Commit Graph

3341 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane 5e7c3d91bf Add documentation and regression tests concerning rounding of numerics.
Michael Paquier, reviewed by Fabien Coelho
2015-07-03 17:04:39 -04:00
Tom Lane 10fb48d66d Add an optional missing_ok argument to SQL function current_setting().
This allows convenient checking for existence of a GUC from SQL, which is
particularly useful when dealing with custom variables.

David Christensen, reviewed by Jeevan Chalke
2015-07-02 16:41:07 -04:00
Joe Conway 1fd0d5ec03 Whitespace fix - replace tab with spaces in CREATE TABLE command. 2015-07-02 09:45:53 -07:00
Tom Lane 62d16c7fc5 Improve design and implementation of pg_file_settings view.
As first committed, this view reported on the file contents as they were
at the last SIGHUP event.  That's not as useful as reporting on the current
contents, and what's more, it didn't work right on Windows unless the
current session had serviced at least one SIGHUP.  Therefore, arrange to
re-read the files when pg_show_all_settings() is called.  This requires
only minor refactoring so that we can pass changeVal = false to
set_config_option() so that it won't actually apply any changes locally.

In addition, add error reporting so that errors that would prevent the
configuration files from being loaded, or would prevent individual settings
from being applied, are visible directly in the view.  This makes the view
usable for pre-testing whether edits made in the config files will have the
desired effect, before one actually issues a SIGHUP.

I also added an "applied" column so that it's easy to identify entries that
are superseded by later entries; this was the main use-case for the original
design, but it seemed unnecessarily hard to use for that.

Also fix a 9.4.1 regression that allowed multiple entries for a
PGC_POSTMASTER variable to cause bogus complaints in the postmaster log.
(The issue here was that commit bf007a27ac unintentionally reverted
3e3f65973a, which suppressed any duplicate entries within
ParseConfigFp.  However, since the original coding of the pg_file_settings
view depended on such suppression *not* happening, we couldn't have fixed
this issue now without first doing something with pg_file_settings.
Now we suppress duplicates by marking them "ignored" within
ProcessConfigFileInternal, which doesn't hide them in the view.)

Lesser changes include:

Drive the view directly off the ConfigVariable list, instead of making a
basically-equivalent second copy of the data.  There's no longer any need
to hang onto the data permanently, anyway.

Convert show_all_file_settings() to do its work in one call and return a
tuplestore; this avoids risks associated with assuming that the GUC state
will hold still over the course of query execution.  (I think there were
probably latent bugs here, though you might need something like a cursor
on the view to expose them.)

Arrange to run SIGHUP processing in a short-lived memory context, to
forestall process-lifespan memory leaks.  (There is one known leak in this
code, in ProcessConfigDirectory; it seems minor enough to not be worth
back-patching a specific fix for.)

Remove mistaken assignment to ConfigFileLineno that caused line counting
after an include_dir directive to be completely wrong.

Add missed failure check in AlterSystemSetConfigFile().  We don't really
expect ParseConfigFp() to fail, but that's not an excuse for not checking.
2015-06-28 18:06:14 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 7d60b2af34 Fix DDL command collection for TRANSFORM
Commit b488c580ae, which added the DDL command collection feature,
neglected to update the code that commit cac7658205 had previously
added two weeks earlier for the TRANSFORM feature.

Reported by Michael Paquier.
2015-06-26 18:17:54 -03:00
Robert Haas 9043ef390f Don't warn about creating temporary or unlogged hash indexes.
Warning people that no WAL-logging will be done doesn't make sense
in this case.

Michael Paquier
2015-06-26 11:37:32 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera ad89a5d115 Add transforms to pg_get_object_address and friends
This was missed when transforms were added by commit cac7658205.

Extracted from a larger patch
Author: Michael Paquier
2015-06-21 16:08:49 -03:00
Robert Haas ca3f43aa48 Change TAP test framework to not rely on having a chmod executable.
This might not work at all on Windows, and is not ever efficient.

Michael Paquier
2015-06-19 10:52:00 -04:00
Tom Lane ae58f1430a Fix failure to cover scalar-vs-rowtype cases in exec_stmt_return().
In commit 9e3ad1aac5 I modified plpgsql
to use exec_stmt_return's simple-variables fast path in more cases.
However, I overlooked that there are really two different return
conventions in use here, depending on whether estate->retistuple is true,
and the existing fast-path code had only bothered to handle one of them.
So trying to return a scalar in a function returning composite, or vice
versa, could lead to unexpected error messages (typically "cache lookup
failed for type 0") or to a null-pointer-dereference crash.

In the DTYPE_VAR case, we can just throw error if retistuple is true,
corresponding to what happens in the general-expression code path that was
being used previously.  (Perhaps someday both of these code paths should
attempt a coercion, but today is not that day.)

In the REC and ROW cases, just hand the problem to exec_eval_datum()
when not retistuple.  Also clean up the ROW coding slightly so it looks
more like exec_eval_datum().

The previous commit also caused exec_stmt_return_next() to be used in
more cases, but that code seems to be OK as-is.

Per off-list report from Serge Rielau.  This bug is new in 9.5 so no need
to back-patch.
2015-06-12 13:44:06 -04:00
Tom Lane b00982344a Improve error message and hint for ALTER COLUMN TYPE can't-cast failure.
We already tried to improve this once, but the "improved" text was rather
off-target if you had provided a USING clause.  Also, it seems helpful
to provide the exact text of a suggested USING clause, so users can just
copy-and-paste it when needed.  Per complaint from Keith Rarick and a
suggestion from Merlin Moncure.

Back-patch to 9.2 where the current wording was adopted.
2015-06-12 11:54:03 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 908e234733 Rename jsonb - text[] operator to #- to avoid ambiguity.
Following recent discussion  on -hackers. The underlying function is
also renamed to jsonb_delete_path. The regression tests now don't need
ugly type casts to avoid the ambiguity, so they are also removed.

Catalog version bumped.
2015-06-11 10:06:58 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan b81c7b4098 Desupport jsonb subscript deletion on objects
Supporting deletion of JSON pairs within jsonb objects using an
array-style integer subscript allowed for surprising outcomes.  This was
mostly due to the implementation-defined ordering of pairs within
objects for jsonb.

It also seems desirable to make jsonb integer subscript deletion
consistent with the 9.4 era general purpose integer subscripting
operator for jsonb (although that operator returns NULL when an object
is encountered, while we prefer here to throw an error).

Peter Geoghegan, following discussion on -hackers.
2015-06-07 20:46:00 -04:00
Tom Lane 1497369e5d Get rid of a //-style comment.
Not sure how "//XXX" got into a committed patch in the first place,
as it's both content-free and against project style.  pgindent made a
bit of a hash of it, too.

Going forward, we should have at least one buildfarm member using
"gcc -ansi" to catch such things, at least till such time as we
decide the project target language isn't C90 any more.  I've turned
this option on on dromedary.
2015-06-05 17:04:07 -04:00
Tom Lane 1d27842519 Second try at stabilizing query plans in rowsecurity regression test.
This reverts commit 5cdf25e168,
which was almost immediately proven insufficient by the buildfarm.

On second thought, the tables involved are not large enough that
autovacuum or autoanalyze would notice them; what seems far more
likely to be the culprit is the database-wide "vacuum analyze"
in the concurrent gist test.  That thing has given us one headache
too many, so get rid of it in favor of targeted vacuuming of that
test's own tables only.
2015-06-04 16:42:23 -04:00
Tom Lane 1676e4381f Fix brin regression test so it actually tests cidr.
The problem noted in my previous commit was simpler than I thought:
we weren't getting an index plan because the column wasn't indexed.
2015-06-04 15:24:22 -04:00
Tom Lane 79454c696b Tighten the per-operator testing done in brin regression test.
Verify that the number of matches is exactly what it should be, not just
that it not be zero.  This should help us detect any environment-dependent
issues.

Also, verify that we're getting the expected type of scan plan (either
bitmap or seqscan as appropriate).  Right now, this is failing on the
cidrcol test cases, as shown in the output file.  I'll look into that
in a bit, but it seems good to commit this as-is temporarily to verify
that it behaves as expected on the buildfarm.
2015-06-04 14:39:52 -04:00
Tom Lane 78e72794a7 Fix brin "char" test to actually test what it meant to test.
Casting to char, without quotes, does not give the same results as casting
to "char".  That meant we were not testing the brin "char" paths at all,
since we ended up with a text operator not a "char" operator.
2015-06-04 13:50:32 -04:00
Tom Lane bac99475eb Stabilize results of brin regression test.
This test used seqscans on tenk1, with LIMIT, to build test data.
That works most of the time, but if the synchronized-seqscan logic
kicks in, we get varying test data.  This seems likely to explain
the erratic test failures on buildfarm member chipmunk, which uses
smaller-than-default shared_buffers.  To fix, add ORDER BY clauses to
force the ordering to be what it was implicitly being assumed to be.

Peter Geoghegan had noticed this with respect to one of the trouble
spots, though not the ones actually causing the chipmunk issue.
2015-06-04 13:46:34 -04:00
Tom Lane 5cdf25e168 Stabilize query plans in rowsecurity regression test.
Some recent buildfarm failures can be explained by supposing that
autovacuum or autoanalyze fired on the tables created by this test,
resulting in plan changes.  Do a proactive VACUUM ANALYZE on the
test's principal tables to try to forestall such changes.
2015-06-04 10:37:06 -04:00
Tom Lane 3b0f77601b Fix some questionable edge-case behaviors in add_path() and friends.
add_path_precheck was doing exact comparisons of path costs, but it really
needs to do them fuzzily to be sure it won't reject paths that could
survive add_path's comparisons.  (This can only matter if the initial cost
estimate is very close to the final one, but that turns out to often be
true.)

Also, it should ignore startup cost for this purpose if and only if
compare_path_costs_fuzzily would do so.  The previous coding always ignored
startup cost for parameterized paths, which is wrong as of commit
3f59be836c555fa6; it could result in improper early rejection of paths that
we care about for SEMI/ANTI joins.  It also always considered startup cost
for unparameterized paths, which is just as wrong though the only effect is
to waste planner cycles on paths that can't survive.  Instead, it should
consider startup cost only when directed to by the consider_startup/
consider_param_startup relation flags.

Likewise, compare_path_costs_fuzzily should have symmetrical behavior
for parameterized and unparameterized paths.  In this case, the best
answer seems to be that after establishing that total costs are fuzzily
equal, we should compare startup costs whether or not the consider_xxx
flags are on.  That is what it's always done for unparameterized paths,
so let's make the behavior for parameterized  paths match.

These issues were noted while developing the SEMI/ANTI join costing fix
of commit 3f59be836c, but we chose not to back-patch these fixes,
because they can cause changes in the planner's choices among
nearly-same-cost plans.  (There is in fact one minor change in plan choice
within the core regression tests.)  Destabilizing plan choices in back
branches without very clear improvements is frowned on, so we'll just fix
this in HEAD.
2015-06-03 18:02:39 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 37def42245 Rename jsonb_replace to jsonb_set and allow it to add new values
The function is given a fourth parameter, which defaults to true. When
this parameter is true, if the last element of the path is missing
in the original json, jsonb_set creates it in the result and assigns it
the new value. If it is false then the function does nothing unless all
elements of the path are present, including the last.

Based on some original code from Dmitry Dolgov, heavily modified by me.

Catalog version bumped.
2015-05-31 20:34:10 -04:00
Tom Lane 1c8c656b3c Check that all aliases of a built-in function have same leakproof property.
opr_sanity.sql has a test checking that relevant properties of built-in
functions match when the same C function is referenced by multiple pg_proc
entries.  The test neglected to check proleakproof, though, and when
I added that condition it exposed that xideqint4 hadn't been updated to
match xideq.  So fix that as well, and in consequence bump catversion.

This isn't very critical, so no need to worry about fixing back branches.
2015-05-29 13:26:21 -04:00
Tom Lane aa9eac45ea Fix portability issue in isolationtester grammar.
specparse.y and specscanner.l used "string" as a token name.  Now, bison
likes to define each token name as a macro for the token code it assigns,
which means those names are basically off-limits for any other use within
the grammar file or included headers.  So names as generic as "string" are
dangerous.  This is what was causing the recent failures on protosciurus:
some versions of Solaris' sys/kstat.h use "string" as a field name.
With late-model bison we don't see this problem because the token macros
aren't defined till later (that is why castoroides didn't show the problem
even though it's on the same machine).  But protosciurus uses bison 1.875
which defines the token macros up front.

This land mine has been there from day one; we'd have found it sooner
except that protosciurus wasn't trying to run the isolation tests till
recently.

To fix, rename the token to "string_literal" which is hopefully less
likely to collide with names used by system headers.  Back-patch to
all branches containing the isolation tests.
2015-05-27 19:14:51 -04:00
Tom Lane 1f303fd1be Suppress occasional failures in brin regression test.
brin.sql included a call of brin_summarize_new_values(), and expected
it to always report exactly 5 summarization events.  This failed sometimes
during parallel regression tests, as a consequence of the database-wide
VACUUM in gist.sql getting there first.  The most future-proof way
to avoid variation in the test results is to forget about using
brin_summarize_new_values() and just do a plain "VACUUM brintest",
which will exercise the same code anyway.

Having done that, there's no need for preventing autovacuum on brintest;
doing so just reduces the scope of test coverage, so let's not.
2015-05-26 14:11:12 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 807b9e0dff pgindent run for 9.5 2015-05-23 21:35:49 -04:00
Andres Freund 284bef2977 Fix yet another bug in ON CONFLICT rule deparsing.
Expand testing of rule deparsing a good bit, it's evidently needed.

Author: Peter Geoghegan, Andres Freund
Discussion: CAM3SWZQmXxZhQC32QVEOTYfNXJBJ_Q2SDENL7BV14Cq-zL0FLg@mail.gmail.com
2015-05-23 02:16:24 +02:00
Tom Lane c5dd8ead40 More fixes for lossy-GiST-distance-functions patch.
Paul Ramsey reported that commit 35fcb1b3d0
induced a core dump on commuted ORDER BY expressions, because it was
assuming that the indexorderby expression could be found verbatim in the
relevant equivalence class, but it wasn't there.  We really don't need
anything that complicated anyway; for the data types likely to be used for
index ORDER BY operators in the foreseeable future, the exprType() of the
ORDER BY expression will serve fine.  (The case where we'd have to work
harder is where the ORDER BY expression's result is only binary-compatible
with the declared input type of the ordering operator; long before worrying
about that, one would need to get rid of GiST's hard-wired assumption that
said datatype is float8.)

Aside from fixing that crash and adding a regression test for the case,
I did some desultory code review:

nodeIndexscan.c was likewise overthinking how hard it ought to work to
identify the datatype of the ORDER BY expressions.

Add comments explaining how come nodeIndexscan.c can get away with
simplifying assumptions about NULLS LAST ordering and no backward scan.

Revert no-longer-needed changes of find_ec_member_for_tle(); while the
new definition was no worse than the old, it wasn't better either, and
it might cause back-patching pain.

Revert entirely bogus additions to genam.h.
2015-05-21 19:47:48 -04:00
Andres Freund 9bc77c4519 Various fixes around ON CONFLICT for rule deparsing.
Neither the deparsing of the new alias for INSERT's target table, nor of
the inference clause was supported. Also fixup a typo in an error
message.

Add regression tests to test those code paths.

Author: Peter Geoghegan
2015-05-19 23:18:57 +02:00
Tom Lane 0b28ea79c0 Avoid collation dependence in indexes of system catalogs.
No index in template0 should have collation-dependent ordering, especially
not indexes on shared catalogs.  For most textual columns we avoid this
issue by using type "name" (which sorts per strcmp()).  However there are a
few indexed columns that we'd prefer to use "text" for, and for that, the
default opclass text_ops is unsafe.  Fortunately, text_pattern_ops is safe
(it sorts per memcmp()), and it has no real functional disadvantage for our
purposes.  So change the indexes on pg_seclabel.provider and
pg_shseclabel.provider to use text_pattern_ops.

In passing, also mark pg_replication_origin.roname as using
text_pattern_ops --- for some reason it was labeled varchar_pattern_ops
which is just wrong, even though it accidentally worked.

Add regression test queries to catch future errors of these kinds.

We still can't do anything about the misdeclared pg_seclabel and
pg_shseclabel indexes in back branches :-(
2015-05-19 11:47:42 -04:00
Andres Freund e4942f7a56 Attach ON CONFLICT SET ... WHERE to the correct planstate.
The previous coding was a leftover from attempting to hang all the on
conflict logic onto modify table's child nodes. It appears to not have
actually caused problems except for explain.

Add test exercising the broken and some other code paths.

Author: Peter Geoghegan and Andres Freund
2015-05-19 01:55:10 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 3b075e9d7b Fix typos in comments
Dmitriy Olshevskiy
2015-05-17 14:58:04 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut e6dc503445 Fix whitespace 2015-05-16 20:43:32 -04:00
Andres Freund f3d3118532 Support GROUPING SETS, CUBE and ROLLUP.
This SQL standard functionality allows to aggregate data by different
GROUP BY clauses at once. Each grouping set returns rows with columns
grouped by in other sets set to NULL.

This could previously be achieved by doing each grouping as a separate
query, conjoined by UNION ALLs. Besides being considerably more concise,
grouping sets will in many cases be faster, requiring only one scan over
the underlying data.

The current implementation of grouping sets only supports using sorting
for input. Individual sets that share a sort order are computed in one
pass. If there are sets that don't share a sort order, additional sort &
aggregation steps are performed. These additional passes are sourced by
the previous sort step; thus avoiding repeated scans of the source data.

The code is structured in a way that adding support for purely using
hash aggregation or a mix of hashing and sorting is possible. Sorting
was chosen to be supported first, as it is the most generic method of
implementation.

Instead of, as in an earlier versions of the patch, representing the
chain of sort and aggregation steps as full blown planner and executor
nodes, all but the first sort are performed inside the aggregation node
itself. This avoids the need to do some unusual gymnastics to handle
having to return aggregated and non-aggregated tuples from underlying
nodes, as well as having to shut down underlying nodes early to limit
memory usage.  The optimizer still builds Sort/Agg node to describe each
phase, but they're not part of the plan tree, but instead additional
data for the aggregation node. They're a convenient and preexisting way
to describe aggregation and sorting.  The first (and possibly only) sort
step is still performed as a separate execution step. That retains
similarity with existing group by plans, makes rescans fairly simple,
avoids very deep plans (leading to slow explains) and easily allows to
avoid the sorting step if the underlying data is sorted by other means.

A somewhat ugly side of this patch is having to deal with a grammar
ambiguity between the new CUBE keyword and the cube extension/functions
named cube (and rollup). To avoid breaking existing deployments of the
cube extension it has not been renamed, neither has cube been made a
reserved keyword. Instead precedence hacking is used to make GROUP BY
cube(..) refer to the CUBE grouping sets feature, and not the function
cube(). To actually group by a function cube(), unlikely as that might
be, the function name has to be quoted.

Needs a catversion bump because stored rules may change.

Author: Andrew Gierth and Atri Sharma, with contributions from Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund, Noah Misch, Tom Lane, Svenne Krap, Tomas
    Vondra, Erik Rijkers, Marti Raudsepp, Pavel Stehule
Discussion: CAOeZVidmVRe2jU6aMk_5qkxnB7dfmPROzM7Ur8JPW5j8Y5X-Lw@mail.gmail.com
2015-05-16 03:46:31 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera b0b7be6133 Add BRIN infrastructure for "inclusion" opclasses
This lets BRIN be used with R-Tree-like indexing strategies.

Also provided are operator classes for range types, box and inet/cidr.
The infrastructure provided here should be sufficient to create operator
classes for similar datatypes; for instance, opclasses for PostGIS
geometries should be doable, though we didn't try to implement one.

(A box/point opclass was also submitted, but we ripped it out before
commit because the handling of floating point comparisons in existing
code is inconsistent and would generate corrupt indexes.)

Author: Emre Hasegeli.  Cosmetic changes by me
Review: Andreas Karlsson
2015-05-15 18:05:22 -03:00
Tom Lane 199f5973c5 Improve test for CONVERT() with GB18030 <-> UTF8.
Add a bit of coverage of high code points.

Arjen Nienhuis
2015-05-15 17:03:23 -04:00
Simon Riggs f6d208d6e5 TABLESAMPLE, SQL Standard and extensible
Add a TABLESAMPLE clause to SELECT statements that allows
user to specify random BERNOULLI sampling or block level
SYSTEM sampling. Implementation allows for extensible
sampling functions to be written, using a standard API.
Basic version follows SQLStandard exactly. Usable
concrete use cases for the sampling API follow in later
commits.

Petr Jelinek

Reviewed by Michael Paquier and Simon Riggs
2015-05-15 14:37:10 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 11a83bbedd Silence another create_index regression test failure.
More platform differences in the less-significant digits in output.

