Commit Graph

37241 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alvaro Herrera 0827e8af70
autovacuum: handle analyze for partitioned tables
Previously, autovacuum would completely ignore partitioned tables, which
is not good regarding analyze -- failing to analyze those tables means
poor plans may be chosen.  Make autovacuum aware of those tables by
propagating "changes since analyze" counts from the leaf partitions up
the partitioning hierarchy.

This also introduces necessary reloptions support for partitioned tables
(autovacuum_enabled, autovacuum_analyze_scale_factor,
autovacuum_analyze_threshold).  It's unclear how best to document this
aspect.

Author: Yuzuko Hosoya <yuzukohosoya@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKkQ508_PwVgwJyBY=0Lmkz90j8CmWNPUxgHvCUwGhMrouz6UA@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-08 01:19:36 -04:00
Andres Freund b3ee4c5038 Cope with NULL query string in ExecInitParallelPlan().
It's far from clear that this is the right approach - but a good
portion of the buildfarm has been red for a few hours, on the last day
of the CF. And this fixes at least the obvious crash. So let's go with
that for now.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210407225806.majgznh4lk34hjvu%40alap3.anarazel.de
2021-04-07 22:08:24 -07:00
Amit Kapila 8ffb003591 Fix typo in jsonfuncs.c.
Author: Tatsuro Yamada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7c166a60-2808-6b89-9524-feefc6233748@nttcom.co.jp_1
2021-04-08 10:24:00 +05:30
Alvaro Herrera 4131f755d5
Repair find_inheritance_children with no active snapshot
When working on a scan with only a catalog snapshot, we may not have an
ActiveSnapshot set.  If we were to come across a detached partition,
that would cause a crash.  Fix by only ignoring detached partitions when
there's an active snapshot.
2021-04-08 00:46:14 -04:00
Tom Lane a3027e1e7f Allow psql's \df and \do commands to specify argument types.
When dealing with overloaded function or operator names, having
to look through a long list of matches is tedious.  Let's extend
these commands to allow specification of (input) argument types
to let such results be trimmed down.  Each additional argument
is treated the same as the pattern argument of \dT and matched
against the appropriate argument's type name.

While at it, fix \dT (and these new options) to recognize the
usual notation of "foo[]" for "the array type over foo", and
to handle the special abbreviations allowed by the backend
grammar, such as "int" for "integer".

Greg Sabino Mullane, revised rather significantly by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKAnmmLF9Hhu02N+s7uAyLc5J1xZReg72HQUoiKhNiJV3_jACQ@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-07 23:02:21 -04:00
Bruce Momjian f57a2f5e03 Add csvlog output for the new query_id value
This also adjusts the printf format for query id used by log_line_prefix
(%Q).

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210408005402.GG24239@momjian.us

Author: Julien Rouhaud, Bruce Momjian
2021-04-07 22:30:30 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 5100010ee4 Teach VACUUM to bypass unnecessary index vacuuming.
VACUUM has never needed to call ambulkdelete() for each index in cases
where there are precisely zero TIDs in its dead_tuples array by the end
of its first pass over the heap (also its only pass over the heap in
this scenario).  Index vacuuming is simply not required when this
happens.  Index cleanup will still go ahead, but in practice most calls
to amvacuumcleanup() are usually no-ops when there were zero preceding
ambulkdelete() calls.  In short, VACUUM has generally managed to avoid
index scans when there were clearly no index tuples to delete from
indexes.  But cases with _close to_ no index tuples to delete were
another matter -- a round of ambulkdelete() calls took place (one per
index), each of which performed a full index scan.

VACUUM now behaves just as if there were zero index tuples to delete in
cases where there are in fact "virtually zero" such tuples.  That is, it
can now bypass index vacuuming and heap vacuuming as an optimization
(though not index cleanup).  Whether or not VACUUM bypasses indexes is
determined dynamically, based on the just-observed number of heap pages
in the table that have one or more LP_DEAD items (LP_DEAD items in heap
pages have a 1:1 correspondence with index tuples that still need to be
deleted from each index in the worst case).

We only skip index vacuuming when 2% or less of the table's pages have
one or more LP_DEAD items -- bypassing index vacuuming as an
optimization must not noticeably impede setting bits in the visibility
map.  As a further condition, the dead_tuples array (i.e. VACUUM's array
of LP_DEAD item TIDs) must not exceed 32MB at the point that the first
pass over the heap finishes, which is also when the decision to bypass
is made.  (The VACUUM must also have been able to fit all TIDs in its
maintenance_work_mem-bound dead_tuples space, though with a default
maintenance_work_mem setting it can't matter.)

This avoids surprising jumps in the duration and overhead of routine
vacuuming with workloads where successive VACUUM operations consistently
have almost zero dead index tuples.  The number of LP_DEAD items may
well accumulate over multiple VACUUM operations, before finally the
threshold is crossed and VACUUM performs conventional index vacuuming.
Even then, the optimization will have avoided a great deal of largely
unnecessary index vacuuming.

In the future we may teach VACUUM to skip index vacuuming on a per-index
basis, using a much more sophisticated approach.  For now we only
consider the extreme cases, where we can be quite confident that index
vacuuming just isn't worth it using simple heuristics.

Also log information about how many heap pages have one or more LP_DEAD
items when autovacuum logging is enabled.

Author: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoD0SkE11fMw4jD4RENAwBMcw1wasVnwpJVw3tVqPOQgAw@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzmkebqPd4MVGuPTOS9bMFvp9MDs5cRTCOsv1rQJ3jCbXw@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-07 16:14:54 -07:00
Bruce Momjian bc70728693 Fix regression test failure caused by commit 4f0b0966c8
The query originally used was too simple, cause explain_filter() to be
unable to remove JIT output text.

Reported-by: Tom Lane

Author: Julien Rouhaud
2021-04-07 18:14:46 -04:00
Michael Paquier c7578fa640 Fix some failures with connection tests on Windows hosts
The truncation of the log file, that this set of tests relies on to make
sure that a connection attempt matches with its expected backend log
pattern, fails, as reported by buildfarm member fairywren.  Instead of a
truncation, do a rotation of the log file and restart the node.  This
will ensure that the connection attempt data is unique for each test.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/YG05nCI8x8B+Ad3G@paquier.xyz
2021-04-08 06:55:00 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut e717a9a18b SQL-standard function body
This adds support for writing CREATE FUNCTION and CREATE PROCEDURE
statements for language SQL with a function body that conforms to the
SQL standard and is portable to other implementations.

Instead of the PostgreSQL-specific AS $$ string literal $$ syntax,
this allows writing out the SQL statements making up the body
unquoted, either as a single statement:

    CREATE FUNCTION add(a integer, b integer) RETURNS integer
        LANGUAGE SQL
        RETURN a + b;

or as a block

    CREATE PROCEDURE insert_data(a integer, b integer)
    LANGUAGE SQL
    BEGIN ATOMIC
      INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (a);
      INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (b);
    END;

The function body is parsed at function definition time and stored as
expression nodes in a new pg_proc column prosqlbody.  So at run time,
no further parsing is required.

However, this form does not support polymorphic arguments, because
there is no more parse analysis done at call time.

Dependencies between the function and the objects it uses are fully
tracked.

A new RETURN statement is introduced.  This can only be used inside
function bodies.  Internally, it is treated much like a SELECT
statement.

psql needs some new intelligence to keep track of function body
boundaries so that it doesn't send off statements when it sees
semicolons that are inside a function body.

Tested-by: Jaime Casanova <jcasanov@systemguards.com.ec>
Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1c11f1eb-f00c-43b7-799d-2d44132c02d7@2ndquadrant.com
2021-04-07 21:47:55 +02:00
Peter Geoghegan 1e55e7d175 Add wraparound failsafe to VACUUM.
Add a failsafe mechanism that is triggered by VACUUM when it notices
that the table's relfrozenxid and/or relminmxid are dangerously far in
the past.  VACUUM checks the age of the table dynamically, at regular
intervals.

When the failsafe triggers, VACUUM takes extraordinary measures to
finish as quickly as possible so that relfrozenxid and/or relminmxid can
be advanced.  VACUUM will stop applying any cost-based delay that may be
in effect.  VACUUM will also bypass any further index vacuuming and heap
vacuuming -- it only completes whatever remaining pruning and freezing
is required.  Bypassing index/heap vacuuming is enabled by commit
8523492d, which made it possible to dynamically trigger the mechanism
already used within VACUUM when it is run with INDEX_CLEANUP off.

It is expected that the failsafe will almost always trigger within an
autovacuum to prevent wraparound, long after the autovacuum began.
However, the failsafe mechanism can trigger in any VACUUM operation.
Even in a non-aggressive VACUUM, where we're likely to not advance
relfrozenxid, it still seems like a good idea to finish off remaining
pruning and freezing.   An aggressive/anti-wraparound VACUUM will be
launched immediately afterwards.  Note that the anti-wraparound VACUUM
that follows will itself trigger the failsafe, usually before it even
begins its first (and only) pass over the heap.

The failsafe is controlled by two new GUCs: vacuum_failsafe_age, and
vacuum_multixact_failsafe_age.  There are no equivalent reloptions,
since that isn't expected to be useful.  The GUCs have rather high
defaults (both default to 1.6 billion), and are expected to generally
only be used to make the failsafe trigger sooner/more frequently.

Author: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoD0SkE11fMw4jD4RENAwBMcw1wasVnwpJVw3tVqPOQgAw@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzmgH3ySGYeC-m-eOBsa2=sDwa292-CFghV4rESYo39FsQ@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-07 12:37:45 -07:00
Bruce Momjian 4f0b0966c8 Make use of in-core query id added by commit 5fd9dfa5f5
Use the in-core query id computation for pg_stat_activity,
log_line_prefix, and EXPLAIN VERBOSE.

Similar to other fields in pg_stat_activity, only the queryid from the
top level statements are exposed, and if the backends status isn't
active then the queryid from the last executed statements is displayed.

Add a %Q placeholder to include the queryid in log_line_prefix, which
will also only expose top level statements.

For EXPLAIN VERBOSE, if a query identifier has been computed, either by
enabling compute_query_id or using a third-party module, display it.

Bump catalog version.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210407125726.tkvjdbw76hxnpwfi@nol

Author: Julien Rouhaud

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera, Nitin Jadhav, Zhihong Yu
2021-04-07 14:04:06 -04:00
Robert Haas ec7ffb8096 amcheck: fix multiple problems with TOAST pointer validation
First, don't perform database access while holding a buffer lock.
When checking a heap, we can validate that TOAST pointers are sane by
performing a scan on the TOAST index and looking up the chunks that
correspond to each value ID that appears in a TOAST poiner in the main
table. But, to do that while holding a buffer lock at least risks
causing other backends to wait uninterruptibly, and probably can cause
undetected and uninterruptible deadlocks.  So, instead, make a list of
checks to perform while holding the lock, and then perform the checks
after releasing it.

Second, adjust things so that we don't try to follow TOAST pointers
for tuples that are already eligible to be pruned. The TOAST tuples
become eligible for pruning at the same time that the main tuple does,
so trying to check them may lead to spurious reports of corruption,
as observed in the buildfarm. The necessary infrastructure to decide
whether or not the tuple being checked is prunable was added by
commit 3b6c1259f9, but it wasn't
actually used for its intended purpose prior to this patch.

Mark Dilger, adjusted by me to avoid a memory leak.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/AC5479E4-6321-473D-AC92-5EC36299FBC2@enterprisedb.com
2021-04-07 13:39:12 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 5fd9dfa5f5 Move pg_stat_statements query jumbling to core.
Add compute_query_id GUC to control whether a query identifier should be
computed by the core (off by default).  It's thefore now possible to
disable core queryid computation and use pg_stat_statements with a
different algorithm to compute the query identifier by using a
third-party module.

To ensure that a single source of query identifier can be used and is
well defined, modules that calculate a query identifier should throw an
error if compute_query_id specified to compute a query id and if a query
idenfitier was already calculated.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210407125726.tkvjdbw76hxnpwfi@nol

Author: Julien Rouhaud

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera, Nitin Jadhav, Zhihong Yu
2021-04-07 13:06:56 -04:00
Tom Lane a282ee68a0 Remove channel binding requirement from clientcert=verify-full test.
This fails on older OpenSSL versions that lack channel binding
support.  Since that feature is not essential to this test case,
just remove it, instead of complicating matters.  Per buildfarm.

Jacob Champion

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fa8dbbb58c20b1d1adf0082769f80d5466eaf485.camel@vmware.com
2021-04-07 12:50:17 -04:00
Tom Lane 0d46771eaa Comment cleanup for a1115fa07.
Amit Langote

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqEcawatEaUh1uTbZMEZTJeLzbroRTz9_X9Z5CFjTWJkhw@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-07 12:22:02 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 3c3b8a4b26 Truncate line pointer array during VACUUM.
Teach VACUUM to truncate the line pointer array of each heap page when a
contiguous group of LP_UNUSED line pointers appear at the end of the
array -- these unused and unreferenced items are excluded.  This process
occurs during VACUUM's second pass over the heap, right after LP_DEAD
line pointers on the page (those encountered/pruned during the first
pass) are marked LP_UNUSED.

Truncation avoids line pointer bloat with certain workloads,
particularly those involving continual range DELETEs and bulk INSERTs
against the same table.

Also harden heapam code to check for an out-of-range page offset number
in places where we weren't already doing so.

Author: Matthias van de Meent <boekewurm+postgres@gmail.com>
Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEze2WjgaQc55Y5f5CQd3L=eS5CZcff2Obxp=O6pto8-f0hC4w@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wzn6a64PJM1Ggzm=uvx2otsopJMhFQj_g1rAj4GWr3ZSzw@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-07 08:47:15 -07:00
Tom Lane 3db826bd55 Tighten up allowed names for custom GUC parameters.
Formerly we were pretty lax about what a custom GUC's name could
be; so long as it had at least one dot in it, we'd take it.
However, corner cases such as dashes or equal signs in the name
would cause various bits of functionality to misbehave.  Rather
than trying to make the world perfectly safe for that, let's
just require that custom names look like "identifier.identifier",
where "identifier" means something that scan.l would accept
without double quotes.

Along the way, this patch refactors things slightly in guc.c
so that find_option() is responsible for reporting GUC-not-found
cases, allowing removal of duplicative code from its callers.

Per report from Hubert Depesz Lubaczewski.  No back-patch,
since the consequences of the problem don't seem to warrant
changing behavior in stable branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/951335.1612910077@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-07 11:22:22 -04:00
Tomas Vondra 23607a8156 Don't add non-existent pages to bitmap from BRIN
The code in bringetbitmap() simply added the whole matching page range
to the TID bitmap, as determined by pages_per_range, even if some of the
pages were beyond the end of the heap. The query then might fail with
an error like this:

  ERROR:  could not open file "base/20176/20228.2" (target block
          262144): previous segment is only 131021 blocks

In this case, the relation has 262093 pages (131072 and 131021 pages),
but we're trying to acess block 262144, i.e. first block of the 3rd
segment. At that point _mdfd_getseg() notices the preceding segment is
incomplete, and fails.

Hitting this in practice is rather unlikely, because:

* Most indexes use power-of-two ranges, so segments and page ranges
  align perfectly (segment end is also a page range end).

* The table size has to be just right, with the last segment being
  almost full - less than one page range from full segment, so that the
  last page range actually crosses the segment boundary.

