Commit Graph

295 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane 9789c99d01 Cosmetic cleanup for commit a760893dbd.
Mostly, fixing overlooked comments.
2012-02-21 14:14:16 -05:00
Bruce Momjian e126958c2e Update copyright notices for year 2012. 2012-01-01 18:01:58 -05:00
Tom Lane 3695a55513 Replace simple constant pg_am.amcanreturn with an AM support function.
The need for this was debated when we put in the index-only-scan feature,
but at the time we had no near-term expectation of having AMs that could
support such scans for only some indexes; so we kept it simple.  However,
the SP-GiST AM forces the issue, so let's fix it.

This patch only installs the new API; no behavior actually changes.
2011-12-18 15:50:37 -05:00
Tom Lane 336c1d7a51 Avoid assuming that index-only scan data matches the index's rowtype.
In general the data returned by an index-only scan should have the
datatypes originally computed by FormIndexDatum.  If the index opclasses
use "storage" datatypes different from their input datatypes, the scan
tuple will not have the same rowtype attributed to the index; but we had
a hard-wired assumption that that was true in nodeIndexonlyscan.c.  We'd
already hacked around the issue for the one case where the types are
different in btree indexes (btree name_ops), but this would definitely
come back to bite us if we ever implement index-only scans in GiST.

To fix, require the index AM to explicitly provide the tupdesc for the
tuple it is returning.  btree can just pass back the index's tupdesc, but
GiST will have to work harder when and if it supports index-only scans.

I had previously proposed fixing this by allowing the index AM to fill the
scan tuple slot directly; but on reflection that seemed like a module
layering violation, since TupleTableSlots are creatures of the executor.
At least in the btree case, it would also be less efficient, since the
tuple deconstruction work would occur even for rows later found to be
invisible to the scan's snapshot.
2011-10-16 19:15:04 -04:00
Tom Lane 9e8da0f757 Teach btree to handle ScalarArrayOpExpr quals natively.
This allows "indexedcol op ANY(ARRAY[...])" conditions to be used in plain
indexscans, and particularly in index-only scans.
2011-10-16 15:39:24 -04:00
Tom Lane 8c8ba6d11b Add comment on why pulling data from a "name" index column can't crash.
It's been bothering me for several days that pretending that the cstring
data stored in a btree name_ops column is really a "name" Datum could lead
to reading past the end of memory.  However, given the current memory
layout used for index-only scans in the btree code, a crash is in fact not
possible.  Document that so we don't break it.  I have not thought of any
other solutions that aren't fairly ugly too, and most of them lose the
functionality of index-only scans on name columns altogether, so this seems
like the way to go.
2011-10-11 18:40:53 -04:00
Tom Lane cbfa92c23c Improve index-only scans to avoid repeated access to the index page.
We copy all the matched tuples off the page during _bt_readpage, instead of
expensively re-locking the page during each subsequent tuple fetch.  This
costs a bit more local storage, but not more than 2*BLCKSZ worth, and the
reduction in LWLock traffic is certainly worth that.  What's more, this
lets us get rid of the API wart in the original patch that said an index AM
could randomly decline to supply an index tuple despite having asserted
pg_am.amcanreturn.  That will be important for future improvements in the
index-only-scan feature, since the executor will now be able to rely on
having the index data available.
2011-10-09 00:21:08 -04:00
Tom Lane a2822fb933 Support index-only scans using the visibility map to avoid heap fetches.
When a btree index contains all columns required by the query, and the
visibility map shows that all tuples on a target heap page are
visible-to-all, we don't need to fetch that heap page.  This patch depends
on the previous patches that made the visibility map reliable.

There's a fair amount left to do here, notably trying to figure out a less
chintzy way of estimating the cost of an index-only scan, but the core
functionality seems ready to commit.

Robert Haas and Ibrar Ahmed, with some previous work by Heikki Linnakangas.
2011-10-07 20:14:13 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 6416a82a62 Remove unnecessary #include references, per pgrminclude script. 2011-09-01 10:04:27 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas cb94db91b2 pgindent run of recent SSI changes. Also, remove an unnecessary #include.
Kevin Grittner
2011-06-16 16:17:22 +03:00
Bruce Momjian bf50caf105 pgindent run before PG 9.1 beta 1. 2011-04-10 11:42:00 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 47ad79122b Fix bugs in Serializable Snapshot Isolation.
Change the way UPDATEs are handled. Instead of maintaining a chain of
tuple-level locks in shared memory, copy any existing locks on the old
tuple to the new tuple at UPDATE. Any existing page-level lock needs to
be duplicated too, as a lock on the new tuple. That was neglected
previously.

Store xmin on tuple-level predicate locks, to distinguish a lock on an old
already-recycled tuple from a new tuple at the same physical location.
Failure to distinguish them caused loops in the tuple-lock chains, as
reported by YAMAMOTO Takashi. Although we don't use the chain representation
of UPDATEs anymore, it seems like a good idea to store the xmin to avoid
some false positives if no other reason.

CheckSingleTargetForConflictsIn now correctly handles the case where a lock
that's being held is not reflected in the local lock table. That happens
if another backend acquires a lock on our behalf due to an UPDATE or a page
split.

PredicateLockPageCombine now retains locks for the page that is being
removed, rather than removing them. This prevents a potentially dangerous
false-positive inconsistency where the local lock table believes that a lock
is held, but it is actually not.

Dan Ports and Kevin Grittner
2011-03-01 19:05:16 +02:00
Tom Lane 82220e8832 Un-break building with BTREE_BUILD_STATS.
This has been broken for awhile, but not clear it's worth back-patching.

Euler Taveira de Oliveira
2011-02-18 14:06:16 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas dafaa3efb7 Implement genuine serializable isolation level.
Until now, our Serializable mode has in fact been what's called Snapshot
Isolation, which allows some anomalies that could not occur in any
serialized ordering of the transactions. This patch fixes that using a
method called Serializable Snapshot Isolation, based on research papers by
Michael J. Cahill (see README-SSI for full references). In Serializable
Snapshot Isolation, transactions run like they do in Snapshot Isolation,
but a predicate lock manager observes the reads and writes performed and
aborts transactions if it detects that an anomaly might occur. This method
produces some false positives, ie. it sometimes aborts transactions even
though there is no anomaly.

To track reads we implement predicate locking, see storage/lmgr/predicate.c.
Whenever a tuple is read, a predicate lock is acquired on the tuple. Shared
memory is finite, so when a transaction takes many tuple-level locks on a
page, the locks are promoted to a single page-level lock, and further to a
single relation level lock if necessary. To lock key values with no matching
tuple, a sequential scan always takes a relation-level lock, and an index
scan acquires a page-level lock that covers the search key, whether or not
there are any matching keys at the moment.

A predicate lock doesn't conflict with any regular locks or with another
predicate locks in the normal sense. They're only used by the predicate lock
manager to detect the danger of anomalies. Only serializable transactions
participate in predicate locking, so there should be no extra overhead for
for other transactions.

Predicate locks can't be released at commit, but must be remembered until
all the transactions that overlapped with it have completed. That means that
we need to remember an unbounded amount of predicate locks, so we apply a
lossy but conservative method of tracking locks for committed transactions.
If we run short of shared memory, we overflow to a new "pg_serial" SLRU
pool.

We don't currently allow Serializable transactions in Hot Standby mode.
That would be hard, because even read-only transactions can cause anomalies
that wouldn't otherwise occur.

Serializable isolation mode now means the new fully serializable level.
Repeatable Read gives you the old Snapshot Isolation level that we have
always had.

