of the entries used to be zero, which I think I had deliberately done in
the name of saving cycles during ANALYZE, but it was really a rather
foolish decision. Some of the more complex views in information_schema
were getting really bad plans for lack of statistics on the columns they
were joining over.
I'm not forcing an initdb for this, but I think there will be one soon
anyway to repair some bugs in the information_schema views.
memory say 'out of shared memory'; some were doing that and some just
said 'out of memory'. Also add a HINT about increasing max_locks_per_transaction
where relevant, per suggestion from Sean Chittenden. (The former change
does not break the strings freeze; the latter does, but I think it's
worth doing anyway.)
protocol, per report from Igor Shevchenko. NOTIFY thought it could
do its thing if transaction blockState is TBLOCK_DEFAULT, but in
reality it had better check the low-level transaction state is
TRANS_DEFAULT as well. Formerly it was not possible to wait for the
client in a state where the first is true and the second is not ...
but now we can have such a state. Minor cleanup in StartTransaction()
as well.
up by quotes or backslashes in words that are being matched to database
names (per gripe from Ian Barwick, though I didn't use his patch).
Also fix possible memory leakage if _complete_with_query isn't run to
completion (not clear if that can happen or not, but be safe).
be made, to avoid corner cases where max_connections ends up unreasonably
small because shared_buffers is hogging too much shmem space. Per pghackers
discussion about a week ago. Also, fix the copy-newlines problem in a
more robust way, by using COPY FROM filename instead of COPY FROM STDIN;
per a suggestion from Peter.
when the pg_class.relhassubclass value is already correct. This should
avoid most cases of the 'tuple concurrently updated' problem that
Robert Creager recently complained about. Also remove a bunch of dead
code in StoreCatalogInheritance() --- it was still computing the complete
list of direct and indirect inheritance ancestors, though that list has
not been needed since we got rid of the pg_ipl catalog.
one side of a binary operator is probably supposed to be the same type
as the other operand' will be applied for domain types. This worked
in 7.3 but was broken in 7.4 due to code rearrangements. Mea culpa.
a single LEFT JOIN query instead of firing the check trigger for each
row individually. Stephan Szabo, with some kibitzing from Tom Lane and
Jan Wieck.
before it is de-backslashed, not after. This allows the null string \N
to be reliably distinguished from the data value \N (which must be
represented as \\N). Per bug report from Manfred Koizar ... but it's
amazing this hasn't been reported before ...
Also, be consistent about encoding conversion for null string: the form
specified in the command is in the server encoding, but what is sent
to/from client must be in client encoding. This never worked quite
right before either.
will downcase the supplied field name unless it is double-quoted. Also,
upgrade the routine's handling of double quotes to match the backend,
in particular support doubled double quotes within quoted identifiers.
Per pgsql-interfaces discussion a couple weeks ago.
with required outer parentheses. Breakage seems to be leftover from
domain-constraint patches. This could be smarter about suppressing
extra parens, but at this stage of the release cycle I want certainty
not cuteness.
of function bodies is done at CREATE FUNCTION time. This is normally
true but can be set false to avoid problems with forward references,
wrong schema search path, etc. This is just the backend patch, still
need to adjust pg_dump to make use of it.
to make them comparable to what UpdateStats does in the same situation.
I'm not certain two instances of vac_update_relstats could run in
parallel for the same relation, but parallel invocations of vac_update_dbstats
do seem possible.
in the schema search path. Otherwise pg_dump doesn't correctly dump
scenarios where a custom opclass is created in 'public' and then used
by indexes in other schemas.
processing the request; this ensures that the request won't be taken
to cancel a subsequently-issued query. Race condition originally
noted by Oliver Jowett in the context of JDBC, but libpq has it too.
discussion on pgsql-hackers: in READ COMMITTED mode we just have to force
a QuerySnapshot update in the trigger, but in SERIALIZABLE mode we have
to run the scan under a current snapshot and then complain if any rows
would be updated/deleted that are not visible in the transaction snapshot.
invalid (has the wrong magic number) until the build is entirely
complete. This turns out to cost no additional writes in the normal
case, since we were rewriting the metapage at the end of the process
anyway. In normal scenarios there's no real gain in security, because
a failed index build would roll back the transaction leaving an unused
index file, but for rebuilding shared system indexes this seems to add
some useful protection.