* Prefetch has to be enabled. The regular page access checks that
  pages are not beyond heap end, but prefetch does not. On older
  releases (before 12) the execution stops after hitting the first
  non-existent page, so the prefetch distance has to be sufficient
  to reach the first page in the next segment to trigger the issue.
  Since 12 it's enough to just have prefetch enabled, the prefetch
  distance does not matter.

Fixed by not adding non-existent pages to the TID bitmap. Backpatch
all the way back to 9.6 (BRIN indexes were introduced in 9.5, but that
release is EOL).

Backpatch-through: 9.6
2021-04-07 15:58:36 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 5c55dc8b47 libpq: Set Server Name Indication (SNI) for SSL connections
By default, have libpq set the TLS extension "Server Name Indication" (SNI).

This allows an SNI-aware SSL proxy to route connections.  (This
requires a proxy that is aware of the PostgreSQL protocol, not just
any SSL proxy.)

In the future, this could also allow the server to use different SSL
certificates for different host specifications.  (That would require
new server functionality.  This would be the client-side functionality
for that.)

Since SNI makes the host name appear in cleartext in the network
traffic, this might be undesirable in some cases.  Therefore, also add
a libpq connection option "sslsni" to turn it off.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/7289d5eb-62a5-a732-c3b9-438cee2cb709%40enterprisedb.com
2021-04-07 15:11:41 +02:00
Magnus Hagander c1968426ba Refactor hba_authname
The previous implementation (from 9afffcb833) had an unnecessary check
on the boundaries of the enum which trigtered compile warnings. To clean
it up, move the pre-existing static assert to a central location and
call that.

Reported-By: Erik Rijkers
Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1056399262.13159.1617793249020@webmailclassic.xs4all.nl
2021-04-07 14:24:47 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas d92b1cdbab Revert "Add sortsupport for gist_btree opclasses, for faster index builds."
This reverts commit 9f984ba6d2.

It was making the buildfarm unhappy, apparently setting client_min_messages
in a regression test produces different output if log_statement='all'.
Another issue is that I now suspect the bit sortsupport function was in
fact not correct to call byteacmp(). Revert to investigate both of those
issues.
2021-04-07 14:33:21 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9f984ba6d2 Add sortsupport for gist_btree opclasses, for faster index builds.
Commit 16fa9b2b30 introduced a faster way to build GiST indexes, by
sorting all the data. This commit adds the sortsupport functions needed
to make use of that feature for btree_gist.

Author: Andrey Borodin
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/2F3F7265-0D22-44DB-AD71-8554C743D943@yandex-team.ru
2021-04-07 13:22:05 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut dd13ad9d39 Fix use of cursor sensitivity terminology
Documentation and comments in code and tests have been using the terms
sensitive/insensitive cursor incorrectly relative to the SQL standard.
(Cursor sensitivity is only relevant for changes made in the same
transaction as the cursor, not for concurrent changes in other
sessions.)  Moreover, some of the behavior of PostgreSQL is incorrect
according to the SQL standard, confusing the issue further.  (WHERE
CURRENT OF changes are not visible in insensitive cursors, but they
should be.)

This change corrects the terminology and removes the claim that
sensitive cursors are supported.  It also adds a test case that checks
the insensitive behavior in a "correct" way, using a change command
not using WHERE CURRENT OF.  Finally, it adds the ASENSITIVE cursor
option to select the default asensitive behavior, per SQL standard.

There are no changes to cursor behavior in this patch.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/96ee8b30-9889-9e1b-b053-90e10c050e85%40enterprisedb.com
2021-04-07 08:05:55 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 0b5e824528 Message improvement
The previous wording contained a superfluous comma.  Adjust phrasing
for grammatical correctness and clarity.
2021-04-07 07:42:44 +02:00
Michael Paquier 4c0239cb7a Remove redundant memset(0) calls for page init of some index AMs
Bloom, GIN, GiST and SP-GiST rely on PageInit() to initialize the
contents of a page, and this routine fills entirely a page with zeros
for a size of BLCKSZ, including the special space.  Those index AMs have
been using an extra memset() call to fill with zeros the special page
space, or even the whole page, which is not necessary as PageInit()
already does this work, so let's remove them.  GiST was not doing this
extra call, but has commented out a system call that did so since
6236991.

While on it, remove one MAXALIGN() for SP-GiST as PageInit() takes care
of that.  This makes the whole page initialization logic more consistent
across all index AMs.

Author: Bharath Rupireddy
Reviewed-by: Vignesh C, Mahendra Singh Thalor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALj2ACViOo2qyaPT7krWm4LRyRTw9kOXt+g6PfNmYuGA=YHj9A@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-07 14:35:26 +09:00
Michael Paquier 9afffcb833 Add some information about authenticated identity via log_connections
The "authenticated identity" is the string used by an authentication
method to identify a particular user.  In many common cases, this is the
same as the PostgreSQL username, but for some third-party authentication
methods, the identifier in use may be shortened or otherwise translated
(e.g. through pg_ident user mappings) before the server stores it.

To help administrators see who has actually interacted with the system,
this commit adds the capability to store the original identity when
authentication succeeds within the backend's Port, and generates a log
entry when log_connections is enabled.  The log entries generated look
something like this (where a local user named "foouser" is connecting to
the database as the database user called "admin"):

  LOG:  connection received: host=[local]
  LOG:  connection authenticated: identity="foouser" method=peer (/data/pg_hba.conf:88)
  LOG:  connection authorized: user=admin database=postgres application_name=psql

Port->authn_id is set according to the authentication method:

  bsd: the PostgreSQL username (aka the local username)
  cert: the client's Subject DN
  gss: the user principal
  ident: the remote username
  ldap: the final bind DN
  pam: the PostgreSQL username (aka PAM username)
  password (and all pw-challenge methods): the PostgreSQL username
  peer: the peer's pw_name
  radius: the PostgreSQL username (aka the RADIUS username)
  sspi: either the down-level (SAM-compatible) logon name, if
        compat_realm=1, or the User Principal Name if compat_realm=0

The trust auth method does not set an authenticated identity.  Neither
does clientcert=verify-full.

Port->authn_id could be used for other purposes, like a superuser-only
extra column in pg_stat_activity, but this is left as future work.

PostgresNode::connect_{ok,fails}() have been modified to let tests check
the backend log files for required or prohibited patterns, using the
new log_like and log_unlike parameters.  This uses a method based on a
truncation of the existing server log file, like issues_sql_like().
Tests are added to the ldap, kerberos, authentication and SSL test
suites.

Author: Jacob Champion
Reviewed-by: Stephen Frost, Magnus Hagander, Tom Lane, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c55788dd1773c521c862e8e0dddb367df51222be.camel@vmware.com
2021-04-07 10:16:39 +09:00
Fujii Masao 8ee9b662da Fix test added by commit 9de9294b0c.
The buildfarm members "drongo" and "fairywren" reported that
the regression test (024_archive_recovery.pl) added by commit 9de9294b0c
failed. The cause of this failure is that the test calls $node->init()
without "allows_streaming => 1" and which doesn't add pg_hba.conf
entry for TCP/IP connection from pg_basebackup.
This commit fixes the issue by specifying "allows_streaming => 1"
when calling $node->init().

Author: Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3cc3909d-f779-7a74-c201-f1f7f62c7497@oss.nttdata.com
2021-04-07 07:42:36 +09:00
Tom Lane a1115fa078 Postpone some more stuff out of ExecInitModifyTable.
Delay creation of the projections for INSERT and UPDATE tuples
until they're needed.  This saves a pretty fair amount of work
when only some of the partitions are actually touched.

The logic associated with identifying junk columns in UPDATE/DELETE
is moved to another loop, allowing removal of one loop over the
target relations; but it didn't actually change at all.

Extracted from a larger patch, which seemed to me to be too messy
to push in one commit.

Amit Langote, reviewed at different times by Heikki Linnakangas and
myself

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqG7ZruBmmih3wPsBZ4s0H2EhywrnXEduckY5Hr3fWzPWA@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-06 18:13:17 -04:00
David Rowley 3b82d990ab Fix compiler warning for MSVC in libpq_pipeline.c
DEBUG was already defined by the MSVC toolchain for "Debug" builds. On
these systems the unconditional #define DEBUG was causing a 'DEBUG': macro
redefinition warning.

Here we rename DEBUG to DEBUG_OUPUT and also get rid of the #define which
defined this constant.  This appears to have been left in the code by
mistake.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvqTTgDm38s4HRj03nhzhzQ1oMOj-RXFUB1pE6Bj07jyuQ@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-07 09:51:33 +12:00
Tom Lane c5b7ba4e67 Postpone some stuff out of ExecInitModifyTable.
Arrange to do some things on-demand, rather than immediately during
executor startup, because there's a fair chance of never having to do
them at all:

* Don't open result relations' indexes until needed.

* Don't initialize partition tuple routing, nor the child-to-root
tuple conversion map, until needed.

This wins in UPDATEs on partitioned tables when only some of the
partitions will actually receive updates; with larger partition
counts the savings is quite noticeable.  Also, we can remove some
sketchy heuristics in ExecInitModifyTable about whether to set up
tuple routing.

Also, remove execPartition.c's private hash table tracking which
partitions were already opened by the ModifyTable node.  Instead
use the hash added to ModifyTable itself by commit 86dc90056.

To allow lazy computation of the conversion maps, we now set
ri_RootResultRelInfo in all child ResultRelInfos.  We formerly set it
only in some, not terribly well-defined, cases.  This has user-visible
side effects in that now more error messages refer to the root
relation instead of some partition (and provide error data in the
root's column order, too).  It looks to me like this is a strict
improvement in consistency, so I don't have a problem with the
output changes visible in this commit.

Extracted from a larger patch, which seemed to me to be too messy
to push in one commit.

Amit Langote, reviewed at different times by Heikki Linnakangas and
myself

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqG7ZruBmmih3wPsBZ4s0H2EhywrnXEduckY5Hr3fWzPWA@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-06 15:57:11 -04:00
Andres Freund 90c885cdab Increment xactCompletionCount during subtransaction abort.
Snapshot caching, introduced in 623a9ba79b, did not increment
xactCompletionCount during subtransaction abort. That could lead to an older
snapshot being reused. That is, at least as far as I can see, not a
correctness issue (for MVCC snapshots there's no difference between "in
progress" and "aborted"). The only difference between the old and new
snapshots would be a newer ->xmax.

While HeapTupleSatisfiesMVCC makes the same visibility determination, reusing
the old snapshot leads HeapTupleSatisfiesMVCC to not set
HEAP_XMIN_INVALID. Which subsequently causes the kill_prior_tuple optimization
to not kick in (via HeapTupleIsSurelyDead() returning false). The performance
effects of doing the same index-lookups over and over again is how the issue
was discovered...

Fix the issue by incrementing xactCompletionCount in
XidCacheRemoveRunningXids. It already acquires ProcArrayLock exclusively,
making that an easy proposition.

Add a test to ensure that kill_prior_tuple prevents index growth when it
involves aborted subtransaction of the current transaction.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210406043521.lopeo7bbigad3n6t@alap3.anarazel.de
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210317055718.v6qs3ltzrformqoa%40alap3.anarazel.de
2021-04-06 09:24:50 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan 8523492d4e Remove tupgone special case from vacuumlazy.c.
Retry the call to heap_prune_page() in rare cases where there is
disagreement between the heap_prune_page() call and the call to
HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum() that immediately follows.  Disagreement is
possible when a concurrently-aborted transaction makes a tuple DEAD
during the tiny window between each step.  This was the only case where
a tuple considered DEAD by VACUUM still had storage following pruning.
VACUUM's definition of dead tuples is now uniformly simple and
unambiguous: dead tuples from each page are always LP_DEAD line pointers
that were encountered just after we performed pruning (and just before
we considered freezing remaining items with tuple storage).

Eliminating the tupgone=true special case enables INDEX_CLEANUP=off
style skipping of index vacuuming that takes place based on flexible,
dynamic criteria.  The INDEX_CLEANUP=off case had to know about skipping
indexes up-front before now, due to a subtle interaction with the
special case (see commit dd695979) -- this was a special case unto
itself.  Now there are no special cases.  And so now it won't matter
when or how we decide to skip index vacuuming: it won't affect how
pruning behaves, and it won't be affected by any of the implementation
details of pruning or freezing.

Also remove XLOG_HEAP2_CLEANUP_INFO records.  These are no longer
necessary because we now rely entirely on heap pruning taking care of
recovery conflicts.  There is no longer any need to generate recovery
conflicts for DEAD tuples that pruning just missed.  This also means
that heap vacuuming now uses exactly the same strategy for recovery
conflicts as index vacuuming always has: REDO routines never need to
process a latestRemovedXid from the WAL record, since earlier REDO of
the WAL record from pruning is sufficient in all cases.  The generic
XLOG_HEAP2_CLEAN record type is now split into two new record types to
reflect this new division (these are called XLOG_HEAP2_PRUNE and
XLOG_HEAP2_VACUUM).

Also stop acquiring a super-exclusive lock for heap pages when they're
vacuumed during VACUUM's second heap pass.  A regular exclusive lock is
enough.  This is correct because heap page vacuuming is now strictly a
matter of setting the LP_DEAD line pointers to LP_UNUSED.  No other
backend can have a pointer to a tuple located in a pinned buffer that
can be invalidated by a concurrent heap page vacuum operation.

Heap vacuuming can now be thought of as conceptually similar to index
vacuuming and conceptually dissimilar to heap pruning.  Heap pruning now
has sole responsibility for anything involving the logical contents of
the database (e.g., managing transaction status information, recovery
conflicts, considering what to do with HOT chains).  Index vacuuming and
heap vacuuming are now only concerned with recycling garbage items from
physical data structures that back the logical database.

Bump XLOG_PAGE_MAGIC due to pruning and heap page vacuum WAL record
changes.

Credit for the idea of retrying pruning a page to avoid the tupgone case
goes to Andres Freund.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-By: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WznneCXTzuFmcwx_EyRQgfsfJAAsu+CsqRFmFXCAar=nJw@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-06 08:49:22 -07:00
Tom Lane 789d81de8a Fix missing #include in nodeResultCache.h.
Per cpluspluscheck.
2021-04-06 11:23:56 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 3a51306722 psql: Show all query results by default
Previously, psql printed only the last result if a command string
returned multiple result sets.  Now it prints all of them.  The
previous behavior can be obtained by setting the psql variable
SHOW_ALL_RESULTS to off.

Author: Fabien COELHO <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
Reviewed-by: "Iwata, Aya" <iwata.aya@jp.fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Verite <daniel@manitou-mail.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: vignesh C <vignesh21@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/alpine.DEB.2.21.1904132231510.8961@lancre
2021-04-06 17:10:24 +02:00
Tomas Vondra 518442c7f3 Fix handling of clauses incompatible with extended statistics
Handling of incompatible clauses while applying extended statistics was
a bit confused - while handling a mix of compatible and incompatible
clauses it sometimes incorrectly treated the incompatible clauses as
compatible, resulting in a crash.

Fixed by reworking the code applying the selected statistics object to
make it easier to understand, and adding a proper compatibility check.

