bigint variants). Clean up some inconsistencies in error message wording.
Fix scanint8 to allow trailing whitespace in INT64_MIN case. Update
int8-exp-three-digits.out, which seems to have been ignored by the last
couple of people to modify the int8 regression test, and remove
int8-exp-three-digits-win32.out which is thereby exposed as redundant.
from Sebastian Böck. The fix involves being more consistent about
when rangetable entries are copied or modified. Someday we really
need to fix this stuff to not scribble on its input data structures
in the first place...
This seems the cleanest way of fixing its lack of a shutdown callback,
which was preventing it from working correctly in a query that didn't
run it to completion. Per bug report from Szima GÄbor.
must be stale. Tweak example startup scripts to not use pg_ctl but launch
the postmaster directly, thereby ensuring that only the postmaster's direct
parent shell will be a postgres-owned process. In combination these should
fix the longstanding problem of the postmaster sometimes refusing to start
during reboot because it thinks the old lockfile is not stale.
of locking used by REINDEX. REINDEX needs only ShareLock on the parent
table, same as CREATE INDEX, plus an exclusive lock on the specific index
being processed.
to unreserved keyword, use ereport not elog, assign a separate error code
for 'could not obtain lock' so that applications will be able to detect
that case cleanly.
now are supposed to take some kind of lock on an index whenever you
are going to access the index contents, rather than relying only on a
lock on the parent table.
a separate production func_expr. This allows us to accept all these
variants in the backwards-compatible syntax for creating a functional
index; which beats documenting exactly which things work and which don't.
Interestingly, it also seems to make the generated state machine a little
bit smaller.
(1) Replace while loop with the new forboth() construct in
parser/analyze.c
(2) Replace lcons() with lappend() in SearchCatCacheList(). Since these
now have the same performance, there is no reason to prefer lcons() in
this case, and using lappend() leads to cleaner code.
(3) Improve the name of the second parameter to for_each_cell()
and hopefully improve code clarity while at it. One intentional
semantics change: a backslashed space will not be treated as removable
trailing whitespace, as the prior coding would do. ISTM that if it
wouldn't be considered removable leading whitespace, it shouldn't be
stripped at the end either.
build in mingw. The MSVC build already did this, but it was not linked
into the mingw one.
This is not the same as the versioninfo patch that's in the queue.
Please apply this one before beta-3 if at all possible.
Magnus Hagander
setting is valid must ignore that state and permit the assignment anyway
when source is PGC_S_OVERRIDE. Otherwise they may disallow a rollback
at transaction abort, which is The Wrong Thing. Per example from
Michael Fuhr 12-Sep-04.
Given that PostgreSQL will output a message complaining about it's
absence if you're using SSL mode, I feel it's important that it gets a
mention in the documentation at some point.
Dominic Mitchell
this, it's hard to debug core-dump test failures, because WAL replay will
enthusiastically remove the core file (along with the rest of the
regression database directory). Per recent discussion, not to mention
bitter experience.
when a function that returns a single tuple (not a setof tuple) returns
NULL. This seems to be the most consistent behavior. It would have
taken a bit less code to make it return an empty table (zero rows) but
ISTM a non-SETOF function ought always return exactly one row. Per
bug report from Ivan-Sun1.
address all of the items in the todo list and adds some new
things as well. Specifically:
* Add support for ALTER SEQUENCE ...
* Add "RENAME TO" for ALTER TRIGGER xx ON yy
* Pick proper table for ALTER TRIGGER xx ON ...
* Support for ALTER USER xxx ...
* Fix ALTER GROUP xxx DROP ...
* Fix ALTER DOMAIN xxx DROP ...
* Remove "OWNER TO" from ALTER DOMAIN xx DROP ...
* Fix ALTER DOMAIN xx SET DEFAULT ..
* Prevent ALTER INDEX xxx SET TABLESPACE from using "TO"
* Support for ALTER LANGUAGE xxx (RENAME TO)
* More support for ALTER TABLE xxx ALTER COLUMN xxx ...
* More support for COPY
Greg Sabino Mullane
of commands for which a transaction block should not be forced. Recognize
VACUUM and other PreventTransactionChain commands; handle nested /* .. */
comments correctly; handle multibyte encodings correctly.
