Commit Graph

33405 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
4203842a1c Use pg_strong_random() to select each server process's random seed.
Previously we just set the seed based on process ID and start timestamp.
Both those values are directly available within the session, and can
be found out or guessed by other users too, making the session's series
of random(3) values fairly predictable.  Up to now, our backend-internal
uses of random(3) haven't seemed security-critical, but commit 88bdbd3f7
added one that potentially is: when using log_statement_sample_rate, a
user might be able to predict which of his SQL statements will get logged.

To improve this situation, upgrade the per-process seed initialization
method to use pg_strong_random() if available, greatly reducing the
predictability of the initial seed value.  This adds a few tens of
microseconds to process start time, but since backend startup time is
at least a couple of milliseconds, that seems an acceptable price.

This means that pg_strong_random() needs to be able to run without
reliance on any backend infrastructure, since it will be invoked
before any of that is up.  It was safe for that already, but adjust
comments and #include commands to make it clearer.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3859.1545849900@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-29 17:56:06 -05:00
Tom Lane
6645ad6bdd Use a separate random seed for SQL random()/setseed() functions.
Previously, the SQL random() function depended on libc's random(3),
and setseed() invoked srandom(3).  This results in interference between
these functions and backend-internal uses of random(3).  We'd never paid
too much mind to that, but in the wake of commit 88bdbd3f7 which added
log_statement_sample_rate, the interference arguably has a security
consequence: if log_statement_sample_rate is active then an unprivileged
user could probably control which if any of his SQL commands get logged,
by issuing setseed() at the right times.  That seems bad.

To fix this reliably, we need random() and setseed() to use their own
private random state variable.  Standard random(3) isn't amenable to such
usage, so let's switch to pg_erand48().  It's hard to say whether that's
more or less "random" than any particular platform's version of random(3),
but it does have a wider seed value and a longer period than are required
by POSIX, so we can hope that this isn't a big downgrade.  Also, we should
now have uniform behavior of random() across platforms, which is worth
something.

While at it, upgrade the per-process seed initialization method to use
pg_strong_random() if available, greatly reducing the predictability
of the initial seed value.  (I'll separately do something similar for
the internal uses of random().)

In addition to forestalling the possible security problem, this has a
benefit in the other direction, which is that we can now document
setseed() as guaranteeing a reproducible sequence of random() values.
Previously, because of the possibility of internal calls of random(3),
we could not promise any such thing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3859.1545849900@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-29 17:33:27 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
1a4eba4e24 pg_rewind: Add missing newline to error message 2018-12-29 13:02:51 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
e3299d36a9 Remove redundant translation markers
psql_error() already handles that itself.
2018-12-29 12:50:59 +01:00
Michael Paquier
0a5a493f04 Improve description of DEFAULT_XLOG_SEG_SIZE in pg_config.h
This was incorrectly referring to --walsegsize, and its description is
rewritten in a clearer way.

Author: Ian Barwick, Tom Lane
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/08534fc6-119a-c498-254e-d5acc4e6bf85@2ndquadrant.com
2018-12-29 08:24:11 +09:00
Tom Lane
6b9bba2df8 Marginal performance hacking in erand48.c.
Get rid of the multiplier and addend variables in favor of hard-wired
constants.  Do the multiply-and-add using uint64 arithmetic, rather
than manually combining several narrower multiplications and additions.
Make _dorand48 return the full-width new random value, and have its
callers use that directly (after suitable masking) rather than
reconstructing what they need from the unsigned short[] representation.

On my machine, this is good for a nearly factor-of-2 speedup of
pg_erand48(), probably mostly from needing just one call of ldexp()
rather than three.  The wins for the other functions are smaller
but measurable.  While none of the existing call sites are really
performance-critical, a cycle saved is a cycle earned; and besides
the machine code is smaller this way (at least on x86_64).

Patch by me, but the original idea to optimize this by switching
to int64 arithmetic is from Fabien Coelho.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1551.1546018192@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-28 15:06:48 -05:00
Tom Lane
e090466411 Fix latent problem with pg_jrand48().
POSIX specifies that jrand48() returns a signed 32-bit value (in the
range [-2^31, 2^31)), but our code was returning an unsigned 32-bit
value (in the range [0, 2^32)).  This doesn't actually matter to any
existing call site, because they all cast the "long" result to int32
or uint32; but it will doubtless bite somebody in the future.
To fix, cast the arithmetic result to int32 explicitly before the
compiler widens it to long (if widening is needed).

While at it, upgrade this file's far-short-of-project-style comments.
Had there been some peer pressure to document pg_jrand48() properly,
maybe this thinko wouldn't have gotten committed to begin with.

Backpatch to v10 where pg_jrand48() was added, just in case somebody
back-patches a fix that uses it and depends on the standard behavior.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17235.1545951602@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-28 14:09:03 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
4ed6c071b8 Fix thinko in previous commit 2018-12-28 15:18:00 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
e8b0e6b82d Rewrite ExecPartitionCheckEmitError for clarity
The original was hard to follow and failed to comply with DRY principle.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181206222221.g5witbsklvqthjll@alvherre.pgsql
2018-12-28 14:47:05 -03:00
Alexander Korotkov
0c6f4f9212 Reduce length of GIN predicate locking isolation test suite
Isolation test suite of GIN predicate locking was criticized for being too slow,
especially under Valgrind.  This commit is intended to accelerate it.  Tests are
simplified in the following ways.

  1) Amount of data is reduced.  We're now close to the minimal amount of data,
     which produces at least one posting tree and at least two pages of entry
     tree.
  2) Three isolation tests are merged into one.
  3) Only one tuple is queried from posting tree.  So, locking of index is the
     same, but tuple locks are not propagated to relation lock.  Also, it is
     faster.
  4) Test cases itself are simplified.  Now each test case run just one INSERT
     and one SELECT involving GIN, which either conflict or not.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181204000740.ok2q53nvkftwu43a%40alap3.anarazel.de
Reported-by: Andres Freund
Tested-by: Andrew Dunstan
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Backpatch-through: 11
2018-12-28 03:33:10 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut
ae4472c619 Remove obsolete IndexIs* macros
Remove IndexIsValid(), IndexIsReady(), IndexIsLive() in favor of
accessing the index structure directly.  These macros haven't been
used consistently, and the original reason of maintaining source
compatibility with PostgreSQL 9.2 is gone.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/d419147c-09d4-6196-5d9d-0234b230880a%402ndquadrant.com
2018-12-27 10:07:46 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
5c82830797 pg_dump: Add missing newline to error message 2018-12-27 10:03:28 +01:00
Alexander Korotkov
b450abd255 Remove entry tree root conflict checking from GIN predicate locking
According to README we acquire predicate locks on entry tree leafs and posting
tree roots.  However, when ginFindLeafPage() is going to lock leaf in exclusive
mode, then it checks root for conflicts regardless whether it's a entry or
posting tree.  Assuming that we never place predicate lock on entry tree root
(excluding corner case when root is leaf), this check is redundant.  This
commit removes this check.  Now, root conflict checking is controlled by
separate argument of ginFindLeafPage().

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPpHfdv7rrDyy%3DMgsaK-L9kk0AH7az0B-mdC3w3p0FSb9uoyEg%40mail.gmail.com
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Backpatch-through: 11
2018-12-27 04:24:20 +03:00
Michael Paquier
1e504f01da Ignore inherited temp relations from other sessions when truncating
Inheritance trees can include temporary tables if the parent is
permanent, which makes possible the presence of multiple temporary
children from different sessions.  Trying to issue a TRUNCATE on the
parent in this scenario causes a failure, so similarly to any other
queries just ignore such cases, which makes TRUNCATE work
transparently.

This makes truncation behave similarly to any other DML query working on
the parent table with queries which need to be work on the children.  A
set of isolation tests is added to cover basic cases.

Reported-by: Zhou Digoal
Author: Amit Langote, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15565-ce67a48d0244436a@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2018-12-27 10:16:19 +09:00
Tom Lane
8528e3d849 Fix failure to check for open() or fsync() failures.
While it seems OK to not be concerned about fsync() failure for a
pre-existing signal file, it's not OK to not even check for open()
failure.  This at least causes complaints from static analyzers,
and I think on some platforms passing -1 to fsync() or close() might
trigger assertion-type failures.  Also add (void) casts to make clear
that we're ignoring fsync's result intentionally.

Oversights in commit 2dedf4d9a, noted by Coverity.
2018-12-26 16:08:17 -05:00
Tom Lane
e9fcfed3fb Fix portability failure introduced in commits d2b0b60e7 et al.
I made a frontend fprintf() format use %m, forgetting that that's only
safe in HEAD not the back branches; prior to 96bf88d52 and d6c55de1f,
it would work on glibc platforms but not elsewhere.  Revert to using
%s ... strerror(errno) as the code did before.

We could have left HEAD as-is, but for code consistency across branches,
I chose to apply this patch there too.

Per Coverity and a few buildfarm members.
2018-12-26 15:30:10 -05:00
Michael Paquier
f89ae34ab8 Improve tab completion of ALTER INDEX/TABLE with SET STATISTICS in psql
This fixes two issues with the completion of ALTER TABLE and ALTER INDEX
after SET STATISTICS is typed, trying to suggest schema objects while
the grammar only allows integers.

The tab completion of ALTER INDEX is made smarter by handling properly
more patterns.  COLUMN is an optional keyword, but as no column numbers
can be suggested yet as possible input simply adjust the completion so
as no incorrect queries are generated.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Tatsuro Yamada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181219092255.GC680@paquier.xyz
2018-12-25 14:20:46 +09:00
Michael Paquier
b981df4cc0 Prioritize history files when archiving
At the end of recovery for the post-promotion process, a new history
file is created followed by the last partial segment of the previous
timeline.  Based on the timing, the archiver would first try to archive
the last partial segment and then the history file.  This can delay the
detection of a new timeline taken, particularly depending on the time it
takes to transfer the last partial segment as it delays the moment the
history file of the new timeline gets archived.  This can cause promoted
standbys to use the same timeline as one already taken depending on the
circumstances if multiple instances look at archives at the same
location.

This commit changes the order of archiving so as history files are
archived in priority over other file types, which reduces the likelihood
of the same timeline being taken (still not reducing the window to
zero), and it makes the archiver behave more consistently with the
startup process doing its post-promotion business.

Author: David Steele
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/929068cf-69e1-bba2-9dc0-e05986aed471@pgmasters.net
Backpatch-through: 9.5
2018-12-24 20:24:16 +09:00
Michael Paquier
bf491a9073 Disable WAL-skipping optimization for COPY on views and foreign tables
COPY can skip writing WAL when loading data on a table which has been
created in the same transaction as the one loading the data, however
this cannot work on views or foreign table as this would result in
trying to flush relation files which do not exist.  So disable the
optimization so as commands are able to work the same way with any
configuration of wal_level.

Tests are added to cover the different cases, which need to have
wal_level set to minimal to allow the problem to show up, and that is
not the default configuration.

Reported-by: Luis M. Carril, Etsuro Fujita
Author: Amit Langote, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Etsuro Fujita
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15552-c64aa14c5c22f63c@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 10, where support for COPY on views has been added,
while v11 has added support for COPY on foreign tables.
2018-12-23 16:42:22 +09:00
Michael Paquier
11a60d4961 Add completion for storage parameters after CREATE TABLE WITH in psql
In passing, move the list of parameters where it can be used for both
CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE, and reorder it alphabetically.

Author: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d8j1s77kdbb.fsf@dalvik.ping.uio.no
2018-12-23 09:33:49 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
66ca44084d Add WRITE_*_ARRAY macros
Add WRITE_ATTRNUMBER_ARRAY, WRITE_OID_ARRAY, WRITE_INT_ARRAY,
WRITE_BOOL_ARRAY macros to outfuncs.c, mirroring the existing
READ_*_ARRAY macros in readfuncs.c.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/8f2ebc67-e75f-9478-f5a5-bbbf090b1f8d%402ndquadrant.com
2018-12-22 07:45:13 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
323eaf9825 Add some const decorations
These mainly help understanding the function signatures better.
2018-12-22 07:45:09 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
f4eabaf3e0 Fix ancient compiler warnings and typos in !HAVE_SYMLINK code
This has never been correct since this code was introduced.
2018-12-22 07:21:40 +01:00
Alexander Korotkov
c952eae52a Check for conflicting queries during replay of gistvacuumpage()
013ebc0a7b implements so-called GiST microvacuum.  That is gistgettuple() marks
index tuples as dead when kill_prior_tuple is set.  Later, when new tuple
insertion claims page space, those dead index tuples are physically deleted
from page.  When this deletion is replayed on standby, it might conflict with
read-only queries.  But 013ebc0a7b doesn't handle this.  That may lead to
disappearance of some tuples from read-only snapshots on standby.

This commit implements resolving of conflicts between replay of GiST microvacuum
and standby queries.  On the master we implement new WAL record type
XLOG_GIST_DELETE, which comprises necessary information.  On stable releases
we've to be tricky to keep WAL compatibility.  Information required for conflict
processing is just appended to data of XLOG_GIST_PAGE_UPDATE record.  So,
PostgreSQL version, which doesn't know about conflict processing, will just
ignore that.

Reported-by: Andres Freund
Diagnosed-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181212224524.scafnlyjindmrbe6%40alap3.anarazel.de
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Backpatch-through: 9.6
2018-12-21 02:37:37 +03:00
Tom Lane
7c15cef86d Base information_schema.sql_identifier domain on name, not varchar.
The SQL spec says that sql_identifier is a domain over varchar,
but it also says that that domain is supposed to represent the set
of valid identifiers for the implementation, in particular applying
a length limit matching the implementation's identifier length limit.
We were declaring sql_identifier as just "character varying", thus
duplicating what the spec says about base type, but entirely failing
at the rest of it.

Instead, let's declare sql_identifier as a domain over type "name".
(We can drop the COLLATE "C" added by commit 6b0faf723, since that's
now implicit in "name".)  With the recent improvements to name's
comparison support, there's not a lot of functional difference between
name and varchar.  So although in principle this is a spec deviation,
it's a pretty minor one.  And correctly enforcing PG's name length limit
is a good thing; on balance this seems closer to the intent of the spec
than what we had.

But that's all just language-lawyering.  The *real* reason to do this is
that it makes sql_identifier columns exposed by information_schema views
be just direct representations of the underlying "name" catalog columns,
eliminating a semantic mismatch that was disastrous for performance of
typical queries on the information_schema.  In combination with the
recent change to allow dropping no-op CoerceToDomain nodes, this allows
(for example) queries such as

    select ... from information_schema.tables where table_name = 'foo';

to produce an indexscan rather than a seqscan on pg_class.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRBUCX4LZ2rA2BbEkdD6NN59mgx+BLo1gO08Wod4RLtcTg@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-20 16:21:59 -05:00
Tom Lane
5bbee34d9f Avoid producing over-length specific_name outputs in information_schema.
information_schema output columns that are declared as being type
sql_identifier are supposed to conform to the implementation's rules
for valid identifiers, in particular the identifier length limit.
Several places potentially violated this limit by concatenating a
function's name and OID.  (The OID is added to ensure name uniqueness
within a schema, since the spec doesn't expect function name overloading.)

Simply truncating the concatenation result to fit in "name" won't do,
since losing part of the OID might wind up giving non-unique results.
Instead, let's truncate the function name as necessary.

The most practical way to do that is to do it in a C function; the
information_schema.sql script doesn't have easy access to the value
of NAMEDATALEN, nor does it have an easy way to truncate on the basis
of resulting byte-length rather than number of characters.

(There are still a couple of places that cast concatenation results to
sql_identifier, but as far as I can see they are guaranteed not to produce
over-length strings, at least with the normal value of NAMEDATALEN.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/23817.1545283477@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-20 16:21:59 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
7b14bcc06c Fix lock level used for partition when detaching it
For probably bogus reasons, we acquire only AccessShareLock on the
partition when we try to detach it from its parent partitioned table.
This can cause ugly things to happen if another transaction is doing
any sort of DDL to the partition concurrently.

Upgrade that lock to ShareUpdateExclusiveLock, which per discussion
seems to be the minimum needed.

Reported by Robert Haas.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYruJQ+2qnFLtF1xQtr71pdwgfxy3Ziy-TxV28M6pEmyA@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-20 16:42:13 -03:00
Tom Lane
216af5eea5 Make bitmapset.c use 64-bit bitmap words on 64-bit machines.
Using the full width of the CPU's native word size shouldn't cost
anything in typical cases.  When working with large bitmapsets,
this halves the number of operations needed for many common BMS
operations.  On the right sort of test case, a measurable improvement
is obtained.

David Rowley

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f9EGBd2h-VkXvb=51tf+X46zMX5T8h-KYgXEV_u2zmLUw@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-20 12:19:07 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
0c2377152f DETACH PARTITION: hold locks on indexes until end of transaction
When a partition is detached from its parent, we acquire locks on all
attached indexes to also detach them ... but we release those locks
immediately.  This is a violation of the policy of keeping locks on user
objects to the end of the transaction.  Bug introduced in 8b08f7d482.

It's unclear that there are any ill effects possible, but it's clearly
wrong nonetheless.  It's likely that bad behavior *is* possible, but
mostly because the relation that the index is for is only locked with
AccessShareLock, which is an older bug that shall be fixed separately.

While touching that line of code, close the index opened with
index_open() using index_close() instead of relation_close().
No difference in practice, but let's be consistent.

Unearthed by Robert Haas.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYruJQ+2qnFLtF1xQtr71pdwgfxy3Ziy-TxV28M6pEmyA@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-20 10:58:22 -03:00
Michael Paquier
4cba9c2a33 Add more tab completion for CREATE TABLE in psql
The following completion patterns are added:
- CREATE TABLE <name> with '(', OF or PARTITION OF.
- CREATE TABLE <name> OF with list of composite types.
- CREATE TABLE name (...) with PARTITION OF, WITH, TABLESPACE, ON
COMMIT (depending on the presence of a temporary table).
- CREATE TABLE ON COMMIT with actions (only for temporary tables).

Author: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d8j1s77kdbb.fsf@dalvik.ping.uio.no
2018-12-20 14:29:15 +09:00
Greg Stark
1075dfdaf3 Fix ADD IF NOT EXISTS used in conjunction with ALTER TABLE ONLY
The flag for IF NOT EXISTS was only being passed down in the normal
recursing case. It's been this way since originally added in 9.6 in
commit 2cd40adb85 so backpatch back to 9.6.
2018-12-19 19:38:31 -05:00
Tom Lane
2ece7c07dc Add text-vs-name cross-type operators, and unify name_ops with text_ops.
Now that name comparison has effectively the same behavior as text
comparison, we might as well merge the name_ops opfamily into text_ops,
allowing cross-type comparisons to be processed without forcing a
datatype coercion first.  We need do little more than add cross-type
operators to make the opfamily complete, and fix one or two places
in the planner that assumed text_ops was a single-datatype opfamily.

I chose to unify hash name_ops into hash text_ops as well, since the
types have compatible hashing semantics.  This allows marking the
new cross-type equality operators as oprcanhash.

(Note: this doesn't remove the name_ops opclasses, so there's no
breakage of index definitions.  Those opclasses are just reparented
into the text_ops opfamily.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15938.1544377821@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-19 17:46:25 -05:00
Tom Lane
586b98fdf1 Make type "name" collation-aware.
The "name" comparison operators now all support collations, making them
functionally equivalent to "text" comparisons, except for the different
physical representation of the datatype.  They do, in fact, mostly share
the varstr_cmp and varstr_sortsupport infrastructure, which has been
slightly enlarged to handle the case.

To avoid changes in the default behavior of the datatype, set name's
typcollation to C_COLLATION_OID not DEFAULT_COLLATION_OID, so that
by default comparisons to a name value will continue to use strcmp
semantics.  (This would have been the case for system catalog columns
anyway, because of commit 6b0faf723, but doing this makes it true for
user-created name columns as well.  In particular, this avoids
locale-dependent changes in our regression test results.)

In consequence, tweak a couple of places that made assumptions about
collatable base types always having typcollation DEFAULT_COLLATION_OID.
I have not, however, attempted to relax the restriction that user-
defined collatable types must have that.  Hence, "name" doesn't
behave quite like a user-defined type; it acts more like a domain
with COLLATE "C".  (Conceivably, if we ever get rid of the need for
catalog name columns to be fixed-length, "name" could actually become
such a domain over text.  But that'd be a pretty massive undertaking,
and I'm not volunteering.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15938.1544377821@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-19 17:46:25 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
68f6f2b739 Remove function names from error messages
They are not necessary, and having them there gives useless work for
translators.
2018-12-19 14:53:27 -03:00
Tom Lane
c6e394c1a2 Small improvements for allocation logic in ginHeapTupleFastCollect().
Avoid repetitive calls to repalloc() when the required size of the
collector array grows more than 2x in one call.  Also ensure that the
array size is a power of 2 (since palloc will probably consume a power
of 2 anyway) and doesn't start out very small (which'd likely just lead
to extra repallocs).

David Rowley, tweaked a bit by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f8vn-iSBE8PKeVHrnhvyjRNYCxguPFFY08QLYmjWG9hPQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-19 11:41:36 -05:00
Peter Geoghegan
61a4480a68 Remove obsolete nbtree duplicate entries comment.
Remove a comment from the Berkeley days claiming that nbtree must
disambiguate duplicate keys within _bt_moveright().  There is no special
care taken around duplicates within _bt_moveright(), at least since
commit 9e85183bfc removed inscrutable _bt_moveright() code to handle
pages full of duplicates.
2018-12-18 21:40:38 -08:00
Peter Geoghegan
60f3cc9553 Correct obsolete nbtree recovery comments.
Commit 40dae7ec53, which made the handling of interrupted nbtree page
splits more robust, removed an nbtree-specific end-of-recovery cleanup
step.  This meant that it was no longer possible to complete an
interrupted page split during recovery.  However, a reference to
recovery as a reason for using a NULL stack while inserting into a
parent page was missed.  Remove the reference.

Remove a similar obsolete reference to recovery that was introduced much
more recently, as part of the btree fastpath optimization enhancement
that made it into Postgres 11 (commit 2b272734, and follow-up commits).

Backpatch: 11-, where the fastpath optimization was introduced.
2018-12-18 16:59:50 -08:00
Tom Lane
6b0faf7236 Make collation-aware system catalog columns use "C" collation.
Up to now we allowed text columns in system catalogs to use collation
"default", but that isn't really safe because it might mean something
different in template0 than it means in a database cloned from template0.
In particular, this could mean that cloned pg_statistic entries for such
columns weren't entirely valid, possibly leading to bogus planner
estimates, though (probably) not any outright failures.

In the wake of commit 5e0928005, a better solution is available: if we
label such columns with "C" collation, then their pg_statistic entries
will also use that collation and hence will be valid independently of
the database collation.

This also provides a cleaner solution for indexes on such columns than
the hack added by commit 0b28ea79c: the indexes will naturally inherit
"C" collation and don't have to be forced to use text_pattern_ops.

Also, with the planned improvement of type "name" to be collation-aware,
this policy will apply cleanly to both text and name columns.

Because of the pg_statistic angle, we should also apply this policy
to the tables in information_schema.  This patch does that by adjusting
information_schema's textual domain types to specify "C" collation.
That has the user-visible effect that order-sensitive comparisons to
textual information_schema view columns will now use "C" collation
by default.  The SQL standard says that the collation of those view
columns is implementation-defined, so I think this is legal per spec.
At some point this might allow for translation of such comparisons
into indexable conditions on the underlying "name" columns, although
additional work will be needed before that can happen.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19346.1544895309@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-18 12:48:15 -05:00
Tom Lane
d364e88155 Fix ancient thinko in mergejoin cost estimation.
"rescanratio" was computed as 1 + rescanned-tuples / total-inner-tuples,
which is sensible if it's to be multiplied by total-inner-tuples or a cost
value corresponding to scanning all the inner tuples.  But in reality it
was (mostly) multiplied by inner_rows or a related cost, numbers that take
into account the possibility of stopping short of scanning the whole inner
relation thanks to a limited key range in the outer relation.  This'd
still make sense if we could expect that stopping short would result in a
proportional decrease in the number of tuples that have to be rescanned.
It does not, however.  The argument that establishes the validity of our
estimate for that number is independent of whether we scan all of the inner
relation or stop short, and experimentation also shows that stopping short
doesn't reduce the number of rescanned tuples.  So the correct calculation
is 1 + rescanned-tuples / inner_rows, and we should be sure to multiply
that by inner_rows or a corresponding cost value.

Most of the time this doesn't make much difference, but if we have
both a high rescan rate (due to lots of duplicate values) and an outer
key range much smaller than the inner key range, then the error can
be significant, leading to a large underestimate of the cost associated
with rescanning.

Per report from Vijaykumar Jain.  This thinko appears to go all the way
back to the introduction of the rescan estimation logic in commit
70fba7043, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAE7uO5hMb_TZYJcZmLAgO6iD68AkEK6qCe7i=vZUkCpoKns+EQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-18 11:19:38 -05:00
Michael Paquier
f94cec6447 Include partitioned indexes to system view pg_indexes
pg_tables already includes partitioned tables, so for consistency
pg_indexes should show partitioned indexes.

Author: Suraj Kharage
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAF1DzPVrYo4XNTEnc=PqVp6aLJc7LFYpYR4rX=_5pV=wJ2KdZg@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-18 16:37:51 +09:00
Michael Paquier
3e514c1238 Tweak description comments in tests for partition functions
The new wording is more generic and fixes one grammar mistake and one
typo on the way.

Per discussion between Amit Langote and me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181217064028.GJ31474@paquier.xyz
2018-12-18 10:52:21 +09:00
Michael Paquier
e4fca461ab Include ALTER INDEX SET STATISTICS in pg_dump
The new grammar pattern of ALTER INDEX SET STATISTICS able to use column
numbers on top of the existing column names introduced by commit 5b6d13e
forgot to add support for the feature in pg_dump, so defining statistics
on index columns was missing from the dumps, potentially causing silent
planning problems with a subsequent restore.

pg_dump ought to not use column names in what it generates as these are
automatically generated by the server and could conflict with real
relation attributes with matching patterns.  "expr" and "exprN", N
incremented automatically after the creation of the first one, are used
as default attribute names for index expressions, and that could easily
match what is defined in other relations, causing the dumps to fail if
some of those attributes are renamed at some point.  So to avoid any
problems, the new grammar with column numbers gets used.

Reported-by: Ronan Dunklau
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Adrien Nayrat, Amul Sul
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAARsnT3UQ4V=yDNW468w8RqHfYiY9mpn2r_c5UkBJ97NAApUEw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 11, where the new syntax has been introduced.
2018-12-18 09:28:16 +09:00
Tom Lane
cc92cca431 Drop support for getting signal descriptions from sys_siglist[].
It appears that all platforms that have sys_siglist[] also have
strsignal(), making that fallback case in pg_strsignal() dead code.
Getting rid of it allows dropping a configure test, which seems worth
more than providing textual signal descriptions on whatever platforms
might still hypothetically have use for the fallback case.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25758.1544983503@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-17 13:50:16 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
ca4103025d Fix tablespace handling for partitioned tables
When partitioned tables were introduced, we failed to realize that by
copying the tablespace handling for other relation kinds with no
physical storage we were causing the secondary effect that their
partitions would not automatically inherit the tablespace setting.  This
is surprising and unhelpful, so change it to adopt the behavior
introduced in pg11 (commit 33e6c34c32) for partitioned indexes: the
parent relation remembers the tablespace specification, which is then
used for any new partitions that don't declare one.

Because this commit changes behavior of the TABLESPACE clause for
partitioned tables (it's no longer a no-op), it is not backpatched.

Author: David Rowley, Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f9SxVzqDrGD1teosFd6jBMM0UEaa14_8mRvcWE19Tu0hA@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-17 15:37:40 -03:00
Amit Kapila
3abb11e55b Remove extra semicolons.
Reported-by: David Rowley
Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 10
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f8EneeYyzzvdjahVZ6gbAHFkHbSFB5m_C0Y6TUJs9Dgdg@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-17 14:32:25 +05:30
Michael Paquier
67915fb8e5 Fix use-after-free bug when renaming constraints
This is an oversight from recent commit b13fd344.  While on it, tweak
the previous test with a better name for the renamed primary key.

Detected by buildfarm member prion which forces relation cache release
with -DRELCACHE_FORCE_RELEASE.  Back-patch down to 9.4 as the previous
commit.
2018-12-17 12:43:00 +09:00
Michael Paquier
b13fd344c5 Make constraint rename issue relcache invalidation on target relation
When a constraint gets renamed, it may have associated with it a target
relation (for example domain constraints don't have one).  Not
invalidating the target relation cache when issuing the renaming can
result in issues with subsequent commands that refer to the old
constraint name using the relation cache, causing various failures.  One
pattern spotted was using CREATE TABLE LIKE after a constraint
renaming.

Reported-by: Stuart <sfbarbee@gmail.com>
Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2047094.V130LYfLq4@station53.ousa.org
2018-12-17 10:34:44 +09:00
Tom Lane
a73d083195 Modernize our code for looking up descriptive strings for Unix signals.
At least as far back as the 2008 spec, POSIX has defined strsignal(3)
for looking up descriptive strings for signal numbers.  We hadn't gotten
the word though, and were still using the crufty old sys_siglist array,
which is in no standard even though most Unixen provide it.

Aside from not being formally standards-compliant, this was just plain
ugly because it involved #ifdef's at every place using the code.

To eliminate the #ifdef's, create a portability function pg_strsignal,
which wraps strsignal(3) if available and otherwise falls back to
sys_siglist[] if available.  The set of Unixen with neither API is
probably empty these days, but on any platform with neither, you'll
just get "unrecognized signal".  All extant callers print the numeric
signal number too, so no need to work harder than that.

Along the way, upgrade pg_basebackup's child-error-exit reporting
to match the rest of the system.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25758.1544983503@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-16 19:38:57 -05:00
Tom Lane
16fda4b853 Make error handling in parallel pg_upgrade less bogus.
reap_child() basically ignored the possibility of either an error in
waitpid() itself or a child process failure on signal.  We don't really
need to do more than report and crash hard, but proceeding as though
nothing is wrong is definitely Not Acceptable.  The error report for
nonzero child exit status was pretty off-point, as well.

Noted while fooling around with child-process failure detection
logic elsewhere.  It's been like this a long time, so back-patch to
all supported branches.
2018-12-16 14:51:47 -05:00
Tom Lane
ade2d61ed0 Improve detection of child-process SIGPIPE failures.
Commit ffa4cbd62 added logic to detect SIGPIPE failure of a COPY child
process, but it only worked correctly if the SIGPIPE occurred in the
immediate child process.  Depending on the shell in use and the
complexity of the shell command string, we might instead get back
an exit code of 128 + SIGPIPE, representing a shell error exit
reporting SIGPIPE in the child process.

We could just hack up ClosePipeToProgram() to add the extra case,
but it seems like this is a fairly general issue deserving a more
general and better-documented solution.  I chose to add a couple
of functions in src/common/wait_error.c, which is a natural place
to know about wait-result encodings, that will test for either a
specific child-process signal type or any child-process signal failure.
Then, adjust other places that were doing ad-hoc tests of this type
to use the common functions.

In RestoreArchivedFile, this fixes a race condition affecting whether
the process will report an error or just silently proc_exit(1): before,
that depended on whether the intermediate shell got SIGTERM'd itself
or reported a child process failing on SIGTERM.

Like the previous patch, back-patch to v10; we could go further
but there seems no real need to.

Per report from Erik Rijkers.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f3683f87ab1701bea5d86a7742b22432@xs4all.nl
2018-12-16 14:32:14 -05:00
Tom Lane
5e09280057 Make pg_statistic and related code account more honestly for collations.
When we first put in collations support, we basically punted on teaching
pg_statistic, ANALYZE, and the planner selectivity functions about that.
They've just used DEFAULT_COLLATION_OID independently of the actual
collation of the data.  It's time to improve that, so:

* Add columns to pg_statistic that record the specific collation associated
with each statistics slot.

* Teach ANALYZE to use the column's actual collation when comparing values
for statistical purposes, and record this in the appropriate slot.  (Note
that type-specific typanalyze functions are now expected to fill
stats->stacoll with the appropriate collation, too.)

* Teach assorted selectivity functions to use the actual collation of
the stats they are looking at, instead of just assuming it's
DEFAULT_COLLATION_OID.

This should give noticeably better results in selectivity estimates for
columns with nondefault collations, at least for query clauses that use
that same collation (which would be the default behavior in most cases).
It's still true that comparisons with explicit COLLATE clauses different
from the stored data's collation won't be well-estimated, but that's no
worse than before.  Also, this patch does make the first step towards
doing better with that, which is that it's now theoretically possible to
collect stats for a collation other than the column's own collation.