Reported-by: David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvpYT10-nkSp8xXe-nbO3jmoaRyRFHbzh-RWMfAJynqgpQ%40mail.gmail.com
2021-04-06 16:56:06 +02:00
Peter Geoghegan 7ab96cf6b3 Refactor lazy_scan_heap() loop.
Add a lazy_scan_heap() subsidiary function that handles heap pruning and
tuple freezing: lazy_scan_prune().  This is a great deal cleaner.  The
code that remains in lazy_scan_heap()'s per-block loop can now be
thought of as code that either comes before or after the call to
lazy_scan_prune(), which is now the clear focal point.  This division is
enforced by the way in which we now manage state.  lazy_scan_prune()
outputs state (using its own struct) that describes what to do with the
page following pruning and freezing (e.g., visibility map maintenance,
recording free space in the FSM).  It doesn't get passed any special
instructional state from the preamble code, though.

Also cleanly separate the logic used by a VACUUM with INDEX_CLEANUP=off
from the logic used by single-heap-pass VACUUMs.  The former case is now
structured as the omission of index and heap vacuuming by a two pass
VACUUM.  The latter case goes back to being used only when the table
happens to have no indexes (just as it was before commit a96c41fe).
This structure is much more natural, since the whole point of
INDEX_CLEANUP=off is to skip the index and heap vacuuming that would
otherwise take place.  The single-heap-pass case doesn't skip any useful
work, though -- it just does heap pruning and heap vacuuming together
when the table happens to have no indexes.

Both of these changes are preparation for an upcoming patch that
generalizes the mechanism used by INDEX_CLEANUP=off.  The later patch
will allow VACUUM to give up on index and heap vacuuming dynamically, as
problems emerge (e.g., with wraparound), so that an affected VACUUM
operation can finish up as soon as possible.

Also fix a very old bug in single-pass VACUUM VERBOSE output.  We were
reporting the number of tuples deleted via pruning as a direct
substitute for reporting the number of LP_DEAD items removed in a
function that deals with the second pass over the heap.  But that
doesn't work at all -- they're two different things.

To fix, start tracking the total number of LP_DEAD items encountered
during pruning, and use that in the report instead.  A single pass
VACUUM will always vacuum away whatever LP_DEAD items a heap page has
immediately after it is pruned, so the total number of LP_DEAD items
encountered during pruning equals the total number vacuumed-away.
(They are _not_ equal in the INDEX_CLEANUP=off case, but that's okay
because skipping index vacuuming is now a totally orthogonal concept to
one-pass VACUUM.)

Also stop reporting the count of LP_UNUSED items in VACUUM VERBOSE
output.  This makes the output of VACUUM VERBOSE more consistent with
log_autovacuum's output (because it never showed information about
LP_UNUSED items).  VACUUM VERBOSE reported LP_UNUSED items left behind
by the last VACUUM, and LP_UNUSED items created via pruning HOT chains
during the current VACUUM (it never included LP_UNUSED items left behind
by the current VACUUM's second pass over the heap).  This makes it
useless as an indicator of line pointer bloat, which must have been the
original intention. (Like the first VACUUM VERBOSE issue, this issue was
arguably an oversight in commit 282d2a03, which added the heap-only
tuple optimization.)

Finally, stop reporting empty_pages in VACUUM VERBOSE output, and start
reporting pages_removed instead.  This also makes the output of VACUUM
VERBOSE more consistent with log_autovacuum's output (which does not
show empty_pages, but does show pages_removed).  An empty page isn't
meaningfully different to a page that is almost empty, or a page that is
empty but for only a small number of remaining LP_UNUSED items.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WznneCXTzuFmcwx_EyRQgfsfJAAsu+CsqRFmFXCAar=nJw@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-06 07:49:39 -07:00
Tom Lane 091e22b2e6 Clean up treatment of missing default and CHECK-constraint records.
Andrew Gierth reported that it's possible to crash the backend if no
pg_attrdef record is found to match an attribute that has atthasdef set.
AttrDefaultFetch warns about this situation, but then leaves behind
a relation tupdesc that has null "adbin" pointer(s), which most places
don't guard against.

We considered promoting the warning to an error, but throwing errors
during relcache load is pretty drastic: it effectively locks one out
of using the relation at all.  What seems better is to leave the
load-time behavior as a warning, but then throw an error in any code
path that wants to use a default and can't find it.  This confines
the error to a subset of INSERT/UPDATE operations on the table, and
in particular will at least allow a pg_dump to succeed.

Also, we should fix AttrDefaultFetch to not leave any null pointers
in the tupdesc, because that just creates an untested bug hazard.

While at it, apply the same philosophy of "warn at load, throw error
only upon use of the known-missing info" to CHECK constraints.
CheckConstraintFetch is very nearly the same logic as AttrDefaultFetch,
but for reasons lost in the mists of time, it was throwing ERROR for
the same cases that AttrDefaultFetch treats as WARNING.  Make the two
functions more nearly alike.

In passing, get rid of potentially-O(N^2) loops in equalTupleDesc
by making AttrDefaultFetch sort the entries after fetching them,
so that equalTupleDesc can assume that entries in two equal tupdescs
must be in matching order.  (CheckConstraintFetch already was sorting
CHECK constraints, but equalTupleDesc hadn't been told about it.)

There's some argument for back-patching this, but with such a small
number of field reports, I'm content to fix it in HEAD.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87pmzaq4gx.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2021-04-06 10:34:39 -04:00
Fujii Masao 9de9294b0c Stop archive recovery if WAL generated with wal_level=minimal is found.
Previously if hot standby was enabled, archive recovery exited with
an error when it found WAL generated with wal_level=minimal.
But if hot standby was disabled, it just reported a warning and
continued in that case. Which could lead to data loss or errors
during normal operation. A warning was emitted, but users could
easily miss that and not notice this serious situation until
they encountered the actual errors.

To improve this situation, this commit changes archive recovery
so that it exits with FATAL error when it finds WAL generated with
wal_level=minimal whatever the setting of hot standby. This enables
users to notice the serious situation soon.

The FATAL error is thrown if archive recovery starts from a base
backup taken before wal_level is changed to minimal. When archive
recovery exits with the error, if users have a base backup taken
after setting wal_level to higher than minimal, they can recover
the database by starting archive recovery from that newer backup.
But note that if such backup doesn't exist, there is no easy way to
complete archive recovery, which may make the database server
unstartable and users may lose whole database. The commit adds
the note about this risk into the document.

Even in the case of unstartable database server, previously by just
disabling hot standby users could avoid the error during archive
recovery, forcibly start up the server and salvage data from it.
But note that this commit makes this procedure unavailable at all.

Author: Takamichi Osumi
Reviewed-by: Laurenz Albe, Kyotaro Horiguchi, David Steele, Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/OSBPR01MB4888CBE1DA08818FD2D90ED8EDF90@OSBPR01MB4888.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
2021-04-06 22:56:51 +09:00
Heikki Linnakangas c4c393b3ec Mark test_enc_conversion() as STRICT.
Reported-by: Jaime Casanova, using SQLsmith
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20210402235337.GA4082@ahch-to
2021-04-06 14:53:56 +03:00
Dean Rasheed 6b258e3d68 pgbench: Function to generate random permutations.
This adds a new function, permute(), that generates pseudorandom
permutations of arbitrary sizes. This can be used to randomly shuffle
a set of values to remove unwanted correlations. For example,
permuting the output from a non-uniform random distribution so that
all the most common values aren't collocated, allowing more realistic
tests to be performed.

Formerly, hash() was recommended for this purpose, but that suffers
from collisions that might alter the distribution, so recommend
permute() for this purpose instead.

Fabien Coelho and Hironobu Suzuki, with additional hacking be me.
Reviewed by Thomas Munro, Alvaro Herrera and Muhammad Usama.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.21.1807280944370.5142@lancre
2021-04-06 11:50:42 +01:00
Etsuro Fujita a8af856d32 Adjust input value to WaitEventSetWait() in ExecAppendAsyncEventWait().
Adjust the number of events given to WaitEventSetWait() so that it
doesn't exceed the maximum number of events in the WaitEventSet given
to that function (set->nevents_space) in hopes of making the buildfarm
green.

Per valgrind failure report from Tom Lane and the buildfarm.

Author: Etsuro Fujita
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3411577.1617289776%40sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-06 19:15:00 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 82ed7748b7 ALTER SUBSCRIPTION ... ADD/DROP PUBLICATION
At present, if we want to update publications in a subscription, we
can use SET PUBLICATION.  However, it requires supplying all
publications that exists and the new publications.  If we want to add
new publications, it's inconvenient.  The new syntax only supplies the
new publications.  When the refresh is true, it only refreshes the new
publications.

Author: Japin Li <japinli@hotmail.com>
Author: Bharath Rupireddy <bharath.rupireddyforpostgres@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/MEYP282MB166939D0D6C480B7FBE7EFFBB6BC0@MEYP282MB1669.AUSP282.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
2021-04-06 11:49:51 +02:00
Amit Kapila 266b5673b4 Fix the tests added by commit ac4645c015.
In the tests, after disabling the subscription, we were not waiting for
the replication connection to drop from the publisher. So when the test
was trying to use the same slot to fetch the messages via SQL API, it
sometimes gives an error that the replication slot is active for other
PID.

Per buildfarm.
2021-04-06 14:58:52 +05:30
David Rowley 9bc9b4609a Fix compiler warning in fe-trace.c for MSVC
It seems that in MSVC timeval's tv_sec field is of type long.
localtime() takes a time_t pointer.  Since long is 32-bit even on 64-bit
builds in MSVC, passing a long pointer instead of the correct time_t
pointer generated a compiler warning.  Fix that.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvoRG25X_=ZCGSPb4KN_j2iu=G2uXsRSg8NBZeuhkOSETg@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-06 18:33:40 +12:00
Peter Eisentraut a2da77cdb4 Change return type of EXTRACT to numeric
The previous implementation of EXTRACT mapped internally to
date_part(), which returned type double precision (since it was
implemented long before the numeric type existed).  This can lead to
imprecise output in some cases, so returning numeric would be
preferrable.  Changing the return type of an existing function is a
bit risky, so instead we do the following:  We implement a new set of
functions, which are now called "extract", in parallel to the existing
date_part functions.  They work the same way internally but use
numeric instead of float8.  The EXTRACT construct is now mapped by the
parser to these new extract functions.  That way, dumps of views
etc. from old versions (which would use date_part) continue to work
unchanged, but new uses will map to the new extract functions.

Additionally, the reverse compilation of EXTRACT now reproduces the
original syntax, using the new mechanism introduced in
40c24bfef9.

The following minor changes of behavior result from the new
implementation:

- The column name from an isolated EXTRACT call is now "extract"
  instead of "date_part".

- Extract from date now rejects inappropriate field names such as
  HOUR.  It was previously mapped internally to extract from
  timestamp, so it would silently accept everything appropriate for
  timestamp.

- Return values when extracting fields with possibly fractional
  values, such as second and epoch, now have the full scale that the
  value has internally (so, for example, '1.000000' instead of just
  '1').

Reported-by: Petr Fedorov <petr.fedorov@phystech.edu>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/42b73d2d-da12-ba9f-570a-420e0cce19d9@phystech.edu
2021-04-06 07:20:42 +02:00
Fujii Masao f5d94e405e Fix typo in pgstat.c.
Introduced by 9868167500.

Author: Vignesh C
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm1DqgaLBAJrtGznKk1sR1mH-augmp7LfGvxWwTUhah+rg@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-06 14:09:40 +09:00
Fujii Masao 43620e3286 Add function to log the memory contexts of specified backend process.
Commit 3e98c0bafb added pg_backend_memory_contexts view to display
the memory contexts of the backend process. However its target process
is limited to the backend that is accessing to the view. So this is
not so convenient when investigating the local memory bloat of other
backend process. To improve this situation, this commit adds
pg_log_backend_memory_contexts() function that requests to log
the memory contexts of the specified backend process.

This information can be also collected by calling
MemoryContextStats(TopMemoryContext) via a debugger. But
this technique cannot be used in some environments because no debugger
is available there. So, pg_log_backend_memory_contexts() allows us to
see the memory contexts of specified backend more easily.

Only superusers are allowed to request to log the memory contexts
because allowing any users to issue this request at an unbounded rate
would cause lots of log messages and which can lead to denial of service.

On receipt of the request, at the next CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS(),
the target backend logs its memory contexts at LOG_SERVER_ONLY level,
so that these memory contexts will appear in the server log but not
be sent to the client. It logs one message per memory context.
Because if it buffers all memory contexts into StringInfo to log them
as one message, which may require the buffer to be enlarged very much
and lead to OOM error since there can be a large number of memory
contexts in a backend.

When a backend process is consuming huge memory, logging all its
memory contexts might overrun available disk space. To prevent this,
now this patch limits the number of child contexts to log per parent
to 100. As with MemoryContextStats(), it supposes that practical cases
where the log gets long will typically be huge numbers of siblings
under the same parent context; while the additional debugging value
from seeing details about individual siblings beyond 100 will not be large.

There was another proposed patch to add the function to return
the memory contexts of specified backend as the result sets,
instead of logging them, in the discussion. However that patch is
not included in this commit because it had several issues to address.

Thanks to Tatsuhito Kasahara, Andres Freund, Tom Lane, Tomas Vondra,
Michael Paquier, Kyotaro Horiguchi and Zhihong Yu for the discussion.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Atsushi Torikoshi
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Zhihong Yu, Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0271f440ac77f2a4180e0e56ebd944d1@oss.nttdata.com
2021-04-06 13:44:15 +09:00
Michael Paquier 5a71964a83 Fix some issues with SSL and Kerberos tests
The recent refactoring done in c50624c accidentally broke a portion of
the kerberos tests checking after a query, so add its functionality
back.  Some inactive SSL tests had their arguments in an incorrect
order, which would cause them to fail if they were to run.

Author: Jacob Champion
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4f5b0b3dc0b6fe9ae6a34886b4d4000f61eb567e.camel@vmware.com
2021-04-06 13:23:57 +09:00
Amit Kapila ac4645c015 Allow pgoutput to send logical decoding messages.
The output plugin accepts a new parameter (messages) that controls if
logical decoding messages are written into the replication stream. It is
useful for those clients that use pgoutput as an output plugin and needs
to process messages that were written by pg_logical_emit_message().

Although logical streaming replication protocol supports logical
decoding messages now, logical replication does not use this feature yet.

Author: David Pirotte, Euler Taveira
Reviewed-by: Euler Taveira, Andres Freund, Ashutosh Bapat, Amit Kapila
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADK3HHJ-+9SO7KuRLH=9Wa1rAo60Yreq1GFNkH_kd0=CdaWM+A@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-06 08:40:47 +05:30
Amit Kapila 531737ddad Refactor function parse_output_parameters.
Instead of using multiple parameters in parse_ouput_parameters function
signature, use the struct PGOutputData that encapsulates all pgoutput
options. It will be useful for future work where we need to add other
options in pgoutput.

Author: Euler Taveira
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADK3HHJ-+9SO7KuRLH=9Wa1rAo60Yreq1GFNkH_kd0=CdaWM+A@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-06 08:26:31 +05:30
Michael Paquier 6d41dd045a Change PostgresNode::connect_fails() to never send down queries
This type of failure is similar to what has been fixed in c757a3da,
where an authentication failure combined with psql pushing a command
down its communication pipe causes a test failure.  This routine is
designed to fail, so sending a query has little sense anyway.