Michael Paesold with some kibitzing from Tom Lane.
was large enough to be batched and the tuples fell into a batch where
there were no inner tuples at all. Thanks to Xiaoyu Wang for finding a
test case that exposed this long-standing bug.
creating a new tuple. This is just for debugging sanity, though, since
nothing should be paying any attention to xmax when the HEAP_XMAX_INVALID
bit is set.
pg_subtrans --- what we need is the oldest xmin of any snapshot in use
in the current top transaction. Introduce a new variable TransactionXmin
to play this role. Fixes intermittent regression failure reported by
Neil Conway.
as per recent discussions. Invent SubTransactionIds that are managed like
CommandIds (ie, counter is reset at start of each top transaction), and
use these instead of TransactionIds to keep track of subtransaction status
in those modules that need it. This means that a subtransaction does not
need an XID unless it actually inserts/modifies rows in the database.
Accordingly, don't assign it an XID nor take a lock on the XID until it
tries to do that. This saves a lot of overhead for subtransactions that
are only used for error recovery (eg plpgsql exceptions). Also, arrange
to release a subtransaction's XID lock as soon as the subtransaction
exits, in both the commit and abort cases. This avoids holding many
unique locks after a long series of subtransactions. The price is some
additional overhead in XactLockTableWait, but that seems acceptable.
Finally, restructure the state machine in xact.c to have a more orthogonal
set of states for subtransactions.
mode see a fresh snapshot for each command in the function, rather than
using the latest interactive command's snapshot. Also, suppress fresh
snapshots as well as CommandCounterIncrement inside STABLE and IMMUTABLE
functions, instead using the snapshot taken for the most closely nested
regular query. (This behavior is only sane for read-only functions, so
the patch also enforces that such functions contain only SELECT commands.)
As per my proposal of 6-Sep-2004; I note that I floated essentially the
same proposal on 19-Jun-2002, but that discussion tailed off without any
action. Since 8.0 seems like the right place to be taking possibly
nontrivial backwards compatibility hits, let's get it done now.
((Snapshot) NULL) can no longer be confused with a valid snapshot,
as per my recent suggestion. Define a macro InvalidSnapshot for 0.
Use InvalidSnapshot instead of SnapshotAny as the do-nothing special
case for heap_update and heap_delete crosschecks; this seems a little
cleaner even though the behavior is really the same.
rather than when returning to the idle loop. This makes no particular
difference for interactively-issued queries, but it makes a big difference
for queries issued within functions: trigger execution now occurs before
the calling function is allowed to proceed. This responds to numerous
complaints about nonintuitive behavior of foreign key checking, such as
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-bugs/2004-09/msg00020.php, and
appears to be required by the SQL99 spec.
Also take the opportunity to simplify the data structures used for the
pending-trigger list, rename them for more clarity, and squeeze out a
bit of space.
status. In particular, I see no reason for deferredTriggerCheckState
to make an explicit entry to note that a particular trigger has its
default state --- that just clutters a list that should normally be
empty or very short. I have plans to revise this module much more
heavily, but this is a simple separable improvement.
Asserts would lead to a server core dump if an error occurred while
trying to abort a failed subtransaction (thereby leading to re-execution
of whatever parts of AbortSubTransaction had already run). This of course
does not prevent such an error from creating an infinite loop, but at
least we don't make the situation worse. Responds to an open item on
the subtransactions to-do list.
elog() emulation code always calls errstart with ERROR error level.
This means that a recursive error call triggered by elog would do
MemoryContextReset(ErrorContext), whether or not this was actually
appropriate. I'm surprised we haven't seen this in the field...
Messages of less than ERROR severity should never be promoted (this
fixes Gaetano Mendola's problem with a COMMERROR becoming a PANIC,
and is obvious in hindsight anyway). Do all promotion in errstart
not errfinish, to ensure that output decisions are made correctly;
the former coding could suppress logging of promoted errors, which
doesn't seem like a good idea. Eliminate some redundant code too.
Windows.
