Commit Graph

2951 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Teodor Sigaev 9a206d063c Improve script generating unaccent rules
Script now use the standard Unicode transliterator Latin-ASCII.

Author: Leonard Benedetti
2016-03-16 16:47:03 +03:00
Robert Haas 3aff33aa68 Fix typos.
Oskari Saarenmaa
2016-03-15 18:06:11 -04:00
Robert Haas 4a46a99d89 postgres_fdw: make_tuple_from_result_row should set cur_attno for ctid.
There's no reason for this function to do this for every other
attribute number and omit it for CTID, especially since
conversion_error_callback has code to handle that case.  This seems
to be an oversight in commit e690b95150.

Etsuro Fujita
2016-03-15 16:51:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 28048cbaa2 Allow callers of create_foreignscan_path to specify nondefault PathTarget.
Although the default choice of rel->reltarget should typically be
sufficient for scan or join paths, it's not at all sufficient for the
purposes PathTargets were invented for; in particular not for
upper-relation Paths.  So break API compatibility by adding a PathTarget
argument to create_foreignscan_path().  To ease updating of existing
code, accept a NULL value of the argument as selecting rel->reltarget.
2016-03-14 17:31:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 307c78852f Rethink representation of PathTargets.
In commit 19a541143a I did not make PathTarget a subtype of Node,
and embedded a RelOptInfo's reltarget directly into it rather than having
a separately-allocated Node.  In hindsight that was misguided
micro-optimization, enabled by the fact that at that point we didn't have
any Paths with custom PathTargets.  Now that PathTarget processing has
been fleshed out some more, it's easier to see that it's better to have
PathTarget as an indepedent Node type, even if it does cost us one more
palloc to create a RelOptInfo.  So change it while we still can.

This commit just changes the representation, without doing anything more
interesting than that.
2016-03-14 16:59:59 -04:00
Robert Haas 6be84eeb8d Update more comments for 96198d94cb.
Etsuro Fujita, reviewed (though not completely endorsed) by Ashutosh
Bapat, and slightly expanded by me.
2016-03-14 14:29:12 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 7a8d874836 Rename auto_explain.sample_ratio to sample_rate
Per suggestion from Tomas Vondra

Author: Julien Rouhaud
2016-03-13 13:18:03 +01:00
Tom Lane 23a27b039d Widen query numbers-of-tuples-processed counters to uint64.
This patch widens SPI_processed, EState's es_processed field, PortalData's
portalPos field, FuncCallContext's call_cntr and max_calls fields,
ExecutorRun's count argument, PortalRunFetch's result, and the max number
of rows in a SPITupleTable to uint64, and deals with (I hope) all the
ensuing fallout.  Some of these values were declared uint32 before, and
others "long".

I also removed PortalData's posOverflow field, since that logic seems
pretty useless given that portalPos is now always 64 bits.

The user-visible results are that command tags for SELECT etc will
correctly report tuple counts larger than 4G, as will plpgsql's GET
GET DIAGNOSTICS ... ROW_COUNT command.  Queries processing more tuples
than that are still not exactly the norm, but they're becoming more
common.

Most values associated with FETCH/MOVE distances, such as PortalRun's count
argument and the count argument of most SPI functions that have one, remain
declared as "long".  It's not clear whether it would be worth promoting
those to int64; but it would definitely be a large dollop of additional
API churn on top of this, and it would only help 32-bit platforms which
seem relatively less likely to see any benefit.

Andreas Scherbaum, reviewed by Christian Ullrich, additional hacking by me
2016-03-12 16:05:29 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 92f03fe76f Allow setting sample ratio for auto_explain
New configuration parameter auto_explain.sample_ratio makes it
possible to log just a fraction of the queries meeting the configured
threshold, to reduce the amount of logging.