Per buildfarm members gaur and hoverfly, based on an analysis and fix
from Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/513200.1617634642@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-06 09:53:06 +09:00
Peter Geoghegan f6b8f19a08 Allocate access strategy in parallel VACUUM workers.
Commit 49f49def took entirely the wrong approach to fixing this issue.
Just allocate a local buffer access strategy in each individual worker
instead of trying to propagate state.  This state was never propagated
by parallel VACUUM in the first place.

It looks like the only reason that this worked following commit 40d964ec
was that it involved static global variables, which are initialized to 0
per the C standard.

A more comprehensive fix may be necessary, even on HEAD.  This fix
should at least get the buildfarm green once again.

Thanks once again to Thomas Munro for continued off-list assistance with
the issue.
2021-04-05 17:17:40 -07:00
Tom Lane 09c1c6ab4b Support INCLUDE'd columns in SP-GiST.
Not much to say here: does what it says on the tin.
We steal a previously-always-zero bit from the nextOffset
field of leaf index tuples in order to track whether there
is a nulls bitmap.  Otherwise it works about like included
columns in other index types.

Pavel Borisov, reviewed by Andrey Borodin and Anastasia Lubennikova,
and rather heavily editorialized on by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALT9ZEFi-vMp4faht9f9Junb1nO3NOSjhpxTmbm1UGLMsLqiEQ@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-05 18:41:21 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 49f49defe7 Propagate parallel VACUUM's buffer access strategy.
Parallel VACUUM relied on global variable state from the leader process
being propagated to workers on fork().  Commit b4af70cb removed most
uses of global variables inside vacuumlazy.c, but did not account for
the buffer access strategy state.

To fix, propagate the state through shared memory instead.

Per buildfarm failures on elver, curculio, and morepork.

Many thanks to Thomas Munro for off-list assistance with this issue.
2021-04-05 14:56:56 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan b4af70cb21 Simplify state managed by VACUUM.
Reorganize the state struct used by VACUUM -- group related items
together to make it easier to understand.  Also stop relying on stack
variables inside lazy_scan_heap() -- move those into the state struct
instead.  Doing things this way simplifies large groups of related
functions whose function signatures had a lot of unnecessary redundancy.

Switch over to using int64 for the struct fields used to count things
that are reported to the user via log_autovacuum and VACUUM VERBOSE
output.  We were using double, but that doesn't seem to have any
advantages.  Using int64 makes it possible to add assertions that verify
that the first pass over the heap (pruning) encounters precisely the
same number of LP_DEAD items that get deleted from indexes later on, in
the second pass over the heap.  These assertions will be added in later
commits.

Finally, adjust the signatures of functions with IndexBulkDeleteResult
pointer arguments in cases where there was ambiguity about whether or
not the argument relates to a single index or all indexes.  Functions
now use the idiom that both ambulkdelete() and amvacuumcleanup() have
always used (where appropriate): accept a mutable IndexBulkDeleteResult
pointer argument, and return a result IndexBulkDeleteResult pointer to
caller.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reviewed-By: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkeOSYwC6KNckbhk2b1aNnWum6Yyn0NKP9D-Hq1LGTDPw@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-05 13:21:44 -07:00
Stephen Frost 6c3ffd697e Add pg_read_all_data and pg_write_all_data roles
A commonly requested use-case is to have a role who can run an
unfettered pg_dump without having to explicitly GRANT that user access
to all tables, schemas, et al, without that role being a superuser.
This address that by adding a "pg_read_all_data" role which implicitly
gives any member of this role SELECT rights on all tables, views and
sequences, and USAGE rights on all schemas.

As there may be cases where it's also useful to have a role who has
write access to all objects, pg_write_all_data is also introduced and
gives users implicit INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE rights on all tables,
views and sequences.

These roles can not be logged into directly but instead should be
GRANT'd to a role which is able to log in.  As noted in the
documentation, if RLS is being used then an administrator may (or may
not) wish to set BYPASSRLS on the login role which these predefined
roles are GRANT'd to.

Reviewed-by: Georgios Kokolatos
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200828003023.GU29590@tamriel.snowman.net
2021-04-05 13:42:52 -04:00
Fujii Masao ad8b674922 Shut down transaction tracking at startup process exit.
Maxim Orlov reported that the shutdown of standby server could result in
the following assertion failure. The cause of this issue was that,
when the shutdown caused the startup process to exit, recovery-time
transaction tracking was not shut down even if it's already initialized,
and some locks the tracked transactions were holding could not be released.
At this situation, if other process was invoked and the PGPROC entry that
the startup process used was assigned to it, it found such unreleased locks
and caused the assertion failure, during the initialization of it.

    TRAP: FailedAssertion("SHMQueueEmpty(&(MyProc->myProcLocks[i]))"

This commit fixes this issue by making the startup process shut down
transaction tracking and release all locks, at the exit of it.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Reported-by: Maxim Orlov
Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Maxim Orlov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ad4ce692cc1d89a093b471ab1d969b0b@postgrespro.ru
2021-04-06 02:25:37 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut a63dd8afe2 Renumber cursor option flags
Move the planner-control flags up so that there is more room for parse
options.  Some pending patches need some room there, so do this
renumbering separately so that there is less potential for conflicts.
2021-04-05 09:10:27 +02:00
Michael Paquier 9f6f1f9b8e Fix typo in collationcmds.c
Introduced by 51e225d.

Author: Anton Voloshin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/05477da0-703c-7de7-998c-5879738e8f39@postgrespro.ru
2021-04-05 11:18:12 +09:00
Michael Paquier c50624cdd2 Refactor all TAP test suites doing connection checks
This commit refactors more TAP tests to adapt with the recent
introduction of connect_ok() and connect_fails() in PostgresNode,
introduced by 0d1a3343.  This changes the following test suites to use
the same code paths for connection checks:
- Kerberos
- LDAP
- SSL
- Authentication

Those routines are extended to be able to handle optional parameters
that are set depending on each suite's needs, as of:
- custom SQL query.
- expected stderr matching pattern.
- expected stdout matching pattern.
The new design is extensible with more parameters, and there are some
plans for those routines in the future with checks based on the contents
of the backend logs.

Author: Jacob Champion, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d17b919e27474abfa55d97786cb9cfadfe2b59e9.camel@vmware.com
2021-04-05 10:13:57 +09:00
Tom Lane dfc843d465 Fix more confusion in SP-GiST.
spg_box_quad_leaf_consistent unconditionally returned the leaf
datum as leafValue, even though in its usage for poly_ops that
value is of completely the wrong type.

In versions before 12, that was harmless because the core code did
nothing with leafValue in non-index-only scans ... but since commit
2a6368343, if we were doing a KNN-style scan, spgNewHeapItem would
unconditionally try to copy the value using the wrong datatype
parameters.  Said copying is a waste of time and space if we're not
going to return the data, but it accidentally failed to fail until
I fixed the datatype confusion in ac9099fc1.

Hence, change spgNewHeapItem to not copy the datum unless we're
actually going to return it later.  This saves cycles and dodges
the question of whether lossy opclasses are returning the right
type.  Also change spg_box_quad_leaf_consistent to not return
data that might be of the wrong type, as insurance against
somebody introducing a similar bug into the core code in future.

It seems like a good idea to back-patch these two changes into
v12 and v13, although I'm afraid to change spgNewHeapItem's
mistaken idea of which datatype to use in those branches.

Per buildfarm results from ac9099fc1.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3728741.1617381471@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-04 17:57:07 -04:00
Tom Lane ac9099fc1d Fix confusion in SP-GiST between attribute type and leaf storage type.
According to the documentation, the attType passed to the opclass
config function (and also relied on by the core code) is the type
of the heap column or expression being indexed.  But what was
actually being passed was the type stored for the index column.
This made no difference for user-defined SP-GiST opclasses,
because we weren't allowing the STORAGE clause of CREATE OPCLASS
to be used, so the two types would be the same.  But it's silly
not to allow that, seeing that the built-in poly_ops opclass
has a different value for opckeytype than opcintype, and that if you
want to do lossy storage then the types must really be different.
(Thus, user-defined opclasses doing lossy storage had to lie about
what type is in the index.)  Hence, remove the restriction, and make
sure that we use the input column type not opckeytype where relevant.

For reasons of backwards compatibility with existing user-defined
opclasses, we can't quite insist that the specified leafType match
the STORAGE clause; instead just add an amvalidate() warning if
they don't match.

Also fix some bugs that would only manifest when trying to return
index entries when attType is different from attLeafType.  It's not
too surprising that these have not been reported, because the only
usual reason for such a difference is to store the leaf value
lossily, rendering index-only scans impossible.

Add a src/test/modules module to exercise cases where attType is
different from attLeafType and yet index-only scan is supported.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3728741.1617381471@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-04 14:28:57 -04:00
Tomas Vondra d9c5b9a9ee Fix bug in brin_minmax_multi_union
When calling sort_expanded_ranges() we need to remember the return
value, because the function sorts and also deduplicates the ranges. So
the number of ranges may decrease. brin_minmax_multi_union failed to do
that, which resulted in crashes due to bogus ranges (equal minval/maxval
but not marked as compacted).

Reported-by: Jaime Casanova
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210404052550.GA4376%40ahch-to
2021-04-04 19:36:12 +02:00
Tomas Vondra 4908684dda Add regression test for minmax-multi macaddr8 type
The regression test for BRIN minmax-multi opclasses tested almost all
supported data types, with the exception of macaddr8. So this adds it.
2021-04-04 19:26:55 +02:00
Tomas Vondra 1dad2a5ea3 Fix order of parameters in BRIN minmax-multi calls
The BRIN minmax-multi consistent function incorrectly assumed it can
lookup an operator, and then swap the arguments to get the commutator.
For example <(a,b) would be called as <(b,a) to get >(a,b). This works
when the arguments are of the same type, but with cross-type opclasses
this fails. We can't swap <(float4,float8) arguments, for example.

Fixed by passing arguments in the right order.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJKUy5jLZFLCxyxfT%3DMfK5mtPfSzHA1rVLowR-j4RRsFVvKm7A%40mail.gmail.com
2021-04-04 19:25:41 +02:00
Tomas Vondra e1fbe1181c Fix BRIN minmax-multi distance for inet type
The distance calculation ignored the mask, unlike the inet comparator,
which resulted in negative distance in some cases. Fixed by applying the
mask in brin_minmax_multi_distance_inet. I've considered simply calling
inetmi() to calculate the delta, but that does not consider mask either.

Reviewed-by: Zhihong Yu
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1a0a7b9d-9bda-e3a2-7fa4-88f15042a051%40enterprisedb.com
2021-04-04 19:23:32 +02:00
Tomas Vondra 7262f2421a Fix BRIN minmax-multi distance for timetz type
The distance calculation ignored the time zone, so the result of (b-a)
might have ended negative even if (b > a). Fixed by considering the time
zone difference.

Reported-by: Jaime Casanova
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJKUy5jLZFLCxyxfT%3DMfK5mtPfSzHA1rVLowR-j4RRsFVvKm7A%40mail.gmail.com
2021-04-04 19:22:23 +02:00
Tomas Vondra 2b10e0e3c2 Fix BRIN minmax-multi distance for interval type
The distance calculation for interval type was treating months as having
31 days, which is inconsistent with the interval comparator (using 30
days). Due to this it was possible to get negative distance (b-a) when
(a<b), trigerring an assert.

Fixed by adopting the same logic as interval_cmp_value.

Reported-by: Jaime Casanova
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJKUy5jKH0Xhneau2mNftNPtTy-BVgQfXc8zQkEvRvBHfeUThQ%40mail.gmail.com
2021-04-04 19:19:51 +02:00
Tom Lane 55873a00e3 Improve psql's behavior when the editor is exited without saving.
When editing the previous query buffer, if the editor is exited
without modifying the temp file then clear the query buffer,
rather than re-loading (and probably re-executing) the previous
query buffer.  This reduces the probability of accidentally
re-executing something you didn't intend to.

Similarly, in "\e file", if the file isn't actually modified
then don't load it into the query buffer.  And in "\ef" and
"\ev", if no changes are made then clear the query buffer
instead of loading the function or view definition into it.

Cases where we fail to invoke the editor at all, or it returns
a nonzero status, are treated like the no-file-modification case.

Laurenz Albe, reviewed by Jacob Champion

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0ba3f2a658bac6546d9934ab6ba63a805d46a49b.camel@cybertec.at
2021-04-03 17:38:31 -04:00
Andres Freund 225a22b19e Improve efficiency of wait event reporting, remove proc.h dependency.
pgstat_report_wait_start() and pgstat_report_wait_end() required two
conditional branches so far. One to check if MyProc is NULL, the other to
check if pgstat_track_activities is set. As wait events are used around
comparatively lightweight operations, and are inlined (reducing branch
predictor effectiveness), that's not great.

The dependency on MyProc has a second disadvantage: Low-level subsystems, like
storage/file/fd.c, report wait events, but architecturally it is preferable
for them to not depend on inter-process subsystems like proc.h (defining
PGPROC).  After this change including pgstat.h (nor obviously its
sub-components like backend_status.h, wait_event.h, ...) does not pull in IPC
related headers anymore.

These goals, efficiency and abstraction, are achieved by having
pgstat_report_wait_start/end() not interact with MyProc, but instead a new
my_wait_event_info variable. At backend startup it points to a local variable,
removing the need to check for MyProc being NULL. During process
initialization my_wait_event_info is redirected to MyProc->wait_event_info. At
shutdown this is reversed. Because wait event reporting now does not need to
know about where the wait event is stored, it does not need to know about
PGPROC anymore.

The removal of the branch for checking pgstat_track_activities is simpler:
Don't check anymore. The cost due to the branch are often higher than the
store - and even if not, pgstat_track_activities is rarely disabled.

The main motivator to commit this work now is that removing the (indirect)
pgproc.h include from pgstat.h simplifies a patch to move statistics reporting
to shared memory (which still has a chance to get into 14).

Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210402194458.2vu324hkk2djq6ce@alap3.anarazel.de
2021-04-03 12:03:45 -07:00
Andres Freund e1025044cd Split backend status and progress related functionality out of pgstat.c.
Backend status (supporting pg_stat_activity) and command
progress (supporting pg_stat_progress*) related code is largely
independent from the rest of pgstat.[ch] (supporting views like
pg_stat_all_tables that accumulate data over time). See also
a333476b92.

This commit doesn't rename the function names to make the distinction
from the rest of pgstat_ clearer - that'd be more invasive and not
clearly beneficial. If we were to decide to do such a rename at some
point, it's better done separately from moving the code as well.

Robert's review was of an earlier version.

Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210316195440.twxmlov24rr2nxrg@alap3.anarazel.de
2021-04-03 11:42:52 -07:00
Michael Paquier 8d3a4c3eae Use more verbose matching patterns for errors in SSL TAP tests
The TAP tests of src/test/ssl/ have been using rather generic matching
patterns to check some failure scenarios, like "SSL error" or just
"FATAL".  These have been introduced in 081bfc1.

Those messages are not wrong per se, but when working on the integration
of new SSL libraries it becomes hard to know if those errors are legit
or not, and existing scenarios may fail in incorrect ways.  This commit
makes all those messages more verbose by adding the information
generated by OpenSSL.  Fortunately, the same error messages are used for
all the versions supported on HEAD (checked that after running the tests
from 1.0.1 to 1.1.1), so the change is straight-forward.