Patch by me; thanks to Peter Eisentraut for review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/14706.1544630227@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-14 12:52:49 -05:00
Michael Paquier
8fb569e978 Introduce new extended routines for FDW and foreign server lookups
The cache lookup routines for foreign-data wrappers and foreign servers
are extended with an extra argument to handle a set of flags.  The only
value which can be used now is to indicate if a missing object should
result in an error or not, and are designed to be extensible on need.
Those new routines are added into the existing set of user-visible
FDW APIs and documented in consequence.  They will be used for future
patches to improve the SQL interface for object addresses.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqSZxrSmdHK-rny7z8mi=EAFXJ5J-0RbzDw6aus=wB5azQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-14 08:59:35 +09:00
Andres Freund
09568ec3d3 Create a separate oid range for oids assigned by genbki.pl.
The changes I made in 578b229718 assigned oids below
FirstBootstrapObjectId to objects in include/catalog/*.dat files that
did not have an oid assigned, starting at the max oid explicitly
assigned.  Tom criticized that for mainly two reasons:
1) It's not clear which values are manually and which explicitly
   assigned.
2) The space below FirstBootstrapObjectId gets pretty crowded, and
   some PostgreSQL forks have used oids >= 9000 for their own objects,
   to avoid conflicting.

Thus create a new range for objects not assigned explicit oids, but
assigned by genbki.pl. For now 1-9999 is for explicitly assigned oids,
FirstGenbkiObjectId (10000) to FirstBootstrapObjectId (1200) -1 is for
genbki.pl assigned oids, and < FirstNormalObjectId (16384) is for oids
assigned during bootstrap.  It's possible that we'll have to adjust
these boundaries, but there's some headroom for now.

Add a note suggesting that oids in forks should be assigned in the
9000-9999 range.

Catversion bump for obvious reasons.

Per complaint from Tom Lane.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16845.1544393682@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-13 14:50:57 -08:00
Tom Lane
84d514887f Fix bogus logic for skipping unnecessary partcollation dependencies.
The idea here is to not call recordDependencyOn for the default collation,
since we know that's pinned.  But what the code actually did was to record
the partition key's dependency on the opclass twice, instead.

Evidently introduced by sloppy coding in commit 2186b608b.  Back-patch
to v10 where that came in.
2018-12-13 15:11:09 -05:00
Tom Lane
04fe805a17 Drop no-op CoerceToDomain nodes from expressions at planning time.
If a domain has no constraints, then CoerceToDomain doesn't really do
anything and can be simplified to a RelabelType.  This not only
eliminates cycles at execution, but allows the planner to optimize better
(for instance, match the coerced expression to an index on the underlying
column).  However, we do have to support invalidating the plan later if
a constraint gets added to the domain.  That's comparable to the case of
a change to a SQL function that had been inlined into a plan, so all the
necessary logic already exists for plans depending on functions.  We
need only duplicate or share that logic for domains.

ALTER DOMAIN ADD/DROP CONSTRAINT need to be taught to send out sinval
messages for the domain's pg_type entry, since those operations don't
update that row.  (ALTER DOMAIN SET/DROP NOT NULL do update that row,
so no code change is needed for them.)

Testing this revealed what's really a pre-existing bug in plpgsql:
it caches the SQL-expression-tree expansion of type coercions and
had no provision for invalidating entries in that cache.  Up to now
that was only a problem if such an expression had inlined a SQL
function that got changed, which is unlikely though not impossible.
But failing to track changes of domain constraints breaks an existing
regression test case and would likely cause practical problems too.

We could fix that locally in plpgsql, but what seems like a better
idea is to build some generic infrastructure in plancache.c to store
standalone expressions and track invalidation events for them.
(It's tempting to wonder whether plpgsql's "simple expression" stuff
could use this code with lower overhead than its current use of the
heavyweight plancache APIs.  But I've left that idea for later.)

Other stuff fixed in passing:

* Allow estimate_expression_value() to drop CoerceToDomain
unconditionally, effectively assuming that the coercion will succeed.
This will improve planner selectivity estimates for cases involving
estimatable expressions that are coerced to domains.  We could have
done this independently of everything else here, but there wasn't
previously any need for eval_const_expressions_mutator to know about
CoerceToDomain at all.

* Use a dlist for plancache.c's list of cached plans, rather than a
manually threaded singly-linked list.  That eliminates a potential
performance problem in DropCachedPlan.

* Fix a couple of inconsistencies in typecmds.c about whether
operations on domains drop RowExclusiveLock on pg_type.  Our common
practice is that DDL operations do drop catalog locks, so standardize
on that choice.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19958.1544122124@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-13 13:24:43 -05:00
Alexander Korotkov
52ac6cd2d0 Prevent GIN deleted pages from being reclaimed too early
When GIN vacuum deletes a posting tree page, it assumes that no concurrent
searchers can access it, thanks to ginStepRight() locking two pages at once.
However, since 9.4 searches can skip parts of posting trees descending from the
root.  That leads to the risk that page is deleted and reclaimed before
concurrent search can access it.

This commit prevents the risk of above by waiting for every transaction, which
might wait to reference this page, to finish.  Due to binary compatibility
we can't change GinPageOpaqueData to store corresponding transaction id.
Instead we reuse page header pd_prune_xid field, which is unused in index pages.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/31a702a.14dd.166c1366ac1.Coremail.chjischj%40163.com
Author: Andrey Borodin, Alexander Korotkov
Reviewed-by: Alexander Korotkov
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2018-12-13 06:55:34 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov
c6ade7a8cd Prevent deadlock in ginRedoDeletePage()
On standby ginRedoDeletePage() can work concurrently with read-only queries.
Those queries can traverse posting tree in two ways.
1) Using rightlinks by ginStepRight(), which locks the next page before
   unlocking its left sibling.
2) Using downlinks by ginFindLeafPage(), which locks at most one page at time.

Original lock order was: page, parent, left sibling.  That lock order can
deadlock with ginStepRight().  In order to prevent deadlock this commit changes
lock order to: left sibling, page, parent.  Note, that position of parent in
locking order seems insignificant, because we only lock one page at time while
traversing downlinks.

Reported-by: Chen Huajun
Diagnosed-by: Chen Huajun, Peter Geoghegan, Andrey Borodin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/31a702a.14dd.166c1366ac1.Coremail.chjischj%40163.com
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2018-12-13 06:55:34 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov
fd83c83d09 Fix deadlock in GIN vacuum introduced by 218f51584d
Before 218f51584d if posting tree page is about to be deleted, then the whole
posting tree is locked by LockBufferForCleanup() on root preventing all the
concurrent inserts.  218f51584d reduced locking to the subtree containing
page to be deleted.  However, due to concurrent parent split, inserter doesn't
always holds pins on all the pages constituting path from root to the target
leaf page.  That could cause a deadlock between GIN vacuum process and GIN
inserter.  And we didn't find non-invasive way to fix this.

This commit reverts VACUUM behavior to lock the whole posting tree before
delete any page.  However, we keep another useful change by 218f51584d: the
tree is locked only if there are pages to be deleted.

Reported-by: Chen Huajun
Diagnosed-by: Chen Huajun, Andrey Borodin, Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/31a702a.14dd.166c1366ac1.Coremail.chjischj%40163.com
Author: Alexander Korotkov, based on ideas from Andrey Borodin and Peter Geoghegan
Reviewed-by: Andrey Borodin
Backpatch-through: 10
2018-12-13 06:55:34 +03:00
Tom Lane
77d4d88afb Repair bogus EPQ plans generated for postgres_fdw foreign joins.
postgres_fdw's postgresGetForeignPlan() assumes without checking that the
outer_plan it's given for a join relation must have a NestLoop, MergeJoin,
or HashJoin node at the top.  That's been wrong at least since commit
4bbf6edfb (which could cause insertion of a Sort node on top) and it seems
like a pretty unsafe thing to Just Assume even without that.

Through blind good fortune, this doesn't seem to have any worse
consequences today than strange EXPLAIN output, but it's clearly trouble
waiting to happen.

To fix, test the node type explicitly before touching Join-specific
fields, and avoid jamming the new tlist into a node type that can't
do projection.  Export a new support function from createplan.c
to avoid building low-level knowledge about the latter into FDWs.

Back-patch to 9.6 where the faulty coding was added.  Note that the
associated regression test cases don't show any changes before v11,
apparently because the tests back-patched with 4bbf6edfb don't actually
exercise the problem case before then (there's no top-level Sort
in those plans).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8946.1544644803@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-12 16:08:30 -05:00
Tom Lane
0f7ec8d9c3 Repair bogus handling of multi-assignment Params in upper plan levels.
Our support for multiple-set-clauses in UPDATE assumes that the Params
referencing a MULTIEXPR_SUBLINK SubPlan will appear before that SubPlan
in the targetlist of the plan node that calculates the updated row.
(Yeah, it's a hack...)  In some PG branches it's possible that a Result
node gets inserted between the primary calculation of the update tlist
and the ModifyTable node.  setrefs.c did the wrong thing in this case
and left the upper-level Params as Params, causing a crash at runtime.
What it should do is replace them with "outer" Vars referencing the child
plan node's output.  That's a result of careless ordering of operations
in fix_upper_expr_mutator, so we can fix it just by reordering the code.

Fix fix_join_expr_mutator similarly for consistency, even though join
nodes could never appear in such a context.  (In general, it seems
likely to be a bit cheaper to use Vars than Params in such situations
anyway, so this patch might offer a tiny performance improvement.)

The hazard extends back to 9.5 where the MULTIEXPR_SUBLINK stuff
was introduced, so back-patch that far.  However, this may be a live
bug only in 9.6.x and 10.x, as the other branches don't seem to want
to calculate the final tlist below the Result node.  (That plan shape
change between branches might be a mini-bug in itself, but I'm not
really interested in digging into the reasons for that right now.
Still, add a regression test memorializing what we expect there,
so we'll notice if it changes again.)

Per bug report from Eduards Bezverhijs.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/b6cd572a-3e44-8785-75e9-c512a5a17a73@tieto.com
2018-12-12 13:49:41 -05:00
Michael Paquier
cc53123bcc Tweak pg_partition_tree for undefined relations and unsupported relkinds
This fixes a crash which happened when calling the function directly
with a relation OID referring to a non-existing object, and changes the
behavior so as NULL is returned for unsupported relkinds instead of
generating an error.  This puts the new function in line with many other
system functions, and eases actions like full scans of pg_class.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Stephen Frost
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181207010406.GO2407@paquier.xyz
2018-12-12 09:49:39 +09:00
Tom Lane
7a28e9aa0f Fix test_rls_hooks to assign expression collations properly.
This module overlooked this necessary fixup step on the results of
transformWhereClause().  It accidentally worked anyway, because the
constructed expression involved type "name" which is not collatable,
but it fell over while I was experimenting with changing "name" to
be collatable.

Back-patch, not because there's any live bug here in back branches,
but because somebody might use this code as a model for some real
application and then not understand why it doesn't work.
2018-12-11 11:48:00 -05:00
Noah Misch
1db439ad49 Raise some timeouts to 180s, in test code.
Slow runs of buildfarm members chipmunk, hornet and mandrill saw the
shorter timeouts expire.  The 180s timeout in poll_query_until has been
trouble-free since 2a0f89cd71 introduced
it two years ago, so use 180s more widely.  Back-patch to 9.6, where the
first of these timeouts was introduced.

Reviewed by Michael Paquier.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181209001601.GC2973271@rfd.leadboat.com
2018-12-10 20:15:42 -08:00
Tom Lane
001bb9f3ed Add stack depth checks to key recursive functions in backend/nodes/*.c.
Although copyfuncs.c has a check_stack_depth call in its recursion,
equalfuncs.c, outfuncs.c, and readfuncs.c lacked one.  This seems
unwise.

Likewise fix planstate_tree_walker(), in branches where that exists.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/30253.1544286631@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-10 11:12:43 -05:00
Tom Lane
b7a29695f7 Make TupleDescInitBuiltinEntry throw error for unsupported types.
Previously, it would just pass back a partially-uninitialized tupdesc,
which doesn't seem like a safe or useful behavior.

Backpatch to v10 where this code came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/30830.1544384975@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-10 10:38:48 -05:00
Stephen Frost
eeeb1dfc87 Add pg_dump test for empty OP class
This adds a pg_dump test for an empty operator class.

Author: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181208011142.GU3415@tamriel.snowman.net
2018-12-10 10:13:52 -05:00
Stephen Frost
2d7eeb1b14 Add additional partition tests to pg_dump
This adds a few tests for non-inherited constraints.

Author: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181208001735.GT3415%40tamriel.snowman.net
2018-12-10 09:46:36 -05:00
Stephen Frost
96c702c1ed Remove dead code in toast_fetch_datum_slice
In toast_fetch_datum_slice(), we Assert() that what is passed in isn't
compressed, but we then later had a check to see what the length of if
what was passed in is compressed.  That later check is rather confusing
since toast_fetch_datum_slice() is only ever called with non-compressed
datums and the Assert() earlier makes it clear that one shouldn't be
passing in compressed datums.

Add a comment to make it clear that toast_fetch_datum_slice() is just
for non-compressed datums, and remove the dead code.
2018-12-10 09:31:38 -05:00
Michael Paquier
6d8727f95e Ensure cleanup of orphan archive status files
When a WAL segment is recycled, its ".ready" and ".done" status files
get also automatically removed, however this is not done in a durable
manner.  Hence, in a subsequent crash, it could be possible that a
".ready" status file is still around with its corresponding segment
already gone.

If the backend reaches such a state, the archive command would most
likely complain about a segment non-existing and would keep retrying,
causing WAL segments to bloat pg_wal/, potentially making Postgres crash
hard when running out of space.

As status files are removed after each individual segment, using
durable_unlink() does not completely close the window either, as a crash
could happen between the moment the WAL segment is recycled and the
moment its status files are removed.  This has also some performance
impact with the additional fsync() calls needed to make the removal in a
durable manner.  Doing the cleanup at recovery is not cost-free either
as this makes crash recovery potentially take longer than necessary.

So, instead, as per an idea of Stephen Frost, make the archiver aware of
orphan status files and remove them on-the-fly if the corresponding
segment goes missing.  Removal failures follow a model close to what
happens for WAL segments, where multiple attempts are done before giving
up temporarily, and where a successful orphan removal makes the archiver
move immediately to the next WAL segment thought as ready to be
archived.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Andres Freund, Stephen Frost, Kyotaro
Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180928032827.GF1500@paquier.xyz
2018-12-10 15:00:59 +09:00
Michael Paquier
7fee252f6f Add timestamp of last received message from standby to pg_stat_replication
The timestamp generated by the standby at message transmission has been
included in the protocol since its introduction for both the status
update message and hot standby feedback message, but it has never
appeared in pg_stat_replication.  Seeing this timestamp does not matter
much with a cluster which has a lot of activity, but on a mostly-idle
cluster, this makes monitoring able to react faster than the configured
timeouts.

Author: MyungKyu LIM
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1657809367.407321.1533027417725.JavaMail.jboss@ep2ml404
2018-12-09 16:35:06 +09:00
Tom Lane
b90e6cef12 In PQprint(), write HTML table trailer before closing the output pipe.
This is an astonishingly ancient bit of silliness, dating AFAICS to
commit edb519b14 of 27-Jul-1996 which added the pipe close stanza in
the wrong place.  It happens to be harmless given that the code above
this won't enable the pager if html3 output mode is selected.  Still,
somebody might try to relax that restriction someday, and in any case
it could confuse readers and static analysis tools, so let's fix it in
HEAD.

Per bug #15541 from Pan Bian.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15541-c835d8b9a903f7ad@postgresql.org
2018-12-07 13:11:30 -05:00
Tom Lane
5deadfef28 Fix misapplication of pgstat_count_truncate to wrong relation.
The stanza of ExecuteTruncate[Guts] that truncates a target table's toast
relation re-used the loop local variable "rel" to reference the toast rel.
This was safe enough when written, but commit d42358efb added code below
that that supposed "rel" still pointed to the parent table.  Therefore,
the stats counter update was applied to the wrong relcache entry (the
toast rel not the user rel); and if we were unlucky and that relcache
entry had been flushed during reindex_relation, very bad things could
ensue.

(I'm surprised that CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS testing hasn't found this.
I'm even more surprised that the problem wasn't detected during the
development of d42358efb; it must not have been tested in any case
with a toast table, as the incorrect stats counts are very obvious.)

To fix, replace use of "rel" in that code branch with a more local
variable.  Adjust test cases added by d42358efb so that some of them
use tables with toast tables.

Per bug #15540 from Pan Bian.  Back-patch to 9.5 where d42358efb came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15540-01078812338195c0@postgresql.org
2018-12-07 12:11:59 -05:00
Tom Lane
9286ef8e91 Clean up sloppy coding in publicationcmds.c's OpenTableList().
Remove dead code (which would be incorrect if it weren't dead),
per report from Pan Bian.  Add a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS in the
inner loop over child relations, because there's little point
in having one in the outer loop if there's not one here too.
Minor stylistic adjustments and comment improvements.

Seems to be aboriginal to this code (cf commit 665d1fad9).
Back-patch to v10 where that came in, not because any of this
is significant, but just to keep the branches looking similar.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15539-06d00ef6b1e2e1bb@postgresql.org
2018-12-07 11:02:39 -05:00
Michael Paquier
730422afcd Fix some errhint and errdetail strings missing a period
As per the error message style guide of the documentation, those should
be full sentences.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://1E8D49B4-16BC-4420-B4ED-58501D9E076B@yesql.se
2018-12-07 07:47:42 +09:00
Tom Lane
d2b0b60e71 Improve our response to invalid format strings, and detect more cases.
Places that are testing for *printf failure ought to include the format
string in their error reports, since bad-format-string is one of the
more likely causes of such failure.  This both makes it easier to find
and repair the mistake, and provides at least some useful info to the
user who stumbles across such a problem.

Also, tighten snprintf.c to report EINVAL for an invalid flag or
final character in a format %-spec (including the case where the
%-spec is missing a final character altogether).  This seems like
better project policy, and it also allows removing an instruction
or two from the hot code path.

Back-patch the error reporting change in pvsnprintf, since it should be
harmless and may be helpful; but not the snprintf.c change.

Per discussion of bug #15511 from Ertuğrul Kahveci, which reported an
invalid translated format string.  These changes don't fix that error,
but they should improve matters next time we make such a mistake.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15511-1d8b6a0bc874112f@postgresql.org
2018-12-06 15:08:44 -05:00
Stephen Frost
369d494a4f Cleanup minor pg_dump memory leaks
In dumputils, we may have successfully parsed the acls when we discover
that we can't parse the reverse ACLs and then return- check and free
aclitems if that happens.

In dumpTableSchema, move ftoptions and srvname under the relkind !=
RELKIND_VIEW branch (since they're only used there) and then check if
they've been allocated and, if so, free them at the end of that block.

Pointed out by Pavel Raiskup, though I didn't use those patches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2183976.vkCJMhdhmF@nb.usersys.redhat.com
2018-12-06 11:11:21 -05:00
Stephen Frost
a243c55326 Cleanup comments in xlog compression
Skipping over the "hole" in full page images in the XLOG code was
described as being a form of compression, but this got a bit confusing
since we now have PGLZ-based compression happening, so adjust the
wording to discuss "removing" the "hole" and keeping the talk about
compression to where we're talking about using PGLZ-based compression of
the full page images.

Reviewed-By: Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181127234341.GM3415@tamriel.snowman.net
2018-12-06 11:05:39 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
71a05b2232 Don't mark partitioned indexes invalid unnecessarily
When an indexes is created on a partitioned table using ONLY (don't
recurse to partitions), it gets marked invalid until index partitions
are attached for each table partition.  But there's no reason to do this
if there are no partitions ... and moreover, there's no way to get the
index to become valid afterwards, because all partitions that get
created/attached get their own index partition already attached to the
parent index, so there's no chance to do ALTER INDEX ... ATTACH PARTITION
that would make the parent index valid.

Fix by not marking the index as invalid to begin with.

This is very similar to 9139aa1942, but the pg_dump aspect does not
appear to be relevant until we add FKs that can point to PKs on
partitioned tables.  (I tried to cause the pg_upgrade test to break by
leaving some of these bogus tables around, but wasn't able to.)

Making this change means that an index that was supposed to be invalid
in the insert_conflict regression test is no longer invalid; reorder the
DDL so that the test continues to verify the behavior we want it to.

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181203225019.2vvdef2ybnkxt364@alvherre.pgsql
2018-12-05 13:31:51 -03:00
Stephen Frost
f502fc88b3 Fix typo
Backends don't typically exist uncleanly, but they can certainly exit
uncleanly, and it's exiting uncleanly that's being discussed here.
2018-12-04 11:04:54 -05:00
Michael Paquier
ee2b37ae04 Add some missing schema qualifications
This does not improve the security and reliability of the touched areas,
but it makes the style more consistent.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by- Noah Misch
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180309075538.GD9376@paquier.xyz
2018-12-03 14:21:52 +09:00
Michael Paquier
d3c09b9b13 Add PGXS options to control TAP and isolation tests, take two
The following options are added for extensions:
- TAP_TESTS, to allow an extention to run TAP tests which are the ones
present in t/*.pl.  A subset of tests can always be run with the
existing PROVE_TESTS for developers.
- ISOLATION, to define a list of isolation tests.
- ISOLATION_OPTS, to pass custom options to isolation_tester.

A couple of custom Makefile rules have been accumulated across the tree
to cover the lack of facility in PGXS for a couple of releases when
using those test suites, which are all now replaced with the new flags,
without reducing the test coverage.  Note that tests of contrib/bloom/
are not enabled yet, as those are proving unstable in the buildfarm.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Adam Berlin, Álvaro Herrera, Tom Lane, Nikolay Shaplov,
Arthur Zakirov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180906014849.GG2726@paquier.xyz
2018-12-03 09:27:35 +09:00
Tom Lane
29180e5d78 Eliminate parallel-make hazard in ecpg/preproc.
Re-making ecpglib's typename.o is dangerous because another make thread
could be doing that at the same time.  While we've not heard field
complaints traceable to this, it seems inevitable that it'd bite someone
eventually.  Instead, symlink typename.c into the preproc directory and
recompile it there.  That file is small enough that compiling it twice
isn't much of a penalty.  Furthermore, this way we get a .o file that's
made without shlib CFLAGS, which seems cleaner.

This requires adding more stuff to the module's -I list.  The MSVC
aspect of that is untested, but I'm sure the buildfarm will tell me
if I got it wrong.

Per a suggestion from Peter Eisentraut.  Although this is theoretically
a bug fix, the lack of field reports makes me feel we needn't back-patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/31364.1543511708@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-01 17:19:51 -05:00
Tom Lane
3295f82022 Rename ecpg's various "extern.h" files to have distinct names.
This should reduce confusion, and in particular make it safe to
copy typename.c into preproc/ and compile it there.

This doesn't affect anything outside ecpg, and particularly not
end users, because these files don't get installed; they just
exist to share declarations among the .c files of each subdirectory.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/31364.1543511708@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-01 16:34:00 -05:00
Tom Lane
2d34ad8430 Add a --socketdir option to pg_upgrade.
This allows control of the directory in which the postmaster sockets
are created for the temporary postmasters started by pg_upgrade.
The default location remains the current working directory, which is
typically fine, but if it is deeply nested then its pathname might
be too long to be a socket name.

In passing, clean up some messiness in pg_upgrade's option handling,
particularly the confusing and undocumented way that configuration-only
datadirs were handled.  And fix check_required_directory's substantially
under-baked cleanup of directory pathnames.

Daniel Gustafsson, reviewed by Hironobu Suzuki, some code cleanup by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E72DD5C3-2268-48A5-A907-ED4B34BEC223@yesql.se
2018-12-01 15:45:11 -05:00
Michael Paquier
7d4524aed3 Fix tablespace path TAP test of pg_verify_checksums for msys
TAP tests on msys need to run with the DTK perl, which understands msys
virtualized paths.  Postgres, however, does not understand such paths,
so before a path can be used safely with CREATE TABLESPACE, it needs to
be translated into a path on the underlying file system.

Per report from buildfarm member jacana.  Suggested fix is from Andrew
Dunstan.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181130053555.GF2267@paquier.xyz
2018-12-01 07:53:18 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera
9dc1225855 Silence compiler warning
My original coding was questionable anyway.

Reported-by: Sergei Kornilov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9645101543575886@myt6-27270b78ac4f.qloud-c.yandex.net
2018-11-30 10:20:49 -03:00
Amit Kapila
dcfdf56e89 Fix typo. 2018-11-30 11:50:43 +05:30
Michael Paquier
5c99513975 Fix various checksum check problems for pg_verify_checksums and base backups
Three issues are fixed in this patch:
- Base backups forgot to ignore files specific to EXEC_BACKEND, leading
to spurious warnings when checksums are enabled, per analysis from me.
- pg_verify_checksums forgot about files specific to EXEC_BACKEND,
leading to failures of the tool on any such build, particularly Windows.
This error was originally found by newly-introduced TAP tests in various
buildfarm members using EXEC_BACKEND.
- pg_verify_checksums forgot to count for temporary files and temporary
paths, which could be valid relation files, without checksums, per
report from Andres Freund.  More tests are added to cover this case.

A new test case which emulates corruption for a file in a different
tablespace is added, coming from from Michael Banck, while I have coded
the main code and refactored the test code.

Author: Michael Banck, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Stephen Frost, David Steele
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181021134206.GA14282@paquier.xyz
2018-11-30 10:34:45 +09:00
Michael Paquier
a1c91dd110 Switch pg_verify_checksums back to a blacklist
This basically reverts commit d55241af70,
leaving around a portion of the regression tests still adapted with
empty relation files, and corrupted cases.  This is also proving to be
failing to check properly relation files located in a non-default
tablespace path.

Per discussion with various folks, including Stephen Frost, David
Steele, Andres Freund, Michael Banck and myself.

Reported-by: Michael Banck
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181021134206.GA14282@paquier.xyz
Backpatch-through: 11
2018-11-30 10:14:58 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera
88bdbd3f74 Add log_statement_sample_rate parameter
This allows to set a lower log_min_duration_statement value without
incurring excessive log traffic (which reduces performance).  This can
be useful to analyze workloads with lots of short queries.

Author: Adrien Nayrat
Reviewed-by: David Rowley, Vik Fearing
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c30ee535-ee1e-db9f-fa97-146b9f62caed@anayrat.info
2018-11-29 18:42:53 -03:00
Tom Lane
826eff57c4 Ensure static libraries have correct mod time even if ranlib messes it up.
In at least Apple's version of ranlib, the output file is updated to have
a mod time equal to the max of the timestamps of its components, and that
data only has seconds precision.  On a filesystem with sub-second file
timestamp precision --- say, APFS --- this can result in the finished
static library appearing older than its input files, which causes useless
rebuilds and possible outright failures in parallel makes.

We've only seen this reported in the field from people using Apple's
ranlib with a non-Apple make, because Apple's make doesn't know about
sub-second timestamps either so it doesn't decide rebuilds are needed.
But Apple's ranlib presumably shares code with at least some BSDen,
so it's not that unlikely that the same problem could arise elsewhere.

To fix, just "touch" the output file after ranlib finishes.

We seem to need this in only one place.  There are other calls of
ranlib in our makefiles, but they are working on intermediate files
whose timestamps are not actually important, or else on an installed
static library for which sub-second timestamp precision is unlikely
to matter either.  (Also, so far as I can tell, Apple's ranlib doesn't
mess up the file timestamp in the latter usage anyhow.)

In passing, change "ranlib" to "$(RANLIB)" in one place that was
bypassing the make macro for no good reason.

Per bug #15525 from Jack Kelly (via Alyssa Ross).
Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15525-a30da084f17a1faa@postgresql.org
2018-11-29 15:53:44 -05:00
Michael Paquier
431f1599a2 Add support for NO_INSTALLCHECK in MSVC scripts
When fetching a list of tests for a given extension in contrib/ or
src/test/modules/, NO_INSTALLCHECK now gets checked first.  If present,
an empty list of tests is returned to let the caller know that tests
for this module need to be bypassed.

This actually fixes a set of issues with MSVC with modules using
REGRESS_OPTS, as an incorrect parsing caused the launched command
to eat the first test listed.  The actual effect on the tree is that
several modules listed a single test, so regressions have been running
with no actual tests.  pg_stat_statements, test_rls_hooks and commit_ts
were impacted by that.  Some other modules like test_decoding (or
snapshot_too_old) don't use yet PGXS rules, but their makefiles will
soon be refactored with an upcoming patch.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181126054302.GI1776@paquier.xyz
2018-11-29 10:31:12 +09:00
Thomas Munro
2ac180c286 Fix minor typo in dsa.c.
Author: Takeshi Ideriha
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4E72940DA2BF16479384A86D54D0988A6F3BF22D%40G01JPEXMBKW04
2018-11-29 14:14:26 +13:00
Michael Paquier
d79fb5d237 Add missing NO_INSTALLCHECK in commit_ts and test_rls_hooks
This bypasses installcheck if specified, which makes sense for those
modules as they require non-default configuration, something which
typical users don't have.  Those have been missing from the start, still
no back-patch is done.

This will be used by an upcoming patch for MSVC scripts adding support
for NO_INSTALLCHECK as installcheck is the default mode for contrib and
modules for performance reasons in the buildfarm.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181126054302.GI1776@paquier.xyz
2018-11-29 09:39:07 +09:00
Michael Paquier
4c703369af Fix handling of synchronous replication for stopping WAL senders
This fixes an oversight from c6c3334 which forgot that if a subset of
WAL senders are stopping and in a sync state, other WAL senders could
still be waiting for a WAL position to be synced while committing a
transaction.  However the subset of stopping senders would not release
waiters, potentially breaking synchronous replication guarantees.  This
commit makes sure that even WAL senders stopping are able to release
waiters and are tracked properly.

On 9.4, this can also trigger an assertion failure when setting for
example max_wal_senders to 1 where a WAL sender is not able to find
itself as in synchronous state when the instance stops.

Reported-by: Paul Guo
Author: Paul Guo, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEET0ZEv8VFqT3C-cQm6byOB4r4VYWcef1J21dOX-gcVhCSpmA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2018-11-29 09:12:19 +09:00
Peter Geoghegan
1a990b207b Have BufFileSize() ereport() on FileSize() failure.
Move the responsibility for checking for and reporting a failure from
the only current BufFileSize() caller, logtape.c, to BufFileSize()
itself.  Code within buffile.c is generally responsible for interfacing
with fd.c to report irrecoverable failures.  This seems like a
convention that's worth sticking to.

Reorganizing things this way makes it easy to make the error message
raised in the event of BufFileSize() failure descriptive of the
underlying problem.  We're now clear on the distinction between
temporary file name and BufFile name, and can show errno, confident that
its value actually relates to the error being reported.  In passing, an
existing, similar buffile.c ereport() + errcode_for_file_access() site
is changed to follow the same conventions.

The API of the function BufFileSize() is changed by this commit, despite
already being in a stable release (Postgres 11).  This seems acceptable,
since the BufFileSize() ABI was changed by commit aa55183042, which
hasn't made it into a point release yet.  Besides, it's difficult to
imagine a third party BufFileSize() caller not just raising an error
anyway, since BufFile state should be considered corrupt when
BufFileSize() fails.

Per complaint from Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26974.1540826748@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch: 11-, where shared BufFiles were introduced.
2018-11-28 14:42:54 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut
f2cbffc7a6 Only allow one recovery target setting
The previous recovery.conf regime accepted multiple recovery_target*
settings and used the last one.  This does not translate well to the
general GUC system.  Specifically, under EXEC_BACKEND, the settings
are written out not in any particular order, so the order in which
they were originally set is not available to new processes.

Rather than redesign the GUC system, it was decided to abandon the old
behavior and only allow one recovery target setting.  A second setting
will cause an error.  However, it is allowed to set the same parameter
multiple times or unset a parameter and set a different one.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/27802171543235530%40iva2-6ec8f0a6115e.qloud-c.yandex.net#701a59c837ad0bf8c244344aaf3ef5a4
2018-11-28 13:55:54 +01:00
Thomas Munro
0f9cdd7dca Don't set PAM_RHOST for Unix sockets.
Since commit 2f1d2b7a we have set PAM_RHOST to "[local]" for Unix
sockets.  This caused Linux PAM's libaudit integration to make DNS
requests for that name.  It's not exactly clear what value PAM_RHOST
should have in that case, but it seems clear that we shouldn't set it
to an unresolvable name, so don't do that.

Back-patch to 9.6.  Bug #15520.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut
Reported-by: Albert Schabhuetl
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15520-4c266f986998e1c5%40postgresql.org
2018-11-28 14:12:30 +13:00
Tomas Vondra
f69c959df0 Do not decode TOAST data for table rewrites
During table rewrites (VACUUM FULL and CLUSTER), the main heap is logged
using XLOG / FPI records, and thus (correctly) ignored in decoding.
But the associated TOAST table is WAL-logged as plain INSERT records,
and so was logically decoded and passed to reorder buffer.