Kevin Grittner and Dan Ports, reviewed by Jeff Davis, Heikki Linnakangas and
Anssi Kääriäinen
2011-02-08 00:09:08 +02:00
Bruce Momjian 5d950e3b0c Stamp copyrights for year 2011. 2011-01-01 13:18:15 -05:00
Robert Haas 53dbc27c62 Support unlogged tables.
The contents of an unlogged table are WAL-logged; thus, they are not
available on standby servers and are truncated whenever the database
system enters recovery.  Indexes on unlogged tables are also unlogged.
Unlogged GiST indexes are not currently supported.
2010-12-29 06:48:53 -05:00
Tom Lane d583f10b7e Create core infrastructure for KNNGIST.
This is a heavily revised version of builtin_knngist_core-0.9.  The
ordering operators are no longer mixed in with actual quals, which would
have confused not only humans but significant parts of the planner.
Instead, ordering operators are carried separately throughout planning and
execution.

Since the API for ambeginscan and amrescan functions had to be changed
anyway, this commit takes the opportunity to rationalize that a bit.
RelationGetIndexScan no longer forces a premature index_rescan call;
instead, callers of index_beginscan must call index_rescan too.  Aside from
making the AM-side initialization logic a bit less peculiar, this has the
advantage that we do not make a useless extra am_rescan call when there are
runtime key values.  AMs formerly could not assume that the key values
passed to amrescan were actually valid; now they can.

Teodor Sigaev and Tom Lane
2010-12-02 20:51:37 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 9f2e211386 Remove cvs keywords from all files. 2010-09-20 22:08:53 +02:00
Simon Riggs a760893dbd Derive latestRemovedXid for btree deletes by reading heap pages. The
WAL record for btree delete contains a list of tids, even when backup
blocks are present. We follow the tids to their heap tuples, taking
care to follow LP_REDIRECT tuples. We ignore LP_DEAD tuples on the
understanding that they will always have xmin/xmax earlier than any
LP_NORMAL tuples referred to by killed index tuples. Iff all tuples
are LP_DEAD we return InvalidTransactionId. The heap relfilenode is
added to the WAL record, requiring API changes to pass down the heap
Relation. XLOG_PAGE_MAGIC updated.
2010-03-28 09:27:02 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 65e806cba1 pgindent run for 9.0 2010-02-26 02:01:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 0a469c8769 Remove old-style VACUUM FULL (which was known for a little while as
VACUUM FULL INPLACE), along with a boatload of subsidiary code and complexity.
Per discussion, the use case for this method of vacuuming is no longer large
enough to justify maintaining it; not to mention that we don't wish to invest
the work that would be needed to make it play nicely with Hot Standby.

Aside from the code directly related to old-style VACUUM FULL, this commit
removes support for certain WAL record types that could only be generated
within VACUUM FULL, redirect-pointer removal in heap_page_prune, and
nontransactional generation of cache invalidation sinval messages (the last
being the sticking point for Hot Standby).

We still have to retain all code that copes with finding HEAP_MOVED_OFF and
HEAP_MOVED_IN flag bits on existing tuples.  This can't be removed as long
as we want to support in-place update from pre-9.0 databases.
2010-02-08 04:33:55 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 0239800893 Update copyright for the year 2010. 2010-01-02 16:58:17 +00:00
Simon Riggs efc16ea520 Allow read only connections during recovery, known as Hot Standby.
Enabled by recovery_connections = on (default) and forcing archive recovery using a recovery.conf. Recovery processing now emulates the original transactions as they are replayed, providing full locking and MVCC behaviour for read only queries. Recovery must enter consistent state before connections are allowed, so there is a delay, typically short, before connections succeed. Replay of recovering transactions can conflict and in some cases deadlock with queries during recovery; these result in query cancellation after max_standby_delay seconds have expired. Infrastructure changes have minor effects on normal running, though introduce four new types of WAL record.

New test mode "make standbycheck" allows regression tests of static command behaviour on a standby server while in recovery. Typical and extreme dynamic behaviours have been checked via code inspection and manual testing. Few port specific behaviours have been utilised, though primary testing has been on Linux only so far.

This commit is the basic patch. Additional changes will follow in this release to enhance some aspects of behaviour, notably improved handling of conflicts, deadlock detection and query cancellation. Changes to VACUUM FULL are also required.

Simon Riggs, with significant and lengthy review by Heikki Linnakangas, including streamlined redesign of snapshot creation and two-phase commit.

Important contributions from Florian Pflug, Mark Kirkwood, Merlin Moncure, Greg Stark, Gianni Ciolli, Gabriele Bartolini, Hannu Krosing, Robert Haas, Tatsuo Ishii, Hiroyuki Yamada plus support and feedback from many other community members.
2009-12-19 01:32:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 25d9bf2e3e Support deferrable uniqueness constraints.
The current implementation fires an AFTER ROW trigger for each tuple that
looks like it might be non-unique according to the index contents at the
time of insertion.  This works well as long as there aren't many conflicts,
but won't scale to massive unique-key reassignments.  Improving that case
is a TODO item.

Dean Rasheed
2009-07-29 20:56:21 +00:00
Bruce Momjian d747140279 8.4 pgindent run, with new combined Linux/FreeBSD/MinGW typedef list
provided by Andrew.
2009-06-11 14:49:15 +00:00
Tom Lane 32ea236361 Improve the IndexVacuumInfo/IndexBulkDeleteResult API to allow somewhat sane
behavior in cases where we don't know the heap tuple count accurately; in
particular partial vacuum, but this also makes the API a bit more useful
for ANALYZE.  This patch adds "estimated_count" flags to both structs so
that an approximate count can be flagged as such, and adjusts the logic
so that approximate counts are not used for updating pg_class.reltuples.

This fixes my previous complaint that VACUUM was putting ridiculous values
into pg_class.reltuples for indexes.  The actual impact of that bug is
limited, because the planner only pays attention to reltuples for an index
if the index is partial; which probably explains why beta testers hadn't
noticed a degradation in plan quality from it.  But it needs to be fixed.

The whole thing is a bit messy and should be redesigned in future, because
reltuples now has the potential to drift quite far away from reality when
a long period elapses with no non-partial vacuums.  But this is as good as
it's going to get for 8.4.
2009-06-06 22:13:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 8f348112f3 Insert CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() calls into btree and hash index scans at the
points where we step right or left to the next page.  This should ensure
reasonable response time to a query cancel request during an unsuccessful
index scan, as seen in recent gripe from Marc Cousin.  It's a bit trickier
than it might seem at first glance, because CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() is a no-op
if executed while holding a buffer lock.  So we have to do it just at the
point where we've dropped one page lock and not yet acquired the next.

Remove CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS calls at the top level of btgetbitmap and
hashgetbitmap, since they're pointless given the added checks.

I think that GIST is okay already --- at least, there's a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS
at a plausible-looking place in gistnext().  I don't claim to know GIN well
enough to try to poke it for this, if indeed it has a problem at all.

This is a pre-existing issue, but in view of the lack of prior complaints
I'm not going to risk back-patching.
2009-05-05 19:36:32 +00:00
Tom Lane ff301d6e69 Implement "fastupdate" support for GIN indexes, in which we try to accumulate
multiple index entries in a holding area before adding them to the main index
structure.  This helps because bulk insert is (usually) significantly faster
than retail insert for GIN.

This patch also removes GIN support for amgettuple-style index scans.  The
API defined for amgettuple is difficult to support with fastupdate, and
the previously committed partial-match feature didn't really work with
it either.  We might eventually figure a way to put back amgettuple
support, but it won't happen for 8.4.

catversion bumped because of change in GIN's pg_am entry, and because
the format of GIN indexes changed on-disk (there's a metapage now,
and possibly a pending list).