Reported-by: Jacob Champion, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/YGU3AxQh0zBMMW8m@paquier.xyz
2021-04-03 20:49:08 +09:00
Michael Paquier e6bdfd9700 Refactor HMAC implementations
Similarly to the cryptohash implementations, this refactors the existing
HMAC code into a single set of APIs that can be plugged with any crypto
libraries PostgreSQL is built with (only OpenSSL currently).  If there
is no such libraries, a fallback implementation is available.  Those new
APIs are designed similarly to the existing cryptohash layer, so there
is no real new design here, with the same logic around buffer bound
checks and memory handling.

HMAC has a dependency on cryptohashes, so all the cryptohash types
supported by cryptohash{_openssl}.c can be used with HMAC.  This
refactoring is an advantage mainly for SCRAM, that included its own
implementation of HMAC with SHA256 without relying on the existing
crypto libraries even if PostgreSQL was built with their support.

This code has been tested on Windows and Linux, with and without
OpenSSL, across all the versions supported on HEAD from 1.1.1 down to
1.0.1.  I have also checked that the implementations are working fine
using some sample results, a custom extension of my own, and doing
cross-checks across different major versions with SCRAM with the client
and the backend.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Bruce Momjian
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/X9m0nkEJEzIPXjeZ@paquier.xyz
2021-04-03 17:30:49 +09:00
Andres Freund 1d9c5d0ce2 Do not rely on pgstat.h to indirectly include storage/ headers.
An upcoming patch might remove the (now indirect) proc.h
include (which in turn includes other headers), and it's cleaner for
the modified files to include their dependencies directly anyway...

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210402194458.2vu324hkk2djq6ce@alap3.anarazel.de
2021-04-02 20:02:47 -07:00
Andres Freund a333476b92 Split wait event related code from pgstat.[ch] into wait_event.[ch].
The wait event related code is independent from the rest of the
pgstat.[ch] code, of nontrivial size and changes on a regular
basis. Put it into its own set of files.

As there doesn't seem to be a good pre-existing directory for code
like this, add src/backend/utils/activity.

Reviewed-By: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210316195440.twxmlov24rr2nxrg@alap3.anarazel.de
2021-04-02 20:02:26 -07:00
David Rowley 1267d9862f Remove useless Asserts in Result Cache code
Testing if an unsigned variable is >= 0 is pretty pointless.

There's likely enough code in remove_cache_entry() to verify the cache
memory accounting is correct in assert enabled builds. These Asserts
were not adding much extra cover, even if they had been checking >= 0 on a
signed variable.

Reported-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210402204734.6mo3nfacnljlicgn@alap3.anarazel.de
2021-04-03 10:41:43 +13:00
Bruce Momjian 84bc2b1752 Use macro MONTHS_PER_YEAR instead of '12' in /ecpg/pgtypeslib
All other places already use MONTHS_PER_YEAR appropriately.

Backpatch-through: 9.6
2021-04-02 16:42:38 -04:00
Thomas Munro c30f54ad73 Detect POLLHUP/POLLRDHUP while running queries.
Provide a new GUC check_client_connection_interval that can be used to
check whether the client connection has gone away, while running very
long queries.  It is disabled by default.

For now this uses a non-standard Linux extension (also adopted by at
least one other OS).  POLLRDHUP is not defined by POSIX, and other OSes
don't have a reliable way to know if a connection was closed without
actually trying to read or write.

In future we might consider trying to send a no-op/heartbeat message
instead, but that could require protocol changes.

Author: Sergey Cherkashin <s.cherkashin@postgrespro.ru>
Author: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tatsuo Ishii <ishii@sraoss.co.jp>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <k.knizhnik@postgrespro.ru>
Reviewed-by: Zhihong Yu <zyu@yugabyte.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Maksim Milyutin <milyutinma@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tsunakawa, Takayuki/綱川 貴之 <tsunakawa.takay@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> (much earlier version)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/77def86b27e41f0efcba411460e929ae%40postgrespro.ru
2021-04-03 09:02:41 +13:00
Fujii Masao 2eb1fc8b1a pg_checksums: Fix progress reporting.
pg_checksums uses two counters, total size and current size,
to calculate the progress. Previously the progress that
pg_checksums reported could not reach 100% at the end.
The cause of this issue was that the sizes of only pages excluding
new ones in each file were counted as the current size
while the size of each file is counted as the total size.
That is, the total size of all new pages could be reported
as the difference between the total size and current size.

This commit fixes this issue by making pg_checksums count
the sizes of all pages including new ones in each file as
the current size.

Back-patch to v12 where progress reporting was added to pg_checksums.

Reported-by: Shinya Kato
Author: Shinya Kato
Reviewed-by: Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TYAPR01MB289656B1ACA0A5E7CAD07BE3C47A9@TYAPR01MB2896.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
2021-04-03 00:07:00 +09:00
Tom Lane 53aafdb9ff Strip file names reported in error messages on Windows, too.
Commit dd136052b established a policy that error message FILE items
should include only the base name of the reporting source file, for
uniformity and succinctness.  We now observe that some Windows compilers
use backslashes in __FILE__ strings, so truncate at backslashes as well.

This is expected to fix some platform variation in the results of the
new libpq_pipeline test module.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3650140.1617372290@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-02 10:43:54 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 1877c9ac3a Fix typo in 6d7a6feac4
Per gripe from Daniel Gustafsson
2021-04-02 10:29:58 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 9c5f67fd62 Add support for NullIfExpr in eval_const_expressions
Author: Hou Zhijie <houzj.fnst@cn.fujitsu.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/7ea5ce773bbc4eea9ff1a381acd3b102@G08CNEXMBPEKD05.g08.fujitsu.local
2021-04-02 11:01:49 +02:00
Fujii Masao 96bdb7e19d Fix pgstat_report_replslot() to use proper data types for its arguments.
The caller of pgstat_report_replslot() passes int64 values to the function.
Also the function stores those values in PgStat_Counter (i.e., int64) fields
of PgStat_MsgReplSlot struct. But previously the function used "int" as
the data types of some arguments for those values, which could lead to
the overflow of values.

To avoid this risk, this commit fixes pgstat_report_replslot() to use
PgStat_Counter type for the arguments. Since they are the statistics counters,
PgStat_Counter, the data type used for counters, is used for them
instead of int64.

Reported-by: Vignesh C
Author: Vignesh C
Reviewed-by: Jeevan Ladhe, Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm080OpG=ZwOb0i8EyChH5SyHAMFWJCKaKTXmrfvJLbgaA@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-02 17:27:31 +09:00
David Rowley a4fac4ffe8 Attempt to fix unstable Result Cache regression tests
force_parallel_mode = regress is causing a few more problems than I
thought.  It seems that both the leader and the single worker can
contribute to the execution. I had mistakenly thought that only the worker
process would do any work.  Since it's not deterministic as to which
of the two processes will get a chance to work on the plan, it seems just
better to disable force_parallel_mode for these tests.  At least doing
this seems better than changing to EXPLAIN only rather than EXPLAIN
ANALYZE.

Additionally, I overlooked the fact that the number of executions of the
sub-plan below a Result Cache will execute a varying number of times
depending on cache eviction.  32-bit machines will use less memory and
evict fewer tuples from the cache.  That results in the subnode being
executed fewer times on 32-bit machines.  Let's just blank out the number
of loops in each node.
2021-04-02 15:25:38 +13:00
David Rowley 9eacee2e62 Add Result Cache executor node (take 2)
Here we add a new executor node type named "Result Cache".  The planner
can include this node type in the plan to have the executor cache the
results from the inner side of parameterized nested loop joins.  This
allows caching of tuples for sets of parameters so that in the event that
the node sees the same parameter values again, it can just return the
cached tuples instead of rescanning the inner side of the join all over
again.  Internally, result cache uses a hash table in order to quickly
find tuples that have been previously cached.

For certain data sets, this can significantly improve the performance of
joins.  The best cases for using this new node type are for join problems
where a large portion of the tuples from the inner side of the join have
no join partner on the outer side of the join.  In such cases, hash join
would have to hash values that are never looked up, thus bloating the hash
table and possibly causing it to multi-batch.  Merge joins would have to
skip over all of the unmatched rows.  If we use a nested loop join with a
result cache, then we only cache tuples that have at least one join
partner on the outer side of the join.  The benefits of using a
parameterized nested loop with a result cache increase when there are
fewer distinct values being looked up and the number of lookups of each
value is large.  Also, hash probes to lookup the cache can be much faster
than the hash probe in a hash join as it's common that the result cache's
hash table is much smaller than the hash join's due to result cache only
caching useful tuples rather than all tuples from the inner side of the
join.  This variation in hash probe performance is more significant when
the hash join's hash table no longer fits into the CPU's L3 cache, but the
result cache's hash table does.  The apparent "random" access of hash
buckets with each hash probe can cause a poor L3 cache hit ratio for large
hash tables.  Smaller hash tables generally perform better.

The hash table used for the cache limits itself to not exceeding work_mem
* hash_mem_multiplier in size.  We maintain a dlist of keys for this cache
and when we're adding new tuples and realize we've exceeded the memory
budget, we evict cache entries starting with the least recently used ones
until we have enough memory to add the new tuples to the cache.

For parameterized nested loop joins, we now consider using one of these
result cache nodes in between the nested loop node and its inner node.  We
determine when this might be useful based on cost, which is primarily
driven off of what the expected cache hit ratio will be.  Estimating the
cache hit ratio relies on having good distinct estimates on the nested
loop's parameters.

For now, the planner will only consider using a result cache for
parameterized nested loop joins.  This works for both normal joins and
also for LATERAL type joins to subqueries.  It is possible to use this new
node for other uses in the future.  For example, to cache results from
correlated subqueries.  However, that's not done here due to some
difficulties obtaining a distinct estimation on the outer plan to
calculate the estimated cache hit ratio.  Currently we plan the inner plan
before planning the outer plan so there is no good way to know if a result
cache would be useful or not since we can't estimate the number of times
the subplan will be called until the outer plan is generated.

The functionality being added here is newly introducing a dependency on
the return value of estimate_num_groups() during the join search.
Previously, during the join search, we only ever needed to perform
selectivity estimations.  With this commit, we need to use
estimate_num_groups() in order to estimate what the hit ratio on the
result cache will be.   In simple terms, if we expect 10 distinct values
and we expect 1000 outer rows, then we'll estimate the hit ratio to be
99%.  Since cache hits are very cheap compared to scanning the underlying
nodes on the inner side of the nested loop join, then this will
significantly reduce the planner's cost for the join.   However, it's
fairly easy to see here that things will go bad when estimate_num_groups()
incorrectly returns a value that's significantly lower than the actual
number of distinct values.  If this happens then that may cause us to make
use of a nested loop join with a result cache instead of some other join
type, such as a merge or hash join.  Our distinct estimations have been
known to be a source of trouble in the past, so the extra reliance on them
here could cause the planner to choose slower plans than it did previous
to having this feature.  Distinct estimations are also fairly hard to
estimate accurately when several tables have been joined already or when a
WHERE clause filters out a set of values that are correlated to the
expressions we're estimating the number of distinct value for.

For now, the costing we perform during query planning for result caches
does put quite a bit of faith in the distinct estimations being accurate.
When these are accurate then we should generally see faster execution
times for plans containing a result cache.  However, in the real world, we
may find that we need to either change the costings to put less trust in
the distinct estimations being accurate or perhaps even disable this
feature by default.  There's always an element of risk when we teach the
query planner to do new tricks that it decides to use that new trick at
the wrong time and causes a regression.  Users may opt to get the old
behavior by turning the feature off using the enable_resultcache GUC.
Currently, this is enabled by default.  It remains to be seen if we'll
maintain that setting for the release.

Additionally, the name "Result Cache" is the best name I could think of
for this new node at the time I started writing the patch.  Nobody seems
to strongly dislike the name. A few people did suggest other names but no
other name seemed to dominate in the brief discussion that there was about
names. Let's allow the beta period to see if the current name pleases
enough people.  If there's some consensus on a better name, then we can
change it before the release.  Please see the 2nd discussion link below
for the discussion on the "Result Cache" name.

Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Andy Fan, Justin Pryzby, Zhihong Yu, Hou Zhijie
Tested-By: Konstantin Knizhnik
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvrPcQyQdWERGYWx8J%2B2DLUNgXu%2BfOSbQ1UscxrunyXyrQ%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvq=yQXr5kqhRviT2RhNKwToaWr9JAN5t+5_PzhuRJ3wvg@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-02 14:10:56 +13:00
Michael Paquier fe246d1c11 Improve stability of test with vacuum_truncate in reloptions.sql
This test has been using a simple VACUUM with pg_relation_size() to
check if a relation gets physically truncated or not, but forgot the
fact that some concurrent activity, like checkpoint buffer writes, could
cause some pages to be skipped.  The second test enabling
vacuum_truncate could fail, seeing a non-empty relation.  The first test
would not have failed, but could finish by testing a behavior different
than the one aimed for.  Both tests gain a FREEZE option, to make the
vacuums more aggressive and prevent page skips.

This is similar to the issues fixed in c2dc1a7.

Author: Arseny Sher
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87tuotr2hh.fsf@ars-thinkpad
backpatch-through: 12
2021-04-02 09:44:42 +09:00
Tom Lane 1ebdec8c03 Rethink handling of pass-by-value leaf datums in SP-GiST.
The existing convention in SP-GiST is that any pass-by-value datatype
is stored in Datum representation, i.e. it's of width sizeof(Datum)
even when typlen is less than that.  This is okay, or at least it's
too late to change it, for prefix datums and node-label datums in inner
(upper) tuples.  But it's problematic for leaf datums, because we'd
prefer those to be stored in Postgres' standard on-disk representation
so that we can easily extend leaf tuples to carry additional "included"
columns.

I believe, however, that we can get away with just up and changing that.
This would be an unacceptable on-disk-format break, but there are two
big mitigating factors:

1. It seems quite unlikely that there are any SP-GiST opclasses out
there that use pass-by-value leaf datatypes.  Certainly none of the
ones in core do, nor has codesearch.debian.net heard of any.  Given
what SP-GiST is good for, it's hard to conceive of a use-case where
the leaf-level values would be both small and fixed-width.  (As an
example, if you wanted to index text values with the leaf level being
just a byte, then every text string would have to be represented
with one level of inner tuple per preceding byte, which would be
horrendously space-inefficient and slow to access.  You always want
to use as few inner-tuple levels as possible, leaving as much as
possible in the leaf values.)

2. Even granting that you have such an index, this change only
breaks things on big-endian machines.  On little-endian, the high
order bytes of the Datum format will now just appear to be alignment
padding space.

So, change the code to store pass-by-value leaf datums in their
usual on-disk form.  Inner-tuple datums are not touched.

This is extracted from a larger patch that intends to add support for
"included" columns.  I'm committing it separately for visibility in
our commit logs.

Pavel Borisov and Tom Lane, reviewed by Andrey Borodin

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALT9ZEFi-vMp4faht9f9Junb1nO3NOSjhpxTmbm1UGLMsLqiEQ@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-01 17:55:17 -04:00
Stephen Frost c9c41c7a33 Rename Default Roles to Predefined Roles
The term 'default roles' wasn't quite apt as these roles aren't able to
be modified or removed after installation, so rename them to be
'Predefined Roles' instead, adding an entry into the newly added
Obsolete Appendix to help users of current releases find the new
documentation.

