Commit Graph

28050 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
907e4dd2b1 Avoid multiple free_struct_lconv() calls on same data.
A failure partway through PGLC_localeconv() led to a situation where
the next call would call free_struct_lconv() a second time, leading
to free() on already-freed strings, typically leading to a core dump.
Add a flag to remember whether we need to do that.

Per report from Thom Brown.  His example case only provokes the failure
as far back as 9.4, but nonetheless this code is obviously broken, so
back-patch to all supported branches.
2016-02-28 23:39:20 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
26fdff1b8f Allow multiple --temp-config arguments to pg_regress
This means that if, for example, TEMP_CONFIG is set and a Makefile
explicitly sets a temp-config file, both will now be used.

Patch from John Gorman.
2016-02-28 09:38:43 -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
Alvaro Herrera
c9578135f7 Add isolationtester spec for old heapam.c bug
In 0e5680f473, I fixed a bug in heapam that caused spurious deadlocks
when multiple updates concurrently attempted to modify the old version
of an updated tuple whose new version was key-share locked.  I proposed
an isolationtester spec file that reproduced the bug, but back then
isolationtester wasn't mature enough to be able to run it.  Now that
38f8bdcac4 is in the tree, we can have this spec file too.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20141212205254.GC1768%40alvh.no-ip.org
2016-02-26 17:11:15 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
74d58425c7 Apply last revision of recovery patch
I applied the previous-to-last revision of Michaël's submitted patch
instead of the last; these two tweaks pointed out by Craig were left out
of the previous commit by accident.
2016-02-26 16:22:53 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
49148645f7 Add a test framework for recovery
This long-awaited framework is an expansion of the existing PostgresNode
stuff to support additional features for recovery testing; the recovery
tests included in this commit are a starting point that cover some of
the recovery features we have.  More scripts are expected to be added
later.

Author: Michaël Paquier, a bit of help from Amir Rohan
Reviewed by: Amir Rohan, Stas Kelvich, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Victor Wagner,
Craig Ringer, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAB7nPqTf7V6rswrFa=q_rrWeETUWagP=h8LX8XAov2Jcxw0DRg@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/trinity-b4a8035d-59af-4c42-a37e-258f0f28e44a-1443795007012@3capp-mailcom-lxa08
2016-02-26 16:13:30 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
89ac7004da Move some code from RewindTest into PostgresNode
Some code in the RewindTest test suite is more generally useful than
just for that suite, so put it where other test suites can reach it.

Some postgresql.conf parameters change their default values when a
cluster is initialized with 'allows_streaming' than the previous
behavior; most notably, autovacuum is no longer turned off.

(Also, we no longer call pg_ctl promote with -w, but that flag doesn't
actually do anything in promote so there's no behavior change.)

Author: Michael Paquier
2016-02-26 13:24:22 -03:00
Robert Haas
7bea19d0a9 On second thought, disable parallelism for prepared statements.
CREATE TABLE .. AS EXECUTE can turn an apparently read-only query into
a write operation, which parallel query can't handle.  It's a bit of a
shame that requires us to avoid parallel query for queries prepared via
PREPARE in all cases, but for right now it does.
2016-02-26 16:33:37 +05:30
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
Alvaro Herrera
e64009303d Add POD docs to PostgresNode
Also, the dump_info method got split into another method that returns
the stuff as a string instead of just printing it to stdout.

Add a new README in src/test/perl too.

Author: Craig Ringer
Reviewed by: Michaël Paquier
2016-02-25 21:31:52 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
bda0b08198 Add README in src/test and src/test/modules
Author: Craig Ringer
Reviewed by: Michaël Paquier
2016-02-25 21:08:32 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
343f709c06 Fix typos
Backpatch to: 9.4
2016-02-25 20:50:20 -03:00
Robert Haas
57a6a72b6b Enable parallelism for prepared statements and extended query protocol.
Parallel query can't handle running a query only partially rather than
to completion.  However, there seems to be no way to run a statement
prepared via SQL PREPARE other than to completion, so we can enable it
there without a problem.

The situation is more complicated for the extend query protocol.
libpq seems to provide no way to send an Execute message with a
non-zero rowcount, but some other client might.  If that happens, and
a parallel plan was chosen, we'll execute the parallel plan without
using any workers, which may be somewhat inefficient but should still
work.  Hopefully this won't be a problem; users can always set
max_parallel_degree=0 to avoid choosing parallel plans in the first
place.

Amit Kapila, reviewed by me.
2016-02-25 13:02:18 +05:30
Noah Misch
25924ac47a Clean the last few TAP suite tmp_check directories.
Back-patch to 9.5, where the suites were introduced.
2016-02-24 23:41:54 -05:00
Noah Misch
4163588783 MSVC: Clean tmp_check directory of pg_controldata test suite.
Back-patch to 9.4, where the suite was introduced.
2016-02-24 23:41:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
52f5d578d6 Create a function to reliably identify which sessions block which others.
This patch introduces "pg_blocking_pids(int) returns int[]", which returns
the PIDs of any sessions that are blocking the session with the given PID.
Historically people have obtained such information using a self-join on
the pg_locks view, but it's unreasonably tedious to do it that way with any
modicum of correctness, and the addition of parallel queries has pretty
much broken that approach altogether.  (Given some more columns in the view
than there are today, you could imagine handling parallel-query cases with
a 4-way join; but ugh.)

The new function has the following behaviors that are painful or impossible
to get right via pg_locks:

1. Correctly understands which lock modes block which other ones.

2. In soft-block situations (two processes both waiting for conflicting lock
modes), only the one that's in front in the wait queue is reported to
block the other.

3. In parallel-query cases, reports all sessions blocking any member of
the given PID's lock group, and reports a session by naming its leader
process's PID, which will be the pg_backend_pid() value visible to
clients.

The motivation for doing this right now is mostly to fix the isolation
tests.  Commit 38f8bdcac4 lobotomized
isolationtester's is-it-waiting query by removing its ability to recognize
nonconflicting lock modes, as a crude workaround for the inability to
handle soft-block situations properly.  But even without the lock mode
tests, the old query was excessively slow, particularly in
CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS builds; some of our buildfarm animals fail the new
deadlock-hard test because the deadlock timeout elapses before they can
probe the waiting status of all eight sessions.  Replacing the pg_locks
self-join with use of pg_blocking_pids() is not only much more correct, but
a lot faster: I measure it at about 9X faster in a typical dev build with
Asserts, and 3X faster in CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS builds.  That should provide
enough headroom for the slower CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS animals to pass the
test, without having to lengthen deadlock_timeout yet more and thus slow
down the test for everyone else.
2016-02-22 14:31:43 -05:00
Tom Lane
73bf8715aa Remove redundant PGPROC.lockGroupLeaderIdentifier field.
We don't really need this field, because it's either zero or redundant with
PGPROC.pid.  The use of zero to mark "not a group leader" is not necessary
since we can just as well test whether lockGroupLeader is NULL.  This does
not save very much, either as to code or data, but the simplification seems
worthwhile anyway.
2016-02-22 11:20:35 -05:00
Andres Freund
ea56b06cf7 Fix wrong keysize in PrivateRefCountHash creation.
In 4b4b680c3 I accidentally used sizeof(PrivateRefCountArray) instead of
sizeof(PrivateRefCountEntry) when creating the refcount overflow
hashtable. As the former is bigger than the latter, this luckily only
resulted in a slightly increased memory usage when many buffers are
pinned in a backend.

Reported-By: Takashi Horikawa
Discussion: 73FA3881462C614096F815F75628AFCD035A48C3@BPXM01GP.gisp.nec.co.jp
Backpatch: 9.5, where thew new ref count infrastructure was introduced
2016-02-21 22:48:44 -08:00
Tom Lane
c7a1c5a6b6 Cosmetic improvements in new config_info code.
Coverity griped about use of unchecked strcpy() into a local variable.
There's unlikely to be any actual bug there, since no caller would be
passing a path longer than MAXPGPATH, but nonetheless use of strlcpy()
seems preferable.

While at it, get rid of unmaintainable separation between list of
field names and list of field values in favor of initializing them
in parallel.  And we might as well declare get_configdata()'s path
argument as const char *, even though no current caller needs that.
2016-02-21 11:38:24 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
94c745eb18 Fix two-argument jsonb_object when called with empty arrays
Some over-eager copy-and-pasting on my part resulted in a nonsense
result being returned in this case. I have adopted the same pattern for
handling this case as is used in the one argument form of the function,
i.e. we just skip over the code that adds values to the object.

Diagnosis and patch from Michael Paquier, although not quite his
solution.

Fixes bug #13936.

Backpatch to 9.5 where jsonb_object was introduced.
2016-02-21 10:30:49 -05:00
Robert Haas
88aca5662d Fix incorrect decision about which lock to take.
Spotted by Tom Lane.
2016-02-21 17:06:41 +05:30
Robert Haas
d91a4a6c85 Cosmetic improvements to group locking.
Reflow text in lock manager README so that it fits within 80 columns.
Correct some mistakes.  Expand the README to explain not only why group
locking exists but also the data structures that support it.  Improve
comments related to group locking several files.  Change the name of a
macro argument for improved clarity.

Most of these problems were reported by Tom Lane, but I found a few
of them myself.

Robert Haas and Tom Lane
2016-02-21 15:42:02 +05:30
Dean Rasheed
740d71842b Further fixing to make pg_size_bytes() portable.
Not all compilers support "long long" and the "LL" integer literal
suffix, so use a cast to int64 instead.
2016-02-20 15:49:26 +00:00
Dean Rasheed
ad7cc1c554 Fix pg_size_bytes() to be more portable.
Commit 53874c5228 broke various 32-bit
buildfarm machines because it incorrectly used an 'L' suffix for what
needed to be a 64-bit literal. Thanks to Michael Paquier for helping
to diagnose this.
2016-02-20 11:03:04 +00:00
Dean Rasheed
53874c5228 Add pg_size_bytes() to parse human-readable size strings.
This will parse strings in the format produced by pg_size_pretty() and
return sizes in bytes. This allows queries to be written with clauses
like "pg_total_relation_size(oid) > pg_size_bytes('10 GB')".

Author: Pavel Stehule with various improvements by Vitaly Burovoy
Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAFj8pRD-tGoDKnxdYgECzA4On01_uRqPrwF-8LdkSE-6bDHp0w@mail.gmail.com
Reviewed-by: Vitaly Burovoy, Oleksandr Shulgin, Kyotaro Horiguchi,
    Michael Paquier and Robert Haas
2016-02-20 09:57:27 +00:00
Noah Misch
5882ca6686 Call xlc __isync() after, not before, associated compare-and-swap.
Architecture reference material specifies this order, and s_lock.h
inline assembly agrees.  The former order failed to provide mutual
exclusion to lwlock.c and perhaps to other clients.  The two xlc
buildfarm members, hornet and mandrill, have failed sixteen times with
duplicate key errors involving pg_class_oid_index or pg_type_oid_index.
Back-patch to 9.5, where commit b64d92f1a5
introduced atomics.

Reviewed by Andres Freund and Tom Lane.
2016-02-19 22:47:50 -05:00
Simon Riggs
481725c0ba Correct StartupSUBTRANS for page wraparound
StartupSUBTRANS() incorrectly handled cases near the max pageid in the subtrans
data structure, which in some cases could lead to errors in startup for Hot
Standby.
This patch wraps the pageids correctly, avoiding any such errors.
Identified by exhaustive crash testing by Jeff Janes.

Jeff Janes
2016-02-19 08:31:12 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
a914a04142 pg_dump: Fix inconsistent sscanf() conversions
It was using %u to read a string that was earlier produced by snprintf with %d
into a signed integer variable.  This seems to work in practice but is
incorrect.

found by cppcheck
2016-02-18 20:12:38 -05:00
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
Bruce Momjian
3386f34cdc pg_upgrade: suppress creation of delete script
Suppress creation of the pg_upgrade delete script when the new data
directory is inside the old data directory.

Reported-by: IRC

Backpatch-through: 9.3, where delete script tests were added
2016-02-18 18:32:27 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
18777c38e9 Improve error message about active replication slot
The old phrasing was awkward if a replication slot is activated and
deactivated repeatedly.
2016-02-17 21:23:28 -05:00
Joe Conway
fc8a81e3e7 Revert inadvertant change in pg_config behavior
In commit a5c43b88 the behavior of command line pg_config was
inadvertantly changed to include the config name when specific
configs are requested, similar to when none are requested and
all are emitted. This breaks scripts that expect to use
pg_config for e.g. PGXS. Revert the behavior to the previous.
2016-02-17 10:00:34 -08:00
Joe Conway
a5c43b8869 Add new system view, pg_config
Move and refactor the underlying code for the pg_config client
application to src/common in support of sharing it with a new
system information SRF called pg_config() which makes the same
information available via SQL. Additionally wrap the SRF with a
new system view, as called pg_config.

Patch by me with extensive input and review by Michael Paquier
and additional review by Alvaro Herrera.
2016-02-17 09:12:06 -08:00
Robert Haas
f1f5ec1efa Reuse abbreviated keys in ordered [set] aggregates.
When processing ordered aggregates following a sort that could make use
of the abbreviated key optimization, only call the equality operator to
compare successive pairs of tuples when their abbreviated keys were not
equal.

Peter Geoghegan, reviewd by Andreas Karlsson and by me.
2016-02-17 15:40:00 +05:30
Tom Lane
66f503868b Make plpython cope with funny characters in function names.
A function name that's double-quoted in SQL can contain almost any
characters, but we were using that name directly as part of the name
generated for the Python-level function, and Python doesn't like
anything that isn't pretty much a standard identifier.  To fix,
replace anything that isn't an ASCII letter or digit with an underscore
in the generated name.  This doesn't create any risk of duplicate Python
function names because we were already appending the function OID to
the generated name to ensure uniqueness.  Per bug #13960 from Jim Nasby.

Patch by Jim Nasby, modified a bit by me.  Back-patch to all
supported branches.
2016-02-16 21:08:15 -05:00
Michael Meskes
868898739a Changed expected result to list IPv6 local interface too. 2016-02-16 14:34:10 +01:00
Michael Meskes
fc1ae7d2eb Change ecpg lexer to accept comments with line breaks in CPP lines. 2016-02-16 14:24:54 +01:00
Joe Conway
851636bfda Move DATA entry to correct position
In commit 7b4bfc87 the DATA and DESCR entries for the new
row_security_active() function were inadvertantly put after
the PROVOLATILE defines, rather than before as they should
have been placed. Move them up where they belong.

Backpatch to 9.5 where the new entries were introduced.
2016-02-15 16:38:47 -08:00
Andres Freund
7975c5e0a9 Allow the WAL writer to flush WAL at a reduced rate.
Commit 4de82f7d7 increased the WAL flush rate, mainly to increase the
likelihood that hint bits can be set quickly. More quickly set hint bits
can reduce contention around the clog et al.  But unfortunately the
increased flush rate can have a significant negative performance impact,
I have measured up to a factor of ~4.  The reason for this slowdown is
that if there are independent writes to the underlying devices, for
example because shared buffers is a lot smaller than the hot data set,
or because a checkpoint is ongoing, the fdatasync() calls force cache
flushes to be emitted to the storage.

This is achieved by flushing WAL only if the last flush was longer than
wal_writer_delay ago, or if more than wal_writer_flush_after (new GUC)
unflushed blocks are pending. Based on some tests the default for
wal_writer_delay is 1MB, which seems to work well both on SSD and
rotational media.

To avoid negative performance impact due to 4de82f7d7 an earlier
commit (db76b1e) made SetHintBits() more likely to succeed; preventing
performance regressions in the pgbench tests I performed.

Discussion: 20160118163908.GW10941@awork2.anarazel.de
2016-02-16 00:56:34 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera
5df44d14ba pgbench: avoid FD_ISSET on an invalid file descriptor
The original code wasn't careful to test the file descriptor returned by
PQsocket() for an invalid socket.  If an invalid socket did turn up,
that would amount to calling FD_ISSET with fd = -1, whereby undefined
behavior can be invoked.

To fix, test file descriptor for validity and stop further processing if
that fails.

Problem noticed by Coverity.

There is an existing FD_ISSET callsite that does check for invalid
sockets beforehand, but the error message reported by it was
strerror(errno); in testing the aforementioned change, that turns out to
result in "bad socket: Success" which isn't terribly helpful.  Instead
use PQerrorMessage() in both places which is more likely to contain an
useful error message.

Backpatch-through: 9.1.
2016-02-15 20:33:43 -03:00
Tom Lane
8c95ae81fa Suppress compiler warnings about useless comparison of unsigned to zero.
Reportedly, some compilers warn about tests like "c < 0" if c is unsigned,
and hence complain about the character range checks I added in commit
3bb3f42f37.  This is a bit of a pain since
the regex library doesn't really want to assume that chr is unsigned.
However, since any such reconfiguration would involve manual edits of
regcustom.h anyway, we can put it on the shoulders of whoever wants to
do that to adjust this new range-checking macro correctly.

Per gripes from Coverity and Andres.
2016-02-15 17:12:16 -05:00
Andres Freund
db76b1efbb Allow SetHintBits() to succeed if the buffer's LSN is new enough.
Previously we only allowed SetHintBits() to succeed if the commit LSN of
the last transaction touching the page has already been flushed to
disk. We can't generally change the LSN of the page, because we don't
necessarily have the required locks on the page. But the required LSN
interlock does not mean the commit record has to be flushed immediately,
it just requires that the commit record will be flushed before the page is
written out. Therefore if the buffer LSN is newer than the commit LSN,
the hint bit can be safely set.

In a number of scenarios (e.g. pgbench) this noticeably increases the
number of hint bits are set. But more importantly it also keeps the
success rate up when flushing WAL less frequently. That was the original
reason for commit 4de82f7d7, which has negative performance consequences
in a number of scenarios. This will allow a followup commit to reduce
the flush rate.