That has severe consequences with TOAST tables of non-trivial size.
Firstly, reorder buffer has to keep all those changes, possibly spilling
them to a file, incurring I/O costs and disk space.

Secondly, ReoderBufferCommit() was stashing all those TOAST chunks into
a hash table, which got discarded only after processing the row from the
main heap.  But as the main heap is not decoded for rewrites, this never
happened, so all the TOAST data accumulated in memory, resulting either
in excessive memory consumption or OOM.

The fix is simple, as commit e9edc1ba already introduced infrastructure
(namely HEAP_INSERT_NO_LOGICAL flag) to skip logical decoding of TOAST
tables, but it only applied it to system tables.  So simply use it for
all TOAST data in raw_heap_insert().

That would however solve only the memory consumption issue - the TOAST
changes would still be decoded and added to the reorder buffer, and
spilled to disk (although without TOAST tuple data, so much smaller).
But we can solve that by tweaking DecodeInsert() to just ignore such
INSERT records altogether, using XLH_INSERT_CONTAINS_NEW_TUPLE flag,
instead of skipping them later in ReorderBufferCommit().

Review: Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1a17c643-e9af-3dba-486b-fbe31bc1823a%402ndquadrant.com
Backpatch: 9.4-, where logical decoding was introduced
2018-11-28 01:43:08 +01:00
Tomas Vondra
d1ce4ed2d5 Use wildcard to match parens after CREATE STATISTICS
CREATE STATISTICS completion was checking manually for the start and end
of the parenthesised list of types. That works, but we now have a better
way to do that as commit 121213d9d taught word_matches() to allow '*' in
the middle of an alternative. But it only applied that to tab completion
for EXPLAIN, ANALYZE and VACUUM. Use it for CREATE STATISTICS too.

Author: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/d8jwooziy1s.fsf%40dalvik.ping.uio.no
2018-11-28 00:48:51 +01:00
Thomas Munro
d67dae036b Don't count zero-filled buffers as 'read' in EXPLAIN.
If you extend a relation, it should count as a block written, not
read (we write a zero-filled block).  If you ask for a zero-filled
buffer, it shouldn't be counted as read or written.

Later we might consider counting zero-filled buffers with a separate
counter, if they become more common due to future work.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Haribabu Kommi, Kyotaro Horiguchi, David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm%3D3JytB3KPpvSwXzkY%2Bdwc5zC8P8Lk7Nedkoci81_0E9rA%40mail.gmail.com
2018-11-28 11:58:10 +13:00
Andres Freund
471a7af585 Ensure consistent sort order of large objects in pg_dump.
The primary purpose of this commit is to ensure pg_upgrade tests yield
comparable dumps pre/post upgrade, which got broken by 12a53c732 /
578b229718, as the order in pg_largeobject_metadata is likely to
differ pre/post upgrade.

It also seems like a generally good idea to make sure such dumps are
comparable, outside of pg_upgrade tests.

LO metadata already was already dumped in an ordered manner as the
metadata is dumped in a well defined order via
sortDumpableObjectsByTypeName() and sortDumpableObjects(). But large
object data is currently not tracked via that mechanism.

As Tom points out it seems possible that at some point dumpBlobs() was
assumed to dump out objects in a well defined order, due to the use of
DISTINCT, which at that time only was done using sorting.

Per complaint from Andrew Dunstan and discussion with him and Tom
Lane.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2735.1543333649@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-27 12:16:55 -08:00
Andres Freund
b238527664 Fix jit compilation bug on wide tables.
The function generated to perform JIT compiled tuple deforming failed
when HeapTupleHeader's t_hoff was bigger than a signed int8. I'd
failed to realize that LLVM's getelementptr would treat an int8 index
argument as signed, rather than unsigned.  That means that a hoff
larger than 127 would result in a negative offset being applied.  Fix
that by widening the index to 32bit.

Add a testcase with a wide table. Don't drop it, as it seems useful to
verify other tools deal properly with wide tables.

Thanks to Justin Pryzby for both reporting a bug and then reducing it
to a reproducible testcase!

Reported-By: Justin Pryzby
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181115223959.GB10913@telsasoft.com
Backpatch: 11, just as jit compilation was
2018-11-27 10:07:03 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut
f17889b221 Update ssl test certificates and keys
Debian testing and newer now require that RSA and DHE keys are at
least 2048 bit long and no longer allow SHA-1 for signatures in
certificates.  This is currently causing the ssl tests to fail there
because the test certificates and keys have been created in violation
of those conditions.

Update the parameters to create the test files and create a new set of
test files.

Author: Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
Reported-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20180917131340.GE31460%40paquier.xyz
2018-11-27 15:16:14 +01:00
Andres Freund
4c8750a9cc Fix ac218aa4f6 to work on versions before 9.5.
Unfortunately ac218aa4f6 missed the fact that a reference to
'pg_catalog.regnamespace'::regclass wouldn't work before that type is
known. Fix that, by replacing the regtype usage with a join to
pg_type.

Reported-By: Tom Lane
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8863.1543297423@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch: 9.5-, like ac218aa4f6
2018-11-26 23:26:05 -08:00
Andres Freund
ac218aa4f6 Update pg_upgrade test for reg* to include regrole and regnamespace.
When the regrole (0c90f6769) and regnamespace (cb9fa802b) types were
added in 9.5, pg_upgrade's check for reg* types wasn't updated. While
regrole currently is safe, regnamespace is not.

It seems unlikely that anybody uses regnamespace inside catalog tables
across a pg_upgrade, but the tests should be correct nevertheless.

While at it, reorder the types checked in the query to be
alphabetical. Otherwise it's annoying to compare existing and tested
for types.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/037e152a-cb25-3bcb-4f35-bdc9988f8204@2ndQuadrant.com
Backpatch: 9.5-, as regrole/regnamespace
2018-11-26 17:00:43 -08:00
Andres Freund
12a53c732c Fix pg_upgrade for oid removal.
pg_upgrade previously copied pg_largeobject_metadata over from the old
cluster. That doesn't work, because the table has oids before
578b229718. I missed that.

As most pieces of metadata for large objects already were dumped as
DDL (except for comments overwritten by pg_upgrade, due to the copy of
pg_largeobject_metadata) it seems reasonable to just also dump grants
for large objects.  If we ever consider this a relevant performance
problem, we'd need to fix the rest of the already emitted DDL
too.

There's still an open discussion about whether we'll want to force a
specific ordering for the dumped objects, as currently
pg_largeobjects_metadata potentially has a different ordering
before/after pg_upgrade, which can make automated testing a bit
harder.

Reported-By: Andrew Dunstan
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/91a8a980-41bc-412b-fba2-2ba71a141c2b@2ndQuadrant.com
2018-11-26 14:37:08 -08:00
Tom Lane
70d7e507ef Fix translation of special characters in psql's LaTeX output modes.
latex_escaped_print() mistranslated \ and failed to provide any translation
for # ^ and ~, all of which would typically lead to LaTeX document syntax
errors.  In addition it didn't translate < > and |, which would typically
render as unexpected characters.

To some extent this represents shortcomings in ancient versions of LaTeX,
which if memory serves had no easy way to render these control characters
as ASCII text.  But that's been fixed for, um, decades.  In any case there
is no value in emitting guaranteed-to-fail output for these characters.

Noted while fooling with test cases added by commit 9a98984f4.  Back-patch
the code change to all supported versions.
2018-11-26 17:32:51 -05:00
Tom Lane
95dcb8fc05 Avoid locale-dependent output in numericlocale check.
I'd forgotten that in the buildfarm, parts of the regression tests
may run with psql exposed to a non-default LC_NUMERIC setting.
Hence we can't assume that C locale prevails, nor is there any
accessible way to force the setting for this single test step.
Lobotomize the test case added by commit 9a98984f4 so that it covers as
much as we can of print.c without having any locale-varying output.
2018-11-26 15:30:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
aa2ba50c2c Add CSV table output mode in psql.
"\pset format csv", or --csv, selects comma-separated values table format.
This is compliant with RFC 4180, except that we aren't too picky about
whether the record separator is LF or CRLF; also, the user may choose a
field separator other than comma.

This output format is directly compatible with the server's COPY CSV
format, and will also be useful as input to other programs.  It's
considerably safer for that purpose than the old recommendation to
use "unaligned" format, since the latter couldn't handle data
containing the field separator character.

Daniel Vérité, reviewed by Fabien Coelho and David Fetter, some
tweaking by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a8de371e-006f-4f92-ab72-2bbe3ee78f03@manitou-mail.org
2018-11-26 15:18:55 -05:00
Tom Lane
9a98984f49 Improve regression test coverage for psql output formats.
As penance for the "\pset format latex" silliness, add some regression
test coverage for the off-the-beaten-path output formats, which formerly
had exactly no coverage, except for some poorly-thought-out (unreadable,
repetitive, and incomplete) tests for asciidoc format.

I make no claims for the behavior exposed here actually being correct;
these test cases are just designed to ensure full code coverage in
fe_utils/print.c.  This brings the line coverage for that file up
from ~60% to ~93%.
2018-11-26 12:41:42 -05:00
Tom Lane
a7eece4fc9 Fix breakage of "\pset format latex".
Commit eaf746a5b unintentionally made psql's "latex" output format
inaccessible, since not only "latex" but all abbreviations of it
were considered ambiguous against "latex-longtable".  Let's go
back to the longstanding behavior that all shortened versions
mean "latex", and you have to write at least "latex-" to get
"latex-longtable".  This leaves the only difference from pre-v12
behavior being that "\pset format a" is considered ambiguous.

The fact that the regression tests didn't expose this is pretty bad,
but fixing it is material for a separate commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/cb7e1caf-3ea6-450d-af28-f524903a030c@manitou-mail.org
2018-11-26 12:31:20 -05:00
Michael Paquier
1d7dd18686 Revert all new recent changes to add PGXS options for TAP and isolation
A set of failures in buildfarm machines are proving that this is not
quite ready yet because of another set of issues:
- MSVC scripts assume that REGRESS_OPTS can only use top_builddir.  Some
test suites actually finish by using top_srcdir, like pg_stat_statements
which cause the regression tests to never run.
- Trying to enforce top_builddir does not work either when using VPATH
as this is not recognized properly.
- TAP tests of bloom are unstable on various platforms, causing various
failures.
2018-11-26 11:12:11 +09:00
Michael Paquier
03faa4a8dd Add PGXS options to control TAP and isolation tests
The following options are added for extensions:
- TAP_TESTS, to allow an extention to run TAP tests which are the ones
present in t/*.pl.  A subset of tests can always be run with the
existing PROVE_TESTS for developers.
- ISOLATION, to define a list of isolation tests.
- ISOLATION_OPTS, to pass custom options to isolation_tester.

A couple of custom Makefile targets have been accumulated across the
tree to cover the lack of facility in PGXS for a couple of releases when
using those test suites, which are all now replaced with the new flags,
without reducing the test coverage.  This also fixes an issue with
contrib/bloom/, which had a custom target to trigger its TAP tests of
its own not part of the main check runs.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Adam Berlin, Álvaro Herrera, Tom Lane, Nikolay Shaplov,
Arthur Zakirov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180906014849.GG2726@paquier.xyz
2018-11-26 08:39:19 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
2dedf4d9a8 Integrate recovery.conf into postgresql.conf
recovery.conf settings are now set in postgresql.conf (or other GUC
sources).  Currently, all the affected settings are PGC_POSTMASTER;
this could be refined in the future case by case.

Recovery is now initiated by a file recovery.signal.  Standby mode is
initiated by a file standby.signal.  The standby_mode setting is
gone.  If a recovery.conf file is found, an error is issued.

The trigger_file setting has been renamed to promote_trigger_file as
part of the move.

The documentation chapter "Recovery Configuration" has been integrated
into "Server Configuration".

pg_basebackup -R now appends settings to postgresql.auto.conf and
creates a standby.signal file.

Author: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com>
Author: Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com>
Author: Abhijit Menon-Sen <ams@2ndquadrant.com>
Author: Sergei Kornilov <sk@zsrv.org>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/607741529606767@web3g.yandex.ru/
2018-11-25 16:33:40 +01:00
Thomas Munro
ab69ea9fee Fix assertion failure for SSL connections.
Commit cfdf4dc4 added an assertion that every WaitLatch() or similar
handles postmaster death.  One place did not, but was missed in
review and testing due to the need for an SSL connection.  Fix, by
asking for WL_EXIT_ON_PM_DEATH.

Reported-by: Christoph Berg
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181124143845.GA15039%40msg.df7cb.de
2018-11-25 18:34:58 +13:00
Tom Lane
452b637d4b Adjust new test case for more portability.
Early returns from the buildfarm say that most critters are good with
commit cbdb8b4c0, but gaur gives unexpected results with the test case
involving a float8 that's one-ULP-less-than-2^63.  It appears that that
platform's version of rint() rounds that value up to 2^63 instead of
leaving it be.  This is possibly a bug, and it's also possible that no
other platform anybody is using anywhere behaves likewise.  Still, the
point of the test is not to insist that everybody's rint() behaves exactly
the same.  Let's use two-ULPs-less-than-2^63 instead, which I've tested
to act the same on gaur as on more modern hardware.

(This is, more or less, exactly the portability issue I'd feared might
arise...)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15519-4fc785b483201ff1@postgresql.org
2018-11-23 23:49:25 -05:00
Tom Lane
cbdb8b4c01 Fix float-to-integer coercions to handle edge cases correctly.
ftoi4 and its sibling coercion functions did their overflow checks in
a way that looked superficially plausible, but actually depended on an
assumption that the MIN and MAX comparison constants can be represented
exactly in the float4 or float8 domain.  That fails in ftoi4, ftoi8,
and dtoi8, resulting in a possibility that values near the MAX limit will
be wrongly converted (to negative values) when they need to be rejected.

Also, because we compared before rounding off the fractional part,
the other three functions threw errors for values that really ought
to get rounded to the min or max integer value.

Fix by doing rint() first (requiring an assumption that it handles
NaN and Inf correctly; but dtoi8 and ftoi8 were assuming that already),
and by comparing to values that should coerce to float exactly, namely
INTxx_MIN and -INTxx_MIN.  Also remove some random cosmetic discrepancies
between these six functions.

Per bug #15519 from Victor Petrovykh.  This should get back-patched,
but first let's see what the buildfarm thinks of it --- I'm not too
sure about portability of some of the regression test cases.

Patch by me; thanks to Andrew Gierth for analysis and discussion.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15519-4fc785b483201ff1@postgresql.org
2018-11-23 20:57:11 -05:00
Tom Lane
a314c34079 Clamp semijoin selectivity to be not more than inner-join selectivity.
We should never estimate the output of a semijoin to be more rows than
we estimate for an inner join with the same input rels and join condition;
it's obviously impossible for that to happen.  However, given the
relatively poor quality of our semijoin selectivity estimates ---
particularly, but not only, in cases where we punt and return a default
estimate --- we did often deliver such estimates.  To improve matters,
calculate both estimates inside eqjoinsel() and take the smaller one.

The bulk of this patch is just mechanical refactoring to avoid repetitive
information lookup when we call both eqjoinsel_semi and eqjoinsel_inner.
The actual new behavior is just

	selec = Min(selec, inner_rel->rows * selec_inner);

which looks a bit odd but is correct because of our different definitions
for inner and semi join selectivity.

There is one ensuing plan change in the regression tests, but it looks
reasonable enough (and checking the actual row counts shows that the
estimate moved closer to reality, not further away).

Per bug #15160 from Alexey Ermakov.  Although this is arguably a bug fix,
I won't risk destabilizing plan choices in stable branches by
back-patching.

Tom Lane, reviewed by Melanie Plageman

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/152395805004.19366.3107109716821067806@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-11-23 12:48:49 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
3be5fe2b10 Silence compiler warnings
Commit cfdf4dc4fc left a few unnecessary assignments, one of which
caused compiler warnings, as reported by Erik Rijkers.  Remove them all.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/df0dcca2025b3d90d946ecc508ca9678@xs4all.nl
2018-11-23 13:01:05 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
de38ce1b83 Don't allow partitioned indexes in pg_global tablespace
Missing in dfa6081419.

Author: David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-M3NMTCpv=vDfkoqHbMPFf=3-Z1ud=+1DHH00tC+zLaQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-23 08:48:20 -03:00
Thomas Munro
cfdf4dc4fc Add WL_EXIT_ON_PM_DEATH pseudo-event.
Users of the WaitEventSet and WaitLatch() APIs can now choose between
asking for WL_POSTMASTER_DEATH and then handling it explicitly, or asking
for WL_EXIT_ON_PM_DEATH to trigger immediate exit on postmaster death.
This reduces code duplication, since almost all callers want the latter.

Repair all code that was previously ignoring postmaster death completely,
or requesting the event but ignoring it, or requesting the event but then
doing an unconditional PostmasterIsAlive() call every time through its
event loop (which is an expensive syscall on platforms for which we don't
have USE_POSTMASTER_DEATH_SIGNAL support).

Assert that callers of WaitLatchXXX() under the postmaster remember to
ask for either WL_POSTMASTER_DEATH or WL_EXIT_ON_PM_DEATH, to prevent
future bugs.

The only process that doesn't handle postmaster death is syslogger.  It
waits until all backends holding the write end of the syslog pipe
(including the postmaster) have closed it by exiting, to be sure to
capture any parting messages.  By using the WaitEventSet API directly
it avoids the new assertion, and as a by-product it may be slightly
more efficient on platforms that have epoll().

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Heikki Linnakangas, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm%3D1TCviRykkUb69ppWLr_V697rzd1j3eZsRMmbXvETfqbQ%40mail.gmail.com,
            https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2LqHzizbe7muD7-2yHUbTOoF7Q+qkSD5Q41kuhttRTwA@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-23 20:46:34 +13:00
Tom Lane
eba2ce1712 Fix another crash in json{b}_populate_recordset and json{b}_to_recordset.
populate_recordset_worker() failed to consider the possibility that the
supplied JSON data contains no rows, so that update_cached_tupdesc never
got called.  This led to a null-pointer dereference since commit 9a5e8ed28;
before that it led to a bogus "set-valued function called in context that
cannot accept a set" error.  Fix by forcing the update to happen.

Per bug #15514.  Back-patch to v11 as 9a5e8ed28 was.  (If we were excited
about the bogus error, we could perhaps go back further, but it'd take more
work to figure out how to fix it in older branches.  Given the lack of
field complaints about that aspect, I'm not excited.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15514-59d5b4c4065b178b@postgresql.org
2018-11-22 15:14:01 -05:00
Michael Paquier
25c026c284 Fix typo in description of ExecFindPartition
Author: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqHg0=UL+Dhh3gpiwYNA=ufk9Lb7GQ2c=5rs=ZmVTP7xAw@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-22 13:23:54 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera
3bac77c48f Rework the pgbench state machine code for clarity
This commit continues the code improvements started by commit
12788ae49e.  With this commit, state machine transitions are better
contained in the routine that was called doCustom() and is now called
advanceConnectionState -- the resulting code is easier to reason about,
since there are no state changes occuring in the outer layer.

This change is prompted by future patches to add more features to
pgbench, which will need to effect some more surgery to this code.

Fabien's original had all the machine state changes inside one routine,
but I (Álvaro) thought that a subroutine to handle command execution is
more straightforward to review, so this commit does not match Fabien's
submission closely.  If something is broken, it's probably my fault.

Author: Fabien Coelho, Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Kirk Jamison
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.21.1808111104320.1705@lancre
2018-11-21 16:33:53 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
03e10b962f Fix typo in commit 6f7d02aa60
Per pink buildfarm.
2018-11-21 15:35:40 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
ee07e38c14 Fix PartitionDispatchData vertical whitespace
Per David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-MstvBWdkOzACsOHyBgj2oXcBM8kfv+NhVe-Ux-wq9Sg@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-21 15:04:25 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
6f7d02aa60 instr_time.h: add INSTR_TIME_SET_CURRENT_LAZY
Sets the timestamp to current if not already set.  Will acquire more
callers momentarily.

Author: Fabien Coelho
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.21.1808111104320.1705@lancre
2018-11-21 15:04:25 -03:00
Andres Freund
578b229718 Remove WITH OIDS support, change oid catalog column visibility.
Previously tables declared WITH OIDS, including a significant fraction
of the catalog tables, stored the oid column not as a normal column,
but as part of the tuple header.

This special column was not shown by default, which was somewhat odd,
as it's often (consider e.g. pg_class.oid) one of the more important
parts of a row.  Neither pg_dump nor COPY included the contents of the
oid column by default.

The fact that the oid column was not an ordinary column necessitated a
significant amount of special case code to support oid columns. That
already was painful for the existing, but upcoming work aiming to make
table storage pluggable, would have required expanding and duplicating
that "specialness" significantly.

WITH OIDS has been deprecated since 2005 (commit ff02d0a05280e0).
Remove it.

Removing includes:
- CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE syntax for declaring the table to be
  WITH OIDS has been removed (WITH (oids[ = true]) will error out)
- pg_dump does not support dumping tables declared WITH OIDS and will
  issue a warning when dumping one (and ignore the oid column).
- restoring an pg_dump archive with pg_restore will warn when
  restoring a table with oid contents (and ignore the oid column)
- COPY will refuse to load binary dump that includes oids.
- pg_upgrade will error out when encountering tables declared WITH
  OIDS, they have to be altered to remove the oid column first.
- Functionality to access the oid of the last inserted row (like
  plpgsql's RESULT_OID, spi's SPI_lastoid, ...) has been removed.

The syntax for declaring a table WITHOUT OIDS (or WITH (oids = false)
for CREATE TABLE) is still supported. While that requires a bit of
support code, it seems unnecessary to break applications / dumps that
do not use oids, and are explicit about not using them.

The biggest user of WITH OID columns was postgres' catalog. This
commit changes all 'magic' oid columns to be columns that are normally
declared and stored. To reduce unnecessary query breakage all the
newly added columns are still named 'oid', even if a table's column
naming scheme would indicate 'reloid' or such.  This obviously
requires adapting a lot code, mostly replacing oid access via
HeapTupleGetOid() with access to the underlying Form_pg_*->oid column.

The bootstrap process now assigns oids for all oid columns in
genbki.pl that do not have an explicit value (starting at the largest
oid previously used), only oids assigned later by oids will be above
FirstBootstrapObjectId. As the oid column now is a normal column the
special bootstrap syntax for oids has been removed.

Oids are not automatically assigned during insertion anymore, all
backend code explicitly assigns oids with GetNewOidWithIndex(). For
the rare case that insertions into the catalog via SQL are called for
the new pg_nextoid() function can be used (which only works on catalog
tables).

The fact that oid columns on system tables are now normal columns
means that they will be included in the set of columns expanded
by * (i.e. SELECT * FROM pg_class will now include the table's oid,
previously it did not). It'd not technically be hard to hide oid
column by default, but that'd mean confusing behavior would either
have to be carried forward forever, or it'd cause breakage down the
line.

While it's not unlikely that further adjustments are needed, the
scope/invasiveness of the patch makes it worthwhile to get merge this
now. It's painful to maintain externally, too complicated to commit
after the code code freeze, and a dependency of a number of other
patches.

Catversion bump, for obvious reasons.

Author: Andres Freund, with contributions by John Naylor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180930034810.ywp2c7awz7opzcfr@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-20 16:00:17 -08:00
Michael Paquier
0999ac4792 Improve description of buffer used to store records in WAL reader
The dedicated private buffer to store records is used only for these
crossing a page boundary since 285bd0ac, but its description did not
match completely the reality.

Reported-by: Andrey Lepikhov
Author: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/49518b48-2036-5e43-1818-0f594e375e76@postgrespro.ru
2018-11-21 08:43:32 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
ea8bc349bd Make detection of SSL_CTX_set_min_proto_version more portable
As already explained in configure.in, using the OpenSSL version number
to detect presence of functions doesn't work, because LibreSSL reports
incompatible version numbers.  Fortunately, the functions we need here
are actually macros, so we can just test for them directly.
2018-11-20 22:59:36 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
e73e67c719 Add settings to control SSL/TLS protocol version
For example:

    ssl_min_protocol_version = 'TLSv1.1'
    ssl_max_protocol_version = 'TLSv1.2'

Reviewed-by: Steve Singer <steve@ssinger.info>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1822da87-b862-041a-9fc2-d0310c3da173@2ndquadrant.com
2018-11-20 22:12:10 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
2d9140ed26 Make WAL description output more consistent
The output for record types XLOG_DBASE_CREATE and XLOG_DBASE_DROP used
the order dbid/tablespaceid, whereas elsewhere the order is
tablespaceid/dbid[/relfilenodeid].  Flip the order for those two types
to make it consistent.

Author: Jean-Christophe Arnu <jcarnu@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAHZmTm18Ln62KW-G8NYvO1wbBL3QU1E76Zep=DuHmg-zS2XFAg@mail.gmail.com/
2018-11-20 13:30:01 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
a568cadaff Refine some guc.c help texts
These settings apply to communication with the sending server, which
is not necessarily a primary.

Author: Sergei Kornilov <sk@zsrv.org>
2018-11-20 06:38:34 +01:00
Michael Paquier
9685d7383a Fix issues with TAP tests of pg_verify_checksums
Two issues have been spotted and get fixed here:
- When checking for corrupted files, make sure that pg_verify_checksums
complains about the correct file.  In order to make the logic more
robust, all files created are immediately removed once checks on them
are done.  The error message generated by pg_verify_checksums also now
includes the file name it sees as corrupted.
- Before running corruption-related tests, empty files are generated
which used names mapping with the corrupted files, potentially leading
to conflicts.  So use different set of names for both.

Author: Michael Banck
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181119181119.GC23740@nighthawk.caipicrew.dd-dns.de
2018-11-20 10:20:52 +09:00
Tom Lane
cb09903fe6 Add needed #include.
Per POSIX, WIFSIGNALED and related macros are provided by <sys/wait.h>.
Apparently on Linux they're also pulled in by some other inclusions,
but BSD-ish systems are pickier.  Fixes portability issue in ffa4cbd62.

Per buildfarm.
2018-11-19 17:28:04 -05:00
Tom Lane
ffa4cbd623 Handle EPIPE more sanely when we close a pipe reading from a program.
Previously, any program launched by COPY TO/FROM PROGRAM inherited the
server's setting of SIGPIPE handling, i.e. SIG_IGN.  Hence, if we were
doing COPY FROM PROGRAM and closed the pipe early, the child process
would see EPIPE on its output file and typically would treat that as
a fatal error, in turn causing the COPY to report error.  Similarly,
one could get a failure report from a query that didn't read all of
the output from a contrib/file_fdw foreign table that uses file_fdw's
PROGRAM option.

To fix, ensure that child programs inherit SIG_DFL not SIG_IGN processing
of SIGPIPE.  This seems like an all-around better situation since if
the called program wants some non-default treatment of SIGPIPE, it would
expect to have to set that up for itself.  Then in COPY, if it's COPY
FROM PROGRAM and we stop reading short of detecting EOF, treat a SIGPIPE
exit from the called program as a non-error condition.  This still allows
us to report an error for any case where the called program gets SIGPIPE
on some other file descriptor.

As coded, we won't report a SIGPIPE if we stop reading as a result of
seeing an in-band EOF marker (e.g. COPY BINARY EOF marker).  It's
somewhat debatable whether we should complain if the called program
continues to transmit data after an EOF marker.  However, it seems like
we should avoid throwing error in any questionable cases, especially in a
back-patched fix, and anyway it would take additional code to make such
an error get reported consistently.

Back-patch to v10.  We could go further back, since COPY FROM PROGRAM
has been around awhile, but AFAICS the only way to reach this situation
using core or contrib is via file_fdw, which has only supported PROGRAM
sources since v10.  The COPY statement per se has no feature whereby
it'd stop reading without having hit EOF or an error already.  Therefore,
I don't see any upside to back-patching further that'd outweigh the
risk of complaints about behavioral change.

Per bug #15449 from Eric Cyr.

Patch by me, review by Etsuro Fujita and Kyotaro Horiguchi

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15449-1cf737dd5929450e@postgresql.org
2018-11-19 17:02:39 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
d56e0fde82 psql: Describe partitioned tables/indexes as such
In \d and \z, instead of conflating partitioned tables and indexes with
plain ones, set the "type" column and table title differently to make
the distinction obvious.  A simple ease-of-use improvement.

Author: Pavel Stehule, Michaël Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRDMWPgijpt_vPj1t702PgLG4Ls2NCf+rEcb+qGPpossmg@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-19 17:30:06 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
6e5f8d489a psql: Show IP address in \conninfo
When hostaddr is given, the actual IP address that psql is connected to
can be totally unexpected for the given host.  The more verbose output
we now generate makes things clearer.  Since the "host" and "hostaddr"
parts of the conninfo could come from different sources (say, one of
them is in the service specification or a URI-style conninfo and the
other is not), this is not as silly as it may first appear.  This is
also definitely useful if the hostname resolves to multiple addresses.

Author: Fabien Coelho
Reviewed-by: Pavel Stehule, Arthur Zakirov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.21.1810261532380.27686@lancre
	https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.21.1808201323020.13832@lancre
2018-11-19 14:34:12 -03:00
Robert Haas
7ee5f88e65 Reduce unnecessary list construction in RelationBuildPartitionDesc.
The 'partoids' list which was constructed by the previous version
of this code was necessarily identical to 'inhoids'.  There's no
point to duplicating the list, so avoid that.  Instead, construct
the array representation directly from the original 'inhoids' list.

Also, use an array rather than a list for 'boundspecs'.  We know
exactly how many items we need to store, so there's really no
reason to use a list.  Using an array instead reduces the number
of memory allocations we perform.

Patch by me, reviewed by Michael Paquier and Amit Langote, the
latter of whom also helped with rebasing.
2018-11-19 12:10:41 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
5c9a5513a3 Disallow COPY FREEZE on partitioned tables
This didn't actually work: COPY would fail to flush the right files, and
instead would try to flush a non-existing file, causing the whole
transaction to fail.

Cope by raising an error as soon as the command is sent instead, to
avoid a nasty later surprise.  Of course, it would be much better to
make it work, but we don't have a patch for that yet, and we don't know
if we'll want to backpatch one when we do.

Reported-by: Tomas Vondra
Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Steve Singer, Tomas Vondra
2018-11-19 11:16:28 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut
fc47e99a15 pg_archivecleanup: Update file header comment a bit 2018-11-19 08:57:03 +01:00
Thomas Munro
9ccdd7f66e PANIC on fsync() failure.
On some operating systems, it doesn't make sense to retry fsync(),
because dirty data cached by the kernel may have been dropped on
write-back failure.  In that case the only remaining copy of the
data is in the WAL.  A subsequent fsync() could appear to succeed,
but not have flushed the data.  That means that a future checkpoint
could apparently complete successfully but have lost data.

Therefore, violently prevent any future checkpoint attempts by
panicking on the first fsync() failure.  Note that we already
did the same for WAL data; this change extends that behavior to
non-temporary data files.

Provide a GUC data_sync_retry to control this new behavior, for
users of operating systems that don't eject dirty data, and possibly
forensic/testing uses.  If it is set to on and the write-back error
was transient, a later checkpoint might genuinely succeed (on a
system that does not throw away buffers on failure); if the error is
permanent, later checkpoints will continue to fail.  The GUC defaults
to off, meaning that we panic.

Back-patch to all supported releases.

There is still a narrow window for error-loss on some operating
systems: if the file is closed and later reopened and a write-back
error occurs in the intervening time, but the inode has the bad
luck to be evicted due to memory pressure before we reopen, we could
miss the error.  A later patch will address that with a scheme
for keeping files with dirty data open at all times, but we judge
that to be too complicated to back-patch.

Author: Craig Ringer, with some adjustments by Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Craig Ringer
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas, Thomas Munro, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180427222842.in2e4mibx45zdth5%40alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-19 17:41:26 +13:00
Thomas Munro
1556cb2fc5 Don't forget about failed fsync() requests.
If fsync() fails, md.c must keep the request in its bitmap, so that
future attempts will try again.

Back-patch to all supported releases.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Reported-by: Andrew Gierth
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87y3i1ia4w.fsf%40news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2018-11-19 17:41:26 +13:00
Michael Paquier
285bd0ac4a Remove unnecessary memcpy when reading WAL record fitting on page
When reading a WAL record, its contents are copied into an intermediate
buffer.  However, doing so is not necessary if the record fits fully
into the current page, saving one memcpy for each such record.  The
allocation handling of the intermediate buffer is also now done only
when a record crosses a page boundary, shaving some extra cycles when
reading a WAL record.

