variable stats_temp_directory, instead of requiring the admin to
mount/symlink the pg_stat_tmp directory manually.
For now the config variable is PGC_POSTMASTER. Room for further improvment
that would allow it to be changed on-the-fly.
main tables.
This requires vacuum() to accept processing a toast table standalone, so
there's a user-visible change in that it's now possible (for a superuser) to
execute "VACUUM pg_toast.pg_toast_XXX".
of multiple forks, and each fork can be created and grown separately.
The bulk of this patch is about changing the smgr API to include an extra
ForkNumber argument in every smgr function. Also, smgrscheduleunlink and
smgrdounlink no longer implicitly call smgrclose, because other forks might
still exist after unlinking one. The callers of those functions have been
modified to call smgrclose instead.
This patch in itself doesn't have any user-visible effect, but provides the
infrastructure needed for upcoming patches. The additional forks envisioned
are a rewritten FSM implementation that doesn't rely on a fixed-size shared
memory block, and a visibility map to allow skipping portions of a table in
VACUUM that have no dead tuples.
This allows the use of a ramdrive (either through mount or symlink) for
the temporary file that's written every half second, which should
reduce I/O.
On server shutdown/startup, the file is written to the old location in
the global directory, to preserve data across restarts.
Bump catversion since the $PGDATA directory layout changed.
backend. If so, send a LOG message to the postmaster log, and if the table
is beyond the vacuum-for-wraparound horizon, forcibly drop it. Per recent
discussions. Perhaps we ought to back-patch this, but it probably needs
to age a bit in HEAD first.
As the buffer could now be a lot larger than before, and copying it could
thus be a lot more expensive than before, use strcpy instead of memcpy to
copy the query string, as was already suggested in comments. Also, only copy
the PgBackendStatus struct and string if the slot is in use.
Patch by Thomas Lee, with some changes by me.
unnecessary cache resets. The major changes are:
* When the queue overflows, we only issue a cache reset to the specific
backend or backends that still haven't read the oldest message, rather
than resetting everyone as in the original coding.
* When we observe backend(s) falling well behind, we signal SIGUSR1
to only one backend, the one that is furthest behind and doesn't already
have a signal outstanding for it. When it finishes catching up, it will
in turn signal SIGUSR1 to the next-furthest-back guy, if there is one that
is far enough behind to justify a signal. The PMSIGNAL_WAKEN_CHILDREN
mechanism is removed.
* We don't attempt to clean out dead messages after every message-receipt
operation; rather, we do it on the insertion side, and only when the queue
fullness passes certain thresholds.
* Split SInvalLock into SInvalReadLock and SInvalWriteLock so that readers
don't block writers nor vice versa (except during the infrequent queue
cleanout operations).
* Transfer multiple sinval messages for each acquisition of a read or
write lock.
corresponding struct definitions. This allows other headers to avoid including
certain highly-loaded headers such as rel.h and relscan.h, instead using just
relcache.h, heapam.h or genam.h, which are more lightweight and thus cause less
unnecessary dependencies.
functions.
Note that because this patch changes FmgrInfo, any external C functions
you might be testing with 8.4 will need to be recompiled.
Patch by Martin Pihlak, some editorialization by me (principally, removing
tracking of getrusage() numbers)
unnecessary #include lines in it. Also, move some tuple routine prototypes and
macros to htup.h, which allows removal of heapam.h inclusion from some .c
files.
For this to work, a new header file access/sysattr.h needed to be created,
initially containing attribute numbers of system columns, for pg_dump usage.
While at it, make contrib ltree, intarray and hstore header files more
consistent with our header style.
do CancelBackup at a sane place, fix some oversights in the state transitions,
allow only superusers to connect while we are waiting for backup mode to end.
have pg_ctl warn about this.
Cancel running online backups (by renaming the backup_label file,
thus rendering the backup useless) when shutting down in fast mode.
Laurenz Albe
classed all as "dead"; also get it to count DEAD item pointers as dead rows,
instead of ignoring them as before. Also improve matters so that tuples
previously inserted or deleted by our own transaction are handled nicely:
the stats collector's live-tuple and dead-tuple counts will end up correct
after our transaction ends, regardless of whether we end in commit or abort.
While there's more work that could be done to improve the counting of in-doubt
tuples in both VACUUM and ANALYZE, this commit is enough to alleviate some
known bad behaviors in 8.3; and the other stuff that's been discussed seems
like research projects anyway.