Bruce Momjian and Stephen Frost

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/157742545062.1149.11052653770497832538%40wrigleys.postgresql.org
and https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20201120211304.GG16415@tamriel.snowman.net
2021-04-01 15:32:06 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera a68a894f01 Fix setvbuf()-induced crash in libpq_pipeline
Windows doesn't like setvbuf(..., _IOLBF) and crashes if you use it,
which has been causing the libpq_pipeline failures all along ... and our
own port.h has known about it for a long time: it offers PG_IOLBF that's
defined to _IONBF on that platform.  Follow its advice.

While at it, get rid of a bogus bitshift that used a constant of the
wrong size.  Decorate the constant as LL to fix.  While at it, remove a
pointless addition that only confused matters.

All as diagnosed by Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3458958.1617302154@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-04-01 16:25:51 -03:00
Tom Lane ec03f2df17 Fix pg_restore's misdesigned code for detecting archive file format.
Despite the clear comments pointing out that the duplicative code
segments in ReadHead() and _discoverArchiveFormat() needed to be
in sync, they were not: the latter did not bother to apply any of
the sanity checks in the former.  We'd missed noticing this partly
because none of those checks would fail in scenarios we customarily
test, and partly because the oversight would be masked if both
segments execute, which they would in cases other than needing to
autodetect the format of a non-seekable stdin source.  However,
in a case meeting all these requirements --- for example, trying
to read a newer-than-supported archive format from non-seekable
stdin --- pg_restore missed applying the version check and would
likely dump core or otherwise misbehave.

The whole thing is silly anyway, because there seems little reason
to duplicate the logic beyond the one-line verification that the
file starts with "PGDMP".  There seems to have been an undocumented
assumption that multiple major formats (major enough to require
separate reader modules) would nonetheless share the first half-dozen
fields of the custom-format header.  This seems unlikely, so let's
fix it by just nuking the duplicate logic in _discoverArchiveFormat().

Also get rid of the pointless attempt to seek back to the start of
the file after successful autodetection.  That wastes cycles and
it means we have four behaviors to verify not two.

Per bug #16951 from Sergey Koposov.  This has been broken for
decades, so back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16951-a4dd68cf0de23048@postgresql.org
2021-04-01 13:34:16 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 91e7c90329 Fix internal extract(timezone_minute) formulas
Through various refactorings over time, the extract(timezone_minute
from time with time zone) and extract(timezone_minute from timestamp
with time zone) implementations ended up with two different but
equally nonsensical formulas by using SECS_PER_MINUTE and
MINS_PER_HOUR interchangeably.  Since those two are of course both the
same number, the formulas do work, but for readability, fix them to be
semantically correct.
2021-04-01 16:12:53 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera dde1a35aee
libpq_pipeline: Must strdup(optarg) to avoid crash
I forgot to strdup() when processing argv[].  Apparently many platforms
hide this mistake from users, but in those that don't you may get a
program crash.  Repair.

Per buildfarm member drongo, which is the only one in all the buildfarm
manifesting a problem here.

While at it, move "numrows" processing out of the line of special cases,
and make it getopt's -r instead.  (A similar thing could be done to
'conninfo', but current use of the program doesn't warrant spending time
on that -- nowhere else we use conninfo in so simplistic a manner.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210401124850.GA19247@alvherre.pgsql
2021-04-01 10:26:20 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas f82de5c46b Do COPY FROM encoding conversion/verification in larger chunks.
This gives a small performance gain, by reducing the number of calls
to the conversion/verification function, and letting it work with
larger inputs. Also, reorganizing the input pipeline makes it easier
to parallelize the input parsing: after the input has been converted
to the database encoding, the next stage of finding the newlines can
be done in parallel, because there cannot be any newline chars
"embedded" in multi-byte characters in the encodings that we support
as server encodings.

This changes behavior in one corner case: if client and server
encodings are the same single-byte encoding (e.g. latin1), previously
the input would not be checked for zero bytes ('\0'). Any fields
containing zero bytes would be truncated at the zero. But if encoding
conversion was needed, the conversion routine would throw an error on
the zero. After this commit, the input is always checked for zeros.

Reviewed-by: John Naylor
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/e7861509-3960-538a-9025-b75a61188e01%40iki.fi
2021-04-01 12:23:40 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas ea1b99a661 Add 'noError' argument to encoding conversion functions.
With the 'noError' argument, you can try to convert a buffer without
knowing the character boundaries beforehand. The functions now need to
return the number of input bytes successfully converted.

This is is a backwards-incompatible change, if you have created a custom
encoding conversion with CREATE CONVERSION. This adds a check to
pg_upgrade for that, refusing the upgrade if there are any user-defined
encoding conversions. Custom conversions are very rare, there are no
commonly used extensions that I know of that uses that feature. No other
objects can depend on conversions, so if you do have one, you can fairly
easily drop it before upgrading, and recreate it after the upgrade with
an updated version.

Add regression tests for built-in encoding conversions. This doesn't cover
every conversion, but it covers all the internal functions in conv.c that
are used to implement the conversions.

Reviewed-by: John Naylor
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/e7861509-3960-538a-9025-b75a61188e01%40iki.fi
2021-04-01 11:45:22 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut e2639a767b Make extract(timetz) tests a bit more interesting
Use a time zone offset with nonzero minutes to make the
timezone_minute test meaningful.
2021-04-01 09:52:03 +02:00
Amit Kapila 4778826532 Ensure to send a prepare after we detect concurrent abort during decoding.
It is possible that while decoding a prepared transaction, it gets aborted
concurrently via a ROLLBACK PREPARED command. In that case, we were
skipping all the changes and directly sending Rollback Prepared when we
find the same in WAL. However, the downstream has no idea of the GID of
such a transaction. So, ensure to send prepare even when a concurrent
abort is detected.

Author: Ajin Cherian
Reviewed-by: Markus Wanner, Amit Kapila
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f82133c6-6055-b400-7922-97dae9f2b50b@enterprisedb.com
2021-04-01 07:57:34 +05:30
Michael Paquier 0d1a33438d Move some client-specific routines from SSLServer to PostgresNode
test_connect_ok() and test_connect_fails() have always been part of the
SSL tests, and check if a connection to the backend should work or not,
and there are sanity checks done on specific error patterns dropped by
libpq if the connection fails.

This was fundamentally wrong on two aspects.  First, SSLServer.pm works
mostly on setting up and changing the SSL configuration of a
PostgresNode, and has really nothing to do with the client.  Second,
the situation became worse in light of b34ca595, where the SSL tests
would finish by using a psql command that may not come from the same
installation as the node set up.

This commit moves those client routines into PostgresNode, making easier
the refactoring of SSLServer to become more SSL-implementation aware.
This can also be reused by the ldap, kerberos and authentication test
suites for connection checks, and a follow-up patch should extend those
interfaces to match with backend log patterns.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan, Daniel Gustafsson, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/YGLKNBf9zyh6+WSt@paquier.xyz
2021-04-01 09:48:17 +09:00
David Rowley 28b3e3905c Revert b6002a796
This removes "Add Result Cache executor node".  It seems that something
weird is going on with the tracking of cache hits and misses as
highlighted by many buildfarm animals.  It's not yet clear what the
problem is as other parts of the plan indicate that the cache did work
correctly, it's just the hits and misses that were being reported as 0.

This is especially a bad time to have the buildfarm so broken, so
reverting before too many more animals go red.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvq_hydhfovm4=izgWs+C5HqEeRScjMbOgbpC-jRAeK3Yw@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-01 13:33:23 +13:00
David Rowley b6002a796d Add Result Cache executor node
Here we add a new executor node type named "Result Cache".  The planner
can include this node type in the plan to have the executor cache the
results from the inner side of parameterized nested loop joins.  This
allows caching of tuples for sets of parameters so that in the event that
the node sees the same parameter values again, it can just return the
cached tuples instead of rescanning the inner side of the join all over
again.  Internally, result cache uses a hash table in order to quickly
find tuples that have been previously cached.

For certain data sets, this can significantly improve the performance of
joins.  The best cases for using this new node type are for join problems
where a large portion of the tuples from the inner side of the join have
no join partner on the outer side of the join.  In such cases, hash join
would have to hash values that are never looked up, thus bloating the hash
table and possibly causing it to multi-batch.  Merge joins would have to
skip over all of the unmatched rows.  If we use a nested loop join with a
result cache, then we only cache tuples that have at least one join
partner on the outer side of the join.  The benefits of using a
parameterized nested loop with a result cache increase when there are
fewer distinct values being looked up and the number of lookups of each
value is large.  Also, hash probes to lookup the cache can be much faster
than the hash probe in a hash join as it's common that the result cache's
hash table is much smaller than the hash join's due to result cache only
caching useful tuples rather than all tuples from the inner side of the
join.  This variation in hash probe performance is more significant when
the hash join's hash table no longer fits into the CPU's L3 cache, but the
result cache's hash table does.  The apparent "random" access of hash
buckets with each hash probe can cause a poor L3 cache hit ratio for large
hash tables.  Smaller hash tables generally perform better.

The hash table used for the cache limits itself to not exceeding work_mem
* hash_mem_multiplier in size.  We maintain a dlist of keys for this cache
and when we're adding new tuples and realize we've exceeded the memory
budget, we evict cache entries starting with the least recently used ones
until we have enough memory to add the new tuples to the cache.

For parameterized nested loop joins, we now consider using one of these
result cache nodes in between the nested loop node and its inner node.  We
determine when this might be useful based on cost, which is primarily
driven off of what the expected cache hit ratio will be.  Estimating the
cache hit ratio relies on having good distinct estimates on the nested
loop's parameters.

For now, the planner will only consider using a result cache for
parameterized nested loop joins.  This works for both normal joins and
also for LATERAL type joins to subqueries.  It is possible to use this new
node for other uses in the future.  For example, to cache results from
correlated subqueries.  However, that's not done here due to some
difficulties obtaining a distinct estimation on the outer plan to
calculate the estimated cache hit ratio.  Currently we plan the inner plan
before planning the outer plan so there is no good way to know if a result
cache would be useful or not since we can't estimate the number of times
the subplan will be called until the outer plan is generated.

The functionality being added here is newly introducing a dependency on
the return value of estimate_num_groups() during the join search.
Previously, during the join search, we only ever needed to perform
selectivity estimations.  With this commit, we need to use
estimate_num_groups() in order to estimate what the hit ratio on the
result cache will be.   In simple terms, if we expect 10 distinct values
and we expect 1000 outer rows, then we'll estimate the hit ratio to be
99%.  Since cache hits are very cheap compared to scanning the underlying
nodes on the inner side of the nested loop join, then this will
significantly reduce the planner's cost for the join.   However, it's
fairly easy to see here that things will go bad when estimate_num_groups()
incorrectly returns a value that's significantly lower than the actual
number of distinct values.  If this happens then that may cause us to make
use of a nested loop join with a result cache instead of some other join
type, such as a merge or hash join.  Our distinct estimations have been
known to be a source of trouble in the past, so the extra reliance on them
here could cause the planner to choose slower plans than it did previous
to having this feature.  Distinct estimations are also fairly hard to
estimate accurately when several tables have been joined already or when a
WHERE clause filters out a set of values that are correlated to the
expressions we're estimating the number of distinct value for.

For now, the costing we perform during query planning for result caches
does put quite a bit of faith in the distinct estimations being accurate.
When these are accurate then we should generally see faster execution
times for plans containing a result cache.  However, in the real world, we
may find that we need to either change the costings to put less trust in
the distinct estimations being accurate or perhaps even disable this
feature by default.  There's always an element of risk when we teach the
query planner to do new tricks that it decides to use that new trick at
the wrong time and causes a regression.  Users may opt to get the old
behavior by turning the feature off using the enable_resultcache GUC.
Currently, this is enabled by default.  It remains to be seen if we'll
maintain that setting for the release.

Additionally, the name "Result Cache" is the best name I could think of
for this new node at the time I started writing the patch.  Nobody seems
to strongly dislike the name. A few people did suggest other names but no
other name seemed to dominate in the brief discussion that there was about
names. Let's allow the beta period to see if the current name pleases
enough people.  If there's some consensus on a better name, then we can
change it before the release.  Please see the 2nd discussion link below
for the discussion on the "Result Cache" name.

Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Andy Fan, Justin Pryzby, Zhihong Yu
Tested-By: Konstantin Knizhnik
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvrPcQyQdWERGYWx8J%2B2DLUNgXu%2BfOSbQ1UscxrunyXyrQ%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvq=yQXr5kqhRviT2RhNKwToaWr9JAN5t+5_PzhuRJ3wvg@mail.gmail.com
2021-04-01 12:32:22 +13:00
Alvaro Herrera 6ec578e601
Remove setvbuf() call from PQtrace()
It's misplaced there -- it's not libpq's output stream to tweak in that
way.  In particular, POSIX says that it has to be called before any
other operation on the file, so if a stream previously used by the
calling application, bad things may happen.

Put setvbuf() in libpq_pipeline for good measure.

Also, reduce fopen(..., "w+") to just fopen(..., "w") in
libpq_pipeline.c.  It's not clear that this fixes anything, but we don't
use w+ anywhere.

Per complaints from Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3337422.1617229905@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-03-31 20:11:51 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera aba24b51cc
Initialize conn->Pfdebug to NULL when creating a connection
Failing to do this can cause a crash, and I suspect is what has happened
with a buildfarm member reporting mysterious failures.

This is an ancient bug, but I'm not backpatching since evidently nobody
cares about PQtrace in older releases.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3333908.1617227066@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-03-31 19:19:57 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera a6d3dea8e5
Disable force_parallel_mode in libpq_pipeline
Some buildfarm animals with force_parallel_mode=regress were failing
this test because the error is reported in a parallel worker quicker
than the rows that succeed.

Take the opportunity to move the SET of lc_messages out of the traced
section, because it's not very interesting.

Diagnosed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3304521.1617221724@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-03-31 18:45:25 -03:00
Tom Lane 9e20406dd8 Fix unportable use of isprint().
We must cast the arguments of <ctype.h> functions to unsigned
char to avoid problems where char is signed.

Speaking of which, considering that this *is* a <ctype.h> function,
it's rather remarkable that we aren't seeing more complaints about
not having included that header.

Per buildfarm.
2021-03-31 17:14:16 -04:00
Tom Lane f1be740a99 Fix portability and safety issues in pqTraceFormatTimestamp.
Remove confusion between time_t and pg_time_t; neither
gettimeofday() nor localtime() deal in the latter.
libpq indeed has no business using <pgtime.h> at all.

Use snprintf not sprintf, to ensure we can't overrun the
supplied buffer.  (Unlikely, but let's be safe.)

Per buildfarm.
2021-03-31 17:00:30 -04:00
Tom Lane c545e9524d Don't prematurely cram a value into a short int.
Since a4d75c86b, some buildfarm members have been warning that
		Assert(attnum <= MaxAttrNumber);
is useless if attnum is an AttrNumber.  I'm not certain how plausible
it is that the value coming out of the bitmap could actually exceed
MaxAttrNumber, but we seem to have thought that that was possible back
in 7300a6995.  Revert the intermediate variable to int so that we have
the same overflow protection as before.
2021-03-31 16:45:24 -04:00
Tom Lane 522d1a89f8 Suppress compiler warning in libpq_pipeline.c.
Some compilers seem to be concerned about the possibility that
recv_step is not any of the defined enum values.  Silence
warnings about uninitialized cmdtag in a different way than
I did in 9fb9691a8.
2021-03-31 15:30:04 -04:00
Tom Lane 6197db5340 Improve style of some replication-related error messages.
Put the remote end's error message into the primary error string,
instead of relegating it to errdetail().  Although this could end up
being awkward if the remote sends us a really long error message,
it seems more in keeping with our message style guidelines, and more
helpful in situations where the errdetail could get dropped.