Discussion: 20160118163908.GW10941@awork2.anarazel.de
2016-02-15 22:48:51 +01:00
Joe Conway
cfafd8bead Correct Copyright year from 2015 to 2016
Looks like this patch went in after Copyright messages
were updated for 2016 and it missed the boat. Fixed.
2016-02-15 13:19:35 -08:00
Fujii Masao
31b6606c48 Make concurrent refresh check early that there is a unique index on matview.
In REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW command, CONCURRENTLY option is only
allowed if there is at least one unique index with no WHERE clause on
one or more columns of the matview. Previously, concurrent refresh
checked the existence of a unique index on the matview after filling
the data to new snapshot, i.e., after calling refresh_matview_datafill().
So, when there was no unique index, we could need to wait a long time
before we detected that and got the error. It was a waste of time.

To eliminate such wasting time, this commit changes concurrent refresh
so that it checks the existence of a unique index at the beginning of
the refresh operation, i.e., before starting any time-consuming jobs.
If CONCURRENTLY option is not allowed due to lack of a unique index,
concurrent refresh can immediately detect it and emit an error.

Author: Masahiko Sawada
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Fujii Masao
2016-02-16 02:15:44 +09:00
Noah Misch
9449c4b1ec Replace broken link in comment. 2016-02-15 02:35:52 -05:00
Tom Lane
9b92e76f7b Make GetLockStatusData's header comment resemble reality.
The API spec for this function was changed completely (and for the better)
by commit 3cba8999b3, but it didn't bother
with anything as mundane as updating the comments.
2016-02-13 15:42:31 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
13a6fa3634 pg_upgrade: Add C comment about NextXID delimiter
We don't test the catversion for the NextXID delimiter change, we just
test the string contents;  explain why.

Reported-by: Michael Paquier
2016-02-12 17:53:36 -05:00
Joe Conway
59a884e985 Change delimiter used for display of NextXID
NextXID has been rendered in the form of a pg_lsn even though it
really is not. This can cause confusion, so change the format from
%u/%u to %u:%u, per discussion on hackers.

Complaint by me, patch by me and Bruce, reviewed by Michael Paquier
and Alvaro. Applied to HEAD only.

Author: Joe Conway, Bruce Momjian
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Alvaro Herrera
Backpatch-through: master
2016-02-12 14:23:59 -08:00
Tom Lane
e84e06d2b3 Increase deadlock_timeout some more in the deadlock-hard isolation test.
The previous value of 5s is inadequate for the buildfarm's
CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS animals: they take long enough to do the is-it-waiting
queries that the timeout expires, allowing the database state to change,
before isolationtester is done looking.  Perhaps 10s will be enough.
(If it isn't, I'm inclined to reduce the number of sessions involved.)
2016-02-12 17:22:42 -05:00
Tom Lane
dca369320f Revert "isolationtester: don't repeat the is-it-waiting query when retrying a step."
This mostly reverts commit 9c9782f066.
I left in the parts that rearranged removal of completed waiting steps;
but the idea of not rechecking a step's blocked-ness isn't working.
2016-02-12 17:12:23 -05:00
Tom Lane
3992188c2a Revert "Still further tweaking of deadlock isolation tests."
This reverts commit d03130d378.
That was dependent on an isolationtester.c change that now proves
to be broken; we will need to find another solution.
2016-02-12 17:02:59 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
34f13cc484 pgbench: cleanup use of a "logfile" parameter
There is no reason to have the per-thread logfile file pointer as a
separate parameter in various functions: it's much simpler to put it in
the per-thread state struct instead, which is already being passed to
all functions that need the log file anyway.  Change the callsites in
which it was used as a boolean to test whether logging is active, so
that they use the use_log global variable instead.

No backpatch, even though this exists since commit a887c486d5 of March
2010, because this is just for cleanliness' sake and the surrounding
code has been modified a lot recently anyway.
2016-02-12 17:30:46 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
db94419ffd pgbench: fix segfault with empty sql file
Commit 1d0c3b3f8a introduced a bug that causes pgbench to crash if an
empty script file is specified.  Fix it by rejecting such files at
startup, which is the historical and intended behavior.

Reported-By: Jeff Janes
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAMkU=1zxKUbLPOt9hQWFp14pTc=V0cGo2GQBbn2GsK2Pu+8ZfA@mail.gmail.com
2016-02-12 17:14:45 -03:00
Tom Lane
d03130d378 Still further tweaking of deadlock isolation tests.
It turns out that there is a second race condition in the new deadlock-hard
test: once the deadlock detector fires, it's uncertain whether step s7a8 or
step s8a1 will report first, because killing s8's transaction unblocks s7.
So far, s7 has only been seen to report first in CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS
builds, but it's pretty reproducible there, and in theory it should
sometimes occur in normal builds too.  If s7 were a bit slower than usual,
that could also break the test, since the existing expected-file assumes
that we'll see s7a8 report the first time we check it after s8a1 completes.
To fix, add a post-lock delay to s7a8.
2016-02-12 14:19:57 -05:00
Tom Lane
9c9782f066 isolationtester: don't repeat the is-it-waiting query when retrying a step.
If we're retrying a step, then we already decided it was blocked on a lock,
and there's no need to recheck that.  The original coding of commit
38f8bdcac4 resulted in a large number of
is-it-waiting queries when dealing with multiple concurrently-blocked
sessions, which is fairly pointless and also results in test failures in
CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS builds, where the is-it-waiting query is quite slow.

This definition also permits appending pg_sleep() calls to steps where it's
needed to control the order of finish of concurrent steps.  Before, that
did not work nicely because we'd decide that a step performing a sleep was
not blocked and hang up waiting for it to finish, rather than noticing the
completion of the concurrent step we're supposed to notice first.

In passing, revise handling of removal of completed waiting steps
to make it a bit less messy.
2016-02-12 14:10:36 -05:00
Tom Lane
a361490806 Re-pgindent isolationtester.c.
Need to do some more hacking on this, and got annoyed that it's not
indent clean.
2016-02-12 13:36:13 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
29b4b7bda6 Fix whitespace 2016-02-12 12:08:40 -05:00
Robert Haas
bcac23de73 Introduce extensible node types.
An extensible node is always tagged T_Extensible, but the extnodename
field identifies it more specifically; it may also include arbitrary
private data.  Extensible nodes can be copied, tested for equality,
serialized, and deserialized, but the core system doesn't know
anything about them otherwise.  Some extensions may find it useful to
include these nodes in fdw_private or custom_private lists in lieu of
arm-wrestling their data into a format that the core code can
understand.

Along the way, so as not to burden the authors of such extensible
node types too much, expose the functions for writing serialized
tokens, and for serializing and deserializing bitmapsets.

KaiGai Kohei, per a design suggested by me.  Reviewed by Andres Freund
and by me, and further edited by me.
2016-02-12 09:38:11 -05:00
Robert Haas
63461a63f9 Make builtin lwlock tranche names consistent.
Previously, we had a mix of styles.

Amit Kapila
2016-02-12 08:07:11 -05:00
Tom Lane
caefc11ef6 Further tweaking of deadlock isolation tests.
The new deadlock-soft-2 test has a timing dependency too: it supposes
that isolationtester will detect step s1b as waiting before the deadlock
detector runs and grants it the lock.  Adjust deadlock_timeout to ensure
that that's true even in CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS builds, where the wait
detection query is quite slow.  Per buildfarm member jaguarundi.
2016-02-11 23:21:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
f144f73242 Refactor check_functional_grouping() to use get_primary_key_attnos().
If we ever get around to allowing functional dependency to be proven
from other things besides simple primary keys, this code will need to
be rethought, but that was true anyway.  In the meantime, we might as
well not have two very-similar routines for scanning pg_constraint.

David Rowley, reviewed by Julien Rouhaud
2016-02-11 17:52:03 -05:00
Tom Lane
d4c3a156cb Remove GROUP BY columns that are functionally dependent on other columns.
If a GROUP BY clause includes all columns of a non-deferred primary key,
as well as other columns of the same relation, those other columns are
redundant and can be dropped from the grouping; the pkey is enough to
ensure that each row of the table corresponds to a separate group.
Getting rid of the excess columns will reduce the cost of the sorting or
hashing needed to implement GROUP BY, and can indeed remove the need for
a sort step altogether.

This seems worth testing for since many query authors are not aware of
the GROUP-BY-primary-key exception to the rule about queries not being
allowed to reference non-grouped-by columns in their targetlists or
HAVING clauses.  Thus, redundant GROUP BY items are not uncommon.  Also,
we can make the test pretty cheap in most queries where it won't help
by not looking up a rel's primary key until we've found that at least
two of its columns are in GROUP BY.

David Rowley, reviewed by Julien Rouhaud
2016-02-11 17:34:59 -05:00
Tom Lane
72eee410d4 Move pg_constraint.h function declarations to new file pg_constraint_fn.h.
A pending patch requires exporting a function returning Bitmapset from
catalog/pg_constraint.c.  As things stand, that would mean including
nodes/bitmapset.h in pg_constraint.h, which might be hazardous for the
client-side includability of that header.  It's not entirely clear whether
any client-side code needs to include pg_constraint.h, but it seems prudent
to assume that there is some such code somewhere.  Therefore, split off the
function definitions into a new file pg_constraint_fn.h, similarly to what
we've done for some other catalog header files.
2016-02-11 15:51:28 -05:00
Tom Lane
2564be360a Fix typo in comment. 2016-02-11 15:20:14 -05:00
Tom Lane
d18643c4a6 Shift the responsibility for emitting "database system is shut down".
Historically this message has been emitted at the end of ShutdownXLOG().
That's not an insane place for it in a standalone backend, but in the
postmaster environment we've grown a fair amount of stuff that happens
later, including archiver/walsender shutdown, stats collector shutdown,
etc.  Recent buildfarm experimentation showed that on slower machines
there could be many seconds' delay between finishing ShutdownXLOG() and
actual postmaster exit.  That's fairly confusing, both for testing
purposes and for DBAs.  Hence, move the code that prints this message
into UnlinkLockFiles(), so that it comes out just after we remove the
postmaster's pidfile.  That is a more appropriate definition of "is shut
down" from the point of view of "pg_ctl stop", for example.  In general,
removing the pidfile should be the last externally-visible action of
either a postmaster or a standalone backend; compare commit
d73d14c271 for instance.  So this seems
like a reasonably future-proof approach.
2016-02-11 14:14:22 -05:00
Robert Haas
c319991bca Use separate lwlock tranches for buffer, lock, and predicate lock managers.
This finishes the work - spread across many commits over the last
several months - of putting each type of lock other than the named
individual locks into a separate tranche.

Amit Kapila
2016-02-11 14:07:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
b11d07b6a3 Make new deadlock isolation test more reproducible.
The original formulation of 4c9864b9b4
was extremely timing-sensitive, because it arranged for the deadlock
detector to be running (and possibly unblocking the current query)
at almost exactly the same time as isolationtester would be probing
to see if the query is blocked.  The committed expected-file assumed
that the deadlock detection would finish first, but we see the opposite
on both fast and slow buildfarm animals.  Adjust the deadlock timeout
settings to make it predictable that isolationtester *will* see the
query as waiting before deadlock detection unblocks it.

I used a 5s timeout for the same reasons mentioned in
a7921f71a3.
2016-02-11 11:59:11 -05:00
Tom Lane
d9dc2b4149 Code review for isolationtester changes.
Fix a few oversights in 38f8bdcac4:
don't leak memory in run_permutation(), remember when we've issued
a cancel rather than issuing another one every 10ms,
fix some typos in comments.
2016-02-11 11:30:52 -05:00
Teodor Sigaev
07d25a964b Improve error reporting in format()
Clarify invalid format conversion type error message and add hint.

Author: Jim Nasby
2016-02-11 18:11:11 +03:00
Robert Haas
a455878d99 Rename PGPROC fields related to group XID clearing again.
Commit 0e141c0fbb introduced a new
facility to reduce ProcArrayLock contention by clearing several XIDs
from the ProcArray under a single lock acquisition.  The names
initially chosen were deemed not to be very good choices, so commit
4aec49899e renamed them.  But now it
seems like we still didn't get it right.  A pending patch wants to
add similar infrastructure for batching CLOG updates, so the names
need to be clear enough to allow a new set of structure members with
a related purpose.

Amit Kapila
2016-02-11 08:55:24 -05:00
Robert Haas
4c9864b9b4 Add some isolation tests for deadlock detection and resolution.
Previously, we had no test coverage for the deadlock detector.
2016-02-11 08:38:09 -05:00
Robert Haas
38f8bdcac4 Modify the isolation tester so that multiple sessions can wait.
This allows testing of deadlock scenarios.  Scenarios that would
previously have been considered invalid are now simply taken as a
scenario in which more than one backend will wait.
2016-02-11 08:36:30 -05:00
Robert Haas
c9882c60f4 Specify permutations for isolation tests with "invalid" permutations.
This is a necessary prerequisite for forthcoming changes to allow deadlock
scenarios to be tested by the isolation tester.  It is also a good idea on
general principle, since these scenarios add no useful test coverage not
provided by other scenarios, but do to take time to execute.
2016-02-11 08:33:24 -05:00
Noah Misch
64d89a93c0 In pg_rewind test suite, triple promote timeout to 90s.
Thirty seconds was not consistently enough for promotion to complete on
buildfarm members sungazer and tern.  Experiments suggest 43s would have
been enough.  Back-patch to 9.5, where pg_rewind was introduced.
2016-02-10 20:34:57 -05:00
Noah Misch
2ffa869620 Accept pg_ctl timeout from the PGCTLTIMEOUT environment variable.
Many automated test suites call pg_ctl.  Buildfarm members axolotl,
hornet, mandrill, shearwater, sungazer and tern have failed when server
shutdown took longer than the pg_ctl default 60s timeout.  This addition
permits slow hosts to easily raise the timeout without us editing a
--timeout argument into every test suite pg_ctl call.  Back-patch to 9.1
(all supported versions) for the sake of automated testing.

Reviewed by Tom Lane.
2016-02-10 20:34:02 -05:00
Tom Lane
51e78ab4ff Avoid use of sscanf() to parse ispell dictionary files.
It turns out that on FreeBSD-derived platforms (including OS X), the
*scanf() family of functions is pretty much brain-dead about multibyte
characters.  In particular it will apply isspace() to individual bytes
of input even when those bytes are part of a multibyte character, thus
allowing false recognition of a field-terminating space.

We appear to have little alternative other than instituting a coding
rule that *scanf() is not to be used if the input string might contain
multibyte characters.  (There was some discussion of relying on "%ls",
but that probably just moves the portability problem somewhere else,
and besides it doesn't fully prevent BSD *scanf() from using isspace().)

This patch is a down payment on that: it gets rid of use of sscanf()
to parse ispell dictionary files, which are certainly at great risk
of having a problem.  The code is cleaner this way anyway, though
a bit longer.

In passing, improve a few comments.

Report and patch by Artur Zakirov, reviewed and somewhat tweaked by me.
Back-patch to all supported branches.
2016-02-10 19:30:11 -05:00
Tom Lane
c5e9b77127 Revert "Temporarily make pg_ctl and server shutdown a whole lot chattier."
This reverts commit 3971f64843 and a
couple of followon debugging commits; I think we've learned what we can
from them.
2016-02-10 16:01:04 -05:00
Robert Haas
79a7ff0fe5 Code cleanup in the wake of recent LWLock refactoring.
As of commit c1772ad922, there's no
longer any way of requesting additional LWLocks in the main tranche,
so we don't need NumLWLocks() or LWLockAssign() any more.  Also,
some of the allocation counters that we had previously aren't needed
any more either.

Amit Kapila
2016-02-10 09:58:09 -05:00
Tom Lane
41d505a7ff Add still more chattiness in server shutdown.
Further investigation says that there may be some slow operations after
we've finished ShutdownXLOG(), so add some more log messages to try to
isolate that.  This is all temporary code too.
2016-02-09 19:36:30 -05:00
Tom Lane
7351e18286 Add more chattiness in server shutdown.
Early returns from the buildfarm show that there's a bit of a gap in the
logging I added in 3971f64843: the portion of CreateCheckPoint()
after CheckPointGuts() can take a fair amount of time.  Add a few more
log messages in that section of code.  This too shall be reverted later.
2016-02-09 11:21:46 -05:00
Tom Lane
3971f64843 Temporarily make pg_ctl and server shutdown a whole lot chattier.
This is a quick hack, due to be reverted when its purpose has been served,
to try to gather information about why some of the buildfarm critters
regularly fail with "postmaster does not shut down" complaints.  Maybe they
are just really overloaded, but maybe something else is going on.  Hence,
instrument pg_ctl to print the current time when it starts waiting for
postmaster shutdown and when it gives up, and add a lot of logging of the
current time in the server's checkpoint and shutdown code paths.

No attempt has been made to make this pretty.  I'm not even totally sure
if it will build on Windows, but we'll soon find out.
2016-02-08 18:43:11 -05:00
Tom Lane
0231f83856 Re-pgindent varlena.c.
Just to make sure previous commit worked ...
2016-02-08 15:17:40 -05:00
Tom Lane
58e797216f Rename typedef "string" to "VarString".
Since pgindent treats typedef names as global, the original coding of
b47b4dbf68 would have had rather nasty effects on the formatting
of other files in which "string" is used as a variable or field name.
Use a less generic name for this typedef, and rename some other
identifiers to match.

Peter Geoghegan, per gripe from me
2016-02-08 15:15:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
3bb3f42f37 Fix some regex issues with out-of-range characters and large char ranges.
Previously, our regex code defined CHR_MAX as 0xfffffffe, which is a
bad choice because it is outside the range of type "celt" (int32).
Characters approaching that limit could lead to infinite loops in logic
such as "for (c = a; c <= b; c++)" where c is of type celt but the
range bounds are chr.  Such loops will work safely only if CHR_MAX+1
is representable in celt, since c must advance to beyond b before the
loop will exit.