Recap: When running on a localized windows version, the timezone name
returned is also localized, and therefor does not match our lookup
table.
Solution: The registry contains both the name of the timezone in english
and the localized name. The patch adds code to scan the registry for the
localized name and gets the english name from that, and then rescans the
table.
I have tested this on a Swedish WinXP, and it works without problems.
The registry layout is the same in Win2k, but I haven't specifically
tested it. It's also the same on different languages but again only
Swedish is tested.
Magnus Hagander
use of already-freed strings, other silliness. Also fix reporting of
config file syntax errors so that it actually works reasonably well
(eg, points at the correct line). Use palloc instead of malloc for
temporary storage to reduce code clutter.
not supposed to (fixes problem with postmaster aborting due to mistaken
postgresql.conf change); don't call superuser() when not inside a
transaction (fixes coredump when, eg, try to set log_statement from
PGOPTIONS); some message style guidelines enforcement.
default tablespace --- they should always go in the database's default
tablespace. Adjust heap_create() API so that it is passed the relkind
to make this easier; should simplify any further tweaking of the same
sort.
to allow DBA to choose the form in which log filenames reflect the
current time. Also allow for truncating instead of appending to
pre-existing files --- this is convenient when the log filename pattern
rewrites the same names cyclically. Per Ed L.
during replay of CREATE DATABASE as well as the first time around.
Else it's possible that the copy operation will copy obsolete blocks.
We are still a long way from guaranteeing anything about using a
recently-written database as a CREATE template, but this seems needed
to ensure the existing behavior holds up during replay.
Fix TablespaceCreateDbspace() to be able to create a dummy directory
in place of a dropped tablespace's symlink. This eliminates the open
problem of a PANIC during WAL replay when a replayed action attempts
to touch a file in a since-deleted tablespace. It also makes for a
significant improvement in the usability of PITR replay.
a more tolerable limit on the number of subtransactions or deleted files
in COMMIT and ABORT records. Buy back the extra space by eliminating the
xl_xact_prev field, which isn't being used for anything and is rather
unlikely ever to be used for anything.
This does not force initdb, but you do need to do pg_resetxlog if you
want to upgrade an existing 8.0 installation without initdb.
Win32 WaitForMultipleObjects:
ret = WaitForMultipleObjects(win32_numChildren, win32_childHNDArray,
FALSE, 0);
Problem is 'win32_numChildren' could be more then 64 ( function supports
), problem basically arise ( kills postgres ) when you create more then
64 connections and terminate some of them sill leaving more then 64.
Claudio Natoli
>>GetLastError will
>>> give much more details than errno.
>>
>>How much more, really? That mapping table gave me the impression that
>>the win32 error codes aren't all that much more detailed than errno...
>
>The mapping table is not complete. My winerror.h from the SDK
>lists 2209
>error codes, whereas errno.h lists 42...
>
>I still don't think we'll get that much more stuff. Right now,
>the Win32
>code paths that actually use the more advanced functions already write
>out the error number in case something happens. We can keep doing that
>for the other paths (ereport the error *number* when the mapping does
>not have a match). The map to errno will catch almost all cases, I
>think. And in the corner cases we can do with just the number, and use
>"net helpmsg" to get the actual message when checking...
Here's an attempt on this. new file goes in backend/port/win32.
Magnus Hagander
some possible causes of the stale postmaster.pid problem that some users
have reported.
- The service did not properly report that it accepts
SERVICE_CONTROL_SHUTDOWN events, thus it's possible the SCM simply
killed the postmaster on shutdown.
- 'WaitHints' are now given to the SCM to prevent it timing out if
pg_ctl doesn't respond to a control event quickly enough.
- During shutdown, the service checkpoint counter is incremented every
five seconds for up to a minute to prevent the SCM timing out and
assuming the service is not responding.
Dave Page
> > The patch adds missing the "libpgport.a" file to the installation under
> > "install-all-headers". It is needed by some contribs. I install the
> > library in "pkglibdir", but I was wondering whether it should be "libdir"?
Please find attached a small patch against current CVS head that fixes
pgport library installation so that it goes to libdir instead of
pkglibdir. It works for me.
Fabien Coelho