These were "text", but that's a bad idea because it has collation-dependent
ordering. No index in template0 should have collation-dependent ordering,
especially not indexes on shared catalogs. There was general agreement
that provider names don't need to be longer than other identifiers, so we
can fix this at a small waste of table space by changing from text to name.
There's no way to fix the problem in the back branches, but we can hope
that security labels don't yet have widespread-enough usage to make it
urgent to fix.
There needs to be a regression sanity test to prevent us from making this
same mistake again; but before putting that in, we'll need to get rid of
similar brain fade in the recently-added pg_replication_origin catalog.
Note: for lack of a suitable testing environment, I've not really exercised
this change. I trust the buildfarm will show up any mistakes.
In a manual pass over the catalog declaration I found a number of
columns which the boostrap automatism didn't mark NOT NULL even though
they actually were. Add BKI_FORCE_NOT_NULL markings to them.
It's usually not critical if a system table column is falsely determined
to be nullable as the code should always catch relevant cases. But it's
good to have a extra layer in place.
Discussion: 20150215170014.GE15326@awork2.anarazel.de
Those fields only appear in the structs so that genbki.pl can create
the BKI bootstrap files for the catalogs. But they are not actually
usable from C. So hiding them can prevent coding mistakes, saves
stack space, and can help the compiler.
In certain catalogs, the first variable-length field has been kept
visible after manual inspection. These exceptions are noted in C
comments.
reviewed by Tom Lane
This requires a new shared catalog, pg_shseclabel.
Along the way, fix the security_label regression tests so that they
don't monkey with the labels of any pre-existing objects. This is
unlikely to matter in practice, since only the label for the "dummy"
provider was being manipulated. But this way still seems cleaner.
KaiGai Kohei, with fairly extensive hacking by me.