Fortunately, there seems no reason not to restrict CHR_MAX to 0x7ffffffe.
It's highly unlikely that Unicode will ever assign codes that high, and
none of our other backend encodings need characters beyond that either.

In addition to modifying the macro, we have to explicitly enforce character
range restrictions on the values of \u, \U, and \x escape sequences, else
the limit is trivially bypassed.

Also, the code for expanding case-independent character ranges in bracket
expressions had a potential integer overflow in its calculation of the
number of characters it could generate, which could lead to allocating too
small a character vector and then overwriting memory.  An attacker with the
ability to supply arbitrary regex patterns could easily cause transient DOS
via server crashes, and the possibility for privilege escalation has not
been ruled out.

Quite aside from the integer-overflow problem, the range expansion code was
unnecessarily inefficient in that it always produced a result consisting of
individual characters, abandoning the knowledge that we had a range to
start with.  If the input range is large, this requires excessive memory.
Change it so that the original range is reported as-is, and then we add on
any case-equivalent characters that are outside that range.  With this
approach, we can bound the number of individual characters allowed without
sacrificing much.  This patch allows at most 100000 individual characters,
which I believe to be more than the number of case pairs existing in
Unicode, so that the restriction will never be hit in practice.

It's still possible for range() to take awhile given a large character code
range, so also add statement-cancel detection to its loop.  The downstream
function dovec() also lacked cancel detection, and could take a long time
given a large output from range().

Per fuzz testing by Greg Stark.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Security: CVE-2016-0773
2016-02-08 10:25:40 -05:00
Fujii Masao
f8a1c1d5a3 Make GIN regression test stable.
Commit 7f46eaf added the regression test which checks that
gin_clean_pending_list() cleans up the GIN pending list and returns >0.
This usually works fine. But if autovacuum comes along and cleans
the list before gin_clean_pending_list() starts, the function may
return 0, and then the regression test may fail.

To fix the problem, this commit disables autovacuum on the target
index of gin_clean_pending_list() by setting autovacuum_enabled
reloption to off when creating the table.

Also this commit sets gin_pending_list_limit reloption to 4MB on
the target index. Otherwise when running "make installcheck" with
small gin_pending_list_limit GUC, insertions of data may trigger
the cleanup of pending list before gin_clean_pending_list() starts
and the function may return 0. This could cause the regression test
to fail.

Per buildfarm member spoonbill.

Reported-By: Tom Lane
2016-02-08 23:41:46 +09:00
Andres Freund
a6897efab9 Fix overeager pushdown of HAVING clauses when grouping sets are used.
In 61444bfb we started to allow HAVING clauses to be fully pushed down
into WHERE, even when grouping sets are in use. That turns out not to
work correctly, because grouping sets can "produce" NULLs, meaning that
filtering in WHERE and HAVING can have different results, even when no
aggregates or volatile functions are involved.

Instead only allow pushdown of empty grouping sets.

It'd be nice to do better, but the exact mechanics of deciding which
cases are safe are still being debated. It's important to give correct
results till we find a good solution, and such a solution might not be
appropriate for backpatching anyway.

Bug: #13863
Reported-By: 'wrb'
Diagnosed-By: Dean Rasheed
Author: Andrew Gierth
Reviewed-By: Dean Rasheed and Andres Freund
Discussion: 20160113183558.12989.56904@wrigleys.postgresql.org
Backpatch: 9.5, where grouping sets were introduced
2016-02-08 11:03:31 +01:00
Tom Lane
cc2ca9319a Fix deparsing of ON CONFLICT arbiter WHERE clauses.
The parser doesn't allow qualification of column names appearing in
these clauses, but ruleutils.c would sometimes qualify them, leading
to dump/reload failures.  Per bug #13891 from Onder Kalaci.

(In passing, make stanzas in ruleutils.c that save/restore varprefix
more consistent.)

Peter Geoghegan
2016-02-07 14:57:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
f867ce5518 ExecHashRemoveNextSkewBucket must physically copy tuples to main hashtable.
Commit 45f6240a8f added an assumption in ExecHashIncreaseNumBatches
and ExecHashIncreaseNumBuckets that they could find all tuples in the main
hash table by iterating over the "dense storage" introduced by that patch.
However, ExecHashRemoveNextSkewBucket continued its old practice of simply
re-linking deleted skew tuples into the main table's hashchains.  Hence,
such tuples got lost during any subsequent increase in nbatch or nbuckets,
and would never get joined, as reported in bug #13908 from Seth P.

I (tgl) think that the aforesaid commit has got multiple design issues
and should be reworked rather completely; but there is no time for that
right now, so band-aid the problem by making ExecHashRemoveNextSkewBucket
physically copy deleted skew tuples into the "dense storage" arena.

The added test case is able to exhibit the problem by means of fooling the
planner with a WHERE condition that it will underestimate the selectivity
of, causing the initial nbatch estimate to be too small.

Tomas Vondra and Tom Lane.  Thanks to David Johnston for initial
investigation into the bug report.
2016-02-07 12:29:32 -05:00
Robert Haas
d89f06f048 Fix parallel-safety markings for pg_upgrade functions.
These establish backend-local state which will not be copied to
parallel workers, so they must be marked parallel-restricted, not
parallel-safe.
2016-02-07 11:45:21 -05:00
Robert Haas
7c944bd903 Introduce a new GUC force_parallel_mode for testing purposes.
When force_parallel_mode = true, we enable the parallel mode restrictions
for all queries for which this is believed to be safe.  For the subset of
those queries believed to be safe to run entirely within a worker, we spin
up a worker and run the query there instead of running it in the
original process.  When force_parallel_mode = regress, make additional
changes to allow the regression tests to run cleanly even though parallel
workers have been injected under the hood.

Taken together, this facilitates both better user testing and better
regression testing of the parallelism code.

Robert Haas, with help from Amit Kapila and Rushabh Lathia.
2016-02-07 11:41:33 -05:00
Robert Haas
a1c1af2a1f Introduce group locking to prevent parallel processes from deadlocking.
For locking purposes, we now regard heavyweight locks as mutually
non-conflicting between cooperating parallel processes.  There are some
possible pitfalls to this approach that are not to be taken lightly,
but it works OK for now and can be changed later if we find a better
approach.  Without this, it's very easy for parallel queries to
silently self-deadlock if the user backend holds strong relation locks.

Robert Haas, with help from Amit Kapila.  Thanks to Noah Misch and
Andres Freund for extensive discussion of possible issues with this
approach.
2016-02-07 10:16:13 -05:00
Tom Lane
aa2387e2fd Improve speed of timestamp/time/date output functions.
It seems that sprintf(), at least in glibc's version, is unreasonably slow
compared to hand-rolled code for printing integers.  Replacing most uses of
sprintf() in the datetime.c output functions with special-purpose code
turns out to give more than a 2X speedup in COPY of a table with a single
timestamp column; which is pretty impressive considering all the other
logic in that code path.

David Rowley and Andres Freund, reviewed by Peter Geoghegan and myself
2016-02-06 23:11:28 -05:00
Tom Lane
b921aeb167 Fix comment block trashed by pgindent.
Looks like I put the protective dashes in the wrong place in f4e4b32743.
2016-02-06 15:13:36 -05:00
Tom Lane
be11f8400d Improve HJDEBUG code a bit.
Commit 30d7ae3c76 introduced an HJDEBUG
stanza that probably didn't compile at the time, and definitely doesn't
compile now, because it refers to a nonexistent variable.  It doesn't seem
terribly useful anyway, so just get rid of it.

While I'm fooling with it, use %z modifier instead of the obsolete hack of
casting size_t to unsigned long, and include the HashJoinTable's address in
each printout so that it's possible to distinguish the activities of
multiple hashjoins occurring in one query.

Noted while trying to use HJDEBUG to investigate bug #13908.  Back-patch
to 9.5, because code that doesn't compile is certainly not very helpful.
2016-02-06 15:05:23 -05:00
Noah Misch
41baee7a93 Comment on dead code in AtAbort_Portals() and AtSubAbort_Portals().
Reviewed by Tom Lane and Robert Haas.
2016-02-05 20:23:40 -05:00
Noah Misch
f4aa3a18a2 Force certain "pljava" custom GUCs to be PGC_SUSET.
Future PL/Java versions will close CVE-2016-0766 by making these GUCs
PGC_SUSET.  This PostgreSQL change independently mitigates that PL/Java
vulnerability, helping sites that update PostgreSQL more frequently than
PL/Java.  Back-patch to 9.1 (all supported versions).
2016-02-05 20:22:51 -05:00
Tom Lane
a73311e525 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2016a.
DST law changes in Cayman Islands, Metlakatla, Trans-Baikal Territory
(Zabaykalsky Krai).  Historical corrections for Pakistan.
2016-02-05 10:59:09 -05:00
Robert Haas
e98fd78607 Fix typo in comment.
Michael Paquier
2016-02-05 08:11:00 -05:00
Robert Haas
e0e7b8fa22 Remove parallel-safety check from GetExistingLocalJoinPath.
Commit a104a017fc has this check because
I added it to the submitted patch before commit, but that was entirely
wrongheaded, as explained to me by Ashutosh Bapat, who also wrote this
patch.
2016-02-05 08:07:38 -05:00
Robert Haas
63f39b9148 Fix small goof in comment.
Peter Geoghegan
2016-02-05 08:04:48 -05:00
Robert Haas
78bea62ab0 Fix typo.
Amit Kapila
2016-02-05 07:56:59 -05:00
Tom Lane
6819514fca Add num_nulls() and num_nonnulls() to count NULL arguments.
An example use-case is "CHECK(num_nonnulls(a,b,c) = 1)" to assert that
exactly one of a,b,c isn't NULL.  The functions are variadic, so they
can also be pressed into service to count the number of null or nonnull
elements in an array.

Marko Tiikkaja, reviewed by Pavel Stehule
2016-02-04 23:03:37 -05:00
Robert Haas
9418d79a76 When modifying a foreign table, initialize tableoid field properly.
Failure to do this can cause AFTER ROW triggers or RETURNING expressions
that reference this field to misbehave.

Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Thom Brown
2016-02-04 21:17:53 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
f8003e07f9 Improve error message 2016-02-04 20:41:32 -05:00
Robert Haas
a104a017fc Add some additional core functions to support join pushdown for FDWs.
GetExistingLocalJoinPath() is useful for handling EvalPlanQual rechecks
properly, and GetUserMappingById() is needed to make sure you're using
the right credentials.

Shigeru Hanada, Etsuro Fujita, Ashutosh Bapat, Robert Haas
2016-02-04 17:05:09 -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
0ed707e9b7 In pg_dump, ensure that view triggers are processed after view rules.
If a view is split into CREATE TABLE + CREATE RULE to break a circular
dependency, then any triggers on the view must be dumped/reloaded after
the CREATE RULE; else the backend may reject the CREATE TRIGGER because
it's the wrong type of trigger for a plain table.  This works all right
in plain dump/restore because of pg_dump's sorting heuristic that places
triggers after rules.  However, when using parallel restore, the ordering
must be enforced by a dependency --- and we didn't have one.

Fixing this is a mere matter of adding an addObjectDependency() call,
except that we need to be able to find all the triggers belonging to the
view relation, and there was no easy way to do that.  Add fields to
pg_dump's TableInfo struct to remember where the associated TriggerInfo
struct(s) are.

Per bug report from Dennis Kögel.  The failure can be exhibited at least
as far back as 9.1, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2016-02-04 00:26:10 -05:00
Robert Haas
b47b4dbf68 Extend sortsupport for text to more opclasses.
Have varlena.c expose an interface that allows the char(n), bytea, and
bpchar types to piggyback on a now-generalized SortSupport for text.
This pushes a little more knowledge of the bpchar/char(n) type into
varlena.c than might be preferred, but that seems like the approach
that creates least friction.  Also speed things up for index builds
that use text_pattern_ops or varchar_pattern_ops.

This patch does quite a bit of renaming, but it seems likely to be
worth it, so as to avoid future confusion about the fact that this code
is now more generally used than the old names might have suggested.

Peter Geoghegan, reviewed by Álvaro Herrera and Andreas Karlsson,
with small tweaks by me.
2016-02-03 14:29:53 -05:00
Robert Haas
69d34408e5 Allow parallel custom and foreign scans.
This patch doesn't put the new infrastructure to use anywhere, and
indeed it's not clear how it could ever be used for something like
postgres_fdw which has to send an SQL query and wait for a reply,
but there might be FDWs or custom scan providers that are CPU-bound,
so let's give them a way to join club parallel.

KaiGai Kohei, reviewed by me.
2016-02-03 12:49:46 -05:00
Robert Haas
f2305d40ec Remove CustomPath's TextOutCustomPath method.
You can't really do anything useful with this in the form it currently
exists; among other problems, there's no way to reread whatever
information might be produced when the path is output.  Work is
underway to replace this with a more useful and more general system of
extensible nodes, but let's start by getting rid of this bit.

Extracted from a larger patch by KaiGai Kohei.
2016-02-03 10:38:50 -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
Peter Eisentraut
7d17e683fc Add support for systemd service notifications
Insert sd_notify() calls at server start and stop for integration with
systemd.  This allows the use of systemd service units of type "notify",
which greatly simplifies the systemd configuration.

Reviewed-by: Pavel Stěhule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
2016-02-02 21:04:29 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
ac7238dc0f Improve error reporting when location specified by postgres -D does not exist
Previously, the first error seen would be that postgresql.conf does not
exist.  But for the case where the whole directory does not exist, give
an error message about that, together with a hint for how to create one.
2016-02-02 21:03:19 -05:00
Tom Lane
2808a2e0f3 Remove printQueryOpt.quote field.
This field was included in the original definition of the printQueryOpt
struct in commit a45195a191, but it was not used anywhere in that
commit, nor since then.  Spotted by Dickson S. Guedes.
2016-02-02 15:26:30 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
3cb5867b7d Don't test for system columns on join relations
create_foreignscan_plan needs to know whether any system columns are
requested from a relation (this flag is needed by ForeignNext during
execution).  However, for join relations this is a pointless test,
because it's not possible to request system columns from them, so
remove the check.

Author: Etsuro Fujita
Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/56AA0FC5.9000207@lab.ntt.co.jp
Reviewed-by: David Rowley, Robert Haas
2016-02-02 19:20:02 +01:00
Tom Lane
2ad83fff22 Remove unnecessary "implementation of FOO operator" DESCR() entries.
Apparently at least one committer hasn't gotten the word that these do not
need to be maintained by hand, since initdb will create them automatically.
Noted while fixing bug #13905.

No catversion bump since the post-initdb state is exactly the same either
way.  I don't see a need for back-patch, either.
2016-02-02 11:52:27 -05:00
Tom Lane
a4627e8fd4 Fix pg_description entries for jsonb_to_record() and jsonb_to_recordset().
All the other jsonb function descriptions refer to the arguments as being
"jsonb", but these two said "json".  Make it consistent.  Per bug #13905
from Petru Florin Mihancea.

No catversion bump --- we can't force one in the back branches, and this
isn't very critical anyway.
2016-02-02 11:39:50 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
23f3cc36ed Fix typo in comment 2016-02-02 13:49:02 +01:00
Teodor Sigaev
f25d07d99f Fix lossy KNN GiST when ordering operator returns non-float8 value.
KNN GiST with recheck flag should return to executor the same type as ordering
operator, GiST detects this type by looking to return type of function which
implements ordering operator. But occasionally detecting code works after
replacing ordering operator function to distance support function.
Distance support function always returns float8, so, detecting code get float8
instead of actual return type of ordering operator.

Built-in opclasses don't have ordering operator which doesn't return
non-float8 value, so, tests are impossible here, at least now.

Backpatch to 9.5 where lozzy KNN was introduced.

Author: Alexander Korotkov
Report by: Artur Zakirov
2016-02-02 15:20:33 +03:00
Robert Haas
7191ce8bea Make all built-in lwlock tranche IDs fixed.
This makes the values more stable, which seems like a good thing for
anybody who needs to look at at them.

Alexander Korotkov and Amit Kapila
2016-02-02 06:45:55 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
1d0c3b3f8a pgbench: allow per-script statistics
Provide per-script statistical info (count of transactions executed
under that script, average latency for the whole script) after a
multi-script run, adding an intermediate level of detail to existing
global stats and per-command stats.

Author: Fabien Coelho
Reviewer: Michaël Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
2016-02-01 15:55:33 +01:00
Robert Haas
64f5edca24 pgbench: Install guards against obscure overflow conditions.
Dividing INT_MIN by -1 or taking INT_MIN modulo -1 can sometimes
cause floating-point exceptions or otherwise misbehave.

Fabien Coelho and Michael Paquier
2016-02-01 08:23:41 -05:00
Fujii Masao
89611c4dfa Various fixes to "ALTER ... SET/RESET" tab completions
Add
- ALTER SYSTEM SET/RESET ... -> GUC variables
- ALTER TABLE ... SET WITH -> OIDS
- ALTER DATABASE/FUNCTION/ROLE/USER ... SET/RESET -> GUC variables
- ALTER DATABASE/FUNCTION/ROLE/USER ... SET ... -> FROM CURRENT/TO
- ALTER DATABASE/FUNCTION/ROLE/USER ... SET ... TO/= -> possible values

Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Masahiko Sawada
2016-02-01 22:19:51 +09:00
Michael Meskes
7a58d19b0c Make sure ecpg header files do not have a comment lasting several lines, one of
which is a preprocessor directive. This leads ecpg to incorrectly parse the comment as nested.
2016-02-01 13:21:00 +01:00
Magnus Hagander
e51ab85cd9 Fix typos in comments
Author: Michael Paquier
2016-02-01 11:43:48 +01:00
Heikki Linnakangas
61ce1e8f15 Fix misspelled function name in comment. 2016-02-01 10:10:24 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
9217bf3961 Fix whitespace 2016-01-30 15:58:20 -05:00
Robert Haas
2251179e6a Migrate replication slot I/O locks into a separate tranche.
This is following in a long train of similar changes and for the same
reasons - see b319356f0e and
fe702a7b3f inter alia.