Author: Andrey Lepikhov
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Heikki Linnakangas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c2ea54dd-a1d3-80eb-ddbf-7e6f258e615e@postgrespro.ru
2018-11-19 10:25:48 +09:00
Andrew Dunstan
79376e0712 fix typo 2018-11-18 12:43:03 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
d5d7f7f3b7 Silence MSVC warnings about redefinition of isnan
Some versions of perl.h define isnan when the compiler is MSVC. To avoid
warnings about this, undefine the symbol before including perl.h and
re-add the definition afterwards if it wasn't recreated.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/caf0568e-3c1f-07fd-6914-d903f22560f2@2ndQuadrant.com
2018-11-18 12:36:31 -05:00
Tomas Vondra
d3bbc4b96a Add valgrind suppressions for wcsrtombs optimizations
wcsrtombs (called through wchar2char from common functions like lower,
upper, etc.) uses various optimizations that may look like access to
uninitialized data, triggering valgrind reports.

For example AVX2 instructions load data in 256-bit chunks, and  gconv
does something similar with 32-bit chunks.  This is faster than accessing
the bytes one by one, and the uninitialized part of the buffer is not
actually used. So suppress the bogus reports.

The exact stack depends on possible optimizations - it might be AVX, SSE
(as in the report by Aleksander Alekseev) or something else. Hence the
last frame is wildcarded, to deal with this.

Backpatch all the way back to 9.4.

Author: Tomas Vondra
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/90ac0452-e907-e7a4-b3c8-15bd33780e62%402ndquadrant.com
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20180220150838.GD18315@e733.localdomain
2018-11-17 23:50:21 +01:00
Tom Lane
37afc079ab Avoid defining SIGTTIN/SIGTTOU on Windows.
Setting them to SIG_IGN seems unlikely to have any beneficial effect
on that platform, and given the signal numbering collision with SIGABRT,
it could easily have bad effects.

Given the lack of field complaints that can be traced to this, I don't
presently feel a need to back-patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5627.1542477392@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-17 16:31:16 -05:00
Tom Lane
125f551c8b Leave SIGTTIN/SIGTTOU signal handling alone in postmaster child processes.
For reasons lost in the mists of time, most postmaster child processes
reset SIGTTIN/SIGTTOU signal handling to SIG_DFL, with the major exception
that backend sessions do not.  It seems like a pretty bad idea for any
postmaster children to do that: if stderr is connected to the terminal,
and the user has put the postmaster in background, any log output would
result in the child process freezing up.  Hence, switch them all to
doing what backends do, ie, nothing.  This allows them to inherit the
postmaster's SIG_IGN setting.  On the other hand, manually-launched
processes such as standalone backends will have default processing,
which seems fine.

In passing, also remove useless resets of SIGCONT and SIGWINCH signal
processing.  Perhaps the postmaster once changed those to something
besides SIG_DFL, but it doesn't now, so these are just wasted (and
confusing) syscalls.

Basically, this propagates the changes made in commit 8e2998d8a from
backends to other postmaster children.  Probably the only reason these
calls now exist elsewhere is that I missed changing pgstat.c along with
postgres.c at the time.

Given the lack of field complaints that can be traced to this, I don't
presently feel a need to back-patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5627.1542477392@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-17 16:31:16 -05:00
Andres Freund
73616126b4 Fix some spurious new compiler warnings in MSVC.
Per buildfarm animal bowerbird.

Discussion: https://buildfarm.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/show_log.pl?nm=bowerbird&dt=2018-11-17%2002%3A30%3A20
2018-11-17 11:41:14 -08:00
Andres Freund
4da597edf1 Make TupleTableSlots extensible, finish split of existing slot type.
This commit completes the work prepared in 1a0586de36, splitting the
old TupleTableSlot implementation (which could store buffer, heap,
minimal and virtual slots) into four different slot types.  As
described in the aforementioned commit, this is done with the goal of
making tuple table slots extensible, to allow for pluggable table
access methods.

To achieve runtime extensibility for TupleTableSlots, operations on
slots that can differ between types of slots are performed using the
TupleTableSlotOps struct provided at slot creation time.  That
includes information from the size of TupleTableSlot struct to be
allocated, initialization, deforming etc.  See the struct's definition
for more detailed information about callbacks TupleTableSlotOps.

I decided to rename TTSOpsBufferTuple to TTSOpsBufferHeapTuple and
ExecCopySlotTuple to ExecCopySlotHeapTuple, as that seems more
consistent with other naming introduced in recent patches.

There's plenty optimization potential in the slot implementation, but
according to benchmarking the state after this commit has similar
performance characteristics to before this set of changes, which seems
sufficient.

There's a few changes in execReplication.c that currently need to poke
through the slot abstraction, that'll be repaired once the pluggable
storage patchset provides the necessary infrastructure.

Author: Andres Freund and  Ashutosh Bapat, with changes by Amit Khandekar
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-16 16:35:15 -08:00
Alvaro Herrera
0201d79a55 Avoid re-typedef'ing PartitionTupleRouting
Apparently, gcc on macOS (?) doesn't like it.

Per buildfarm.
2018-11-16 16:55:53 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
4092319194 pgbench: introduce a RandomState struct
This becomes useful when used to retry a transaction after a
serialization error or deadlock abort.  (We don't yet have that feature,
but this is preparation for it.)

While at it, use separate random state for thread administratrivia such
as deciding which script to run, how long to delay for throttling, or
whether to log a message when sampling; this not only makes these tasks
independent of each other, but makes the actual thread run
deterministic.

Author: Marina Polyakova
Reviewed-by: Fabien Coelho
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/72a0d590d6ba06f242d75c2e641820ec@postgrespro.ru
2018-11-16 16:34:13 -03:00
Andres Freund
a7aa608e0f Inline hot path of slot_getsomeattrs().
This yields a minor speedup, which roughly balances the loss from the
upcoming introduction of callbacks to do some operations on slots.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-16 10:29:01 -08:00
Alvaro Herrera
3f2393edef Redesign initialization of partition routing structures
This speeds up write operations (INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, COPY, as well
as the future MERGE) on partitioned tables.

This changes the setup for tuple routing so that it does far less work
during the initial setup and pushes more work out to when partitions
receive tuples.  PartitionDispatchData structs for sub-partitioned
tables are only created when a tuple gets routed through it.  The
possibly large arrays in the PartitionTupleRouting struct have largely
been removed.  The partitions[] array remains but now never contains any
NULL gaps.  Previously the NULLs had to be skipped during
ExecCleanupTupleRouting(), which could add a large overhead to the
cleanup when the number of partitions was large.  The partitions[] array
is allocated small to start with and only enlarged when we route tuples
to enough partitions that it runs out of space. This allows us to keep
simple single-row partition INSERTs running quickly.  Redesign

The arrays in PartitionTupleRouting which stored the tuple translation maps
have now been removed.  These have been moved out into a
PartitionRoutingInfo struct which is an additional field in ResultRelInfo.

The find_all_inheritors() call still remains by far the slowest part of
ExecSetupPartitionTupleRouting(). This commit just removes the other slow
parts.

In passing also rename the tuple translation maps from being ParentToChild
and ChildToParent to being RootToPartition and PartitionToRoot. The old
names mislead you into thinking that a partition of some sub-partitioned
table would translate to the rowtype of the sub-partitioned table rather
than the root partitioned table.

Authors: David Rowley and Amit Langote, heavily revised by Álvaro Herrera
Testing help from Jesper Pedersen and Kato Sho.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_1RJyFquuCKRFHTdcXqoPX-PYqAd7nz=GVBwvGh4a6xA@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-16 15:01:05 -03:00
Andres Freund
a387a3dff9 Fix slot type assumptions for nodeGather[Merge].
The assumption made in 1a0586de36 was wrong, as evidenced by
buildfarm failure on locust, which runs with
force_parallel_mode=regress.  The tuples accessed in either nodes are
in the outer slot, and we can't trivially rely on the slot type being
known because the leader might execute the subsidiary node directly,
or via the tuple queue on a worker. In the latter case the tuple will
always be a heaptuple slot, but in the former, it'll be whatever the
subsidiary node returns.
2018-11-15 23:16:41 -08:00
Andres Freund
f92cd73923 Add dummy field to currently empty struct TupleTableSlotOps.
Per MSVC complaint on buildfarm member dory.
2018-11-15 22:29:50 -08:00
Andres Freund
7ef04e4d2c Don't generate tuple deforming functions for virtual slots.
Virtual tuple table slots never need tuple deforming. Therefore, if we
know at expression compilation time, that a certain slot will always
be virtual, there's no need to create a tuple deforming routine for
it.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-15 22:00:30 -08:00
Andres Freund
15d8f83128 Verify that expected slot types match returned slot types.
This is important so JIT compilation knows what kind of tuple slot the
deforming routine can expect. There's also optimization potential for
expression initialization without JIT compilation. It e.g. seems
plausible to elide EEOP_*_FETCHSOME ops entirely when dealing with
virtual slots.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-15 22:00:30 -08:00
Andres Freund
675af5c01e Compute information about EEOP_*_FETCHSOME at expression init time.
Previously this information was computed when JIT compiling an
expression.  But the information is useful for assertions in the
non-JIT case too (for assertions), therefore it makes sense to move
it.

This will, in a followup commit, allow to treat different slot types
differently. E.g. for virtual slots there's no need to generate a JIT
function to deform the slot.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-15 22:00:30 -08:00
Andres Freund
1a0586de36 Introduce notion of different types of slots (without implementing them).
Upcoming work intends to allow pluggable ways to introduce new ways of
storing table data. Accessing those table access methods from the
executor requires TupleTableSlots to be carry tuples in the native
format of such storage methods; otherwise there'll be a significant
conversion overhead.

Different access methods will require different data to store tuples
efficiently (just like virtual, minimal, heap already require fields
in TupleTableSlot). To allow that without requiring additional pointer
indirections, we want to have different structs (embedding
TupleTableSlot) for different types of slots.  Thus different types of
slots are needed, which requires adapting creators of slots.

The slot that most efficiently can represent a type of tuple in an
executor node will often depend on the type of slot a child node
uses. Therefore we need to track the type of slot is returned by
nodes, so parent slots can create slots based on that.

Relatedly, JIT compilation of tuple deforming needs to know which type
of slot a certain expression refers to, so it can create an
appropriate deforming function for the type of tuple in the slot.

But not all nodes will only return one type of slot, e.g. an append
node will potentially return different types of slots for each of its
subplans.

Therefore add function that allows to query the type of a node's
result slot, and whether it'll always be the same type (whether it's
fixed). This can be queried using ExecGetResultSlotOps().

The scan, result, inner, outer type of slots are automatically
inferred from ExecInitScanTupleSlot(), ExecInitResultSlot(),
left/right subtrees respectively. If that's not correct for a node,
that can be overwritten using new fields in PlanState.

This commit does not introduce the actually abstracted implementation
of different kind of TupleTableSlots, that will be left for a followup
commit.  The different types of slots introduced will, for now, still
use the same backing implementation.

While this already partially invalidates the big comment in
tuptable.h, it seems to make more sense to update it later, when the
different TupleTableSlot implementations actually exist.

Author: Ashutosh Bapat and Andres Freund, with changes by Amit Khandekar
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-15 22:00:30 -08:00
Andres Freund
763f2edd92 Rejigger materializing and fetching a HeapTuple from a slot.
Previously materializing a slot always returned a HeapTuple. As
current work aims to reduce the reliance on HeapTuples (so other
storage systems can work efficiently), that needs to change. Thus
split the tasks of materializing a slot (i.e. making it independent
from the underlying storage / other memory contexts) from fetching a
HeapTuple from the slot.  For brevity, allow to fetch a HeapTuple from
a slot and materializing the slot at the same time, controlled by a
parameter.

For now some callers of ExecFetchSlotHeapTuple, with materialize =
true, expect that changes to the heap tuple will be reflected in the
underlying slot.  Those places will be adapted in due course, so while
not pretty, that's OK for now.

Also rename ExecFetchSlotTuple to ExecFetchSlotHeapTupleDatum and
ExecFetchSlotTupleDatum to ExecFetchSlotHeapTupleDatum, as it's likely
that future storage methods will need similar methods. There already
is ExecFetchSlotMinimalTuple, so the new names make the naming scheme
more coherent.

Author: Ashutosh Bapat and Andres Freund, with changes by Amit Khandekar
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-15 14:31:12 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut
7ac0069fb8 A small tweak to some comments for PartitionKeyData
It was not really that obvious that there's meant to be exactly 1 item
in the partexprs List for each zero-valued partattrs element.  Some
incorrect code using these fields was the cause of CVE-2018-1052, so
it's worthwhile to mention how they should be used in the comments.

Author: David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com>
2018-11-15 23:22:19 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
52d8e899d0 Correct code comments for PartitionedRelPruneInfo struct
The comments above the PartitionedRelPruneInfo struct incorrectly
document how subplan_map and subpart_map are indexed.  This seems to
have snuck in on 4e23236403.

Author: David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com>
2018-11-15 23:04:48 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
86a4819f69 Update executor documentation for run-time partition pruning
With run-time partition pruning, there is no longer necessarily an
executor node for each corresponding plan node.

Author: David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com>
2018-11-15 23:02:21 +01:00
Andres Freund
c058fc2a2b Rationalize expression context reset in ExecModifyTable().
The current pattern of reseting expressions both in
ExecProcessReturning() and ExecOnConflictUpdate() makes it harder than
necessary to reason about memory lifetimes.  It also requires
materializing slots unnecessarily, although this patch doesn't take
advantage of the fact that that's not necessary anymore.

Instead reset the expression context once for each input tuple.

Author: Ashutosh Bapat
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-15 11:40:50 -08:00
Andres Freund
6a744413ea Make reformat-dat-files, reformat-dat-files VPATH safe.
The reformat_dat_file.pl script, added by 372728b0d4, supported
all the necessary options to make it work in a VPATH build, but the
makefile invocations didn't take VPATH into account. Fix that.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181115185303.d2z7wonx23mdfvd3@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 11-, where 372728b0d4 was merged
2018-11-15 11:38:03 -08:00
Tom Lane
34c9e455d0 Improve performance of partition pruning remapping a little.
ExecFindInitialMatchingSubPlans has to update the PartitionPruneState's
subplan mapping data to account for the removal of subplans it prunes.
However, that's only necessary if run-time pruning will also occur,
so we can skip it when that won't happen, which should result in not
needing to do the remapping in many cases.  (We now need it only when
some partitions are potentially startup-time prunable and others are
potentially run-time prunable, which seems like an unusual case.)

Also make some marginal performance improvements in the remapping
itself.  These will mainly win if most partitions got pruned by
the startup-time pruning, which is perhaps a debatable assumption
in this context.

Also fix some bogus comments, and rearrange code to marginally
reduce space consumption in the executor's query-lifespan context.

David Rowley, reviewed by Yoshikazu Imai

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f9+m6-di-zyy4B4AGn0y1B9F8UKDRigtBbNviXOkuyOpw@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-15 13:34:16 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
74514bd4a5 geo_ops.c: Clarify comments and function arguments
These functions were not crystal clear about what their respective APIs
are.  Make an effort to improve that.

Emre's patch was correct AFAICT, but I (Álvaro) felt the need to improve
a few comments a bit more.  Any resulting errors are my own.

Per complaint from Coverity, Ning Yu, and Tom Lane.

Author: Emre Hasegeli, Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26769.1533090136@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-15 12:08:03 -03:00
Thomas Munro
ab8984f52d Further adjustment to random() seed initialization.
Per complaint from Tom Lane, don't chomp the timestamp at 32 bits, so we
can shift in some of its higher bits.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/14712.1542253115%40sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-15 17:38:55 +13:00
Thomas Munro
5b0ce3ec33 Increase the number of possible random seeds per time period.
Commit 197e4af9 refactored the initialization of the libc random()
seed, but reduced the number of possible seeds values that could be
chosen in a given time period.  This negation of the effects of
commit 98c50656c was unintentional.  Replace with code that
shifts the fast moving timestamp bits left, similar to the original
algorithm (though not the previous float-tolerating coding, which
is no longer necessary).

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Noah Misch
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181112083358.GA1073796%40rfd.leadboat.com
2018-11-15 16:25:30 +13:00
Thomas Munro
aa55183042 Use 64 bit type for BufFileSize().
BufFileSize() can't use off_t, because it's only 32 bits wide on
some systems.  BufFile objects can have many 1GB segments so the
total size can exceed 2^31.  The only known client of the function
is parallel CREATE INDEX, which was reported to fail when building
large indexes on Windows.

Though this is technically an ABI break on platforms with a 32 bit
off_t and we might normally avoid back-patching it, the function is
brand new and thus unlikely to have been discovered by extension
authors yet, and it's fairly thoroughly broken on those platforms
anyway, so just fix it.

Defect in 9da0cc35.  Bug #15460.  Back-patch to 11, where this
function landed.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Paul van der Linden, Pavel Oskin
Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15460-b6db80de822fa0ad%40postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHDGBJP_GsESbTt4P3FZA8kMUKuYxjg57XHF7NRBoKnR%3DCAR-g%40mail.gmail.com
2018-11-15 13:13:57 +13:00
Tom Lane
eaf746a5b8 Make psql's "\pset format" command reject non-unique abbreviations.
The previous behavior of preferring the oldest match had the advantage
of not breaking existing scripts when we add a conflicting format name;
but that behavior was undocumented and fragile (it seems just luck that
commit add9182e5 didn't break it).  Let's go over to the less mistake-
prone approach of complaining when there are multiple matches.

Since this is a small compatibility break, no back-patch.

Daniel Vérité

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/cb7e1caf-3ea6-450d-af28-f524903a030c@manitou-mail.org
2018-11-14 16:39:59 -05:00
Tom Lane
600b04d6b5 Add a timezone-specific variant of date_trunc().
date_trunc(field, timestamptz, zone_name) performs truncation using
the named time zone as reference, rather than working in the session
time zone as is the default behavior.  It's equivalent to

date_trunc(field, timestamptz at time zone zone_name) at time zone zone_name

but it's faster, easier to type, and arguably easier to understand.

Vik Fearing and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6249ffc4-2b22-4c1b-4e7d-7af84fedd7c6@2ndquadrant.com
2018-11-14 15:41:07 -05:00
Tom Lane
06c723447b Second try at fixing numeric data passed through an ECPG SQLDA.
In commit ecfd55795, I removed sqlda.c's checks for ndigits != 0 on the
grounds that we should duplicate the state of the numeric value's digit
buffer even when all the digits are zeroes.  However, that still isn't
quite right, because another possible state of the digit buffer is
buf == digits == NULL (this occurs for a NaN).  As the code now stands,
it'll invoke memcpy with a NULL source address and zero bytecount,
which we know a few platforms crash on.  Hence, reinstate the no-copy
short-circuit, but make it test specifically for buf != NULL rather than
some other condition.  In hindsight, the ndigits test (added by commit
f2ae9f9c3) was almost certainly meant to fix the NaN case not the
all-zeroes case as the associated thread alleged.

As before, back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1803D792815FC24D871C00D17AE95905C71161@g01jpexmbkw24
2018-11-14 11:27:47 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
1b5d797cd4 Lower lock level for renaming indexes
Change lock level for renaming index (either ALTER INDEX or implicitly
via some other commands) from AccessExclusiveLock to
ShareUpdateExclusiveLock.

One reason we need a strong lock for relation renaming is that the
name change causes a rebuild of the relcache entry.  Concurrent
sessions that have the relation open might not be able to handle the
relcache entry changing underneath them.  Therefore, we need to lock
the relation in a way that no one can have the relation open
concurrently.  But for indexes, the relcache handles reloads specially
in RelationReloadIndexInfo() in a way that keeps changes in the
relcache entry to a minimum.  As long as no one keeps pointers to
rd_amcache and rd_options around across possible relcache flushes,
which is the case, this ought to be safe.

We also want to use a self-exclusive lock for correctness, so that
concurrent DDL doesn't overwrite the rename if they start updating
while still seeing the old version.  Therefore, we use
ShareUpdateExclusiveLock, which is already used by other DDL commands
that want to operate in a concurrent manner.

The reason this is interesting at all is that renaming an index is a
typical part of a concurrent reindexing workflow (CREATE INDEX
CONCURRENTLY new + DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY old + rename back).  And
indeed a future built-in REINDEX CONCURRENTLY might rely on the ability
to do concurrent renames as well.

Reviewed-by: Andrey Klychkov <aaklychkov@mail.ru>
Reviewed-by: Fabrízio de Royes Mello <fabriziomello@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/1531767486.432607658@f357.i.mail.ru
2018-11-14 17:09:54 +01:00
Michael Paquier
b4721f3950 Initialize TransactionState and user ID consistently at transaction start
If a failure happens when a transaction is starting between the moment
the transaction status is changed from TRANS_DEFAULT to TRANS_START and
the moment the current user ID and security context flags are fetched
via GetUserIdAndSecContext(), or before initializing its basic fields,
then those may get reset to incorrect values when the transaction
aborts, leaving the session in an inconsistent state.

One problem reported is that failing a starting transaction at the first
query of a session could cause several kinds of system crashes on the
follow-up queries.

In order to solve that, move the initialization of the transaction state
fields and the call of GetUserIdAndSecContext() in charge of fetching
the current user ID close to the point where the transaction status is
switched to TRANS_START, where there cannot be any error triggered
in-between, per an idea of Tom Lane.  This properly ensures that the
current user ID, the security context flags and that the basic fields of
TransactionState remain consistent even if the transaction fails while
starting.

Reported-by: Richard Guo
Diagnosed-By: Richard Guo
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAN_9JTxECSb=pEPcb0a8d+6J+bDcOZ4=DgRo_B7Y5gRHJUM=Rw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2018-11-14 16:46:53 +09:00
Michael Paquier
3be97b97ed Add flag values in WAL description to all heap records
Hexadecimal is consistently used as format to not bloat too much the
output but keep it readable.  This information is useful mainly for
debugging purposes with for example pg_waldump.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart, Dmitry Dolgov, Andres Freund, Álvaro
Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180413034734.GE1552@paquier.xyz
2018-11-14 10:33:10 +09:00
Michael Paquier
b52b7dc250 Refactor code creating PartitionBoundInfo
The code building PartitionBoundInfo based on the constituent partition
data read from catalogs has been located in partcache.c, with a specific
set of routines dedicated to bound types, like sorting or bound data
creation.  All this logic is moved to partbounds.c and relocates all the
bound-specific logistic into it, with partition_bounds_create() as
principal entry point.

Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3f289da8-6d10-75fe-814a-635e8b191d43@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-11-14 10:01:49 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera
9079fe60b2 Add INSERT ON CONFLICT test on partitioned tables with transition table
This case was uncovered by existing tests, so breakage went undetected.
Make sure it remains stable.

Extracted from a larger patch by
Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-aGCJ5H7_hiSs5PhWs6Obmj+vGARjGymqH1=o5PcrNnQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-13 18:12:39 -03:00
Tom Lane
ecfd557956 Fix incorrect results for numeric data passed through an ECPG SQLDA.
Numeric values with leading zeroes were incorrectly copied into a
SQLDA (SQL Descriptor Area), leading to wrong results in ECPG programs.

Report and patch by Daisuke Higuchi.  Back-patch to all supported
versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1803D792815FC24D871C00D17AE95905C71161@g01jpexmbkw24
2018-11-13 15:46:08 -05:00
Tom Lane
965a3d6be0 Fix realfailN lexer rules to not make assumptions about input format.
The realfail1 and realfail2 backup-prevention rules always returned
token type FCONST, ignoring the possibility that what we've scanned
is more appropriately described as ICONST.  I think that at the
time that code was added, it might actually have been safe to not
distinguish; but since we started allowing AS-less aliases in SELECT
target lists, it's definitely legal to have a number immediately
followed by an identifier.

In the SELECT case, it seems there's no visible consequence because
make_const() will change the type back to integer anyway.  But I'm
worried that there are other contexts, or will be in future, where
it's more important to get the constant's type right.

Hence, use process_integer_literal to correctly determine which
token type to return.

Arguably this is a bug fix, but given the lack of evidence of
user-visible problems, I'll refrain from back-patching.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/21364.1542136808@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-13 14:54:41 -05:00
Tom Lane
4766bcd9e2 Remove unused code in ECPG.
scanner_init/scanner_finish weren't actually called from anywhere,
and the scanbuf variables they set up weren't used either.

Remove unused declaration for mm_realloc, too.

John Naylor

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGWGqY9YBs2EwtRUkbNv=hXkN8yRPOoD1wxE6COgvvrz5g@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-13 13:04:15 -05:00
Tom Lane
ec937d0805 Align ECPG lexer more closely with the core and psql lexers.
Make a bunch of basically-cosmetic changes to reduce the diffs between
the flex rules in scan.l, psqlscan.l, and pgc.l.  Reorder some code,
adjust a lot of whitespace, sync some comments, make use of flex start
condition scopes to do that.

There are a few non-cosmetic changes in the ECPG lexer:

* Bring over the decimalfail rule (and support function
process_integer_literal) so that ECPG will lex "1..10" into
the same tokens as the backend would.  I'm not sure this makes any
visible difference to users, but I'm not sure it doesn't, either.

* <xdc><<EOF>> gets its own rule so as to produce a more on-point
error message.

* Remove duplicate <SQL>{xdstart} rule.

John Naylor, with a few additional changes by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGWGqY9YBs2EwtRUkbNv=hXkN8yRPOoD1wxE6COgvvrz5g@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-13 12:57:52 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
6178f3cb79 pg_dump: Fix dumping of WITH OIDS tables
A table with OIDs that was the first in the dump output would not get
dumped with OIDs enabled.  Fix that.

The reason was that the currWithOids flag was declared to be bool but
actually also takes a -1 value for "don't know yet".  But under
stdbool.h semantics, that is coerced to true, so the required SET
default_with_oids command is not output again.  Change the variable
type to char to fix that.

Reported-by: Derek Nelson <derek@pipelinedb.com>
2018-11-13 09:41:20 +01:00
Thomas Munro
b59d4d6c36 Fix const correctness warning.
Per buildfarm.
2018-11-13 19:03:02 +13:00
Amit Kapila
a53bc135fb Fix the initialization of atomic variables introduced by the
group clearing mechanism.

Commits 0e141c0fbb and baaf272ac9 introduced initialization of atomic
variables in InitProcess which means that it's not safe to look at those
for backends that aren't currently in use.  Fix that by initializing them
during postmaster startup.

Reported-by: Andres Freund
Author: Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 9.6
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181027104138.qmbbelopvy7cw2qv@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-13 10:52:40 +05:30
Thomas Munro
257ef3cd4f Fix handling of HBA ldapserver with multiple hostnames.
Commit 35c0754f failed to handle space-separated lists of alternative
hostnames in ldapserver, when building a URI for ldap_initialize()
(OpenLDAP).  Such lists need to be expanded to space-separated URIs.

Repair.  Back-patch to 11, to fix bug report #15495.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Renaud Navarro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15495-2c39fc196c95cd72%40postgresql.org
2018-11-13 17:46:28 +13:00
Thomas Munro
6a3dcd2856 Fix possible buffer overrun in hba.c.
Coverty reports a possible buffer overrun in the code that populates the
pg_hba_file_rules view.  It may not be a live bug due to restrictions
on options that can be used together, but let's increase MAX_HBA_OPTIONS
and correct a nearby misleading comment.

Back-patch to 10 where this code arrived.

Reported-by: Julian Hsiao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADnGQpzbkWdKS2YHNifwAvX5VEsJ5gW49U4o-7UL5pzyTv4vTg%40mail.gmail.com
2018-11-13 16:27:13 +13:00
Michael Paquier
52b70b1c7d Remove CommandCounterIncrement() after processing ON COMMIT DELETE
This comes from f9b5b41, which is part of one the original commits that
implemented ON COMMIT actions.  By looking at the truncation code, any
CCI needed happens locally when rebuilding indexes, so it looks safe to
just remove this final incrementation.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181109024731.GF2652@paquier.xyz
2018-11-13 08:59:41 +09:00
Tom Lane
3de491482b Simplify null-element handling in extension_config_remove().
There's no point in asking deconstruct_array() for a null-flags
array when we already checked the array has no nulls, and aren't
going to examine the output anyhow.  Not asking for this output
should make the code marginally faster, and it's also more
robust since if there somehow were nulls, deconstruct_array()
would throw an error.

Daniel Gustafsson

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/289FFB8B-7AAB-48B5-A497-6E0D41D7BA47@yesql.se
2018-11-12 11:50:28 -05:00
Tom Lane
e3f005d974 Limit the number of index clauses considered in choose_bitmap_and().
classify_index_clause_usage() is O(N^2) in the number of distinct index
qual clauses it considers, because of its use of a simple search list to
store them.  For nearly all queries, that's fine because only a few clauses
will be considered.  But Alexander Kuzmenkov reported a machine-generated
query with 80000 (!) index qual clauses, which caused this code to take
forever.  Somewhat remarkably, this is the only O(N^2) behavior we now
have for such a query, so let's fix it.

We can get rid of the O(N^2) runtime for cases like this without much
damage to the functionality of choose_bitmap_and() by separating out
paths with "too many" qual or pred clauses, and deeming them to always
be nonredundant with other paths.  Then their clauses needn't go into
the search list, so it doesn't get too long, but we don't lose the
ability to consider bitmap AND plans altogether.  I set the threshold
for "too many" to be 100 clauses per path, which should be plenty to
ensure no change in planning behavior for normal queries.

There are other things we could do to make this go faster, but it's not
clear that it's worth any additional effort.  80000 qual clauses require
a whole lot of work in many other places, too.

The code's been like this for a long time, so back-patch to all supported
branches.  The troublesome query only works back to 9.5 (in 9.4 it fails
with stack overflow in the parser); so I'm not sure that fixing this in
9.4 has any real-world benefit, but perhaps it does.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/90c5bdfa-d633-dabe-9889-3cf3e1acd443@postgrespro.ru
2018-11-12 11:19:04 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
7f284debaf Disable MSVC warning caused by recent snprintf.c changes
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/05f348de-0c79-d88d-69b7-434ef828bd4d@2ndQuadrant.com
2018-11-10 20:20:54 -05:00
Andres Freund
450c7defa6 Remove volatiles from {procarray,volatile}.c and fix memory ordering issue.
The use of volatiles in procarray.c largely originated from the time
when postgres did not have reliable compiler and memory
barriers. That's not the case anymore, so we can do better.

Several of the functions in procarray.c can be bottlenecks, and
removal of volatile yields mildly better code.

The new state, with explicit memory barriers, is also more
correct. The previous use of volatile did not actually deliver
sufficient guarantees on weakly ordered machines, in particular the
logic in GetNewTransactionId() does not look safe.  It seems unlikely
to be a problem in practice, but worth fixing.

Thomas and I independently wrote a patch for this.

Reported-By: Andres Freund and Thomas Munro
Author: Andres Freund, with cherrypicked changes from a patch by Thomas Munro
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20181005172955.wyjb4fzcdzqtaxjq@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=1nff0x=7i3YQO16jLA2qw-F9O39YmUew4oq-xcBQBs0g@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-10 16:11:57 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut
69ee2ff930 Apply RI trigger skipping tests also for DELETE
The tests added in cfa0f4255b to skip
firing an RI trigger if any old key value is NULL can also be applied
for DELETE.  This should give a performance gain in those cases, and it
also saves a lot of duplicate code in the actual RI triggers.  (That
code was already dead code for the UPDATE cases.)

Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2018-11-10 16:14:51 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
34479d9a36 Remove dead foreign key optimization code
The ri_KeysEqual() calls in the foreign-key trigger functions to
optimize away some updates are useless because since
adfeef55cb those triggers are not enqueued
at all.  (It's also not useful to keep these checks as some kind of
backstop, since it's also semantically correct to just run the full
check even with equal keys.)

Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2018-11-10 16:14:51 +01:00
Andres Freund
5fde047f2b Combine two flag tests in GetSnapshotData().
Previously the code checked PROC_IN_LOGICAL_DECODING and
PROC_IN_VACUUM separately. As the relevant variable is marked as
volatile, the compiler cannot combine the two tests.  As
GetSnapshotData() is pretty hot in a number of workloads, it's
worthwhile to fix that.

It'd also be a good idea to get rid of the volatiles altogether. But
for one that's a larger patch, and for another, the code after this
change still seems at least as easy to read as before.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181005172955.wyjb4fzcdzqtaxjq@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-09 20:43:56 -08:00
Tom Lane
f26c06a404 Fix error-cleanup mistakes in exec_stmt_call().
Commit 15c729347 was a couple bricks shy of a load: we need to
ensure that expr->plan gets reset to NULL on any error exit,
if it's not supposed to be saved.  Also ensure that the
stmt->target calculation gets redone if needed.

The easy way to exhibit a problem is to set up code that
violates the writable-argument restriction and then execute
it twice.  But error exits out of, eg, setup_param_list()
could also break it.  Make the existing PG_TRY block cover
all of that code to be sure.