Author: Craig Ringer and Julien Rouhaud
Review: Petr Jelinek
2016-03-11 15:08:34 +01:00
Tom Lane 364a9f47ab Refactor pull_var_clause's API to make it less tedious to extend.
In commit 1d97c19a0f and later c1d9579dd8, we extended
pull_var_clause's API by adding enum-type arguments.  That's sort of a pain
to maintain, though, because it means every time we add a new behavior we
must touch every last one of the call sites, even if there's a reasonable
default behavior that most of them could use.  Let's switch over to using a
bitmask of flags, instead; that seems more maintainable and might save a
nanosecond or two as well.  This commit changes no behavior in itself,
though I'm going to follow it up with one that does add a new behavior.

In passing, remove flatten_tlist(), which has not been used since 9.1
and would otherwise need the same API changes.

Removing these enums means that optimizer/tlist.h no longer needs to
depend on optimizer/var.h.  Changing that caused a number of C files to
need addition of #include "optimizer/var.h" (probably we can thank old
runs of pgrminclude for that); but on balance it seems like a good change
anyway.
2016-03-10 15:53:07 -05:00
Andres Freund 1d4a0ab19a Avoid unlikely data-loss scenarios due to rename() without fsync.
Renaming a file using rename(2) is not guaranteed to be durable in face
of crashes. Use the previously added durable_rename()/durable_link_or_rename()
in various places where we previously just renamed files.

Most of the changed call sites are arguably not critical, but it seems
better to err on the side of too much durability.  The most prominent
known case where the previously missing fsyncs could cause data loss is
crashes at the end of a checkpoint. After the actual checkpoint has been
performed, old WAL files are recycled. When they're filled, their
contents are fdatasynced, but we did not fsync the containing
directory. An OS/hardware crash in an unfortunate moment could then end
up leaving that file with its old name, but new content; WAL replay
would thus not replay it.

Reported-By: Tomas Vondra
Author: Michael Paquier, Tomas Vondra, Andres Freund
Discussion: 56583BDD.9060302@2ndquadrant.com
Backpatch: All supported branches
2016-03-09 18:53:53 -08:00
Alvaro Herrera 188f359d39 pgcrypto: support changing S2K iteration count
pgcrypto already supports key-stretching during symmetric encryption,
including the salted-and-iterated method; but the number of iterations
was not configurable.  This commit implements a new s2k-count parameter
to pgp_sym_encrypt() which permits selecting a larger number of
iterations.

Author: Jeff Janes
2016-03-09 14:31:07 -03:00
Robert Haas aa09cd242f postgres_fdw: Consider foreign joining and foreign sorting together.
Commit ccd8f97922 gave us the ability to
request that the remote side sort the data, and, later, commit
e4106b2528 gave us the ability to
request that the remote side perform the join for us rather than doing
it locally.  But we could not do both things at the same time: a
remote SQL query that had an ORDER BY clause would never be a join.
This commit adds that capability.

Ashutosh Bapat, reviewed by me.
2016-03-09 10:51:49 -05:00
Andres Freund 7a1d4a2448 ltree: Zero padding bytes when allocating memory for externally visible data.
ltree/ltree_gist/ltxtquery's headers stores data at MAXALIGN alignment,
requiring some padding bytes. So far we left these uninitialized. Zero
those by using palloc0.

Author: Andres Freund
Reported-By: Andres Freund / valgrind / buildarm animal skink
Backpatch: 9.1-
2016-03-08 14:59:29 -08:00
Robert Haas d29b153f18 Fix reversed argument to bms_is_subset.
Ashutosh Bapat
2016-03-08 13:59:11 -05:00
Robert Haas ba0a198fb1 Add pg_visibility contrib module.
This lets you examine the visibility map as well as page-level
visibility information.  I initially wrote it as a debugging aid,
but was encouraged to polish it for commit.

Patch by me, reviewed by Masahiko Sawada.

Discussion: 56D77803.6080503@BlueTreble.com
2016-03-08 08:42:01 -05:00
Andres Freund c8f621c43a logical decoding: Fix handling of large old tuples with replica identity full.
When decoding the old version of an UPDATE or DELETE change, and if that
tuple was bigger than MaxHeapTupleSize, we either Assert'ed out, or
failed in more subtle ways in non-assert builds.  Normally individual
tuples aren't bigger than MaxHeapTupleSize, with big datums toasted.
But that's not the case for the old version of a tuple for logical
decoding; the replica identity is logged as one piece. With the default
replica identity btree limits that to small tuples, but that's not the
case for FULL.