Teodor Sigaev
2009-03-24 20:17:18 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 511db38ace Update copyright for 2009. 2009-01-01 17:24:05 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3396000684 Rethink the way FSM truncation works. Instead of WAL-logging FSM
truncations in FSM code, call FreeSpaceMapTruncateRel from smgr_redo. To
make that cleaner from modularity point of view, move the WAL-logging one
level up to RelationTruncate, and move RelationTruncate and all the
related WAL-logging to new src/backend/catalog/storage.c file. Introduce
new RelationCreateStorage and RelationDropStorage functions that are used
instead of calling smgrcreate/smgrscheduleunlink directly. Move the
pending rel deletion stuff from smgrcreate/smgrscheduleunlink to the new
functions. This leaves smgr.c as a thin wrapper around md.c; all the
transactional stuff is now in storage.c.

This will make it easier to add new forks with similar truncation logic,
like the visibility map.
2008-11-19 10:34:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 10e3acb8e7 Prevent synchronous scan during GIN index build, because GIN is optimized
for inserting tuples in increasing TID order.  It's not clear whether this
fully explains Ivan Sergio Borgonovo's complaint, but simple testing
confirms that a scan that doesn't start at block 0 can slow GIN build by
a factor of three or four.

Backpatch to 8.3.  Sync scan didn't exist before that.
2008-11-13 17:42:10 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 19c8dc839b Unite ReadBufferWithFork, ReadBufferWithStrategy, and ZeroOrReadBuffer
functions into one ReadBufferExtended function, that takes the strategy
and mode as argument. There's three modes, RBM_NORMAL which is the default
used by plain ReadBuffer(), RBM_ZERO, which replaces ZeroOrReadBuffer, and
a new mode RBM_ZERO_ON_ERROR, which allows callers to read corrupt pages
without throwing an error. The FSM needs the new mode to recover from
corrupt pages, which could happend if we crash after extending an FSM file,
and the new page is "torn".

Add fork number to some error messages in bufmgr.c, that still lacked it.
2008-10-31 15:05:00 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 89f373bf5b Index FSMs needs to be vacuumed as well. Report by Jeff Davis. 2008-10-06 08:04:11 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 15c121b3ed Rewrite the FSM. Instead of relying on a fixed-size shared memory segment, the
free space information is stored in a dedicated FSM relation fork, with each
relation (except for hash indexes; they don't use FSM).

This eliminates the max_fsm_relations and max_fsm_pages GUC options; remove any
trace of them from the backend, initdb, and documentation.

Rewrite contrib/pg_freespacemap to match the new FSM implementation. Also
introduce a new variant of the get_raw_page(regclass, int4, int4) function in
contrib/pageinspect that let's you to return pages from any relation fork, and
a new fsm_page_contents() function to inspect the new FSM pages.
2008-09-30 10:52:14 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera a3540b0f65 Improve our #include situation by moving pointer types away from the
corresponding struct definitions.  This allows other headers to avoid including
certain highly-loaded headers such as rel.h and relscan.h, instead using just
relcache.h, heapam.h or genam.h, which are more lightweight and thus cause less
unnecessary dependencies.
2008-06-19 00:46:06 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera f8c4d7db60 Restructure some header files a bit, in particular heapam.h, by removing some
unnecessary #include lines in it.  Also, move some tuple routine prototypes and
macros to htup.h, which allows removal of heapam.h inclusion from some .c
files.

For this to work, a new header file access/sysattr.h needed to be created,
initially containing attribute numbers of system columns, for pg_dump usage.

While at it, make contrib ltree, intarray and hstore header files more
consistent with our header style.
2008-05-12 00:00:54 +00:00
Tom Lane d1cbd26ded Repair two places where SIGTERM exit could leave shared memory state
corrupted.  (Neither is very important if SIGTERM is used to shut down the
whole database cluster together, but there's a problem if someone tries to
SIGTERM individual backends.)  To do this, introduce new infrastructure
macros PG_ENSURE_ERROR_CLEANUP/PG_END_ENSURE_ERROR_CLEANUP that take care
of transiently pushing an on_shmem_exit cleanup hook.  Also use this method
for createdb cleanup --- that wasn't a shared-memory-corruption problem,
but SIGTERM abort of createdb could leave orphaned files lying around.

Backpatch as far as 8.2.  The shmem corruption cases don't exist in 8.1,
and the createdb usage doesn't seem important enough to risk backpatching
further.
2008-04-16 23:59:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 24558da14a Phase 2 of project to make index operator lossiness be determined at runtime
instead of plan time.  Extend the amgettuple API so that the index AM returns
a boolean indicating whether the indexquals need to be rechecked, and make
that rechecking happen in nodeIndexscan.c (currently the only place where
it's expected to be needed; other callers of index_getnext are just erroring
out for now).  For the moment, GIN and GIST have stub logic that just always
sets the recheck flag to TRUE --- I'm hoping to get Teodor to handle pushing
that control down to the opclass consistent() functions.  The planner no
longer pays any attention to amopreqcheck, and that catalog column will go
away in due course.
2008-04-13 19:18:14 +00:00
Tom Lane 4e82a95476 Replace "amgetmulti" AM functions with "amgetbitmap", in which the whole
indexscan always occurs in one call, and the results are returned in a
TIDBitmap instead of a limited-size array of TIDs.  This should improve
speed a little by reducing AM entry/exit overhead, and it is necessary
infrastructure if we are ever to support bitmap indexes.

In an only slightly related change, add support for TIDBitmaps to preserve
(somewhat lossily) the knowledge that particular TIDs reported by an index
need to have their quals rechecked when the heap is visited.  This facility
is not really used yet; we'll need to extend the forced-recheck feature to
plain indexscans before it's useful, and that hasn't been coded yet.
The intent is to use it to clean up 8.3's horrid @@@ kluge for text search
with weighted queries.  There might be other uses in future, but that one
alone is sufficient reason.

Heikki Linnakangas, with some adjustments by me.
2008-04-10 22:25:26 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 9098ab9e32 Update copyrights in source tree to 2008. 2008-01-01 19:46:01 +00:00
Tom Lane d526575f89 Make large sequential scans and VACUUMs work in a limited-size "ring" of
buffers, rather than blowing out the whole shared-buffer arena.  Aside from
avoiding cache spoliation, this fixes the problem that VACUUM formerly tended
to cause a WAL flush for every page it modified, because we had it hacked to
use only a single buffer.  Those flushes will now occur only once per
ring-ful.  The exact ring size, and the threshold for seqscans to switch into
the ring usage pattern, remain under debate; but the infrastructure seems
done.  The key bit of infrastructure is a new optional BufferAccessStrategy
object that can be passed to ReadBuffer operations; this replaces the former
StrategyHintVacuum API.

This patch also changes the buffer usage-count methodology a bit: we now
advance usage_count when first pinning a buffer, rather than when last
unpinning it.  To preserve the behavior that a buffer's lifetime starts to
decrease when it's released, the clock sweep code is modified to not decrement
usage_count of pinned buffers.

Work not done in this commit: teach GiST and GIN indexes to use the vacuum
BufferAccessStrategy for vacuum-driven fetches.

Original patch by Simon, reworked by Heikki and again by Tom.
2007-05-30 20:12:03 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 29dccf5fe0 Update CVS HEAD for 2007 copyright. Back branches are typically not
back-stamped for this.
2007-01-05 22:20:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 70ce5c9082 Fix "failed to re-find parent key" btree VACUUM failure by revising page
deletion code to avoid the case where an upper-level btree page remains "half
dead" for a significant period of time, and to block insertions into a key
range that is in process of being re-assigned to the right sibling of the
deleted page's parent.  This prevents the scenario reported by Ed L. wherein
index keys could become out-of-order in the grandparent index level.