Per buildfarm member rover_firefly, still.
2015-05-15 21:24:23 +03:00
Tom Lane 07af523870 Fix outdated src/test/mb/ tests, and add a GB18030 test.
The expected-output files for these tests were broken by the recent
addition of a warning for hash indexes.  Update them.

Also add a test case for GB18030 encoding, similar to the other ones.
This is a pretty weak test, but it's better than nothing.
2015-05-15 13:47:42 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9feaba28e2 Silence create_index regression test failure.
The expected output contained some floating point values which might get
rounded slightly differently on different platforms. The exact output isn't
very interesting in this test, so just round it.

Per buildfarm member rover_firefly.
2015-05-15 18:20:16 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 35fcb1b3d0 Allow GiST distance function to return merely a lower-bound.
The distance function can now set *recheck = false, like index quals. The
executor will then re-check the ORDER BY expressions, and use a queue to
reorder the results on the fly.

This makes it possible to do kNN-searches on polygons and circles, which
don't store the exact value in the index, but just a bounding box.

Alexander Korotkov and me
2015-05-15 14:26:51 +03:00
Fujii Masao ecd222e770 Support VERBOSE option in REINDEX command.
When this option is specified, a progress report is printed as each index
is reindexed.

Per discussion, we agreed on the following syntax for the extensibility of
the options.

    REINDEX (flexible options) { INDEX | ... } name

Sawada Masahiko.
Reviewed by Robert Haas, Fabrízio Mello, Alvaro Herrera, Kyotaro Horiguchi,
Jim Nasby and me.

Discussion: CAD21AoA0pK3YcOZAFzMae+2fcc3oGp5zoRggDyMNg5zoaWDhdQ@mail.gmail.com
2015-05-15 20:09:57 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut a486e35706 Add pg_settings.pending_restart column
with input from David G. Johnston, Robert Haas, Michael Paquier
2015-05-14 20:08:51 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 3f2cec797e Fix jsonb replace and delete on scalars and empty structures
These operations now error out if attempted on scalars, and simply
return the input if attempted on empty arrays or objects. Along the way
we remove the unnecessary cloning of the input when it's known to be
unchanged. Regression tests covering these cases are added.
2015-05-13 13:52:08 -04:00
Andres Freund 4af6e61a36 Fix ON CONFLICT bugs that manifest when used in rules.
Specifically the tlist and rti of the pseudo "excluded" relation weren't
properly treated by expression_tree_walker, which lead to errors when
excluded was referenced inside a rule because the varnos where not
properly adjusted.  Similar omissions in OffsetVarNodes and
expression_tree_mutator had less impact, but should obviously be fixed
nonetheless.

A couple tests of for ON CONFLICT UPDATE into INSERT rule bearing
relations have been added.

In passing I updated a couple comments.
2015-05-13 00:13:22 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan 5c7df74204 Fix some errors from jsonb functions patch.
The catalog version should have been bumped, and the alternative
regression result file was not up to date with the name of jsonb_pretty.
2015-05-12 16:54:38 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan c6947010ce Additional functions and operators for jsonb
jsonb_pretty(jsonb) produces nicely indented json output.
jsonb || jsonb concatenates two jsonb values.
jsonb - text removes a key and its associated value from the json
jsonb - int removes the designated array element
jsonb - text[] removes a key and associated value or array element at
the designated path
jsonb_replace(jsonb,text[],jsonb) replaces the array element designated
by the path or the value associated with the key designated by the path
with the given value.

Original work by Dmitry Dolgov, adapted and reworked for PostgreSQL core
by Andrew Dunstan, reviewed and tidied up by Petr Jelinek.
2015-05-12 15:52:45 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 007c932e5a "Fix" test_ddl_deparse regress test schedule
MSVC is not smart enough to figure it out, so dumb down the Makefile and
remove the schedule file.

Also add a .gitignore file.

Author: Michael Paquier
2015-05-12 12:12:39 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera b488c580ae Allow on-the-fly capture of DDL event details
This feature lets user code inspect and take action on DDL events.
Whenever a ddl_command_end event trigger is installed, DDL actions
executed are saved to a list which can be inspected during execution of
a function attached to ddl_command_end.

The set-returning function pg_event_trigger_ddl_commands can be used to
list actions so captured; it returns data about the type of command
executed, as well as the affected object.  This is sufficient for many
uses of this feature.  For the cases where it is not, we also provide a
"command" column of a new pseudo-type pg_ddl_command, which is a
pointer to a C structure that can be accessed by C code.  The struct
contains all the info necessary to completely inspect and even
reconstruct the executed command.

There is no actual deparse code here; that's expected to come later.
What we have is enough infrastructure that the deparsing can be done in
an external extension.  The intention is that we will add some deparsing
code in a later release, as an in-core extension.

A new test module is included.  It's probably insufficient as is, but it
should be sufficient as a starting point for a more complete and
future-proof approach.

Authors: Álvaro Herrera, with some help from Andres Freund, Ian Barwick,
Abhijit Menon-Sen.

Reviews by Andres Freund, Robert Haas, Amit Kapila, Michael Paquier,
Craig Ringer, David Steele.
Additional input from Chris Browne, Dimitri Fontaine, Stephen Frost,
Petr Jelínek, Tom Lane, Jim Nasby, Steven Singer, Pavel Stěhule.

Based on original work by Dimitri Fontaine, though I didn't use his
code.

Discussion:
  https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/m2txrsdzxa.fsf@2ndQuadrant.fr
  https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20131108153322.GU5809@eldon.alvh.no-ip.org
  https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20150215044814.GL3391@alvh.no-ip.org
2015-05-11 19:14:31 -03:00
Tom Lane 20781765f7 Fix incorrect checking of deferred exclusion constraint after a HOT update.
If a row that potentially violates a deferred exclusion constraint is
HOT-updated later in the same transaction, the exclusion constraint would
be reported as violated when the check finally occurs, even if the row(s)
the new row originally conflicted with have since been removed.  This
happened because the wrong TID was passed to check_exclusion_constraint(),
causing the live HOT-updated row to be seen as a conflicting row rather
than recognized as the row-under-test.

Per bug #13148 from Evan Martin.  It's been broken since exclusion
constraints were invented, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2015-05-11 12:25:43 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan cb9fa802b3 Add new OID alias type regnamespace
Catalog version bumped

Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
2015-05-09 13:36:52 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 0c90f6769d Add new OID alias type regrole
The new type has the scope of whole the database cluster so it doesn't
behave the same as the existing OID alias types which have database
scope,
concerning object dependency. To avoid confusion constants of the new
type are prohibited from appearing where dependencies are made involving
it.

Also, add a note to the docs about possible MVCC violation and
optimization issues, which are general over the all reg* types.

Kyotaro Horiguchi
2015-05-09 13:06:49 -04:00
Stephen Frost a97e0c3354 Add pg_file_settings view and function
The function and view added here provide a way to look at all settings
in postgresql.conf, any #include'd files, and postgresql.auto.conf
(which is what backs the ALTER SYSTEM command).

The information returned includes the configuration file name, line
number in that file, sequence number indicating when the parameter is
loaded (useful to see if it is later masked by another definition of the
same parameter), parameter name, and what it is set to at that point.
This information is updated on reload of the server.

This is unfiltered, privileged, information and therefore access is
restricted to superusers through the GRANT system.

Author: Sawada Masahiko, various improvements by me.
Reviewers: David Steele
2015-05-08 19:09:26 -04:00
Andres Freund 168d5805e4 Add support for INSERT ... ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING/UPDATE.
The newly added ON CONFLICT clause allows to specify an alternative to
raising a unique or exclusion constraint violation error when inserting.
ON CONFLICT refers to constraints that can either be specified using a
inference clause (by specifying the columns of a unique constraint) or
by naming a unique or exclusion constraint.  DO NOTHING avoids the
constraint violation, without touching the pre-existing row.  DO UPDATE
SET ... [WHERE ...] updates the pre-existing tuple, and has access to
both the tuple proposed for insertion and the existing tuple; the
optional WHERE clause can be used to prevent an update from being
executed.  The UPDATE SET and WHERE clauses have access to the tuple
proposed for insertion using the "magic" EXCLUDED alias, and to the
pre-existing tuple using the table name or its alias.

This feature is often referred to as upsert.

This is implemented using a new infrastructure called "speculative
insertion". It is an optimistic variant of regular insertion that first
does a pre-check for existing tuples and then attempts an insert.  If a
violating tuple was inserted concurrently, the speculatively inserted
tuple is deleted and a new attempt is made.  If the pre-check finds a
matching tuple the alternative DO NOTHING or DO UPDATE action is taken.
If the insertion succeeds without detecting a conflict, the tuple is
deemed inserted.

To handle the possible ambiguity between the excluded alias and a table
named excluded, and for convenience with long relation names, INSERT
INTO now can alias its target table.

Bumps catversion as stored rules change.

Author: Peter Geoghegan, with significant contributions from Heikki
    Linnakangas and Andres Freund. Testing infrastructure by Jeff Janes.
Reviewed-By: Heikki Linnakangas, Andres Freund, Robert Haas, Simon Riggs,
    Dean Rasheed, Stephen Frost and many others.
2015-05-08 05:43:10 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera db5f98ab4f Improve BRIN infra, minmax opclass and regression test
The minmax opclass was using the wrong support functions when
cross-datatypes queries were run.  Instead of trying to fix the
pg_amproc definitions (which apparently is not possible), use the
already correct pg_amop entries instead.  This requires jumping through
more hoops (read: extra syscache lookups) to obtain the underlying
functions to execute, but it is necessary for correctness.

Author: Emre Hasegeli, tweaked by Álvaro
Review: Andreas Karlsson

Also change BrinOpcInfo to record each stored type's typecache entry
instead of just the OID.  Turns out that the full type cache is
necessary in brin_deform_tuple: the original code used the indexed
type's byval and typlen properties to extract the stored tuple, which is
correct in Minmax; but in other implementations that want to store
something different, that's wrong.  The realization that this is a bug
comes from Emre also, but I did not use his patch.

I also adopted Emre's regression test code (with smallish changes),
which is more complete.
2015-05-07 13:02:22 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 3b6db1f445 Add geometry/range functions to support BRIN inclusion
This commit adds the following functions:
    box(point) -> box
    bound_box(box, box) -> box
    inet_same_family(inet, inet) -> bool
    inet_merge(inet, inet) -> cidr
    range_merge(anyrange, anyrange) -> anyrange

The first of these is also used to implement a new assignment cast from
point to box.

These functions are the first part of a base to implement an "inclusion"
operator class for BRIN, for multidimensional data types.

Author: Emre Hasegeli
Reviewed by: Andreas Karlsson
2015-05-05 15:22:24 -03:00
Tom Lane a4820434c1 Fix overlooked relcache invalidation in ALTER TABLE ... ALTER CONSTRAINT.
When altering the deferredness state of a foreign key constraint, we
correctly updated the catalogs and then invalidated the relcache state for
the target relation ... but that's not the only relation with relevant
triggers.  Must invalidate the other table as well, or the state change
fails to take effect promptly for operations triggered on the other table.
Per bug #13224 from Christian Ullrich.

In passing, reorganize regression test case for this feature so that it
isn't randomly injected into the middle of an unrelated test sequence.

Oversight in commit f177cbfe67.  Back-patch
to 9.4 where the faulty code was added.
2015-05-03 11:30:24 -04:00
Robert Haas e044a44949 Deparse named arguments to use the new => operator instead of :=
Tom Lane pointed out that this wasn't done, and asked whether that was
intentional.  Subsequent discussion was in favor of making the change,
so here we go.
2015-05-01 09:37:10 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 9d396af463 Fix up some loose ends for CURRENT_USER as RoleSpec
In commit 31eae6028e, some documents were not updated to show the new
capability; fix that.  Also, the error message you get when CURRENT_USER
and SESSION_USER are used in a context that doesn't accept them could be
clearer about it being a problem only in those contexts; so add the
word "here".

Author: Kyotaro HORIGUCHI

His patch submission also included changes to GRANT/REVOKE, but those
seemed more controversial, so I left them out.  We can reconsider these
changes later.
2015-04-30 16:57:05 -03:00
Andres Freund 5aa2350426 Introduce replication progress tracking infrastructure.
When implementing a replication solution ontop of logical decoding, two
related problems exist:
* How to safely keep track of replication progress
* How to change replication behavior, based on the origin of a row;
  e.g. to avoid loops in bi-directional replication setups

The solution to these problems, as implemented here, consist out of
three parts:

1) 'replication origins', which identify nodes in a replication setup.
2) 'replication progress tracking', which remembers, for each
   replication origin, how far replay has progressed in a efficient and
   crash safe manner.
3) The ability to filter out changes performed on the behest of a
   replication origin during logical decoding; this allows complex
   replication topologies. E.g. by filtering all replayed changes out.

Most of this could also be implemented in "userspace", e.g. by inserting
additional rows contain origin information, but that ends up being much
less efficient and more complicated.  We don't want to require various
replication solutions to reimplement logic for this independently. The
infrastructure is intended to be generic enough to be reusable.

This infrastructure also replaces the 'nodeid' infrastructure of commit
timestamps. It is intended to provide all the former capabilities,
except that there's only 2^16 different origins; but now they integrate
with logical decoding. Additionally more functionality is accessible via
SQL.  Since the commit timestamp infrastructure has also been introduced
in 9.5 (commit 73c986add) changing the API is not a problem.

For now the number of origins for which the replication progress can be
tracked simultaneously is determined by the max_replication_slots
GUC. That GUC is not a perfect match to configure this, but there
doesn't seem to be sufficient reason to introduce a separate new one.

Bumps both catversion and wal page magic.

Author: Andres Freund, with contributions from Petr Jelinek and Craig Ringer
Reviewed-By: Heikki Linnakangas, Petr Jelinek, Robert Haas, Steve Singer
Discussion: 20150216002155.GI15326@awork2.anarazel.de,
    20140923182422.GA15776@alap3.anarazel.de,
    20131114172632.GE7522@alap2.anarazel.de
2015-04-29 19:30:53 +02:00
Stephen Frost dcbf5948e1 Improve qual pushdown for RLS and SB views
The original security barrier view implementation, on which RLS is
built, prevented all non-leakproof functions from being pushed down to
below the view, even when the function was not receiving any data from
the view.  This optimization improves on that situation by, instead of
checking strictly for non-leakproof functions, it checks for Vars being
passed to non-leakproof functions and allows functions which do not
accept arguments or whose arguments are not from the current query level
(eg: constants can be particularly useful) to be pushed down.

As discussed, this does mean that a function which is pushed down might
gain some idea that there are rows meeting a certain criteria based on
the number of times the function is called, but this isn't a
particularly new issue and the documentation in rules.sgml already
addressed similar covert-channel risks.  That documentation is updated
to reflect that non-leakproof functions may be pushed down now, if
they meet the above-described criteria.

Author: Dean Rasheed, with a bit of rework to make things clearer,
along with comment and documentation updates from me.
2015-04-27 12:29:42 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut cac7658205 Add transforms feature
This provides a mechanism for specifying conversions between SQL data
types and procedural languages.  As examples, there are transforms
for hstore and ltree for PL/Perl and PL/Python.

reviews by Pavel Stěhule and Andres Freund
2015-04-26 10:33:14 -04:00
Tom Lane 3cf8686014 Prevent improper reordering of antijoins vs. outer joins.
An outer join appearing within the RHS of an antijoin can't commute with
the antijoin, but somehow I missed teaching make_outerjoininfo() about
that.  In Teodor Sigaev's recent trouble report, this manifests as a
"could not find RelOptInfo for given relids" error within eqjoinsel();
but I think silently wrong query results are possible too, if the planner
misorders the joins and doesn't happen to trigger any internal consistency
checks.  It's broken as far back as we had antijoins, so back-patch to all
supported branches.
2015-04-25 16:44:27 -04:00
Stephen Frost 410cbfd6dd Fix file comment for test_rls_hooks.c
The file-level comment wasn't updated when it was copied from the shared
memory queue test module.  Fixed.

Noted by Dean Rasheed.
2015-04-24 20:44:53 -04:00
Stephen Frost e89bd02f58 Perform RLS WITH CHECK before constraints, etc
The RLS capability is built on top of the WITH CHECK OPTION
system which was added for auto-updatable views, however, unlike
WCOs on views (which are mandated by the SQL spec to not fire until
after all other constraints and checks are done), it makes much more
sense for RLS checks to happen earlier than constraint and uniqueness
checks.

This patch reworks the structure which holds the WCOs a bit to be
explicitly either VIEW or RLS checks and the RLS-related checks are
done prior to the constraint and uniqueness checks.  This also allows
better error reporting as we are now reporting when a violation is due
to a WITH CHECK OPTION and when it's due to an RLS policy violation,
which was independently noted by Craig Ringer as being confusing.

The documentation is also updated to include a paragraph about when RLS
WITH CHECK handling is performed, as there have been a number of
questions regarding that and the documentation was previously silent on
the matter.

Author: Dean Rasheed, with some kabitzing and comment changes by me.
2015-04-24 20:34:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 732b33f8ae Fix up .gitignore and cleanup actions in some src/test/ subdirectories.
examples/, locale/, and thread/ lacked .gitignore files and were also
not connected up to top-level "make clean" etc.  This had escaped notice
because none of those directories are built in normal scenarios.  Still,
they have working Makefiles, so if someone does a "make" in one of these
directories it would be good if (a) git doesn't bleat about the product
files and (b) cleaning up removes them.

This is a longstanding oversight, but since this behavior is probably
only of interest to developers, there seems no need for back-patching.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane
2015-04-24 17:13:06 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 9ba978c8cc Fix misspellings
Amit Langote and Thom Brown
2015-04-24 12:00:49 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut dcae5facca Improve speed of make check-world
Before, make check-world would create a new temporary installation for
each test suite, which is slow and wasteful.  Instead, we now create one
test installation that is used by all test suites that are part of a
make run.

The management of the temporary installation is removed from pg_regress
and handled in the makefiles.  This allows for better control, and
unifies the code with that of test suites not run through pg_regress.

review and msvc support by Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>

more review by Fabien Coelho <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
2015-04-23 08:59:52 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 50a16e30eb Use the right type OID after creating a shell type
Commit a2e35b53c3 neglected to update the type OID to use further
down in DefineType when TypeShellMake was changed to return
ObjectAddress instead of OID (it got it right in DefineRange, however.)
This resulted in an internal error message being issued when looking up
I/O functions.

Author: Michael Paquier

Also add Asserts() to a couple of other places to ensure that the type
OID being used is as expected.
2015-04-22 16:23:02 -03:00
Stephen Frost 450fa1b5ba Fix installcheck for test_rls_hooks
As pointed out by the buildfarm, test_rls_hooks wasn't functioning
properly with a clean installcheck.  test_rls_hooks needs to explicitly
load the library with the hooks in it, to allow installcheck to work;
using the --temp-config doesn't help since that isn't used when running
installcheck and it isn't exactly fair to the buildfarm to modify the
installed config prior to calling installcheck.

Also, have test_rls_hooks clean up after itself.
2015-04-22 12:43:57 -04:00
Stephen Frost 0bf22e0c8b RLS fixes, new hooks, and new test module
In prepend_row_security_policies(), defaultDeny was always true, so if
there were any hook policies, the RLS policies on the table would just
get discarded.  Fixed to start off with defaultDeny as false and then
properly set later if we detect that only the default deny policy exists
for the internal policies.

The infinite recursion detection in fireRIRrules() didn't properly
manage the activeRIRs list in the case of WCOs, so it would incorrectly
report infinite recusion if the same relation with RLS appeared more
than once in the rtable, for example "UPDATE t ... FROM t ...".

Further, the RLS expansion code in fireRIRrules() was handling RLS in
the main loop through the rtable, which lead to RTEs being visited twice
if they contained sublink subqueries, which
prepend_row_security_policies() attempted to handle by exiting early if
the RTE already had securityQuals.  That doesn't work, however, since
if the query involved a security barrier view on top of a table with
RLS, the RTE would already have securityQuals (from the view) by the
time fireRIRrules() was invoked, and so the table's RLS policies would
be ignored.  This is fixed in fireRIRrules() by handling RLS in a
separate loop at the end, after dealing with any other sublink
subqueries, thus ensuring that each RTE is only visited once for RLS
expansion.

The inheritance planner code didn't correctly handle non-target
relations with RLS, which would get turned into subqueries during
planning. Thus an update of the form "UPDATE t1 ... FROM t2 ..." where
t1 has inheritance and t2 has RLS quals would fail.  Fix by making sure
to copy in and update the securityQuals when they exist for non-target
relations.

process_policies() was adding WCOs to non-target relations, which is
unnecessary, and could lead to a lot of wasted time in the rewriter and
the planner. Fix by only adding WCO policies when working on the result
relation.  Also in process_policies, we should be copying the USING
policies to the WITH CHECK policies on a per-policy basis, fix by moving
the copying up into the per-policy loop.