Pavan Deolasee and Tom Lane
key files that are similar to the one for the postmaster's data directory
permissions check. (I chose to standardize on that one since it's the most
heavily used and presumably best-wordsmithed by now.) Also eliminate explicit
tests on file ownership in these places, since the ensuing read attempt must
fail anyway if it's wrong, and there seems no value in issuing the same error
message for distinct problems. (But I left in the explicit ownership test in
postmaster.c, since it had its own error message anyway.) Also be more
specific in the documentation's descriptions of these checks. Per a gripe
from Kevin Hunter.
query texts only to the server log. This eliminates the issue of possible
leaking of security-sensitive data in other sessions' queries. Since the
log is presumed secure, we can now log the queries of all sessions involved
in the deadlock, whether or not they belong to the same user as the one
reporting the failure.
(if they'd be visible to the current user in pg_stat_activity).
This might look like it's subject to race conditions, but it's actually
pretty safe because at the time DeadLockReport() is constructing the
report, we haven't yet aborted our transaction and so we can expect that
everyone else involved in the deadlock is still blocked on some lock.
(There are corner cases where that might not be true, such as a statement
timeout triggering in another backend before we finish reporting; but at
worst we'd report a misleading activity string, so it seems acceptable
considering the usefulness of reporting the queries.)
Original patch by Itagaki Takahiro, heavily modified by me.
This accidentally failed to fail before 8.3, because the context we were
switching back to was long-lived anyway; but it sure looks risky as can be
now. Well spotted by Pavan Deolasee.
With the addition of multiple autovacuum workers, our choices were to delete
the check, document the interaction with autovacuum_max_workers, or complicate
the check to try to hide that interaction. Since this restriction has never
been adequate to ensure backends can't run out of pinnable buffers, it doesn't
really have enough excuse to live to justify the second or third choices.
Per discussion of a complaint from Andreas Kling (see also bug #3888).
This commit also removes several documentation references to this restriction,
but I'm not sure I got them all.
data structures and backend internal APIs. This solves problems we've seen
recently with inconsistent layout of pg_control between machines that have
32-bit time_t and those that have already migrated to 64-bit time_t. Also,
we can get out from under the problem that Windows' Unix-API emulation is not
consistent about the width of time_t.
There are a few remaining places where local time_t variables are used to hold
the current or recent result of time(NULL). I didn't bother changing these
since they do not affect any cross-module APIs and surely all platforms will
have 64-bit time_t before overflow becomes an actual risk. time_t should
be avoided for anything visible to extension modules, however.
a double-pfree crash and another that effectively disabled size-based rotation
for CSV logs. Also suppress a memory leak and make some trivial cosmetic
improvements. Per bug #3901 from Chris Hoover and additional code-reading.
finish archiving everything (when there's no error), and to eliminate various
hazards as best we can. This fixes a previous 8.3 patch that caused the
postmaster to kill and then restart the archiver during shutdown (!?).
The new behavior is that the archiver is allowed to run unmolested until
the bgwriter has exited; then it is sent SIGUSR2 to tell it to do a final
archiving cycle and quit. We only SIGQUIT the archiver if we want a panic
stop; this is important since SIGQUIT will also be sent to any active
archive_command. The postmaster also now doesn't SIGQUIT the stats collector
until the bgwriter is done, since the bgwriter can send stats messages in 8.3.
The postmaster will not exit until both the archiver and stats collector are
gone; this provides some defense (not too bulletproof) against conflicting
archiver or stats collector processes being started by a new postmaster
instance. We continue the prior practice that the archiver will check
for postmaster death immediately before issuing any archive_command; that
gives some additional protection against conflicting archivers.
Also, modify the archiver process to notice SIGTERM and refuse to issue any
more archive commands if it gets it. The postmaster doesn't ever send it
SIGTERM; we assume that any such signal came from init and is a notice of
impending whole-system shutdown. In this situation it seems imprudent to try
to start new archive commands --- if they aren't extremely quick they're
likely to get SIGKILL'd by init.
All per discussion.
childprocess deaths instead of using one thread per child. This drastastically
reduces the address space usage and should allow for more backends running.
Also change the win32_waitpid functionality to use an IO Completion Port for
queueing child death notices instead of using a fixed-size array.
having several of them. Add two more flags: whether the process is
executing an ANALYZE, and whether a vacuum is for Xid wraparound (which
is obviously only set by autovacuum).