Since this is a moderately invasive fix, I'm applying it only to HEAD.
The bug exists back to 7.4, but the back branches will get a different patch.
2006-11-01 19:43:17 +00:00
Bruce Momjian f99a569a2e pgindent run for 8.2. 2006-10-04 00:30:14 +00:00
Tom Lane 9e936693a9 Fix free space map to correctly track the total amount of FSM space needed
even when a single relation requires more than max_fsm_pages pages.  Also,
make VACUUM emit a warning in this case, since it likely means that VACUUM
FULL or other drastic corrective measure is needed.  Per reports from Jeff
Frost and others of unexpected changes in the claimed max_fsm_pages need.
2006-09-21 20:31:22 +00:00
Tom Lane 08ae5edc5c Optimize the case where a btree indexscan has current and mark positions
on the same index page; we can avoid data copying as well as buffer refcount
manipulations in this common case.  Makes for a small but noticeable
improvement in mergejoin speed.

Heikki Linnakangas
2006-08-24 01:18:34 +00:00
Tom Lane 3fdeb189e9 Clean up code associated with updating pg_class statistics columns
(relpages/reltuples).  To do this, create formal support in heapam.c for
"overwrite" tuple updates (including xlog replay capability) and use that
instead of the ad-hoc overwrites we'd been using in VACUUM and CREATE INDEX.
Take the responsibility for updating stats during CREATE INDEX out of the
individual index AMs, and do it where it belongs, in catalog/index.c.  Aside
from being more modular, this avoids having to update the same tuple twice in
some paths through CREATE INDEX.  It's probably not measurably faster, but
for sure it's a lot cleaner than before.
2006-05-10 23:18:39 +00:00
Tom Lane 5749f6ef0c Rewrite btree vacuuming to fold the former bulkdelete and cleanup operations
into a single mostly-physical-order scan of the index.  This requires some
ticklish interlocking considerations, but should create no material
performance impact on normal index operations (at least given the
already-committed changes to make scans work a page at a time).  VACUUM
itself should get significantly faster in any index that's degenerated to a
very nonlinear page order.  Also, we save one pass over the index entirely,
except in the case where there were no deletions to do and so only one pass
happened anyway.

Original patch by Heikki Linnakangas, rework by Tom Lane.
2006-05-08 00:00:17 +00:00
Tom Lane 09cb5c0e7d Rewrite btree index scans to work a page at a time in all cases (both
btgettuple and btgetmulti).  This eliminates the problem of "re-finding" the
exact stopping point, since the stopping point is effectively always a page
boundary, and index items are never moved across pre-existing page boundaries.
A small penalty is that the keys_are_unique optimization is effectively
disabled (and, therefore, is removed in this patch), causing us to apply
_bt_checkkeys() to at least one more tuple than necessary when looking up a
unique key.  However, the advantages for non-unique cases seem great enough to
accept this tradeoff.  Aside from simplifying and (sometimes) speeding up the
indexscan code, this will allow us to reimplement btbulkdelete as a largely
sequential scan instead of index-order traversal, thereby significantly
reducing the cost of VACUUM.  Those changes will come in a separate patch.

Original patch by Heikki Linnakangas, rework by Tom Lane.
2006-05-07 01:21:30 +00:00
Tom Lane e57345975c Clean up API for ambulkdelete/amvacuumcleanup as per today's discussion.
This formulation requires every AM to provide amvacuumcleanup, unlike before,
but it's surely a whole lot cleaner.  Also, add an 'amstorage' column to
pg_am so that we can get rid of hardwired knowledge in DefineOpClass().
2006-05-02 22:25:10 +00:00
Tom Lane d2896a9ed1 Arrange to cache btree metapage data in the relcache entry for the index,
thereby saving a visit to the metapage in most index searches/updates.
This wouldn't actually save any I/O (since in the old regime the metapage
generally stayed in cache anyway), but it does provide a useful decrease
in bufmgr traffic in high-contention scenarios.  Per my recent proposal.
2006-04-25 22:46:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 89bda95d82 Remove the 'slow' path for btree index build, which built the btree
incrementally by successive inserts rather than by sorting the data.
We were only using the slow path during bootstrap, apparently because
when first written it failed during bootstrap --- but it works fine now
AFAICT.  Removing it saves a hundred or so lines of code and produces
noticeably (~10%) smaller initial states of the system catalog indexes.
While that won't make much difference for heavily-modified catalogs,
for the more static ones there may be a useful long-term performance
improvement.
2006-04-01 03:03:37 +00:00
Tom Lane a8b8f4db23 Clean up WAL/buffer interactions as per my recent proposal. Get rid of the
misleadingly-named WriteBuffer routine, and instead require routines that
change buffer pages to call MarkBufferDirty (which does exactly what it says).
We also require that they do so before calling XLogInsert; this takes care of
the synchronization requirement documented in SyncOneBuffer.  Note that
because bufmgr takes the buffer content lock (in shared mode) while writing
out any buffer, it doesn't matter whether MarkBufferDirty is executed before
the buffer content change is complete, so long as the content change is
completed before releasing exclusive lock on the buffer.  So it's OK to set
the dirtybit before we fill in the LSN.
This eliminates the former kluge of needing to set the dirtybit in LockBuffer.
Aside from making the code more transparent, we can also add some new
debugging assertions, in particular that the caller of MarkBufferDirty must
hold the buffer content lock, not merely a pin.
2006-03-31 23:32:07 +00:00
Bruce Momjian f2f5b05655 Update copyright for 2006. Update scripts. 2006-03-05 15:59:11 +00:00
Tom Lane 2d7f694729 Move btbulkdelete's vacuum_delay_point() call to a place in the loop where
we are not holding a buffer content lock; where it was, InterruptHoldoffCount
is positive and so we'd not respond to cancel signals as intended.  Also
add missing vacuum_delay_point() call in btvacuumcleanup.  This should fix
complaint from Evgeny Gridasov about failure to respond to SIGINT/SIGTERM
in a timely fashion (bug #2257).
2006-02-14 17:20:01 +00:00
Tom Lane d52a57fc30 Actually there's a better way to do this, which is to count tuples
during the vacuumcleanup scan that we're going to do anyway.  Should
save a few cycles (one calculation per page, not per tuple) as well
as not having to depend on assumptions about heap and index being
in step.
I think this could probably be made to work for GIST too, but that
code looks messy enough that I'm disinclined to try right now.
2006-02-12 00:18:17 +00:00
Tom Lane fd267c1ebc Skip ambulkdelete scan if there's nothing to delete and the index is not
partial.  None of the existing AMs do anything useful except counting
tuples when there's nothing to delete, and we can get a tuple count
from the heap as long as it's not a partial index.  (hash actually can
skip anyway because it maintains a tuple count in the index metapage.)
GIST is not currently able to exploit this optimization because, due to
failure to index NULLs, GIST is always effectively partial.  Possibly
we should fix that sometime.
Simon Riggs w/ some review by Tom Lane.
2006-02-11 23:31:34 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 77bb65d3fc Revert based on Tom's recommendation:
> Allow VACUUM to complete faster by avoiding scanning the indexes when no
> rows were removed from the heap by the VACUUM.
2006-02-11 17:14:09 +00:00
Bruce Momjian bf324946b3 Allow VACUUM to complete faster by avoiding scanning the indexes when no
rows were removed from the heap by the VACUUM.