Lastly, as noted by Dean, we were simply adding policies returned by the
hook provided to the list of quals being AND'd, meaning that they would
actually restrict records returned and there was no option to have
internal policies and hook-based policies work together permissively (as
all internal policies currently work).  Instead, explicitly add support
for both permissive and restrictive policies by having a hook for each
and combining the results appropriately.  To ensure this is all done
correctly, add a new test module (test_rls_hooks) to test the various
combinations of internal, permissive, and restrictive hook policies.

Largely from Dean Rasheed (thanks!):

CAEZATCVmFUfUOwwhnBTcgi6AquyjQ0-1fyKd0T3xBWJvn+xsFA@mail.gmail.com

Author: Dean Rasheed, though I added the new hooks and test module.
2015-04-22 12:01:06 -04:00
Andres Freund cef939c347 Rename pg_replication_slot's new active_in to active_pid.
In d811c037ce active_in was added but discussion since showed that
active_pid is preferred as a name.

Discussion: CAMsr+YFKgZca5_7_ouaMWxA5PneJC9LNViPzpDHusaPhU9pA7g@mail.gmail.com
2015-04-22 09:43:40 +02:00
Andres Freund d811c037ce Add 'active_in' column to pg_replication_slots.
Right now it is visible whether a replication slot is active in any
session, but not in which.  Adding the active_in column, containing the
pid of the backend having acquired the slot, makes it much easier to
associate pg_replication_slots entries with the corresponding
pg_stat_replication/pg_stat_activity row.

This should have been done from the start, but I (Andres) dropped the
ball there somehow.

Author: Craig Ringer, revised by me Discussion:
CAMsr+YFKgZca5_7_ouaMWxA5PneJC9LNViPzpDHusaPhU9pA7g@mail.gmail.com
2015-04-21 11:51:06 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 9029f4b374 Add system view pg_stat_ssl
This view shows information about all connections, such as if the
connection is using SSL, which cipher is used, and which client
certificate (if any) is used.

Reviews by Alex Shulgin, Heikki Linnakangas, Andres Freund & Michael Paquier
2015-04-12 19:07:46 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 5d79b67bdd Make SSL regression test suite more portable by avoiding cp.
Use perl 'glob' and File::Copy instead of "cp". This takes us one step
closer to running the suite on Windows.

Michael Paquier
2015-04-09 22:07:18 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 0fb256dc82 Gitignore temp files generated by SSL regression suite
Michael Paquier
2015-04-09 22:02:21 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera e9a077cad3 pg_event_trigger_dropped_objects: add is_temp column
It now also reports temporary objects dropped that are local to the
backend.  Previously we weren't reporting any temp objects because it
was deemed unnecessary; but as it turns out, it is necessary if we want
to keep close track of DDL command execution inside one session.  Temp
objects are reported as living in schema pg_temp, which works because
such a schema-qualification always refers to the temp objects of the
current session.
2015-04-06 11:40:55 -03:00
Simon Riggs 35ecc24407 Add new test files for lock level patch 2015-04-05 12:03:58 -04:00
Simon Riggs 0ef0396ae1 Reduce lock levels of some trigger DDL and add FKs
Reduce lock levels to ShareRowExclusive for the following SQL
 CREATE TRIGGER (but not DROP or ALTER)
 ALTER TABLE ENABLE TRIGGER
 ALTER TABLE DISABLE TRIGGER
 ALTER TABLE … ADD CONSTRAINT FOREIGN KEY

Original work by Simon Riggs, extracted and refreshed by Andreas Karlsson
New test cases added by Andreas Karlsson
Reviewed by Noah Misch, Andres Freund, Michael Paquier and Simon Riggs
2015-04-05 11:37:08 -04:00
Tom Lane ca6805338f Fix incorrect matching of subexpressions in outer-join plan nodes.
Previously we would re-use input subexpressions in all expression trees
attached to a Join plan node.  However, if it's an outer join and the
subexpression appears in the nullable-side input, this is potentially
incorrect for apparently-matching subexpressions that came from above
the outer join (ie, targetlist and qpqual expressions), because the
executor will treat the subexpression value as NULL when maybe it should
not be.

The case is fairly hard to hit because (a) you need a non-strict
subexpression (else NULL is correct), and (b) we don't usually compute
expressions in the outputs of non-toplevel plan nodes.  But we might do
so if the expressions are sort keys for a mergejoin, for example.

Probably in the long run we should make a more explicit distinction between
Vars appearing above and below an outer join, but that will be a major
planner redesign and not at all back-patchable.  For the moment, just hack
set_join_references so that it will not match any non-Var expressions
coming from nullable inputs to expressions that came from above the join.
(This is somewhat overkill, in that a strict expression could still be
matched, but it doesn't seem worth the effort to check that.)

Per report from Qingqing Zhou.  The added regression test case is based
on his example.

This has been broken for a very long time, so back-patch to all active
branches.
2015-04-04 19:55:15 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 9d9991c84e psql: add asciidoc output format
Patch by Szymon Guz, adjustments by me

Testing by Michael Paquier, Pavel Stehule
2015-03-31 11:33:25 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan fa1e5afa8a Run pg_upgrade and pg_resetxlog with restricted token on Windows
As with initdb these programs need to run with a restricted token, and
if they don't pg_upgrade will fail when run as a user with Adminstrator
privileges.

Backpatch to all live branches. On the development branch the code is
reorganized so that the restricted token code is now in a single
location. On the stable bramches a less invasive change is made by
simply copying the relevant code to pg_upgrade.c and pg_resetxlog.c.

Patches and bug report from Muhammad Asif Naeem, reviewed by Michael
Paquier, slightly edited by me.
2015-03-30 17:07:52 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 97690ea6e8 Change array_offset to return subscripts, not offsets
... and rename it and its sibling array_offsets to array_position and
array_positions, to account for the changed behavior.

Having the functions return subscripts better matches existing practice,
and is better suited to using the result value as a subscript into the
array directly.  For one-based arrays, the new definition is identical
to what was originally committed.

(We use the term "subscript" in the documentation, which is what we use
whenever we talk about arrays; but the functions themselves are named
using the word "position" to match the standard-defined POSITION()
functions.)

Author: Pavel Stěhule
Behavioral problem noted by Dean Rasheed.
2015-03-30 16:13:21 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 0853630159 Fix lost persistence setting during REINDEX INDEX
ReindexIndex() trusts a parser-built RangeVar with the persistence to
use for the new copy of the index; but the parser naturally does not
know what's the persistence of the original index.  To find out the
correct persistence, grab it from relcache.

This bug was introduced by commit 85b506bbfc, and therefore no
backpatch is necessary.

Bug reported by Thom Brown, analysis and patch by Michael Paquier; test
case provided by Fabrízio de Royes Mello.
2015-03-30 16:01:44 -03:00
Tom Lane 542320c2bd Be more careful about printing constants in ruleutils.c.
The previous coding in get_const_expr() tried to avoid quoting integer,
float, and numeric literals if at all possible.  While that looks nice,
it means that dumped expressions might re-parse to something that's
semantically equivalent but not the exact same parsetree; for example
a FLOAT8 constant would re-parse as a NUMERIC constant with a cast to
FLOAT8.  Though the result would be the same after constant-folding,
this is problematic in certain contexts.  In particular, Jeff Davis
pointed out that this could cause unexpected failures in ALTER INHERIT
operations because of child tables having not-exactly-equivalent CHECK
expressions.  Therefore, favor correctness over legibility and dump
such constants in quotes except in the limited cases where they'll
be interpreted as the same type even without any casting.

This results in assorted small changes in the regression test outputs,
and will affect display of user-defined views and rules similarly.
The odds of that causing problems in the field seem non-negligible;
given the lack of previous complaints, it seems best not to change
this in the back branches.
2015-03-30 14:59:49 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 0633a60f4d Add index-only scan support to range type GiST opclass.
Andreas Karlsson
2015-03-30 13:22:38 +03:00
Andrew Dunstan 7655f4ccea Add a pager_min_lines setting to psql
If set, the pager will not be used unless this many lines are to be
displayed, even if that is more than the screen depth. Default is zero,
meaning it's disabled.

There is probably more work to be done in giving the user control over
when the pager is used, particularly when wide output forces use of the
pager regardless of how many lines there are, but this is a start.
2015-03-28 11:07:41 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3a20b0e7b6 Add index-only scan support to inet GiST opclass.
Andreas Karlsson
2015-03-28 15:11:53 +02:00
Tom Lane 785941cdc3 Tweak __attribute__-wrapping macros for better pgindent results.
This improves on commit bbfd7edae5 by
making two simple changes:

* pg_attribute_noreturn now takes parentheses, ie pg_attribute_noreturn().
Likewise pg_attribute_unused(), pg_attribute_packed().  This reduces
pgindent's tendency to misformat declarations involving them.

* attributes are now always attached to function declarations, not
definitions.  Previously some places were taking creative shortcuts,
which were not merely candidates for bad misformatting by pgindent
but often were outright wrong anyway.  (It does little good to put a
noreturn annotation where callers can't see it.)  In any case, if
we would like to believe that these macros can be used with non-gcc
compilers, we should avoid gratuitous variance in usage patterns.

I also went through and manually improved the formatting of a lot of
declarations, and got rid of excessively repetitive (and now obsolete
anyway) comments informing the reader what pg_attribute_printf is for.
2015-03-26 14:03:25 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas d04c8ed904 Add support for index-only scans in GiST.
This adds a new GiST opclass method, 'fetch', which is used to reconstruct
the original Datum from the value stored in the index. Also, the 'canreturn'
index AM interface function gains a new 'attno' argument. That makes it
possible to use index-only scans on a multi-column index where some of the
opclasses support index-only scans but some do not.

This patch adds support in the box and point opclasses. Other opclasses
can added later as follow-on patches (btree_gist would be particularly
interesting).

Anastasia Lubennikova, with additional fixes and modifications by me.
2015-03-26 19:12:00 +02:00
Tom Lane a4847fc3ef Add an ASSERT statement in plpgsql.
This is meant to make it easier to insert simple debugging cross-checks
in plpgsql functions.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Jim Nasby
2015-03-25 19:05:32 -04:00
Tom Lane 06bf0dd6e3 Upgrade src/port/rint.c to be POSIX-compliant.
The POSIX spec says that rint() rounds halfway cases to nearest even.
Our substitute implementation failed to do that, rather rounding halfway
cases away from zero; and it also got some other cases (such as minus
zero) wrong.  This led to observable cross-platform differences, as
reported in bug #12885 from Rich Schaaf; in particular, casting from
float to int didn't honor round-to-nearest-even on builds using rint.c.

Implement something that attempts to cover all cases per spec, and add
some simple regression tests so that we'll notice if any platforms still
get this wrong.

Although this is a bug fix, no back-patch, as a behavioral change in
the back branches was agreed not to be a good idea.

Pedro Gimeno Fortea, reviewed by Michael Paquier and myself
2015-03-25 15:54:18 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 1d8198bb44 Add support for ALTER TABLE IF EXISTS ... RENAME CONSTRAINT
Also add regression test.  Previously this was documented to work, but
didn't.
2015-03-24 19:52:47 -04:00
Tom Lane e5f455f59f Apply table and domain CHECK constraints in name order.
Previously, CHECK constraints of the same scope were checked in whatever
order they happened to be read from pg_constraint.  (Usually, but not
reliably, this would be creation order for domain constraints and reverse
creation order for table constraints, because of differing implementation
details.)  Nondeterministic results of this sort are problematic at least
for testing purposes, and in discussion it was agreed to be a violation of
the principle of least astonishment.  Therefore, borrow the principle
already established for triggers, and apply such checks in name order
(using strcmp() sort rules).  This lets users control the check order
if they have a mind to.

Domain CHECK constraints still follow the rule of checking lower nested
domains' constraints first; the name sort only applies to multiple
constraints attached to the same domain.

In passing, I failed to resist the temptation to wordsmith a bit in
create_domain.sgml.

Apply to HEAD only, since this could result in a behavioral change in
existing applications, and the potential regression test failures have
not actually been observed in our buildfarm.
2015-03-23 16:59:35 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 33a2c5ecd6 to_char: revert cc0d90b73b
Revert "to_char(float4/8):  zero pad to specified length".  There are
too many platform-specific problems, and the proper rounding is missing.
Also revert companion patch 9d61b9953c.
2015-03-22 22:56:56 -04:00
Tom Lane cb1ca4d800 Allow foreign tables to participate in inheritance.
Foreign tables can now be inheritance children, or parents.  Much of the
system was already ready for this, but we had to fix a few things of
course, mostly in the area of planner and executor handling of row locks.

As side effects of this, allow foreign tables to have NOT VALID CHECK
constraints (and hence to accept ALTER ... VALIDATE CONSTRAINT), and to
accept ALTER SET STORAGE and ALTER SET WITH/WITHOUT OIDS.  Continuing to
disallow these things would've required bizarre and inconsistent special
cases in inheritance behavior.  Since foreign tables don't enforce CHECK
constraints anyway, a NOT VALID one is a complete no-op, but that doesn't
mean we shouldn't allow it.  And it's possible that some FDWs might have
use for SET STORAGE or SET WITH OIDS, though doubtless they will be no-ops
for most.

An additional change in support of this is that when a ModifyTable node
has multiple target tables, they will all now be explicitly identified
in EXPLAIN output, for example:

 Update on pt1  (cost=0.00..321.05 rows=3541 width=46)
   Update on pt1
   Foreign Update on ft1
   Foreign Update on ft2
   Update on child3
   ->  Seq Scan on pt1  (cost=0.00..0.00 rows=1 width=46)
   ->  Foreign Scan on ft1  (cost=100.00..148.03 rows=1170 width=46)
   ->  Foreign Scan on ft2  (cost=100.00..148.03 rows=1170 width=46)
   ->  Seq Scan on child3  (cost=0.00..25.00 rows=1200 width=46)

This was done mainly to provide an unambiguous place to attach "Remote SQL"
fields, but it is useful for inherited updates even when no foreign tables
are involved.

Shigeru Hanada and Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Ashutosh Bapat and Kyotaro
Horiguchi, some additional hacking by me
2015-03-22 13:53:21 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 8ac356cde3 rm src/test/performance
Last changed in 1997.

Report by Andres Freund
2015-03-21 22:21:20 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 9d61b9953c to_char(float4/8): don't print "junk" digits
Commit cc0d90b73b also avoids printing
junk digits, which are digits that are beyond the precision of the
underlying type.
2015-03-21 21:50:03 -04:00
Bruce Momjian cc0d90b73b to_char(float4/8): zero pad to specified length
Previously, zero padding was limited to the internal length, rather than
the specified length.  This allows it to match to_char(int/numeric), which
always padded to the specified length.

Regression tests added.

BACKWARD INCOMPATIBILITY
2015-03-21 21:43:36 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 05d1910c1c regression tests: remove polygon diagrams
The diagrams were inaccurate.

Report by Emre Hasegeli
2015-03-19 22:10:52 -04:00
Robert Haas 12968cf408 Add flags argument to dsm_create.
Right now, there's only one flag, DSM_CREATE_NULL_IF_MAXSEGMENTS,
which suppresses the error that would normally be thrown when the
maximum number of segments already exists, instead returning NULL.
It might be useful to add more flags in the future, such as one to
ignore allocation errors, but I haven't done that here.
2015-03-19 13:03:03 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 13dbc7a824 array_offset() and array_offsets()
These functions return the offset position or positions of a value in an
array.

Author: Pavel Stěhule
Reviewed by: Jim Nasby
2015-03-18 16:01:34 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera b8d226b4f9 Setup cursor position for schema-qualified elements
This makes any errors thrown while looking up such schemas report the
position of the error.

Author: Ryan Kelly
Reviewed by: Jeevan Chalke, Tom Lane
2015-03-18 14:48:02 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera a61fd5334e Support opfamily members in get_object_address
In the spirit of 890192e99a and 4464303405f: have get_object_address
understand individual pg_amop and pg_amproc objects.  There is no way to
refer to such objects directly in the grammar -- rather, they are almost
always considered an integral part of the opfamily that contains them.
(The only case that deals with them individually is ALTER OPERATOR
FAMILY ADD/DROP, which carries the opfamily address separately and thus
does not need it to be part of each added/dropped element's address.)
In event triggers it becomes possible to become involved with individual
amop/amproc elements, and this commit enables pg_get_object_address to
do so as well.

To make the overall coding simpler, this commit also slightly changes
the get_object_address representation for opclasses and opfamilies:
instead of having the AM name in the objargs array, I moved it as the
first element of the objnames array.  This enables the new code to use
objargs for the type names used by pg_amop and pg_amproc.

Reviewed by: Stephen Frost
2015-03-16 12:06:34 -03:00
Tom Lane f4abd0241d Support flattening of empty-FROM subqueries and one-row VALUES tables.
We can't handle this in the general case due to limitations of the
planner's data representations; but we can allow it in many useful cases,
by being careful to flatten only when we are pulling a single-row subquery
up into a FROM (or, equivalently, inner JOIN) node that will still have at
least one remaining relation child.  Per discussion of an example from
Kyotaro Horiguchi.
2015-03-11 23:18:03 -04:00
Tom Lane b746d0c32d Fix old bug in get_loop_count().
While poking at David Kubečka's issue I noticed an ancient logic error
in get_loop_count(): it used 1.0 as a "no data yet" indicator, but since
that is actually a valid rowcount estimate, this doesn't work.  If we
have one input relation with 1.0 as rowcount and then another one with
a larger rowcount, we should use 1.0 as the result, but we picked the
larger rowcount instead.  (I think when I coded this, I recognized the
conflict, but mistakenly thought that the logic would pick the desired
count anyway.)

Fixing this changed the plan for one existing regression test case.
Since the point of that test is to exercise creation of a particular
shape of nestloop plan, I tweaked the query a little bit so it still
results in the same plan choice.

This is definitely a bug, but I'm hesitant to back-patch since it might
change plan choices unexpectedly, and anyway failure to implement a
heuristic precisely as intended is a pretty low-grade bug.
2015-03-11 22:53:32 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 4464303405 Support default ACLs in get_object_address
In the spirit of 890192e99a, this time add support for the things
living in the pg_default_acl catalog.  These are not really "objects",
but they show up as such in event triggers.

There is no "DROP DEFAULT PRIVILEGES" or similar command, so it doesn't
look like the new representation given would be useful anywhere else, so
I didn't try to use it outside objectaddress.c.  (That might be a bug in
itself, but that would be material for another commit.)

Reviewed by Stephen Frost.
2015-03-11 19:23:47 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 890192e99a Support user mappings in get_object_address
Since commit 72dd233d3e we were trying to obtain object addressing
information in sql_drop event triggers, but that caused failures when
the drops involved user mappings.  This addition enables that to work
again.  Naturally, pg_get_object_address can work with these objects
now, too.

I toyed with the idea of removing DropUserMappingStmt as a node and
using DropStmt instead in the DropUserMappingStmt grammar production,
but that didn't go very well: for one thing the messages thrown by the
specific code are specialized (you get "server not found" if you specify
the wrong server, instead of a generic "user mapping for ... not found"
which you'd get it we were to merge this with RemoveObjects --- unless
we added even more special cases).  For another thing, it would require
to pass RoleSpec nodes through the objname/objargs representation used
by RemoveObjects, which works in isolation, but gets messy when
pg_get_object_address is involved.  So I dropped this part for now.

Reviewed by Stephen Frost.
2015-03-11 17:04:27 -03:00
Robert Haas e529cd4ffa Suggest to the user the column they may have meant to reference.
Error messages informing the user that no such column exists can
sometimes provoke a perplexed response.  This often happens due to
a subtle typo in the column name or, perhaps less likely, in the
alias name.  To speed discovery of what the real issue is in such
cases, we'll now search the range table for approximate matches.
If there are one or two such matches that are good enough to think
that they might be what the user intended to type, and better than
all other approximate matches, we'll issue a hint suggesting that
the user might have intended to reference those columns.

Peter Geoghegan and Robert Haas
2015-03-11 10:44:04 -04:00
Andres Freund bbfd7edae5 Add macros wrapping all usage of gcc's __attribute__.
Until now __attribute__() was defined to be empty for all compilers but
gcc. That's problematic because it prevents using it in other compilers;
which is necessary e.g. for atomics portability.  It's also just
generally dubious to do so in a header as widely included as c.h.

Instead add pg_attribute_format_arg, pg_attribute_printf,
pg_attribute_noreturn macros which are implemented in the compilers that
understand them. Also add pg_attribute_noreturn and pg_attribute_packed,
but don't provide fallbacks, since they can affect functionality.

This means that external code that, possibly unwittingly, relied on
__attribute__ defined to be empty on !gcc compilers may now run into
warnings or errors on those compilers. But there shouldn't be many
occurances of that and it's hard to work around...