Change the tuple buffer infrastructure to separate allocate over-large
tuples, instead of always going through the slab cache.

This unfortunately requires changing the ReorderBufferTupleBuf
definition, we need to store the allocated size someplace. To avoid
requiring output plugins to recompile, don't store HeapTupleHeaderData
directly after HeapTupleData, but point to it via t_data; that leaves
rooms for the allocated size.  As there's no reason for an output plugin
to look at ReorderBufferTupleBuf->t_data.header, remove the field. It
was just a minor convenience having it directly accessible.

Reported-By: Adam Dratwiński
Discussion: CAKg6ypLd7773AOX4DiOGRwQk1TVOQKhNwjYiVjJnpq8Wo+i62Q@mail.gmail.com
2016-03-05 18:02:20 -08:00
Andres Freund 0bda14d54c logical decoding: old/newtuple in spooled UPDATE changes was switched around.
Somehow I managed to flip the order of restoring old & new tuples when
de-spooling a change in a large transaction from disk. This happens to
only take effect when a change is spooled to disk which has old/new
versions of the tuple. That only is the case for UPDATEs where he
primary key changed or where replica identity is changed to FULL.

The tests didn't catch this because either spooled updates, or updates
that changed primary keys, were tested; not both at the same time.

Found while adding tests for the following commit.

Backpatch: 9.4, where logical decoding was added
2016-03-05 18:02:20 -08:00
Andres Freund d9e903f3cb logical decoding: Tell reorderbuffer about all xids.
Logical decoding's reorderbuffer keeps transactions in an LSN ordered
list for efficiency. To make that's efficiently possible upper-level
xids are forced to be logged before nested subtransaction xids.  That
only works though if these records are all looked at: Unfortunately we
didn't do so for e.g. row level locks, which are otherwise uninteresting
for logical decoding.

This could lead to errors like:
"ERROR: subxact logged without previous toplevel record".

It's not sufficient to just look at row locking records, the xid could
appear first due to a lot of other types of records (which will trigger
the transaction to be marked logged with MarkCurrentTransactionIdLoggedIfAny).
So invent infrastructure to tell reorderbuffer about xids seen, when
they'd otherwise not pass through reorderbuffer.c.

Reported-By: Jarred Ward
Bug: #13844
Discussion: 20160105033249.1087.66040@wrigleys.postgresql.org
Backpatch: 9.4, where logical decoding was added
2016-03-05 18:02:20 -08:00
Robert Haas 3bea3f88d5 postgres_fdw: When sending ORDER BY, always include NULLS FIRST/LAST.
Previously, we included NULLS FIRST when appropriate but relied on the
default behavior to be NULLS LAST.  This is, however, not true for a
sort in descending order and seems like a fragile assumption anyway.

Report by Rajkumar Raghuwanshi.  Patch by Ashutosh Bapat.  Review
comments from Michael Paquier and Tom Lane.
2016-03-04 11:37:42 -05:00
Andres Freund 1986c3c440 Force synchronous_commit=on in test_decoding's concurrent_ddl_dml.spec.
Otherwise running installcheck-force on a server with
synchronous_commit=off will result in the tests failing. All the other
tests already do so...

Backpatch: 9.4, where logical decoding was added
2016-03-03 17:22:25 -08:00
Andres Freund 7c17aac69d logical decoding: fix decoding of a commit's commit time.
When adding replication origins in 5aa235042, I somehow managed to set
the timestamp of decoded transactions to InvalidXLogRecptr when decoding
one made without a replication origin. Fix that, and the wrong type of
the new commit_time variable.

This didn't trigger a regression test failure because we explicitly
don't show commit timestamps in the regression tests, as they obviously
are variable. Add a test that checks that a decoded commit's timestamp
is within minutes of NOW() from before the commit.

