Python) to support shared extension modules, I have learned that Guido
prefers the style of the attached patch to solve the above problem.
I feel that this solution is particularly appropriate in this case
because the following:
PglargeType
PgType
PgQueryType
are already being handled in the way that I am proposing for PgSourceType.
Jason Tishler
> > The attached patch changes src/interfaces/python/GNUmakefile to use the
> > value of DESTDIR like the rest (or at least most) of the PostgreSQL
> > makefiles. I found this problem when trying to package a pre-built
> > Cygwin PostgreSQL distribution, but this problem is platform independent.
value of DESTDIR like the rest (or at least most) of the PostgreSQL
makefiles. I found this problem when trying to package a pre-built
Cygwin PostgreSQL distribution, but this problem is platform independent.
The problem manifests itself when one tries to install into a stagging
area (e.g., to build a tarball) instead of a real install. In this case,
pg.py and _pgmodule$(SO) still end up being installed in the configured
prefix directory ignoring the value of DESTDIR.
Unfortunately, this patch does not handle the case where PostgreSQL
and Python are configured with different prefixes. Since the Python
Makefile is automatically generated and does not use DESTDIR, I believe
that this issue will be difficult to correct. If anyone has ideas on
how to fix this issue, then I'm quite willing to rework the patch to
take the suggestion into account.
Jason Tishler
under Cygwin. The root cause of this problem is that (Sun) java is a
native Win32 app and hence does not understand Cygwin Posix style paths.
The solution is to use Cygwin's cygpath utility to convert the Posix style
JDBC installation directory path into a Win32 one before invoking ant.
I'm not sure if my patch is the best way to correct this issue but
my goal was to confine the Cygwin specific constructs to
Jason Tishler
it does not support 64bit integers. AFAIK that's the default data type for
OIDs, so I am not surprised that this does not work. Use gcc instead.
BTW., 7.1 does not compile as is with gcc either, I believed the
required patches made it into the 7.1.1 release but obviously I missed
the deadline.
Since the ports mailing list does not seem to be archived I have attached
a copy of the patch (for 7.1 and 7.1.1).
I've just performed a build of a Watcom compiled version and found a couple
of bugs in the watcom specific part of that patch. Please use the attached
version instead.
Tegge, Bernd
return oid on insert
handle all primitive data types
handle single quotes and newlines in Strings
handle null variables
deal with non public and final variables (not very
well, though)
Ken K
to do that, but inconsistently.) Make bit type reject too short input,
too, per SQL. Since it no longer zero pads, 'zpbit*' has been renamed to
'bit*' in the source, hence initdb.
- New functions to create a portal using a prepared/saved
SPI plan or lookup an existing portal by name.
- Functions to fetch/move from/in portals. Results are placed
in the usual SPI_processed and SPI_tuptable, so the entire
set of utility functions can be used to gain attribute access.
- Prepared/saved SPI plans now use their own memory context
and SPI_freeplan(plan) can remove them.
- Tuple result sets (SPI_tuptable) now uses it's own memory
context and can be free'd by SPI_freetuptable(tuptab).
Enhancement of PL/pgSQL
- Uses generic named portals internally in FOR ... SELECT
loops to avoid running out of memory on huge result sets.
- Support for CURSOR and REFCURSOR syntax using the new SPI
functionality. Cursors used internally only need no explicit
transaction block. Refcursor variables can be used inside
of explicit transaction block to pass cursors between main
application and functions.
Jan
create_index_paths are not immediately discarded, but are available for
subsequent planner work. This allows avoiding redundant syscache lookups
in several places. Change interface to operator selectivity estimation
procedures to allow faster and more flexible estimation.
Initdb forced due to change of pg_proc entries for selectivity functions!
/*
* parse function
* This code is confusing because the database can accept
* relation.column, column.function, or relation.column.function.
* In these cases, funcname is the last parameter, and fargs are
* the rest.
*
* It can also be called as func(col) or func(col,col).
* In this case, Funcname is the part before parens, and fargs
* are the part in parens.
*
*/
Node *
ParseFuncOrColumn(ParseState *pstate, char *funcname, List *fargs,
bool agg_star, bool agg_distinct,
int precedence)
(1.22) of interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/ResultSet.java. That
change removed a line that set the variable s to the value of the
stringbuffer. This fix changes the following if checks to check the
length of the stringbuffer instead of s, since s no longer contains the
string the if conditions are expecting.