Discussion: 54B58BA3.8040302@ohmu.fi
Author: Oskari Saarenmaa, with some minor changes by me.
2015-03-11 14:30:01 +01:00
Robert Haas 865f14a2d3 Allow named parameters to be specified using => in addition to :=
SQL has standardized on => as the use of to specify named parameters,
and we've wanted for many years to support the same syntax ourselves,
but this has been complicated by the possible use of => as an operator
name.  In PostgreSQL 9.0, we began emitting a warning when an operator
named => was defined, and in PostgreSQL 9.2, we stopped shipping a
=>(text, text) operator as part of hstore.  By the time the next major
version of PostgreSQL is released, => will have been deprecated for a
full five years, so hopefully there won't be too many people still
relying on it.  We continue to support := for compatibility with
previous PostgreSQL releases.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Petr Jelinek, with a few documentation
tweaks by me.
2015-03-10 11:09:41 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 31eae6028e Allow CURRENT/SESSION_USER to be used in certain commands
Commands such as ALTER USER, ALTER GROUP, ALTER ROLE, GRANT, and the
various ALTER OBJECT / OWNER TO, as well as ad-hoc clauses related to
roles such as the AUTHORIZATION clause of CREATE SCHEMA, the FOR clause
of CREATE USER MAPPING, and the FOR ROLE clause of ALTER DEFAULT
PRIVILEGES can now take the keywords CURRENT_USER and SESSION_USER as
user specifiers in place of an explicit user name.

This commit also fixes some quite ugly handling of special standards-
mandated syntax in CREATE USER MAPPING, which in particular would fail
to work in presence of a role named "current_user".

The special role specifiers PUBLIC and NONE also have more consistent
handling now.

Also take the opportunity to add location tracking to user specifiers.

Authors: Kyotaro Horiguchi.  Heavily reworked by Álvaro Herrera.
Reviewed by: Rushabh Lathia, Adam Brightwell, Marti Raudsepp.
2015-03-09 15:41:54 -03:00
Noah Misch 9375157073 Add CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() to the wait_pid() loop.
Though the one contemporary caller uses it in a limited way, this
function could loop indefinitely if pointed to an arbitrary PID.
2015-03-07 00:47:38 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut bb8582abf3 Remove rolcatupdate
This role attribute is an ancient PostgreSQL feature, but could only be
set by directly updating the system catalogs, and it doesn't have any
clearly defined use.

Author: Adam Brightwell <adam.brightwell@crunchydatasolutions.com>
2015-03-06 23:42:38 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 6510c832bb Add some more tests on event triggers
Fabien Coelho
Reviewed by Robert Haas
2015-03-06 19:14:28 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera cf34e373fc Fix user mapping object description
We were using "user mapping for user XYZ" as description for user mappings, but
that's ambiguous because users can have mappings on multiple foreign
servers; therefore change it to "for user XYZ on server UVW" instead.
Object identities for user mappings are also updated in the same way, in
branches 9.3 and above.

The incomplete description string was introduced together with the whole
SQL/MED infrastructure by commit cae565e503 of 8.4 era, so backpatch all
the way back.
2015-03-05 18:03:16 -03:00
Tom Lane 8abb3cda0d Use the typcache to cache constraints for domain types.
Previously, we cached domain constraints for the life of a query, or
really for the life of the FmgrInfo struct that was used to invoke
domain_in() or domain_check().  But plpgsql (and probably other places)
are set up to cache such FmgrInfos for the whole lifespan of a session,
which meant they could be enforcing really stale sets of constraints.
On the other hand, searching pg_constraint once per query gets kind of
expensive too: testing says that as much as half the runtime of a
trivial query such as "SELECT 0::domaintype" went into that.

To fix this, delegate the responsibility for tracking a domain's
constraints to the typcache, which has the infrastructure needed to
detect syscache invalidation events that signal possible changes.
This not only removes unnecessary repeat reads of pg_constraint,
but ensures that we never apply stale constraint data: whatever we
use is the current data according to syscache rules.

Unfortunately, the current configuration of the system catalogs means
we have to flush cached domain-constraint data whenever either pg_type
or pg_constraint changes, which happens rather a lot (eg, creation or
deletion of a temp table will do it).  It might be worth rearranging
things to split pg_constraint into two catalogs, of which the domain
constraint one would probably be very low-traffic.  That's a job for
another patch though, and in any case this patch should improve matters
materially even with that handicap.

This patch makes use of the recently-added memory context reset callback
feature to manage the lifespan of domain constraint caches, so that we
don't risk deleting a cache that might be in the midst of evaluation.

Although this is a bug fix as well as a performance improvement, no
back-patch.  There haven't been many if any field complaints about
stale domain constraint checks, so it doesn't seem worth taking the
risk of modifying data structures as basic as MemoryContexts in back
branches.
2015-03-01 14:06:55 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera e059e02e43 Fix intermittent failure in event_trigger test
As evidenced by measles in buildfarm.  Pointed out by Tom.
2015-03-01 11:58:07 -03:00
Tom Lane b514a7460d Fix planning of star-schema-style queries.
Part of the intent of the parameterized-path mechanism was to handle
star-schema queries efficiently, but some overly-restrictive search
limiting logic added in commit e2fa76d80b
prevented such cases from working as desired.  Fix that and add a
regression test about it.  Per gripe from Marc Cousin.

This is arguably a bug rather than a new feature, so back-patch to 9.2
where parameterized paths were introduced.
2015-02-28 12:43:04 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 3f190f67eb Fix table_rewrite event trigger for ALTER TYPE/SET DATA TYPE CASCADE
When a composite type being used in a typed table is modified by way
of ALTER TYPE, a table rewrite occurs appearing to come from ALTER TYPE.
The existing event_trigger.c code was unable to cope with that
and raised a spurious error.  The fix is just to accept that command
tag for the event, and document this properly.

Noted while fooling with deparsing of DDL commands.  This appears to be
an oversight in commit 618c9430a.

Thanks to Mark Wong for documentation wording help.
2015-02-27 18:39:53 -03:00
Andrew Dunstan bda76c1c8c Render infinite date/timestamps as 'infinity' for json/jsonb
Commit ab14a73a6c raised an error in these cases and later the
behaviour was copied to jsonb. This is what the XML code, which we
then adopted, does, as the XSD types don't accept infinite values.
However, json dates and timestamps are just strings as far as json is
concerned, so there is no reason not to render these values as
'infinity'.

The json portion of this is backpatched to 9.4 where the behaviour was
introduced. The jsonb portion only affects the development branch.

Per gripe on pgsql-general.
2015-02-26 12:25:21 -05:00
Noah Misch f5ef00aed4 Free SQLSTATE and SQLERRM no earlier than other PL/pgSQL variables.
"RETURN SQLERRM" prompted plpgsql_exec_function() to read from freed
memory.  Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).  Little code ran
between the premature free and the read, so non-assert builds are
unlikely to witness user-visible consequences.
2015-02-25 23:48:28 -05:00
Stephen Frost 6f9bd50eab Add locking clause for SB views for update/delete
In expand_security_qual(), we were handling locking correctly when a
PlanRowMark existed, but not when we were working with the target
relation (which doesn't have any PlanRowMarks, but the subquery created
for the security barrier quals still needs to lock the rows under it).

Noted by Etsuro Fujita when working with the Postgres FDW, which wasn't
properly issuing a SELECT ... FOR UPDATE to the remote side under a
DELETE.

Back-patch to 9.4 where updatable security barrier views were
introduced.

Per discussion with Etsuro and Dean Rasheed.
2015-02-25 21:36:29 -05:00
Tom Lane e9f1c01b71 Fix dumping of views that are just VALUES(...) but have column aliases.
The "simple" path for printing VALUES clauses doesn't work if we need
to attach nondefault column aliases, because there's noplace to do that
in the minimal VALUES() syntax.  So modify get_simple_values_rte() to
detect nondefault aliases and treat that as a non-simple case.  This
further exposes that the "non-simple" path never actually worked;
it didn't produce valid syntax.  Fix that too.  Per bug #12789 from
Curtis McEnroe, and analysis by Andrew Gierth.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  Before 9.3, this also requires
back-patching the part of commit 092d7ded29
that created get_simple_values_rte() to begin with; inserting the extra
test into the old factorization of that logic would've been too messy.
2015-02-25 12:01:12 -05:00
Tom Lane d809fd0008 Improve parser's one-extra-token lookahead mechanism.
There are a couple of places in our grammar that fail to be strict LALR(1),
by requiring more than a single token of lookahead to decide what to do.
Up to now we've dealt with that by using a filter between the lexer and
parser that merges adjacent tokens into one in the places where two tokens
of lookahead are necessary.  But that creates a number of user-visible
anomalies, for instance that you can't name a CTE "ordinality" because
"WITH ordinality AS ..." triggers folding of WITH and ORDINALITY into one
token.  I realized that there's a better way.

In this patch, we still do the lookahead basically as before, but we never
merge the second token into the first; we replace just the first token by
a special lookahead symbol when one of the lookahead pairs is seen.

This requires a couple extra productions in the grammar, but it involves
fewer special tokens, so that the grammar tables come out a bit smaller
than before.  The filter logic is no slower than before, perhaps a bit
faster.

I also fixed the filter logic so that when backing up after a lookahead,
the current token's terminator is correctly restored; this eliminates some
weird behavior in error message issuance, as is shown by the one change in
existing regression test outputs.

I believe that this patch entirely eliminates odd behaviors caused by
lookahead for WITH.  It doesn't really improve the situation for NULLS
followed by FIRST/LAST unfortunately: those sequences still act like a
reserved word, even though there are cases where they should be seen as two
ordinary identifiers, eg "SELECT nulls first FROM ...".  I experimented
with additional grammar hacks but couldn't find any simple solution for
that.  Still, this is better than before, and it seems much more likely
that we *could* somehow solve the NULLS case on the basis of this filter
behavior than the previous one.
2015-02-24 17:53:45 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 8902f79264 Remove unnecessary and unreliable test 2015-02-20 14:03:49 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera d42358efb1 Have TRUNCATE update pgstat tuple counters
This works by keeping a per-subtransaction record of the ins/upd/del
counters before the truncate, and then resetting them; this record is
useful to return to the previous state in case the truncate is rolled
back, either in a subtransaction or whole transaction.  The state is
propagated upwards as subtransactions commit.

When the per-table data is sent to the stats collector, a flag indicates
to reset the live/dead counters to zero as well.

Catalog version bumped due to the change in pgstat format.

Author: Alexander Shulgin
Discussion: 1007.1207238291@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: 548F7D38.2000401@BlueTreble.com
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, Jim Nasby
2015-02-20 12:10:01 -03:00
Tom Lane 2fb7a75f37 Add pg_stat_get_snapshot_timestamp() to show statistics snapshot timestamp.
Per discussion, this could be useful for purposes such as programmatically
detecting a nonresponding stats collector.  We already have the timestamp
anyway, it's just a matter of providing a SQL-accessible function to fetch
it.

Matt Kelly, reviewed by Jim Nasby
2015-02-19 21:36:50 -05:00
Tom Lane 56a79a869b Split array_push into separate array_append and array_prepend functions.
There wasn't any good reason for a single C function to implement both
these SQL functions: it saved very little code overall, and it required
significant pushups to re-determine at runtime which case applied.  Redoing
it as two functions ends up with just slightly more lines of code, but it's
simpler to understand, and faster too because we need not repeat syscache
lookups on every call.

An important side benefit is that this eliminates the only case in which
different aliases of the same C function had both anyarray and anyelement
arguments at the same position, which would almost always be a mistake.
The opr_sanity regression test will now notice such mistakes since there's
no longer a valid case where it happens.
2015-02-18 20:53:33 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 9c7dd35019 Fix opclass/opfamily identity strings
The original representation uses "opcname for amname", which is good
enough; but if we replace "for" with "using", we can apply the returned
identity directly in a DROP command, as in

DROP OPERATOR CLASS opcname USING amname

This slightly simplifies code using object identities to programatically
execute commands on these kinds of objects.

Note backwards-incompatible change:
The previous representation dates back to 9.3 when object identities
were introduced by commit f8348ea3, but we don't want to change the
behavior on released branches unnecessarily and so this is not
backpatched.
2015-02-18 14:44:27 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 0d906798f6 Fix object identities for pg_conversion objects
We were neglecting to schema-qualify them.

Backpatch to 9.3, where object identities were introduced as a concept
by commit f8348ea32e.
2015-02-18 14:28:11 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2c75531a6c In the SSL test suite, use a root CA cert that won't expire (so quickly)
All the other certificates were created to be valid for 10000 days, because
we don't want to have to recreate them. But I missed the root CA cert, and
the pre-created certificates included in the repository expired in January.
Fix, and re-create all the certificates.
2015-02-16 22:11:43 +02:00
Tom Lane 08361cea2b Fix null-pointer-deref crash while doing COPY IN with check constraints.
In commit bf7ca15875 I introduced an
assumption that an RTE referenced by a whole-row Var must have a valid eref
field.  This is false for RTEs constructed by DoCopy, and there are other
places taking similar shortcuts.  Perhaps we should make all those places
go through addRangeTableEntryForRelation or its siblings instead of having
ad-hoc logic, but the most reliable fix seems to be to make the new code in
ExecEvalWholeRowVar cope if there's no eref.  We can reasonably assume that
there's no need to insert column aliases if no aliases were provided.

Add a regression test case covering this, and also verifying that a sane
column name is in fact available in this situation.

Although the known case only crashes in 9.4 and HEAD, it seems prudent to
back-patch the code change to 9.2, since all the ingredients for a similar
failure exist in the variant patch applied to 9.3 and 9.2.

Per report from Jean-Pierre Pelletier.
2015-02-15 23:26:45 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 64cdbbc48c pg_regress: Write processed input/*.source into output dir
Before, it was writing the processed files into the input directory,
which is incorrect in a vpath build.
2015-02-14 21:33:41 -05:00
Andres Freund 2505ce0be0 Remove remnants of ImmediateInterruptOK handling.
Now that nothing sets ImmediateInterruptOK to true anymore, we can
remove all the supporting code.

Reviewed-By: Heikki Linnakangas
2015-02-03 23:25:47 +01:00
Tom Lane cec916f35b Remove unused "m" field in LSEG.
This field has been unreferenced since 1998, and does not appear in lseg
values stored on disk (since sizeof(lseg) is only 32 bytes according to
pg_type).  There was apparently some idea of maintaining it just in values
appearing in memory, but the bookkeeping required to make that work would
surely far outweigh the cost of recalculating the line's slope when needed.
Remove it to (a) simplify matters and (b) suppress some uninitialized-field
whining from Coverity.
2015-02-03 16:53:32 -05:00
Tom Lane 451d280815 Fix jsonb Unicode escape processing, and in consequence disallow \u0000.
We've been trying to support \u0000 in JSON values since commit
78ed8e03c6, and have introduced increasingly worse hacks to try to
make it work, such as commit 0ad1a81632.  However, it fundamentally
can't work in the way envisioned, because the stored representation looks
the same as for \\u0000 which is not the same thing at all.  It's also
entirely bogus to output \u0000 when de-escaped output is called for.

The right way to do this would be to store an actual 0x00 byte, and then
throw error only if asked to produce de-escaped textual output.  However,
getting to that point seems likely to take considerable work and may well
never be practical in the 9.4.x series.

To preserve our options for better behavior while getting rid of the nasty
side-effects of 0ad1a81632, revert that commit in toto and instead
throw error if \u0000 is used in a context where it needs to be de-escaped.
(These are the same contexts where non-ASCII Unicode escapes throw error
if the database encoding isn't UTF8, so this behavior is by no means
without precedent.)

In passing, make both the \u0000 case and the non-ASCII Unicode case report
ERRCODE_UNTRANSLATABLE_CHARACTER / "unsupported Unicode escape sequence"
rather than claiming there's something wrong with the input syntax.

Back-patch to 9.4, where we have to do something because 0ad1a81632
broke things for many cases having nothing to do with \u0000.  9.3 also has
bogus behavior, but only for that specific escape value, so given the lack
of field complaints it seems better to leave 9.3 alone.
2015-01-30 14:44:56 -05:00
Tom Lane 3d660d33aa Fix assorted oversights in range selectivity estimation.
calc_rangesel() failed outright when comparing range variables to empty
constant ranges with < or >=, as a result of missing cases in a switch.
It also produced a bogus estimate for > comparison to an empty range.

On top of that, the >= and > cases were mislabeled throughout.  For
nonempty constant ranges, they managed to produce the right answers
anyway as a result of counterbalancing typos.

Also, default_range_selectivity() omitted cases for elem <@ range,
range &< range, and range &> range, so that rather dubious defaults
were applied for these operators.

In passing, rearrange the code in rangesel() so that the elem <@ range
case is handled in a less opaque fashion.

Report and patch by Emre Hasegeli, some additional work by me
2015-01-30 12:30:59 -05:00
Stephen Frost c7cf9a2433 Add usebypassrls to pg_user and pg_shadow
The row level security patches didn't add the 'usebypassrls' columns to
the pg_user and pg_shadow views on the belief that they were deprecated,
but we havn't actually said they are and therefore we should include it.

This patch corrects that, adds missing documentation for rolbypassrls
into the system catalog page for pg_authid, along with the entries for
pg_user and pg_shadow, and cleans up a few other uses of 'row-level'
cases to be 'row level' in the docs.

Pointed out by Amit Kapila.

Catalog version bump due to system view changes.
2015-01-28 21:47:15 -05:00
Stephen Frost 804b6b6db4 Fix column-privilege leak in error-message paths
While building error messages to return to the user,
BuildIndexValueDescription, ExecBuildSlotValueDescription and
ri_ReportViolation would happily include the entire key or entire row in
the result returned to the user, even if the user didn't have access to
view all of the columns being included.

Instead, include only those columns which the user is providing or which
the user has select rights on.  If the user does not have any rights
to view the table or any of the columns involved then no detail is
provided and a NULL value is returned from BuildIndexValueDescription
and ExecBuildSlotValueDescription.  Note that, for key cases, the user
must have access to all of the columns for the key to be shown; a
partial key will not be returned.

Further, in master only, do not return any data for cases where row
security is enabled on the relation and row security should be applied
for the user.  This required a bit of refactoring and moving of things
around related to RLS- note the addition of utils/misc/rls.c.

Back-patch all the way, as column-level privileges are now in all
supported versions.

This has been assigned CVE-2014-8161, but since the issue and the patch
have already been publicized on pgsql-hackers, there's no point in trying
to hide this commit.
2015-01-28 12:31:30 -05:00
Tom Lane fd496129d1 Clean up some mess in row-security patches.
Fix unsafe coding around PG_TRY in RelationBuildRowSecurity: can't change
a variable inside PG_TRY and then use it in PG_CATCH without marking it
"volatile".  In this case though it seems saner to avoid that by doing
a single assignment before entering the TRY block.

I started out just intending to fix that, but the more I looked at the
row-security code the more distressed I got.  This patch also fixes
incorrect construction of the RowSecurityPolicy cache entries (there was
not sufficient care taken to copy pass-by-ref data into the cache memory
context) and a whole bunch of sloppiness around the definition and use of
pg_policy.polcmd.  You can't use nulls in that column because initdb will
mark it NOT NULL --- and I see no particular reason why a null entry would
be a good idea anyway, so changing initdb's behavior is not the right
answer.  The internal value of '\0' wouldn't be suitable in a "char" column
either, so after a bit of thought I settled on using '*' to represent ALL.
Chasing those changes down also revealed that somebody wasn't paying
attention to what the underlying values of ACL_UPDATE_CHR etc really were,
and there was a great deal of lackadaiscalness in the catalogs.sgml
documentation for pg_policy and pg_policies too.

This doesn't pretend to be a complete code review for the row-security
stuff, it just fixes the things that were in my face while dealing with
the bugs in RelationBuildRowSecurity.
2015-01-24 16:16:22 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 972bf7d6f1 Tweak BRIN minmax operator class
In the union support proc, we were not checking the hasnulls flag of
value A early enough, so it could be skipped if the "allnulls" flag in
value B is set.  Also, a check on the allnulls flag of value "B" was
redundant, so remove it.

Also change inet_minmax_ops to not be the default opclass for type inet,
as a future inclusion operator class would be more useful and it's
pretty difficult to change default opclass for a datatype later on.
(There is no catversion bump for this catalog change; this shouldn't be
a problem.)

Extracted from a larger patch to add an "inclusion" operator class.

Author: Emre Hasegeli
2015-01-22 17:01:09 -03:00
Bruce Momjian 59367fdf97 adjust ACL owners for REASSIGN and ALTER OWNER TO
When REASSIGN and ALTER OWNER TO are used, both the object owner and ACL
list should be changed from the old owner to the new owner. This patch
fixes types, foreign data wrappers, and foreign servers to change their
ACL list properly;  they already changed owners properly.

BACKWARD INCOMPATIBILITY?

Report by Alexey Bashtanov
2015-01-22 12:36:55 -05:00
Tom Lane aa719391d5 In pg_regress, remove the temporary installation upon successful exit.
This results in a very substantial reduction in disk space usage during
"make check-world", since that sequence involves creation of numerous
temporary installations.  It should also help a bit in the buildfarm, even
though the buildfarm script doesn't create as many temp installations,
because the current script misses deleting some of them; and anyway it
seems better to do this once in one place rather than expecting that
script to get it right every time.