Sneakily move the worker's recently-acquired PostAuthDelay to a more useful
place.
with the next table on schedule instead of exiting, in all cases instead of
just on query cancel.
Add a errcontext() line indicating the activity of the worker to the error
message when it is cancelled.
Change the WorkerInfo struct to contain a pointer to the worker's PGPROC
instead of just the PID.
Add forgotten post-auth delays, per Simon Riggs. Also to autovac launcher.
- create a separate archive_mode GUC, on which archive_command is dependent
- %r option in recovery.conf sends last restartpoint to recovery command
- %r used in pg_standby, updated README
- minor other code cleanup in pg_standby
- doc on Warm Standby now mentions pg_standby and %r
- log_restartpoints recovery option emits LOG message at each restartpoint
- end of recovery now displays last transaction end time, as requested
by Warren Little; also shown at each restartpoint
- restart archiver if needed to carry away WAL files at shutdown
Simon Riggs
buffers that cannot possibly need to be cleaned, and estimates how many
buffers it should try to clean based on moving averages of recent allocation
requests and density of reusable buffers. The patch also adds a couple
more columns to pg_stat_bgwriter to help measure the effectiveness of the
bgwriter.
Greg Smith, building on his own work and ideas from several other people,
in particular a much older patch from Itagaki Takahiro.
* stats_start_collector goes away; we always start the collector process,
unless prevented by a problem with setting up the stats UDP socket.
* stats_reset_on_server_start goes away; it seems useless in view of the
availability of pg_stat_reset().
* stats_block_level and stats_row_level are merged into a single variable
"track_counts", which controls all reports sent to the collector process.
* stats_command_string is renamed to track_activities.
* log_autovacuum is renamed to log_autovacuum_min_duration to better reflect
its meaning.
The log_autovacuum change is not a compatibility issue since it didn't exist
before 8.3 anyway. The other changes need to be release-noted.
columns, and the new version can be stored on the same heap page, we no longer
generate extra index entries for the new version. Instead, index searches
follow the HOT-chain links to ensure they find the correct tuple version.
In addition, this patch introduces the ability to "prune" dead tuples on a
per-page basis, without having to do a complete VACUUM pass to recover space.
VACUUM is still needed to clean up dead index entries, however.
Pavan Deolasee, with help from a bunch of other people.
we'd dump core anyway immediately afterward if it were null; and it
seems to confuse some versions of icc into generating bad code.
Per report from Sergey Koposov. Patched in HEAD only, for the moment,
since this is only likely to affect developers.
recover from elog(ERROR). Problem was created by introduction of hash seq
search tracking awhile back, and affects all branches that have bgwriter;
in HEAD the disease has snuck into autovacuum and walwriter too. (Not sure
that the latter two use hash_seq_search at the moment, but surely they might
someday.) Per report from Sergey Koposov.
constant flow of new connection requests could prevent the postmaster from
completing a shutdown or crash restart. This is done by labeling child
processes that are "dead ends", that is, we know that they were launched only
to tell a client that it can't connect. These processes are managed
separately so that they don't confuse us into thinking that we can't advance
to the next stage of a shutdown or restart sequence, until the very end
where we must wait for them to drain out so we can delete the shmem segment.
Per discussion of a misbehavior reported by Keaton Adams.
Since this code was baroque already, and my first attempt at fixing the
problem made it entirely impenetrable, I took the opportunity to rewrite it
in a state-machine style. That eliminates some duplicated code sections and
hopefully makes everything a bit clearer.
as well as regular backends: if no regular backend launches before the autovac
launcher tries to start an autovac worker, the postmaster would get an Assert
fault due to calling PostmasterRandom before random_seed was initialized.
Cleanest solution seems to be to take the initialization of random_seed out
of ServerLoop and let PostmasterRandom do it for itself.
displayed in the postmaster log. This avoids Windows-specific problems with
localized time zone names that are in the wrong encoding, and generally seems
like a good idea to forestall other potential platform-dependent issues.
To preserve the existing behavior that all backends will log in the same time
zone, create a new GUC variable log_timezone that can only be changed on a
system-wide basis, and reference log-related calculations to that zone instead
of the TimeZone variable.