Reported-By: Weiping Qu
Diagnosed-By: Artur Zakirov
Discussion: 56D4197E.9050706@informatik.uni-kl.de,
    56D42918.1010108@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch: 9.5, where 5aa235042 originates.
2016-03-02 23:42:21 -08:00
Robert Haas a892234f83 Change the format of the VM fork to add a second bit per page.
The new bit indicates whether every tuple on the page is already frozen.
It is cleared only when the all-visible bit is cleared, and it can be
set only when we vacuum a page and find that every tuple on that page is
both visible to every transaction and in no need of any future
vacuuming.

A future commit will use this new bit to optimize away full-table scans
that would otherwise be triggered by XID wraparound considerations.  A
page which is merely all-visible must still be scanned in that case, but
a page which is all-frozen need not be.  This commit does not attempt
that optimization, although that optimization is the goal here.  It
seems better to get the basic infrastructure in place first.

Per discussion, it's very desirable for pg_upgrade to automatically
migrate existing VM forks from the old format to the new format.  That,
too, will be handled in a follow-on patch.

Masahiko Sawada, reviewed by Kyotaro Horiguchi, Fujii Masao, Amit
Kapila, Simon Riggs, Andres Freund, and others, and substantially
revised by me.
2016-03-01 21:49:41 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 87cc6b57a9 Respect TEMP_CONFIG when pg_regress_check and friends are called
This reverts commit 9117985b6b in favor of
a more general solution.
2016-02-27 12:28:21 -05:00
Robert Haas 35746bc348 Add new FDW API to test for parallel-safety.
This is basically a bug fix; the old code assumes that a ForeignScan
is always parallel-safe, but for postgres_fdw, for example, this is
definitely false.  It should be true for file_fdw, though, since a
worker can read a file from the filesystem just as well as any other
backend process.

Original patch by Thomas Munro.  Documentation, and changes to the
comments, by me.
2016-02-26 16:14:46 +05:30
Robert Haas 9117985b6b Respect TEMP_CONFIG when running contrib regression tests.
Thomas Munro
2016-02-26 12:38:21 +05:30
Robert Haas dd077ef832 postgres_fdw: Avoid sharing list substructure.
list_concat(list_concat(a, b), c) destructively changes both a and b;
to avoid such perils, copy lists of remote_conds before incorporating
them into larger lists via list_concat().

Ashutosh Bapat, per a report from Etsuro Fujita
2016-02-21 14:17:50 +05:30
Tom Lane 19a541143a Add an explicit representation of the output targetlist to Paths.
Up to now, there's been an assumption that all Paths for a given relation
compute the same output column set (targetlist).  However, there are good
reasons to remove that assumption.  For example, an indexscan on an
expression index might be able to return the value of an expensive function
"for free".  While we have the ability to generate such a plan today in
simple cases, we don't have a way to model that it's cheaper than a plan
that computes the function from scratch, nor a way to create such a plan
in join cases (where the function computation would normally happen at
the topmost join node).  Also, we need this so that we can have Paths
representing post-scan/join steps, where the targetlist may well change
from one step to the next.  Therefore, invent a "struct PathTarget"
representing the columns we expect a plan step to emit.  It's convenient
to include the output tuple width and tlist evaluation cost in this struct,
and there will likely be additional fields in future.

While Path nodes that actually do have custom outputs will need their own
PathTargets, it will still be true that most Paths for a given relation
will compute the same tlist.  To reduce the overhead added by this patch,
keep a "default PathTarget" in RelOptInfo, and allow Paths that compute
that column set to just point to their parent RelOptInfo's reltarget.
(In the patch as committed, actually every Path is like that, since we
do not yet have any cases of custom PathTargets.)