Peter Smith

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHut+Ps-Qv2yQceCwobQDP0aJOkfDzRFrOaR6+2Op2K=WHGeWg@mail.gmail.com
2021-03-31 15:25:53 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera db973ffb3c
Fix some libpq_pipeline test problems
Test pipeline_abort was not checking that it got the rows it expected in
one mode; make it do so.  This doesn't fix the actual problem (no idea
what that is, yet) but at least it should make it more obvious rather
than being visible only as a difference in the trace output.

While at it, fix other infelicities in the test:

* I reversed the order of result vs. expected in like().

* The output traces from -t are being put in the log dir, which means
the buildfarm script uselessly captures them.  Put them in a separate
dir tmp_check/traces instead, to avoid cluttering the buildfarm results.

* Test pipelined_insert was using too large a row count.  Reduce that a
tad and add a filler column to make each insert a little bulkier, while
still keeping enough that a buffer is filled and we have to switch mode.
2021-03-31 15:14:23 -03:00
Joe Conway b12bd4869b Fix has_column_privilege function corner case
According to the comments, when an invalid or dropped column oid is passed
to has_column_privilege(), the intention has always been to return NULL.
However, when the caller had table level privilege the invalid/missing
column was never discovered, because table permissions were checked first.

Fix that by introducing extended versions of pg_attribute_acl(check|mask)
and pg_class_acl(check|mask) which take a new argument, is_missing. When
is_missing is NULL, the old behavior is preserved. But when is_missing is
passed by the caller, no ERROR is thrown for dropped or missing
columns/relations, and is_missing is flipped to true. This in turn allows
has_column_privilege to check for column privileges first, providing the
desired semantics.

Not backpatched since it is a user visible behavioral change with no previous
complaints, and the fix is a bit on the invasive side.

Author: Joe Conway
Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Reported by: Ian Barwick
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/9b5f4311-157b-4164-7fe7-077b4fe8ed84%40joeconway.com
2021-03-31 13:55:25 -04:00
Tom Lane 86dc90056d Rework planning and execution of UPDATE and DELETE.
This patch makes two closely related sets of changes:

1. For UPDATE, the subplan of the ModifyTable node now only delivers
the new values of the changed columns (i.e., the expressions computed
in the query's SET clause) plus row identity information such as CTID.
ModifyTable must re-fetch the original tuple to merge in the old
values of any unchanged columns.  The core advantage of this is that
the changed columns are uniform across all tables of an inherited or
partitioned target relation, whereas the other columns might not be.
A secondary advantage, when the UPDATE involves joins, is that less
data needs to pass through the plan tree.  The disadvantage of course
is an extra fetch of each tuple to be updated.  However, that seems to
be very nearly free in context; even worst-case tests don't show it to
add more than a couple percent to the total query cost.  At some point
it might be interesting to combine the re-fetch with the tuple access
that ModifyTable must do anyway to mark the old tuple dead; but that
would require a good deal of refactoring and it seems it wouldn't buy
all that much, so this patch doesn't attempt it.

2. For inherited UPDATE/DELETE, instead of generating a separate
subplan for each target relation, we now generate a single subplan
that is just exactly like a SELECT's plan, then stick ModifyTable
on top of that.  To let ModifyTable know which target relation a
given incoming row refers to, a tableoid junk column is added to
the row identity information.  This gets rid of the horrid hack
that was inheritance_planner(), eliminating O(N^2) planning cost
and memory consumption in cases where there were many unprunable
target relations.

Point 2 of course requires point 1, so that there is a uniform
definition of the non-junk columns to be returned by the subplan.
We can't insist on uniform definition of the row identity junk
columns however, if we want to keep the ability to have both
plain and foreign tables in a partitioning hierarchy.  Since
it wouldn't scale very far to have every child table have its
own row identity column, this patch includes provisions to merge
similar row identity columns into one column of the subplan result.
In particular, we can merge the whole-row Vars typically used as
row identity by FDWs into one column by pretending they are type
RECORD.  (It's still okay for the actual composite Datums to be
labeled with the table's rowtype OID, though.)

There is more that can be done to file down residual inefficiencies
in this patch, but it seems to be committable now.

FDW authors should note several API changes:

* The argument list for AddForeignUpdateTargets() has changed, and so
has the method it must use for adding junk columns to the query.  Call
add_row_identity_var() instead of manipulating the parse tree directly.
You might want to reconsider exactly what you're adding, too.

* PlanDirectModify() must now work a little harder to find the
ForeignScan plan node; if the foreign table is part of a partitioning
hierarchy then the ForeignScan might not be the direct child of
ModifyTable.  See postgres_fdw for sample code.

* To check whether a relation is a target relation, it's no
longer sufficient to compare its relid to root->parse->resultRelation.
Instead, check it against all_result_relids or leaf_result_relids,
as appropriate.

Amit Langote and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqHpHdqdDn48yCEhynnniahH78rwcrv1rEX65-fsZGBOLQ@mail.gmail.com
2021-03-31 11:52:37 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 055fee7eb4 Allow an alias to be attached to a JOIN ... USING
This allows something like

    SELECT ... FROM t1 JOIN t2 USING (a, b, c) AS x

where x has the columns a, b, c and unlike a regular alias it does not
hide the range variables of the tables being joined t1 and t2.

Per SQL:2016 feature F404 "Range variable for common column names".

Reviewed-by: Vik Fearing <vik.fearing@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/454638cf-d563-ab76-a585-2564428062af@2ndquadrant.com
2021-03-31 17:10:50 +02:00
Etsuro Fujita 27e1f14563 Add support for asynchronous execution.
This implements asynchronous execution, which runs multiple parts of a
non-parallel-aware Append concurrently rather than serially to improve
performance when possible.  Currently, the only node type that can be
run concurrently is a ForeignScan that is an immediate child of such an
Append.  In the case where such ForeignScans access data on different
remote servers, this would run those ForeignScans concurrently, and
overlap the remote operations to be performed simultaneously, so it'll
improve the performance especially when the operations involve
time-consuming ones such as remote join and remote aggregation.

We may extend this to other node types such as joins or aggregates over
ForeignScans in the future.

This also adds the support for postgres_fdw, which is enabled by the
table-level/server-level option "async_capable".  The default is false.

Robert Haas, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Thomas Munro, and myself.  This commit
is mostly based on the patch proposed by Robert Haas, but also uses
stuff from the patch proposed by Kyotaro Horiguchi and from the patch
proposed by Thomas Munro.  Reviewed by Kyotaro Horiguchi, Konstantin
Knizhnik, Andrey Lepikhov, Movead Li, Thomas Munro, Justin Pryzby, and
others.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BTgmoaXQEt4tZ03FtQhnzeDEMzBck%2BLrni0UWHVVgOTnA6C1w%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGLBRyu0rHrDCMC4%3DRn3252gogyp1SjOgG8SEKKZv%3DFwfQ%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20200228.170650.667613673625155850.horikyota.ntt%40gmail.com
2021-03-31 18:45:00 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 66392d3965 Add p_names field to ParseNamespaceItem
ParseNamespaceItem had a wired-in assumption that p_rte->eref
describes the table and column aliases exposed by the nsitem.  This
relaxes this by creating a separate p_names field in an nsitem.  This
is mainly preparation for a patch for JOIN USING aliases, but it saves
one indirection in common code paths, so it's possibly a win on its
own.

Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/785329.1616455091@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-03-31 10:52:37 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 91c5a8caaa Add errhint_plural() function and make use of it
Similar to existing errmsg_plural() and errdetail_plural().  Some
errhint() calls hadn't received the proper plural treatment yet.
2021-03-31 09:16:25 +02:00
Noah Misch 0ff8bbdee1 Accept slightly-filled pages for tuples larger than fillfactor.
We always inserted a larger-than-fillfactor tuple into a newly-extended
page, even when existing pages were empty or contained nothing but an
unused line pointer.  This was unnecessary relation extension.  Start
tolerating page usage up to 1/8 the maximum space that could be taken up
by line pointers.  This is somewhat arbitrary, but it should allow more
cases to reuse pages.  This has no effect on tables with fillfactor=100
(the default).

John Naylor and Floris van Nee.  Reviewed by Matthias van de Meent.
Reported by Floris van Nee.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6e263217180649339720afe2176c50aa@opammb0562.comp.optiver.com
2021-03-30 18:53:44 -07:00
Michael Paquier 7ef64e7e72 Fix comment in parsenodes.h
CreateStmt->inhRelations is a list of RangeVars, but a comment was
incorrect about that.

Author: Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210330123015.yzekhz5sweqbgxdr@nol
2021-03-31 09:35:58 +09:00
Michael Paquier 6568cef26e Add support for --extension in pg_dump
When specified, only extensions matching the given pattern are included
in dumps.  Similarly to --table and --schema, when --strict-names is
used,  a perfect match is required.  Also, like the two other options,
this new option offers no guarantee that dependent objects have been
dumped, so a restore may fail on a clean database.

Tests are added in test_pg_dump/, checking after a set of positive and
negative cases, with or without an extension's contents added to the
dump generated.

Author: Guillaume Lelarge
Reviewed-by: David Fetter, Tom Lane, Michael Paquier, Asif Rehman,
Julien Rouhaud
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAECtzeXOt4cnMU5+XMZzxBPJ_wu76pNy6HZKPRBL-j7yj1E4+g@mail.gmail.com
2021-03-31 09:12:34 +09:00
Tom Lane 65158f497a Remove small inefficiency in ExecARDeleteTriggers/ExecARUpdateTriggers.
Whilst poking at nodeModifyTable.c, I chanced to notice that while
its calls to ExecBR*Triggers and ExecIR*Triggers are protected by
tests to see if there are any relevant triggers to fire, its calls
to ExecAR*Triggers are not; the latter functions do the equivalent
tests themselves.  This seems possibly reasonable given the more
complex conditions involved, but what's less reasonable is that
the ExecAR* functions aren't careful to do no work when there is
no work to be done.  ExecARInsertTriggers gets this right, but the
other two will both force creation of a slot that the query may
have no use for.  ExecARUpdateTriggers additionally performed a
usually-useless ExecClearTuple() on that slot.  This is probably
all pretty microscopic in real workloads, but a cycle shaved is a
cycle earned.
2021-03-30 20:01:31 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 7bebd0d009
libpq_pipeline: add PQtrace() support and tests
The libpq_pipeline program recently introduced by commit acb7e4eb6b
is well equipped to test the PQtrace() functionality, so let's make it
do that.

Author: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210327192812.GA25115@alvherre.pgsql
2021-03-30 20:33:04 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 198b3716db
Improve PQtrace() output format
Transform the PQtrace output format from its ancient (and mostly
useless) byte-level output format to a logical-message-level output,
making it much more usable.  This implementation allows the printing
code to be written (as it indeed was) by looking at the protocol
documentation, which gives more confidence that the three (docs, trace
code and actual code) actually match.

Author: 岩田 彩 (Aya Iwata) <iwata.aya@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: 綱川 貴之 (Takayuki Tsunakawa) <tsunakawa.takay@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Kirk Jamison <k.jamison@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Reviewed-by: 黒田 隼人 (Hayato Kuroda) <kuroda.hayato@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: "Nagaura, Ryohei" <nagaura.ryohei@jp.fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryo Matsumura <matsumura.ryo@fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Greg Nancarrow <gregn4422@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jim Doty <jdoty@pivotal.io>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/71E660EB361DF14299875B198D4CE5423DE3FBA4@g01jpexmbkw25
2021-03-30 20:12:34 -03:00
Bruce Momjian 5da9868ed9 In messages, use singular nouns for -1, like we do for +1.
This outputs "-1 year", not "-1 years".

Reported-by: neverov.max@gmail.com

Bug: 16939

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16939-cceeb03fb72736ee@postgresql.org
2021-03-30 18:34:27 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 6131ffc43f Add tests for date_part of epoch near upper bound of timestamp range
This exercises a special case in the implementations of
date_part('epoch', timestamp[tz]) that was previously not tested.
2021-03-30 22:05:18 +02:00
Stephen Frost 4753ef37e0 Use a WaitLatch for vacuum/autovacuum sleeping
Instead of using pg_usleep() in vacuum_delay_point(), use a WaitLatch.
This has the advantage that we will realize if the postmaster has been
killed since the last time we decided to sleep while vacuuming.

Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFh8B=kcdk8k-Y21RfXPu5dX=bgPqJ8TC3p_qxR_ygdBS=JN5w@mail.gmail.com
2021-03-30 12:52:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 54bb91c30e Further tweaking of pg_dump's handling of default_toast_compression.
As committed in bbe0a81db, pg_dump from a pre-v14 server effectively
acts as though you'd said --no-toast-compression.  I think the right
thing is for it to act as though default_toast_compression is set to
"pglz", instead, so that the tables' toast compression behavior is
preserved.  You can always get the other behavior, if you want that,
by giving the switch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1112852.1616609702@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-03-30 10:57:57 -04:00
David Rowley ed934d4fa3 Allow estimate_num_groups() to pass back further details about the estimation
Here we add a new output parameter to estimate_num_groups() to allow it to
inform the caller of additional, possibly useful information about the
estimation.

The new output parameter is a struct that currently contains just a single
field with a set of flags.  This was done rather than having the flags as
an output parameter to allow future fields to be added without having to
change the signature of the function at a later date when we want to pass
back further information that might not be suitable to store in the flags
field.

It seems reasonable that one day in the future that the planner would want
to know more about the estimation. For example, how many individual sets
of statistics was the estimation generated from?  The planner may want to
take that into account if we ever want to consider risks as well as costs
when generating plans.

For now, there's only 1 flag we set in the flags field.  This is to
indicate if the estimation fell back on using the hard-coded constants in
any part of the estimation. Callers may like to change their behavior if
this is set, and this gives them the ability to do so.  Callers may pass
the flag pointer as NULL if they have no interest in obtaining any
additional information about the estimate.

We're not adding any actual usages of these flags here.  Some follow-up
commits will make use of this feature.  Additionally, we're also not
making any changes to add support for clauselist_selectivity() and
clauselist_selectivity_ext().  However, if this is required in the future
then the same struct being added here should be fine to use as a new
output argument for those functions too.

Author: David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvqQqpk=1W-G_ds7A9CsXX3BggWj_7okinzkLVhDubQzjA@mail.gmail.com
2021-03-30 20:52:46 +13:00
David Rowley efd9d92bb3 Fix compiler warning in unistr function
Some compilers are not aware that elog/ereport ERROR does not return.
2021-03-30 20:28:09 +13:00
David Rowley ff53d7b159 Allow users of simplehash.h to perform direct deletions
Previously simplehash.h only exposed a method to perform a hash table
delete using the hash table key. This meant that the delete function had
to perform a hash lookup in order to find the entry to delete.  Here we
add a new function so that users of simplehash.h can perform a hash delete
directly using the entry pointer, thus saving the hash lookup.