This fixes the issue reported by Hiroshi Saito that timestamps printed by
xlog.c startup could be improperly localized on Windows. We still need a
simpler patch for that problem in the back branches, however.
not bothering to initialize is_autovacuum for regular backends, meaning there
was a significant chance of the postmaster prematurely sending them SIGTERM
during database shutdown. Also, leaving the cancel key unset for an autovac
worker meant that any client could send it SIGINT, which doesn't sound
especially good either.
so that we will be able to create a cookie for all processes for CSVlogs.
It is set wherever MyProcPid is set. Take the opportunity to remove the now
unnecessary session-only restriction on the %s and %c escapes in log_line_prefix.
and fsync WAL at convenient intervals. For the moment it just tries to
offload this work from backends, but soon it will be responsible for
guaranteeing a maximum delay before asynchronously-committed transactions
will be flushed to disk.
This is a portion of Simon Riggs' async-commit patch, committed to CVS
separately because a background WAL writer seems like it might be a good idea
independently of the async-commit feature. I rebased walwriter.c on
bgwriter.c because it seemed like a more appropriate way of handling signals;
while the startup/shutdown logic in postmaster.c is more like autovac because
we want walwriter to quit before we start the shutdown checkpoint.
against a Unix server, and Windows-specific server-side authentication
using SSPI "negotiate" method (Kerberos or NTLM).
Only builds properly with MSVC for now.
we don't know at that point which relation OID to tell pgstat to forget.
The code was passing the relfilenode, which is incorrect, and could possibly
cause some other relation's stats to be zeroed out. While we could try to
clean this up, it seems much simpler and more reliable to let the next
invocation of pgstat_vacuum_tabstat() fix things; which indeed is how it
worked before I introduced the buggy code into 8.1.3 and later :-(.
Problem noticed by Itagaki Takahiro, fix is per subsequent discussion.
checkpoint. The comment claimed that we could do this anytime after
setting the checkpoint REDO point, but actually BufferSync is relying
on the assumption that buffers dumped by other backends will be fsync'd
too. So we really could not do it any sooner than we are doing it.
so that it responds to SIGQUIT reasonably promptly even on machines where
SA_RESTART signals restart a sleep from scratch. (This whole area could
stand some rethinking, but for now make it work like the other processes
do.) Also some marginal stylistic cleanups.
for it to die before telling the bgwriter to initiate shutdown checkpoint.
Since it's connected to shared memory, this seems more prudent than the
alternative of letting it quit asynchronously. Resolves my complaint
of yesterday about repeated shutdown checkpoints in CVS HEAD.
memory context pointing at a context not long lived enough.
Also, create a fake PortalContext where to store the vac_context, if only
to avoid having it be a top-level memory context.
continue with the schedule. Change current uses of SIGINT to abort a worker
into SIGTERM, which keeps the old behaviour of terminating the process.
Patch from ITAGAKI Takahiro, with some editorializing of my own.
over a fairly long period of time, rather than being spat out in a burst.
This happens only for background checkpoints carried out by the bgwriter;
other cases, such as a shutdown checkpoint, are still done at full speed.
Remove the "all buffers" scan in the bgwriter, and associated stats
infrastructure, since this seems no longer very useful when the checkpoint
itself is properly throttled.
Original patch by Itagaki Takahiro, reworked by Heikki Linnakangas,
and some minor API editorialization by me.
by having the postmaster signal it when certain failures occur. This requires
the postmaster setting a flag in shared memory, but should be as safe as the
pmsignal.c code is.
Also make sure the launcher honor's a postgresql.conf change turning it off
on SIGHUP.
reassembled in the syslogger before writing to the log file. This prevents
partial messages from being written, which mucks up log rotation, and
messages from different backends being interleaved, which causes garbled
logs. Backport as far as 8.0, where the syslogger was introduced.
Tom Lane and Andrew Dunstan
causes a division-by-zero error in the vacuum code. This can happen when there
are more workers than cost limit units.
Per report from Galy Lee in
<200705310914.l4V9E6JA094603@wwwmaster.postgresql.org>.
value for the vacuum code. Instead, make zero signify getting the value from a
higher level configuration facility, just like -1 in the original coding. We
still document that -1 is the value that disables the feature, to avoid
confusing the user unnecessarily.
Reported by Galy Lee in <200705310914.l4V9E6JA094603@wwwmaster.postgresql.org>;
per subsequent discussion.