In 9.4 and HEAD, also undo the unwise choice in commit b1aebbb6a8
to report strerror(errno) after a rmtree() failure.  rmtree has already
reported that, possibly for multiple failures with distinct errnos; and
what's more, by the time it returns there is no good reason to assume
that errno still reflects the last reportable error.  So reporting errno
here is at best redundant and at worst badly misleading.

Back-patch to all supported branches, so that future revisions of the
buildfarm script can rely on this behavior.
2015-01-19 23:44:19 -05:00
Noah Misch 4c34dcf97f Activate low-volume optional logging during regression test runs.
Elaborated from an idea by Andres Freund.
2015-01-18 14:08:09 -05:00
Tom Lane 20af53d719 Show sort ordering options in EXPLAIN output.
Up to now, EXPLAIN has contented itself with printing the sort expressions
in a Sort or Merge Append plan node.  This patch improves that by
annotating the sort keys with COLLATE, DESC, USING, and/or NULLS FIRST/LAST
whenever nondefault sort ordering options are used.  The output is now a
reasonably close approximation of an ORDER BY clause equivalent to the
plan's ordering.

Marius Timmer, Lukas Kreft, and Arne Scheffer; reviewed by Mike Blackwell.
Some additional hacking by me.
2015-01-16 18:19:00 -05:00
Noah Misch 28df6a0df0 Update "pg_regress --no-locale" for Darwin and Windows.
Commit 894459e59f revealed this option to
be broken for NLS builds on Darwin, but "make -C contrib/unaccent check"
and the buildfarm client rely on it.  Fix that configuration by
redefining the option to imply LANG=C on Darwin.  In passing, use LANG=C
instead of LANG=en on Windows; since only postmaster startup uses that
value, testers are unlikely to notice the change.  Back-patch to 9.0,
like the predecessor commit.
2015-01-16 01:27:31 -05:00
Tom Lane c480cb9d24 Fix use-of-already-freed-memory problem in EvalPlanQual processing.
Up to now, the "child" executor state trees generated for EvalPlanQual
rechecks have simply shared the ResultRelInfo arrays used for the original
execution tree.  However, this leads to dangling-pointer problems, because
ExecInitModifyTable() is all too willing to scribble on some fields of the
ResultRelInfo(s) even when it's being run in one of those child trees.
This trashes those fields from the perspective of the parent tree, because
even if the generated subtree is logically identical to what was in use in
the parent, it's in a memory context that will go away when we're done
with the child state tree.

We do however want to share information in the direction from the parent
down to the children; in particular, fields such as es_instrument *must*
be shared or we'll lose the stats arising from execution of the children.
So the simplest fix is to make a copy of the parent's ResultRelInfo array,
but not copy any fields back at end of child execution.

Per report from Manuel Kniep.  The added isolation test is based on his
example.  In an unpatched memory-clobber-enabled build it will reliably
fail with "ctid is NULL" errors in all branches back to 9.1, as a
consequence of junkfilter->jf_junkAttNo being overwritten with $7f7f.
This test cannot be run as-is before that for lack of WITH syntax; but
I have no doubt that some variant of this problem can arise in older
branches, so apply the code change all the way back.
2015-01-15 18:52:58 -05:00
Andres Freund 59f71a0d0b Add a default local latch for use in signal handlers.
To do so, move InitializeLatchSupport() into the new common process
initialization functions, and add a new global variable MyLatch.

MyLatch is usable as soon InitPostmasterChild() has been called
(i.e. very early during startup). Initially it points to a process
local latch that exists in all processes. InitProcess/InitAuxiliaryProcess
then replaces that local latch with PGPROC->procLatch. During shutdown
the reverse happens.

This is primarily advantageous for two reasons: For one it simplifies
dealing with the shared process latch, especially in signal handlers,
because instead of having to check for MyProc, MyLatch can be used
unconditionally. For another, a later patch that makes FEs/BE
communication use latches, now can rely on the existence of a latch,
even before having gone through InitProcess.

Discussion: 20140927191243.GD5423@alap3.anarazel.de
2015-01-14 18:45:22 +01:00
Tom Lane 5b3ce2c911 Avoid unexpected slowdown in vacuum regression test.
I noticed the "vacuum" regression test taking really significantly longer
than it used to on a slow machine.  Investigation pointed the finger at
commit e415b469b3, which added creation of
an index using an extremely expensive index function.  That function was
evidently meant to be applied only twice ... but the test re-used an
existing test table, which up till a couple lines before that had had over
two thousand rows.  Depending on timing of the concurrent regression tests,
the intervening VACUUMs might have been unable to remove those
recently-dead rows, and then the index build would need to create index
entries for them too, leading to the wrap_do_analyze() function being
executed 2000+ times not twice.  Avoid this by using a different table
that is guaranteed to have only the intended two rows in it.

Back-patch to 9.0, like the commit that created the problem.
2015-01-12 15:13:53 -05:00
Stephen Frost c219cbfed3 Move rowsecurity event trigger test
The event trigger test for rowsecurity can cause problems for other
tests which are run in parallel with it.  Instead of running that test
in the rowsecurity set, move it to the event_trigger set, which runs
isolated from other tests.

Also reverts 7161b08, which moved rowsecurity into its own test group.
That's no longer necessary, now that the event trigger test is gone from
the rowsecurity set of tests.

Pointed out by Tom.
2015-01-08 14:14:14 -05:00
Noah Misch e415b469b3 Reject ANALYZE commands during VACUUM FULL or another ANALYZE.
vacuum()'s static variable handling makes it non-reentrant; an ensuing
null pointer deference crashed the backend.  Back-patch to 9.0 (all
supported versions).
2015-01-07 22:33:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 79af9a1d26 Fix namespace handling in xpath function
Previously, the xml value resulting from an xpath query would not have
namespace declarations if the namespace declarations were attached to
an ancestor element in the input xml value.  That means the output value
was not correct XML.  Fix that by running the result value through
xmlCopyNode(), which produces the correct namespace declarations.

Author: Ali Akbar <the.apaan@gmail.com>
2015-01-06 23:06:13 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 4baaf863ec Update copyright for 2015
Backpatch certain files through 9.0
2015-01-06 11:43:47 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera d5e3d1e969 Fix thinko in lock mode enum
Commit 0e5680f473 contained a thinko
mixing LOCKMODE with LockTupleMode.  This caused misbehavior in the case
where a tuple is marked with a multixact with at most a FOR SHARE lock,
and another transaction tries to acquire a FOR NO KEY EXCLUSIVE lock;
this case should block but doesn't.

Include a new isolation tester spec file to explicitely try all the
tuple lock combinations; without the fix it shows the problem:

    starting permutation: s1_begin s1_lcksvpt s1_tuplock2 s2_tuplock3 s1_commit
    step s1_begin: BEGIN;
    step s1_lcksvpt: SELECT * FROM multixact_conflict FOR KEY SHARE; SAVEPOINT foo;
    a

    1
    step s1_tuplock2: SELECT * FROM multixact_conflict FOR SHARE;
    a

    1
    step s2_tuplock3: SELECT * FROM multixact_conflict FOR NO KEY UPDATE;
    a

    1
    step s1_commit: COMMIT;

With the fixed code, step s2_tuplock3 blocks until session 1 commits,
which is the correct behavior.

All other cases behave correctly.

Backpatch to 9.3, like the commit that introduced the problem.
2015-01-04 15:48:29 -03:00
Tom Lane 7161b082bd Don't run rowsecurity in parallel with other regression tests.
The short-lived event trigger in the rowsecurity test causes irreproducible
failures when the concurrent tests do something that the event trigger
can't cope with.  Per buildfarm.
2014-12-31 17:04:27 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 72dd233d3e pg_event_trigger_dropped_objects: Add name/args output columns
These columns can be passed to pg_get_object_address() and used to
reconstruct the dropped objects identities in a remote server containing
similar objects, so that the drop can be replicated.

Reviewed by Stephen Frost, Heikki Linnakangas, Abhijit Menon-Sen, Andres
Freund.
2014-12-30 17:41:46 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera a676201490 Add pg_identify_object_as_address
This function returns object type and objname/objargs arrays, which can
be passed to pg_get_object_address.  This is especially useful because
the textual representation can be copied to a remote server in order to
obtain the corresponding OID-based address.  In essence, this function
is the inverse of recently added pg_get_object_address().

Catalog version bumped due to the addition of the new function.

Also add docs to pg_get_object_address.
2014-12-30 15:41:50 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 5b447ad3a9 Fix object_address expected output
Per pink buildfarm
2014-12-30 15:04:21 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 3f88672a4e Use TypeName to represent type names in certain commands
In COMMENT, DROP, SECURITY LABEL, and the new pg_get_object_address
function, we were representing types as a list of names, same as other
objects; but types are special objects that require their own
representation to be totally accurate.  In the original COMMENT code we
had a note about fixing it which was lost in the course of c10575ff00.
Change all those places to use TypeName instead, as suggested by that
comment.

Right now the original coding doesn't cause any bugs, so no backpatch.
It is more problematic for proposed future code that operate with object
addresses from the SQL interface; type details such as array-ness are
lost when working with the degraded representation.

Thanks to Petr Jelínek and Dimitri Fontaine for offlist help on finding
a solution to a shift/reduce grammar conflict.
2014-12-30 13:57:23 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 6630420fc9 Restrict name list len for domain constraints
This avoids an ugly-looking "cache lookup failure" message.

Ugliness pointed out by Andres Freund.
2014-12-26 14:31:37 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 289121a452 Remove event trigger from object_address test
It is causing trouble when run in parallel mode, because dropping the
function other sessions are running concurrently causes them to fail due
to inability to find the function.

Per buildfarm, as noted by Tom Lane.
2014-12-26 14:18:09 -03:00
Noah Misch 8d9cb0bc48 Have config_sspi_auth() permit IPv6 localhost connections.
Windows versions later than Windows Server 2003 map "localhost" to ::1.
Account for that in the generated pg_hba.conf, fixing another oversight
in commit f6dc6dd5ba.  Back-patch to 9.0,
like that commit.

David Rowley and Noah Misch
2014-12-25 13:52:03 -05:00
Tom Lane 3e22753559 Remove failing collation case from object_address regression test.
Per buildfarm, this test case does not yield consistent results.
I don't think it's useful enough to figure out a workaround, either.
2014-12-23 16:55:51 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera a609d96778 Revert "Use a bitmask to represent role attributes"
This reverts commit 1826987a46.

The overall design was deemed unacceptable, in discussion following the
previous commit message; we might find some parts of it still
salvageable, but I don't want to be on the hook for fixing it, so let's
wait until we have a new patch.
2014-12-23 15:35:49 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera d7ee82e50f Add SQL-callable pg_get_object_address
This allows access to get_object_address from SQL, which is useful to
obtain OID addressing information from data equivalent to that emitted
by the parser.  This is necessary infrastructure of a project to let
replication systems propagate object dropping events to remote servers,
where the schema might be different than the server originating the
DROP.

This patch also adds support for OBJECT_DEFAULT to get_object_address;
that is, it is now possible to refer to a column's default value.

Catalog version bumped due to the new function.

Reviewed by Stephen Frost, Heikki Linnakangas, Robert Haas, Andres
Freund, Abhijit Menon-Sen, Adam Brightwell.
2014-12-23 15:31:29 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 1826987a46 Use a bitmask to represent role attributes
The previous representation using a boolean column for each attribute
would not scale as well as we want to add further attributes.

Extra auxilliary functions are added to go along with this change, to
make up for the lost convenience of access of the old representation.

Catalog version bumped due to change in catalogs and the new functions.

Author: Adam Brightwell, minor tweaks by Álvaro
Reviewed by: Stephen Frost, Andres Freund, Álvaro Herrera
2014-12-23 10:22:09 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 7eca575d1c get_object_address: separate domain constraints from table constraints
Apart from enabling comments on domain constraints, this enables a
future project to replicate object dropping to remote servers: with the
current mechanism there's no way to distinguish between the two types of
constraints, so there's no way to know what to drop.

Also added support for the domain constraint comments in psql's \dd and
pg_dump.

Catalog version bumped due to the change in ObjectType enum.
2014-12-23 09:06:44 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 0ee98d1cbf pg_event_trigger_dropped_objects: add behavior flags
Add "normal" and "original" flags as output columns to the
pg_event_trigger_dropped_objects() function.  With this it's possible to
distinguish which objects, among those listed, need to be explicitely
referenced when trying to replicate a deletion.

This is necessary so that the list of objects can be pruned to the
minimum necessary to replicate the DROP command in a remote server that
might have slightly different schema (for instance, TOAST tables and
constraints with different names and such.)

Catalog version bumped due to change of function definition.

Reviewed by: Abhijit Menon-Sen, Stephen Frost, Heikki Linnakangas,
Robert Haas.
2014-12-19 15:00:45 -03:00
Fujii Masao 19e065c049 Ensure variables live across calls in generate_series(numeric, numeric).
In generate_series_step_numeric(), the variables "start_num"
and "stop_num" may be potentially freed until the next call.
So they should be put in the location which can survive across calls.
But previously they were not, and which could cause incorrect
behavior of generate_series(numeric, numeric). This commit fixes
this problem by copying them on multi_call_memory_ctx.

Andrew Gierth
2014-12-18 21:13:52 +09:00
Fujii Masao ccf292cd2e Update .gitignore for config.cache.
Also add a comment about why regreesion.* aren't listed in .gitignore.

Jim Nasby
2014-12-18 19:56:42 +09:00
Noah Misch 40c598fa15 Fix previous commit for TAP test suites in VPATH builds.
Per buildfarm member crake.  Back-patch to 9.4, where the TAP suites
were introduced.
2014-12-18 01:24:57 -05:00
Noah Misch f6dc6dd5ba Lock down regression testing temporary clusters on Windows.
Use SSPI authentication to allow connections exclusively from the OS
user that launched the test suite.  This closes on Windows the
vulnerability that commit be76a6d39e
closed on other platforms.  Users of "make installcheck" or custom test
harnesses can run "pg_regress --config-auth=DATADIR" to activate the
same authentication configuration that "make check" would use.
Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).

Security: CVE-2014-0067
2014-12-17 22:48:40 -05:00
Tom Lane fc2ac1fb41 Allow CHECK constraints to be placed on foreign tables.
As with NOT NULL constraints, we consider that such constraints are merely
reports of constraints that are being enforced by the remote server (or
other underlying storage mechanism).  Their only real use is to allow
planner optimizations, for example in constraint-exclusion checks.  Thus,
the code changes here amount to little more than removal of the error that
was formerly thrown for applying CHECK to a foreign table.

(In passing, do a bit of cleanup of the ALTER FOREIGN TABLE reference page,
which had accumulated some weird decisions about ordering etc.)

Shigeru Hanada and Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Kyotaro Horiguchi and
Ashutosh Bapat.
2014-12-17 17:00:53 -05:00
Noah Misch 0916eba131 Fix commit_ts test suite for systems with coarse timestamp granularity.
Noticed on a couple of Windows configurations.

Petr Jelinek, reviewed by Michael Paquier.
2014-12-15 20:56:09 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4520ba6769 Add point <-> polygon distance operator.
Alexander Korotkov, reviewed by Emre Hasegeli.
2014-12-15 17:06:21 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan e39b6f953e Add CINE option for CREATE TABLE AS and CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW
Fabrízio de Royes Mello reviewed by Rushabh Lathia.
2014-12-13 13:56:09 -05:00
Tom Lane b0f479113a Repair corner-case bug in array version of percentile_cont().
The code for advancing through the input rows overlooked the case that we
might already be past the first row of the row pair now being considered,
in case the previous percentile also fell between the same two input rows.

Report and patch by Andrew Gierth; logic rewritten a bit for clarity by me.
2014-12-13 11:49:41 -05:00
Tom Lane 1c5c70df45 Avoid instability in output of new REINDEX SCHEMA test.
The planner seems to like to do this join query as a hash join, making
the output ordering machine-dependent; worse, it's a hash on OIDs, so
that it's a bit astonishing that the result doesn't change from run to
run even on one machine.  Add an ORDER BY to get consistent results.
Per buildfarm.

I also suppressed output from the final DROP SCHEMA CASCADE, to avoid
occasional failures similar to those fixed in commit 81d815dc3e.
That hasn't been observed in the buildfarm yet, but it seems likely
to happen in future if we leave it as-is.
2014-12-12 15:49:09 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 7e354ab9fe Add several generator functions for jsonb that exist for json.
The functions are:
    to_jsonb()
    jsonb_object()
    jsonb_build_object()
    jsonb_build_array()
    jsonb_agg()
    jsonb_object_agg()

Also along the way some better logic is implemented in
json_categorize_type() to match that in the newly implemented
jsonb_categorize_type().

Andrew Dunstan, reviewed by Pavel Stehule and Alvaro Herrera.
2014-12-12 15:31:14 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 237a882443 Add json_strip_nulls and jsonb_strip_nulls functions.
The functions remove object fields, including in nested objects, that
have null as a value. In certain cases this can lead to considerably
smaller datums, with no loss of semantic information.

Andrew Dunstan, reviewed by Pavel Stehule.
2014-12-12 09:00:43 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 2f8607860b SSL tests: Remove trailing blank lines 2014-12-11 21:33:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut ce37eff06d SSL tests: Silence pg_ctl output
Otherwise the pg_ctl start and stop messages get mixed up with the TAP
output, which isn't technically valid.
2014-12-11 21:32:30 -05:00
Tom Lane 2db576ba8c Fix corner case where SELECT FOR UPDATE could return a row twice.
In READ COMMITTED mode, if a SELECT FOR UPDATE discovers it has to redo
WHERE-clause checking on rows that have been updated since the SELECT's
snapshot, it invokes EvalPlanQual processing to do that.  If this first
occurs within a non-first child table of an inheritance tree, the previous
coding could accidentally re-return a matching row from an earlier,
already-scanned child table.  (And, to add insult to injury, I think this
could make it miss returning a row that should have been returned, if the
updated row that this happens on should still have passed the WHERE qual.)
Per report from Kyotaro Horiguchi; the added isolation test is based on his
test case.

This has been broken for quite awhile, so back-patch to all supported
branches.
2014-12-11 19:37:36 -05:00
Simon Riggs 2646d2d4a9 Further changes to REINDEX SCHEMA
Ensure we reindex indexes built on Mat Views.
Based on patch from Micheal Paquier

Add thorough tests to check that indexes on
tables, toast tables and mat views are reindexed.

Simon Riggs
2014-12-11 22:54:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 0845264642 Make rowsecurity test clean up after itself, too.
Leaving global objects like roles hanging around is bad practice.
2014-12-11 17:45:35 -05:00
Tom Lane 58af84f4bb Fix completely broken REINDEX SCHEMA testcase.
Aside from not testing the case it claimed to test (namely a permissions
failure), it left a login-capable role lying around, which quite aside
from possibly being a security hole would cause subsequent regression runs
to fail since the role would already exist.
2014-12-11 17:37:17 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas e39250c644 Add a regression test suite for SSL support.
It's not run by the global "check" or "installcheck" targets, because the
temporary installation it creates accepts TCP connections from any user
the same host, which is insecure.
2014-12-09 17:37:20 +02:00
Simon Riggs ae4e6887a4 Silence REINDEX
Previously REINDEX DATABASE and REINDEX SCHEMA
produced a stream of NOTICE messages. Removing that
since it is inconsistent for such a command to
produce output without a VERBOSE option.
2014-12-09 18:05:36 +09:00
Simon Riggs fe263d115a REINDEX SCHEMA
Add new SCHEMA option to REINDEX and reindexdb.

Sawada Masahiko

Reviewed by Michael Paquier and Fabrízio de Royes Mello
2014-12-09 00:28:00 +09:00
Simon Riggs 618c9430a8 Event Trigger for table_rewrite
Generate a table_rewrite event when ALTER TABLE
attempts to rewrite a table. Provide helper
functions to identify table and reason.

Intended use case is to help assess or to react
to schema changes that might hold exclusive locks
for long periods.

Dimitri Fontaine, triggering an edit by Simon Riggs

Reviewed in detail by Michael Paquier
2014-12-08 00:55:28 +09:00
Heikki Linnakangas b27b6e75af Remove erroneous EXTRA_CLEAN line from Makefile.
After commit da34731, these files are not generated files anymore.

Adam Brightwell
2014-12-05 12:17:56 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera 73c986adde Keep track of transaction commit timestamps
Transactions can now set their commit timestamp directly as they commit,
or an external transaction commit timestamp can be fed from an outside
system using the new function TransactionTreeSetCommitTsData().  This
data is crash-safe, and truncated at Xid freeze point, same as pg_clog.

This module is disabled by default because it causes a performance hit,
but can be enabled in postgresql.conf requiring only a server restart.