Simon Riggs
2006-02-11 16:59:09 +00:00
Tom Lane c389760c32 Remove the no-longer-useful BTItem/BTItemData level of structure, and
just refer to btree index entries as plain IndexTuples, which is what
they have been for a very long time.  This is mostly just an exercise
in removing extraneous notation, but it does save a palloc/pfree cycle
per index insertion.
2006-01-25 23:04:21 +00:00
Tom Lane cefcbbf1fd Push the responsibility for handling ignore_killed_tuples down into
_bt_checkkeys(), instead of checking it in the top-level nbtree.c routines
as formerly.  This saves a little bit of loop overhead, but more importantly
it lets us skip performing the index key comparisons for dead tuples.
2005-12-07 19:37:53 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 436a2956d8 Re-run pgindent, fixing a problem where comment lines after a blank
comment line where output as too long, and update typedefs for /lib
directory.  Also fix case where identifiers were used as variable names
in the backend, but as typedefs in ecpg (favor the backend for
indenting).

Backpatch to 8.1.X.
2005-11-22 18:17:34 +00:00
Tom Lane 766dc45d9f Add defenses to btree and hash index AMs to do simple sanity checks
on every index page they read; in particular to catch the case of an
all-zero page, which PageHeaderIsValid allows to pass.  It turns out
hash already had this idea, but it was just Assert()ing things rather
than doing a straight error check, and the Asserts were partially
redundant with PageHeaderIsValid anyway.  Per recent failure example
from Jim Nasby.  (gist still needs the same treatment.)
2005-11-06 19:29:01 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 1dc3498251 Standard pgindent run for 8.1. 2005-10-15 02:49:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 35e9b1cc1e Clean up a couple of ad-hoc computations of the maximum number of tuples
on a page, as suggested by ITAGAKI Takahiro.  Also, change a few places
that were using some other estimates of max-items-per-page to consistently
use MaxOffsetNumber.  This is conservatively large --- we could have used
the new MaxHeapTuplesPerPage macro, or a similar one for index tuples ---
but those places are simply declaring a fixed-size buffer and assuming it
will work, rather than actively testing for overrun.  It seems safer to
size these buffers in a way that can't overflow even if the page is
corrupt.
2005-09-02 19:02:20 +00:00
Neil Conway 3140437495 This patch refactors away some duplicated code in the index AM build
methods: they all invoke UpdateStats() since they have computed the
number of heap tuples, so I created a function in catalog/index.c that
each AM now calls.
2005-05-11 06:24:55 +00:00
Tom Lane 30f540be43 Repair very-low-probability race condition between relation extension
and VACUUM: in the interval between adding a new page to the relation
and formatting it, it was possible for VACUUM to come along and decide
it should format the page too.  Though not harmful in itself, this would
cause data loss if a third transaction were able to insert tuples into
the vacuumed page before the original extender got control back.
2005-05-07 21:32:24 +00:00
Tom Lane 278bd0cc22 For some reason access/tupmacs.h has been #including utils/memutils.h,
which is neither needed by nor related to that header.  Remove the bogus
inclusion and instead include the header in those C files that actually
need it.  Also fix unnecessary inclusions and bad inclusion order in
tsearch2 files.
2005-05-06 17:24:55 +00:00
Tom Lane bf3dbb5881 First steps towards index scans with heap access decoupled from index
access: define new index access method functions 'amgetmulti' that can
fetch multiple TIDs per call.  (The functions exist but are totally
untested as yet.)  Since I was modifying pg_am anyway, remove the
no-longer-needed 'rel' parameter from amcostestimate functions, and
also remove the vestigial amowner column that was creating useless
work for Alvaro's shared-object-dependencies project.
Initdb forced due to changes in pg_am.
2005-03-27 23:53:05 +00:00
Tom Lane ee4ddac137 Convert index-related tuple handling routines from char 'n'/' ' to bool
convention for isnull flags.  Also, remove the useless InsertIndexResult
return struct from index AM aminsert calls --- there is no reason for
the caller to know where in the index the tuple was inserted, and we
were wasting a palloc cycle per insert to deliver this uninteresting
value (plus nontrivial complexity in some AMs).
I forced initdb because of the change in the signature of the aminsert
routines, even though nothing really looks at those pg_proc entries...
2005-03-21 01:24:04 +00:00
Tom Lane 354049c709 Remove unnecessary calls of FlushRelationBuffers: there is no need
to write out data that we are about to tell the filesystem to drop.
smgr_internal_unlink already had a DropRelFileNodeBuffers call to
get rid of dead buffers without a write after it's no longer possible
to roll back the deleting transaction.  Adding a similar call in
smgrtruncate simplifies callers and makes the overall division of
labor clearer.  This patch removes the former behavior that VACUUM
would write all dirty buffers of a relation unconditionally.
2005-03-20 22:00:54 +00:00
PostgreSQL Daemon 2ff501590b Tag appropriate files for rc3
Also performed an initial run through of upgrading our Copyright date to
extend to 2005 ... first run here was very simple ... change everything
where: grep 1996-2004 && the word 'Copyright' ... scanned through the
generated list with 'less' first, and after, to make sure that I only
picked up the right entries ...
2004-12-31 22:04:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 5374d097de Change planner to use the current true disk file size as its estimate of
a relation's number of blocks, rather than the possibly-obsolete value
in pg_class.relpages.  Scale the value in pg_class.reltuples correspondingly
to arrive at a hopefully more accurate number of rows.  When pg_class
contains 0/0, estimate a tuple width from the column datatypes and divide
that into current file size to estimate number of rows.  This improved
methodology allows us to jettison the ancient hacks that put bogus default
values into pg_class when a table is first created.  Also, per a suggestion
from Simon, make VACUUM (but not VACUUM FULL or ANALYZE) adjust the value
it puts into pg_class.reltuples to try to represent the mean tuple density
instead of the minimal density that actually prevails just after VACUUM.
These changes alter the plans selected for certain regression tests, so
update the expected files accordingly.  (I removed join_1.out because
it's not clear if it still applies; we can add back any variant versions
as they are shown to be needed.)
2004-12-01 19:00:56 +00:00
Neil Conway 5d1dd2bc55 Micro-optimization of markpos() and restrpos() in btree and hash indexes.
Rather than using ReadBuffer() to increment the reference count on an
already-pinned buffer, we should use IncrBufferRefCount() as it is
faster and does not require acquiring the BufMgrLock.
2004-11-17 03:13:38 +00:00
Neil Conway 4d0f669f3c Remove obsolete comment from btbuild() and hashbuild(): we no longer use
a global variable to control building indexes.
2004-11-11 00:32:50 +00:00
Bruce Momjian da9a8649d8 Update copyright to 2004. 2004-08-29 04:13:13 +00:00
Tom Lane fe548629c5 Invent ResourceOwner mechanism as per my recent proposal, and use it to
keep track of portal-related resources separately from transaction-related
resources.  This allows cursors to work in a somewhat sane fashion with
nested transactions.  For now, cursor behavior is non-subtransactional,
that is a cursor's state does not roll back if you abort a subtransaction
that fetched from the cursor.  We might want to change that later.
2004-07-17 03:32:14 +00:00
Tom Lane c3a153afed Tweak palloc/repalloc to allow zero bytes to be requested, as per recent
proposal.  Eliminate several dozen now-unnecessary hacks to avoid palloc(0).
(It's likely there are more that I didn't find.)
2004-06-05 19:48:09 +00:00
Tom Lane 2095206de1 Adjust btree index build to not use shared buffers, thereby avoiding the
locking conflict against concurrent CHECKPOINT that was discussed a few
weeks ago.  Also, if not using WAL archiving (which is always true ATM
but won't be if PITR makes it into this release), there's no need to
WAL-log the index build process; it's sufficient to force-fsync the
completed index before commit.  This seems to gain about a factor of 2
in my tests, which is consistent with writing half as much data.  I did
not try it with WAL on a separate drive though --- probably the gain would
be a lot less in that scenario.
2004-06-02 17:28:18 +00:00
Tom Lane e674707968 Minor code rationalization: FlushRelationBuffers just returns void,
rather than an error code, and does elog(ERROR) not elog(WARNING)
when it detects a problem.  All callers were simply elog(ERROR)'ing on
failure return anyway, and I find it hard to envision a caller that would
not, so we may as well simplify the callers and produce the more useful
error message directly.
2004-05-31 19:24:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 4af3421161 Get rid of rd_nblocks field in relcache entries. Turns out this was
costing us lots more to maintain than it was worth.  On shared tables
it was of exactly zero benefit because we couldn't trust it to be
up to date.  On temp tables it sometimes saved an lseek, but not often
enough to be worth getting excited about.  And the real problem was that
we forced an lseek on every relcache flush in order to update the field.
So all in all it seems best to lose the complexity.
2004-05-08 19:09:25 +00:00
Tom Lane 37fa3b6c89 Tweak indexscan and seqscan code to arrange that steps from one page to
the next are handled by ReleaseAndReadBuffer rather than separate
ReleaseBuffer and ReadBuffer calls.  This cuts the number of acquisitions
of the BufMgrLock by a factor of 2 (possibly more, if an indexscan happens
to pull successive rows from the same heap page).  Unfortunately this
doesn't seem enough to get us out of the recently discussed context-switch
storm problem, but it's surely worth doing anyway.
2004-04-21 18:24:26 +00:00
Tom Lane 58f337a343 Centralize implementation of delay code by creating a pg_usleep()
subroutine in src/port/pgsleep.c.  Remove platform dependencies from
miscadmin.h and put them in port.h where they belong.  Extend recent
vacuum cost-based-delay patch to apply to VACUUM FULL, ANALYZE, and
non-btree index vacuuming.