Per report from Pavel Stehule.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRAeXNTO43W2Y0Cn0YOVFPv1WpYyOqQrrzUiN6s=dn7gCg@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-09 22:04:14 -05:00
Tom Lane
fa2952d8eb Fix missing role dependencies for some schema and type ACLs.
This patch fixes several related cases in which pg_shdepend entries were
never made, or were lost, for references to roles appearing in the ACLs of
schemas and/or types.  While that did no immediate harm, if a referenced
role were later dropped, the drop would be allowed and would leave a
dangling reference in the object's ACL.  That still wasn't a big problem
for normal database usage, but it would cause obscure failures in
subsequent dump/reload or pg_upgrade attempts, taking the form of
attempts to grant privileges to all-numeric role names.  (I think I've
seen field reports matching that symptom, but can't find any right now.)

Several cases are fixed here:

1. ALTER DOMAIN SET/DROP DEFAULT would lose the dependencies for any
existing ACL entries for the domain.  This case is ancient, dating
back as far as we've had pg_shdepend tracking at all.

2. If a default type privilege applies, CREATE TYPE recorded the
ACL properly but forgot to install dependency entries for it.
This dates to the addition of default privileges for types in 9.2.

3. If a default schema privilege applies, CREATE SCHEMA recorded the
ACL properly but forgot to install dependency entries for it.
This dates to the addition of default privileges for schemas in v10
(commit ab89e465c).

Another somewhat-related problem is that when creating a relation
rowtype or implicit array type, TypeCreate would apply any available
default type privileges to that type, which we don't really want
since such an object isn't supposed to have privileges of its own.
(You can't, for example, drop such privileges once they've been added
to an array type.)

ab89e465c is also to blame for a race condition in the regression tests:
privileges.sql transiently installed globally-applicable default
privileges on schemas, which sometimes got absorbed into the ACLs of
schemas created by concurrent test scripts.  This should have resulted
in failures when privileges.sql tried to drop the role holding such
privileges; but thanks to the bug fixed here, it instead led to dangling
ACLs in the final state of the regression database.  We'd managed not to
notice that, but it became obvious in the wake of commit da906766c, which
allowed the race condition to occur in pg_upgrade tests.

To fix, add a function recordDependencyOnNewAcl to encapsulate what
callers of get_user_default_acl need to do; while the original call
sites got that right via ad-hoc code, none of the later-added ones
have.  Also change GenerateTypeDependencies to generate these
dependencies, which requires adding the typacl to its parameter list.
(That might be annoying if there are any extensions calling that
function directly; but if there are, they're most likely buggy in the
same way as the core callers were, so they need work anyway.)  While
I was at it, I changed GenerateTypeDependencies to accept most of its
parameters in the form of a Form_pg_type pointer, making its parameter
list a bit less unwieldy and mistake-prone.

The test race condition is fixed just by wrapping the addition and
removal of default privileges into a single transaction, so that that
state is never visible externally.  We might eventually prefer to
separate out tests of default privileges into a script that runs by
itself, but that would be a bigger change and would make the tests
run slower overall.

Back-patch relevant parts to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15719.1541725287@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-09 20:42:14 -05:00
Andres Freund
c670d0faac Remove ineffective check against dropped columns from slot_getattr().
Before this commit slot_getattr() checked for dropped
columns (returning NULL in that case), but only after checking for
previously deformed columns. As slot_deform_tuple() does not contain
such a check, the check in slot_getattr() would often not have been
reached, depending on previous use of the slot.

These days locking and plan invalidation ought to ensure that dropped
columns are not accessed in query plans. Therefore this commit just
drops the insufficient check in slot_getattr().  It's possible that
we'll find some holes againt use of dropped columns, but if so, those
need to be addressed independent of slot_getattr(), as most accesses
don't go through that function anyway.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181107174403.zai7fedgcjoqx44p@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-09 17:40:40 -08:00
Andres Freund
1ef6bd2954 Don't require return slots for nodes without projection.
In a lot of nodes the return slot is not required. That can either be
because the node doesn't do any projection (say an Append node), or
because the node does perform projections but the projection is
optimized away because the projection would yield an identical row.

Slots aren't that small, especially for wide rows, so it's worthwhile
to avoid creating them.  It's not possible to just skip creating the
slot - it's currently used to determine the tuple descriptor returned
by ExecGetResultType().  So separate the determination of the result
type from the slot creation.  The work previously done internally
ExecInitResultTupleSlotTL() can now also be done separately with
ExecInitResultTypeTL() and ExecInitResultSlot().  That way nodes that
aren't guaranteed to need a result slot, can use
ExecInitResultTypeTL() to determine the result type of the node, and
ExecAssignScanProjectionInfo() (via
ExecConditionalAssignProjectionInfo()) determines that a result slot
is needed, it is created with ExecInitResultSlot().

Besides the advantage of avoiding to create slots that then are
unused, this is necessary preparation for later patches around tuple
table slot abstraction. In particular separating the return descriptor
and slot is a prerequisite to allow JITing of tuple deforming with
knowledge of the underlying tuple format, and to avoid unnecessarily
creating JITed tuple deforming for virtual slots.

This commit removes a redundant argument from
ExecInitResultTupleSlotTL(). While this commit touches a lot of the
relevant lines anyway, it'd normally still not worthwhile to cause
breakage, except that aforementioned later commits will touch *all*
ExecInitResultTupleSlotTL() callers anyway (but fits worse
thematically).

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-09 17:19:39 -08:00
Michael Paquier
3ce1201894 Fix incorrect routine name in xlog_heapam.h
s/xl_heap_delete/xl_heap_truncate/ in a comment block referring to flags
for truncation.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180413034734.GE1552@paquier.xyz
2018-11-10 08:58:55 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera
a28e10e82e Indicate session name in isolationtester notices
When a session under isolationtester produces printable notices (NOTICE,
WARNING) we were just printing them unadorned, which can be confusing
when debugging.  Prefix them with the session name, which makes things
clearer.

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Hari Babu Kommi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181024213451.75nh3f3dctmcdbfq@alvherre.pgsql
2018-11-09 13:08:00 -03:00
Michael Paquier
319a810180 Fix dependency handling of partitions and inheritance for ON COMMIT
This commit fixes a set of issues with ON COMMIT actions when used on
partitioned tables and tables with inheritance children:
- Applying ON COMMIT DROP on a partitioned table with partitions or on a
table with inheritance children caused a failure at commit time, with
complains about the children being already dropped as all relations are
dropped one at the same time.
- Applying ON COMMIT DELETE on a partition relying on a partitioned
table which uses ON COMMIT DROP would cause the partition truncation to
fail as the parent is removed first.

The solution to the first problem is to handle the removal of all the
dependencies in one go instead of dropping relations one-by-one, based
on a suggestion from Álvaro Herrera.  So instead all the relation OIDs
to remove are gathered and then processed in one round of multiple
deletions.

The solution to the second problem is to reorder the actions, with
truncation happening first and relation drop done after.  Even if it
means that a partition could be first truncated, then immediately
dropped if its partitioned table is dropped, this has the merit to keep
the code simple as there is no need to do existence checks on the
relations to drop.

Contrary to a manual TRUNCATE on a partitioned table, ON COMMIT DELETE
does not cascade to its partitions.  The ON COMMIT action defined on
each partition gets the priority.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera, Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/68f17907-ec98-1192-f99f-8011400517f5@lab.ntt.co.jp
Backpatch-through: 10
2018-11-09 10:03:22 +09:00
Tom Lane
3d360e20c9 Disallow setting client_min_messages higher than ERROR.
Previously it was possible to set client_min_messages to FATAL or PANIC,
which had the effect of suppressing transmission of regular ERROR messages
to the client.  Perhaps that seemed like a useful option in the past, but
the trouble with it is that it breaks guarantees that are explicitly made
in our FE/BE protocol spec about how a query cycle can end.  While libpq
and psql manage to cope with the omission, that's mostly because they
are not very bright; client libraries that have more semantic knowledge
are likely to get confused.  Notably, pgODBC doesn't behave very sanely.
Let's fix this by getting rid of the ability to set client_min_messages
above ERROR.

In HEAD, just remove the FATAL and PANIC options from the set of allowed
enum values for client_min_messages.  (This change also affects
trace_recovery_messages, but that's OK since these aren't useful values
for that variable either.)

In the back branches, there was concern that rejecting these values might
break applications that are explicitly setting things that way.  I'm
pretty skeptical of that argument, but accommodate it by accepting these
values and then internally setting the variable to ERROR anyway.

In all branches, this allows a couple of tiny simplifications in the
logic in elog.c, so do that.

Also respond to the point that was made that client_min_messages has
exactly nothing to do with the server's logging behavior, and therefore
does not belong in the "When To Log" subsection of the documentation.
The "Statement Behavior" subsection is a better match, so move it there.

Jonah Harris and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7809.1541521180@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15479-ef0f4cc2fd995ca2@postgresql.org
2018-11-08 17:33:43 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
705d433fd5 Revise attribute handling code on partition creation
The original code to propagate NOT NULL and default expressions
specified when creating a partition was mostly copy-pasted from
typed-tables creation, but not being a great match it contained some
duplicity, inefficiency and bugs.

This commit fixes the bug that NOT NULL constraints declared in the
parent table would not be honored in the partition.  One reported issue
that is not fixed is that a DEFAULT declared in the child is not used
when inserting through the parent.  That would amount to a behavioral
change that's better not back-patched.

This rewrite makes the code simpler:

1. instead of checking for duplicate column names in its own block,
reuse the original one that already did that;

2. instead of concatenating the list of columns from parent and the one
declared in the partition and scanning the result to (incorrectly)
propagate defaults and not-null constraints, just scan the latter
searching the former for a match, and merging sensibly.  This works
because we know the list in the parent is already correct and there can
only be one parent.

This rewrite makes ColumnDef->is_from_parent unused, so it's removed
on branch master; on released branches, it's kept as an unused field in
order not to cause ABI incompatibilities.

This commit also adds a test case for creating partitions with
collations mismatching that on the parent table, something that is
closely related to the code being patched.  No code change is introduced
though, since that'd be a behavior change that could break some (broken)
working applications.

Amit Langote wrote a less invasive fix for the original
NOT NULL/defaults bug, but while I kept the tests he added, I ended up
not using his original code.  Ashutosh Bapat reviewed Amit's fix.  Amit
reviewed mine.

Author: Álvaro Herrera, Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat, Amit Langote
Reported-by: Jürgen Strobel (bug #15212)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/152746742177.1291.9847032632907407358@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-11-08 16:22:09 -03:00
Andrew Dunstan
12d5f39b15 Adjust valgrind fix in commit 517b0d0b5f
lousyjack still wasn't happy. I have tested this modification and it
worked.
2018-11-08 08:38:46 -05:00
Michael Paquier
170dccc69d Fix incorrect routine name reference in partprune.c
Author: Yuzuko Hosoya
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/00ac01d4774c$7feac860$7fc05920$@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-11-08 20:14:16 +09:00
Andres Freund
c14a8ff27e Fixup for b84a6dafbf triggering assert failure in LLVM debug builds.
Author: Andres Freund
2018-11-07 14:00:14 -08:00
Tom Lane
c3e6d5d386 Fix inadequate autoconfiscation of copyfile() usage.
Per buildfarm, HAVE_COPYFILE is not the same thing as HAVE_COPYFILE_H.
Add the extra configure test.
2018-11-07 16:41:42 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
54ad7282fe Use parallel installcheck in vcregress.pl's upgrade test
This is to keep the test in sync with what's done in test.sh, which
acquired this change in commit da906766c.
2018-11-07 14:17:57 -05:00
Andres Freund
b84a6dafbf Move EEOP_*_SYSVAR evaluation out of line.
This mainly de-duplicates code. As evaluating a system variable isn't
the hottest path and the current inline implementation ends up calling
out to an external function anyway, this is OK from a performance POV.

The main motivation for de-duplicating is the upcoming slot
abstraction work, after which there's not guaranteed to be a HeapTuple
backing the slot.

Author: Andres Freund, Amit Khandekar
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-07 11:08:45 -08:00
Andrew Dunstan
517b0d0b5f Quiet valgrind complaints following pread/pwrite changes
Per complaints from buildfarm and elsewhere
Patch from Jasper Pedersen
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0f419c91-49ab-2399-0143-13063bd97c46@redhat.com
2018-11-07 12:58:39 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
3a769d8239 pg_upgrade: Allow use of file cloning
Add another transfer mode --clone to pg_upgrade (besides the existing
--link and the default copy), using special file cloning calls.  This
makes the file transfer faster and more space efficient, achieving
speed similar to --link mode without the associated drawbacks.

On Linux, file cloning is supported on Btrfs and XFS (if formatted with
reflink support).  On macOS, file cloning is supported on APFS.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
2018-11-07 18:35:20 +01:00
Andres Freund
5f32b29c18 Build HashState's hashkeys expression with the correct parent.
Previously the expressions were built with the HashJoinState as a
parent. That's incorrect.

Currently this does not appear to be harmful, but for the upcoming
'slot abstraction' work this proves to be problematic, as the
underlying slot types can differ between Hash and HashJoin.  It's
possible that this already causes a problem, but I've not been able to
come up with a scenario.  Therefore don't backpatch at this point.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180220224318.gw4oe5jadhpmcdnm@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-07 09:25:54 -08:00
Andres Freund
da906766cd Use installcheck-parallel in pg_upgrade's testsuite.
The installcheck run takes a sizable fraction of test.sh to run. Using
a parallel schedule reduces that noticably.

It's possible that we want to backpatch this at some point, to reduce
buildfarm times, but for now lets just see if this upsets the
buildfarm.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181105210039.hh4vvi4vwoq5ba2q@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-07 09:22:48 -08:00
Tom Lane
c6e4133fae Postpone calculating total_table_pages until after pruning/exclusion.
The planner doesn't make any use of root->total_table_pages until it
estimates costs of indexscans, so we don't need to compute it as
early as that's currently done.  By doing the calculation between
set_base_rel_sizes and set_base_rel_pathlists, we can omit relations
that get removed from the query by partition pruning or constraint
exclusion, which seems like a more accurate basis for costing.

(Historical note: I think at the time this code was written, there
was not a separation between the "set sizes" and "set pathlists"
steps, so that this approach would have been impossible at the time.
But now that we have that separation, this is clearly the better way
to do things.)

David Rowley, reviewed by Edmund Horner

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-NG1mRM0VOtkAG7=ZLQWihoqees9R4ki3CKBB0-fRfCA@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-07 12:12:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
5d28c9bd73 Disable recheck_on_update optimization to avoid crashes.
The code added by commit c203d6cf8 causes a crash in at least one case,
where a potentially-optimizable expression index has a storage type
different from the input data type.  A cursory code review turned up
numerous other problems that seem impractical to fix on short notice.

Andres argued for revert of that patch some time ago, and if additional
senior committers had been paying attention, that's likely what would
have happened, but we were not :-(

At this point we can't just revert, at least not in v11, because that would
mean an ABI break for code touching relcache entries.  And we should not
remove the (also buggy) support for the recheck_on_update index reloption,
since it might already be used in some databases in the field.  So this
patch just does the as-little-invasive-as-possible measure of disabling
the feature as though recheck_on_update were forced off for all indexes.
I also removed the related regression tests (which would otherwise fail)
and the user-facing documentation of the reloption.

We should undertake a more thorough code cleanup if the patch can't be
fixed, but not under the extreme time pressure of being already overdue
for 11.1 release.

Per report from Ondřej Bouda and subsequent private discussion among
pgsql-release.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181106185255.776mstcyehnc63ty@alvherre.pgsql
2018-11-06 18:33:28 -05:00
Thomas Munro
c4f0876fb8 Remove set-but-unused variable.
Clean-up for commit c24dcd0c.

Reported-by: Andrew Dunstan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2d52ff4a-5440-f6f1-7806-423b0e6370cb%402ndQuadrant.com
2018-11-07 12:06:43 +13:00
Andrew Gierth
5613da4cc7 Optimize nested ConvertRowtypeExpr nodes.
A ConvertRowtypeExpr is used to translate a whole-row reference of a
child to that of a parent. The planner produces nested
ConvertRowtypeExpr while translating whole-row reference of a leaf
partition in a multi-level partition hierarchy. Executor then
translates the whole-row reference from the leaf partition into all
the intermediate parent's whole-row references before arriving at the
final whole-row reference. It could instead translate the whole-row
reference from the leaf partition directly to the top-most parent's
whole-row reference skipping any intermediate translations.

Ashutosh Bapat, with tests by Kyotaro Horiguchi and some
editorialization by me. Reviewed by Andres Freund, Pavel Stehule,
Kyotaro Horiguchi, Dmitry Dolgov, Tom Lane.
2018-11-06 21:10:10 +00:00
Thomas Munro
c24dcd0cfd Use pg_pread() and pg_pwrite() for data files and WAL.
Cut down on system calls by doing random I/O using offset-based OS
routines where available.  Remove the code for tracking the 'virtual'
seek position.  The only reason left to call FileSeek() was to get
the file's size, so provide a new function FileSize() instead.

Author: Oskari Saarenmaa, Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro, Jesper Pedersen, Tom Lane, Alvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=02rapCpPR3ZGF2vW=SBHSdFYO_bz_f-wwWJonmA3APgw@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/b8748d39-0b19-0514-a1b9-4e5a28e6a208%40gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a86bd200-ebbe-d829-e3ca-0c4474b2fcb7%40ohmu.fi
2018-11-07 09:51:50 +13:00
Thomas Munro
3fd2a7932e Provide pg_pread() and pg_pwrite() for random I/O.
Forward to POSIX pread() and pwrite(), or emulate them if unavailable.
The emulation is not perfect as the file position is changed, so
we'll put pg_ prefixes on the names to minimize the risk of confusion
in future patches that might inadvertently try to mix pread() and read()
on the same file descriptor.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Jesper Pedersen
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=02rapCpPR3ZGF2vW=SBHSdFYO_bz_f-wwWJonmA3APgw@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-07 09:50:01 +13:00
Bruce Momjian
b43df566b3 GUC: adjust effective_cache_size SQL descriptions
Follow on patch for commit 3e0f1a4741.

Reported-by: Peter Eisentraut

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/369ec766-b947-51bd-4dad-6fb9e026439f@2ndquadrant.com

Backpatch-through: 9.4
2018-11-06 13:40:03 -05:00
Tom Lane
003c68a3b4 Rename rbtree.c functions to use "rbt" prefix not "rb" prefix.
The "rb" prefix is used by Ruby, so that our existing code results
in name collisions that break plruby.  We discussed ways to prevent
that by adjusting dynamic linker options, but it seems that at best
we'd move the pain to other cases.  Renaming to avoid the collision
is the only portable fix anyway.  Fortunately, our rbtree code is
not (yet?) widely used --- in core, there's only a single usage
in GIN --- so it seems likely that we can get away with a rename.

I chose to do this basically as s/rb/rbt/g, except for places where
there already was a "t" after "rb".  The patch could have been made
smaller by only touching linker-visible symbols, but it would have
resulted in oddly inconsistent-looking code.  Better to make it look
like "rbt" was the plan all along.

Back-patch to v10.  The rbtree.c code exists back to 9.5, but
rb_iterate() which is the actual immediate source of pain was added
in v10, so it seems like changing the names before that would have
more risk than benefit.

Per report from Pavel Raiskup.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4738198.8KVIIDhgEB@nb.usersys.redhat.com
2018-11-06 13:25:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
8f623bedfb Remove useless symbol from Makefile.global.
I added HAVE_IPV6 to Makefile.global way back in commit 7703e55c3
so that we could transmit its value to the shell-script version of
initdb.  Since initdb was rewritten in C, it's been finding that
out from pg_config.h instead, so this is useless.  Keeping it here
just wastes configure and make cycles, plus it's a potential
two-sources-of-truth problem.
2018-11-06 10:57:51 -05:00
Thomas Munro
9e12fb02b7 Remove some remaining traces of dsm_resize().
A couple of obsolete comments and unreachable blocks remained after
commit 3c60d0fa.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1%2B%3DyAFUvpFoHXFi_gm8YqmXN-TtkFH%2BVYjvDLS6-SFq-Q%40mail.gmail.com
2018-11-06 21:40:08 +13:00
Michael Paquier
add9182e59 Reorganize format options of psql in alphabetical order
This makes the addition of new formats easier, and documentation lookups
easier.

Author: Daniel Vérité
Reviewed-by: Fabien Coelho
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1803081004241.2916@lancre
2018-11-06 15:04:40 +09:00
Michael Paquier
8f045e242b Switch pg_promote to be parallel-safe
pg_promote uses nothing relying on a global state, so it is fine to mark
it as parallel-safe, conclusion based on a detailed analysis from Robert
Haas.  This also fixes an inconsistency where pg_proc.dat missed to mark
the function with its previous value for proparallel, update which does
not matter now as the default is used.

Based on a discussion between multiple folks: Laurenz Albe, Robert Haas,
Amit Kapila, Tom Lane and myself.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181029082530.GL14242@paquier.xyz
2018-11-06 14:11:21 +09:00
Thomas Munro
3c60d0fa23 Remove dsm_resize() and dsm_remap().
These interfaces were never used in core, didn't handle failure of
posix_fallocate() correctly and weren't supported on all platforms.
We agreed to remove them in 12.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1%2B%3DyAFUvpFoHXFi_gm8YqmXN-TtkFH%2BVYjvDLS6-SFq-Q%40mail.gmail.com
2018-11-06 16:11:12 +13:00
Andres Freund
a3fb382e9c Fix copy-paste error in errhint() introduced in 691d79a079.
Reported-By: Petr Jelinek
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c95a620b-34f0-7930-aeb5-f7ab804f26cb@2ndquadrant.com
Backpatch: 9.4-, like the previous commit
2018-11-05 12:05:38 -08:00
Tom Lane
55f3d10296 Remove unreferenced pg_opfamily entry.
The entry with OID 4035, for GIST jsonb_ops, is unused; apparently
it was added in preparation for index support that never materialized.
Remove it, and add a regression test case to detect future mistakes
of the same kind.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17188.1541379745@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-05 12:02:27 -05:00
Michael Paquier
dc3e436b19 Block creation of partitions with open references to its parent
When a partition is created as part of a trigger processing, it is
possible that the partition which just gets created changes the
properties of the table the executor of the ongoing command relies on,
causing a subsequent crash.  This has been found possible when for
example using a BEFORE INSERT which creates a new partition for a
partitioned table being inserted to.

Any attempt to do so is blocked when working on a partition, with
regression tests added for both CREATE TABLE PARTITION OF and ALTER
TABLE ATTACH PARTITION.

Reported-by: Dmitry Shalashov
Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15437-3fe01ee66bd1bae1@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 10
2018-11-05 11:04:02 +09:00
Michael Paquier
4bc772e2af Ignore partitioned tables when processing ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS
Those tables have no physical storage, making this option unusable with
partition trees as at commit time an actual truncation was attempted.
There are still issues with the way ON COMMIT actions are done when
mixing several action types, however this impacts as well inheritance
trees, so this issue will be dealt with later.

Reported-by: Rajkumar Raghuwanshi
Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6mhgcjSiB_egqEAEFgX462QZtncU8QCAJ2HZwM-wWGVew@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-05 09:14:33 +09:00
Tom Lane
9b6fb9fbb4 Fix ExecuteCallStmt to not scribble on the passed-in parse tree.
Modifying the parse tree at execution time is, or at least ought to be,
verboten.  It seems quite difficult to actually cause a crash this way
in v11 (although you can exhibit it pretty easily in HEAD by messing
with plan_cache_mode).  Nonetheless, it's risky, so fix and back-patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/13789.1541359611@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-04 14:50:55 -05:00
Tom Lane
15c7293477 Fix bugs in plpgsql's handling of CALL argument lists.
exec_stmt_call() tried to extract information out of a CALL statement's
argument list without using expand_function_arguments(), apparently in
the hope of saving a few nanoseconds by not processing defaulted
arguments.  It got that quite wrong though, leading to crashes with
named arguments, as well as failure to enforce writability of the
argument for a defaulted INOUT parameter.  Fix and simplify the logic
by using expand_function_arguments() before examining the list.

Also, move the argument-examination to just after producing the CALL
command's plan, before invoking the called procedure.  This ensures
that we'll track possible changes in the procedure's argument list
correctly, and avoids a hazard of the plan cache being flushed while
the procedure executes.

Also fix assorted falsehoods and omissions in associated documentation.

Per bug #15477 from Alexey Stepanov.

Patch by me, with some help from Pavel Stehule.  Back-patch to v11.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15477-86075b1d1d319e0a@postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRA6UsujpTs9Sdwmk-R6yQykPx46wgjj+YZ7zxm4onrDyw@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-04 13:25:39 -05:00
Tom Lane
3e0b05a756 Fix unused-variable warning.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU=1xTHkS6d0iptCWykHc1Xrh3LBic_gZDo3JzDYru815fLQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-04 11:20:59 -05:00
Andres Freund
793beab37e Prevent generating EEOP_AGG_STRICT_INPUT_CHECK operations when nargs == 0.
This only became a problem with 4c640f4f38, which didn't synchronize
the value agg_strict_input_check.nargs is set to, with the guard
condition for emitting the operation.

Besides such instructions being unnecessary overhead, currently the
LLVM JIT provider doesn't support them. It seems more sensible to
avoid generating such instruction than supporting them. Add assertions
to make it easier to debug a potential further occurance.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2a505161-2727-2473-7c46-591ed108ac52@email.cz
Backpatch: 11-, like 4c640f4f38.
2018-11-03 15:55:23 -07:00
Andres Freund
4c640f4f38 Fix STRICT check for strict aggregates with NULL ORDER BY columns.
I (Andres) broke this unintentionally in 69c3936a14, by checking
strictness for all input expressions computed for an aggregate, rather
than just the input for the aggregate transition function.

Reported-By: Ondřej Bouda
Bisected-By: Tom Lane
Diagnosed-By: Andrew Gierth
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2a505161-2727-2473-7c46-591ed108ac52@email.cz
Backpatch: 11-, like 69c3936a14
2018-11-03 14:48:42 -07:00
Tom Lane
981dc2baa8 Make ts_locale.c's character-type functions cope with UTF-16.
On Windows, in UTF8 database encoding, what char2wchar() produces is
UTF16 not UTF32, ie, characters above U+FFFF will be represented by
surrogate pairs.  t_isdigit() and siblings did not account for this
and failed to provide a large enough result buffer.  That in turn
led to bogus "invalid multibyte character for locale" errors, because
contrary to what you might think from char2wchar()'s documentation,
its Windows code path doesn't cope sanely with buffer overflow.

The solution for t_isdigit() and siblings is pretty clear: provide
a 3-wchar_t result buffer not 2.

char2wchar() also needs some work to provide more consistent, and more
accurately documented, buffer overrun behavior.  But that's a bigger job
and it doesn't actually have any immediate payoff, so leave it for later.

Per bug #15476 from Kenji Uno, who deserves credit for identifying the
cause of the problem.  Back-patch to all active branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15476-4314f480acf0f114@postgresql.org
2018-11-03 13:56:10 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
dfa6081419 Fix tablespace handling for partitioned indexes
When creating partitioned indexes, the tablespace was not being saved
for the parent index. This meant that subsequently created partitions
would not use the right tablespace for their indexes.

ALTER INDEX SET TABLESPACE and ALTER INDEX ALL IN TABLESPACE raised
errors when tried; fix them too.  This requires bespoke code for
ATExecCmd() that applies to the special case when the tablespace move is
just a catalog change.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181102003138.uxpaca6qfxzskepi@alvherre.pgsql
2018-11-03 13:25:19 -03:00
Tom Lane
1440c461f7 Yet further rethinking of build changes for macOS Mojave.
The solution arrived at in commit e74dd00f5 presumes that the compiler
has a suitable default -isysroot setting ... but further experience
shows that in many combinations of macOS version, XCode version, Xcode
command line tools version, and phase of the moon, Apple's compiler
will *not* supply a default -isysroot value.

We could potentially go back to the approach used in commit 68fc227dd,
but I don't have a lot of faith in the reliability or life expectancy of
that either.  Let's just revert to the approach already shipped in 11.0,
namely specifying an -isysroot switch globally.  As a partial response to
the concerns raised by Jakob Egger, adjust the contents of Makefile.global
to look like

CPPFLAGS = -isysroot $(PG_SYSROOT) ...
PG_SYSROOT = /path/to/sysroot

This allows overriding the sysroot path at build time in a relatively
painless way.

Add documentation to installation.sgml about how to use the PG_SYSROOT
option.  I also took the opportunity to document how to work around
macOS's "System Integrity Protection" feature.

As before, back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20840.1537850987@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-02 18:54:00 -04:00
Thomas Munro
1ce4a807e2 Fix NULL handling in multi-batch Parallel Hash Left Join.
NULL keys in left joins were skipped when building batch files.
Repair, by making the keep_nulls argument to ExecHashGetHashValue()
depend on whether this is a left outer join, as we do in other
paths.

Bug #15475.  Thinko in 1804284042.  Back-patch to 11.

Reported-by: Paul Schaap
Diagnosed-by: Andrew Gierth
Dicussion: https://postgr.es/m/15475-11a7a783fed72a36%40postgresql.org
2018-11-03 11:05:35 +13:00
Bruce Momjian
3e0f1a4741 GUC: adjust effective_cache_size docs and SQL description
Clarify that effective_cache_size is both kernel buffers and shared
buffers.

Reported-by: nat@makarevitch.org

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/153685164808.22334.15432535018443165207@wrigleys.postgresql.org

Backpatch-through: 9.3
2018-11-02 09:11:00 -04:00
Magnus Hagander
fbec7459aa Fix spelling errors and typos in comments
Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2018-11-02 13:56:52 +01:00
Michael Paquier
6286efb524 Lower error level from PANIC to FATAL when restoring slots at startup
When restoring slot information from disk at startup and filling in
shared memory information, the startup process would issue a PANIC
message if more slots are found than what max_replication_slots allows,
and then Postgres generates a core dump, recommending to increase
max_replication_slots.  This gives users a switch to crash Postgres at
will by creating slots, lower the configuration to not support it, and
then restart it.

Making Postgres crash hard in this case is overdoing it just to give a
recommendation to users.  So instead use a FATAL, which makes Postgres
fail to start without crashing, still giving the recommendation.  This
is more consistent with what happens for prepared transactions for
example.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181030025109.GD1644@paquier.xyz
2018-11-02 07:59:24 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
96b00c433c Remove obsolete pg_constraint.consrc column
This has been deprecated and effectively unused for a long time.

Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2018-11-01 20:36:05 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
fe5038236c Remove obsolete pg_attrdef.adsrc column
This has been deprecated and effectively unused for a long time.

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2018-11-01 20:35:42 +01:00
Andres Freund
8a99f8a827 Fix error message typo introduced 691d79a079.
Reported-By: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181101003405.GB1727@paquier.xyz
Backpatch: 9.4-, like the previous commit
2018-11-01 10:44:29 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan
cb6f8a9a72 Adjust trace_sort log messages.
The project message style guide dictates: "When citing the name of an
object, state what kind of object it is".  The parallel CREATE INDEX
patch added a worker number to most of the trace_sort messages within
tuplesort.c without specifying the object type.  Bring these messages
into compliance with the style guide.

We're still treating a leader or serial Tuplesortstate as having worker
number -1.  trace_sort is a developer option, and these two cases are
highly comparable, so this seems appropriate.

Per complaint from Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8330.1540831863@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch: 11-, where parallel CREATE INDEX was introduced.
2018-11-01 09:18:57 -07:00
Andres Freund
691d79a079 Disallow starting server with insufficient wal_level for existing slot.
Previously it was possible to create a slot, change wal_level, and
restart, even if the new wal_level was insufficient for the
slot. That's a problem for both logical and physical slots, because
the necessary WAL records are not generated.

This removes a few tests in newer versions that, somewhat
inexplicably, whether restarting with a too low wal_level worked (a
buggy behaviour!).

Reported-By: Joshua D. Drake
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181029191304.lbsmhshkyymhw22w@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.4-, where replication slots where introduced
2018-10-31 15:46:39 -07:00
Tom Lane
696b0c5fd0 Fix memory leak in repeated SPGIST index scans.
spgendscan neglected to pfree all the memory allocated by spgbeginscan.
It's possible to get away with that in most normal queries, since the
memory is allocated in the executor's per-query context which is about
to get deleted anyway; but it causes severe memory leakage during
creation or filling of large exclusion-constraint indexes.

Also, document that amendscan is supposed to free what ambeginscan
allocates.  The docs' lack of clarity on that point probably caused this
bug to begin with.  (There is discussion of changing that API spec going
forward, but I don't think it'd be appropriate for the back branches.)

Per report from Bruno Wolff.  It's been like this since the beginning,
so back-patch to all active branches.