A new test in src/test/modules is included.

Catalog version bumped due to the new subdirectory within PGDATA and a
couple of new SQL functions.

Authors: Álvaro Herrera and Petr Jelínek

Reviewed to varying degrees by Michael Paquier, Andres Freund, Robert
Haas, Amit Kapila, Fujii Masao, Jaime Casanova, Simon Riggs, Steven
Singer, Peter Eisentraut
2014-12-03 11:53:02 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut bc2f43eaa4 Fix whitespace 2014-12-02 23:45:03 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera da34731bd3 Install kludges to fix check-world for src/test/modules
check-world failed in a completely clean tree, because src/test/modules
fail to build unless errcodes.h is generated first.  To fix this,
install a dependency in src/test/modules' Makefile so that the necessary
file is generated.  Even with this, running "make check" within
individual module subdirs will still fail because the dependency is not
considered there, but this case is less interesting and would be messier
to fix.

check-world still failed with the above fix in place, this time because
dummy_seclabel used LOAD to load the dynamic library, which doesn't work
because the @libdir@ (expanded by the makefile) is expanded to the final
install path, not the temporary installation directory used by make
check.  To fix, tweak things so that CREATE EXTENSION can be used
instead, which solves the problem because the library path is expanded
by the backend, which is aware of the true libdir.
2014-12-02 23:43:53 -03:00
Tom Lane 475aedd1ef Improve error messages for malformed array input strings.
Make the error messages issued by array_in() uniformly follow the style
	ERROR: malformed array literal: "actual input string"
	DETAIL: specific complaint here
and rewrite many of the specific complaints to be clearer.

The immediate motivation for doing this is a complaint from Josh Berkus
that json_to_record() produced an unintelligible error message when
dealing with an array item, because it tries to feed the JSON-format
array value to array_in().  Really it ought to be smart enough to
perform JSON-to-Postgres array conversion, but that's a future feature
not a bug fix.  In the meantime, this change is something we agreed
we could back-patch into 9.4, and it should help de-confuse things a bit.
2014-12-02 18:23:27 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 3325624377 dummy_seclabel: add sql/, expected/, and .gitignores
Michael Paquier
2014-12-02 11:14:56 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera df761e3cf7 Move security_label test
Rather than have the core security_label regression test depend on the
dummy_seclabel module, have that part of the test be executed by
dummy_seclabel itself directly.  This simplifies the testing rig a bit;
in particular it should silence the problems from the MSVC buildfarm
phylum, which haven't yet gotten taught how to install src/test/modules.
2014-12-01 16:12:43 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 22dfd116a1 Move test modules from contrib to src/test/modules
This is advance preparation for introducing even more test modules; the
easy solution is to add them to contrib, but that's bloated enough that
it seems a good time to think of something different.

Moved modules are dummy_seclabel, test_shm_mq, test_parser and
worker_spi.

(test_decoding was also a candidate, but there was too much opposition
to moving that one.  We can always reconsider later.)
2014-11-29 23:55:00 -03:00
Stephen Frost 143b39c185 Rename pg_rowsecurity -> pg_policy and other fixes
As pointed out by Robert, we should really have named pg_rowsecurity
pg_policy, as the objects stored in that catalog are policies.  This
patch fixes that and updates the column names to start with 'pol' to
match the new catalog name.

The security consideration for COPY with row level security, also
pointed out by Robert, has also been addressed by remembering and
re-checking the OID of the relation initially referenced during COPY
processing, to make sure it hasn't changed under us by the time we
finish planning out the query which has been built.

Robert and Alvaro also commented on missing OCLASS and OBJECT entries
for POLICY (formerly ROWSECURITY or POLICY, depending) in various
places.  This patch fixes that too, which also happens to add the
ability to COMMENT on policies.

In passing, attempt to improve the consistency of messages, comments,
and documentation as well.  This removes various incarnations of
'row-security', 'row-level security', 'Row-security', etc, in favor
of 'policy', 'row level security' or 'row_security' as appropriate.

Happy Thanksgiving!
2014-11-27 01:15:57 -05:00
Tom Lane bb1b8f694a De-reserve most statement-introducing keywords in plpgsql.
Add a bit of context sensitivity to plpgsql_yylex() so that it can
recognize when the word it is looking at is the first word of a new
statement, and if so whether it is the target of an assignment statement.
When we are at start of statement and it's not an assignment, we can
prefer recognizing unreserved keywords over recognizing variable names,
thereby allowing most statements' initial keywords to be demoted from
reserved to unreserved status.  This is rather useful already (there are
15 such words that get demoted here), and what's more to the point is
that future patches proposing to add new plpgsql statements can avoid
objections about having to add new reserved words.

The keywords BEGIN, DECLARE, FOR, FOREACH, LOOP, WHILE need to remain
reserved because they can be preceded by block labels, and the logic
added here doesn't understand about block labels.  In principle we
could probably fix that, but it would take more than one token of
lookback and the benefit doesn't seem worth extra complexity.

Also note I didn't de-reserve EXECUTE, because it is used in more places
than just statement start.  It's possible it could be de-reserved with
more work, but that would be an independent fix.

In passing, also de-reserve COLLATE and DEFAULT, which shouldn't have
been reserved in the first place since they only need to be recognized
within DECLARE sections.
2014-11-25 15:02:09 -05:00
Tom Lane bac27394a1 Support arrays as input to array_agg() and ARRAY(SELECT ...).
These cases formerly failed with errors about "could not find array type
for data type".  Now they yield arrays of the same element type and one
higher dimension.

The implementation involves creating functions with API similar to the
existing accumArrayResult() family.  I (tgl) also extended the base family
by adding an initArrayResult() function, which allows callers to avoid
special-casing the zero-inputs case if they just want an empty array as
result.  (Not all do, so the previous calling convention remains valid.)
This allowed simplifying some existing code in xml.c and plperl.c.

Ali Akbar, reviewed by Pavel Stehule, significantly modified by me
2014-11-25 12:21:28 -05:00
Stephen Frost 81d815dc3e Suppress DROP CASCADE notices in regression tests
In the regression tests, when doing cascaded drops, we need to suppress
the notices from DROP CASCADE or there can be transient regression
failures as the order of drops can depend on the physical row order in
pg_depend.

Report and fix suggestion from Tom.
2014-11-25 10:04:49 -05:00
Tom Lane b62f94c603 Allow simplification of EXISTS() subqueries containing LIMIT.
The locution "EXISTS(SELECT ... LIMIT 1)" seems to be rather common among
people who don't realize that the database already performs optimizations
equivalent to putting LIMIT 1 in the sub-select.  Unfortunately, this was
actually making things worse, because it prevented us from optimizing such
EXISTS clauses into semi or anti joins.  Teach simplify_EXISTS_query() to
suppress constant-positive LIMIT clauses.  That fixes the semi/anti-join
case, and may help marginally even for cases that have to be left as
sub-SELECTs.

Marti Raudsepp, reviewed by David Rowley
2014-11-22 19:12:38 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas b10a97b819 Add a comment to regress.c explaining what it contains.
Ian Barwick
2014-11-21 15:07:29 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 88fc719263 Add test cases for indexam operations not currently covered.
That includes VACUUM on GIN, GiST and SP-GiST indexes, and B-tree indexes
large enough to cause page deletions in B-tree. Plus some other special
cases.

After this patch, the regression tests generate all different WAL record
types. Not all branches within the redo functions are covered, but it's a
step forward.
2014-11-19 19:47:43 +02:00
Tom Lane 8d7af8fbe7 Don't require bleeding-edge timezone data in timestamptz regression test.
The regression test cases added in commits b2cbced9e et al depended in part
on the Russian timezone offset changes of Oct 2014.  While this is of no
particular concern for a default Postgres build, it was possible for a
build using --with-system-tzdata to fail the tests if the system tzdata
database wasn't au courant.  Bjorn Munch and Christoph Berg both complained
about this while packaging 9.4rc1, so we probably shouldn't insist on the
system tzdata being up-to-date.  Instead, make an equivalent test using a
zone change that occurred in Venezuela in 2007.  With this patch, the
regression tests should pass using any tzdata set from 2012 or later.
(I can't muster much sympathy for somebody using --with-system-tzdata
on a machine whose system tzdata is more than three years out-of-date.)
2014-11-18 21:36:39 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 86cf9a5650 Reduce disk footprint of brin regression test
Per complaint from Tom.

While at it, throw in some extra tests for nulls as well, and make sure
that the set of data we insert on the second round is not identical to
the first one.  Both measures are intended to improve coverage of the
test.

Also uncomment the ON COMMIT DROP clause on the CREATE TEMP TABLE
commands.  This doesn't have any effect for someone examining the
regression database after the tests are done, but it reduces clutter for
those that execute the script directly.
2014-11-14 16:31:48 -03:00
Fujii Masao c291503b1c Rename pending_list_cleanup_size to gin_pending_list_limit.
Since this parameter is only for GIN index, it's better to
add "gin" to the parameter name for easier understanding.
2014-11-13 12:14:48 +09:00
Noah Misch 28245b8424 Use just one database connection in the "tablespace" test.
On Windows, DROP TABLESPACE has a race condition when run concurrently
with other processes having opened files in the tablespace.  This led to
a rare failure on buildfarm member frogmouth.  Back-patch to 9.4, where
the reconnection was introduced.
2014-11-12 07:33:17 -05:00
Fujii Masao 1871c89202 Add generate_series(numeric, numeric).
Платон Малюгин
Reviewed by Michael Paquier, Ali Akbar and Marti Raudsepp
2014-11-11 21:44:46 +09:00
Fujii Masao a1b395b6a2 Add GUC and storage parameter to set the maximum size of GIN pending list.
Previously the maximum size of GIN pending list was controlled only by
work_mem. But the reasonable value of work_mem and the reasonable size
of the list are basically not the same, so it was not appropriate to
control both of them by only one GUC, i.e., work_mem. This commit
separates new GUC, pending_list_cleanup_size, from work_mem to allow
users to control only the size of the list.

Also this commit adds pending_list_cleanup_size as new storage parameter
to allow users to specify the size of the list per index. This is useful,
for example, when users want to increase the size of the list only for
the GIN index which can be updated heavily, and decrease it otherwise.

Reviewed by Etsuro Fujita.
2014-11-11 21:08:21 +09:00
Tom Lane bf7ca15875 Ensure that RowExprs and whole-row Vars produce the expected column names.
At one time it wasn't terribly important what column names were associated
with the fields of a composite Datum, but since the introduction of
operations like row_to_json(), it's important that looking up the rowtype
ID embedded in the Datum returns the column names that users would expect.
That did not work terribly well before this patch: you could get the column
names of the underlying table, or column aliases from any level of the
query, depending on minor details of the plan tree.  You could even get
totally empty field names, which is disastrous for cases like row_to_json().

To fix this for whole-row Vars, look to the RTE referenced by the Var, and
make sure its column aliases are applied to the rowtype associated with
the result Datums.  This is a tad scary because we might have to return
a transient RECORD type even though the Var is declared as having some
named rowtype.  In principle it should be all right because the record
type will still be physically compatible with the named rowtype; but
I had to weaken one Assert in ExecEvalConvertRowtype, and there might be
third-party code containing similar assumptions.

Similarly, RowExprs have to be willing to override the column names coming
from a named composite result type and produce a RECORD when the column
aliases visible at the site of the RowExpr differ from the underlying
table's column names.

In passing, revert the decision made in commit 398f70ec07 to add
an alias-list argument to ExecTypeFromExprList: better to provide that
functionality in a separate function.  This also reverts most of the code
changes in d685814835, which we don't need because we're no longer
depending on the tupdesc found in the child plan node's result slot to be
blessed.

Back-patch to 9.4, but not earlier, since this solution changes the results
in some cases that users might not have realized were buggy.  We'll apply a
more restricted form of this patch in older branches.
2014-11-10 15:21:09 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 0e892e04ef Fix serial schedule
Test misc depends on brin, but it was earlier in the serial schedule
file.  I didn't notice this because I only run the parallel schedule,
but the buildfarm exposed my folly ...
2014-11-07 17:08:16 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 7516f52594 BRIN: Block Range Indexes
BRIN is a new index access method intended to accelerate scans of very
large tables, without the maintenance overhead of btrees or other
traditional indexes.  They work by maintaining "summary" data about
block ranges.  Bitmap index scans work by reading each summary tuple and
comparing them with the query quals; all pages in the range are returned
in a lossy TID bitmap if the quals are consistent with the values in the
summary tuple, otherwise not.  Normal index scans are not supported
because these indexes do not store TIDs.

As new tuples are added into the index, the summary information is
updated (if the block range in which the tuple is added is already
summarized) or not; in the latter case, a subsequent pass of VACUUM or
the brin_summarize_new_values() function will create the summary
information.

For data types with natural 1-D sort orders, the summary info consists
of the maximum and the minimum values of each indexed column within each
page range.  This type of operator class we call "Minmax", and we
supply a bunch of them for most data types with B-tree opclasses.
Since the BRIN code is generalized, other approaches are possible for
things such as arrays, geometric types, ranges, etc; even for things
such as enum types we could do something different than minmax with
better results.  In this commit I only include minmax.

Catalog version bumped due to new builtin catalog entries.

There's more that could be done here, but this is a good step forwards.

Loosely based on ideas from Simon Riggs; code mostly by Álvaro Herrera,
with contribution by Heikki Linnakangas.

Patch reviewed by: Amit Kapila, Heikki Linnakangas, Robert Haas.
Testing help from Jeff Janes, Erik Rijkers, Emanuel Calvo.

PS:
  The research leading to these results has received funding from the
  European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under
  grant agreement n° 318633.
2014-11-07 16:38:14 -03:00
Fujii Masao 08309aaf74 Implement IF NOT EXIST for CREATE INDEX.
Fabrízio de Royes Mello, reviewed by Marti Raudsepp, Adam Brightwell and me.
2014-11-06 18:48:33 +09:00
Tom Lane 465d7e1882 Make CREATE TYPE print warnings if a datatype's I/O functions are volatile.
This is a followup to commit 43ac12c6e6,
which added regression tests checking that I/O functions of built-in
types are not marked volatile.  Complaining in CREATE TYPE should push
developers of add-on types to fix any misdeclared functions in their
types.  It's just a warning not an error, to avoid creating upgrade
problems for what might be just cosmetic mis-markings.

Aside from adding the warning code, fix a number of types that were
sloppily created in the regression tests.
2014-11-05 11:44:06 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut a409b464f9 Add configure --enable-tap-tests option
Don't skip the TAP tests anymore when IPC::Run is not found.  This will
fail normally now.
2014-11-02 09:17:26 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 7912f9b7dc Remove use of TAP subtests
They turned out to be too much of a portability headache, because they
need a fairly new version of Test::More to work properly.
2014-10-29 19:41:19 -04:00
Tom Lane e0722d9cb5 Avoid corrupting tables when ANALYZE inside a transaction is rolled back.
VACUUM and ANALYZE update the target table's pg_class row in-place, that is
nontransactionally.  This is OK, more or less, for the statistical columns,
which are mostly nontransactional anyhow.  It's not so OK for the DDL hint
flags (relhasindex etc), which might get changed in response to
transactional changes that could still be rolled back.  This isn't a
problem for VACUUM, since it can't be run inside a transaction block nor
in parallel with DDL on the table.  However, we allow ANALYZE inside a
transaction block, so if the transaction had earlier removed the last
index, rule, or trigger from the table, and then we roll back the
transaction after ANALYZE, the table would be left in a corrupted state
with the hint flags not set though they should be.

To fix, suppress the hint-flag updates if we are InTransactionBlock().
This is safe enough because it's always OK to postpone hint maintenance
some more; the worst-case consequence is a few extra searches of pg_index
et al.  There was discussion of instead using a transactional update,
but that would change the behavior in ways that are not all desirable:
in most scenarios we're better off keeping ANALYZE's statistical values
even if the ANALYZE itself rolls back.  In any case we probably don't want
to change this behavior in back branches.

Per bug #11638 from Casey Shobe.  This has been broken for a good long
time, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Tom Lane and Michael Paquier, initial diagnosis by Andres Freund
2014-10-29 18:12:02 -04:00
Tom Lane a4523c5aa5 Improve planning of btree index scans using ScalarArrayOpExpr quals.
Since we taught btree to handle ScalarArrayOpExpr quals natively (commit
9e8da0f757), the planner has always included
ScalarArrayOpExpr quals in index conditions if possible.  However, if the
qual is for a non-first index column, this could result in an inferior plan
because we can no longer take advantage of index ordering (cf. commit
807a40c551).  It can be better to omit the
ScalarArrayOpExpr qual from the index condition and let it be done as a
filter, so that the output doesn't need to get sorted.  Indeed, this is
true for the query introduced as a test case by the latter commit.

To fix, restructure get_index_paths and build_index_paths so that we
consider paths both with and without ScalarArrayOpExpr quals in non-first
index columns.  Redesign the API of build_index_paths so that it reports
what it found, saving useless second or third calls.

Report and patch by Andrew Gierth (though rather heavily modified by me).
Back-patch to 9.2 where this code was introduced, since the issue can
result in significant performance regressions compared to plans produced
by 9.1 and earlier.
2014-10-26 16:12:22 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 17009fb9eb Fix TAP tests with Perl 5.12
Perl 5.12 ships with a somewhat broken version of Test::Simple, so skip
the tests if that is found.

The relevant fix is

    0.98  Wed, 23 Feb 2011 14:38:02 +1100
        Bug Fixes
        * subtest() should not fail if $? is non-zero. (Aaron Crane)
2014-10-26 10:26:36 -04:00
Tom Lane 43ac12c6e6 In type_sanity, check I/O functions of built-in types are not volatile.
We have a project policy that I/O functions must not be volatile, as per
commit aab353a60b, but we weren't doing
anything to enforce that.  In most usage the marking of the function
doesn't matter as long as its behavior is sane --- but I/O casts can
expose the marking as user-visible behavior, as per today's complaint
from Joe Van Dyk about contrib/ltree.

This test as such will only protect us against future errors in built-in
data types.  To catch the same error in contrib or third-party types,
perhaps we should make CREATE TYPE complain?  But that's a separate
issue from enforcing the policy for built-in types.
2014-10-23 15:59:40 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a5f7d58194 Add tests for sequence privileges 2014-10-22 21:39:07 -04:00
Tom Lane 31dd7fcd03 Update expected/sequence_1.out.
The last three updates to the sequence regression test have all forgotten
to touch the alternate expected-output file.  Sigh.

Michael Paquier
2014-10-21 18:25:58 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 6f04368cfc Allow input format xxxx-xxxx-xxxx for macaddr type
Author: Herwin Weststrate <herwin@quarantainenet.nl>
Reviewed-by: Ali Akbar <the.apaan@gmail.com>
2014-10-21 16:16:39 -04:00
Tom Lane f330a6d140 Fix mishandling of FieldSelect-on-whole-row-Var in nested lateral queries.
If an inline-able SQL function taking a composite argument is used in a
LATERAL subselect, and the composite argument is a lateral reference,
the planner could fail with "variable not found in subplan target list",
as seen in bug #11703 from Karl Bartel.  (The outer function call used in
the bug report and in the committed regression test is not really necessary
to provoke the bug --- you can get it if you manually expand the outer
function into "LATERAL (SELECT inner_function(outer_relation))", too.)

The cause of this is that we generate the reltargetlist for the referenced
relation before doing eval_const_expressions() on the lateral sub-select's
expressions (cf find_lateral_references()), so what's scheduled to be
emitted by the referenced relation is a whole-row Var, not the simplified
single-column Var produced by optimizing the function's FieldSelect on the
whole-row Var.  Then setrefs.c fails to match up that lateral reference to
what's available from the outer scan.

Preserving the FieldSelect optimization in such cases would require either
major planner restructuring (to recursively do expression simplification
on sub-selects much earlier) or some amazingly ugly kluge to change the
reltargetlist of a possibly-already-planned relation.  It seems better
just to skip the optimization when the Var is from an upper query level;
the case is not so common that it's likely anyone will notice a few
wasted cycles.

AFAICT this problem only occurs for uplevel LATERAL references, so
back-patch to 9.3 where LATERAL was added.
2014-10-20 12:23:42 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 6895866510 psql: Improve \pset without arguments
Revert the output of the individual backslash commands that change print
settings back to the 9.3 way (not showing the command name in
parentheses).  Implement \pset without arguments separately, showing all
settings with values in a table form.
2014-10-18 22:48:15 -04:00
Bruce Momjian b87671f1b6 Shorten warning about hash creation
Also document that PITR is also affected.
2014-10-18 10:36:09 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 417f92484d interval: tighten precision specification
interval precision can only be specified after the "interval" keyword if
no units are specified.

Previously we incorrectly checked the units to see if the precision was
legal, causing confusion.