Author: Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Alexander Korotkov, Robert Haas
2016-01-29 09:45:38 -05:00
Robert Haas
b319356f0e Migrate PGPROC's backendLock into PGPROC itself, using a new tranche.
Previously, each PGPROC's backendLock was part of the main tranche,
and the PGPROC just contained a pointer.  Now, the actual LWLock is
part of the PGPROC.

As with previous, similar patches, this makes it significantly easier
to identify these lwlocks in LWLOCK_STATS or Trace_lwlocks output
and improves modularity.

Author: Ildus Kurbangaliev
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila, Robert Haas
2016-01-29 08:14:28 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
b603766496 pgbench: refactor handling of stats tracking
This doesn't add any functionality but just shuffles things around so
that it can be reused and improved later.

Author: Fabien Coelho
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
2016-01-29 13:05:08 +01:00
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
fbe5a3fb73 Only try to push down foreign joins if the user mapping OIDs match.
Previously, the foreign join pushdown infrastructure left the question
of security entirely up to individual FDWs, but it would be easy for
a foreign data wrapper to inadvertently open up subtle security holes
that way.  So, make it the core code's job to determine which user
mapping OID is relevant, and don't attempt join pushdown unless it's
the same for all relevant relations.

Per a suggestion from Tom Lane.  Shigeru Hanada and Ashutosh Bapat,
reviewed by Etsuro Fujita and KaiGai Kohei, with some further
changes by me.
2016-01-28 14:05:36 -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
Fujii Masao
62e2ddd4ca Fix typos in comments and doc
overriden -> overridden

The misspelling in create_extension.sgml was introduced in b67aaf2,
so no need to backpatch.
2016-01-28 16:47:36 +09:00
Fujii Masao
7f46eaf035 Add gin_clean_pending_list function to clean up GIN pending list
This function cleans up the pending list of the GIN index by
moving entries in it to the main GIN data structure in bulk.
It returns the number of pages cleaned up from the pending list.

This function is useful, for example, when the pending list
needs to be cleaned up *quickly* to improve the performance of
the search using GIN index. VACUUM can do the same thing, too,
but it may take days to run on a large table.

Jeff Janes,
reviewed by Julien Rouhaud, Jaime Casanova, Alvaro Herrera and me.

Discussion: CAMkU=1x8zFkpfnozXyt40zmR3Ub_kHu58LtRmwHUKRgQss7=iQ@mail.gmail.com
2016-01-28 12:57:52 +09:00
Robert Haas
eaf7b1f643 Assert that create_unique_path returns non-NULL.
Per off-list discussion with Tom Lane and Michael Paquier, Coverity
gets unhappy if this is not done.
2016-01-27 22:03:18 -05:00
Robert Haas
025b2f3392 Fix cross-version pg_dump for aggregate combine functions.
Fixes a defect in commit a7de3dc5c3.

David Rowley, per report from Jeff Janes, who also checked that the
fix works.
2016-01-27 21:45:07 -05:00
Fujii Masao
e09507a272 Fix volatility marking of pg_size_pretty function
pg_size_pretty function should be marked immutable rather than volatile
because it always returns the same result given the same argument.

Pavel Stehule
2016-01-27 11:13:31 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera
8bea3d2219 pgbench: improve multi-script support
Previously, it was possible to specify one or several custom scripts to
run, or only one of the builtin scripts.  With this patch it is also
possible to specify to run the builtin scripts multiple times, using the
new -b option.  Also, unify the code for both cases; this eases future
pgbench improvements.

Author: Fabien Coelho
Review: Michaël Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
2016-01-27 02:54:22 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera
5b3cc1af2f Mostly mechanical cleanup of pgbench
pgindent for recent commits; also change some variables from int to
boolean, which is how they are really used.

Mostly submitted by Fabien Coelho; this is in preparation to commit
further patches to the file.
2016-01-27 02:11:34 +01:00
Tom Lane
b8682a7155 Fix startup so that log prefix %h works for the log_connections message.
We entirely randomly chose to initialize port->remote_host just after
printing the log_connections message, when we could perfectly well do it
just before, allowing %h and %r to work for that message.  Per gripe from
Artem Tomyuk.
2016-01-26 15:38:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
cc988fbb0b Improve ResourceOwners' behavior for large numbers of owned objects.
The original coding was quite fast so long as objects were always
released in reverse order of addition; otherwise, it degenerated into
O(N^2) behavior due to searching for the array element to delete.
Improve matters by switching to hashed storage when the number of
objects of a given type exceeds 64.  (The cutover point is open to
discussion, of course, but some simple performance testing suggests
that hashing has enough overhead to be a loser below there.)

Also, refactor resowner.c so that we don't need N copies of the array
management code.  Since all the resource IDs the code currently needs
to deal with are either pointers or integers, it seems sufficient to
create a one-size-fits-all infrastructure in which everything is
converted to a Datum for storage.

Aleksander Alekseev, reviewed by Stas Kelvich, further fixes by me
2016-01-26 15:20:30 -05:00
Kevin Grittner
879d71393d Various fixes to REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW tab completion.
Masahiko Sawada, Fujii Masao, Kevin Grittner
2016-01-26 08:45:08 -06:00
Tatsuo Ishii
ad2e233385 Revert "Fix broken multibyte regression tests."
This reverts commit efc1610b64.
The commit was plain wrong as pointed out in:
http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/27771.1448736909@sss.pgh.pa.us
2016-01-26 08:29:15 +09:00
Simon Riggs
1129c2b0ad Correct comment in GetConflictingVirtualXIDs()
We use Share lock because it is safe to do so.
2016-01-24 10:22:11 -08:00
Tom Lane
00347575e2 Yet further adjust degree-based trig functions for more portability.
Buildfarm member cockatiel is still saying that cosd(60) isn't 0.5.
What seems likely is that the subexpression (1.0 - cos(x)) isn't being
rounded to double width before more arithmetic is done on it, so force
that by storing it into a variable.
2016-01-24 12:53:03 -05:00
Tom Lane
360f67d31a Still further adjust degree-based trig functions for more portability.
Indeed, the non-static declaration foreseen in my previous commit message
is necessary.  Per Noah Misch.
2016-01-23 18:12:54 -05:00
Tom Lane
65abaab547 Further adjust degree-based trig functions for more portability.
The last round didn't do it.  Per Noah Misch, the problem on at least
some machines is that the compiler pre-evaluates trig functions having
constant arguments using code slightly different from what will be used
at runtime.  Therefore, we must prevent the compiler from seeing constant
arguments to any of the libm trig functions used in this code.

The method used here might still fail if init_degree_constants() gets
inlined into the call sites.  That probably won't happen given the large
number of call sites; but if it does, we could probably fix it by making
init_degree_constants() non-static.  I'll avoid that till proven
necessary, though.
2016-01-23 16:17:31 -05:00
Tom Lane
73193d82d7 Adjust degree-based trig functions for more portability.
The buildfarm isn't very happy with the results of commit e1bd684a34.
To try to get the expected exact results everywhere:

* Replace M_PI / 180 subexpressions with a precomputed constant, so that
the compiler can't decide to rearrange that division with an adjacent
operation.  Hopefully this will fix failures to get exactly 0.5 from
sind(30) and cosd(60).

* Add scaling to ensure that tand(45) and cotd(45) give exactly 1; there
was nothing particularly guaranteeing that before.

* Replace minus zero by zero when tand() or cotd() would output that;
many machines did so for tand(180) and cotd(270), but not all.  We could
alternatively deem both results valid, but that doesn't seem likely to
be what users will want.
2016-01-23 11:26:07 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
6ae4c8de00 psql: Improve completion of FDW DDL commands
Add
- ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER -> RENAME TO
- ALTER SERVER -> RENAME TO
- ALTER SERVER ... VERSION ... -> OPTIONS
- CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER -> OPTIONS
- CREATE SERVER -> OPTIONS
- CREATE|ALTER USER MAPPING -> OPTIONS

From: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
2016-01-23 06:57:42 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
df43fcf457 pg_dump: Fix quoting of domain constraint names
The original code was adding double quotes to an already-quoted
identifier, leading to nonsensical results.  Remove the quoting call.

I introduced the broken code in 7eca575d1c of 9.5 era, so backpatch to
9.5.

Report and patch by Elvis Pranskevichus
Reviewed by Michael Paquier
2016-01-22 20:04:35 -03:00
Tom Lane
e1bd684a34 Add trigonometric functions that work in degrees.
The implementations go to some lengths to deliver exact results for values
where an exact result can be expected, such as sind(30) = 0.5 exactly.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Michael Paquier
2016-01-22 15:46:22 -05:00
Tom Lane
fd5200c3dc Improve cross-platform consistency of Inf/NaN handling in trig functions.
Ensure that the trig functions return NaN for NaN input regardless of what
the underlying C library functions might do.  Also ensure that an error
is thrown for Inf (or otherwise out-of-range) input, except for atan/atan2
which should accept it.

All these behaviors should now conform to the POSIX spec; previously, all
our popular platforms deviated from that in one case or another.

The main remaining platform dependency here is whether the C library might
choose to throw a domain error for sin/cos/tan inputs that are large but
less than infinity.  (Doing so is not unreasonable, since once a single
unit-in-the-last-place exceeds PI, there can be no significance at all in
the result; however there doesn't seem to be any suggestion in POSIX that
such an error is allowed.)  We will report such errors if they are reported
via "errno", but not if they are reported via "fetestexcept" which is the
other mechanism sanctioned by POSIX.  Some preliminary experiments with
fetestexcept indicated that it might also report errors we could do
without, such as complaining about underflow at an unreasonably large
threshold.  So let's skip that complexity for now.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Michael Paquier
2016-01-22 14:50:51 -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
647d87c56a Make extract() do something more reasonable with infinite datetimes.
Historically, extract() just returned zero for any case involving an
infinite timestamp[tz] input; even cases in which the unit name was
invalid.  This is not very sensible.  Instead, return infinity or
-infinity as appropriate when the requested field is one that is
monotonically increasing (e.g, year, epoch), or NULL when it is not
(e.g., day, hour).  Also, throw the expected errors for bad unit names.

BACKWARDS INCOMPATIBLE CHANGE

Vitaly Burovoy, reviewed by Vik Fearing
2016-01-21 22:26:20 -05:00
Tom Lane
d9b9289c83 Suppress compiler warning.
Given the limited range of i, these shifts should not cause any
problem, but that apparently doesn't stop some compilers from
whining about them.

David Rowley
2016-01-21 21:14:07 -05:00
Tom Lane
be44ed27b8 Improve index AMs' opclass validation procedures.
The amvalidate functions added in commit 65c5fcd353 were on the
crude side.  Improve them in a few ways:

* Perform signature checking for operators and support functions.

* Apply more thorough checks for missing operators and functions,
where possible.

* Instead of reporting problems as ERRORs, report most problems as INFO
messages and make the amvalidate function return FALSE.  This allows
more than one problem to be discovered per run.

* Report object names rather than OIDs, and work a bit harder on making
the messages understandable.

Also, remove a few more opr_sanity regression test queries that are
now superseded by the amvalidate checks.
2016-01-21 19:47:15 -05:00
Tom Lane
b99551832e Add defenses against putting expanded objects into Const nodes.
Putting a reference to an expanded-format value into a Const node would be
a bad idea for a couple of reasons.  It'd be possible for the supposedly
immutable Const to change value, if something modified the referenced
variable ... in fact, if the Const's reference were R/W, any function that
has the Const as argument might itself change it at runtime.  Also, because
datumIsEqual() is pretty simplistic, the Const might fail to compare equal
to other Consts that it should compare equal to, notably including copies
of itself.  This could lead to unexpected planner behavior, such as "could
not find pathkey item to sort" errors or inferior plans.

I have not been able to find any way to get an expanded value into a Const
within the existing core code; but Paul Ramsey was able to trigger the
problem by writing a datatype input function that returns an expanded
value.

The best fix seems to be to establish a rule that varlena values being
placed into Const nodes should be passed through pg_detoast_datum().
That will do nothing (and cost little) in normal cases, but it will flatten
expanded values and thereby avoid the above problems.  Also, it will
convert short-header or compressed values into canonical format, which will
avoid possible unexpected lack-of-equality issues for those cases too.
And it provides a last-ditch defense against putting a toasted value into
a Const, which we already knew was dangerous, cf commit 2b0c86b665.
(In the light of this discussion, I'm no longer sure that that commit
provided 100% protection against such cases, but this fix should do it.)

The test added in commit 65c3d05e18 to catch datatype input functions
with unstable results would fail for functions that returned expanded
values; but it seems a bit uncharitable to deem a result unstable just
because it's expressed in expanded form, so revise the coding so that we
check for bitwise equality only after applying pg_detoast_datum().  That's
a sufficient condition anyway given the new rule about detoasting when
forming a Const.

Back-patch to 9.5 where the expanded-object facility was added.  It's
possible that this should go back further; but in the absence of clear
evidence that there's any live bug in older branches, I'll refrain for now.
2016-01-21 12:56:08 -05:00
Fujii Masao
38710a374e Remove unused argument from ginInsertCleanup()
It's an oversight in commit dc943ad.
2016-01-22 01:22:56 +09:00
Simon Riggs
c80b31d557 Refactor headers to split out standby defs
Jeff Janes
2016-01-20 18:51:34 -08:00
Simon Riggs
978b2f65aa Speedup 2PC by skipping two phase state files in normal path
2PC state info is written only to WAL at PREPARE, then read back from WAL at
COMMIT PREPARED/ABORT PREPARED. Prepared transactions that live past one bufmgr
checkpoint cycle will be written to disk in the same form as previously. Crash
recovery path is not altered. Measured performance gains of 50-100% for short
2PC transactions by completely avoiding writing files and fsyncing. Other
optimizations still available, further patches in related areas expected.

Stas Kelvich and heavily edited by Simon Riggs

Based upon earlier ideas and patches by Michael Paquier and Heikki Linnakangas,
a concrete example of how Postgres-XC has fed back ideas into PostgreSQL.

Reviewed by Michael Paquier, Jeff Janes and Andres Freund
Performance testing by Jesper Pedersen
2016-01-20 18:40:44 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut
d0f2f53cd6 psql: Add tab completion for COPY with query
From: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
2016-01-20 21:27:46 -05:00
Simon Riggs
422a55a687 Refactor to create generic WAL page read callback
Previously we didn’t have a generic WAL page read callback function,
surprisingly. Logical decoding has logical_read_local_xlog_page(), which was
actually generic, so move that to xlogfunc.c and rename to
read_local_xlog_page().
Maintain logical_read_local_xlog_page() so existing callers still work.

As requested by Michael Paquier, Alvaro Herrera and Andres Freund
2016-01-20 17:18:58 -08:00
Robert Haas
45be99f8cd Support parallel joins, and make related improvements.
The core innovation of this patch is the introduction of the concept
of a partial path; that is, a path which if executed in parallel will
generate a subset of the output rows in each process.  Gathering a
partial path produces an ordinary (complete) path.  This allows us to
generate paths for parallel joins by joining a partial path for one
side (which at the baserel level is currently always a Partial Seq
Scan) to an ordinary path on the other side.  This is subject to
various restrictions at present, especially that this strategy seems
unlikely to be sensible for merge joins, so only nested loops and
hash joins paths are generated.

This also allows an Append node to be pushed below a Gather node in
the case of a partitioned table.

Testing revealed that early versions of this patch made poor decisions
in some cases, which turned out to be caused by the fact that the
original cost model for Parallel Seq Scan wasn't very good.  So this
patch tries to make some modest improvements in that area.

There is much more to be done in the area of generating good parallel
plans in all cases, but this seems like a useful step forward.

Patch by me, reviewed by Dilip Kumar and Amit Kapila.
2016-01-20 14:40:26 -05:00
Robert Haas
a7de3dc5c3 Support multi-stage aggregation.
Aggregate nodes now have two new modes: a "partial" mode where they
output the unfinalized transition state, and a "finalize" mode where
they accept unfinalized transition states rather than individual
values as input.

These new modes are not used anywhere yet, but they will be necessary
for parallel aggregation.  The infrastructure also figures to be
useful for cases where we want to aggregate local data and remote
data via the FDW interface, and want to bring back partial aggregates
from the remote side that can then be combined with locally generated
partial aggregates to produce the final value.  It may also be useful
even when neither FDWs nor parallelism are in play, as explained in
the comments in nodeAgg.c.

David Rowley and Simon Riggs, reviewed by KaiGai Kohei, Heikki
Linnakangas, Haribabu Kommi, and me.
2016-01-20 13:46:50 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
c8642d909f PostgresNode: Add names to nodes
This makes the log files easier to follow when investigating a test
failure.

Author: Michael Paquier
Review: Noah Misch
2016-01-20 14:13:11 -03:00
Bruce Momjian
216d568432 Properly install dynloader.h on MSVC builds
This will enable PL/Java to be cleanly compiled, as dynloader.h is a
requirement.

Report by Chapman Flack

Patch by Michael Paquier

Backpatch through 9.1
2016-01-19 23:30:29 -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
Alvaro Herrera
948c97958b Add two HyperLogLog functions
New functions initHyperLogLogError() and freeHyperLogLog() simplify
using this module from elsewhere.

Author: Tomáš Vondra
Review: Peter Geoghegan
2016-01-19 17:40:15 -03:00
Tom Lane
9ff60273e3 Fix assorted inconsistencies in GiST opclass support function declarations.
The conventions specified by the GiST SGML documentation were widely
ignored.  For example, the strategy-number argument for "consistent" and
"distance" functions is specified to be a smallint, but most of the
built-in support functions declared it as an integer, and for that matter
the core code passed it using Int32GetDatum not Int16GetDatum.  None of
that makes any real difference at runtime, but it's quite confusing for
newcomers to the code, and it makes it very hard to write an amvalidate()
function that checks support function signatures.  So let's try to instill
some consistency here.