In HEAD, also fix an independent leak caused by commit 2a6368343
(allocating memory during spgrescan instead of spgbeginscan, which
might be all right if it got cleaned up, but it didn't).  And do a bit
of code beautification on that commit, too.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181024012314.GA27428@wolff.to
2018-10-31 17:05:03 -04:00
Andres Freund
c4ab62f9ac Fix typo in xlog.c.
Author: Daniel Gustafsson
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/A6817958-949E-4A5B-895D-FA421B6640C2@yesql.se
2018-10-31 07:50:32 -07:00
Tom Lane
10bfda0617 Sync our copy of the timezone library with IANA release tzcode2018g.
This patch absorbs an upstream fix to "zic" for a recently-introduced
bug that made it output data that some 32-bit clients couldn't read.
Given the current source data, the bug only manifests in zones with
leap seconds, which we don't generate, so that there's no actual
change in our installed timezone data files from this.  Still, in
case somebody uses our copy of "zic" to do something else, it seems
best to apply the fix promptly.

Also, update the README's notes about converting upstream code to
our conventions.
2018-10-31 09:47:53 -04:00
Tom Lane
5c2e0ca5f0 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2018g.
DST law changes in Morocco (with, effectively, zero notice).
Historical corrections for Hawaii.
2018-10-31 08:35:50 -04:00
Tom Lane
14a158f9bf Fix interaction of CASE and ArrayCoerceExpr.
An array-type coercion appearing within a CASE that has a constant
(after const-folding) test expression was mangled by the planner, causing
all the elements of the resulting array to be equal to the coerced value
of the CASE's test expression.  This is my oversight in commit c12d570fa:
that changed ArrayCoerceExpr to use a subexpression involving a
CaseTestExpr, and I didn't notice that eval_const_expressions needed an
adjustment to keep from folding such a CaseTestExpr to a constant when
it's inside a suitable CASE.

This is another in what's getting to be a depressingly long line of bugs
associated with misidentification of the referent of a CaseTestExpr.
We're overdue to redesign that mechanism; but any such fix is unlikely
to be back-patchable into v11.  As a stopgap, fix eval_const_expressions
to do what it must here.  Also add a bunch of comments pointing out the
restrictions and assumptions that are needed to make this work at all.

Also fix a related oversight: contain_context_dependent_node() was not
aware of the relationship of ArrayCoerceExpr to CaseTestExpr.  That was
somewhat fail-soft, in that the outcome of a wrong answer would be to
prevent optimizations that could have been made, but let's fix it while
we're at it.

Per bug #15471 from Matt Williams.  Back-patch to v11 where the faulty
logic came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15471-1117f49271989bad@postgresql.org
2018-10-30 15:26:11 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
c2c7c263af pg_rewind: Remove unused macro
This has never been used while pg_rewind was in the tree (possibly
once copied from pg_upgrade).
2018-10-30 13:22:11 +01:00
Michael Paquier
c34bca9ea5 Consolidate cross-option checks in pg_restore
This moves one check for conflicting options from the archive restore
code to the main function where other similar checks are performed.
Also reword the error message to be consistent with other messages.

The only option combination impacted is --create specified with
--single-transaction, and informing the caller at an early step saves
from opening the archive worked on.  A TAP test is added for this
combination.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson
Reviewed-by: Fabien Coelho
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/616808BD-4B59-4E6C-97A9-7317F62D5570@yesql.se
2018-10-30 11:38:35 +09:00
Michael Paquier
d5eec4eefd Add pg_partition_tree to display information about partitions
This new function is useful to display a full tree of partitions with a
partitioned table given in output, and avoids the need of any complex
WITH RECURSIVE query when looking at partition trees which are
deep multiple levels.

It returns a set of records, one for each partition, containing the
partition's name, its immediate parent's name, a boolean value telling
if the relation is a leaf in the tree and an integer telling its level
in the partition tree with given table considered as root, beginning at
zero for the root, and incrementing by one each time the scan goes one
level down.

Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Jesper Pedersen, Michael Paquier, Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8d00e51a-9a51-ad02-d53e-ba6bf50b2e52@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-10-30 10:25:06 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
a9e5f8e781 Exclude temporary directories from pgindent
Exclude tmp_check and tmp_install from pgindent.  In a fully-built
tree, pgindent would spend a lot of time digging through these
directories and ends up re-indenting installed header files.
2018-10-29 11:39:44 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
2fe42baf7c pg_restore: Augment documentation for -N option
This was forgotten when the option was added.

Author: Michael Banck <michael.banck@credativ.de>
2018-10-29 11:31:43 +01:00
Thomas Munro
051a1494bd Remove incorrect comment in dshash.c.
Back-patch to 11.

Author: Antonin Houska
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8726.1540553521%40localhost
2018-10-29 12:57:55 +13:00
Andrew Dunstan
1df92eeafe Fix perl searchpath for modern perl for MSVC tools
Modern versions of perl no longer include the current directory in the
perl searchpath, as it's insecure. Instead of adding the current
directory, we get around the problem by adding the directory where the
script lives.

Problem noted by Victor Wagner.

Solution adapted from buildfarm client code.

Backpatch to all live versions.
2018-10-28 12:22:32 -04:00
Michael Paquier
5953c99697 Improve tab completion of CREATE EVENT TRIGGER in psql
This adds tab completion of the clauses WHEN and EXECUTE
FUNCTION|PROCEDURE clauses to CREATE EVENT TRIGGER, similar to CREATE
TRIGGER in the previous commit.  This has version-dependent logic so as
FUNCTION is chosen over PROCEDURE for 11 and newer versions.

Author: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d8jmur4q4yc.fsf@dalvik.ping.uio.no
2018-10-26 13:46:20 +09:00
Michael Paquier
292ef6e277 Add tab completion of EXECUTE FUNCTION for CREATE TRIGGER in psql
The change to accept EXECUTE FUNCTION as well as EXECUTE PROCEDURE in
CREATE TRIGGER (added by 0a63f99) forgot to tell psql's tab completion
system about this.  In passing, add tab completion of EXECUTE
FUNCTION/PROCEDURE after a complete WHEN ( … ) clause.

This change is version-aware, with FUNCTION being selected automatically
instead of PROCEDURE depending on the backend version, PROCEDURE being
an historical grammar kept for compatibility and considered as
deprecated in v11.

Author: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d8jmur4q4yc.fsf@dalvik.ping.uio.no
2018-10-26 09:30:43 +09:00
Michael Paquier
10074651e3 Add pg_promote function
This function is able to promote a standby with this new SQL-callable
function.  Execution access can be granted to non-superusers so that
failover tools can observe the principle of least privilege.

Catalog version is bumped.

Author: Laurenz Albe
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6e7c79b3ec916cf49742fb8849ed17cd87aed620.camel@cybertec.at
2018-10-25 09:46:00 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
0a8590b2a0 Apply unconstify() in more places
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/08adbe4e-38f8-2c73-55f0-591392371687%402ndquadrant.com
2018-10-25 01:02:46 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
f2898de98a Improve unconstify() documentation
Refer to expression instead of variable when appropriate.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/08adbe4e-38f8-2c73-55f0-591392371687%402ndquadrant.com
2018-10-25 01:02:46 +01:00
Andrew Dunstan
4beea5508e Fix typo in regression test comment
per Michael Banck
2018-10-24 19:39:50 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
040a1df614 Correctly set t_self for heap tuples in expand_tuple
Commit 16828d5c0 incorrectly set an invalid pointer for t_self for heap
tuples. This patch correctly copies it from the source tuple, and
includes a regression test that relies on it being set correctly.

Backpatch to release 11.

Fixes bug #15448 reported by Tillmann Schulz

Diagnosis and test case by Amit Langote
2018-10-24 10:56:27 -04:00
Michael Paquier
5ef037cf0b List wait events in alphabetical order
This changes the documentation, and the related structures so as
everything is consistent.

Some wait events were not listed alphabetically since their
introduction, others have been added rather randomly.  Keeping all those
entries in order helps in maintenance, and helps the user looking at the
documentation.

Author: Michael Paquier, Kuntal Ghosh
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181024002539.GI1658@paquier.xyz
Backpatch-through: 10, only for the documentation part to avoid an ABI
breakage.
2018-10-24 17:02:37 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
5d7c703a44 Remove get_attidentity()
All existing uses can get this information more easily from the
relation descriptor, so the detour through the syscache is not
necessary.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
2018-10-23 14:47:14 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
c903bb7b1c Remove get_atttypmod()
This has been unused since 2004.  get_atttypetypmodcoll() is often a
better alternative.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
2018-10-23 14:47:14 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
e6f5d1accd Drop const cast from dlsym() calls
This workaround might be obsolete.  We'll see if those "older
platforms" mentioned in the comment are still around.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/08adbe4e-38f8-2c73-55f0-591392371687%402ndquadrant.com
2018-10-23 14:35:59 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
807e4bc828 Sprinkle some const decorations
These mainly help understanding the function signatures better.
2018-10-23 12:25:17 +02:00
Michael Paquier
55853d666c Clarify descriptions of relhassubclass and relispartition in pg_class
Three places are fixed, one for each author.

Reported-by: Tom Lane
Author: Tom Lane, Amit Langote, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/82470.1540177167@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-22 15:26:28 +09:00
Michael Paquier
17f206fbc8 Set pg_class.relhassubclass for partitioned indexes
Like for relations, switching this parameter is optimistic by turning it
on each time a partitioned index gains a partition.  So seeing this
parameter set to true means that the partitioned index has or has had
partitions.  The flag cannot be reset yet for partitioned indexes, which
is something not obvious anyway as partitioned relations exist to have
partitions.

This allows to track more conveniently partition trees for indexes,
which will come in use with an upcoming patch helping in listing
partition trees with an SQL-callable function.

Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/80306490-b5fc-ea34-4427-f29c52156052@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-10-22 11:04:48 +09:00
Andrew Dunstan
c468bd5c08 Don't try to test files named with a trailing dot on Windows
The pg_verify_checksums test tries to create files with corrupt data
named "123." and "123_." But on Windows a file name with a trailing dot
is the same as a file without the trailing dot. In the first case this
will create a file with a "valid" name, which causes the test to fail in
an unexpected way, and in the secongd case this will be redandant as the
test already creates a file named "123_".

Bug discovered by buildfarm animal bowerbird.
2018-10-21 09:00:13 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
ce5d3424d6 Lower privilege level of programs calling regression_main
On Windows this mean that the regression tests can now safely and
successfully run as Administrator, which is useful in situations like
Appveyor. Elsewhere it's a no-op.

Backpatch to 9.5 - this is harder in earlier branches and not worth the
trouble.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/650b0c29-9578-8571-b1d2-550d7f89f307@2ndQuadrant.com
2018-10-20 09:02:36 -04:00
Tom Lane
4247db6252 Client-side fixes for delayed NOTIFY receipt.
PQnotifies() is defined to just process already-read data, not try to read
any more from the socket.  (This is a debatable decision, perhaps, but I'm
hesitant to change longstanding library behavior.)  The documentation has
long recommended calling PQconsumeInput() before PQnotifies() to ensure
that any already-arrived message would get absorbed and processed.
However, psql did not get that memo, which explains why it's not very
reliable about reporting notifications promptly.

Also, most (not quite all) callers called PQconsumeInput() just once before
a PQnotifies() loop.  Taking this recommendation seriously implies that we
should do PQconsumeInput() before each call.  This is more important now
that we have "payload" strings in notification messages than it was before;
that increases the probability of having more than one packet's worth
of notify messages.  Hence, adjust code as well as documentation examples
to do it like that.

Back-patch to 9.5 to match related server fixes.  In principle we could
probably go back further with these changes, but given lack of field
complaints I doubt it's worthwhile.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOYf6ec-TmRYjKBXLLaGaB-jrd=mjG1Hzn1a1wufUAR39PQYhw@mail.gmail.com
2018-10-19 22:22:57 -04:00
Tom Lane
2ddb9149d1 Server-side fix for delayed NOTIFY and SIGTERM processing.
Commit 4f85fde8e introduced some code that was meant to ensure that we'd
process cancel, die, sinval catchup, and notify interrupts while waiting
for client input.  But there was a flaw: it supposed that the process
latch would be set upon arrival at secure_read() if any such interrupt
was pending.  In reality, we might well have cleared the process latch
at some earlier point while those flags remained set -- particularly
notifyInterruptPending, which can't be handled as long as we're within
a transaction.

To fix the NOTIFY case, also attempt to process signals (except
ProcDiePending) before trying to read.

Also, if we see that ProcDiePending is set before we read, forcibly set the
process latch to ensure that we will handle that signal promptly if no data
is available.  I also made it set the process latch on the way out, in case
there is similar logic elsewhere.  (It remains true that we won't service
ProcDiePending here unless we need to wait for input.)

The code for handling ProcDiePending during a write needs those changes,
too.

Also be a little more careful about when to reset whereToSendOutput,
and improve related comments.

Back-patch to 9.5 where this code was added.  I'm not entirely convinced
that older branches don't have similar issues, but the complaint at hand
is just about the >= 9.5 code.

Jeff Janes and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOYf6ec-TmRYjKBXLLaGaB-jrd=mjG1Hzn1a1wufUAR39PQYhw@mail.gmail.com
2018-10-19 21:39:21 -04:00
Tom Lane
12bfb778ce Sync our copy of the timezone library with IANA release tzcode2018f.
About half of this is purely cosmetic changes to reduce the diff between
our code and theirs, like inserting "const" markers where they have them.

The other half is tracking actual code changes in zic.c and localtime.c.
I don't think any of these represent near-term compatibility hazards, but
it seems best to stay up to date.

I also fixed longstanding bugs in our code for producing the
known_abbrevs.txt list, which by chance hadn't been exposed before,
but which resulted in some garbage output after applying the upstream
changes in zic.c.  Notably, because upstream removed their old phony
transitions at the Big Bang, it's now necessary to cope with TZif files
containing no DST transition times at all.
2018-10-19 19:36:34 -04:00
Tom Lane
13877d30f2 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2018f.
DST law changes in Chile, Fiji, and Russia (Volgograd).
Historical corrections for China, Japan, Macau, and North Korea.

Note: like the previous tzdata update, this involves a depressingly
large amount of semantically-meaningless churn in tzdata.zi.  That
is a consequence of upstream's data compression method assigning
unstable abbreviations to DST rulesets.  I complained about that
to them last time, and this version now uses an assignment method
that pays some heed to not changing abbreviations unnecessarily.
So hopefully, that'll be better going forward.
2018-10-19 17:01:34 -04:00
Tom Lane
e65e8f8218 Silence perlcritic warning about missing return.
Per buildfarm member crake.
2018-10-19 14:00:17 -04:00
Michael Paquier
d55241af70 Use whitelist to choose files scanned with pg_verify_checksums
The original implementation of pg_verify_checksums used a blacklist to
decide which files should be skipped for scanning as they do not include
data checksums, like pg_internal.init or pg_control.  However, this
missed two things:
- Some files are created within builds of EXEC_BACKEND and these were
not listed, causing failures on Windows.
- Extensions may create custom files in data folders, causing the tool
to equally fail.

This commit switches to a whitelist-like method instead by checking if
the files to scan are authorized relation files.  This is close to a
reverse-engineering of what is defined in relpath.c in charge of
building the relation paths, and we could consider refactoring what this
patch does so as all routines are in a single place.  This is left for
later.

This is based on a suggestion from Andres Freund.  TAP tests are updated
so as multiple file patterns are tested.  The bug has been spotted by
various buildfarm members as a result of b34e84f which has introduced
the TAP tests of pg_verify_checksums.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan, Michael Banck
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181012005614.GC26424@paquier.xyz
Backpatch-through: 11
2018-10-19 22:44:12 +09:00
Tom Lane
350410be45 Add missing quote_identifier calls for CREATE TRIGGER ... REFERENCING.
Mixed-case names for transition tables weren't dumped correctly.
Oversight in commit 8c48375e5, per bug #15440 from Karl Czajkowski.

In passing, I couldn't resist a bit of code beautification.

Back-patch to v10 where this was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15440-02d1468e94d63d76@postgresql.org
2018-10-19 00:50:16 -04:00
Thomas Munro
197e4af9d5 Refactor pid, random seed and start time initialization.
Background workers, including parallel workers, were generating
the same sequence of numbers in random().  This showed up as DSM
handle collisions when Parallel Hash created multiple segments,
but any code that calls random() in background workers could be
affected if it cares about different backends generating different
numbers.

Repair by making sure that all new processes initialize the seed
at the same time as they set MyProcPid and MyStartTime in a new
function InitProcessGlobals(), called by the postmaster, its
children and also standalone processes.  Also add a new high
resolution MyStartTimestamp as a potentially useful by-product,
and remove SessionStartTime from struct Port as it is now
redundant.

No back-patch for now, as the known consequences so far are just
a bunch of harmless shm_open(O_EXCL) collisions.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm%3D2eJj_6%3DB%2B2tEpGu2nf1BjthCf9nXXUouYvJJ4C5WSwhg%40mail.gmail.com
2018-10-19 13:59:28 +13:00
Tom Lane
e74dd00f53 Still further rethinking of build changes for macOS Mojave.
To avoid the sorts of problems complained of by Jakob Egger, it'd be
best if configure didn't emit any references to the sysroot path at all.
In the case of PL/Tcl, we can do that just by keeping our hands off the
TCL_INCLUDE_SPEC string altogether.  In the case of PL/Perl, we need to
substitute -iwithsysroot for -I in the compile commands, which is easily
handled if we change to using a configure output variable that includes
the switch not only the directory name.  Since PL/Tcl and PL/Python
already do it like that, this seems like good consistency cleanup anyway.

Hence, this replaces the advice given to Perl-related extensions in commit
5e2217131; instead of writing "-I$(perl_archlibexp)/CORE", they should
just write "$(perl_includespec)".  (The old way continues to work, but not
on recent macOS.)

It's still the case that configure needs to be aware of the sysroot
path internally, but that's cleaner than what we had before.

As before, back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20840.1537850987@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-18 14:55:23 -04:00
Tom Lane
26cb82030f Improve some comments related to executor result relations.
es_leaf_result_relations doesn't exist; perhaps this was an old name
for es_tuple_routing_result_relations, or maybe this comment has gone
unmaintained through multiple rounds of whacking the code around.

Related comment in execnodes.h was both obsolete and ungrammatical.
2018-10-17 16:41:00 -04:00
Tom Lane
48d818ede1 Const-ify a few more large static tables.
Per research by Andres.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-17 15:32:47 -04:00
Tom Lane
9958b2b2a8 Fix minor bug in isolationtester.
If the lock wait query failed, isolationtester would report the
PQerrorMessage from some other connection, meaning there would be
no message or an unrelated one.  This seems like a pretty unlikely
occurrence, but if it did happen, this bug could make it really
difficult/confusing to figure out what happened.  That seems to
justify patching all the way back.

In passing, clean up another place where the "wrong" conn was used
for an error report.  That one's not actually buggy because it's
a different alias for the same connection, but it's still confusing
to the reader.
2018-10-17 15:06:57 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
a7a1b44516 Fix crash in multi-insert COPY
A bug introduced in 0d5f05cde0
considered the *previous* partition's triggers when deciding whether
multi-insert can be used.  Rearrange the code so that the current
partition is considered.

Author: Ashutosh Sharma <ashu.coek88@gmail.com>
2018-10-17 20:31:20 +02:00
Tom Lane
d8cc1616b5 Minor additional improvements for ecpglib/prepare.c.
Avoid allocating never-used entries in stmtCacheEntries[], other than the
intentionally-unused zero'th entry.  Tie the array size directly to the
bucket count and size, rather than having undocumented dependencies between
three magic constants.  Fix the hash calculation to be platform-independent
--- notably, it was sensitive to the signed'ness of "char" before, not to
mention having an unnecessary hard-wired dependency on the existence and
size of type "long long".  (The lack of complaints says it's been a long
time since anybody tried to build PG on a compiler without "long long",
and certainly with the requirement for C99 this isn't a live bug anymore.
But it's still not per project coding style.)  Fix ecpg_auto_prepare's
new-cache-entry path so that it increments the exec count for the new
cache entry not the dummy zero'th entry.

The last of those is an actual bug, though one of little consequence;
the rest is mostly future-proofing and neatnik-ism.  Doesn't seem
necessary to back-patch.
2018-10-17 14:22:33 -04:00
Tom Lane
e7eb07f709 Improve tzparse's handling of TZDEFRULES ("posixrules") zone data.
In the IANA timezone code, tzparse() always tries to load the zone
file named by TZDEFRULES ("posixrules").  Previously, we'd hacked
that logic to skip the load in the "lastditch" code path, which we use
only to initialize the default "GMT" zone during GUC initialization.
That's critical for a couple of reasons: since we do not support leap
seconds, we *must not* allow "GMT" to have leap seconds, and since this
case runs before the GUC subsystem is fully alive, we'd really rather
not take the risk of pg_open_tzfile throwing any errors.

However, that still left the code reading TZDEFRULES on every other
call, something we'd noticed to the extent of having added code to cache
the result so it was only done once per process not a lot of times.
Andres Freund complained about the static data space used up for the
cache; but as long as the logic was like this, there was no point in
trying to get rid of that space.

We can improve matters by looking a bit more closely at what the IANA
code actually needs the TZDEFRULES data for.  One thing it does is
that if "posixrules" is a leap-second-aware zone, the leap-second
behavior will be absorbed into every POSIX-style zone specification.
However, that's a behavior we'd really prefer to do without, since
for our purposes the end effect is to render every POSIX-style zone
name unsupported.  Otherwise, the TZDEFRULES data is used only if
the POSIX zone name specifies DST but doesn't include a transition
date rule (e.g., "EST5EDT" rather than "EST5EDT,M3.2.0,M11.1.0").
That is a minority case for our purposes --- in particular, it
never happens when tzload() invokes tzparse() to interpret a
transition date rule string found in a tzdata zone file.

Hence, if we legislate that we're going to ignore leap-second data
from "posixrules", we can postpone the TZDEFRULES load into the path
where we actually need to substitute for a missing date rule string.
That means it will never happen at all in common scenarios, making it
reasonable to dynamically allocate the cache space when it does happen.
Even when the data is already loaded, this saves some cycles in the
common code path since we avoid a memcpy of 23KB or so.  And, IMO at
least, this is a less ugly hack on the IANA logic than what we had
before, since it's not messing with the lastditch-vs-regular code paths.

Back-patch to all supported branches, not so much because this is a
critical change as that I want to keep all our copies of the IANA
timezone code in sync.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-17 12:26:48 -04:00
Tom Lane
e15aae829e Avoid statically allocating statement cache in ecpglib/prepare.c.
This removes a megabyte of storage that isn't used at all in ecpglib's
default operating mode --- you have to enable auto-prepare to get any
use out of it.  Seems well worth the trouble to allocate on demand.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-17 00:04:48 -04:00
Tom Lane
92dff34116 Formatting cleanup in ecpglib/prepare.c.
Looking at this code made my head hurt.  Format the comments more
like the way it's done elsewhere, break a few overly long lines.
No actual code changes in this commit.
2018-10-16 23:43:15 -04:00
Andres Freund
28d750c0cd Reorder FmgrBuiltin members, saving 25% in size.
That's worth it, as fmgr_builtins is frequently accessed, and as
fmgr_builtins is one of the biggest constant variables in a backend.

On most 64bit systems this will change the size of the struct from
32byte to 24bytes. While that could make indexing into the array
marginally more expensive, the higher cache hit ratio is worth more,
especially because these days fmgr_builtins isn't searched with a
binary search anymore (c.f. 212e6f34d5).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181016201145.aa2dfeq54rhqzron@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-16 14:51:18 -07:00
Tom Lane
68fc227dd0 Back off using -isysroot on Darwin.
Rethink the solution applied in commit 5e2217131 to get PL/Tcl to
build on macOS Mojave.  I feared that adding -isysroot globally might
have undesirable consequences, and sure enough Jakob Egger reported
one: it complicates building extensions with a different Xcode version
than was used for the core server.  (I find that a risky proposition
in general, but apparently it works most of the time, so we shouldn't
break it if we don't have to.)

We'd already adopted the solution for PL/Perl of inserting the sysroot
path directly into the -I switches used to find Perl's headers, and we
can do the same thing for PL/Tcl by changing the -iwithsysroot switch
that Apple's tclConfig.sh reports.  This restricts the risks to PL/Perl
and PL/Tcl themselves and directly-dependent extensions, which is a lot
more pleasing in general than a global -isysroot switch.

Along the way, tighten the test to see if we need to inject the sysroot
path into $perl_includedir, as I'd speculated about upthread but not
gotten round to doing.

As before, back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20840.1537850987@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-16 16:27:15 -04:00
Andres Freund
93ca02e005 Mark constantly allocated dest receiver as const.
This allows the compiler / linker to mark affected pages as read-only.

Doing so requires casting constness away, as CreateDestReceiver()
returns both constant and non-constant dest receivers. That's fine
though, as any modification of the statically allocated receivers
would already have been a bug (and would now be caught on some
platforms).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-16 12:05:50 -07:00
Andres Freund
d1211c63f0 Add macro to cast away const without allowing changes to underlying type.
The new unconsitify(underlying_type, var) macro allows to cast
constness away from a variable, but doesn't allow changing the
underlying type.  Enforcement of the latter currently only works for
gcc like compilers.

Please note IT IS NOT SAFE to cast constness away if the variable will ever
be modified (it would be undefined behaviour). Doing so anyway can cause
compiler misoptimizations or runtime crashes (modifying readonly memory).
It is only safe to use when the the variable will not be modified, but API
design or language restrictions prevent you from declaring that
(e.g. because a function returns both const and non-const variables).

This'll be used in an upcoming change, but seems like it's independent
infrastructure.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-16 12:05:50 -07:00
Tom Lane
2c300c6807 Be smarter about age-counter overflow in formatting.c caches.
The previous code here simply threw away whatever it knew about cache
entry ages whenever a counter overflow occurred.  Since the counter
is int width and will be bumped once per format function execution,
overflows are not really so rare as to not be worth thinking about.
Instead, let's deal with the situation by halving all the age values,
essentially rescaling the age metric.  In that way, we retain a
pretty accurate (if not quite perfect) idea of which entries are oldest.
2018-10-16 14:57:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
f7a953c2d8 Avoid rare race condition in privileges.sql regression test.
We created a temp table, then switched to a new session, leaving
the old session to clean up its temp objects in background.  If that
took long enough, the eventual attempt to drop the user that owns
the temp table could fail, as exhibited today by sidewinder.
Fix by dropping the temp table explicitly when we're done with it.

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

Report: https://buildfarm.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/show_log.pl?nm=sidewinder&dt=2018-10-16%2014%3A45%3A00
2018-10-16 13:56:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
fd85e9f78d Avoid statically allocating formatting.c's format string caches.
This eliminates circa 120KB of static data from Postgres' memory
footprint.  In some usage patterns that space will get allocated
anyway, but in many processes it never will be allocated.

We can improve matters further by allocating only as many cache
entries as we actually use, rather than allocating the whole array
on first use.  However, to avoid wasting lots of space due to
palloc's habit of rounding requests up to power-of-2 sizes, tweak
the maximum cacheable format string length to make the struct sizes
be powers of 2 or just less.  The sizes I chose make the maximums
a little bit less than they were before, but I doubt it matters much.

While at it, rearrange struct FormatNode to avoid wasting quite so
much padding space.  This change actually halves the size of that
struct on 64-bit machines.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-16 13:11:09 -04:00
Andres Freund
02a30a09f9 Correct constness of system attributes in heap.c & prerequisites.
This allows the compiler / linker to mark affected pages as read-only.

There's a fair number of pre-requisite changes, to allow the const
properly be propagated. Most of consts were already required for
correctness anyway, just not represented on the type-level.  Arguably
we could be more aggressive in using consts in related code, but..

This requires using a few of the types underlying typedefs that
removes pointers (e.g. const NameData *) as declaring the typedefed
type constant doesn't have the same meaning (it makes the variable
const, not what it points to).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-16 09:44:43 -07:00
Tom Lane
c015ccb306 Make PostgresNode.pm's poll_query_until() more chatty about failures.
Reporting only the stderr is unhelpful when the problem is that the
server output we're getting doesn't match what was expected.  So we
should report the query output too; and just for good measure, let's
print the query we used and the output we expected.

Back-patch to 9.5 where poll_query_until was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17913.1539634756@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-16 12:27:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
3dfef0c519 Avoid statically allocating gmtsub()'s timezone workspace.
localtime.c's "struct state" is a rather large object, ~23KB.  We were
statically allocating one for gmtsub() to use to represent the GMT
timezone, even though that function is not at all heavily used and is
never reached in most backends.  Let's malloc it on-demand, instead.

This does pose the question of how to handle a malloc failure, but
there's already a well-defined error report convention here, ie
set errno and return NULL.

We have but one caller of pg_gmtime in HEAD, and two in back branches,
neither of which were troubling to check for error.  Make them do so.
The possible errors are sufficiently unlikely (out-of-range timestamp,
and now malloc failure) that I think elog() is adequate.

Back-patch to all supported branches to keep our copies of the IANA
timezone code in sync.  This particular change is in a stanza that
already differs from upstream, so it's a wash for maintenance purposes
--- but only as long as we keep the branches the same.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-16 11:50:18 -04:00
Andres Freund
62649bad83 Correct constness of a few variables.
This allows the compiler / linker to mark affected pages as read-only.

There's other cases, but they're a bit more invasive, and should go
through some review. These are easy.

They were found with
objdump -j .data -t src/backend/postgres|awk '{print $4, $5, $6}'|sort -r|less

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-15 21:01:14 -07:00
Andres Freund
c5257345ef Move TupleTableSlots boolean member into one flag variable.
There's several reasons for this change:
1) It reduces the total size of TupleTableSlot / reduces alignment
   padding, making the commonly accessed members fit into a single
   cacheline (but we currently do not force proper alignment, so
   that's not yet guaranteed to be helpful)
2) Combining the booleans into a flag allows to combine read/writes
   from memory.
3) With the upcoming slot abstraction changes, it allows to have core
   and extended flags, in a memory efficient way.

Author: Ashutosh Bapat and Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180220224318.gw4oe5jadhpmcdnm@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-15 18:23:25 -07:00
Andres Freund
9d906f1119 Move generic slot support functions from heaptuple.c into execTuples.c.
heaptuple.c was never a particular good fit for slot_getattr(),
slot_getsomeattrs() and slot_getmissingattrs(), but in upcoming
changes slots will be made more abstract (allowing slots that contain
different types of tuples), making it clearly the wrong place.

Note that slot_deform_tuple() remains in it's current place, as it
clearly deals with a HeapTuple.  getmissingattrs() also remains, but
it's less clear that that's correct - but execTuples.c wouldn't be the
right place.

Author: Ashutosh Bapat.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180220224318.gw4oe5jadhpmcdnm@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-15 15:17:04 -07:00
Thomas Munro
e73ca79fc7 Move the replication lag tracker into heap memory.
Andres Freund complained about the 128KB of .bss occupied by LagTracker.
It's only needed in the walsender process, so allocate it in heap
memory there.

Author: Thomas Munro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181015200754.7y7zfuzsoux2c4ya%40alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-16 11:04:41 +13:00
Tom Lane
d48da369ab Check for stack overrun in standard_ProcessUtility().
ProcessUtility can recurse, and indeed can be driven to infinite
recursion, so it ought to have a check_stack_depth() call.  This
covers the reported bug (portal trying to execute itself) and a bunch
of other cases that could perhaps arise somewhere.

Per bug #15428 from Malthe Borch.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15428-b3c2915ec470b033@postgresql.org
2018-10-15 14:01:38 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
5b75a4f826 pgbench: Report errors during run better
When an error occurs during a benchmark run, exit with a nonzero exit
code and write a message at the end.  Previously, it would just print
the error message when it happened but then proceed to print the run
summary normally and exit with status 0.  To still allow
distinguishing setup from run-time errors, we use exit status 2 for
the new state, whereas existing errors during pgbench initialization
use exit status 1.

Reviewed-by: Fabien COELHO <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
2018-10-15 10:34:35 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
35584fd05f Make spelling of "acknowledgment" consistent
I used the preferred U.S. spelling, as we do in other cases.
2018-10-15 10:06:45 +02:00
Tom Lane
b403ea43e4 Make some subquery-using test cases a bit more robust.
These test cases could be adversely affected by an upcoming change
to allow pullup of FROM-less subqueries.  Tweak them to ensure that
they'll continue to test what they did before.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5395.1539275668@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-14 14:02:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
7d4a10e260 Use PlaceHolderVars within the quals of a FULL JOIN.
This prevents failures in cases where we pull up a constant or var-free
expression from a subquery and put it into a full join's qual.  That can
result in not recognizing the qual as containing a mergejoin-able or
hashjoin-able condition.  A PHV prevents the problem because it is still
recognized as belonging to the side of the join the subquery is in.

I'm not very sure about the net effect of this change on plan quality.
In "typical" cases where the join keys are Vars, nothing changes.
In an affected case, the PHV-wrapped expression is less likely to be seen
as equal to PHV-less instances below the join, but more likely to be seen
as equal to similar expressions above the join, so it may end up being a
wash.  In the one existing case where there's any visible change in a
regression-test plan, it amounts to referencing a lower computation of a
COALESCE result instead of recomputing it, which seems like a win.