The bug manifests itself in getTimestamp() loosing the timezone
information of timestamps selected from the database, thereby causing
the time to be incorrect.
Barry Lind
Here's what I came up with. The biggest difference api between JDK1.x and
later versions is the support for collections. The problem was with the
Vector class; in jdk1.x there is no method called add, so I changed the
calls to addElement. Also no addAll, so I rewrote the method slightly to not
require addAll. While reviewing this I notices some System.out.println
statements that weren't commented out. So I commented them out in both
versions.
The upshot of all of this is that I have clean compile, but no idea if the
code works ;(
Dave Cramer
PageGetFreeSpace() was being called while not holding the buffer lock, which
not only could yield a garbage answer, but even if it's the right answer there
might be less space available after we reacquire the buffer lock.
Also repair potential deadlock introduced by my recent performance improvement
in RelationGetBufferForTuple(): it was possible for two heap_updates to try to
lock two buffers in opposite orders. The fix creates a global rule that
buffers of a single heap relation should be locked in decreasing block number
order. Currently, this only applies to heap_update; VACUUM can get away with
ignoring the rule since it holds exclusive lock on the whole relation anyway.
However, if we try to implement a VACUUM that can run in parallel with other
transactions, VACUUM will also have to obey the lock order rule.
(http://www.ideit.com/products/dbvis/) to work with Postgresql and I found
out the following bug: if database has views then getTables() gets the null
pointer exception ('order by relname' makes the listing tree in
DbVisualizer a lot useful !!)
This patch should propably be applied to the the jdbc1's
DatabaseMetaData.java, too.
Panu Outinen
not properly handle 8-bit unsigned data as it blindly
casts the byte to an int, which java most helpfully
promotes to a signed type. This causes problems when
you can only return -1 to indicated EOF.
The following patch fixes the bug and has been tested
locally on image data.
Chad David
with many NULLs ( inserting of NULL into indexed field cause
ERROR: MemoryContextAlloc: invalid request size)
As a workaround 'vacuum analyze' could be used.
This patch resolves the problem, please upply to 7.1.1 sources and
current cvs tree.
Oleg Bartunov
trees (mostly my fault). Repair. Also fix long-standing bug in ExecReplace:
after recomputing a concurrently updated tuple, we must recheck constraints.
Make EvalPlanQual leak memory with somewhat less enthusiasm than before,
although plugging leaks fully will require more changes than I care to risk
in a dot-release.
not TRUE. Otherwise we break pl call handler functions. fmgr_oldstyle
will take care of making sure the semantics are the same for C functions.
Clean up some slightly grotty coding in 7.0 pg_class reading, also.
when we need to move to a new page; as long as we can insert the new
tuple on the same page as before, we only need LockBuffer and not the
expensive stuff. Also, twiddle bufmgr interfaces to avoid redundant
lseeks in RelationGetBufferForTuple and BufferAlloc. Successive inserts
now require one lseek per page added, rather than one per tuple with
several additional ones at each page boundary as happened before.
Lock contention when multiple backends are inserting in same table
is also greatly reduced.
- Fix view dumping SQL for V7.0
- Fix bug when getting view oid with long view names
- Treat SEQUENCE SET TOC entries as data entries rather than schema
entries.
- Make allowance for data entries that did not have a data dumper
routine (eg. SEQUENCE SET)
not being consulted anywhere, so remove it and remove the _mdnblocks()
calls that were used to set it. Change smgrextend interface to pass in
the target block number (ie, current file length) --- the caller always
knows this already, having already done smgrnblocks(), so it's silly to
do it over again inside mdextend. Net result: extension of a file now
takes one lseek(SEEK_END) and a write(), not three lseeks and a write.
a PostgreSQL user-defined function. The Metaphone system is a method of
matching similar sounding names (or any words) to the same code.
Metaphone was invented by Lawrence Philips as an improvement to the popular
name-hashing routine, Soundex.
This metaphone code is from Michael Kuhn, and is detailed at
http://aspell.sourceforge.net/metaphone/metaphone-kuhn.txt
Joel Burton
constraint names.
> > A reasonable interpretation of DROP CONSTRAINT "foo" is to drop *all*
> > constraints named "foo" on the target table.