Another similar issue is that the "query" argument is not of a single
well-defined type, but could have different types depending on the strategy
(corresponding to search operators with different righthand-side argument
types).  Some of the functions threw up their hands and declared the query
argument as being of "internal" type, which surely isn't right ("any" would
have been more appropriate); but the majority position seemed to be to
declare it as being of the indexed data type, corresponding to a search
operator with both input types the same.  So I've specified a convention
that that's what to do always.

Also, the result of the "union" support function actually must be of the
index's storage type, but the documentation suggested declaring it to
return "internal", and some of the functions followed that.  Standardize
on telling the truth, instead.

Similarly, standardize on declaring the "same" function's inputs as
being of the storage type, not "internal".

Also, somebody had forgotten to add the "recheck" argument to both
the documentation of the "distance" support function and all of their
SQL declarations, even though the C code was happily using that argument.
Clean that up too.

Fix up some other omissions in the docs too, such as documenting that
union's second input argument is vestigial.

So far as the errors in core function declarations go, we can just fix
pg_proc.h and bump catversion.  Adjusting the erroneous declarations in
contrib modules is more debatable: in principle any change in those
scripts should involve an extension version bump, which is a pain.
However, since these changes are purely cosmetic and make no functional
difference, I think we can get away without doing that.
2016-01-19 12:04:36 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
53c949c1be Remove Cygwin-specific code from pg_ctl
This code has been there for a long time, but it's never really been
needed. Cygwin has its own utility for registering, unregistering,
stopping and starting Windows services, and that's what's used in the
Cygwin postgres packages. So now pg_ctl for Cygwin looks like it is for
any Unix platform.

Michael Paquier and me
2016-01-19 07:31:18 -05:00
Tom Lane
49b4950650 Add explicit cast to amcostestimate call.
My compiler doesn't complain here, but David Rowley's does ...
2016-01-17 22:56:16 -05:00
Tom Lane
65c5fcd353 Restructure index access method API to hide most of it at the C level.
This patch reduces pg_am to just two columns, a name and a handler
function.  All the data formerly obtained from pg_am is now provided
in a C struct returned by the handler function.  This is similar to
the designs we've adopted for FDWs and tablesample methods.  There
are multiple advantages.  For one, the index AM's support functions
are now simple C functions, making them faster to call and much less
error-prone, since the C compiler can now check function signatures.
For another, this will make it far more practical to define index access
methods in installable extensions.

A disadvantage is that SQL-level code can no longer see attributes
of index AMs; in particular, some of the crosschecks in the opr_sanity
regression test are no longer possible from SQL.  We've addressed that
by adding a facility for the index AM to perform such checks instead.
(Much more could be done in that line, but for now we're content if the
amvalidate functions more or less replace what opr_sanity used to do.)
We might also want to expose some sort of reporting functionality, but
this patch doesn't do that.

Alexander Korotkov, reviewed by Petr Jelínek, and rather heavily
editorialized on by me.
2016-01-17 19:36:59 -05:00
Tom Lane
8d290c8ec6 Re-pgindent a few files.
In preparation for landing index AM interface changes.
2016-01-17 19:13:18 -05:00
Tom Lane
57ce9acc04 Remove dead code in pg_dump.
Coverity quite reasonably complained that this check for fout==NULL
occurred after we'd already dereferenced fout.  However, the check
is just dead code since there is no code path by which CreateArchive
can return a null pointer.  Errors such as can't-open-that-file are
reported down inside CreateArchive, and control doesn't return.
So let's silence the warning by removing the dead code, rather than
continuing to pretend it does something.

Coverity didn't complain about this before 5b5fea2a1, so back-patch
to 9.5 like that patch.
2016-01-17 11:38:40 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
4189e3d659 psql: Add completion support for DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY
based on patch by Kyotaro Horiguchi
2016-01-16 20:46:14 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
cf7dfbf2d6 Fix minor typo in comment
Tatsuro Yamada
2016-01-15 10:24:37 +01:00
Robert Haas
23c2dd03d5 Fix spelling mistakes.
Same patch submitted independently by David Rowley and Peter Geoghegan.
2016-01-14 23:16:40 -05:00
Tom Lane
a923af382c Fix build_grouping_chain() to not clobber its input lists.
There's no good reason for stomping on the input data; it makes the logic
in this function no simpler, in fact probably the reverse.  And it makes
it impossible to separate path generation from plan generation, as I'm
working towards doing; that will require more than one traversal of these
lists.
2016-01-14 11:51:57 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
6a61d1ff9d Properly close token in sspi authentication
We can never leak more than one token, but we shouldn't do that. We
don't bother closing it in the error paths since the process will
exit shortly anyway.

Christian Ullrich
2016-01-14 13:06:03 +01:00
Tom Lane
e72d7d8531 Handle extension members when first setting object dump flags in pg_dump.
pg_dump's original approach to handling extension member objects was to
run around and clear (or set) their dump flags rather late in its data
collection process.  Unfortunately, quite a lot of code expects those flags
to be valid before that; which was an entirely reasonable expectation
before we added extensions.  In particular, this explains Karsten Hilbert's
recent report of pg_upgrade failing on a database in which an extension
has been installed into the pg_catalog schema.  Its objects are initially
marked as not-to-be-dumped on the strength of their schema, and later we
change them to must-dump because we're doing a binary upgrade of their
extension; but we've already skipped essential tasks like making associated
DO_SHELL_TYPE objects.

To fix, collect extension membership data first, and incorporate it in the
initial setting of the dump flags, so that those are once again correct
from the get-go.  This has the undesirable side effect of slightly
lengthening the time taken before pg_dump acquires table locks, but testing
suggests that the increase in that window is not very much.

Along the way, get rid of ugly special-case logic for deciding whether
to dump procedural languages, FDWs, and foreign servers; dump decisions
for those are now correct up-front, too.

In 9.3 and up, this also fixes erroneous logic about when to dump event
triggers (basically, they were *always* dumped before).  In 9.5 and up,
transform objects had that problem too.

Since this problem came in with extensions, back-patch to all supported
versions.
2016-01-13 18:55:27 -05:00
Tom Lane
5b5fea2a11 Access pg_dump's options structs through Archive struct, not directly.
Rather than passing around DumpOptions and RestoreOptions as separate
arguments, add fields to struct Archive to carry pointers to these objects,
and access them through those fields when needed.  There already was a
RestoreOptions pointer in Archive, though for no obvious reason it was part
of the "private" struct rather than out where pg_dump.c could see it.

Doing this allows reversion of quite a lot of parameter-addition changes
made in commit 0eea8047bf, which is a good thing IMO because this will
reduce the code delta between 9.4 and 9.5, probably easing a few future
back-patch efforts.  Moreover, the previous commit only added a DumpOptions
argument to functions that had to have it at the time, which means we could
anticipate still more code churn (and more back-patch hazard) as the
requirement spread further.  I'd hit exactly that problem in my upcoming
patch to fix extension membership marking, which is what motivated me to
do this.
2016-01-13 17:48:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
26905e009b Run pgindent on src/bin/pg_dump/*
To ease doing indent fixups on a couple of patches I have in progress.
2016-01-13 15:48:54 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
b1bfb28b58 psql: Improve CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY tab completion
The completion of CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY was lacking in several ways
compared to a plain CREATE INDEX command:

- CREATE INDEX <name> ON completes table names, but didn't with
  CONCURRENTLY.

- CREATE INDEX completes ON and existing index names, but with
  CONCURRENTLY it only completed ON.

- CREATE INDEX <name> completes ON, but didn't with CONCURRENTLY.

These are now all fixed.
2016-01-12 20:54:27 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
bc56d5898d psql: Fix CREATE INDEX tab completion
The previous code supported a syntax like CREATE INDEX name
CONCURRENTLY, which never existed.  Mistake introduced in commit
37ec19a15c.  Remove the addition of
CONCURRENTLY at that point.
2016-01-12 20:54:27 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
7032703009 psql: Update tab completion comment
This just updates a comment to match the code.

from Michael Paquier
2016-01-12 20:54:27 -05:00
Simon Riggs
e63bb4549a Add new user fn pg_current_xlog_flush_location()
Tomas Vondra, reviewed by Michael Paquier and Amit Kapila
Minor edits by me
2016-01-12 07:54:52 +00:00
Simon Riggs
1e29e6324c Maintain local LogwrtResult consistently
Teach GetFlushRecPtr() to update LogwrtResult cache as performed by all other
functions in xlog.c
2016-01-12 07:33:20 +00:00
Tom Lane
796d1e889f Remove no-longer-needed old-style check for incompatible plpythons.
Commit 866566a690 introduced a new mechanism for incompatible
plpythons to detect each other.  I left the old mechanism in place,
because it seems possible that a plpython predating that commit might be
used with one postdating it.  (This would require updating plpython3 but
not plpython2 or vice versa, but that seems well within the realm of
possibility.)  However, surely it will not be able to happen in 9.6 or
later, so we can delete the old mechanism in HEAD.
2016-01-11 20:13:31 -05:00
Tom Lane
866566a690 Avoid dump/reload problems when using both plpython2 and plpython3.
Commit 803716013d installed a safeguard against loading plpython2
and plpython3 at the same time, but asserted that both could still be
used in the same database, just not in the same session.  However, that's
not actually all that practical because dumping and reloading will fail
(since both libraries necessarily get loaded into the restoring session).
pg_upgrade is even worse, because it checks for missing libraries by
loading every .so library mentioned in the entire installation into one
session, so that you can have only one across the whole cluster.

We can improve matters by not throwing the error immediately in _PG_init,
but only when and if we're asked to do something that requires calling
into libpython.  This ameliorates both of the above situations, since
while execution of CREATE LANGUAGE, CREATE FUNCTION, etc will result in
loading plpython, it isn't asked to do anything interesting (at least
not if check_function_bodies is off, as it will be during a restore).

It's possible that this opens some corner-case holes in which a crash
could be provoked with sufficient effort.  However, since plpython
only exists as an untrusted language, any such crash would require
superuser privileges, making it "don't do that" not a security issue.
To reduce the hazards in this area, the error is still FATAL when it
does get thrown.

Per a report from Paul Jones.  Back-patch to 9.2, which is as far back
as the patch applies without work.  (It could be made to work in 9.1,
but given the lack of previous complaints, I'm disinclined to expend
effort so far back.  We've been pretty desultory about support for
Python 3 in 9.1 anyway.)
2016-01-11 19:55:39 -05:00
Robert Haas
950ab82c3d Remove obsolete comment.
Noted while reviewing a question from Dickson S. Guedes.
2016-01-10 21:35:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
820bdccc1b Remove a useless PG_GETARG_DATUM() call from jsonb_build_array.
This loop uselessly fetched the argument after the one it's currently
looking at.  No real harm is done since we couldn't possibly fetch off
the end of memory, but it's confusing to the reader.

Also remove a duplicate (and therefore confusing) PG_ARGISNULL check in
jsonb_build_object.

I happened to notice these things while trolling for missed null-arg
checks earlier today.  Back-patch to 9.5, not because there is any
real bug, but just because 9.5 and HEAD are still in sync in this
file and we might as well keep them so.

In passing, re-pgindent.
2016-01-09 17:39:45 -05:00
Tom Lane
3ef16c46fb Add some checks on "char"-type columns to type_sanity and opr_sanity.
I noticed that the sanity checks in the regression tests omitted to
check a couple of "poor man's enum" columns that you'd reasonably
expect them to check.

There are other "char"-type columns in system catalogs that are not
covered by either type_sanity or opr_sanity, e.g. pg_rewrite.ev_type.
However, those catalogs are not populated with any manually-created
data during bootstrap, so it seems less necessary to check them
this way.
2016-01-09 17:20:58 -05:00
Tom Lane
26d538dc93 Clean up some lack-of-STRICT issues in the core code, too.
A scan for missed proisstrict markings in the core code turned up
these functions:

brin_summarize_new_values
pg_stat_reset_single_table_counters
pg_stat_reset_single_function_counters
pg_create_logical_replication_slot
pg_create_physical_replication_slot
pg_drop_replication_slot

The first three of these take OID, so a null argument will normally look
like a zero to them, resulting in "ERROR: could not open relation with OID
0" for brin_summarize_new_values, and no action for the pg_stat_reset_XXX
functions.  The other three will dump core on a null argument, though this
is mitigated by the fact that they won't do so until after checking that
the caller is superuser or has rolreplication privilege.

In addition, the pg_logical_slot_get/peek[_binary]_changes family was
intentionally marked nonstrict, but failed to make nullness checks on all
the arguments; so again a null-pointer-dereference crash is possible but
only for superusers and rolreplication users.

Add the missing ARGISNULL checks to the latter functions, and mark the
former functions as strict in pg_proc.  Make that change in the back
branches too, even though we can't force initdb there, just so that
installations initdb'd in future won't have the issue.  Since none of these
bugs rise to the level of security issues (and indeed the pg_stat_reset_XXX
functions hardly misbehave at all), it seems sufficient to do this.

In addition, fix some order-of-operations oddities in the slot_get_changes
family, mostly cosmetic, but not the part that moves the function's last
few operations into the PG_TRY block.  As it stood, there was significant
risk for an error to exit without clearing historical information from
the system caches.

The slot_get_changes bugs go back to 9.4 where that code was introduced.
Back-patch appropriate subsets of the pg_proc changes into all active
branches, as well.
2016-01-09 16:58:32 -05:00
Tom Lane
1cb63c791c Clean up code for widget_in() and widget_out().
Given syntactically wrong input, widget_in() could call atof() with an
indeterminate pointer argument, typically leading to a crash; or if it
didn't do that, it might return a NULL pointer, which again would lead
to a crash since old-style C functions aren't supposed to do things
that way.  Fix that by correcting the off-by-one syntax test and
throwing a proper error rather than just returning NULL.

Also, since widget_in and widget_out have been marked STRICT for a
long time, their tests for null inputs are just dead code; remove 'em.
In the oldest branches, also improve widget_out to use snprintf not
sprintf, just to be sure.

In passing, get rid of a long-since-useless sprintf into a local buffer
that nothing further is done with, and make some other minor coding
style cleanups.

In the intended regression-testing usage of these functions, none of
this is very significant; but if the regression test database were
left around in a production installation, these bugs could amount
to a minor security hazard.

Piotr Stefaniak, Michael Paquier, and Tom Lane
2016-01-09 13:44:49 -05:00
Simon Riggs
b602842613 Revoke change to rmgr desc of btree vacuum
Per discussion with Andres Freund
2016-01-09 18:31:08 +00:00
Tom Lane
529baf6a2f Add STRICT to some C functions created by the regression tests.
These functions readily crash when passed a NULL input value.  The tests
themselves do not pass NULL values to them; but when the regression
database is used as a basis for fuzz testing, they cause a lot of noise.
Also, if someone were to leave a regression database lying about in a
production installation, these would create a minor security hazard.

Andreas Seltenreich
2016-01-09 13:02:54 -05:00
Simon Riggs
687f2cd7a0 Avoid pin scan for replay of XLOG_BTREE_VACUUM
Replay of XLOG_BTREE_VACUUM during Hot Standby was previously thought to require
complex interlocking that matched the requirements on the master. This required
an O(N) operation that became a significant problem with large indexes, causing
replication delays of seconds or in some cases minutes while the
XLOG_BTREE_VACUUM was replayed.

This commit skips the “pin scan” that was previously required, by observing in
detail when and how it is safe to do so, with full documentation. The pin scan
is skipped only in replay; the VACUUM code path on master is not touched here.

The current commit still performs the pin scan for toast indexes, though this
can also be avoided if we recheck scans on toast indexes. Later patch will
address this.

No tests included. Manual tests using an additional patch to view WAL records
and their timing have shown the change in WAL records and their handling has
successfully reduced replication delay.
2016-01-09 10:10:08 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
4631721166 Revert "Blind attempt at a Cygwin fix"
This reverts commit e9282e9532, which blew
up in a pretty spectacular way.  Re-introduce the original code while we
search for a real fix.
2016-01-08 13:18:40 -03:00
Magnus Hagander
2650486ebc Fix typo in comment
Tatsuro Yamada
2016-01-08 08:54:40 +01:00
Magnus Hagander
c662ef1d03 Remove reundand include of TestLib
Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
2016-01-08 08:53:00 +01:00
Tom Lane
a54676acad Marginal cleanup of GROUPING SETS code in grouping_planner().
Improve comments and make it a shade less messy.  I think we might want
to move all of this somewhere else later, but it needs to be more
readable first.

In passing, re-pgindent the file, affecting some recently-added comments
concerning parallel query planning.
2016-01-07 20:32:35 -05:00
Tom Lane
c44d013835 Delay creation of subplan tlist until after create_plan().
Once upon a time it was necessary for grouping_planner() to determine
the tlist it wanted from the scan/join plan subtree before it called
query_planner(), because query_planner() would actually make a Plan using
that.  But we refactored things a long time ago to delay construction of
the Plan tree till later, so there's no need to build that tlist until
(and indeed unless) we're ready to plaster it onto the Plan.  The only
thing query_planner() cares about is what Vars are going to be needed for
the tlist, and it can perfectly well get that by looking at the real tlist
rather than some masticated version.

Well, actually, there is one minor glitch in that argument, which is that
make_subplanTargetList also adds Vars appearing only in HAVING to the
tlist it produces.  So now we have to account for HAVING explicitly in
build_base_rel_tlists.  But that just adds a few lines of code, and
I doubt it moves the needle much on processing time; we might be doing
pull_var_clause() twice on the havingQual, but before we had it scanning
dummy tlist entries instead.