By the way, where is the documentation for the cost-based-delay patch?
2004-02-10 03:42:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 87bd956385 Restructure smgr API as per recent proposal. smgr no longer depends on
the relcache, and so the notion of 'blind write' is gone.  This should
improve efficiency in bgwriter and background checkpoint processes.
Internal restructuring in md.c to remove the not-very-useful array of
MdfdVec objects --- might as well just use pointers.
Also remove the long-dead 'persistent main memory' storage manager (mm.c),
since it seems quite unlikely to ever get resurrected.
2004-02-10 01:55:27 +00:00
Jan Wieck f425b605f4 Cost based vacuum delay feature.
Jan
2004-02-06 19:36:18 +00:00
Tom Lane 391c3811a2 Rename SortMem and VacuumMem to work_mem and maintenance_work_mem.
Make btree index creation and initial validation of foreign-key constraints
use maintenance_work_mem rather than work_mem as their memory limit.
Add some code to guc.c to allow these variables to be referenced by their
old names in SHOW and SET commands, for backwards compatibility.
2004-02-03 17:34:04 +00:00
Neil Conway 192ad63bd7 More janitorial work: remove the explicit casting of NULL literals to a
pointer type when it is not necessary to do so.

For future reference, casting NULL to a pointer type is only necessary
when (a) invoking a function AND either (b) the function has no prototype
OR (c) the function is a varargs function.
2004-01-07 18:56:30 +00:00
PostgreSQL Daemon 969685ad44 $Header: -> $PostgreSQL Changes ... 2003-11-29 19:52:15 +00:00
Tom Lane fa5c8a055a Cross-data-type comparisons are now indexable by btrees, pursuant to my
pghackers proposal of 8-Nov.  All the existing cross-type comparison
operators (int2/int4/int8 and float4/float8) have appropriate support.
The original proposal of storing the right-hand-side datatype as part of
the primary key for pg_amop and pg_amproc got modified a bit in the event;
it is easier to store zero as the 'default' case and only store a nonzero
when the operator is actually cross-type.  Along the way, remove the
long-since-defunct bigbox_ops operator class.
2003-11-12 21:15:59 +00:00
Tom Lane e33f205a94 Adjust btree index build procedure so that the btree metapage looks
invalid (has the wrong magic number) until the build is entirely
complete.  This turns out to cost no additional writes in the normal
case, since we were rewriting the metapage at the end of the process
anyway.  In normal scenarios there's no real gain in security, because
a failed index build would roll back the transaction leaving an unused
index file, but for rebuilding shared system indexes this seems to add
some useful protection.
2003-09-29 23:40:26 +00:00
Bruce Momjian f3c3deb7d0 Update copyrights to 2003. 2003-08-04 02:40:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 089003fb46 pgindent run. 2003-08-04 00:43:34 +00:00
Tom Lane ec7aa4b515 Error message editing in backend/access. 2003-07-21 20:29:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 0489783011 Adjust amrescan code so that it's allowed to call index_rescan with a
NULL key pointer, indicating that the existing scan key should be reused.
This behavior isn't used yet but will be needed for my planned fix to
the keys_are_unique code.
2003-03-23 23:01:03 +00:00
Tom Lane 391eb5e5b6 Reimplement free-space-map management as per recent discussions.
Adjustable threshold is gone in favor of keeping track of total requested
page storage and doling out proportional fractions to each relation
(with a minimum amount per relation, and some quantization of the results
to avoid thrashing with small changes in page counts).  Provide special-
case code for indexes so as not to waste space storing useless page
free space counts.  Restructure internal data storage to be a flat array
instead of list-of-chunks; this may cost a little more work in data
copying when reorganizing, but allows binary search to be used during
lookup_fsm_page_entry().
2003-03-04 21:51:22 +00:00
Tom Lane 0797bb5c50 During VACUUM FULL, truncate off any deletable pages that are at the
end of a btree index.  This isn't super-effective, since we won't move
nondeletable pages, but it's better than nothing.  Also, improve stats
displayed during VACUUM VERBOSE.
2003-02-24 00:57:17 +00:00
Tom Lane 3981f2195f Remove no-longer-used FixBTree GUC variable. 2003-02-23 23:27:21 +00:00
Tom Lane 3bbd6af37c Adjust btbulkdelete logic so that only one WAL record is issued while
deleting multiple index entries on a single index page.  This makes for
a very substantial reduction in the amount of WAL traffic during a
large delete operation.
2003-02-23 22:43:09 +00:00
Tom Lane 88dc31e3f2 First cut at recycling space in btree indexes. Still some rough edges
to fix, but it seems to basically work...
2003-02-23 06:17:13 +00:00
Tom Lane 799bc58dc7 More infrastructure for btree compaction project. Tree-traversal code
now knows what to do upon hitting a dead page (in theory anyway, it's
untested...).  Add a post-VACUUM-cleanup entry point for index AMs, to
provide a place for dead-page scavenging to happen.
Also, fix oversight that broke btpo_prev links in temporary indexes.
initdb forced due to additions in pg_am.
2003-02-22 00:45:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 70508ba7ae Make btree index structure adjustments and WAL logging changes needed to
support btree compaction, as per proposal of a few days ago.  btree index
pages no longer store parent links, instead they have a level indicator
(counting up from zero for leaf pages).  The FixBTree recovery logic is
removed, and replaced by code that detects missing parent-level insertions
during WAL replay.  Also, generate appropriate WAL entries when updating
btree metapage and when building a btree index from scratch.  I believe
btree indexes are now completely WAL-legal for the first time.
initdb forced due to index and WAL changes.
2003-02-21 00:06:22 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 559b6c7ced Rename show_btree_build_stats to log_btree_build_stats 2002-11-15 01:26:09 +00:00
Tom Lane 13416a1f8f Fix potential problem with btbulkdelete deleting an indexscan's current
item, if the page containing the current item is split while the indexscan
is stopped and holds no read-lock on the page.  The current item might
move right onto a page that the indexscan holds no pin on.  In the prior
code this would allow btbulkdelete to reach and possibly delete the item,
causing 'my bits moved right off the end of the world!' when the indexscan
finally resumes.  Fix by chaining read-locks to the right during
_bt_restscan and requiring btbulkdelete to LockBufferForCleanup on every
page it scans, not only those with deletable items.  Per my pghackers
message of 25-May-02.  (Too bad no one could think of a better way.)
2002-10-20 20:47:31 +00:00
Bruce Momjian e50f52a074 pgindent run. 2002-09-04 20:31:48 +00:00
Bruce Momjian d84fe82230 Update copyright to 2002. 2002-06-20 20:29:54 +00:00
Tom Lane 3f4d488022 Mark index entries "killed" when they are no longer visible to any
transaction, so as to avoid returning them out of the index AM.  Saves
repeated heap_fetch operations on frequently-updated rows.  Also detect
queries on unique keys (equality to all columns of a unique index), and
don't bother continuing scan once we have found first match.