Given my uncertainty about that and the lack of field complaints,
no back-patch, even though this is a very ancient problem.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/32090.1539378124@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-14 13:07:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
e9f42d529f Clean up/tighten up coercibility checks in opr_sanity regression test.
With the removal of the old abstime type, there are no longer any cases
in this test where we need to use the weaker castcontext-ignoring form
of binary coercibility check.  (The other major source of such headaches,
apparently-incompatible hash functions, is now hashvalidate()'s problem
not this test script's problem.)  Hence, just use binary_coercible()
everywhere, and remove the comments explaining why we don't do so ---
which were broken anyway by cda6a8d01.

I left physically_coercible() in place but renamed it to better
match what it's actually testing, and added some comments.

Also, in test queries that have an assumption about the maximum number
of function arguments they need to handle, add a clause to make them fail
if someday there's a relevant function with more arguments.  Otherwise
we're likely not to notice that we need to extend the queries.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/27637.1539388060@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-14 12:11:16 -04:00
Michael Paquier
1df21ddb19 Avoid duplicate XIDs at recovery when building initial snapshot
On a primary, sets of XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS records are generated on a
periodic basis to allow recovery to build the initial state of
transactions for a hot standby.  The set of transaction IDs is created
by scanning all the entries in ProcArray.  However it happens that its
logic never counted on the fact that two-phase transactions finishing to
prepare can put ProcArray in a state where there are two entries with
the same transaction ID, one for the initial transaction which gets
cleared when prepare finishes, and a second, dummy, entry to track that
the transaction is still running after prepare finishes.  This way
ensures a continuous presence of the transaction so as callers of for
example TransactionIdIsInProgress() are always able to see it as alive.

So, if a XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS takes a standby snapshot while a two-phase
transaction finishes to prepare, the record can finish with duplicated
XIDs, which is a state expected by design.  If this record gets applied
on a standby to initial its recovery state, then it would simply fail,
so the odds of facing this failure are very low in practice.  It would
be tempting to change the generation of XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS so as
duplicates are removed on the source, but this requires to hold on
ProcArrayLock for longer and this would impact all workloads,
particularly those using heavily two-phase transactions.

XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS is also actually used only to initialize the standby
state at recovery, so instead the solution is taken to discard
duplicates when applying the initial snapshot.

Diagnosed-by: Konstantin Knizhnik
Author: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0c96b653-4696-d4b4-6b5d-78143175d113@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch-through: 9.3
2018-10-14 22:23:21 +09:00
Tom Lane
240cd6bc83 Another round of portability hacking on ECPG regression tests.
Removing the separate Windows expected-files in commit f1885386f
turns out to have been too optimistic: on most (but not all!) of our
Windows buildfarm members, the tests still print floats with three
exponent digits, because they're invoking the native printf()
not snprintf.c.

But rather than put back the extra expected-files, let's hack
the three tests in question so that they adjust float formatting
the same way snprintf.c does.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18890.1539374107@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-12 18:08:47 -04:00
Tom Lane
13cd7209f7 Simplify use of AllocSetContextCreate() wrapper macro.
We can allow this macro to accept either abbreviated or non-abbreviated
allocation parameters by making use of __VA_ARGS__.  As noted by Andres
Freund, it's unlikely that any compiler would have __builtin_constant_p
but not __VA_ARGS__, so this gives up little or no error checking, and
it avoids a minor but annoying API break for extensions.

With this change, there is no reason for anybody to call
AllocSetContextCreateExtended directly, so in HEAD I renamed it to
AllocSetContextCreateInternal.  It's probably too late for an ABI
break like that in 11, though.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181012170355.bhxi273skjt6sag4@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-12 14:26:56 -04:00
Tom Lane
24a2c436a5 Remove dead reference to ecpg resultmap file.
I missed this in my prior commit because it doesn't matter in non-VPATH
builds.

Per buildfarm.
2018-10-12 11:42:28 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
c7d43c4d8a Correct attach/detach logic for FKs in partitions
There was no code to handle foreign key constraints on partitioned
tables in the case of ALTER TABLE DETACH; and if you happened to ATTACH
a partition that already had an equivalent constraint, that one was
ignored and a new constraint was created.  Adding this to the fact that
foreign key cloning reuses the constraint name on the partition instead
of generating a new name (as it probably should, to cater to SQL
standard rules about constraint naming within schemas), the result was a
pretty poor user experience -- the most visible failure was that just
detaching a partition and re-attaching it failed with an error such as

  ERROR:  duplicate key value violates unique constraint "pg_constraint_conrelid_contypid_conname_index"
  DETAIL:  Key (conrelid, contypid, conname)=(26702, 0, test_result_asset_id_fkey) already exists.

because it would try to create an identically-named constraint in the
partition.  To make matters worse, if you tried to drop the constraint
in the now-independent partition, that would fail because the constraint
was still seen as dependent on the constraint in its former parent
partitioned table:
  ERROR:  cannot drop inherited constraint "test_result_asset_id_fkey" of relation "test_result_cbsystem_0001_0050_monthly_2018_09"

This fix attacks the problem from two angles: first, when the partition
is detached, the constraint is also marked as independent, so the drop
now works.  Second, when the partition is re-attached, we scan existing
constraints searching for one matching the FK in the parent, and if one
exists, we link that one to the parent constraint.  So we don't end up
with a duplicate -- and better yet, we don't need to scan the referenced
table to verify that the constraint holds.

To implement this I made a small change to previously planner-only
struct ForeignKeyCacheInfo to contain the constraint OID; also relcache
now maintains the list of FKs for partitioned tables too.

Backpatch to 11.

Reported-by: Michael Vitale (bug #15425)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15425-2dbc9d2aa999f816@postgresql.org
2018-10-12 12:37:37 -03:00
Tom Lane
f1885386f6 Make float exponent output on Windows look the same as elsewhere.
Windows, alone among our supported platforms, likes to emit three-digit
exponent fields even when two digits would do.  Adjust such results to
look like the way everyone else does it.  Eliminate a bunch of variant
expected-output files that were needed only because of this quirk.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2934.1539122454@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-12 11:14:27 -04:00
Michael Paquier
b34e84f160 Add TAP tests for pg_verify_checksums
All options available in the utility get coverage:
- Tests with disabled page checksums.
- Tests with enabled test checksums.
- Emulation of corruption and broken checksums with a full scan and
single relfilenode scan.

This patch has been contributed mainly by Michael Banck and Magnus
Hagander with things presented on various threads, and I have gathered
all the contents into a single patch.

Author: Michael Banck, Magnus Hagander, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181005012645.GE1629@paquier.xyz
2018-10-12 09:12:31 +09:00
Andres Freund
cda6a8d01d Remove deprecated abstime, reltime, tinterval datatypes.
These types have been deprecated for a *long* time.

Catversion bump, for obvious reasons.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20181009192237.34wjp3nmw7oynmmr@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20171213080506.cwjkpcz3bkk6yz2u@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/25615.1513115237@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-11 11:59:15 -07:00
Andres Freund
2d10defa77 Remove timetravel extension.
The extension depended on old types which are about to be removed. As
the code additionally was pretty crufty and didn't provide much in the
way of functionality, removing the extension seems to be the best way
forward.  It's fairly trivial to write functionality in plpgsql that
more than covers what timetravel did.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20171213080506.cwjkpcz3bkk6yz2u@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/25615.1513115237@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-11 11:43:56 -07:00
Andres Freund
86896be60e Move timeofday() implementation out of nabstime.c.
nabstime.c is about to be removed, but timeofday() isn't related to
the rest of the functionality therein, and some find it useful. Move
to timestamp.c.

Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/20181009192237.34wjp3nmw7oynmmr@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20180928223240.kgwc4czzzekrpsid%40alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-11 11:30:59 -07:00
Andres Freund
e9edc1ba0b Fix logical decoding error when system table w/ toast is repeatedly rewritten.
Repeatedly rewriting a mapped catalog table with VACUUM FULL or
CLUSTER could cause logical decoding to fail with:
ERROR, "could not map filenode \"%s\" to relation OID"

To trigger the problem the rewritten catalog had to have live tuples
with toasted columns.

The problem was triggered as during catalog table rewrites the
heap_insert() check that prevents logical decoding information to be
emitted for system catalogs, failed to treat the new heap's toast table
as a system catalog (because the new heap is not recognized as a
catalog table via RelationIsLogicallyLogged()). The relmapper, in
contrast to the normal catalog contents, does not contain historical
information. After a single rewrite of a mapped table the new relation
is known to the relmapper, but if the table is rewritten twice before
logical decoding occurs, the relfilenode cannot be mapped to a
relation anymore.  Which then leads us to error out.   This only
happens for toast tables, because the main table contents aren't
re-inserted with heap_insert().

The fix is simple, add a new heap_insert() flag that prevents logical
decoding information from being emitted, and accept during decoding
that there might not be tuple data for toast tables.

Unfortunately that does not fix pre-existing logical decoding
errors. Doing so would require not throwing an error when a filenode
cannot be mapped to a relation during decoding, and that seems too
likely to hide bugs.  If it's crucial to fix decoding for an existing
slot, temporarily changing the ERROR in ReorderBufferCommit() to a
WARNING appears to be the best fix.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180914021046.oi7dm4ra3ot2g2kt@alap3.anarazel.de
Backpatch: 9.4-, where logical decoding was introduced
2018-10-10 13:53:02 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut
f82d4d666f Slightly correct context check for event triggers
The previous check for a "complete query" omitted the new
PROCESS_UTILITY_QUERY_NONATOMIC value.  This didn't actually make a
difference in practice, because only CALL and SET from PL/pgSQL run in
this state, but it's more correct to include it anyway.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/4566041d-2567-74d2-d135-19ff6a20fe51%402ndquadrant.com
2018-10-10 22:41:12 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
ae307861d8 Test that event triggers work in functions and procedures
This ensures that we have coverage of all the ProcessUtilityContext
variants.
2018-10-10 22:41:12 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
f8c10f616f Turn transaction_isolation into GUC enum
It was previously a string setting that was converted into an enum by
custom code, but using the GUC enum facility seems much simpler and
doesn't change any functionality, except that

    set transaction_isolation='default';

no longer works, but that was never documented and doesn't work with
any other transaction characteristics.  (Note that this is not the
same as RESET or SET TO DEFAULT, which still work.)

Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/457db615-e84c-4838-310e-43841eb806e5@iki.fi
2018-10-09 21:26:00 +02:00
Tom Lane
b6b297d20d Make src/common/exec.c's error logging less ugly.
This code used elog where it really ought to use ereport, mainly so that
it can report a SQLSTATE different from ERRCODE_INTERNAL_ERROR.  There
were some other random deviations from typical error report practice too.

In addition, we can make some cleanups that were impractical six months
ago:

* Use one variadic macro, instead of several with different numbers
of arguments, reducing the temptation to force-fit messages into
particular numbers of arguments;

* Use %m, even in the frontend case, simplifying the code.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6025.1527351693@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-09 13:36:24 -04:00
Tom Lane
6eb4378d53 Remove no-longer-needed variant expected regression result files.
numerology_1.out and float8-small-is-zero_1.out differ from their
base files only in showing plain zero rather than minus zero for
some results.  I believe that in the wake of commit 6eb3eb577,
we will print minus zero as such on all IEEE-float platforms
(and non-IEEE floats are going to cause many more regression diffs
than this, anyway).  Hence we should be able to remove these and
eliminate a bit of maintenance pain.  Let's see if the buildfarm
agrees.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/29037.1539021687@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-09 11:31:30 -04:00
Tom Lane
aed9fa0bd8 Select appropriate PG_PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE for recent NetBSD.
NetBSD-current generates a large number of warnings about "%m" not
being appropriate to use with *printf functions.  While that's true
for their native printf, it's surely not true for snprintf.c, so I
think they have misunderstood gcc's definition of the "gnu_printf"
archetype.  Nonetheless, choosing "__syslog__" instead silences the
warnings; so teach configure about that.

Since this is only a cosmetic warning issue (and anyway it depends
on previous hacking to be self-consistent), no back-patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16785.1539046036@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-09 11:10:07 -04:00
Michael Paquier
c481016201 Add pg_ls_archive_statusdir function
This function lists the contents of the WAL archive status directory,
and is intended to be used by monitoring tools.  Unlike pg_ls_dir(),
access to it can be granted to non-superusers so that those monitoring
tools can observe the principle of least privilege.  Access is also
given by default to members of pg_monitor.

Author:  Christoph Moench-Tegeder
Reviewed-by: Aya Iwata
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180930205920.GA64534@elch.exwg.net
2018-10-09 22:29:09 +09:00
Thomas Munro
212fab9926 Relax transactional restrictions on ALTER TYPE ... ADD VALUE (redux).
Originally committed as 15bc038f (plus some follow-ups), this was
reverted in 28e07270 due to a problem discovered in parallel
workers.  This new version corrects that problem by sending the
list of uncommitted enum values to parallel workers.

Here follows the original commit message describing the change:

To prevent possibly breaking indexes on enum columns, we must keep
uncommitted enum values from getting stored in tables, unless we
can be sure that any such column is new in the current transaction.

Formerly, we enforced this by disallowing ALTER TYPE ... ADD VALUE
from being executed at all in a transaction block, unless the target
enum type had been created in the current transaction.  This patch
removes that restriction, and instead insists that an uncommitted enum
value can't be referenced unless it belongs to an enum type created
in the same transaction as the value.  Per discussion, this should be
a bit less onerous.  It does require each function that could possibly
return a new enum value to SQL operations to check this restriction,
but there aren't so many of those that this seems unmaintainable.

Author: Andrew Dunstan and Tom Lane, with parallel query fix by Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm%3D0Ei7g6PaNTbcmAh9tCRahQrk%3Dr5ZWLD-jr7hXweYX3yg%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4075.1459088427%40sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-09 12:51:01 +13:00
Tom Lane
7767aadd94 Fix omissions in snprintf.c's coverage of standard *printf functions.
A warning on a NetBSD box revealed to me that pg_waldump/compat.c
is using vprintf(), which snprintf.c did not provide coverage for.
This is not good if we want to have uniform *printf behavior, and
it's pretty silly to omit when it's a one-line function.

I also noted that snprintf.c has pg_vsprintf() but for some reason
it was not exposed to the outside world, creating another way in
which code might accidentally invoke the platform *printf family.

Let's just make sure that we replace all eight of the POSIX-standard
printf family.

Also, upgrade plperl.h and plpython.h to make sure that they do
their undefine/redefine rain dance for all eight, not some random
maybe-sufficient subset thereof.
2018-10-08 19:15:55 -04:00
Tom Lane
82ff0cc91d Advance transaction timestamp for intra-procedure transactions.
Per discussion, this behavior seems less astonishing than not doing so.

Peter Eisentraut and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180920234040.GC29981@momjian.us
2018-10-08 16:16:36 -04:00
Tom Lane
6eb3eb577d Improve snprintf.c's handling of NaN, Infinity, and minus zero.
Up to now, float4out/float8out handled NaN and Infinity cases explicitly,
and invoked psprintf only for ordinary float values.  This was done because
platform implementations of snprintf produce varying representations of
these special cases.  But now that we use snprintf.c always, it's better
to give it the responsibility to produce a uniform representation of
these cases, so that we have uniformity across the board not only in
float4out/float8out.  Hence, move that work into fmtfloat().

Also, teach fmtfloat() to recognize IEEE minus zero and handle it
correctly.  The previous coding worked only accidentally, and would
fail for e.g. "%+f" format (it'd print "+-0.00000").  Now that we're
using snprintf.c everywhere, it's not acceptable for it to do weird
things in corner cases.  (This incidentally avoids a portability
problem we've seen on some really ancient platforms, that native
sprintf does the wrong thing with minus zero.)

Also, introduce a new entry point in snprintf.c to allow float[48]out
to bypass the work of interpreting a well-known format spec, as well
as bypassing the overhead of the psprintf layer.  I modeled this API
loosely on strfromd().  In my testing, this brings float[48]out back
to approximately the same speed they had when using native snprintf,
fixing one of the main performance issues caused by using snprintf.c.

(There is some talk of more aggressive work to improve the speed of
floating-point output conversion, but these changes seem to provide
a better starting point for such work anyway.)

Getting rid of the previous ad-hoc hack for Infinity/NaN in fmtfloat()
allows removing <ctype.h> from snprintf.c's #includes.  I also removed
a few other #includes that I think are historical, though the buildfarm
may expose that as wrong.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/13178.1538794717@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-08 12:19:20 -04:00
Tom Lane
f9eb7c14b0 Avoid O(N^2) cost in ExecFindRowMark().
If there are many ExecRowMark structs, we spent O(N^2) time in
ExecFindRowMark during executor startup.  Once upon a time this was
not of great concern, but the addition of native partitioning has
squeezed out enough other costs that this can become the dominant
overhead in some use-cases for tables with many partitions.

To fix, simply replace that List data structure with an array.

This adds a little bit of cost to execCurrentOf(), but not much,
and anyway that code path is neither of large importance nor very
efficient now.  If we ever decide it is a bottleneck, constructing a
hash table for lookup-by-tableoid would likely be the thing to do.

Per complaint from Amit Langote, though this is different from
his fix proposal.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/468c85d9-540e-66a2-1dde-fec2b741e688@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-10-08 10:41:34 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
eee01d606e Silence compiler warning in Assert()
gcc 6.3 does not whine about this mistake I made in 39808e8868 but
evidently lots of other compilers do, according to Michael Paquier,
Peter Eisentraut, Arthur Zakirov, Tomas Vondra.

Discussion: too many to list
2018-10-08 10:37:21 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut
634b4b79cb Track procedure calls in pg_stat_user_functions
This was forgotten when procedures were implemented.

Reported-by: Lukas Fittl <lukas@fittl.com>
2018-10-08 11:22:53 +02:00
Michael Paquier
9c2a970d1f Improve two error messages related to foreign keys on partitioned tables
Error messages for creating a foreign key on a partitioned table using
ONLY or NOT VALID were wrong in mentioning the objects they worked on.
This commit adds on the way some regression tests missing for those
cases.

Author: Laurenz Albe
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c11c05810a9ed65e9b2c817a9ef442275a32fe80.camel@cybertec.at
2018-10-08 17:56:13 +09:00
Magnus Hagander
a9da329be0 Fix speling error
Reported by Alexander Lakhin in bug #15423
2018-10-08 08:57:24 +02:00
Tom Lane
52ed730d51 Remove some unnecessary fields from Plan trees.
In the wake of commit f2343653f, we no longer need some fields that
were used before to control executor lock acquisitions:

* PlannedStmt.nonleafResultRelations can go away entirely.

* partitioned_rels can go away from Append, MergeAppend, and ModifyTable.
However, ModifyTable still needs to know the RT index of the partition
root table if any, which was formerly kept in the first entry of that
list.  Add a new field "rootRelation" to remember that.  rootRelation is
partly redundant with nominalRelation, in that if it's set it will have
the same value as nominalRelation.  However, the latter field has a
different purpose so it seems best to keep them distinct.

Amit Langote, reviewed by David Rowley and Jesper Pedersen,
and whacked around a bit more by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/468c85d9-540e-66a2-1dde-fec2b741e688@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-10-07 14:33:17 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
39808e8868 Fix catalog insertion order for ATTACH PARTITION
Commit 2fbdf1b38b changed the order in which we inserted catalog rows
when creating partitions, so that we could remove an unsightly hack
required for untimely relcache invalidations.  However, that commit only
changed the ordering for CREATE TABLE PARTITION OF, and left ALTER TABLE
ATTACH PARTITION unchanged, so the latter can be affected when catalog
invalidations occur, for instance when the partition key involves an SQL
function.

Reported-by: Rajkumar Raghuwanshi
Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Michaël Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6=nTz9KSfTr_6Z2mpzLJ_09JN-rK6=dWic6gGyTSWueyQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-10-06 22:13:19 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
ad08006ba0 Fix event triggers for partitioned tables
Index DDL cascading on partitioned tables introduced a way for ALTER
TABLE to be called reentrantly.  This caused an an important deficiency
in event trigger support to be exposed: on exiting the reentrant call,
the alter table state object was clobbered, causing a crash when the
outer alter table tries to finalize its processing.  Fix the crash by
creating a stack of event trigger state objects.  There are still ways
to cause things to misbehave (and probably other crashers) with more
elaborate tricks, but at least it now doesn't crash in the obvious
scenario.

Backpatch to 9.5, where DDL deparsing of event triggers was introduced.

Reported-by: Marco Slot
Authors: Michaël Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANNhMLCpi+HQ7M36uPfGbJZEQLyTy7XvX=5EFkpR-b1bo0uJew@mail.gmail.com
2018-10-06 19:17:46 -03:00
Tom Lane
29ef2b310d Restore sane locking behavior during parallel query.
Commit 9a3cebeaa changed things so that parallel workers didn't obtain
any lock of their own on tables they access.  That was clearly a bad
idea, but I'd mistakenly supposed that it was the intended end result
of the series of patches for simplifying the executor's lock management.
Undo that change in relation_open(), and adjust ExecOpenScanRelation()
so that it gets the correct lock if inside a parallel worker.

In passing, clean up some more obsolete comments about when locks
are acquired.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/468c85d9-540e-66a2-1dde-fec2b741e688@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-10-06 15:49:37 -04:00
Tom Lane
f2343653f5 Remove more redundant relation locking during executor startup.
We already have appropriate locks on every relation listed in the
query's rangetable before we reach the executor.  Take the next step
in exploiting that knowledge by removing code that worries about
taking locks on non-leaf result relations in a partitioned table.

In particular, get rid of ExecLockNonLeafAppendTables and a stanza in
InitPlan that asserts we already have locks on certain such tables.

In passing, clean up some now-obsolete comments in InitPlan.

Amit Langote, reviewed by David Rowley and Jesper Pedersen,
and whacked around a bit more by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/468c85d9-540e-66a2-1dde-fec2b741e688@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-10-06 15:12:51 -04:00
Tom Lane
0209f0285d Don't use is_infinite() where isinf() will do.
Places that aren't testing for sign should not use the more expensive
function; it's just wasteful, not to mention being a cognitive load
for readers who may know what isinf() is but not is_infinite().

As things stand, we actually don't need is_infinite() anyplace except
float4out/float8out, which means it could potentially go away altogether
after the changes I proposed in <13178.1538794717@sss.pgh.pa.us>.
2018-10-06 13:18:38 -04:00
Tom Lane
07ee62ce9e Propagate xactStartTimestamp and stmtStartTimestamp to parallel workers.
Previously, a worker process would establish values for these based on
its own start time.  In v10 and up, this can trivially be shown to cause
misbehavior of transaction_timestamp(), timestamp_in(), and related
functions which are (perhaps unwisely?) marked parallel-safe.  It seems
likely that other behaviors might diverge from what happens in the parent
as well.

It's not as trivial to demonstrate problems in 9.6 or 9.5, but I'm sure
it's still possible, so back-patch to all branches containing parallel
worker infrastructure.

In HEAD only, mark now() and statement_timestamp() as parallel-safe
(other affected functions already were).  While in theory we could
still squeeze that change into v11, it doesn't seem important enough
to force a last-minute catversion bump.

Konstantin Knizhnik, whacked around a bit by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6406dbd2-5d37-4cb6-6eb2-9c44172c7e7c@postgrespro.ru
2018-10-06 12:00:09 -04:00
Dean Rasheed
e954a727f0 Improve the accuracy of floating point statistical aggregates.
When computing statistical aggregates like variance, the common
schoolbook algorithm which computes the sum of the squares of the
values and subtracts the square of the mean can lead to a large loss
of precision when using floating point arithmetic, because the
difference between the two terms is often very small relative to the
terms themselves.

To avoid this, re-work these aggregates to use the Youngs-Cramer
algorithm, which is a proven, numerically stable algorithm that
directly aggregates the sum of the squares of the differences of the
values from the mean in a single pass over the data.

While at it, improve the test coverage to test the aggregate combine
functions used during parallel aggregation.

Per report and suggested algorithm from Erich Schubert.

Patch by me, reviewed by Madeleine Thompson.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/153313051300.1397.9594490737341194671@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-10-06 11:20:09 +01:00
Michael Paquier
38921d1416 Assign constraint name when cloning FK definition for partitions
This is for example used when attaching a partition to a partitioned
table which includes foreign keys, and in this case the constraint name
has been missing in the data cloned.  This could lead to hard crashes,
as when validating the foreign key constraint, the constraint name is
always expected.  Particularly, when using log_min_messages >= DEBUG1, a
log message would be generated with this unassigned constraint name,
leading to an assertion failure on HEAD.

While on it, rename a variable in ATExecAttachPartition which was
declared twice with the same name.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181005042236.GG1629@paquier.xyz
Backpatch-through: 11
2018-10-06 14:59:36 +09:00
Tom Lane
c87cb5f7a6 Allow btree comparison functions to return INT_MIN.
Historically we forbade datatype-specific comparison functions from
returning INT_MIN, so that it would be safe to invert the sort order
just by negating the comparison result.  However, this was never
really safe for comparison functions that directly return the result
of memcmp(), strcmp(), etc, as POSIX doesn't place any such restriction
on those library functions.  Buildfarm results show that at least on
recent Linux on s390x, memcmp() actually does return INT_MIN sometimes,
causing sort failures.

The agreed-on answer is to remove this restriction and fix relevant
call sites to not make such an assumption; code such as "res = -res"
should be replaced by "INVERT_COMPARE_RESULT(res)".  The same is needed
in a few places that just directly negated the result of memcmp or
strcmp.

To help find places having this problem, I've also added a compile option
to nbtcompare.c that causes some of the commonly used comparators to
return INT_MIN/INT_MAX instead of their usual -1/+1.  It'd likely be
a good idea to have at least one buildfarm member running with
"-DSTRESS_SORT_INT_MIN".  That's far from a complete test of course,
but it should help to prevent fresh introductions of such bugs.

This is a longstanding portability hazard, so back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180928185215.ffoq2xrq5d3pafna@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-05 16:01:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
113a659914 Ensure that PLPGSQL_DTYPE_ROW variables have valid refname fields.
Without this, the syntax-tree-dumping functions in pl_funcs.c crash,
and there are other places that might be at risk too.  Per report
from Pavel Stehule.

Looks like I broke this in commit f9263006d, so back-patch to v11.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRA+3f5n4642q2g8BXCKjbTd7yU9JMYAgDyHgozk6cQ-VA@mail.gmail.com
2018-10-05 12:45:37 -04:00
Michael Paquier
9cd92d1a33 Add pg_ls_tmpdir function
This lists the contents of a temporary directory associated to a given
tablespace, useful to get information about on-disk consumption caused
by temporary files used by a session query.  By default, pg_default is
scanned, and a tablespace can be specified as argument.

This function is intended to be used by monitoring tools, and, unlike
pg_ls_dir(), access to them can be granted to non-superusers so that
those monitoring tools can observe the principle of least privilege.
Access is also given by default to members of pg_monitor.

Author: Nathan Bossart
Reviewed-by: Laurenz Albe
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/92F458A2-6459-44B8-A7F2-2ADD3225046A@amazon.com
2018-10-05 09:21:48 +09:00
Tom Lane
d73f4c74dd In the executor, use an array of pointers to access the rangetable.
Instead of doing a lot of list_nth() accesses to es_range_table,
create a flattened pointer array during executor startup and index
into that to get at individual RangeTblEntrys.

This eliminates one source of O(N^2) behavior with lots of partitions.
(I'm not exactly convinced that it's the most important source, but
it's an easy one to fix.)

Amit Langote and David Rowley

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/468c85d9-540e-66a2-1dde-fec2b741e688@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-10-04 15:48:17 -04:00
Tom Lane
9ddef36278 Centralize executor's opening/closing of Relations for rangetable entries.
Create an array estate->es_relations[] paralleling the es_range_table,
and store references to Relations (relcache entries) there, so that any
given RT entry is opened and closed just once per executor run.  Scan
nodes typically still call ExecOpenScanRelation, but ExecCloseScanRelation
is no more; relation closing is now done centrally in ExecEndPlan.

This is slightly more complex than one would expect because of the
interactions with relcache references held in ResultRelInfo nodes.
The general convention is now that ResultRelInfo->ri_RelationDesc does
not represent a separate relcache reference and so does not need to be
explicitly closed; but there is an exception for ResultRelInfos in the
es_trig_target_relations list, which are manufactured by
ExecGetTriggerResultRel and have to be cleaned up by
ExecCleanUpTriggerState.  (That much was true all along, but these
ResultRelInfos are now more different from others than they used to be.)

To allow the partition pruning logic to make use of es_relations[] rather
than having its own relcache references, adjust PartitionedRelPruneInfo
to store an RT index rather than a relation OID.

Amit Langote, reviewed by David Rowley and Jesper Pedersen,
some mods by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/468c85d9-540e-66a2-1dde-fec2b741e688@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-10-04 14:03:42 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
fb9e93a2c5 Fix duplicate primary keys in partitions
When using the CREATE TABLE .. PARTITION OF syntax, it's possible to
cause a partition to get two primary keys if the parent already has one.
Tighten the check to disallow that.

Reported-by: Rajkumar Raghuwanshi
Author: Amul Sul
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6=OnSV3-qd8Gb6W=KPPwcCz6Fe_O_MQYjTa24__Xn8XxA@mail.gmail.com
2018-10-04 11:40:36 -03:00
Michael Paquier
09921f397b Refactor user-facing SQL functions signalling backends
This moves the system administration functions for signalling backends
from backend/utils/adt/misc.c into a separate file dedicated to backend
signalling.  No new functionality is introduced in this commit.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/C2C7C3EC-CC5F-44B6-9C78-637C88BD7D14@yesql.se
2018-10-04 18:27:25 +09:00
Michael Paquier
803b1301e8 Add option SKIP_LOCKED to VACUUM and ANALYZE
When specified, this option allows VACUUM to skip the work on a relation
if there is a conflicting lock on it when trying to open it at the
beginning of its processing.

Similarly to autovacuum, this comes with a couple of limitations while
the relation is processed which can cause the process to still block:
- when opening the relation indexes.
- when acquiring row samples for table inheritance trees, partition trees
or certain types of foreign tables, and that a lock is taken on some
leaves of such trees.

Author: Nathan Bossart
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Andres Freund, Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9EF7EBE4-720D-4CF1-9D0E-4403D7E92990@amazon.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171201160907.27110.74730@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-10-04 09:00:33 +09:00
Andres Freund
d173652797 Replace uint64 use introduced in 4868e44685 in light of 595a0eab7f.
Reported-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/527.1538598263@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-03 13:28:14 -07:00
Andres Freund
4868e44685 Ensure that snprintf.c's fmtint() doesn't overflow when printing INT64_MIN.
This isn't actually a live bug, as the output happens to be the
same.  But it upsets tools like UBSan, which makes it worthwhile to
fix.

As it's an issue without practical consequences, don't backpatch.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180928001121.hhx5n6dsygqxr5wu@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-10-03 13:13:50 -07:00
Tom Lane
9a3cebeaa7 Change executor to just Assert that table locks were already obtained.
Instead of locking tables during executor startup, just Assert that
suitable locks were obtained already during the parse/plan pipeline
(or re-obtained by the plan cache).  This must be so, else we have a
hazard that concurrent DDL has invalidated the plan.

This is pretty inefficient as well as undercommented, but it's all going
to go away shortly, so I didn't try hard.  This commit is just another
attempt to use the buildfarm to see if we've missed anything in the plan
to simplify the executor's table management.

Note that the change needed here in relation_open() exposes that
parallel workers now really are accessing tables without holding any
lock of their own, whereas they were not doing that before this commit.
This does not give me a warm fuzzy feeling about that aspect of parallel
query; it does not seem like a good design, and we now know that it's
had exactly no actual testing.  I think that we should modify parallel
query so that that change can be reverted.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/468c85d9-540e-66a2-1dde-fec2b741e688@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-10-03 16:05:12 -04:00
Andres Freund
c03c1449c0 Fix issues around EXPLAIN with JIT.
I (Andres) was more than a bit hasty in committing 33001fd7a7
after last minute changes, leading to a number of problems (jit output
was only shown for JIT in parallel workers, and just EXPLAIN without
ANALYZE didn't work).  Lukas luckily found these issues quickly.

Instead of combining instrumentation in in standard_ExecutorEnd(), do
so on demand in the new ExplainPrintJITSummary().

Also update a documentation example of the JIT output, changed in
52050ad8eb.

Author: Lukas Fittl, with minor changes by me
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAP53PkxmgJht69pabxBXJBM+0oc6kf3KHMborLP7H2ouJ0CCtQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 11, where JIT compilation was introduced
2018-10-03 12:48:37 -07:00
Tom Lane
595a0eab7f Rationalize snprintf.c's handling of "ll" formats.
Although all known platforms define "long long" as 64 bits, it still feels
a bit shaky to be using "va_arg(args, int64)" to pull out an argument that
the caller thought was declared "long long".  The reason it was coded like
this, way back in commit 3311c7669, was to work around the possibility that
the compiler had no type named "long long" --- and, at the time, that it
maybe didn't have 64-bit ints at all.  Now that we're requiring compilers
to support C99, those concerns are moot.  Let's make the code clearer and
more bulletproof by writing "long long" where we mean "long long".