This is a very small down payment on rationalizing grouping_planner
enough so it can be refactored.
2016-01-07 20:23:57 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
f81c966d20 Fix order of arguments to va_start() 2016-01-07 20:32:49 -03:00
Tom Lane
b41fb65056 Fix unobvious interaction between -X switch and subdirectory creation.
Turns out the only reason initdb -X worked is that pg_mkdir_p won't
whine if you point it at something that's a symlink to a directory.
Otherwise, the attempt to create pg_xlog/ just like all the other
subdirectories would have failed.  Let's be a little more explicit
about what's happening.  Oversight in my patch for bug #13853
(mea culpa for not testing -X ...)
2016-01-07 18:20:57 -05:00
Tom Lane
33b054bc79 Use plain mkdir() not pg_mkdir_p() to create subdirectories of PGDATA.
When we're creating subdirectories of PGDATA during initdb, we know darn
well that the parent directory exists (or should exist) and that the new
subdirectory doesn't (or shouldn't).  There is therefore no need to use
anything more complicated than mkdir().  Using pg_mkdir_p() just opens us
up to unexpected failure modes, such as the one exhibited in bug #13853
from Nuri Boardman.  It's not very clear why pg_mkdir_p() went wrong there,
but it is clear that we didn't need to be trying to create parent
directories in the first place.  We're not even saving any code, as proven
by the fact that this patch nets out at minus five lines.

Since this is a response to a field bug report, back-patch to all branches.
2016-01-07 15:22:24 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
b1a9bad9e7 pgstat: add WAL receiver status view & SRF
This new view provides insight into the state of a running WAL receiver
in a HOT standby node.
The information returned includes the PID of the WAL receiver process,
its status (stopped, starting, streaming, etc), start LSN and TLI, last
received LSN and TLI, timestamp of last message send and receipt, latest
end-of-WAL LSN and time, and the name of the slot (if any).

Access to the detailed data is only granted to superusers; others only
get the PID.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewer: Haribabu Kommi
2016-01-07 16:21:19 -03:00
Tom Lane
6b1a837f69 Remove vestigial CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS call.
Commit e710b65c inserted code in md5_crypt_verify to disable and later
re-enable interrupts, with a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS call as part of the
second step, to process any interrupts that had been held off.  Commit
6647248e removed the interrupt disable/re-enable code, but left behind
the CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS, even though this is now an entirely random,
pointless place for one.  md5_crypt_verify doesn't run long enough to
need such a check, and if it did, this would still be the wrong place
to put one.
2016-01-07 11:26:54 -05:00
Tom Lane
5e0b5dcab6 Provide more detail in postmaster log for password authentication failures.
We tell people to examine the postmaster log if they're unsure why they are
getting auth failures, but actually only a few relatively-uncommon failure
cases were given their own log detail messages in commit 64e43c59b8.
Expand on that so that every failure case detected within md5_crypt_verify
gets a specific log detail message.  This should cover pretty much every
ordinary password auth failure cause.

So far I've not noticed user demand for a similar level of auth detail
for the other auth methods, but sooner or later somebody might want to
work on them.  This is not that patch, though.
2016-01-07 11:19:33 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
a967613911 Windows: Make pg_ctl reliably detect service status
pg_ctl is using isatty() to verify whether the process is running in a
terminal, and if not it sends its output to Windows' Event Log ... which
does the wrong thing when the output has been redirected to a pipe, as
reported in bug #13592.

To fix, make pg_ctl use the code we already have to detect service-ness:
in the master branch, move src/backend/port/win32/security.c to src/port
(with suitable tweaks so that it runs properly in backend and frontend
environments); pg_ctl already has access to pgport so it Just Works.  In
older branches, that's likely to cause trouble, so instead duplicate the
required code in pg_ctl.c.

Author: Michael Paquier
Bug report and diagnosis: Egon Kocjan
Backpatch: all supported branches
2016-01-07 11:59:08 -03:00
Tom Lane
dad08994b2 In initdb's post-bootstrap phase, drop temp tables explicitly.
Although these temp tables will get removed from template1 at the end of
the standalone-backend run, that's too late to keep them from getting
copied into the template0 and postgres databases, now that we use only a
single backend run for the whole sequence.  While no real harm is done
by the extra copies (since they'd be deleted on first use of the temp
schema), it's still unsightly, and it would mean some wasted cycles for
every database creation for the life of the installation.

Oversight in commit c4a8812cf6.  Noticed by Amit Langote.
2016-01-06 12:25:32 -05:00
Tom Lane
4bf87169cc Comment typo fix.
Per Amit Langote.
2016-01-06 11:06:51 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
abb1733922 Add scale(numeric)
Author: Marko Tiikkaja
2016-01-05 19:02:13 -03:00
Tom Lane
419400c5da Remove some ancient and unmaintained encoding-conversion test cruft.
In commit 921191912c I claimed that we weren't testing encoding
conversion functions, but further poking around reveals that we did
have an equivalent though hard-wired set of tests in conversion.sql.
AFAICS there is no advantage to doing it like that as compared to letting
the catalog contents drive the test, so let the opr_sanity addition stand
and remove the now-redundant tests in conversion.sql.

Also, remove some infrastructure in src/backend/utils/mb/conversion_procs
for building conversion.sql's list of tests.  That was unmaintained, and
had not corresponded to the actual contents of conversion.sql since 2007
or perhaps even further back.
2016-01-05 16:43:40 -05:00
Tom Lane
3343ea9e8e Sort $(wildcard) output where needed for reproducible build output.
The order of inclusion of .o files makes a difference in linker output;
not a functional difference, but still a bitwise difference, which annoys
some packagers who would like reproducible builds.

Report and patch by Christoph Berg
2016-01-05 15:47:05 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
4aecd22d3c Make pg_receivexlog silent with 9.3 and older servers
A pointless and confusing error message is shown to the user when
attempting to identify a 9.3 or older remote server with a 9.5/9.6
pg_receivexlog, because the return signature of IDENTIFY_SYSTEM was
changed in 9.4.  There's no good reason for the warning message, so
shuffle code around to keep it quiet.

(pg_recvlogical is also affected by this commit, but since it obviously
cannot work with 9.3 that doesn't actually matter much.)

Backpatch to 9.5.

Reported by Marco Nenciarini, who also wrote the initial patch.  Further
tweaked by Robert Haas and Fujii Masao; reviewed by Michael Paquier and
Craig Ringer.
2016-01-05 17:25:12 -03:00
Tom Lane
921191912c In opr_sanity regression test, check for unexpected uses of cstring.
In light of commit ea0d494dae, it seems like a good idea to add
a regression test that will complain about random functions taking or
returning cstring.  Only I/O support functions and encoding conversion
functions should be declared that way.

While at it, add some checks that encoding conversion functions are
declared properly.  Since pg_conversion isn't populated manually,
it's not quite as necessary to check its contents as it is for catalogs
like pg_proc; but one thing we definitely have not tested in the past
is whether the identified conproc for a conversion actually does that
conversion vs. some other one.
2016-01-05 15:00:54 -05:00
Tom Lane
ea0d494dae Make the to_reg*() functions accept text not cstring.
Using cstring as the input type was a poor decision, because that's not
really a full-fledged type.  In particular, it lacks implicit coercions
from text or varchar, meaning that usages like to_regproc('foo'||'bar')
wouldn't work; basically the only case that did work without explicit
casting was a simple literal constant argument.

The lack of field complaints about this suggests that hardly anyone
is using these functions, so hopefully fixing it won't cause much of
a compatibility problem.  They've only been there since 9.4, anyway.

Petr Korobeinikov
2016-01-05 13:02:43 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
efa318bcfa Make pg_shseclabel available in early backend startup
While the in-core authentication mechanism doesn't need to access
pg_shseclabel at all, it's reasonable to think that an authentication
hook will want to look at the label for the role logging in, or for rows
in other catalogs used during the authentication phase of startup.

Catalog version bumped, because this changes the "is nailed" status for
pg_shseclabel.

Author: Adam Brightwell
2016-01-05 14:50:53 -03:00
Tom Lane
4f18010af1 Convert psql's tab completion for backslash commands to the new style.
This requires adding some more infrastructure to handle both case-sensitive
and case-insensitive matching, as well as the ability to match a prefix of
a previous word.  So it ends up being about a wash line-count-wise, but
it's just as big a readability win here as in the SQL tab completion rules.

Michael Paquier, some adjustments by me
2016-01-05 12:00:13 -05:00
Tom Lane
9b181b0363 In psql's tab completion, change most TailMatches patterns to Matches.
In the refactoring in commit d37b816dc9,
we mostly kept to the original design whereby only the last few words
on the line were matched to identify a completable pattern.  However,
after commit d854118c8d, there's really
no reason to do it like that: where it's sensible, we can use patterns
that expect to match the entire input line.  And mostly, it's sensible.
Matching the entire line greatly reduces the odds of a false match that
leads to offering irrelevant completions.  Moreover (though I've not
tried to measure this), it should make tab completion faster since
many of the patterns will be discarded after a single integer comparison
that finds that the wrong number of words appear on the line.

There are certain identifiable places where we still need to use
TailMatches because the statement in question is allowed to appear
embedded in a larger statement.  These are just a small minority of
the existing patterns, though, so the benefit of switching where
possible is large.

It's possible that this patch has removed some within-line matching
behaviors that are in fact desirable, but we can put those back when
we get complaints.  Most of the removed behaviors are certainly silly.

Michael Paquier, with some further adjustments by me
2016-01-04 20:08:08 -05:00
Tom Lane
5d35438273 Adjust behavior of row_security GUC to match the docs.
Some time back we agreed that row_security=off should not be a way to
bypass RLS entirely, but only a way to get an error if it was being
applied.  However, the code failed to act that way for table owners.
Per discussion, this is a must-fix bug for 9.5.0.

Adjust the logic in rls.c to behave as expected; also, modify the
error message to be more consistent with the new interpretation.
The regression tests need minor corrections as well.  Also update
the comments about row_security in ddl.sgml to be correct.  (The
official description of the GUC in config.sgml is already correct.)

I failed to resist the temptation to do some other very minor
cleanup as well, such as getting rid of a duplicate extern declaration.
2016-01-04 12:21:41 -05:00
Robert Haas
8978eb03a8 Fix typo in comment.
Masahiko Sawada
2016-01-04 10:12:44 -05:00
Tom Lane
b0cadc08fe Fix regrole and regnamespace output functions to do quoting, too.
We discussed this but somehow failed to implement it...
2016-01-04 01:53:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
fb1227af67 Fix regrole and regnamespace types to honor quoting like other reg* types.
Aside from any consistency arguments, this is logically necessary because
the I/O functions for these types also handle numeric OID values.  Without
a quoting rule it is impossible to distinguish numeric OIDs from role or
namespace names that happen to contain only digits.

Also change the to_regrole and to_regnamespace functions to dequote their
arguments.  While not logically essential, this seems like a good idea
since the other to_reg* functions do it.  Anyone who really wants raw
lookup of an uninterpreted name can fall back on the time-honored solution
of (SELECT oid FROM pg_namespace WHERE nspname = whatever).

Report and patch by Jim Nasby, reviewed by Michael Paquier
2016-01-04 01:03:53 -05:00
Tom Lane
f47b602df8 Fix bogus lock release in RemovePolicyById and RemoveRoleFromObjectPolicy.
Can't release the AccessExclusiveLock on the target table until commit.
Otherwise there is a race condition whereby other backends might service
our cache invalidation signals before they can actually see the updated
catalog rows.

Just to add insult to injury, RemovePolicyById was closing the rel (with
incorrect lock drop) and then passing the now-dangling rel pointer to
CacheInvalidateRelcache.  Probably the reason this doesn't fall over on
CLOBBER_CACHE buildfarm members is that some outer level of the DROP logic
is still holding the rel open ... but it'd have bit us on the arse
eventually, no doubt.
2016-01-03 20:53:35 -05:00
Tom Lane
939d10cd87 Guard against null arguments in binary_upgrade_create_empty_extension().
The CHECK_IS_BINARY_UPGRADE macro is not sufficient security protection
if we're going to dereference pass-by-reference arguments before it.

But in any case we really need to explicitly check PG_ARGISNULL for all
the arguments of a non-strict function, not only the ones we expect null
values for.

Oversight in commits 30982be4e5 and
f92fc4c95d.  Found by Andreas Seltenreich.
(The other usages in pg_upgrade_support.c seem safe.)
2016-01-03 16:26:38 -05:00
Tom Lane
90e61df813 Fix treatment of *lpNumberOfBytesRecvd == 0: that's a completion condition.
pgwin32_recv() has treated a non-error return of zero bytes from WSARecv()
as being a reason to block ever since the current implementation was
introduced in commit a4c40f140d.  However, so far as one can tell
from Microsoft's documentation, that is just wrong: what it means is
graceful connection closure (in stream protocols) or receipt of a
zero-length message (in message protocols), and neither case should result
in blocking here.  The only reason the code worked at all was that control
then fell into the retry loop, which did *not* treat zero bytes specially,
so we'd get out after only wasting some cycles.  But as of 9.5 we do not
normally reach the retry loop and so the bug is exposed, as reported by
Shay Rojansky and diagnosed by Andres Freund.

Remove the unnecessary test on the byte count, and rearrange the code
in the retry loop so that it looks identical to the initial sequence.

Back-patch to 9.5.  The code is wrong all the way back, AFAICS, but
since it's relatively harmless in earlier branches we'll leave it alone.
2016-01-03 13:56:29 -05:00
Tom Lane
b416c0bb62 Teach pg_dump to quote reloption values safely.
Commit c7e27becd2 fixed this on the backend side, but we neglected
the fact that several code paths in pg_dump were printing reloptions
values that had not gotten massaged by ruleutils.  Apply essentially the
same quoting logic in those places, too.
2016-01-02 19:04:45 -05:00
Tom Lane
7157fe80f4 Fix overly-strict assertions in spgtextproc.c.
spg_text_inner_consistent is capable of reconstructing an empty string
to pass down to the next index level; this happens if we have an empty
string coming in, no prefix, and a dummy node label.  (In practice, what
is needed to trigger that is insertion of a whole bunch of empty-string
values.)  Then, we will arrive at the next level with in->level == 0
and a non-NULL (but zero length) in->reconstructedValue, which is valid
but the Assert tests weren't expecting it.

Per report from Andreas Seltenreich.  This has no impact in non-Assert
builds, so should not be a problem in production, but back-patch to
all affected branches anyway.

In passing, remove a couple of useless variable initializations and
shorten the code by not duplicating DatumGetPointer() calls.
2016-01-02 16:24:50 -05:00
Tom Lane
de7c8dbea1 Make copyright.pl cope with nonstandard case choices in copyright notices.
The need for this is shown by the files it missed in Bruce's recent run.
I fixed it so that it will actually adjust the case when needed.

In passing, also make it skip .po files, since those will just get
overwritten anyway from the translation repository.
2016-01-02 14:45:21 -05:00
Tom Lane
48c9f2889a Update copyright for 2016
On closer inspection, the reason copyright.pl was missing files is
that it is looking for 'Copyright (c)' and they had 'Copyright (C)'.
Fix that, and update a couple more that grepping for that revealed.
2016-01-02 14:19:48 -05:00
Tom Lane
ad08bf5c8b Update copyright for 2016
Manually fix some copyright lines missed by the automated script.
2016-01-02 14:08:55 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
ee94300446 Update copyright for 2016
Backpatch certain files through 9.1
2016-01-02 13:33:40 -05:00
Noah Misch
dfcd9cb302 Cover heap_page_prune_opt()'s cleanup lock tactic in README.
Jeff Janes, reviewed by Jim Nasby.
2016-01-01 21:52:22 -05:00
Tom Lane
c7e27becd2 Teach flatten_reloptions() to quote option values safely.
flatten_reloptions() supposed that it didn't really need to do anything
beyond inserting commas between reloption array elements.  However, in
principle the value of a reloption could be nearly anything, since the
grammar allows a quoted string there.  Any restrictions on it would come
from validity checking appropriate to the particular option, if any.

A reloption value that isn't a simple identifier or number could thus lead
to dump/reload failures due to syntax errors in CREATE statements issued
by pg_dump.  We've gotten away with not worrying about this so far with
the core-supported reloptions, but extensions might allow reloption values
that cause trouble, as in bug #13840 from Kouhei Sutou.

To fix, split the reloption array elements explicitly, and then convert
any value that doesn't look like a safe identifier to a string literal.
(The details of the quoting rule could be debated, but this way is safe
and requires little code.)  While we're at it, also quote reloption names
if they're not safe identifiers; that may not be a likely problem in the
field, but we might as well try to be bulletproof here.

It's been like this for a long time, so back-patch to all supported
branches.

Kouhei Sutou, adjusted some by me
2016-01-01 15:27:53 -05:00
Tom Lane
3c93a60f60 Add some more defenses against silly estimates to gincostestimate().
A report from Andy Colson showed that gincostestimate() was not being
nearly paranoid enough about whether to believe the statistics it finds in
the index metapage.  The problem is that the metapage stats (other than the
pending-pages count) are only updated by VACUUM, and in the worst case
could still reflect the index's original empty state even when it has grown
to many entries.  We attempted to deal with that by scaling up the stats to
match the current index size, but if nEntries is zero then scaling it up
still gives zero.  Moreover, the proportion of pages that are entry pages
vs. data pages vs. pending pages is unlikely to be estimated very well by
scaling if the index is now orders of magnitude larger than before.

We can improve matters by expanding the use of the rule-of-thumb estimates
I introduced in commit 7fb008c5ee: if the index has grown by more
than a cutoff amount (here set at 4X growth) since VACUUM, then use the
rule-of-thumb numbers instead of scaling.  This might not be exactly right
but it seems much less likely to produce insane estimates.

I also improved both the scaling estimate and the rule-of-thumb estimate
to account for numPendingPages, since it's reasonable to expect that that
is accurate in any case, and certainly pages that are in the pending list
are not either entry or data pages.

As a somewhat separate issue, adjust the estimation equations that are
concerned with extra fetches for partial-match searches.  These equations
suppose that a fraction partialEntries / numEntries of the entry and data
pages will be visited as a consequence of a partial-match search.  Now,
it's physically impossible for that fraction to exceed one, but our
estimate of partialEntries is mostly bunk, and our estimate of numEntries
isn't exactly gospel either, so we could arrive at a silly value.  In the
example presented by Andy we were coming out with a value of 100, leading
to insane cost estimates.  Clamp the fraction to one to avoid that.