Killing is implemented in the btree and hash AMs, but not yet in rtree
or gist, because there isn't an equally convenient place to do it in
those AMs (the outer amgetnext routine can't do it without re-pinning
the index page).

Did some small cleanup on APIs of HeapTupleSatisfies, heap_fetch, and
index_insert to make this a little easier.
2002-05-24 18:57:57 +00:00
Tom Lane 44fbe20d62 Restructure indexscan API (index_beginscan, index_getnext) per
yesterday's proposal to pghackers.  Also remove unnecessary parameters
to heap_beginscan, heap_rescan.  I modified pg_proc.h to reflect the
new numbers of parameters for the AM interface routines, but did not
force an initdb because nothing actually looks at those fields.
2002-05-20 23:51:44 +00:00
Bruce Momjian a033daf566 Commit to match discussed elog() changes. Only update is that LOG is
now just below FATAL in server_min_messages.  Added more text to
highlight ordering difference between it and client_min_messages.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

REALLYFATAL => PANIC
STOP => PANIC
New INFO level the prints to client by default
New LOG level the prints to server log by default
Cause VACUUM information to print only to the client
NOTICE => INFO where purely information messages are sent
DEBUG => LOG for purely server status messages
DEBUG removed, kept as backward compatible
DEBUG5, DEBUG4, DEBUG3, DEBUG2, DEBUG1 added
DebugLvl removed in favor of new DEBUG[1-5] symbols
New server_min_messages GUC parameter with values:
        DEBUG[5-1], INFO, NOTICE, ERROR, LOG, FATAL, PANIC
New client_min_messages GUC parameter with values:
        DEBUG[5-1], LOG, INFO, NOTICE, ERROR, FATAL, PANIC
Server startup now logged with LOG instead of DEBUG
Remove debug_level GUC parameter
elog() numbers now start at 10
Add test to print error message if older elog() values are passed to elog()
Bootstrap mode now has a -d that requires an argument, like postmaster
2002-03-02 21:39:36 +00:00
Tom Lane 3b6cbce458 Add CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() in various strategic spots, per comments
from Hiroshi.
2002-01-06 00:37:44 +00:00
Tom Lane cd255bb070 Fix boundary condition in btbulkdelete: don't examine high key in case
where rightmost index page splits while we are waiting to obtain exclusive
lock on it.  Not clear this would actually hurt (probably the callback
would always fail), but better safe than sorry.
Also, improve comments describing concurrency considerations in this code.
2001-11-23 23:41:54 +00:00
Tom Lane f6ee99a062 Clean up usage-statistics display code (ShowUsage and friends). StatFp
is gone, usage messages now go through elog(DEBUG).
2001-11-10 23:51:14 +00:00
Bruce Momjian ea08e6cd55 New pgindent run with fixes suggested by Tom. Patch manually reviewed,
initdb/regression tests pass.
2001-11-05 17:46:40 +00:00
Bruce Momjian b81844b173 pgindent run on all C files. Java run to follow. initdb/regression
tests pass.
2001-10-25 05:50:21 +00:00
Tom Lane c8076f09d2 Restructure index AM interface for index building and index tuple deletion,
per previous discussion on pghackers.  Most of the duplicate code in
different AMs' ambuild routines has been moved out to a common routine
in index.c; this means that all index types now do the right things about
inserting recently-dead tuples, etc.  (I also removed support for EXTEND
INDEX in the ambuild routines, since that's about to go away anyway, and
it cluttered the code a lot.)  The retail indextuple deletion routines have
been replaced by a "bulk delete" routine in which the indexscan is inside
the access method.  I haven't pushed this change as far as it should go yet,
but it should allow considerable simplification of the internal bookkeeping
for deletions.  Also, add flag columns to pg_am to eliminate various
hardcoded tests on AM OIDs, and remove unused pg_am columns.

Fix rtree and gist index types to not attempt to store NULLs; before this,
gist usually crashed, while rtree managed not to crash but computed wacko
bounding boxes for NULL entries (which might have had something to do with
the performance problems we've heard about occasionally).

Add AtEOXact routines to hash, rtree, and gist, all of which have static
state that needs to be reset after an error.  We discovered this need long
ago for btree, but missed the other guys.

Oh, one more thing: concurrent VACUUM is now the default.
2001-07-15 22:48:19 +00:00
Bruce Momjian dc0ff5c67a Small code cleanups,formatting. 2001-05-18 21:24:20 +00:00
Tom Lane f905d65ee3 Rewrite of planner statistics-gathering code. ANALYZE is now available as
a separate statement (though it can still be invoked as part of VACUUM, too).
pg_statistic redesigned to be more flexible about what statistics are
stored.  ANALYZE now collects a list of several of the most common values,
not just one, plus a histogram (not just the min and max values).  Random
sampling is used to make the process reasonably fast even on very large
tables.  The number of values and histogram bins collected is now
user-settable via an ALTER TABLE command.

There is more still to do; the new stats are not being used everywhere
they could be in the planner.  But the remaining changes for this project
should be localized, and the behavior is already better than before.