Report by Alvaro Herrera
2014-10-18 10:31:00 -04:00
Tom Lane b2cbced9ee Support timezone abbreviations that sometimes change.
Up to now, PG has assumed that any given timezone abbreviation (such as
"EDT") represents a constant GMT offset in the usage of any particular
region; we had a way to configure what that offset was, but not for it
to be changeable over time.  But, as with most things horological, this
view of the world is too simplistic: there are numerous regions that have
at one time or another switched to a different GMT offset but kept using
the same timezone abbreviation.  Almost the entire Russian Federation did
that a few years ago, and later this month they're going to do it again.
And there are similar examples all over the world.

To cope with this, invent the notion of a "dynamic timezone abbreviation",
which is one that is referenced to a particular underlying timezone
(as defined in the IANA timezone database) and means whatever it currently
means in that zone.  For zones that use or have used daylight-savings time,
the standard and DST abbreviations continue to have the property that you
can specify standard or DST time and get that time offset whether or not
DST was theoretically in effect at the time.  However, the abbreviations
mean what they meant at the time in question (or most recently before that
time) rather than being absolutely fixed.

The standard abbreviation-list files have been changed to use this behavior
for abbreviations that have actually varied in meaning since 1970.  The
old simple-numeric definitions are kept for abbreviations that have not
changed, since they are a bit faster to resolve.

While this is clearly a new feature, it seems necessary to back-patch it
into all active branches, because otherwise use of Russian zone
abbreviations is going to become even more problematic than it already was.
This change supersedes the changes in commit 513d06ded et al to modify the
fixed meanings of the Russian abbreviations; since we've not shipped that
yet, this will avoid an undesirably incompatible (not to mention incorrect)
change in behavior for timestamps between 2011 and 2014.

This patch makes some cosmetic changes in ecpglib to keep its usage of
datetime lookup tables as similar as possible to the backend code, but
doesn't do anything about the increasingly obsolete set of timezone
abbreviation definitions that are hard-wired into ecpglib.  Whatever we
do about that will likely not be appropriate material for back-patching.
Also, a potential free() of a garbage pointer after an out-of-memory
failure in ecpglib has been fixed.

This patch also fixes pre-existing bugs in DetermineTimeZoneOffset() that
caused it to produce unexpected results near a timezone transition, if
both the "before" and "after" states are marked as standard time.  We'd
only ever thought about or tested transitions between standard and DST
time, but that's not what's happening when a zone simply redefines their
base GMT offset.

In passing, update the SGML documentation to refer to the Olson/zoneinfo/
zic timezone database as the "IANA" database, since it's now being
maintained under the auspices of IANA.
2014-10-16 15:22:10 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut b7a08c8028 Message improvements 2014-10-12 01:06:35 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 4f2e5a8a84 regression: adjust polygon diagrams to not use tabs
Also, small diagram adjustments

Patch by Emre Hasegeli
2014-10-11 17:14:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 4a50de1312 Fix bogus optimization in JSONB containment tests.
When determining whether one JSONB object contains another, it's okay to
make a quick exit if the first object has fewer pairs than the second:
because we de-duplicate keys within objects, it is impossible that the
first object has all the keys the second does.  However, the code was
applying this rule to JSONB arrays as well, where it does *not* hold
because arrays can contain duplicate entries.  The test was really in
the wrong place anyway; we should do it within JsonbDeepContains, where
it can be applied to nested objects not only top-level ones.

Report and test cases by Alexander Korotkov; fix by Peter Geoghegan and
Tom Lane.
2014-10-11 14:13:51 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera df630b0dd5 Implement SKIP LOCKED for row-level locks
This clause changes the behavior of SELECT locking clauses in the
presence of locked rows: instead of causing a process to block waiting
for the locks held by other processes (or raise an error, with NOWAIT),
SKIP LOCKED makes the new reader skip over such rows.  While this is not
appropriate behavior for general purposes, there are some cases in which
it is useful, such as queue-like tables.

Catalog version bumped because this patch changes the representation of
stored rules.

Reviewed by Craig Ringer (based on a previous attempt at an
implementation by Simon Riggs, who also provided input on the syntax
used in the current patch), David Rowley, and Álvaro Herrera.

Author: Thomas Munro
2014-10-07 17:23:34 -03:00
Stephen Frost 78d72563ef Fix CreatePolicy, pg_dump -v; psql and doc updates
Peter G pointed out that valgrind was, rightfully, complaining about
CreatePolicy() ending up copying beyond the end of the parsed policy
name.  Name is a fixed-size type and we need to use namein (through
DirectFunctionCall1()) to flush out the entire array before we pass
it down to heap_form_tuple.

Michael Paquier pointed out that pg_dump --verbose was missing a
newline and Fabrízio de Royes Mello further pointed out that the
schema was also missing from the messages, so fix those also.

Also, based on an off-list comment from Kevin, rework the psql \d
output to facilitate copy/pasting into a new CREATE or ALTER POLICY
command.

Lastly, improve the pg_policies view and update the documentation for
it, along with a few other minor doc corrections based on an off-list
discussion with Adam Brightwell.
2014-10-03 16:31:53 -04:00
Tom Lane 5a6c168c78 Fix some more problems with nested append relations.
As of commit a87c72915 (which later got backpatched as far as 9.1),
we're explicitly supporting the notion that append relations can be
nested; this can occur when UNION ALL constructs are nested, or when
a UNION ALL contains a table with inheritance children.

Bug #11457 from Nelson Page, as well as an earlier report from Elvis
Pranskevichus, showed that there were still nasty bugs associated with such
cases: in particular the EquivalenceClass mechanism could try to generate
"join" clauses connecting an appendrel child to some grandparent appendrel,
which would result in assertion failures or bogus plans.

Upon investigation I concluded that all current callers of
find_childrel_appendrelinfo() need to be fixed to explicitly consider
multiple levels of parent appendrels.  The most complex fix was in
processing of "broken" EquivalenceClasses, which are ECs for which we have
been unable to generate all the derived equality clauses we would like to
because of missing cross-type equality operators in the underlying btree
operator family.  That code path is more or less entirely untested by
the regression tests to date, because no standard opfamilies have such
holes in them.  So I wrote a new regression test script to try to exercise
it a bit, which turned out to be quite a worthwhile activity as it exposed
existing bugs in all supported branches.

The present patch is essentially the same as far back as 9.2, which is
where parameterized paths were introduced.  In 9.0 and 9.1, we only need
to back-patch a small fragment of commit 5b7b5518d, which fixes failure to
propagate out the original WHERE clauses when a broken EC contains constant
members.  (The regression test case results show that these older branches
are noticeably stupider than 9.2+ in terms of the quality of the plans
generated; but we don't really care about plan quality in such cases,
only that the plan not be outright wrong.  A more invasive fix in the
older branches would not be a good idea anyway from a plan-stability
standpoint.)
2014-10-01 19:31:12 -04:00
Stephen Frost 08da8947f4 Also revert e3ec0728, JSON regression tests
Managed to forget to update the other JSON regression test output,
again.  Revert the commit which fixed it before.

Per buildfarm.
2014-09-29 13:59:32 -04:00
Stephen Frost c8a026e4f1 Revert 95d737ff to add 'ignore_nulls'
Per discussion, revert the commit which added 'ignore_nulls' to
row_to_json.  This capability would be better added as an independent
function rather than being bolted on to row_to_json.  Additionally,
the implementation didn't address complex JSON objects, and so was
incomplete anyway.

Pointed out by Tom and discussed with Andrew and Robert.
2014-09-29 13:32:22 -04:00
Stephen Frost ff27fcfa0a Fix relcache for policies, and doc updates
Andres pointed out that there was an extra ';' in equalPolicies, which
made me realize that my prior testing with CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS was
insufficient (it didn't always catch the issue, just most of the time).
Thanks to that, a different issue was discovered, specifically in
equalRSDescs.  This change corrects eqaulRSDescs to return 'true' once
all policies have been confirmed logically identical.  After stepping
through both functions to ensure correct behavior, I ran this for
about 12 hours of CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS runs of the regression tests
with no failures.

In addition, correct a few typos in the documentation which were pointed
out by Thom Brown (thanks!) and improve the policy documentation further
by adding a flushed out usage example based on a unix passwd file.

Lastly, clean up a few comments in the regression tests and pg_dump.h.
2014-09-26 12:46:26 -04:00
Andres Freund b64d92f1a5 Add a basic atomic ops API abstracting away platform/architecture details.
Several upcoming performance/scalability improvements require atomic
operations. This new API avoids the need to splatter compiler and
architecture dependent code over all the locations employing atomic
ops.

For several of the potential usages it'd be problematic to maintain
both, a atomics using implementation and one using spinlocks or
similar. In all likelihood one of the implementations would not get
tested regularly under concurrency. To avoid that scenario the new API
provides a automatic fallback of atomic operations to spinlocks. All
properties of atomic operations are maintained. This fallback -
obviously - isn't as fast as just using atomic ops, but it's not bad
either. For one of the future users the atomics ontop spinlocks
implementation was actually slightly faster than the old purely
spinlock using implementation. That's important because it reduces the
fear of regressing older platforms when improving the scalability for
new ones.

The API, loosely modeled after the C11 atomics support, currently
provides 'atomic flags' and 32 bit unsigned integers. If the platform
efficiently supports atomic 64 bit unsigned integers those are also
provided.

To implement atomics support for a platform/architecture/compiler for
a type of atomics 32bit compare and exchange needs to be
implemented. If available and more efficient native support for flags,
32 bit atomic addition, and corresponding 64 bit operations may also
be provided. Additional useful atomic operations are implemented
generically ontop of these.

The implementation for various versions of gcc, msvc and sun studio have
been tested. Additional existing stub implementations for
* Intel icc
* HUPX acc
* IBM xlc
are included but have never been tested. These will likely require
fixes based on buildfarm and user feedback.

As atomic operations also require barriers for some operations the
existing barrier support has been moved into the atomics code.

Author: Andres Freund with contributions from Oskari Saarenmaa
Reviewed-By: Amit Kapila, Robert Haas, Heikki Linnakangas and Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: CA+TgmoYBW+ux5-8Ja=Mcyuy8=VXAnVRHp3Kess6Pn3DMXAPAEA@mail.gmail.com,
    20131015123303.GH5300@awork2.anarazel.de,
    20131028205522.GI20248@awork2.anarazel.de
2014-09-25 23:49:05 +02:00
Stephen Frost 6550b901fe Code review for row security.
Buildfarm member tick identified an issue where the policies in the
relcache for a relation were were being replaced underneath a running
query, leading to segfaults while processing the policies to be added
to a query.  Similar to how TupleDesc RuleLocks are handled, add in a
equalRSDesc() function to check if the policies have actually changed
and, if not, swap back the rsdesc field (using the original instead of
the temporairly built one; the whole structure is swapped and then
specific fields swapped back).  This now passes a CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS
for me and should resolve the buildfarm error.

In addition to addressing this, add a new chapter in Data Definition
under Privileges which explains row security and provides examples of
its usage, change \d to always list policies (even if row security is
disabled- but note that it is disabled, or enabled with no policies),
rework check_role_for_policy (it really didn't need the entire policy,
but it did need to be using has_privs_of_role()), and change the field
in pg_class to relrowsecurity from relhasrowsecurity, based on
Heikki's suggestion.  Also from Heikki, only issue SET ROW_SECURITY in
pg_restore when talking to a 9.5+ server, list Bypass RLS in \du, and
document --enable-row-security options for pg_dump and pg_restore.

Lastly, fix a number of minor whitespace and typo issues from Heikki,
Dimitri, add a missing #include, per Peter E, fix a few minor
variable-assigned-but-not-used and resource leak issues from Coverity
and add tab completion for role attribute bypassrls as well.
2014-09-24 16:32:22 -04:00
Tom Lane 3f6f9260e3 Fix bogus variable-mangling in security_barrier_replace_vars().
This function created new Vars with varno different from varnoold, which
is a condition that should never prevail before setrefs.c does the final
variable-renumbering pass.  The created Vars could not be seen as equal()
to normal Vars, which among other things broke equivalence-class processing
for them.  The consequences of this were indeed visible in the regression
tests, in the form of failure to propagate constants as one would expect.
I stumbled across it while poking at bug #11457 --- after intentionally
disabling join equivalence processing, the security-barrier regression
tests started falling over with fun errors like "could not find pathkey
item to sort", because of failure to match the corrupted Vars to normal
ones.
2014-09-24 15:59:34 -04:00
Tom Lane 3694b4d7e1 Fix incorrect search for "x?" style matches in creviterdissect().
When the number of allowed iterations is limited (either a "?" quantifier
or a bound expression), the last sub-match has to reach to the end of the
target string.  The previous coding here first tried the shortest possible
match (one character, usually) and then gave up and back-tracked if that
didn't work, typically leading to failure to match overall, as shown in
bug #11478 from Christoph Berg.  The minimum change to fix that would be to
not decrement k before "goto backtrack"; but that would be a pretty stupid
solution, because we'd laboriously try each possible sub-match length
before finally discovering that only ending at the end can work.  Instead,
force the sub-match endpoint limit up to the end for even the first
shortest() call if we cannot have any more sub-matches after this one.

Bug introduced in my rewrite that added the iterdissect logic, commit
173e29aa5d.  The shortest-first search code
was too closely modeled on the longest-first code, which hasn't got this
issue since it tries a match reaching to the end to start with anyway.
Back-patch to all affected branches.
2014-09-23 20:26:14 -04:00
Stephen Frost 6ef8c658af Process withCheckOption exprs in setrefs.c
While withCheckOption exprs had been handled in many cases by
happenstance, they need to be handled during set_plan_references and
more specifically down in set_plan_refs for ModifyTable plan nodes.
This is to ensure that the opfuncid's are set for operators referenced
in the withCheckOption exprs.

Identified as an issue by Thom Brown

Patch by Dean Rasheed

Back-patch to 9.4, where withCheckOption was introduced.
2014-09-22 20:12:51 -04:00
Stephen Frost 491c029dbc Row-Level Security Policies (RLS)
Building on the updatable security-barrier views work, add the
ability to define policies on tables to limit the set of rows
which are returned from a query and which are allowed to be added
to a table.  Expressions defined by the policy for filtering are
added to the security barrier quals of the query, while expressions
defined to check records being added to a table are added to the
with-check options of the query.

New top-level commands are CREATE/ALTER/DROP POLICY and are
controlled by the table owner.  Row Security is able to be enabled
and disabled by the owner on a per-table basis using
ALTER TABLE .. ENABLE/DISABLE ROW SECURITY.

Per discussion, ROW SECURITY is disabled on tables by default and
must be enabled for policies on the table to be used.  If no
policies exist on a table with ROW SECURITY enabled, a default-deny
policy is used and no records will be visible.

By default, row security is applied at all times except for the
table owner and the superuser.  A new GUC, row_security, is added
which can be set to ON, OFF, or FORCE.  When set to FORCE, row
security will be applied even for the table owner and superusers.
When set to OFF, row security will be disabled when allowed and an
error will be thrown if the user does not have rights to bypass row
security.

Per discussion, pg_dump sets row_security = OFF by default to ensure
that exports and backups will have all data in the table or will
error if there are insufficient privileges to bypass row security.
A new option has been added to pg_dump, --enable-row-security, to
ask pg_dump to export with row security enabled.

A new role capability, BYPASSRLS, which can only be set by the
superuser, is added to allow other users to be able to bypass row
security using row_security = OFF.

Many thanks to the various individuals who have helped with the
design, particularly Robert Haas for his feedback.

Authors include Craig Ringer, KaiGai Kohei, Adam Brightwell, Dean
Rasheed, with additional changes and rework by me.

Reviewers have included all of the above, Greg Smith,
Jeff McCormick, and Robert Haas.
2014-09-19 11:18:35 -04:00
Stephen Frost a2dabf0e1d Add unicode_{column|header|border}_style to psql
With the unicode linestyle, this adds support to control if the
column, header, or border style should be single or double line
unicode characters.  The default remains 'single'.

In passing, clean up the border documentation and address some
minor formatting/spelling issues.

Pavel Stehule, with some additional changes by me.
2014-09-12 12:04:37 -04:00
Tom Lane 1d352325b8 Fix power_var_int() for large integer exponents.
The code for raising a NUMERIC value to an integer power wasn't very
careful about large powers.  It got an outright wrong answer for an
exponent of INT_MIN, due to failure to consider overflow of the Abs(exp)
operation; which is fixable by using an unsigned rather than signed
exponent value after that point.  Also, even though the number of
iterations of the power-computation loop is pretty limited, it's easy for
the repeated squarings to result in ridiculously enormous intermediate
values, which can take unreasonable amounts of time/memory to process,
or even overflow the internal "weight" field and so produce a wrong answer.
We can forestall misbehaviors of that sort by bailing out as soon as the
weight value exceeds what will fit in int16, since then the final answer
must overflow (if exp > 0) or underflow (if exp < 0) the packed numeric
format.

Per off-list report from Pavel Stehule.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.
2014-09-11 23:30:51 -04:00
Tom Lane e3ec07280c Fix JSON regression tests.
Commit 95d737ff45 neglected to update
expected/json_1.out.  Per buildfarm.
2014-09-11 22:34:32 -04:00
Stephen Frost 95d737ff45 Add 'ignore_nulls' option to row_to_json
Provide an option to skip NULL values in a row when generating a JSON
object from that row with row_to_json.  This can reduce the size of the
JSON object in cases where columns are NULL without really reducing the
information in the JSON object.

This also makes row_to_json into a single function with default values,
rather than having multiple functions.  In passing, change array_to_json
to also be a single function with default values (we don't add an
'ignore_nulls' option yet- it's not clear that there is a sensible
use-case there, and it hasn't been asked for in any case).

Pavel Stehule
2014-09-11 21:23:51 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 849462a9fa improve hash creation warning message
This improves the wording of commit 84aa8ba128.

Report by Kevin Grittner
2014-09-11 13:40:06 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 75717ce8f0 Handle old versions of Test::More
Really old versions of Test::More don't support subplans, so skip the
tests in that case.
2014-09-10 20:52:35 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 84aa8ba128 Issue a warning during the creation of hash indexes 2014-09-10 16:54:47 -04:00
Tom Lane 1b4cc493d2 Preserve AND/OR flatness while extracting restriction OR clauses.
The code I added in commit f343a880d5 was
careless about preserving AND/OR flatness: it could create a structure with
an OR node directly underneath another one.  That breaks an assumption
that's fairly important for planning efficiency, not to mention triggering
various Asserts (as reported by Benjamin Smith).  Add a trifle more logic
to handle the case properly.
2014-09-09 18:35:31 -04:00
Tom Lane e80252d424 Add width_bucket(anyelement, anyarray).
This provides a convenient method of classifying input values into buckets
that are not necessarily equal-width.  It works on any sortable data type.

The choice of function name is a bit debatable, perhaps, but showing that
there's a relationship to the SQL standard's width_bucket() function seems
more attractive than the other proposals.

Petr Jelinek, reviewed by Pavel Stehule
2014-09-09 15:34:14 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 57b1085df5 Allow empty content in xml type
The xml type previously rejected "content" that is empty or consists
only of spaces.  But the SQL/XML standard allows that, so change that.
The accepted values for XML "documents" are not changed.

Reviewed-by: Ali Akbar <the.apaan@gmail.com>
2014-09-09 11:34:52 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 303f4d1012 Assorted message fixes and improvements 2014-09-05 01:25:27 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas c1008f0037 Check number of parameters in RAISE statement at compile time.
The number of % parameter markers in RAISE statement should match the number
of parameters given. We used to check that at execution time, but we have
all the information needed at compile time, so let's check it at compile
time instead. It's generally better to find mistakes earlier.

Marko Tiikkaja, reviewed by Fabien Coelho
2014-09-02 15:56:50 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 65c9dc231a Assorted message improvements 2014-08-29 00:26:17 -04:00
Tom Lane 6c40f8316e Add min and max aggregates for inet/cidr data types.
Haribabu Kommi, reviewed by Muhammad Asif Naeem
2014-08-28 22:37:58 -04:00
Fujii Masao 9df492664a Revert "Allow units to be specified in relation option setting value."
This reverts commit e23014f3d4.

As the side effect of the reverted commit, when the unit is
specified, the reloption was stored in the catalog with the unit.
This broke pg_dump (specifically, it prevented pg_dump from
outputting restorable backup regarding the reloption) and
turned the buildfarm red. Revert the commit until the fixed
version is ready.
2014-08-29 05:10:47 +09:00
Fujii Masao e23014f3d4 Allow units to be specified in relation option setting value.
This introduces an infrastructure which allows us to specify the units
like ms (milliseconds) in integer relation option, like GUC parameter.
Currently only autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay reloption can accept
the units.

Reviewed by Michael Paquier
2014-08-28 15:55:50 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 1c9701cfe5 Fix FOR UPDATE NOWAIT on updated tuple chains
If SELECT FOR UPDATE NOWAIT tries to lock a tuple that is concurrently
being updated, it might fail to honor its NOWAIT specification and block
instead of raising an error.