Like the previous patch, back-patch to all supported branches; this
problem can be demonstrated in one form or another in all of them.
2016-01-01 13:42:21 -05:00
Noah Misch
3cd1ba147e Fix comments about WAL rule "write xlog before data" versus pg_multixact.
Recovery does not achieve its goal of zeroing all pg_multixact entries
whose accompanying WAL records never reached disk.  Remove that claim
and justify its expendability.  Detail the need for TrimMultiXact(),
which has little in common with the TrimCLOG() rationale.  Merge two
tightly-related comments.  Stop presenting pg_multixact as specific to
heap_lock_tuple(); PostgreSQL 9.3 extended its use to heap_update().

Noticed while investigating a report from Andres Freund.
2016-01-01 01:46:46 -05:00
Tom Lane
0dab5ef39b Fix ALTER OPERATOR to update dependencies properly.
Fix an oversight in commit 321eed5f0f: replacing an operator's
selectivity functions needs to result in a corresponding update in
pg_depend.  We have a function that can handle that, but it was not
called by AlterOperator().

To fix this without enlarging pg_operator.h's #include list beyond
what clients can safely include, split off the function definitions
into a new file pg_operator_fn.h, similarly to what we've done for
some other catalog header files.  It's not entirely clear whether
any client-side code needs to include pg_operator.h, but it seems
prudent to assume that there is some such code somewhere.
2015-12-31 17:37:31 -05:00
Tom Lane
e5d06f2b12 Dept of second thoughts: the !scan_all exit mustn't increase scanned_pages.
In the extreme edge case where contended pages are the only ones that
escape being scanned, the previous commit would have allowed us to think
that relfrozenxid could be advanced, which is exactly wrong.
2015-12-30 17:32:23 -05:00
Tom Lane
e842908233 Avoid useless truncation attempts during VACUUM.
VACUUM can skip heap pages altogether when there's a run of consecutive
pages that are all-visible according to the visibility map.  This causes it
to not update its nonempty_pages count, just as if those pages were empty,
which means that at the end we will think they are candidates for deletion.
Thus, we may take the table's AccessExclusive lock only to find that no
pages are really truncatable.  This usually causes no real problems on a
master server, thanks to the lock being acquired only conditionally; but on
hot-standby servers, the same lock must be acquired unconditionally which
can result in unnecessary query cancellations.

To improve matters, force examination of the table's last page whenever
we reach there with a nonempty_pages count that would allow a truncation
attempt.  If it's not empty, we'll advance nonempty_pages and thereby
prevent the truncation attempt.

If we are unable to acquire cleanup lock on that page, there's no need to
force it, unless we're doing an anti-wraparound vacuum.  We can just check
for tuples with a shared buffer lock and then give up.  (When we are doing
an anti-wraparound vacuum, and decide it's okay to skip the page because it
contains no freezable tuples, this patch still improves matters because
nonempty_pages is properly updated, which it was not before.)

Since only the last page is special-cased in this way, we might attempt a
truncation that will release many fewer pages than the normal heuristic
would suggest; at worst, only one page would be truncated.  But that seems
all right, because the situation won't repeat during the next vacuum.
The real problem with the old logic is that the useless truncation attempt
happens every time we vacuum, so long as the state of the last few dozen
pages doesn't change.

This is a longstanding deficiency, but since the consequences aren't very
severe in most scenarios, I'm not going to risk a back-patch.

Jeff Janes and Tom Lane
2015-12-30 17:13:15 -05:00
Tom Lane
efe4c9d704 Add some comments about division of labor between rewriter and planner.
The rationale for the way targetlist processing is done wasn't clearly
stated anywhere, and I for one had forgotten some of the details.  Having
just painfully re-learned them, add some breadcrumbs for the next person.
2015-12-29 18:50:35 -05:00
Tom Lane
fd19525756 Put back one copyObject() in rewriteTargetView().
Commit 6f8cb1e234 tried to centralize rewriteTargetView's copying
of a target view's Query struct.  However, it ignored the fact that the
jointree->quals field was used twice.  This only accidentally failed to
fail immediately because the same ChangeVarNodes mutation is applied in
both cases, so that we end up with logically identical expression trees
for both uses (and, as the code stands, the second ChangeVarNodes call
actually does nothing).  However, we end up linking *physically*
identical expression trees into both an RTE's securityQuals list and
the WithCheckOption list.  That's pretty dangerous, mainly because
prepsecurity.c is utterly cavalier about further munging such structures
without copying them first.

There may be no live bug in HEAD as a consequence of the fact that we apply
preprocess_expression in between here and prepsecurity.c, and that will
make a copy of the tree anyway.  Or it may just be that the regression
tests happen to not trip over it.  (I noticed this only because things
fell over pretty badly when I tried to relocate the planner's call of
expand_security_quals to before expression preprocessing.)  In any case
it's very fragile because if anyone tried to make the securityQuals and
WithCheckOption trees diverge before we reach preprocess_expression, it
would not work.  The fact that the current code will preprocess
securityQuals and WithCheckOptions lists at completely different times in
different query levels does nothing to increase my trust that that can't
happen.

In view of the fact that 9.5.0 is almost upon us and the aforesaid commit
has seen exactly zero field testing, the prudent course is to make an extra
copy of the quals so that the behavior is not different from what has been
in the field during beta.
2015-12-29 16:45:47 -05:00
Joe Conway
241448b23a Rename (new|old)estCommitTs to (new|old)estCommitTsXid
The variables newestCommitTs and oldestCommitTs sound as if they are
timestamps, but in fact they are the transaction Ids that correspond
to the newest and oldest timestamps rather than the actual timestamps.
Rename these variables to reflect that they are actually xids: to wit
newestCommitTsXid and oldestCommitTsXid respectively. Also modify
related code in a similar fashion, particularly the user facing output
emitted by pg_controldata and pg_resetxlog.

Complaint and patch by me, review by Tom Lane and Alvaro Herrera.
Backpatch to 9.5 where these variables were first introduced.
2015-12-28 12:34:11 -08:00
Tom Lane
870df2b3b7 Fix omission of -X (--no-psqlrc) in some psql invocations.
As of commit d5563d7df, psql -c no longer implies -X, but not all of
our regression testing scripts had gotten that memo.

To ensure consistency of results across different developers, make
sure that *all* invocations of psql in all scripts in our tree
use -X, even where this is not what previously happened.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane
2015-12-28 11:46:43 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
fc995bfdbf Fix translation domain in pg_basebackup
For some reason, we've been overlooking the fact that pg_receivexlog
and pg_recvlogical are using wrong translation domains all along,
so their output hasn't ever been translated.  The right domain is
pg_basebackup, not their own executable names.

Noticed by Ioseph Kim, who's been working on the Korean translation.

Backpatch pg_receivexlog to 9.2 and pg_recvlogical to 9.4.
2015-12-28 10:50:35 -03:00
Tom Lane
fec1ad94df Include typmod when complaining about inherited column type mismatches.
MergeAttributes() rejects cases where columns to be merged have the same
type but different typmod, which is correct; but the error message it
printed didn't show either typmod, which is unhelpful.  Changing this
requires using format_type_with_typemod() in place of TypeNameToString(),
which will have some minor side effects on the way some type names are
printed, but on balance this is an improvement: the old code sometimes
printed one type according to one set of rules and the other type according
to the other set, which could be confusing in its own way.

Oddly, there were no regression test cases covering any of this behavior,
so add some.

Complaint and fix by Amit Langote
2015-12-26 13:41:29 -05:00
Tom Lane
3d2b31e30e Fix brin_summarize_new_values() to check index type and ownership.
brin_summarize_new_values() did not check that the passed OID was for
an index at all, much less that it was a BRIN index, and would fail in
obscure ways if it wasn't (possibly damaging data first?).  It also
lacked any permissions test; by analogy to VACUUM, we should only allow
the table's owner to summarize.

Noted by Jeff Janes, fix by Michael Paquier and me
2015-12-26 12:56:09 -05:00
Fujii Masao
8014c44e82 Improve SECURITY LABEL tab completion
Add DATABASE, EVENT TRIGGER, FOREIGN TABLE, ROLE, and TABLESPACE to
tab completion for SECURITY LABEL.

Kyotaro Horiguchi
2015-12-25 22:56:01 +09:00
Tom Lane
a9246fbf66 Remove unnecessary row ordering dependency in pg_rewind test suite.
t/002_databases.pl was expecting to see a specific physical order of the
rows in pg_database.  I broke that in HEAD with commit 01e386a325,
but I'd say it's a pretty fragile test methodology in any case, so fix
it in 9.5 as well.
2015-12-24 11:38:31 -05:00
Tom Lane
96cd61a169 Fix factual and grammatical errors in comments for struct _tableInfo.
Amit Langote, further adjusted by me
2015-12-24 10:42:58 -05:00
Tom Lane
01e386a325 Avoid VACUUM FULL altogether in initdb.
Commit ed7b3b3811 purported to remove initdb's use of VACUUM FULL,
as had been agreed to in a pghackers discussion back in Dec 2014.
But it missed this one ...
2015-12-23 20:09:01 -05:00
Tom Lane
ff402ae11b Improve handling of password reuse in src/bin/scripts programs.
This reverts most of commit 83dec5a71 in favor of having connectDatabase()
store the possibly-reusable password in a static variable, similar to the
coding we've had for a long time in pg_dump's version of that function.
To avoid possible problems with unwanted password reuse, make callers
specify whether it's reasonable to attempt to re-use the password.
This is a wash for cases where re-use isn't needed, but it is far simpler
for callers that do want that.  Functionally there should be no difference.

Even though we're past RC1, it seems like a good idea to back-patch this
into 9.5, like the prior commit.  Otherwise, if there are any third-party
users of connectDatabase(), they'll have to deal with an API change in
9.5 and then another one in 9.6.

Michael Paquier
2015-12-23 15:45:43 -05:00
Tom Lane
1aa41e3eae In pg_dump, remember connection passwords no matter how we got them.
When pg_dump prompts the user for a password, it remembers the password
for possible re-use by parallel worker processes.  However, libpq might
have extracted the password from a connection string originally passed
as "dbname".  Since we don't record the original form of dbname but
break it down to host/port/etc, the password gets lost.  Fix that by
retrieving the actual password from the PGconn.

(It strikes me that this whole approach is rather broken, as it will also
lose other information such as options that might have been present in
the connection string.  But we'll leave that problem for another day.)

In passing, get rid of rather silly use of malloc() for small fixed-size
arrays.

Back-patch to 9.3 where parallel pg_dump was introduced.

Report and fix by Zeus Kronion, adjusted a bit by Michael Paquier and me
2015-12-23 14:25:53 -05:00
Robert Haas
bc7fcab5e3 Read from the same worker repeatedly until it returns no tuple.
The original coding read tuples from workers in round-robin fashion,
but performance testing shows that it works much better to read enough
to empty one queue before moving on to the next.  I believe the
reason for this is that, with the old approach, we could easily wake
up a worker repeatedly to write only one new tuple into the shm_mq
each time.  With this approach, by the time the process gets scheduled,
it has a decent chance of being able to fill the entire buffer in
one go.

Patch by me.  Dilip Kumar helped with performance testing.
2015-12-23 14:06:52 -05:00
Robert Haas
51d152f18e Change Gather not to use a physical tlist.
This should have been part of the original commit, but was missed.
Pushing data between processes is expensive, so we definitely want
to project away unneeded columns here, just as we do for other nodes
like Sort and Hash that care about the volume of data.
2015-12-23 13:41:06 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
30c0c4bf12 Remove unnecessary escaping in C character literals
'\"' is more commonly written simply as '"'.
2015-12-22 22:43:46 -05:00
Tom Lane
6efbded6e4 Allow omitting one or both boundaries in an array slice specifier.
Omitted boundaries represent the upper or lower limit of the corresponding
array subscript.  This allows simpler specification of many common
use-cases.

(Revised version of commit 9246af6799)

YUriy Zhuravlev
2015-12-22 21:05:29 -05:00
Robert Haas
0ba3f3bc65 Comment improvements for abbreviated keys.
Peter Geoghegan and Robert Haas
2015-12-22 13:57:18 -05:00
Robert Haas
ccd8f97922 postgres_fdw: Consider requesting sorted data so we can do a merge join.
When use_remote_estimate is enabled, consider adding ORDER BY to the
query we sending to the remote server so that we can use that ordered
data for a merge join.  Commit f18c944b61
arranges to push down the query pathkeys, which seems like the case
mostly likely to be a win, but testing shows this can sometimes win,
too.

For a regular table, we know which indexes are present and therefore
test whether the ordering provided by each such index is useful.  Here,
we take the opposite approach: guess what orderings would be useful if
they could be generated cheaply, and then ask the remote side what those
will cost.

Ashutosh Bapat, with very substantial cosmetic revisions by me.  Also
reviewed by Rushabh Lathia.
2015-12-22 13:46:40 -05:00
Tom Lane
f5a4370aea Fix calculation of space needed for parsed words in tab completion.
Yesterday in commit d854118c8, I had a serious brain fade leading me to
underestimate the number of words that the tab-completion logic could
divide a line into.  On input such as "(((((", each character will get
seen as a separate word, which means we do indeed sometimes need more
space for the words than for the original line.  Fix that.
2015-12-21 15:08:56 -05:00
Stephen Frost
6f8cb1e234 Make viewquery a copy in rewriteTargetView()
Rather than expect the Query returned by get_view_query() to be
read-only and then copy bits and pieces of it out, simply copy the
entire structure when we get it.  This addresses an issue where
AcquireRewriteLocks, which is called by acquireLocksOnSubLinks(),
scribbles on the parsetree passed in, which was actually an entry
in relcache, leading to segfaults with certain view definitions.
This also future-proofs us a bit for anyone adding more code to this
path.

The acquireLocksOnSubLinks() was added in commit c3e0ddd40.

Back-patch to 9.3 as that commit was.
2015-12-21 10:34:14 -05:00
Tom Lane
99ccb23092 Remove silly completion for "DELETE FROM tabname ...".
psql offered USING, WHERE, and SET in this context, but SET is not a valid
possibility here.  Seems to have been a thinko in commit f5ab0a14ea
which added DELETE's USING option.
2015-12-20 18:29:51 -05:00
Tom Lane
d854118c8d Teach psql's tab completion to consider the entire input string.
Up to now, the tab completion logic has only examined the last few words
of the current input line; "last few" being originally as few as four
words, but lately up to nine words.  Furthermore, it only looked at what
libreadline considers the current line of input, which made it rather
myopic if you split your command across lines.  This was tolerable,
sort of, so long as the match patterns were only designed to consider the
last few words of input; but with the recent addition of HeadMatches()
and Matches() matching rules, we really have to do better if we want
those to behave sanely.

Hence, change the code to break the entire line down into words, and to
include any previous lines in the command buffer along with the active
readline input buffer.

This will be a little bit slower than the previous coding, but some
measurements say that even a query of several thousand characters can be
parsed in a hundred or so microseconds on modern machines; so it's really
not going to be significant for interactive tab completion.  To reduce
the cost some, I arranged to avoid the per-word malloc calls that used
to occur: all the words are now kept in one malloc'd buffer.
2015-12-20 13:28:18 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
69e7c44fc6 psql: Review of new help output strings 2015-12-20 11:50:04 -05:00
Tom Lane
654218138b Add missing COSTS OFF to EXPLAIN commands in rowsecurity.sql.
Commit e5e11c8cc added a bunch of EXPLAIN statements without COSTS OFF
to the regression tests.  This is contrary to project policy since it
results in unnecessary platform dependencies in the output (it's just
luck that we didn't get buildfarm failures from it).  Per gripe from
Mike Wilson.
2015-12-19 16:55:14 -05:00
Tom Lane
d37b816dc9 Adopt a more compact, less error-prone notation for tab completion code.
Replace tests like

    else if (pg_strcasecmp(prev4_wd, "CREATE") == 0 &&
             pg_strcasecmp(prev3_wd, "TRIGGER") == 0 &&
             (pg_strcasecmp(prev_wd, "BEFORE") == 0 ||
              pg_strcasecmp(prev_wd, "AFTER") == 0))

with new notation like this:

    else if (TailMatches4("CREATE", "TRIGGER", MatchAny, "BEFORE|AFTER"))

In addition, provide some macros COMPLETE_WITH_LISTn() to reduce the amount
of clutter needed to specify a small number of predetermined completion
alternatives.

This makes the code substantially more compact: tab-complete.c gets over a
thousand lines shorter in this patch, despite the addition of a couple of
hundred lines of infrastructure for the new notations.  The new way of
specifying match rules seems a whole lot more readable and less
error-prone, too.

There's a lot more that could be done now to make matching faster and more
reliable; for example I suspect that most of the TailMatches() rules should
now be Matches() rules.  That would allow them to be skipped after a single
integer comparison if there aren't the right number of words on the line,
and it would reduce the risk of unintended matches.  But for now, (mostly)
refrain from reworking any match rules in favor of just converting what
we've got into the new notation.

Thomas Munro, reviewed by Michael Paquier, some adjustments by me
2015-12-19 16:03:14 -05:00
Andres Freund
130d94a7b8 Fix tab completion for ALTER ... TABLESPACE ... OWNED BY.
Previously the completion used the wrong word to match 'BY'. This was
introduced brokenly, in b2de2a. While at it, also add completion of
IN TABLESPACE ... OWNED BY and fix comments referencing nonexistent
syntax.

Reported-By: Michael Paquier
Author: Michael Paquier and Andres Freund
Discussion: CAB7nPqSHDdSwsJqX0d2XzjqOHr==HdWiubCi4L=Zs7YFTUne8w@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 9.4, like the commit introducing the bug
2015-12-19 17:37:11 +01:00
Teodor Sigaev
bbbd807097 Revert 9246af6799 because
I miss too much. Patch is returned to commitfest process.
2015-12-18 21:35:22 +03:00
Robert Haas
3c7042a7d7 pgbench: Change terminology from "threshold" to "parameter".
Per a recommendation from Tomas Vondra, it's more helpful to refer to
the value that determines how skewed a Gaussian or exponential
distribution is as a parameter rather than a threshold.