I took this opportunity to provide some more-honest costing of
PlaceHolderVar evaluation.  Up to now, the assumption that "scan/join
reltargetlists have cost zero" was applied not only to Vars, where it's
reasonable, but also PlaceHolderVars where it isn't.  Now, we add the eval
cost of a PlaceHolderVar's expression to the first plan level where it can
be computed, by including it in the PathTarget cost field and adding that
to the cost estimates for Paths.  This isn't perfect yet but it's much
better than before, and there is a way forward to improve it more.  This
costing change affects the join order chosen for a couple of the regression
tests, changing expected row ordering.
2016-02-18 20:02:03 -05:00
Tom Lane 48e6c943e5 Fix multiple bugs in contrib/pgstattuple's pgstatindex() function.
Dead or half-dead index leaf pages were incorrectly reported as live, as a
consequence of a code rearrangement I made (during a moment of severe brain
fade, evidently) in commit d287818eb5.

The index metapage was not counted in index_size, causing that result to
not agree with the actual index size on-disk.

Index root pages were not counted in internal_pages, which is inconsistent
compared to the case of a root that's also a leaf (one-page index), where
the root would be counted in leaf_pages.  Aside from that inconsistency,
this could lead to additional transient discrepancies between the reported
page counts and index_size, since it's possible for pgstatindex's scan to
see zero or multiple pages marked as BTP_ROOT, if the root moves due to
a split during the scan.  With these fixes, index_size will always be
exactly one page more than the sum of the displayed page counts.

Also, the index_size result was incorrectly documented as being measured in
pages; it's always been measured in bytes.  (While fixing that, I couldn't
resist doing some small additional wordsmithing on the pgstattuple docs.)

Including the metapage causes the reported index_size to not be zero for
an empty index.  To preserve the desired property that the pgstattuple
regression test results are platform-independent (ie, BLCKSZ configuration
independent), scale the index_size result in the regression tests.

The documentation issue was reported by Otsuka Kenji, and the inconsistent
root page counting by Peter Geoghegan; the other problems noted by me.
Back-patch to all supported branches, because this has been broken for
a long time.
2016-02-18 15:40:35 -05:00
Tom Lane 99a9d6d563 Add missing "static" qualifier.
Per buildfarm member pademelon.
2016-02-12 11:20:16 -05:00
Robert Haas 019e788137 postgres_fdw: Remove unnecessary variable.
It causes warnings in non-Assert-enabled builds.

Per report from Jeff Janes.
2016-02-10 08:17:43 -05:00
Robert Haas bb4df42e6a postgres_fdw: Remove unstable regression test.
Per Tom Lane and the buildfarm.
2016-02-09 15:42:20 -05:00
Robert Haas e4106b2528 postgres_fdw: Push down joins to remote servers.
If we've got a relatively straightforward join between two tables,
this pushes that join down to the remote server instead of fetching
the rows for each table and performing the join locally.  Some cases
are not handled yet, such as SEMI and ANTI joins.  Also, we don't
yet attempt to create presorted join paths or parameterized join
paths even though these options do get tried for a base relation
scan.  Nevertheless, this seems likely to be a very significant win
in many practical cases.

Shigeru Hanada and Ashutosh Bapat, reviewed by Robert Haas, with
additional review at various points by Tom Lane, Etsuro Fujita,
KaiGai Kohei, and Jeevan Chalke.
2016-02-09 14:00:50 -05:00
Tom Lane 63828969c8 Use %u not %d to print OIDs.
Oversight in commit 96198d94c.

Etsuro Fujita
2016-02-08 11:06:23 -05:00
Tom Lane 392998bc58 Add missing "static" qualifier.
Per buildfarm member pademelon.
2016-02-06 12:21:14 -05:00
Robert Haas d0cd7bda97 postgres_fdw: pgindent run.
In preparation for upcoming commits.
2016-02-04 22:30:08 -05:00
Robert Haas 37c84570b1 postgres_fdw: Avoid possible misbehavior when RETURNING tableoid column only.
deparseReturningList ended up adding up RETURNING NULL to the code, but
code elsewhere saw an empty list of attributes and concluded that it
should not expect tuples from the remote side.