Fix by adding a no-wait flag to EvalPlanQualFetch which it can pass down
to heap_lock_tuple; also use it in EvalPlanQualFetch itself to avoid
blocking while waiting for a concurrent transaction.

Authors: Craig Ringer and Thomas Munro, tweaked by Álvaro
http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/51FB6703.9090801@2ndquadrant.com

Per Thomas Munro in the course of his SKIP LOCKED feature submission,
who also provided one of the isolation test specs.

Backpatch to 9.4, because that's as far back as it applies without
conflicts (although the bug goes all the way back).  To that branch also
backpatch Thomas Munro's new NOWAIT test cases, committed in master by
Heikki as commit 9ee16b49f0 .
2014-08-27 19:15:18 -04:00
Kevin Grittner a9d0f1cff3 Fix superuser concurrent refresh of matview owned by another.
Use SECURITY_LOCAL_USERID_CHANGE while building temporary tables;
only escalate to SECURITY_RESTRICTED_OPERATION while potentially
running user-supplied code.  The more secure mode was preventing
temp table creation.  Add regression tests to cover this problem.

This fixes Bug #11208 reported by Bruno Emanuel de Andrade Silva.

Backpatch to 9.4, where the bug was introduced.
2014-08-26 09:56:26 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 0076f264b6 Implement IF NOT EXISTS for CREATE SEQUENCE.
Fabrízio de Royes Mello
2014-08-26 16:18:17 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9ee16b49f0 Add regression tests for SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE NOWAIT.
Thomas Munro
2014-08-25 20:14:43 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera f41872d0c1 Implement ALTER TABLE .. SET LOGGED / UNLOGGED
This enables changing permanent (logged) tables to unlogged and
vice-versa.

(Docs for ALTER TABLE / SET TABLESPACE got shuffled in an order that
hopefully makes more sense than the original.)

Author: Fabrízio de Royes Mello
Reviewed by: Christoph Berg, Andres Freund, Thom Brown
Some tweaking by Álvaro Herrera
2014-08-22 14:27:00 -04:00
Tom Lane 41dd50e84d Fix corner-case behaviors in JSON/JSONB field extraction operators.
Cause the path extraction operators to return their lefthand input,
not NULL, if the path array has no elements.  This seems more consistent
since the case ought to correspond to applying the simple extraction
operator (->) zero times.

Cause other corner cases in field/element/path extraction to return NULL
rather than failing.  This behavior is arguably more useful than throwing
an error, since it allows an expression index using these operators to be
built even when not all values in the column are suitable for the
extraction being indexed.  Moreover, we already had multiple
inconsistencies between the path extraction operators and the simple
extraction operators, as well as inconsistencies between the JSON and
JSONB code paths.  Adopt a uniform rule of returning NULL rather than
throwing an error when the JSON input does not have a structure that
permits the request to be satisfied.

Back-patch to 9.4.  Update the release notes to list this as a behavior
change since 9.3.
2014-08-22 13:17:58 -04:00
Stephen Frost 3c4cf08087 Rework 'MOVE ALL' to 'ALTER .. ALL IN TABLESPACE'
As 'ALTER TABLESPACE .. MOVE ALL' really didn't change the tablespace
but instead changed objects inside tablespaces, it made sense to
rework the syntax and supporting functions to operate under the
'ALTER (TABLE|INDEX|MATERIALIZED VIEW)' syntax and to be in
tablecmds.c.

Pointed out by Alvaro, who also suggested the new syntax.

Back-patch to 9.4.
2014-08-21 19:06:17 -04:00
Tom Lane fa069822f5 More regression test cases for json/jsonb extraction operators.
Cover some cases I omitted before, such as null and empty-string
elements in the path array.  This exposes another inconsistency:
json_extract_path complains about empty path elements but
jsonb_extract_path does not.
2014-08-20 19:05:05 -04:00
Tom Lane 9bac66020d Fix core dump in jsonb #> operator, and add regression test cases.
jsonb's #> operator segfaulted (dereferencing a null pointer) if the RHS
was a zero-length array, as reported in bug #11207 from Justin Van Winkle.
json's #> operator returns NULL in such cases, so for the moment let's
make jsonb act likewise.

Also add a bunch of regression test queries memorializing the -> and #>
operators' behavior for this and other corner cases.

There is a good argument for changing some of these behaviors, as they
are not very consistent with each other, and throwing an error isn't
necessarily a desirable behavior for operators that are likely to be
used in indexes.  However, everybody can agree that a core dump is the
Wrong Thing, and we need test cases even if we decide to change their
expected output later.
2014-08-20 16:48:53 -04:00
Noah Misch ee9569e4df Finish adding file version information to installed Windows binaries.
In support of this, have the MSVC build follow GNU make in preferring
GNUmakefile over Makefile when a directory contains both.

Michael Paquier, reviewed by MauMau.
2014-08-18 22:59:53 -04:00
Greg Stark 458ef6bad1 Fix further concerns about psql wrapping in expanded mode having
collateral damage on other formats, by Sergey Muraviov.
2014-08-18 12:20:32 +01:00
Tom Lane a068b5b65f Add opr_sanity queries to inspect commutator/negator links more closely.
Make lists of the names of all operators that are claimed to be commutator
pairs or negator pairs.  This is analogous to the existing queries that
make lists of all operator names appearing in particular opclass strategy
slots.  Unexpected additions to these lists are likely to be mistakes; had
we had these queries in place before, bug #11178 might've been prevented.
2014-08-16 13:22:52 -04:00
Robert Haas 873de34b71 Fix alternate regression test output file.
Commit 0ef99bdce3 broke this.

Jeff Janes
2014-08-06 11:30:32 -04:00
Robert Haas 0ef99bdce3 Improve some JSON error messages.
These messages are new in 9.4, which hasn't been released yet, so
back-patch to REL9_4_STABLE.

Daniele Varrazzo
2014-08-05 12:28:57 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 455044d55a Fix TAP installcheck tests when current directory name contains spaces
This fixes the installcheck part.  The check part has additional
problems that will be addressed in a separate commit.
2014-07-23 22:06:56 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 4ebe3519e1 Allow empty string object keys in json_object().
This makes the behaviour consistent with the json parser, other
json-generating functions, and the JSON standards.
2014-07-22 11:27:31 -04:00
Noah Misch d7cdf6ee36 Diagnose incompatible OpenLDAP versions during build and test.
With OpenLDAP versions 2.4.24 through 2.4.31, inclusive, PostgreSQL
backends can crash at exit.  Raise a warning during "configure" based on
the compile-time OpenLDAP version number, and test the crash scenario in
the dblink test suite.  Back-patch to 9.0 (all supported versions).
2014-07-22 11:01:03 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 24e786f056 Unset some local environment variables in TAP tests
Unset environment variables that control message language, so that we
can compare some program output with expected strings.  This is very
similar to what pg_regress does.
2014-07-22 00:45:06 -04:00
Tom Lane 9b35ddce93 Partial fix for dropped columns in functions returning composite.
When a view has a function-returning-composite in FROM, and there are
some dropped columns in the underlying composite type, ruleutils.c
printed junk in the column alias list for the reconstructed FROM entry.
Before 9.3, this was prevented by doing get_rte_attribute_is_dropped
tests while printing the column alias list; but that solution is not
currently available to us for reasons I'll explain below.  Instead,
check for empty-string entries in the alias list, which can only exist
if that column position had been dropped at the time the view was made.
(The parser fills in empty strings to preserve the invariant that the
aliases correspond to physical column positions.)

While this is sufficient to handle the case of columns dropped before
the view was made, we have still got issues with columns dropped after
the view was made.  In particular, the view could contain Vars that
explicitly reference such columns!  The dependency machinery really
ought to refuse the column drop attempt in such cases, as it would do
when trying to drop a table column that's explicitly referenced in
views.  However, we currently neglect to store dependencies on columns
of composite types, and fixing that is likely to be too big to be
back-patchable (not to mention that existing views in existing databases
would not have the needed pg_depend entries anyway).  So I'll leave that
for a separate patch.

Pre-9.3, ruleutils would print such Vars normally (with their original
column names) even though it suppressed their entries in the RTE's
column alias list.  This is certainly bogus, since the printed view
definition would fail to reload, but at least it didn't crash.  However,
as of 9.3 the printed column alias list is tightly tied to the names
printed for Vars; so we can't treat columns as dropped for one purpose
and not dropped for the other.  This is why we can't just put back the
get_rte_attribute_is_dropped test: it results in an assertion failure
if the view in fact contains any Vars referencing the dropped column.
Once we've got dependencies preventing such cases, we'll probably want
to do it that way instead of relying on the empty-string test used here.

This fix turned up a very ancient bug in outfuncs/readfuncs, namely
that T_String nodes containing empty strings were not dumped/reloaded
correctly: the node was printed as "<>" which is read as a string
value of <>.  Since (per SQL) we disallow empty-string identifiers,
such nodes don't occur normally, which is why we'd not noticed.
(Such nodes aren't used for literal constants, just identifiers.)

Per report from Marc Schablewski.  Back-patch to 9.3 which is where
the rule printing behavior changed.  The dangling-variable case is
broken all the way back, but that's not what his complaint is about.
2014-07-19 14:28:52 -04:00
Tom Lane f15821eefd Allow join removal in some cases involving a left join to a subquery.
We can remove a left join to a relation if the relation's output is
provably distinct for the columns involved in the join clause (considering
only equijoin clauses) and the relation supplies no variables needed above
the join.  Previously, the join removal logic could only prove distinctness
by reference to unique indexes of a table.  This patch extends the logic
to consider subquery relations, wherein distinctness might be proven by
reference to GROUP BY, DISTINCT, etc.

We actually already had some code to check that a subquery's output was
provably distinct, but it was hidden inside pathnode.c; which was a pretty
bad place for it really, since that file is mostly boilerplate Path
construction and comparison.  Move that code to analyzejoins.c, which is
arguably a more appropriate location, and is certainly the site of the
new usage for it.

David Rowley, reviewed by Simon Riggs
2014-07-15 21:12:43 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut d38228fe40 Add missing serial commas
Also update one place where the wal_level "logical" was not added to an
error message.
2014-07-15 08:31:50 -04:00
Magnus Hagander a16bac36ec Remove dependency on wsock32.lib in favor of ws2_32
ws2_32 is the new version of the library that should be used, as
it contains the require functionality from wsock32 as well as some
more (which is why some binaries were already using ws2_32).

Michael Paquier, reviewed by MauMau
2014-07-15 14:18:39 +02:00
Tom Lane d685814835 Fix bug with whole-row references to append subplans.
ExecEvalWholeRowVar incorrectly supposed that it could "bless" the source
TupleTableSlot just once per query.  But if the input is coming from an
Append (or, perhaps, other cases?) more than one slot might be returned
over the query run.  This led to "record type has not been registered"
errors when a composite datum was extracted from a non-blessed slot.

This bug has been there a long time; I guess it escaped notice because when
dealing with subqueries the planner tends to expand whole-row Vars into
RowExprs, which don't have the same problem.  It is possible to trigger
the problem in all active branches, though, as illustrated by the added
regression test.
2014-07-11 19:12:35 -04:00
Tom Lane 59efda3e50 Implement IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA.
This command provides an automated way to create foreign table definitions
that match remote tables, thereby reducing tedium and chances for error.
In this patch, we provide the necessary core-server infrastructure and
implement the feature fully in the postgres_fdw foreign-data wrapper.
Other wrappers will throw a "feature not supported" error until/unless
they are updated.

Ronan Dunklau and Michael Paquier, additional work by me
2014-07-10 15:01:43 -04:00
Tom Lane 9e2f2d7a05 Don't assume a subquery's output is unique if there's a SRF in its tlist.
While the x output of "select x from t group by x" can be presumed unique,
this does not hold for "select x, generate_series(1,10) from t group by x",
because we may expand the set-returning function after the grouping step.
(Perhaps that should be re-thought; but considering all the other oddities
involved with SRFs in targetlists, it seems unlikely we'll change it.)
Put a check in query_is_distinct_for() so it's not fooled by such cases.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

David Rowley
2014-07-08 14:03:56 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut f545d233eb Use a separate temporary directory for the Unix-domain socket
Creating the Unix-domain socket in the build directory can run into
name-length limitations.  Therefore, create the socket file in the
default temporary directory of the operating system.  Keep the temporary
data directory etc. in the build tree.
2014-07-02 21:47:14 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 0490db6287 Support vpath builds in TAP tests 2014-07-02 21:47:07 -04:00
Tom Lane a749a23d7a Remove use_json_as_text options from json_to_record/json_populate_record.
The "false" case was really quite useless since all it did was to throw
an error; a definition not helped in the least by making it the default.
Instead let's just have the "true" case, which emits nested objects and
arrays in JSON syntax.  We might later want to provide the ability to
emit sub-objects in Postgres record or array syntax, but we'd be best off
to drive that off a check of the target field datatype, not a separate
argument.

For the functions newly added in 9.4, we can just remove the flag arguments
outright.  We can't do that for json_populate_record[set], which already
existed in 9.3, but we can ignore the argument and always behave as if it
were "true".  It helps that the flag arguments were optional and not
documented in any useful fashion anyway.
2014-06-29 13:50:58 -04:00
Tom Lane d222585a9f Allow pushdown of WHERE quals into subqueries with window functions.
We can allow this even without any specific knowledge of the semantics
of the window function, so long as pushed-down quals will either accept
every row in a given window partition, or reject every such row.  Because
window functions act only within a partition, such a case can't result
in changing the window functions' outputs for any surviving row.
Eliminating entire partitions in this way obviously can reduce the cost
of the window-function computations substantially.

The fly in the ointment is that it's hard to be entirely sure whether
this is true for an arbitrary qual condition.  This patch allows pushdown
if (a) the qual references only partitioning columns, and (b) the qual
contains no volatile functions.  We are at risk of incorrect results if
the qual can produce different answers for values that the partitioning
equality operator sees as equal.  While it's not hard to invent cases
for which that can happen, it seems to seldom be a problem in practice,
since no one has complained about a similar assumption that we've had
for many years with respect to DISTINCT.  The potential performance
gains seem to be worth the risk.

David Rowley, reviewed by Vik Fearing; some credit is due also to
Thomas Mayer who did considerable preliminary investigation.
2014-06-27 23:08:08 -07:00
Tom Lane 1147035203 Disallow pushing volatile qual expressions down into DISTINCT subqueries.
A WHERE clause applied to the output of a subquery with DISTINCT should
theoretically be applied only once per distinct row; but if we push it
into the subquery then it will be evaluated at each row before duplicate
elimination occurs.  If the qual is volatile this can give rise to
observably wrong results, so don't do that.

While at it, refactor a little bit to allow subquery_is_pushdown_safe
to report more than one kind of restrictive condition without indefinitely
expanding its argument list.

Although this is a bug fix, it seems unwise to back-patch it into released
branches, since it might de-optimize plans for queries that aren't giving
any trouble in practice.  So apply to 9.4 but not further back.
2014-06-27 11:08:48 -07:00
Tom Lane f71136eeeb Get rid of bogus separate pg_proc entries for json_extract_path operators.
These should not have existed to begin with, but there was apparently some
misunderstanding of the purpose of the opr_sanity regression test item
that checks for operator implementation functions with their own comments.
The idea there is to check for unintentional violations of the rule that
operator implementation functions shouldn't be documented separately
.... but for these functions, that is in fact what we want, since the
variadic option is useful and not accessible via the operator syntax.
Get rid of the extra pg_proc entries and fix the regression test and
documentation to be explicit about what we're doing here.
2014-06-26 16:22:15 -07:00
Tom Lane 344eed91e9 Forward-patch regression test for "could not find pathkey item to sort".
Commit a87c729153 already fixed the bug this
is checking for, but the regression test case it added didn't cover this
scenario.  Since we managed to miss the fact that there was a bug at all,
it seems like a good idea to propagate the extra test case forward to HEAD.
2014-06-26 10:41:48 -07:00
Tom Lane 798e235790 Rationalize error messages within jsonfuncs.c.
I noticed that the functions in jsonfuncs.c sometimes printed error
messages that claimed I'd called some other function.  Investigation showed
that this was from repurposing code into "worker" functions without taking
much care as to whether it would mention the right SQL-level function if it
threw an error.  Moreover, there was a weird mismash of messages that
contained a fixed function name, messages that used %s for a function name,
and messages that constructed a function name out of spare parts, like
"json%s_populate_record" (which, quite aside from being ugly as sin, wasn't
even sufficient to cover all the cases).  This would put an undue burden on
our long-suffering translators.  Standardize on inserting the SQL function
name with %s so as to reduce the number of translatable strings, and pass
function names around as needed to make sure we can report the right one.
Fix up some gratuitous variations in wording, too.
2014-06-25 15:25:22 -07:00
Tom Lane 57d8c1270e Fix handling of nested JSON objects in json_populate_recordset and friends.
populate_recordset_object_start() improperly created a new hash table
(overwriting the link to the existing one) if called at nest levels
greater than one.  This resulted in previous fields not appearing in
the final output, as reported by Matti Hameister in bug #10728.
In 9.4 the problem also affects json_to_recordset.

This perhaps missed detection earlier because the default behavior is to
throw an error for nested objects: you have to pass use_json_as_text = true
to see the problem.

In addition, fix query-lifespan leakage of the hashtable created by
json_populate_record().  This is pretty much the same problem recently
fixed in dblink: creating an intended-to-be-temporary context underneath
the executor's per-tuple context isn't enough to make it go away at the
end of the tuple cycle, because MemoryContextReset is not
MemoryContextResetAndDeleteChildren.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane
2014-06-24 21:22:40 -07:00
Tom Lane 8f889b1083 Implement UPDATE tab SET (col1,col2,...) = (SELECT ...), ...
This SQL-standard feature allows a sub-SELECT yielding multiple columns
(but only one row) to be used to compute the new values of several columns
to be updated.  While the same results can be had with an independent
sub-SELECT per column, such a workaround can require a great deal of
duplicated computation.

The standard actually says that the source for a multi-column assignment
could be any row-valued expression.  The implementation used here is
tightly tied to our existing sub-SELECT support and can't handle other
cases; the Bison grammar would have some issues with them too.  However,
I don't feel too bad about this since other cases can be converted into
sub-SELECTs.  For instance, "SET (a,b,c) = row_valued_function(x)" could
be written "SET (a,b,c) = (SELECT * FROM row_valued_function(x))".
2014-06-18 13:22:34 -04:00
Tom Lane 2146f13408 Avoid recursion when processing simple lists of AND'ed or OR'ed clauses.
Since most of the system thinks AND and OR are N-argument expressions
anyway, let's have the grammar generate a representation of that form when
dealing with input like "x AND y AND z AND ...", rather than generating
a deeply-nested binary tree that just has to be flattened later by the
planner.  This avoids stack overflow in parse analysis when dealing with
queries having more than a few thousand such clauses; and in any case it
removes some rather unsightly inconsistencies, since some parts of parse
analysis were generating N-argument ANDs/ORs already.

It's still possible to get a stack overflow with weirdly parenthesized
input, such as "x AND (y AND (z AND ( ... )))", but such cases are not
mainstream usage.  The maximum depth of parenthesization is already
limited by Bison's stack in such cases, anyway, so that the limit is
probably fairly platform-independent.

Patch originally by Gurjeet Singh, heavily revised by me
2014-06-16 15:55:30 -04:00
Noah Misch be76a6d39e Secure Unix-domain sockets of "make check" temporary clusters.
Any OS user able to access the socket can connect as the bootstrap
superuser and proceed to execute arbitrary code as the OS user running
the test.  Protect against that by placing the socket in a temporary,
mode-0700 subdirectory of /tmp.  The pg_regress-based test suites and
the pg_upgrade test suite were vulnerable; the $(prove_check)-based test
suites were already secure.  Back-patch to 8.4 (all supported versions).
The hazard remains wherever the temporary cluster accepts TCP
connections, notably on Windows.

As a convenient side effect, this lets testing proceed smoothly in
builds that override DEFAULT_PGSOCKET_DIR.  Popular non-default values
like /var/run/postgresql are often unwritable to the build user.

Security: CVE-2014-0067
2014-06-14 09:41:13 -04:00
Noah Misch f3fdd257a4 Harden pg_filenode_relation test against concurrent DROP TABLE.
Per buildfarm member prairiedog.  Back-patch to 9.4, where the test was
introduced.

Reviewed by Tom Lane.
2014-06-13 19:57:59 -04:00
Tom Lane 70ad7ed4e8 Adjust largeobject regression test to leave a couple of LOs behind.
Since we commonly test pg_dump/pg_restore by seeing whether they can dump
and restore the regression test database, it behooves us to include some
large objects in that test scenario.

I tried to include a comment on one of these large objects to improve
the test scenario further ... but it turns out that pg_upgrade fails to
preserve comments on large objects, and its regression test notices
the discrepancy.  So uncommenting that COMMENT is a TODO for later.
2014-06-12 17:51:47 -04:00