Since it's not quite too late to get this right in 9.5, where it was
introduced, back-patch this.  Most of the patch changes only comments
and documentation, but a few pgbench messages are altered to match.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Michael Paquier and by me.
2015-12-18 13:24:51 -05:00
Robert Haas
6e7b335930 Remove duplicate word.
Kyotaro Horiguchi
2015-12-18 12:43:52 -05:00
Robert Haas
2bdfcb52c5 Fix TupleQueueReaderNext not to ignore its nowait argument.
This was a silly goof on my (rhaas's) part.

Report and fix by Rushabh Lathia.
2015-12-18 12:37:43 -05:00
Robert Haas
4496226782 Fix copy-and-paste error in logical decoding callback.
This could result in the error context misidentifying where the error
actually occurred.

Craig Ringer
2015-12-18 12:17:35 -05:00
Robert Haas
9a51698bae Fix typo in comment.
Amit Langote
2015-12-18 12:03:15 -05:00
Teodor Sigaev
9246af6799 Allow to omit boundaries in array subscript
Allow to omiy lower or upper or both boundaries in array subscript
for selecting slice of array.

Author: YUriy Zhuravlev
2015-12-18 15:18:58 +03:00
Tom Lane
3d0c50ffa0 Remove unreferenced function declarations.
datapagemap_create() and datapagemap_destroy() were declared extern,
but they don't actually exist anywhere.  Per YUriy Zhuravlev and
Michael Paquier.
2015-12-17 20:21:42 -05:00
Tom Lane
c4a8812cf6 Use just one standalone-backend session for initdb's post-bootstrap steps.
Previously, each subroutine in initdb fired up its own standalone backend
session.  Over time we'd grown as many as fifteen of these sessions,
and the cumulative startup and shutdown work for them was getting pretty
noticeable.  Combining things so that all these steps share a single
backend session cuts a good 10% off the total runtime of initdb, more
if you're not fsync'ing.

The main stumbling block to doing this before was that some of the sessions
were run with -j and some not.  The improved definition of -j mode
implemented by my previous commit makes it possible to fix that by running
all the post-bootstrap steps with -j; we just have to use double instead of
single newlines to end command strings.  (This is only absolutely necessary
around the VACUUM and CREATE DATABASE steps, since those can't be run in a
transaction block.  But it seems best to make them all use double newlines
so that the commands remain separate for error-reporting purposes.)

A minor disadvantage is that since initdb can't tell how much of its
output the backend has executed, we can no longer have the per-step
progress reporting initdb used to print.  But things are fast enough
nowadays that that's not really all that useful anyway.

In passing, add more const decoration to some of the static arrays in
initdb.c.
2015-12-17 19:38:21 -05:00
Tom Lane
66d947b9d3 Adjust behavior of single-user -j mode for better initdb error reporting.
Previously, -j caused the entire input file to be read in and executed as
a single command string.  That's undesirable, not least because any error
causes the entire file to be regurgitated as the "failing query".  Some
experimentation suggests a better rule: end the command string when we see
a semicolon immediately followed by two newlines, ie, an empty line after
a query.  This serves nicely to break up the existing examples such as
information_schema.sql and system_views.sql.  A limitation is that it's
no longer possible to write such a sequence within a string literal or
multiline comment in a file meant to be read with -j; but there are no
instances of such a problem within the data currently used by initdb.
(If someone does make such a mistake in future, it'll be obvious because
they'll get an unterminated-literal or unterminated-comment syntax error.)
Other than that, there shouldn't be any negative consequences; you're not
forced to end statements that way, it's just a better idea in most cases.

In passing, remove src/include/tcop/tcopdebug.h, which is dead code
because it's not included anywhere, and hasn't been for more than
ten years.  One of the debug-support symbols it purported to describe
has been unreferenced for at least the same amount of time, and the
other is removed by this commit on the grounds that it was useless:
forcing -j mode all the time would have broken initdb.  The lack of
complaints about that, or about the missing inclusion, shows that
no one has tried to use TCOP_DONTUSENEWLINE in many years.
2015-12-17 19:34:15 -05:00
Tom Lane
aee7705be5 Fix improper initialization order for readline.
Turns out we must set rl_basic_word_break_characters *before* we call
rl_initialize() the first time, because it will quietly copy that value
elsewhere --- but only on the first call.  (Love these undocumented
dependencies.)  I broke this yesterday in commit 2ec477dc8108339d;
like that commit, back-patch to all active branches.  Per report from
Pavel Stehule.
2015-12-17 16:55:23 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
756e7b4c9d Rework internals of changing a type's ownership
This is necessary so that REASSIGN OWNED does the right thing with
composite types, to wit, that it also alters ownership of the type's
pg_class entry -- previously, the pg_class entry remained owned by the
original user, which caused later other failures such as the new owner's
inability to use ALTER TYPE to rename an attribute of the affected
composite.  Also, if the original owner is later dropped, the pg_class
entry becomes owned by a non-existant user which is bogus.

To fix, create a new routine AlterTypeOwner_oid which knows whether to
pass the request to ATExecChangeOwner or deal with it directly, and use
that in shdepReassignOwner rather than calling AlterTypeOwnerInternal
directly.  AlterTypeOwnerInternal is now simpler in that it only
modifies the pg_type entry and recurses to handle a possible array type;
higher-level tasks are handled by either AlterTypeOwner directly or
AlterTypeOwner_oid.

I took the opportunity to add a few more objects to the test rig for
REASSIGN OWNED, so that more cases are exercised.  Additional ones could
be added for superuser-only-ownable objects (such as FDWs and event
triggers) but I didn't want to push my luck by adding a new superuser to
the tests on a backpatchable bug fix.

Per bug #13666 reported by Chris Pacejo.

Backpatch to 9.5.

(I would back-patch this all the way back, except that it doesn't apply
cleanly in 9.4 and earlier because 59367fdf9 wasn't backpatched.  If we
decide that we need this in earlier branches too, we should backpatch
both.)
2015-12-17 14:25:41 -03:00
Tom Lane
2ec477dc81 Cope with Readline's failure to track SIGWINCH events outside of input.
It emerges that libreadline doesn't notice terminal window size change
events unless they occur while collecting input.  This is easy to stumble
over if you resize the window while using a pager to look at query output,
but it can be demonstrated without any pager involvement.  The symptom is
that queries exceeding one line are misdisplayed during subsequent input
cycles, because libreadline has the wrong idea of the screen dimensions.

The safest, simplest way to fix this is to call rl_reset_screen_size()
just before calling readline().  That causes an extra ioctl(TIOCGWINSZ)
for every command; but since it only happens when reading from a tty, the
performance impact should be negligible.  A more valid objection is that
this still leaves a tiny window during entry to readline() wherein delivery
of SIGWINCH will be missed; but the practical consequences of that are
probably negligible.  In any case, there doesn't seem to be any good way to
avoid the race, since readline exposes no functions that seem safe to call
from a generic signal handler --- rl_reset_screen_size() certainly isn't.

It turns out that we also need an explicit rl_initialize() call, else
rl_reset_screen_size() dumps core when called before the first readline()
call.

rl_reset_screen_size() is not present in old versions of libreadline,
so we need a configure test for that.  (rl_initialize() is present at
least back to readline 4.0, so we won't bother with a test for it.)
We would need a configure test anyway since libedit's emulation of
libreadline doesn't currently include such a function.  Fortunately,
libedit seems not to have any corresponding bug.

Merlin Moncure, adjusted a bit by me
2015-12-16 16:59:35 -05:00
Robert Haas
b648b70342 Speed up CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY's TID sort.
Encode TIDs as 64-bit integers to speed up comparisons.  This seems to
speed things up on all platforms, but is even more beneficial when
8-byte integers are passed by value.

Peter Geoghegan.  Design suggestions and review by Tom Lane.  Review
also by Simon Riggs and by me.
2015-12-16 15:23:45 -05:00
Robert Haas
f27a6b15e6 Mark CHECK constraints declared NOT VALID valid if created with table.
FOREIGN KEY constraints have behaved this way for a long time, but for
some reason the behavior of CHECK constraints has been inconsistent up
until now.

Amit Langote and Amul Sul, with assorted tweaks by me.
2015-12-16 07:43:56 -05:00
Robert Haas
049469e7e7 Teach mdnblocks() not to create zero-length files.
It's entirely surprising that mdnblocks() has the side effect of
creating new files on disk, so let's make it not do that.  One
consequence of the old behavior is that, if running on a damaged
cluster that is missing a file, mdnblocks() can recreate the file
and allow a subsequent _mdfd_getseg() for a higher segment to succeed.
This happens because, while mdnblocks() stops when it finds a segment
that is shorter than 1GB, _mdfd_getseg() has no such check, and thus
the empty file created by mdnblocks() can allow it to continue its
traversal and find higher-numbered segments which remain.

It might be a good idea for _mdfd_getseg() to actually verify that
each segment it finds is exactly 1GB before proceeding to the next
one, but that would involve some additional system calls, so for
now I'm just doing this much.

Patch by me, per off-list analysis by Kevin Grittner and Rahila Syed.
Review by Andres Freund.
2015-12-15 13:57:45 -05:00
Robert Haas
6150a1b08a Move buffer I/O and content LWLocks out of the main tranche.
Move the content lock directly into the BufferDesc, so that locking and
pinning a buffer touches only one cache line rather than two.  Adjust
the definition of BufferDesc slightly so that this doesn't make the
BufferDesc any larger than one cache line (at least on platforms where
a spinlock is only 1 or 2 bytes).

We can't fit the I/O locks into the BufferDesc and stay within one
cache line, so move those to a completely separate tranche.  This
leaves a relatively limited number of LWLocks in the main tranche, so
increase the padding of those remaining locks to a full cache line,
rather than allowing adjacent locks to share a cache line, hopefully
reducing false sharing.

Performance testing shows that these changes make little difference
on laptop-class machines, but help significantly on larger servers,
especially those with more than 2 sockets.

Andres Freund, originally based on an earlier patch by Simon Riggs.
Review and cosmetic adjustments (including heavy rewriting of the
comments) by me.
2015-12-15 13:32:54 -05:00
Robert Haas
3fed417452 Provide a way to predefine LWLock tranche IDs.
It's a bit cumbersome to use LWLockNewTrancheId(), because the returned
value needs to be shared between backends so that each backend can call
LWLockRegisterTranche() with the correct ID.  So, for built-in tranches,
use a hard-coded value instead.

This is motivated by an upcoming patch adding further built-in tranches.

Andres Freund and Robert Haas
2015-12-15 11:48:19 -05:00
Stephen Frost
e5e11c8cca Collect the global OR of hasRowSecurity flags for plancache
We carry around information about if a given query has row security or
not to allow the plancache to use that information to invalidate a
planned query in the event that the environment changes.

Previously, the flag of one of the subqueries was simply being copied
into place to indicate if the query overall included RLS components.
That's wrong as we need the global OR of all subqueries.  Fix by
changing the code to match how fireRIRules works, which is results
in OR'ing all of the flags.

Noted by Tom.

Back-patch to 9.5 where RLS was introduced.
2015-12-14 20:05:43 -05:00
Tom Lane
db81329eed Add missing cleanup logic in pg_rewind/t/005_same_timeline.pl test.
Per Michael Paquier
2015-12-14 19:22:50 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
0d8f3d5d11 Add missing CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS in lseg_inside_poly
Apparently, there are bugs in this code that cause it to loop endlessly.
That bug still needs more research, but in the meantime it's clear that
the loop is missing a check for interrupts so that it can be cancelled
timely.

Backpatch to 9.1 -- this has been missing since 49475aab8d.
2015-12-14 16:44:40 -03:00
Kevin Grittner
e2f1765ce0 Remove xmlparse(document '') test
This one test was behaving differently between the ubuntu fix for
CVE-2015-7499 and the base "expected" file.  It's not worth having
yet another version of the expected file for this test, so drop it.
Perhaps at some point when all distros have settled down to the
same behavior on this test, it can be restored.

Problem found by me on libxml2 (2.9.1+dfsg1-3ubuntu4.6).
Solution suggested by Tom Lane.
Backpatch to 9.5, where the test was added.
2015-12-14 11:37:26 -06:00
Heikki Linnakangas
7b96bf445a Fix out-of-memory error handling in ParameterDescription message processing.
If libpq ran out of memory while constructing the result set, it would hang,
waiting for more data from the server, which might never arrive. To fix,
distinguish between out-of-memory error and not-enough-data cases, and give
a proper error message back to the client on OOM.

There are still similar issues in handling COPY start messages, but let's
handle that as a separate patch.

Michael Paquier, Amit Kapila and me. Backpatch to all supported versions.
2015-12-14 18:19:10 +02:00
Andres Freund
cca705a5d9 Fix bug in SetOffsetVacuumLimit() triggered by find_multixact_start() failure.
Previously, if find_multixact_start() failed, SetOffsetVacuumLimit() would
install 0 into MultiXactState->offsetStopLimit if it previously succeeded.
Luckily, there are no known cases where find_multixact_start() will return
an error in 9.5 and above. But if it were to happen, for example due to
filesystem permission issues, it'd be somewhat bad: GetNewMultiXactId()
could continue allocating mxids even if close to a wraparound, or it could
erroneously stop allocating mxids, even if no wraparound is looming.  The
wrong value would be corrected the next time SetOffsetVacuumLimit() is
called, or by a restart.

Reported-By: Noah Misch, although this is not his preferred fix
Discussion: 20151210140450.GA22278@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.5, where the bug was introduced as part of 4f627f
2015-12-14 11:34:16 +01:00
Andres Freund
2a3544960e Correct statement to actually be the intended assert statement.
e3f4cfc7 introduced a LWLockHeldByMe() call, without the corresponding
Assert() surrounding it.

Spotted by Coverity.

Backpatch: 9.1+, like the previous commit
2015-12-14 11:23:24 +01:00
Tom Lane
fcbbf82d2b Code and docs review for multiple -c and -f options in psql.
Commit d5563d7df9 drew complaints from Coverity, which quite
correctly complained that one copy of each -c or -f string was being
leaked.  What's more, simple_action_list_append was allocating enough space
for still a third copy of each string as part of the SimpleActionListCell,
even though that coding method had been superseded by a separate strdup
operation.  There were some other minor coding infelicities too.  The
documentation needed more work as well, eg it forgot to explain that -c
causes psql not to accept any interactive input.
2015-12-13 14:52:07 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
a91bdf67c4 Consistently set all fields in pg_stat_replication to null instead of 0
Previously the "sent" field would be set to 0 and all other xlog
pointers be set to NULL if there were no valid values (such as when
in a backup sending walsender).
2015-12-13 16:53:38 +01:00
Magnus Hagander
263c19572b Properly initialize write, flush and replay locations in walsender slots
These would leak random xlog positions if a walsender used for backup would
a walsender slot previously used by a replication walsender.

In passing also fix a couple of cases where the xlog pointer is directly
compared to zero instead of using XLogRecPtrIsInvalid, noted by
Michael Paquier.
2015-12-13 16:46:56 +01:00
Andres Freund
f54d0629ec Fix ALTER TABLE ... SET TABLESPACE for unlogged relations.
Changing the tablespace of an unlogged relation did not WAL log the
creation and content of the init fork. Thus, after a standby is
promoted, unlogged relation cannot be accessed anymore, with errors
like:
ERROR:  58P01: could not open file "pg_tblspc/...": No such file or directory
Additionally the init fork was not synced to disk, independent of the
configured wal_level, a relatively small durability risk.

Investigation of that problem also brought to light that, even for
permanent relations, the creation of !main forks was not WAL logged,
i.e. no XLOG_SMGR_CREATE record were emitted. That mostly turns out not
to be a problem, because these files were created when the actual
relation data is copied; nonexistent files are not treated as an error
condition during replay. But that doesn't work for empty files, and
generally feels a bit haphazard. Luckily, outside init and main forks,
empty forks don't occur often or are not a problem.

Add the required WAL logging and syncing to disk.

Reported-By: Michael Paquier
Author: Michael Paquier and Andres Freund
Discussion: 20151210163230.GA11331@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.1, where unlogged relations were introduced
2015-12-12 14:17:39 +01:00
Tom Lane
085423e3e3 Add an expected-file to match behavior of latest libxml2.
Recent releases of libxml2 do not provide error context reports for errors
detected at the very end of the input string.  This appears to be a bug, or
at least an infelicity, introduced by the fix for libxml2's CVE-2015-7499.
We can hope that this behavioral change will get undone before too long;
but the security patch is likely to spread a lot faster/further than any
follow-on cleanup, which means this behavior is likely to be present in the
wild for some time to come.  As a stopgap, add a variant regression test
expected-file that matches what you get with a libxml2 that acts this way.
2015-12-11 19:09:04 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
6b34e55638 pg_rewind: Don't error if the two clusters are already on the same timeline
This previously resulted in an error and a nonzero exit status, but
after discussion this should rather be a noop with a zero exit status.
2015-12-11 18:32:03 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
8c1615531f For REASSIGN OWNED for foreign user mappings
As reported in bug #13809 by Alexander Ashurkov, the code for REASSIGN
OWNED hadn't gotten word about user mappings.  Deal with them in the
same way default ACLs do, which is to ignore them altogether; they are
handled just fine by DROP OWNED.  The other foreign object cases are
already handled correctly by both commands.

Also add a REASSIGN OWNED statement to foreign_data test to exercise the
foreign data objects.  (The changes are just before the "cleanup" phase,
so it shouldn't remove any existing live test.)

Reported by Alexander Ashurkov, then independently by Jaime Casanova.
2015-12-11 18:39:09 -03:00