An upcoming patch that uses simplehash.h already has performed the hash
lookup so already has the entry pointer.  This change will allow the
code in that patch to perform the hash delete without the code in
simplehash.h having to perform an additional hash lookup.

Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAApHDvqFLXXge153WmPsjke5VGOSt7Ez0yD0c7eBXLfmWxs3Kw@mail.gmail.com
2021-03-30 19:56:50 +13:00
Peter Eisentraut bc9f1afdeb Add upper boundary tests for timestamp and timestamptz types
The existing regression tests only tested the lower boundary of the
range supported by the timestamp and timestamptz types because "The
upper boundary differs between integer and float timestamps, so no
check".  Since this is obsolete, add similar tests for the upper
boundary.
2021-03-30 08:46:34 +02:00
Amit Kapila f64ea6dc5c Add a xid argument to the filter_prepare callback for output plugins.
Along with gid, this provides a different way to identify the transaction.
The users that use xid in some way to prepare the transactions can use it
to filter prepare transactions. The later commands COMMIT PREPARED or
ROLLBACK PREPARED carries both identifiers, providing an output plugin the
choice of what to use.

Author: Markus Wanner
Reviewed-by: Vignesh C, Amit Kapila
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ee280000-7355-c4dc-e47b-2436e7be959c@enterprisedb.com
2021-03-30 10:34:43 +05:30
Alvaro Herrera 8d645a116e
psql: call clearerr() just before printing
We were never doing clearerr() on the output stream, which results in a
message being printed after each result once an EOF is seen:

could not print result table: Success

This message was added by commit b03436994b (in the pg13 era); before
that, the error indicator would never be examined.  So backpatch only
that far back, even though the actual bug (to wit: the fact that the
error indicator is never cleared) is older.
2021-03-29 18:34:39 -03:00
David Rowley af527705ed Adjust design of per-worker parallel seqscan data struct
The design of the data structures which allow storage of the per-worker
memory during parallel seq scans were not ideal. The work done in
56788d215 required an additional data structure to allow workers to
remember the range of pages that had been allocated to them for
processing during a parallel seqscan.  That commit added a void pointer
field to TableScanDescData to allow heapam to store the per-worker
allocation information.  However putting the field there made very little
sense given that we have AM specific structs for that, e.g.
HeapScanDescData.

Here we remove the void pointer field from TableScanDescData and add a
dedicated field for this purpose to HeapScanDescData.

Previously we also allocated memory for this parallel per-worker data for
all scans, regardless if it was a parallel scan or not.  This was just a
wasted allocation for non-parallel scans, so here we make the allocation
conditional on the scan being parallel.

Also, add previously missing pfree() to free the per-worker data in
heap_endscan().

Reported-by: Andres Freund
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20210317023101.anvejcfotwka6gaa@alap3.anarazel.de
2021-03-30 10:17:09 +13:00
Andrew Dunstan 6d7a6feac4 Allow matching the DN of a client certificate for authentication
Currently we only recognize the Common Name (CN) of a certificate's
subject to be matched against the user name. Thus certificates with
subjects '/OU=eng/CN=fred' and '/OU=sales/CN=fred' will have the same
connection rights. This patch provides an option to match the whole
Distinguished Name (DN) instead of just the CN. On any hba line using
client certificate identity, there is an option 'clientname' which can
have values of 'DN' or 'CN'. The default is 'CN', the current procedure.

The DN is matched against the RFC2253 formatted DN, which looks like
'CN=fred,OU=eng'.

This facility of probably best used in conjunction with an ident map.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/92e70110-9273-d93c-5913-0bccb6562740@dunslane.net

Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier, Daniel Gustafsson, Jacob Champion
2021-03-29 15:49:39 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut efcc7572f5 Clean up date_part tests a bit
Some tests for timestamp and timestamptz were in the date.sql test
file.  Move them to their appropriate files, or drop tests cases that
were already present there.
2021-03-29 17:53:30 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut f37fec837c Add unistr function
This allows decoding a string with Unicode escape sequences.  It is
similar to Unicode escape strings, but offers some more flexibility.

Author: Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Asif Rehman <asifr.rehman@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAFj8pRA5GnKT+gDVwbVRH2ep451H_myBt+NTz8RkYUARE9+qOQ@mail.gmail.com
2021-03-29 11:56:53 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut ebedd0c78f Reset standard_conforming_strings in strings test
After some tests relating to standard_conforming_strings behavior, the
value was not reset to the default value.  Therefore, the rest of the
tests in that file ran with the nondefault setting, which affected the
results of some tests.  For clarity, reset the value and run the rest
of the tests with the default setting again.
2021-03-29 08:40:39 +02:00
Peter Geoghegan 30aaab26e5 PageAddItemExtended(): Add LP_UNUSED assertion.
Assert that LP_UNUSED items have no storage.  If it's worth having
defensive code in non-assert builds then it's worth having an assertion
as well.
2021-03-28 20:10:02 -07:00
David Rowley f58b230ed0 Cache if PathTarget and RestrictInfos contain volatile functions
Here we aim to reduce duplicate work done by contain_volatile_functions()
by caching whether PathTargets and RestrictInfos contain any volatile
functions the first time contain_volatile_functions() is called for them.
Any future calls for these nodes just use the cached value rather than
going to the trouble of recursively checking the sub-node all over again.
Thanks to Tom Lane for the idea.

Any locations in the code which make changes to a PathTarget or
RestrictInfo which could change the outcome of the volatility check must
change the cached value back to VOLATILITY_UNKNOWN again.
contain_volatile_functions() is the only code in charge of setting the
cache value to either VOLATILITY_VOLATILE or VOLATILITY_NOVOLATILE.

Some existing code does benefit from this additional caching, however,
this change is mainly aimed at an upcoming patch that must check for
volatility during the join search.  Repeated volatility checks in that
case can become very expensive when the join search contains more than a
few relations.

Author: David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3795226.1614059027@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-03-29 14:55:26 +13:00
Tomas Vondra 2a058e938c Stabilize stats_ext test with other collations
The tests used string concatenation to test statistics on expressions,
but that made the tests locale-dependent, e.g. because the ordering of
'11' and '1X' depends on the collation. This affected both the estimated
and actual row couts, breaking some of the tests.

Fixed by replacing the string concatenation with upper() function call,
so that the text values contain only digits.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/b650920b-2767-fbc3-c87a-cb8b5d693cbf%40enterprisedb.com
2021-03-27 18:26:56 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 8df2f37114 Improve consistency of SQL code capitalization 2021-03-27 10:17:12 +01:00
Tomas Vondra a4d75c86bf Extended statistics on expressions
Allow defining extended statistics on expressions, not just just on
simple column references.  With this commit, expressions are supported
by all existing extended statistics kinds, improving the same types of
estimates. A simple example may look like this:

  CREATE TABLE t (a int);
  CREATE STATISTICS s ON mod(a,10), mod(a,20) FROM t;
  ANALYZE t;

The collected statistics are useful e.g. to estimate queries with those
expressions in WHERE or GROUP BY clauses:

  SELECT * FROM t WHERE mod(a,10) = 0 AND mod(a,20) = 0;

  SELECT 1 FROM t GROUP BY mod(a,10), mod(a,20);

This introduces new internal statistics kind 'e' (expressions) which is
built automatically when the statistics object definition includes any
expressions. This represents single-expression statistics, as if there
was an expression index (but without the index maintenance overhead).
The statistics is stored in pg_statistics_ext_data as an array of
composite types, which is possible thanks to 79f6a942bd.

CREATE STATISTICS allows building statistics on a single expression, in
which case in which case it's not possible to specify statistics kinds.

A new system view pg_stats_ext_exprs can be used to display expression
statistics, similarly to pg_stats and pg_stats_ext views.

ALTER TABLE ... ALTER COLUMN ... TYPE now treats indexes the same way it
treats indexes, i.e. it drops and recreates the statistics. This means
all statistics are reset, and we no longer try to preserve at least the
functional dependencies. This should not be a major issue in practice,
as the functional dependencies actually rely on per-column statistics,
which were always reset anyway.

Author: Tomas Vondra
Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby, Dean Rasheed, Zhihong Yu
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ad7891d2-e90c-b446-9fe2-7419143847d7%40enterprisedb.com
2021-03-27 00:01:11 +01:00
Tomas Vondra 98376c18f1 Reduce duration of stats_ext regression tests
The regression tests of extended statistics were taking a fair amount of
time, due to using fairly large data sets with a couple thousand rows.
So far this was fine, but with tests for statistics on expressions the
duration would get a bit excessive.  So reduce the size of some of the
tests that will be used to test expressions, to keep the duration under
control.  Done in a separate commit before adding the statistics on
expressions, to make it clear which estimates are expected to change.

Author: Tomas Vondra
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ad7891d2-e90c-b446-9fe2-7419143847d7%40enterprisedb.com
2021-03-26 23:00:47 +01:00
Tomas Vondra 33e52ad9a3 Fix ndistinct estimates with system attributes
When estimating the number of groups using extended statistics, the code
was discarding information about system attributes. This led to strange
situation that

    SELECT 1 FROM t GROUP BY ctid;

could have produced higher estimate (equal to pg_class.reltuples) than

    SELECT 1 FROM t GROUP BY a, b, ctid;

with extended statistics on (a,b). Fixed by retaining information about
the system attribute.

Backpatch all the way to 10, where extended statistics were introduced.

Author: Tomas Vondra
Backpatch-through: 10
2021-03-26 22:34:58 +01:00
Noah Misch a14a0118a1 Add "pg_database_owner" default role.
Membership consists, implicitly, of the current database owner.  Expect
use in template databases.  Once pg_database_owner has rights within a
template, each owner of a database instantiated from that template will
exercise those rights.

Reviewed by John Naylor.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20201228043148.GA1053024@rfd.leadboat.com
2021-03-26 10:42:17 -07:00
Noah Misch f687bf61ed Merge similar algorithms into roles_is_member_of().
The next commit would have complicated two or three algorithms, so take
this opportunity to consolidate.  No functional changes.

Reviewed by John Naylor.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20201228043148.GA1053024@rfd.leadboat.com
2021-03-26 10:42:16 -07:00
Tomas Vondra 73b96bad4a Fix alignment in BRIN minmax-multi deserialization
The deserialization failed to ensure correct alignment, as it assumed it
can simply point into the serialized value. The serialization however
ignores alignment and copies just the significant bytes in order to make
the result as small as possible. This caused failures on systems that
are sensitive to mialigned addresses, like sparc, or with address
sanitizer enabled.

Fixed by copying the serialized data to ensure proper alignment. While
at it, fix an issue with serialization on big endian machines, using the
same store_att_byval/fetch_att trick as extended statistics.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/0c8c3304-d3dd-5e29-d5ac-b50589a23c8c%40enterprisedb.com
2021-03-26 16:48:36 +01:00
Tomas Vondra ab596105b5 BRIN minmax-multi indexes
Adds BRIN opclasses similar to the existing minmax, except that instead
of summarizing the page range into a single [min,max] range, the summary
consists of multiple ranges and/or points, allowing gaps. This allows
more efficient handling of data with poor correlation to physical
location within the table and/or outlier values, for which the regular
minmax opclassed tend to work poorly.

It's possible to specify the number of values kept for each page range,
either as a single point or an interval boundary.

  CREATE TABLE t (a int);
  CREATE INDEX ON t
   USING brin (a int4_minmax_multi_ops(values_per_range=16));

When building the summary, the values are combined into intervals with
the goal to minimize the "covering" (sum of interval lengths), using a
support procedure computing distance between two values.

Bump catversion, due to various catalog changes.

Author: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@postgresql.org>
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Korotkov <aekorotkov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Sokolov Yura <y.sokolov@postgrespro.ru>
Reviewed-by: John Naylor <john.naylor@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c1138ead-7668-f0e1-0638-c3be3237e812@2ndquadrant.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5d78b774-7e9c-c94e-12cf-fef51cc89b1a%402ndquadrant.com
2021-03-26 13:54:30 +01:00
Tomas Vondra 77b88cd1bb BRIN bloom indexes
Adds a BRIN opclass using a Bloom filter to summarize the range. Indexes
using the new opclasses allow only equality queries (similar to hash
indexes), but that works fine for data like UUID, MAC addresses etc. for
which range queries are not very common. This also means the indexes
work for data that is not well correlated to physical location within
the table, or perhaps even entirely random (which is a common issue with
existing BRIN minmax opclasses).

It's possible to specify opclass parameters with the usual Bloom filter
parameters, i.e. the desired false-positive rate and the expected number
of distinct values per page range.

  CREATE TABLE t (a int);
  CREATE INDEX ON t
   USING brin (a int4_bloom_ops(false_positive_rate = 0.05,
                                n_distinct_per_range = 100));

The opclasses do not operate on the indexed values directly, but compute
a 32-bit hash first, and the Bloom filter is built on the hash value.
Collisions should not be a huge issue though, as the number of distinct
values in a page ranges is usually fairly small.

Bump catversion, due to various catalog changes.

Author: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@postgresql.org>
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Korotkov <aekorotkov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Sokolov Yura <y.sokolov@postgrespro.ru>
Reviewed-by: Nico Williams <nico@cryptonector.com>
Reviewed-by: John Naylor <john.naylor@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c1138ead-7668-f0e1-0638-c3be3237e812@2ndquadrant.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5d78b774-7e9c-c94e-12cf-fef51cc89b1a%402ndquadrant.com
2021-03-26 13:35:32 +01:00
Tomas Vondra a681e3c107 Support the old signature of BRIN consistent function
Commit a1c649d889 changed the signature of the BRIN consistent function
by adding a new required parameter.  Treating the parameter as optional,
which would make the change backwards incompatibile, was rejected with
the justification that there are few out-of-core extensions, so it's not
worth adding making the code more complex, and it's better to deal with
that in the extension.

But after further thought, that would be rather problematic, because
pg_upgrade simply dumps catalog contents and the same version of an
extension needs to work on both PostgreSQL versions. Supporting both
variants of the consistent function (with 3 or 4 arguments) makes that
possible.

The signature is not the only thing that changed, as commit 72ccf55cb9
moved handling of IS [NOT] NULL keys from the support procedures. But
this change is backward compatible - handling the keys in exension is
unnecessary, but harmless. The consistent function will do a bit of
unnecessary work, but it should be very cheap.

This also undoes most of the changes to the existing opclasses (minmax
and inclusion), making them use the old signature again. This should
make backpatching simpler.

Catversion bump, because of changes in pg_amproc.

Author: Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@postgresql.org>
Author: Nikita Glukhov <n.gluhov@postgrespro.ru>
Reviewed-by: Mark Dilger <hornschnorter@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Korotkov <aekorotkov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <masahiko.sawada@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: John Naylor <john.naylor@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c1138ead-7668-f0e1-0638-c3be3237e812@2ndquadrant.com
2021-03-26 13:17:58 +01:00
Tomas Vondra a68dfa27d4 Remove unnecessary pg_amproc BRIN minmax entries
The BRIN minmax opclasses included amproc entries with mismatching left
and right types, but those happen to be unnecessary.  The opclasses only
need cross-type operators, not cross-type support procedures. Discovered
when trying to define equivalent BRIN operator families in an extension.

Catversion bump, because of pg_amproc changes.

Author: Tomas Vondra
Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/78c357ab-3395-8433-e7b3-b2cfcc9fdc23%40enterprisedb.com
2021-03-26 13:04:16 +01:00