Etsuro Fujita and Robert Haas, reviewed by Thom Brown
2016-02-04 22:27:13 -05:00
Robert Haas c1772ad922 Change the way that LWLocks for extensions are allocated.
The previous RequestAddinLWLocks() method had several disadvantages.
First, the locks would be in the main tranche; we've recently decided
that it's useful for LWLocks used for separate purposes to have
separate tranche IDs.  Second, there wasn't any correlation between
what code called RequestAddinLWLocks() and what code called
LWLockAssign(); when multiple modules are in use, it could become
quite difficult to troubleshoot problems where LWLockAssign() ran out
of locks.  To fix, create a concept of named LWLock tranches which
can be used either by extension or by core code.

Amit Kapila and Robert Haas
2016-02-04 16:43:04 -05:00
Tom Lane 41d2c081ce Make hstore_to_jsonb_loose match hstore_to_json_loose on what's a number.
Commit e09996ff8d removed some ad-hoc code in hstore_to_json_loose
that determined whether an hstore value string looked like a number,
in favor of calling the JSON parser's is-it-a-number code.  However,
it neglected the fact that the exact same code appeared in
hstore_to_jsonb_loose.

This is not a bug, exactly, because the requirements on the two functions
are not the same: hstore_to_json_loose must accept only syntactically legal
JSON numbers as numbers, or it will produce invalid JSON output, as per bug
#12070 which spawned the prior commit.  But hstore_to_jsonb_loose could
accept anything that numeric_in will eat, other than Inf and NaN.

Nonetheless it seems surprising and arbitrary that the two functions don't
use the same rules for what is a number versus what is a string; especially
since they did use the same rules before the aforesaid commit.  For one
thing, that means that doing hstore_to_json_loose and then casting to jsonb
can produce results different from doing just hstore_to_jsonb_loose.

Hence, change hstore_to_jsonb_loose's logic to match hstore_to_json_loose,
ie, hstore values are treated as numbers when they match the JSON syntax
for numbers.

No back-patch, since this is more in the nature of a definitional change
than a bug fix.
2016-02-03 12:04:02 -05:00
Robert Haas 52b63649fc Code review for commit dc203dc3ac.
Remove duplicate assignment.  This part by Ashutosh Bapat.

Remove now-obsolete comment.  This part by me, although the pending
join pushdown patch does something similar, and for the same reason:
there's no reason to keep two lists of the things in the fdw_private
structure that have to be kept in sync with each other.
2016-02-03 11:53:46 -05:00
Robert Haas dc203dc3ac postgres_fdw: Allow fetch_size to be set per-table or per-server.
The default fetch size of 100 rows might not be right in every
environment, so allow users to configure it.

Corey Huinker, reviewed by Kyotaro Horiguchi, Andres Freund, and me.
2016-02-03 09:07:35 -05:00
Tom Lane e6ecc93a17 Fix IsValidJsonNumber() to notice trailing non-alphanumeric garbage.
Commit e09996ff8d was one brick shy of a load: it didn't insist
that the detected JSON number be the whole of the supplied string.
This allowed inputs such as "2016-01-01" to be misdetected as valid JSON
numbers.  Per bug #13906 from Dmitry Ryabov.

In passing, be more wary of zero-length input (I'm not sure this can
happen given current callers, but better safe than sorry), and do some
minor cosmetic cleanup.
2016-02-03 01:39:48 -05:00
Magnus Hagander e51ab85cd9 Fix typos in comments
Author: Michael Paquier
2016-02-01 11:43:48 +01:00
Robert Haas cc592c48c5 postgres_fdw: More preliminary refactoring for upcoming join pushdown.
The code that generates a complete SQL query for a given foreign relation
was repeated in two places, and they didn't quite agree: the EXPLAIN case
left out the locking clause.  Centralize the code so we get the same
behavior everywhere, and adjust calling conventions and which functions
are static vs. extern accordingly .  Centralize the code so we get the same
behavior everywhere, and adjust calling conventions and which functions
are static vs. extern accordingly.

