodes/strings, so only checking for Lists seems more
future-proof. The documentation only mentioned using Lists, so this is
closer to what was documented, anyway.

This should fix the buildfarm failures on systems building with Python 2.5,
although I don't have Python 2.5 installed myself to test with.
2016-10-26 14:44:55 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 73c8e8506c Avoid using platform-dependent floats in test case.
The number of decimals printed for floats varied in this test case, as
noted by several buildfarm members. There's nothing special about floats
and arrays in the code being tested, so replace the floats with numerics to
make the output platform-independent.
2016-10-26 14:17:07 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas e131ba4fe5 Fix regression test to also work with Python 2.
Per buildfarm.
2016-10-26 11:18:04 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 56f39009c5 Fix typos in comments.
Vinayak Pokale
2016-10-26 11:12:31 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 8a2f08fbea Fix typo in comment.
Daniel Gustafsson
2016-10-26 11:10:13 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 510e1b8ecf Give a hint, when [] is incorrectly used for a composite type in array.
That used to be accepted, so let's try to give a hint to users on why
their PL/python functions no longer work.

Reviewed by Pavel Stehule.

Discussion: <CAH38_tmbqwaUyKs9yagyRra=SMaT45FPBxk1pmTYcM0TyXGG7Q@mail.gmail.com>
2016-10-26 10:56:56 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 94aceed317 Support multi-dimensional arrays in PL/python.
Multi-dimensional arrays can now be used as arguments to a PL/python function
(used to throw an error), and they can be returned as nested Python lists.

This makes a backwards-incompatible change to the handling of composite
types in arrays. Previously, you could return an array of composite types
as "[[col1, col2], [col1, col2]]", but now that is interpreted as a two-
dimensional array. Composite types in arrays must now be returned as
Python tuples, not lists, to resolve the ambiguity. I.e. "[(col1, col2),
(col1, col2)]".

To avoid breaking backwards-compatibility, when not necessary, () is still
accepted for arrays at the top-level, but it is always treated as a
single-dimensional array. Likewise, [] is still accepted for composite types,
when they are not in an array. Update the documentation to recommend using []
for arrays, and () for composite types, with a mention that those other things
are also accepted in some contexts.

This needs to be mentioned in the release notes.

Alexey Grishchenko, Dave Cramer and me. Reviewed by Pavel Stehule.

Discussion: <CAH38_tmbqwaUyKs9yagyRra=SMaT45FPBxk1pmTYcM0TyXGG7Q@mail.gmail.com>
2016-10-26 10:56:30 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 8c035e55c4 pg_dump: Simplify internal archive version handling
The ArchiveHandle structure contained the archive format version number
twice, once as a single field and once split into components.  Simplify
that by just keeping the single field and adding some macros to extract
the components.  Introduce some macros for composing version numbers, to
eliminate the repeated use of magic formulas.  Drop the unused trailing
zero byte from the run-time composite version representation.

reviewed by Tom Lane
2016-10-25 17:02:22 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 78d109150b Free walmethods before exiting
Not strictly necessary since we quite after, but could become important
in the future if we do restarts etc.

Michael Paquier with nitpicking from me
2016-10-25 19:00:12 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 8c46f0c9ce Don't fsync() files when --no-sync is specified
Michael Paquier
2016-10-25 19:00:01 +02:00
Bruce Momjian 10c064ce4d Consistently mention 'SELECT pg_reload_conf()' in config files
Previously we only mentioned SIGHUP and 'pg_ctl reload' in
postgresql.conf and pg_hba.conf.
2016-10-25 11:26:15 -04:00
Robert Haas f5d6bce63c postgres_fdw: Try again to stabilize aggregate pushdown regression tests.
A query that only aggregates one row isn't a great argument for pushdown,
and buildfarm member brolga decides against it.  Adjust the query a bit
in the hopes of getting remote aggregation to win consistently.

Jeevan Chalke, per suggestion from Tom Lane
2016-10-24 22:36:24 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 2dde01ccbf Use ssize_t where signed results can happen
Noted by Alexander Korotkov
2016-10-24 20:10:18 +02:00
Tom Lane 30a6f98ed8 Update release notes for last-minute commit timestamp fix. 2016-10-24 09:37:23 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 00f15338b2 Preserve commit timestamps across clean restart
An oversight in setting the boundaries of known commit timestamps during
startup caused old commit timestamps to become inaccessible after a
server restart.

Author and reporter: Julien Rouhaud
Review, test code: Craig Ringer
2016-10-24 09:45:48 -03:00
Tom Lane 7d80417d3d Release notes for 9.6.1, 9.5.5, 9.4.10, 9.3.15, 9.2.19, 9.1.24. 2016-10-23 22:13:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 8f1fb7d621 Avoid testing tuple visibility without buffer lock.
INSERT ... ON CONFLICT (specifically ExecCheckHeapTupleVisible) contains
another example of this unsafe coding practice.  It is much harder to get
a failure out of it than the case fixed in commit 6292c2339, because in
most scenarios any hint bits that could be set would have already been set
earlier in the command.  However, Konstantin Knizhnik reported a failure
with a custom transaction manager, and it's clearly possible to get a
failure via a race condition in async-commit mode.

For lack of a reproducible example, no regression test case in this
commit.

I did some testing with Asserts added to tqual.c's functions, and can say
that running "make check-world" exposed these two bugs and no others.
The Asserts are messy enough that I've not added them to the code for now.