>
> Then it should probably be a good thing to avoid the automatic
> generation of
> duplicate names? I might take a look at that, actually...
>
Christopher Kings-Lynne
jdbc/Connection.java
Andy
P.S. in Connection.java if encoding=="WIN" then dbEncoding is set to
"Cp1252".
What if it's Cyrillic "WIN"? Than it should be "Cp1251". Is there any
way to fix that without making different "WIN" encodings in
PostgreSQL?
Andy Rysin
in referencing and referenced columns of an fk constraint
aren't comparable using '=' at constraint definition time
rather than insert/update time.
Stephan Szabo
enables pltcl unknown support.
Also it adds substituting of tclsh with tclsh that was by configure in
pltcl_*mod scripts. For example, On freebsd, tclsh can be called
tclsh8.2 or
tclsh8.3 depending on installed version of Tcl.
After patching files
src/pl/tcl/modules/pltcl_listmod
src/pl/tcl/modules/pltcl_loadmod
src/pl/tcl/modules/pltcl_delmod
must be renamed(copied,repocopied) to
src/pl/tcl/modules/pltcl_listmod.in
src/pl/tcl/modules/pltcl_loadmod.in
src/pl/tcl/modules/pltcl_delmod.in
seva@sevasoft.kiev.ua
still looking at the best way to integrate Tom Vijlbrief's fixes
(insofar as they're still needed); would 7.2 be a suitable time for
incompatible API changes?
Jeroen
Changes:
(*) Introduced bool, true, false (replacing some int, 1, 0)
(*) Made some member functions const
(*) Documented GetIsNull()
(*) Marked DisplayTuples() and PrintTuples() as obsolescent; fixed possible
portability problem (assumed that NULL pointer equals all-zero bit pattern)
(*) PrintTuples(): renamed width parameter to fillAlign to conform with other
usage; fixed memory leak and compile issue w.r.t. field separator (should
also slightly improve performance)
(*) Fixed some minor compilation issues
(*) Moved "using namespace std;" out of headers, where they didn't belong; used
new (temporary) preprocessor macro PGSTD to do this
(*) Made ToString() static, removed unneeded memset(), made buffer size adapt
to sizeof(int)
(*) Made some constructors explicit
(*) Changed some const std::string & parameters to plain std::string
(*) Marked PgCursor::Cursor(std::string) as obsolescent (setter with same name
as getter--bad style)
(*) Renamed some paramaters previously named "string"
(*) Introduced size_type typedef for number of tuples in result set
(*) PgTransaction now supports re-opening after closing, and aborts if not
explicitly committed prior to destruction
J. T. Vermeulen
collected by ANALYZE. Also, add some modest amount of intelligence to
guesses that are used for varlena columns in the absence of any ANALYZE
statistics. The 'width' reported by EXPLAIN is finally something less
than totally bogus for varlena columns ... and, in consequence, hashjoin
estimating should be a little better ...
to their children, leading to misbehavior if they had any children that paid
attention to chgParam (most plan node types don't). Append's bug has been
there a long time, but nobody had noticed because it used to be difficult
to create a query where an Append would be used below the top level of a
plan; so there were never any parameters getting passed down. SubqueryScan
is new in 7.1 ... and I'd modeled its behavior on Append :-(
> cronjob:
> NOTICE: RegisterSharedInvalid: SI buffer overflow
> NOTICE: InvalidateSharedInvalid: cache state reset
> I don't understand what these mean. Should I be concerned about them
> and what do they signify?
No real need to worry. Those should've been downgraded to DEBUG-level
messages a release or two back, but nobody bothered...
Tom Lane
a separate statement (though it can still be invoked as part of VACUUM, too).
pg_statistic redesigned to be more flexible about what statistics are
stored. ANALYZE now collects a list of several of the most common values,
not just one, plus a histogram (not just the min and max values). Random
sampling is used to make the process reasonably fast even on very large
tables. The number of values and histogram bins collected is now
user-settable via an ALTER TABLE command.
There is more still to do; the new stats are not being used everywhere
they could be in the planner. But the remaining changes for this project
should be localized, and the behavior is already better than before.
A not-very-related change is that sorting now makes use of btree comparison
routines if it can find one, rather than invoking '<' twice.