A not-very-related change is that sorting now makes use of btree comparison
routines if it can find one, rather than invoking '<' twice.
2001-05-07 00:43:27 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 9e1552607a pgindent run. Make it all clean. 2001-03-22 04:01:46 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev c19dadbf08 Runtime btree recovery is now ON by default. 2001-02-07 23:35:33 +00:00
Tom Lane 0d54d6ac44 Clean up handling of tuple descriptors so that result-tuple descriptors
allocated by plan nodes are not leaked at end of query.  This doesn't
really matter for normal queries, but it sure does for queries invoked
repetitively inside SQL functions.  Clean up some other grotty code
associated with tupdescs, and fix a few other memory leaks exposed by
tests with simple SQL functions.
2001-01-29 00:39:20 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev c6e6d292bc First step in attempt to fix tree at runtime: create upper levels
and new root page if old root one was splitted but new root page
wasn't created.
New code is protected by FixBTree bool flag setted to FALSE, so
nothing should be affected by this untested approach.
2001-01-26 01:24:31 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 623bf843d2 Change Copyright from PostgreSQL, Inc to PostgreSQL Global Development Group. 2001-01-24 19:43:33 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev b3c4f03c9c nbtree_xlog_newroot: set meta flag in meta page opaque. 2000-12-29 08:08:59 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev 7ceeeb662f New WAL version - CRC and data blocks backup. 2000-12-28 13:00:29 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev 81c8c244b2 No more #ifdef XLOG. 2000-11-30 08:46:26 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut a70e74b060 Put external declarations into header files. 2000-11-21 21:16:06 +00:00
Tom Lane 3908473c80 Make DROP TABLE rollback-able: postpone physical file delete until commit.
(WAL logging for this is not done yet, however.)  Clean up a number of really
crufty things that are no longer needed now that DROP behaves nicely.  Make
temp table mapper do the right things when drop or rename affecting a temp
table is rolled back.  Also, remove "relation modified while in use" error
check, in favor of locking tables at first reference and holding that lock
throughout the statement.
2000-11-08 22:10:03 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev 855ffa0be0 Forgot to check page LSN and unlock buffer in btree_xlog_delete - fixed.
(Thanks to Tatsuo Ishii for finding bug)
2000-11-01 20:39:58 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev e3ba543525 WAL fixes. 2000-10-29 18:33:41 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev a7fcadd10a WAL 2000-10-21 15:43:36 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev b58c0411ba redo/undo support functions and cleanups. 2000-10-20 11:01:21 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev deee783052 WAL 2000-10-13 12:05:22 +00:00
Vadim B. Mikheev 25a26a7ab8 WAL 2000-10-13 02:03:02 +00:00
Hiroshi Inoue b0d5036c7c CREATE btree INDEX takes dead tuples into account when old transactions
are running.
2000-08-10 02:33:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 9e85183bfc Major overhaul of btree index code. Eliminate special BTP_CHAIN logic for
duplicate keys by letting search go to the left rather than right when an
equal key is seen at an upper tree level.  Fix poor choice of page split
point (leading to insertion failures) that was forced by chaining logic.
Don't store leftmost key in non-leaf pages, since it's not necessary.
Don't create root page until something is first stored in the index, so an
unused index is now 8K not 16K.  (Doesn't seem to be as easy to get rid of
the metadata page, unfortunately.)  Massive cleanup of unreadable code,
fix poor, obsolete, and just plain wrong documentation and comments.
See src/backend/access/nbtree/README for the gory details.
2000-07-21 06:42:39 +00:00
Tom Lane 6bfe64032e Cleanup of code for creating index entries. Functional indexes with
pass-by-ref data types --- eg, an index on lower(textfield) --- no longer
leak memory during index creation or update.  Clean up a lot of redundant
code ... did you know that copy, vacuum, truncate, reindex, extend index,
and bootstrap each basically duplicated the main executor's logic for
extracting information about an index and preparing index entries?
Functional indexes should be a little faster now too, due to removal
of repeated function lookups.
CREATE INDEX 'opt_type' clause is deimplemented by these changes,
but I haven't removed it from the parser yet (need to merge with
Thomas' latest change set first).
2000-07-14 22:18:02 +00:00
Tom Lane badce86a2c First stage of reclaiming memory in executor by resetting short-term
memory contexts.  Currently, only leaks in expressions executed as
quals or projections are handled.  Clean up some old dead cruft in
executor while at it --- unused fields in state nodes, that sort of thing.
2000-07-12 02:37:39 +00:00
Tom Lane edf0b5f0db Get rid of IndexIsUniqueNoCache() kluge by the simple expedient of
passing the index-is-unique flag to index build routines (duh! ...
why wasn't it done this way to begin with?).  Aside from eliminating
an eyesore, this should save a few milliseconds in btree index creation
because a full scan of pg_index is not needed any more.
2000-06-17 23:41:51 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 946e80c435 Final #include cleanup. 2000-06-15 04:10:30 +00:00
Tom Lane ff7b9f5541 I had overlooked the fact that some fmgr-callable functions return void
--- ie, they're only called for side-effects.  Add a PG_RETURN_VOID()
macro and use it where appropriate.  This probably doesn't change the
machine code by a single bit ... it's just for documentation.
2000-06-14 05:24:50 +00:00
Tom Lane f2d1205322 Another batch of fmgr updates. I think I have gotten all old-style
functions that take pass-by-value datatypes.  Should be ready for
port testing ...
2000-06-13 07:35:40 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 6a68f42648 The heralded `Grand Unified Configuration scheme' (GUC)
That means you can now set your options in either or all of $PGDATA/configuration,
some postmaster option (--enable-fsync=off), or set a SET command. The list of
options is in backend/utils/misc/guc.c, documentation will be written post haste.

pg_options is gone, so is that pq_geqo config file. Also removed were backend -K,
-Q, and -T options (no longer applicable, although -d0 does the same as -Q).

Added to configure an --enable-syslog option.

changed all callers from TPRINTF to elog(DEBUG)
2000-05-31 00:28:42 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 52f77df613 Ye-old pgindent run. Same 4-space tabs. 2000-04-12 17:17:23 +00:00
Hiroshi Inoue e3a97b370c Implement reindex command 2000-02-18 09:30:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 5c25d60244 Add:
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2000, PostgreSQL, Inc

to all files copyright Regents of Berkeley.  Man, that's a lot of files.
2000-01-26 05:58:53 +00:00
Tom Lane 6d1efd76fb Fix handling of NULL constraint conditions: per SQL92 spec, a NULL result
from a constraint condition does not violate the constraint (cf. discussion
on pghackers 12/9/99).  Implemented by adding a parameter to ExecQual,
specifying whether to return TRUE or FALSE when the qual result is
really NULL in three-valued boolean logic.  Currently, ExecRelCheck is
the only caller that asks for TRUE, but if we find any other places that
have the wrong response to NULL, it'll be easy to fix them.
2000-01-19 23:55:03 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 97dec77fab Rename several destroy* functions/tags to drop*. 1999-12-10 03:56:14 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 4901ff77bd Mention index name when reporting corruption. 1999-12-01 00:29:54 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 103022c339 Add index recreation suggestion to end of world error message. 1999-11-14 16:22:59 +00:00
Tom Lane 26c48b5e8c Final stage of psort reconstruction work: replace psort.c with
a generalized module 'tuplesort.c' that can sort either HeapTuples or
IndexTuples, and is not tied to execution of a Sort node.  Clean up
memory leakages in sorting, and replace nbtsort.c's private implementation
of mergesorting with calls to tuplesort.c.
1999-10-17 22:15:09 +00:00
Tom Lane bd272cace6 Mega-commit to make heap_open/heap_openr/heap_close take an
additional argument specifying the kind of lock to acquire/release (or
'NoLock' to do no lock processing).  Ensure that all relations are locked
with some appropriate lock level before being examined --- this ensures
that relevant shared-inval messages have been processed and should prevent
problems caused by concurrent VACUUM.  Fix several bugs having to do with
mismatched increment/decrement of relation ref count and mismatched
heap_open/close (which amounts to the same thing).  A bogus ref count on
a relation doesn't matter much *unless* a SI Inval message happens to
arrive at the wrong time, which is probably why we got away with this
sloppiness for so long.  Repair missing grab of AccessExclusiveLock in
DROP TABLE, ALTER/RENAME TABLE, etc, as noted by Hiroshi.
Recommend 'make clean all' after pulling this update; I modified the
Relation struct layout slightly.
Will post further discussion to pghackers list shortly.
1999-09-18 19:08:25 +00:00