Report: <57EE93C8.8080504@postgrespro.ru>
Related-Discussion: <CAO3NbwOycQjt2Oqy2VW-eLTq2M5uGMyHnGm=RNga4mjqcYD7gQ@mail.gmail.com>
2016-10-23 19:14:32 -04:00
Tom Lane a6c0a5b6e8 Don't throw serialization errors for self-conflicts in INSERT ON CONFLICT.
A transaction that conflicts against itself, for example
	INSERT INTO t(pk) VALUES (1),(1) ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING;
should behave the same regardless of isolation level.  It certainly
shouldn't throw a serialization error, as retrying will not help.
We got this wrong due to the ON CONFLICT logic not considering the case,
as reported by Jason Dusek.

Core of this patch is by Peter Geoghegan (based on an earlier patch by
Thomas Munro), though I didn't take his proposed code refactoring for fear
that it might have unexpected side-effects.  Test cases by Thomas Munro
and myself.

Report: <CAO3NbwOycQjt2Oqy2VW-eLTq2M5uGMyHnGm=RNga4mjqcYD7gQ@mail.gmail.com>
Related-Discussion: <57EE93C8.8080504@postgrespro.ru>
2016-10-23 18:36:13 -04:00
Tom Lane 6292c23391 Avoid testing tuple visibility without buffer lock in RI_FKey_check().
Despite the argumentation I wrote in commit 7a2fe85b0, it's unsafe to do
this, because in corner cases it's possible for HeapTupleSatisfiesSelf
to try to set hint bits on the target tuple; and at least since 8.2 we
have required the buffer content lock to be held while setting hint bits.

The added regression test exercises one such corner case.  Unpatched, it
causes an assertion failure in assert-enabled builds, or otherwise would
cause a hint bit change in a buffer we don't hold lock on, which given
the right race condition could result in checksum failures or other data
consistency problems.  The odds of a problem in the field are probably
pretty small, but nonetheless back-patch to all supported branches.

Report: <19391.1477244876@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-10-23 15:01:24 -04:00
Magnus Hagander eade082b12 Rename walmethod fsync method to sync
Using the name fsync clashed with the #define we have on Windows that
redefines it to _commit. Naming it sync should remove that conflict.

Per all the Windows buildfarm members
2016-10-23 18:04:34 +02:00
Magnus Hagander a5c17c1dce Fix obviously too quickly applied fix to zlib issue 2016-10-23 16:07:31 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 9ae6713cdf Fix walmethods.c build without libz
Per numerous buildfarm manuals
2016-10-23 16:00:42 +02:00
Magnus Hagander d97a59a4c5 Remove extra comma at end of enum list
C99-specific feature, and wasn't intentional in the first place.

Per buildfarm member mylodon
2016-10-23 15:57:25 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 56c7d8d455 Allow pg_basebackup to stream transaction log in tar mode
This will write the received transaction log into a file called
pg_wal.tar(.gz) next to the other tarfiles instead of writing it to
base.tar. When using fetch mode, the transaction log is still written to
base.tar like before, and when used against a pre-10 server, the file
is named pg_xlog.tar.

To do this, implement a new concept of a "walmethod", which is
responsible for writing the WAL. Two implementations exist, one that
writes to a plain directory (which is also used by pg_receivexlog) and
one that writes to a tar file with optional compression.

Reviewed by Michael Paquier
2016-10-23 15:23:11 +02:00
Tom Lane 1885c88459 Improve documentation about use of Linux huge pages.
Show how to get the system's huge page size, rather than misleadingly
referring to PAGE_SIZE (which is usually understood to be the regular
page size).  Show how to confirm whether huge pages have been allocated.
Minor wordsmithing.  Back-patch to 9.4 where this section appeared.
2016-10-22 14:04:51 -04:00
Tom Lane eacaf6e29f First-draft release notes for 9.6.1.
As usual, the release notes for other branches will be made by cutting
these down, but put them up for community review first.
2016-10-21 19:43:16 -04:00
Robert Haas 919c811ca1 Fix comment formatting. 2016-10-21 12:04:21 -04:00
Robert Haas ad13a09d76 postgres_fdw: Attempt to stabilize regression results.
Set enable_hashagg to false for tests involving least_agg(), so that
we get the same plan regardless of local costing variances.  Also,
remove a test involving sqrt(); it's there to test deparsing of
HAVING clauses containing expressions, but that's tested elsewhere
anyway, and sqrt(2) deparses with different amounts of precision on
different machines.

Per buildfarm.
2016-10-21 11:29:33 -04:00
Tom Lane 7aa2c10ac6 Doc: wording tweak for PERL, PYTHON, TCLSH configuration variables.
Replace "Full path to ..." with "Full path name of ...".  At least one
user has misinterpreted the existing wording as meaning "Directory
containing ...".
2016-10-21 11:01:35 -04:00
Robert Haas 7012b132d0 postgres_fdw: Push down aggregates to remote servers.
Now that the upper planner uses paths, and now that we have proper hooks
to inject paths into the upper planning process, it's possible for
foreign data wrappers to arrange to push aggregates to the remote side
instead of fetching all of the rows and aggregating them locally.  This
figures to be a massive win for performance, so teach postgres_fdw to
do it.

Jeevan Chalke and Ashutosh Bapat.  Reviewed by Ashutosh Bapat with
additional testing by Prabhat Sahu.  Various mostly cosmetic changes
by me.
2016-10-21 09:54:29 -04:00