Ashutosh Bapat, reviewed and slightly adjusted by me.
2016-01-30 10:32:38 -05:00
Tom Lane 7e22470471 Fix incorrect pattern-match processing in psql's \det command.
listForeignTables' invocation of processSQLNamePattern did not match up
with the other ones that handle potentially-schema-qualified names; it
failed to make use of pg_table_is_visible() and also passed the name
arguments in the wrong order.  Bug seems to have been aboriginal in commit
0d692a0dc9.  It accidentally sort of worked as long as you didn't
inquire too closely into the behavior, although the silliness was later
exposed by inconsistencies in the test queries added by 59efda3e50
(which I probably should have questioned at the time, but didn't).

Per bug #13899 from Reece Hart.  Patch by Reece Hart and Tom Lane.
Back-patch to all affected branches.
2016-01-29 10:28:02 +01:00
Robert Haas b88ef201d4 postgres_fdw: Refactor deparsing code for locking clauses.
The upcoming patch to allow join pushdown in postgres_fdw needs to use
this code multiple times, which requires moving it to deparse.c.  That
seems like a good idea anyway, so do that now both on general principle
and to simplify the future patch.

Inspired by a patch by Shigeru Hanada and Ashutosh Bapat, but I did
it a little differently than what that patch did.
2016-01-28 16:44:01 -05:00
Robert Haas 2f6b041f76 Add missing quotation mark.
This fix accidentally got left out of the previous commit.
2016-01-28 12:21:51 -05:00
Robert Haas 96198d94cb Avoid multiple foreign server connections when all use same user mapping.
Previously, postgres_fdw's connection cache was keyed by user OID and
server OID, but this can lead to multiple connections when it's not
really necessary.  In particular, if all relevant users are mapped to
the public user mapping, then their connection options are certainly
the same, so one connection can be used for all of them.

While we're cleaning things up here, drop the "server" argument to
GetConnection(), which isn't really needed.  This saves a few cycles
because callers no longer have to look this up; the function itself
does, but only when establishing a new connection, not when reusing
an existing one.

Ashutosh Bapat, with a few small changes by me.
2016-01-28 12:05:19 -05:00
Tom Lane a396144ac0 Remove new coupling between NAMEDATALEN and MAX_LEVENSHTEIN_STRLEN.
Commit e529cd4ffa introduced an Assert requiring NAMEDATALEN to be
less than MAX_LEVENSHTEIN_STRLEN, which has been 255 for a long time.
Since up to that instant we had always allowed NAMEDATALEN to be
substantially more than that, this was ill-advised.

It's debatable whether we need MAX_LEVENSHTEIN_STRLEN at all (versus
putting a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS into the loop), or whether it has to be
so tight; but this patch takes the narrower approach of just not applying
the MAX_LEVENSHTEIN_STRLEN limit to calls from the parser.

Trusting the parser for this seems reasonable, first because the strings
are limited to NAMEDATALEN which is unlikely to be hugely more than 256,
and second because the maximum distance is tightly constrained by
MAX_FUZZY_DISTANCE (though we'd forgotten to make use of that limit in one
place).  That means the cost is not really O(mn) but more like O(max(m,n)).

Relaxing the limit for user-supplied calls is left for future research;
given the lack of complaints to date, it doesn't seem very high priority.

In passing, fix confusion between lengths-in-bytes and lengths-in-chars
in comments and error messages.

Per gripe from Kevin Day; solution suggested by Robert Haas.  Back-patch
to 9.5 where the unwanted restriction was introduced.
2016-01-22 11:53:06 -05:00
Tom Lane dbe2328959 Fix assorted inconsistencies in GIN opclass support function declarations.
GIN had some minor issues too, mostly using "internal" where something
else would be more appropriate.  I went with the same approach as in
9ff60273e3, namely preferring the opclass' indexed datatype for
arguments that receive an operator RHS value, even if that's not
necessarily what they really are.

Again, this is with an eye to having a uniform rule for ginvalidate()
to check support function signatures.
2016-01-19 22:32:22 -05:00