Before patch:
test=# select pg_get_constraintdef(oid) from pg_constraint;
pg_get_constraintdef
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CHECK (VALUE >= 0)
CHECK ((((a)::text = 'asdf'::text) OR ((a)::text = 'fdsa'::text)) OR
((a)::text = 'dfd'::text))
PRIMARY KEY (b)
FOREIGN KEY (a) REFERENCES test2(b)
UNIQUE (b)
(5 rows)
test=# select pg_get_constraintdef(oid, true) from pg_constraint;
pg_get_constraintdef
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CHECK VALUE >= 0
CHECK a::text = 'asdf'::text OR a::text = 'fdsa'::text OR a::text =
'dfd'::text
PRIMARY KEY (b)
FOREIGN KEY (a) REFERENCES test2(b)
UNIQUE (b)
(5 rows)
After patch:
test=# select pg_get_constraintdef(oid) from pg_constraint;
pg_get_constraintdef
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CHECK (VALUE >= 0)
CHECK ((((a)::text = 'asdf'::text) OR ((a)::text = 'fdsa'::text)) OR
((a)::text = 'dfd'::text))
PRIMARY KEY (b)
FOREIGN KEY (a) REFERENCES test2(b)
UNIQUE (b)
(5 rows)
test=# select pg_get_constraintdef(oid, true) from pg_constraint;
pg_get_constraintdef
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CHECK (VALUE >= 0)
` CHECK (a::text = 'asdf'::text OR a::text = 'fdsa'::text OR a::text =
'dfd'::text)
PRIMARY KEY (b)
FOREIGN KEY (a) REFERENCES test2(b)
UNIQUE (b)
(5 rows)
It's important that those brackets are there to (a) match all other
constraints and (b) so that people can just copy and paste them and it
will work as SQL.
Christopher Kings-Lynne
> > a) Write documentation how the win32 console needs to be set up so that
> > psql can handle 8-bit characters.
> > Where should it be added? The Section "Installation on Windows" in the
> > Administrator's Guide seems natural to me.
> >
> > b) Add code to psql that prints a warning on startup of psql when the
> > console codepage differs from the windows codepage, something like
> >
> > Warning: Console codepage (850) differs from windows codepage (1252)
> > 8-bit characters will not work correctly. See PostgreSQL
> > documentation "Installation on Windows" for details.
>
Attached are two patches:
- installdoc.patch contains an additional paragraph on the win32 console
codepage for the chapter "Installation on Windows"
Due to a lack of SGML-tools, I have only edited the text and not tested
the SGML code - please check it before merging into the CVS branch.
- psqlcodepage.patch adds the warning about a problematic codepage to psql.
Christoph Dalitz
to be less dangerous, and often faster as well. ExprState trees are
not kept across transaction boundaries; this eliminates problems with
resource leakage in failed transactions. But by keeping them in a
per-transaction EState, we can safely arrange for a single ExprState
to be shared by all the expression evaluations done in a given plpgsql
function call. (Formerly it seemed necessary to create and destroy an
ExprState for each exec_eval_simple_expr() call.) This saves time in
any scenario where a plpgsql function executes more than one expression.
Seems to be about as fast as 7.3 for simple cases, and significantly
faster for functions that do a lot of calculations.
post-abort cleanup hooks. I'm surprised that we have not needed this
already, but I need it now to fix a plpgsql problem, and the usefulness
for other dynamically loaded modules seems obvious.
in the RI triggers for ON DELETE/UPDATE SET DEFAULT. The code depended
way too much on knowledge of plan structure, and yet still would fail
if the generated query got rewritten by rules.
method. Fix a number of places where shared libraries were linked without
mentioning all the libraries they depend on; the Darwin and AIX ports
are known to require this, and it doesn't seem to hurt any other supported
platforms. (Hence, remove code in pl/tcl makefile that tried to avoid
mentioning other libs if not needed.)
on pgsql-hackers.
A cast is included in the dump output if any of the objects does
not belong to a system namespace and all of the non-system namespace
objects belong to dumped namespaces. System namespace is defined
as nspname begins with "pg_".
Jan
every string, especially if some of the output should be fixed-format
machine-readable. This needs to be more carefully sorted out. Also, make
the help message generated by --help-config -h be more similar in style to
the others.
are not longer than 8 characters. But sometimes they are, and that made
the display quite ugly. So just format them vertically so that everyone
can read them.
to allow es_snapshot to be set to SnapshotNow rather than a query snapshot.
This solves a bug reported by Wade Klaver, wherein triggers fired as a
result of RI cascade updates could misbehave.
now able to cope with assigning new relfilenode values to nailed-in-cache
indexes, so they can be reindexed using the fully crash-safe method. This
leaves only shared system indexes as special cases. Remove the 'index
deactivation' code, since it provides no useful protection in the shared-
index case. Require reindexing of shared indexes to be done in standalone
mode, but remove other restrictions on REINDEX. -P (IgnoreSystemIndexes)
now prevents using indexes for lookups, but does not disable index updates.
It is therefore safe to allow from PGOPTIONS. Upshot: reindexing system catalogs
can be done without a standalone backend for all cases except
shared catalogs.
AUTHORIZATION clause to specify the desired owner. This allows a
superuser to restore schemas owned by users without CREATE-SCHEMA
permissions (ie, schemas originally created by a superuser using
AUTHORIZATION). --no-owner can be specified to suppress the
AUTHORIZATION clause if need be.
to control object ownership. The use-set-session-authorization and
no-reconnect switches are obsolete (still accepted on the command line,
but they don't do anything). This is a precursor to fixing handling
of CREATE SCHEMA, which will be a separate commit.
since 7.3: 'select array_dims(histogram_bounds) from pg_stats' used to
work and still should. Problem was that code wouldn't take input of
declared type anyarray as matching an anyarray argument. Allow this
case as long as we don't need to determine an element type (which in
practice means as long as anyelement isn't used in the function signature).