This does introduce a hazard that we'd inefficiently use 128-bit arithmetic
to convert plain old integers.  The way to tackle that would be to provide
two versions of fmtint(), one for "long long" and one for narrower types.
Since, as of today, no platforms require that, we won't bother with the
extra code for now.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1680.1538587115@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-03 14:33:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
6d842be6c1 Provide fast path in snprintf.c for conversion specs that are just "%s".
This case occurs often enough (around 45% of conversion specs executed
in our regression tests are just "%s") that it's worth an extra test
per conversion spec to allow skipping all the logic associated with
field widths and padding when it happens.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26193.1538582367@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-03 13:05:01 -04:00
Tom Lane
abd9ca377d Make assorted performance improvements in snprintf.c.
In combination, these changes make our version of snprintf as fast
or faster than most platforms' native snprintf, except for cases
involving floating-point conversion (which we still delegate to
the native sprintf).  The speed penalty for a float conversion
is down to around 10% though, much better than before.

Notable changes:

* Rather than always parsing the format twice to see if it contains
instances of %n$, do the extra scan only if we actually find a $.
This obviously wins for non-localized formats, and even when there
is use of %n$, we can avoid scanning text before the first % twice.

* Use strchrnul() if available to find the next %, and emit the
literal text between % escapes as strings rather than char-by-char.

* Create a bespoke function (dopr_outchmulti) for the common case
of emitting N copies of the same character, in place of writing
loops around dopr_outch.

* Simplify construction of the format string for invocations of sprintf
for floats.

* Const-ify some internal functions, and avoid unnecessary use of
pass-by-reference arguments.

Patch by me, reviewed by Andres Freund

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11787.1534530779@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-03 10:18:15 -04:00
Amit Kapila
9bc9f72b28 MAXALIGN the target address where we store flattened value.
The API (EOH_flatten_into) that flattens the expanded value representation
expects the target address to be maxaligned.  All it's usage adhere to that
principle except when serializing datums for parallel query.  Fix that
usage.

Diagnosed-by: Tom Lane
Author: Tom Lane and Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 9.6
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11629.1536550032@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-03 09:15:03 +05:30
Andrew Dunstan
a33245a853 Don't build static libraries on Cygwin
Cygwin has been building and linking against static libraries. Although
a bug this has been relatively harmless until now, when this has caused
errors due to changes in the way we build certain libraries. So this
patch makes things work the way we always intended, namely that we would
link against the dynamic libraries (cygpq.dll etc.) and just not build
the static libraries. The downstream packagers have been doing this for
some time, so this just aligns with their practice.

Extracted from a patch by Marco Atzeri, with a suggestion from Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1056.1538235347@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-02 16:46:57 -04:00
Tom Lane
6e35939feb Change rewriter/planner/executor/plancache to depend on RTE rellockmode.
Instead of recomputing the required lock levels in all these places,
just use what commit fdba460a2 made the parser store in the RTE fields.
This already simplifies the code measurably in these places, and
follow-on changes will remove a bunch of no-longer-needed infrastructure.

In a few cases, this change causes us to acquire a higher lock level
than we did before.  This is OK primarily because said higher lock level
should've been acquired already at query parse time; thus, we're saving
a useless extra trip through the shared lock manager to acquire a lesser
lock alongside the original lock.  The only known exception to this is
that re-execution of a previously planned SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE query,
for a table that uses ROW_MARK_REFERENCE or ROW_MARK_COPY methods, might
have gotten only AccessShareLock before.  Now it will get RowShareLock
like the first execution did, which seems fine.

While there's more to do, push it in this state anyway, to let the
buildfarm help verify that nothing bad happened.

Amit Langote, reviewed by David Rowley and Jesper Pedersen,
and whacked around a bit more by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/468c85d9-540e-66a2-1dde-fec2b741e688@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-10-02 14:43:09 -04:00
Andres Freund
cc2905e963 Use slots more widely in tuple mapping code and make naming more consistent.
It's inefficient to use a single slot for mapping between tuple
descriptors for multiple tuples, as previously done when using
ConvertPartitionTupleSlot(), as that means the slot's tuple descriptors
change for every tuple.

Previously we also, via ConvertPartitionTupleSlot(), built new tuples
after the mapping even in cases where we, immediately afterwards,
access individual columns again.

Refactor the code so one slot, on demand, is used for each
partition. That avoids having to change the descriptor (and allows to
use the more efficient "fixed" tuple slots). Then use slot->slot
mapping, to avoid unnecessarily forming a tuple.

As the naming between the tuple and slot mapping functions wasn't
consistent, rename them to execute_attr_map_{tuple,slot}.  It's likely
that we'll also rename convert_tuples_by_* to denote that these
functions "only" build a map, but that's left for later.

Author: Amit Khandekar and Amit Langote, editorialized by me
Reviewed-By: Amit Langote, Amit Khandekar, Andres Freund
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9fR0wRNeAE8VqffNTyONS_UfFPRpqxhnD9Q42vZB+Jvpg@mail.gmail.com
    https://postgr.es/m/e4f9d743-cd4b-efb0-7574-da21d86a7f36%40lab.ntt.co.jp
Backpatch: -
2018-10-02 11:14:26 -07:00
Tom Lane
625b38ea0e Set snprintf.c's maximum number of NL arguments to be 31.
Previously, we used the platform's NL_ARGMAX if any, otherwise 16.
The trouble with this is that the platform value is hugely variable,
ranging from the POSIX-minimum 9 to as much as 64K on recent FreeBSD.
Values of more than a dozen or two have no practical use and slow down
the initialization of the argtypes array.  Worse, they cause snprintf.c
to consume far more stack space than was the design intention, possibly
resulting in stack-overflow crashes.

Standardize on 31, which is comfortably more than we need (it looks like
no existing translatable message has more than about 10 parameters).
I chose that, not 32, to make the array sizes powers of 2, for some
possible small gain in speed of the memset.

The lack of reported crashes suggests that the set of platforms we
use snprintf.c on (in released branches) may have no overlap with
the set where NL_ARGMAX has unreasonably large values.  But that's
not entirely clear, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Per report from Mateusz Guzik (via Thomas Munro).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=3VF=PUp2f8gU8fgZB22yPE_KBS0+e1AHAtQ=09schTHg@mail.gmail.com
2018-10-02 12:41:28 -04:00
Tom Lane
3d0f68dd30 Fix corner-case failures in has_foo_privilege() family of functions.
The variants of these functions that take numeric inputs (OIDs or
column numbers) are supposed to return NULL rather than failing
on bad input; this rule reduces problems with snapshot skew when
queries apply the functions to all rows of a catalog.

has_column_privilege() had careless handling of the case where the
table OID didn't exist.  You might get something like this:
	select has_column_privilege(9999,'nosuchcol','select');
	ERROR:  column "nosuchcol" of relation "(null)" does not exist
or you might get a crash, depending on the platform's printf's response
to a null string pointer.

In addition, while applying the column-number variant to a dropped
column returned NULL as desired, applying the column-name variant
did not:
	select has_column_privilege('mytable','........pg.dropped.2........','select');
	ERROR:  column "........pg.dropped.2........" of relation "mytable" does not exist
It seems better to make this case return NULL as well.

Also, the OID-accepting variants of has_foreign_data_wrapper_privilege,
has_server_privilege, and has_tablespace_privilege didn't follow the
principle of returning NULL for nonexistent OIDs.  Superusers got TRUE,
everybody else got an error.

Per investigation of Jaime Casanova's report of a new crash in HEAD.
These behaviors have been like this for a long time, so back-patch to
all supported branches.

Patch by me; thanks to Stephen Frost for discussion and review

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJGNTeP=-6Gyqq5TN9OvYEydi7Fv1oGyYj650LGTnW44oAzYCg@mail.gmail.com
2018-10-02 11:54:12 -04:00
Amit Kapila
0fd6a8a7d0 Test passing expanded-value representations to workers.
Currently, we don't have an explicit test to pass expanded-value
representations to workers, so we don't know whether it works on all kind
of platforms.  We suspect that the current code won't work on
alignment-sensitive hardware.  This commit will test that aspect and can
lead to failure on some of the buildfarm machines which we will fix in the
later commit.

Author: Tom Lane and Amit Kapila
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11629.1536550032@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-02 11:01:33 +05:30
Michael Paquier
e3a25ab9ea Refactor relation opening for VACUUM and ANALYZE
VACUUM and ANALYZE share similar logic when it comes to opening a
relation to work on in terms of how the relation is opened, in which
order locks are tried and how logs should be generated when something
does not work as expected.

This commit refactors things so as both use the same code path to handle
the way a relation is opened, so as the integration of new options
becomes easier.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180927075152.GT1659@paquier.xyz
2018-10-02 08:53:38 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
cf3dfea45b Change PROCEDURE to FUNCTION in CREATE EVENT TRIGGER syntax
This was claimed to have been done in
0a63f996e0, but that actually only
changed the documentation and not the grammar.  (That commit did fully
change it for CREATE TRIGGER.)
2018-10-01 23:02:55 +02:00
Tom Lane
b04aeb0a05 Add assertions that we hold some relevant lock during relation open.
Opening a relation with no lock at all is unsafe; there's no guarantee
that we'll see a consistent state of the relevant catalog entries.
While use of MVCC scans to read the catalogs partially addresses that
complaint, it's still possible to switch to a new catalog snapshot
partway through loading the relcache entry.  Moreover, whether or not
you trust the reasoning behind sometimes using less than
AccessExclusiveLock for ALTER TABLE, that reasoning is certainly not
valid if concurrent users of the table don't hold a lock corresponding
to the operation they want to perform.

Hence, add some assertion-build-only checks that require any caller
of relation_open(x, NoLock) to hold at least AccessShareLock.  This
isn't a full solution, since we can't verify that the lock level is
semantically appropriate for the action --- but it's definitely of
some use, because it's already caught two bugs.

We can also assert that callers of addRangeTableEntryForRelation()
hold at least the lock level specified for the new RTE.

Amit Langote and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16565.1538327894@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-01 12:43:21 -04:00
Tom Lane
e27453bd83 Fix ALTER COLUMN TYPE to not open a relation without any lock.
If the column being modified is referenced by a foreign key constraint
of another table, ALTER TABLE would open the other table (to re-parse
the constraint's definition) without having first obtained a lock on it.
This was evidently intentional, but that doesn't mean it's really safe.
It's especially not safe in 9.3, which pre-dates use of MVCC scans for
catalog reads, but even in current releases it doesn't seem like a good
idea.

We know we'll need AccessExclusiveLock shortly to drop the obsoleted
constraint, so just get that a little sooner to close the hole.

Per testing with a patch that complains if we open a relation without
holding any lock on it.  I don't plan to back-patch that patch, but we
should close the holes it identifies in all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2038.1538335244@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-10-01 11:39:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
fdba460a26 Create an RTE field to record the query's lock mode for each relation.
Add RangeTblEntry.rellockmode, which records the appropriate lock mode for
each RTE_RELATION rangetable entry (either AccessShareLock, RowShareLock,
or RowExclusiveLock depending on the RTE's role in the query).

This patch creates the field and makes all creators of RTE nodes fill it
in reasonably, but for the moment nothing much is done with it.  The plan
is to replace assorted post-parser logic that re-determines the right
lockmode to use with simple uses of rte->rellockmode.  For now, just add
Asserts in each of those places that the rellockmode matches what they are
computing today.  (In some cases the match isn't perfect, so the Asserts
are weaker than you might expect; but this seems OK, as per discussion.)

This passes check-world for me, but it seems worth pushing in this state
to see if the buildfarm finds any problems in cases I failed to test.

catversion bump due to change of stored rules.

Amit Langote, reviewed by David Rowley and Jesper Pedersen,
and whacked around a bit more by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/468c85d9-540e-66a2-1dde-fec2b741e688@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-09-30 13:55:51 -04:00
Stephen Frost
8bddc86400 Add application_name to connection authorized msg
The connection authorized message has quite a bit of useful information
in it, but didn't include the application_name (when provided), so let's
add that as it can be very useful.

Note that at the point where we're emitting the connection authorized
message, we haven't processed GUCs, so it's not possible to get this by
using log_line_prefix (which pulls from the GUC).  There's also
something to be said for having this included in the connection
authorized message and then not needing to repeat it for every line, as
having it in log_line_prefix would do.

The GUC cleans the application name to pure-ascii, so do that here too,
but pull out the logic for cleaning up a string into its own function
in common and re-use it from those places, and check_cluster_name which
was doing the same thing.

Author: Don Seiler <don@seiler.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHJZqBB_Pxv8HRfoh%2BAB4KxSQQuPVvtYCzMg7woNR3r7dfmopw%40mail.gmail.com
2018-09-28 19:04:50 -04:00
Tom Lane
2b04dfc472 Improve error reporting for unsupported effective_io_concurrency setting.
Give a specific error complaining about lack of posix_fadvise() when
someone tries to set effective_io_concurrency > 0 on platforms
without that.

This probably isn't worth extensive back-patching, but I (tgl) felt
cramming it into v11 was reasonable.

James Robinson

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/153771876450.14994.560017943128223619@wrigleys.postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/A3942987-5BC7-4F05-B54D-2A0EC2914B33@jlr-photo.com
2018-09-28 16:12:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
61f14cc8c8 Tweak MSVC build system to match changes in 7143b3e82.
Looks like we need to pull in $libpgcommon in a couple more
places than before.

Per buildfarm.
2018-09-28 15:49:05 -04:00
Tom Lane
97c6852ff7 Tweak MSVC build system to match changes in 7143b3e82.
Also try to make the comment suggesting that this might be needed
more intelligible.

Per buildfarm.
2018-09-28 15:17:07 -04:00
Tom Lane
7143b3e821 Build src/common files as a library with -fPIC.
Build a third version of libpgcommon.a, with -fPIC and -DFRONTEND,
as commit ea53100d5 did for src/port.  Use that in libpq to avoid
symlinking+rebuilding source files retail.

Also adjust ecpg to use the new src/port and src/common libraries.

Arrange to install these libraries, too, to simplify out-of-tree
builds of shared libraries that need any of these modules.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/13022.1538003440@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1g5Y8r-0006vs-QA@gemulon.postgresql.org
2018-09-28 14:28:19 -04:00
Tom Lane
f7ab802855 Remove pqsignal() from libpq's official exports list.
Client applications should get this function, if they need it, from
libpgport.

The fact that it's exported from libpq is a hack left over from before
we set up libpgport.  It's never been documented, and there's no good
reason for non-PG code to be calling it anyway, so hopefully this won't
cause any problems.  Moreover, with the previous setup it was not real
clear whether our clients that use the function were getting it from
libpgport or libpq, so this might actually prevent problems.

The reason for changing it now is that in the wake of commit ea53100d5,
some linkers won't export the symbol, apparently because it's coming from
a .a library instead of a .o file.  We could get around that by continuing
to symlink pqsignal.c into libpq as before; but unless somebody complains
very hard, I don't want to adopt such a kluge.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/13022.1538003440@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1g5Y8r-0006vs-QA@gemulon.postgresql.org
2018-09-28 12:38:10 -04:00
Amit Kapila
a86bf6057e Fix assertion failure when updating full_page_writes for checkpointer.
When the checkpointer receives a SIGHUP signal to update its configuration,
it may need to update the shared memory for full_page_writes and need to
write a WAL record for it.  Now, it is quite possible that the XLOG
machinery has not been initialized by that time and it will lead to
assertion failure while doing that.  Fix is to allow the initialization of
the XLOG machinery outside critical section.

This bug has been introduced by the commit 2c03216d83 which added the XLOG
machinery initialization in RecoveryInProgress code path.

Reported-by: Dilip Kumar
Author: Dilip Kumar
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier and Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 9.5
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFiTN-u4BA8KXcQUWDPNgaKAjDXC=C2whnzBM8TAcv=stckYUw@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-28 16:40:04 +05:30
Andres Freund
92a0342a90 Correct overflow handling in pgbench.
This patch attempts, although it's quite possible there are a few
holes, to properly detect and reported signed integer overflows in
pgbench.

Author: Fabien Coelho
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171212052943.k2hlckfkeft3eiio@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-09-27 21:50:57 -07:00
Michael Paquier
78ea8b5daa Fix WAL recycling on standbys depending on archive_mode
A restart point or a checkpoint recycling WAL segments treats segments
marked with neither ".done" (archiving is done) or ".ready" (segment is
ready to be archived) in archive_status the same way for archive_mode
being "on" or "always".  While for a primary this is fine, a standby
running a restart point with archive_mode = on would try to mark such a
segment as ready for archiving, which is something that will never
happen except after the standby is promoted.

Note that this problem applies only to WAL segments coming from the
local pg_wal the first time archive recovery is run.  Segments part of a
self-contained base backup are the most common case where this could
happen, however even in this case normally the .done markers would be
most likely part of the backup.  Segments recovered from an archive are
marked as .ready or .done by the startup process, and segments finished
streaming are marked as such by the WAL receiver, so they are handled
already.

Reported-by: Haruka Takatsuka
Author: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15402-a453c90ed4cf88b2@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 9.5, where archive_mode = always has been added.
2018-09-28 11:54:38 +09:00
Tom Lane
aaf10f32a3 Fix assorted bugs in pg_get_partition_constraintdef().
It failed if passed a nonexistent relation OID, or one that was a non-heap
relation, because of blindly applying heap_open to a user-supplied OID.
This is not OK behavior for a SQL-exposed function; we have a project
policy that we should return NULL in such cases.  Moreover, since
pg_get_partition_constraintdef ought now to work on indexes, restricting
it to heaps is flat wrong anyway.

The underlying function generate_partition_qual() wasn't on board with
indexes having partition quals either, nor for that matter with rels
having relispartition set but yet null relpartbound.  (One wonders
whether the person who wrote the function comment blocks claiming that
these functions allow a missing relpartbound had ever tested it.)

Fix by testing relispartition before opening the rel, and by using
relation_open not heap_open.  (If any other relkinds ever grow the
ability to have relispartition set, the code will work with them
automatically.)  Also, don't reject null relpartbound in
generate_partition_qual.

Back-patch to v11, and all but the null-relpartbound change to v10.
(It's not really necessary to change generate_partition_qual at all
in v10, but I thought s/heap_open/relation_open/ would be a good
idea anyway just to keep the code in sync with later branches.)

Per report from Justin Pryzby.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180927200020.GJ776@telsasoft.com
2018-09-27 18:15:17 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov
4ec90f53f1 Minor formatting cleanup for 2a6368343f 2018-09-27 23:29:50 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov
0f64595894 Remove extra usage of BoxPGetDatum() macro
Author: Mark Dilger
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/B2AEFCD0-836D-4654-9D59-3DF616E0A6F3%40gmail.com
2018-09-27 23:25:22 +03:00
Andres Freund
27e082b0c6 Clean up in the wake of TupleDescGetSlot() removal / 10763358c3.
The previous commit wasn't careful enough to remove all traces of
TupleDescGetSlot().

Besides fixing the oversight of not removing TupleDescGetSlot()'s
declaration, this also removes FuncCallContext->slot. That was
documented to be for use in combination with TupleDescGetSlot(), a
cursory search over extensions finds no users, and there doesn't seem
to be convincing reasons to keep it around. If we later in the v12
release cycle find users, we can re-consider this part of the commit.

Reported-By: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180926000413.GC1659@paquier.xyz
2018-09-27 11:38:11 -07:00
Tom Lane
ea53100d56 Build src/port files as a library with -fPIC, and use that in libpq.
libpq and ecpg need shared-library-friendly versions of assorted src/port/
and src/common/ modules.  Up to now, they got those by symlinking the
individual source files and compiling them locally.  That's baroque, and a
pain to maintain, and it results in some amount of duplicated compile work.
It might've made sense when only a couple of files were needed, but the
list has grown and grown and grown :-(

It makes more sense to have the originating directory build a third variant
of libpgport.a/libpgcommon.a containing modules built with $(CFLAGS_SL),
and just link that into the shared library.  Unused files won't get linked,
so the end result should be the same.

This patch makes a down payment on that idea by having src/port/ build
such a library and making libpq use it.  If the buildfarm doesn't expose
fatal problems with the approach, I'll extend it to the other cases.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/13022.1538003440@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-27 11:23:43 -04:00
Tom Lane
ce4887bd02 Fix another portability issue from commit 758ce9b77.
strerror.c now requires strlcpy() in some cases, and a couple of the
ecpg libraries did not have that at hand.  Pull it in from src/port/
following the usual recipe.  Per buildfarm.
2018-09-26 19:03:40 -04:00
Michael Paquier
ba16aade33 Switch flags tracking pending interrupts to sig_atomic_t
Those previously used bool, which should be safe on any modern
platforms, however the C standard is clear that it is better to use
sig_atomic_t for variables manipulated in signal handlers.  This commit
adds at the same time PGDLLIMPORT to ClientConnectionLost.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Chris Travers, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180925011311.GD1354@paquier.xyz
2018-09-27 07:47:20 +09:00
Tom Lane
751f532b97 Try another way to detect the result type of strerror_r().
The method we've traditionally used, of redeclaring strerror_r() to
see if the compiler complains of inconsistent declarations, turns out
not to work reliably because some compilers only report a warning,
not an error.  Amazingly, this has gone undetected for years, even
though it certainly breaks our detection of whether strerror_r
succeeded.

Let's instead test whether the compiler will take the result of
strerror_r() as a switch() argument.  It's possible this won't
work universally either, but it's the best idea I could come up with
on the spur of the moment.

We should probably back-patch this once the dust settles, but
first let's see what the buildfarm thinks of it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10877.1537993279@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-26 18:23:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
8b91d25884 Clean up *printf macros to avoid conflict with format archetypes.
We must define the macro "printf" with arguments, else it can mess
up format archetype attributes in builds where PG_PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE
is just "printf".  Fortunately, that's easy to do now that we're
requiring C99; we can use __VA_ARGS__.

On the other hand, it's better not to use __VA_ARGS__ for the rest
of the *printf crew, so that one can take the addresses of those
functions without surprises.

I'd proposed doing this some time ago, but forgot to make it happen;
buildfarm failures subsequent to 96bf88d52 reminded me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/22709.1535135640@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180926190934.ea4xvzhkayuw7gkx@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-09-26 17:35:01 -04:00
Tom Lane
a6b88d682c Fix link failures due to snprintf/strerror changes.
snprintf.c requires isnan(), which requires -lm on some platforms.
libpq never bothered with -lm before, but now it needs it.

strerror.c tries to translate a string or two, which requires -lintl.
We'd managed never to need that anywhere in ecpg/pgtypeslib/ before,
but now we do.

Per buildfarm and a report from Peter Eisentraut.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180926190934.ea4xvzhkayuw7gkx@alap3.anarazel.de
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f67b5008-9f01-057f-2bff-558cb53af851@2ndquadrant.com
2018-09-26 16:47:44 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
0320ddaf3c Recurse to sequences on ownership change for all relkinds
When a table ownership is changed, we must apply that also to any owned
sequences.  (Otherwise, it would result in a situation that cannot be
restored, because linked sequences must have the same owner as the
table.)  But this was previously only applied to regular tables and
materialized views.  But it should also apply to at least foreign
tables.  This patch removes the relkind check altogether, because it
doesn't save very much and just introduces the possibility of similar
omissions.

Bug: #15238
Reported-by: Christoph Berg <christoph.berg@credativ.de>
2018-09-26 20:19:15 +02:00
Tom Lane
d6c55de1f9 Implement %m in src/port/snprintf.c, and teach elog.c to rely on that.
I started out with the idea that we needed to detect use of %m format specs
in contexts other than elog/ereport calls, because we couldn't rely on that
working in *printf calls.  But a better answer is to fix things so that it
does work.  Now that we're using snprintf.c all the time, we can implement
%m in that and we've fixed the problem.

This requires also adjusting our various printf-wrapping functions so that
they ensure "errno" is preserved when they call snprintf.c.

Remove elog.c's handmade implementation of %m, and let it rely on
snprintf to support the feature.  That should provide some performance
gain, though I've not attempted to measure it.

There are a lot of places where we could now simplify 'printf("%s",
strerror(errno))' into 'printf("%m")', but I'm not in any big hurry
to make that happen.

Patch by me, reviewed by Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2975.1526862605@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-26 13:31:56 -04:00
Tom Lane
96bf88d527 Always use our own versions of *printf().
We've spent an awful lot of effort over the years in coping with
platform-specific vagaries of the *printf family of functions.  Let's just
forget all that mess and standardize on always using src/port/snprintf.c.
This gets rid of a lot of configure logic, and it will allow a saner
approach to dealing with %m (though actually changing that is left for
a follow-on patch).

Preliminary performance testing suggests that as it stands, snprintf.c is
faster than the native printf functions for some tasks on some platforms,
and slower for other cases.  A pending patch will improve that, though
cases with floating-point conversions will doubtless remain slower unless
we want to put a *lot* of effort into that.  Still, we've not observed
that *printf is really a performance bottleneck for most workloads, so
I doubt this matters much.

Patch by me, reviewed by Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2975.1526862605@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-26 13:13:57 -04:00
Tom Lane
758ce9b779 Incorporate strerror_r() into src/port/snprintf.c, too.
This provides the features that used to exist in useful_strerror()
for users of strerror_r(), too.  Also, standardize on the GNU convention
that strerror_r returns a char pointer that may not be NULL.

I notice that libpq's win32.c contains a variant version of strerror_r
that probably ought to be folded into strerror.c.  But lacking a
Windows environment, I should leave that to somebody else.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2975.1526862605@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-26 12:35:57 -04:00
Tom Lane
26e9d4d4ef Convert elog.c's useful_strerror() into a globally-used strerror wrapper.
elog.c has long had a private strerror wrapper that handles assorted
possible failures or deficiencies of the platform's strerror.  On Windows,
it also knows how to translate Winsock error codes, which the native
strerror does not.  Move all this code into src/port/strerror.c and
define strerror() as a macro that invokes it, so that both our frontend
and backend code will have all of this behavior.

I believe this constitutes an actual bug fix on Windows, since AFAICS
our frontend code did not report Winsock error codes properly before this.
However, the main point is to lay the groundwork for implementing %m
in src/port/snprintf.c: the behavior we want %m to have is this one,
not the native strerror's.

Note that this throws away the prior use of src/port/strerror.c,
which was to implement strerror() on platforms lacking it.  That's
been dead code for nigh twenty years now, since strerror() was
already required by C89.

We should likewise cause strerror_r to use this behavior, but
I'll tackle that separately.

Patch by me, reviewed by Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2975.1526862605@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-26 11:06:42 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
a49ceda6a0 Update dummy CREATE ASSERTION grammar
While we are probably still far away from fully implementing
assertions, all patch proposals appear to take issue with the existing
dummy grammar CREATE/DROP ASSERTION productions, so update those a
little bit.  Rename the rule, use any_name instead of name, and remove
some unused code.  Also remove the production for DROP ASSERTION,
since that would most likely be handled via the generic DROP support.

extracted from a patch by Joe Wildish
2018-09-26 13:26:24 +02:00
Tomas Vondra
a3d2844852 Improve test coverage of geometric types
This commit significantly increases test coverage of geo_ops.c, adding
tests for various issues addressed by 2e2a392de3 (which went undetected
for a long time, at least partially due to not being covered).

This also removes alternative results expecting -0 on some platforms.
Instead the functions are should return the same results everywhere,
transforming -0 to 0 if needed.

The tests are added to geometric.sql file, sorted by the left hand side
of the operators. There are many cross datatype operators, so this seems
like the best solution.

Author: Emre Hasegeli
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAE2gYzxF7-5djV6-cEvqQu-fNsnt%3DEqbOURx7ZDg%2BVv6ZMTWbg%40mail.gmail.com
2018-09-26 10:45:21 +02:00
Tomas Vondra
2e2a392de3 Fix problems in handling the line data type
According to the source history, the internal format of line data type
has changed, but various functions working with it did were not updated
and thus were producing wrong results.

This patch addresses various such issues, in particular:

* Reject invalid specification A=B=0 on receive
* Reject same points on line_construct_pp()
* Fix perpendicular operator when negative values are involved
* Avoid division by zero on perpendicular operator
* Fix intersection and distance operators when neither A nor B are 1
* Return NULL for closest point when objects are parallel
* Check whether closest point of line segments is the intersection point
* Fix closest point of line segments being on the wrong segment

Aside from handling those issues, the patch also aims to make operators
more symmetric and less sen to precision loss.  The EPSILON interferes
with even minor changes, but the least we can do is applying it to both
sides of the operators equally.

Author: Emre Hasegeli
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAE2gYzxF7-5djV6-cEvqQu-fNsnt%3DEqbOURx7ZDg%2BVv6ZMTWbg%40mail.gmail.com
2018-09-26 10:25:24 +02:00
Michael Paquier
f535d5f0c1 Add basic regression tests for default monitoring roles
The following default roles gain some coverage:
- pg_read_all_stats
- pg_read_all_settings

Author: Alexandra Ryzhevich
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOt4E5S5WJmDc9YpS1BfyAMQ5C1NEmiYynD6nUz42qVxphqkpA@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-26 15:26:45 +09:00
Michael Paquier
8d28bf500f Rework activation of commit timestamps during recovery
The activation and deactivation of commit timestamp tracking has not
been handled consistently for a primary or standbys at recovery.  The
facility can be activated at three different moments of recovery:
- The beginning, where a primary would use the GUC value for the
decision-making, and where a standby relies on the contents of the
control file.
- When replaying a XLOG_PARAMETER_CHANGE record at redo.
- The end, where both primary and standby rely on the GUC value.

Using the GUC value for a primary at the beginning of recovery causes
problems with commit timestamp access when doing crash recovery.
Particularly, when replaying transaction commits, it could be possible
that an attempt to read commit timestamps is done for a transaction
which committed at a moment when track_commit_timestamp was disabled.

A test case is added to reproduce the failure.  The test works down to
v11 as it takes advantage of transaction commits within procedures.

Reported-by: Hailong Li
Author: Masahiko Sawasa, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11224478-a782-203b-1f17-e4797b39bdf0@qunar.com
Backpatch-through: 9.5, where commit timestamps have been introduced.
2018-09-26 10:25:54 +09:00
Andres Freund
10763358c3 Remove absolete function TupleDescGetSlot().
TupleDescGetSlot() was kept around for backward compatibility for
user-written SRFs. With the TupleTableSlot abstraction work, that code
will need to be version specific anyway, so there's no point in
keeping the function around any longer.

Author: Ashutosh Bapat
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180220224318.gw4oe5jadhpmcdnm@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-09-25 16:28:57 -07:00
Andres Freund
29c94e03c7 Split ExecStoreTuple into ExecStoreHeapTuple and ExecStoreBufferHeapTuple.
Upcoming changes introduce further types of tuple table slots, in
preparation of making table storage pluggable. New storage methods
will have different representation of tuples, therefore the slot
accessor should refer explicitly to heap tuples.

Instead of just renaming the functions, split it into one function
that accepts heap tuples not residing in buffers, and one accepting
ones in buffers.  Previously one function was used for both, but that
was a bit awkward already, and splitting will allow us to represent
slot types for tuples in buffers and normal memory separately.

This is split out from the patch introducing abstract slots, as this
largely consists out of mechanical changes.

Author: Ashutosh Bapat
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180220224318.gw4oe5jadhpmcdnm@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-09-25 16:27:48 -07:00
Andres Freund
bbdfbb9154 Remove function list from prologue of execTuples.c.
That section is never in sync with the actual routines available and
their functionality.

Author: Ashutosh Bapat
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180220224318.gw4oe5jadhpmcdnm@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-09-25 16:27:48 -07:00
Andres Freund
a598708ffa Change TupleTableSlot->tts_nvalid to type AttrNumber.
Previously it was an int / 4 bytes. The maximum number of attributes
in a tuple is restricted by the maximum value Var->varattno, which is
an AttrNumber/int16. Hence use the same data type for
TupleTableSlot->tts_nvalid.

Author: Ashutosh Bapat
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180220224318.gw4oe5jadhpmcdnm@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-09-25 15:59:46 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera
5913b9bbf3 Remove obsolete comment
The documented shortcoming was actually fixed in 4c728f3829
so the comment is not true anymore.
2018-09-25 17:55:22 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
62e533d3f1 Remove fmgr.h inclusion from partition.h
It's not needed anymore.
2018-09-25 17:52:07 -03:00
Andres Freund
33001fd7a7 Collect JIT instrumentation from workers.
Previously, when using parallel query, EXPLAIN (ANALYZE)'s JIT
compilation timings did not include the overhead from doing so on the
workers.  Fix that.

We do so by simply aggregating the cost of doing JIT compilation on
workers and the leader together. Arguably that's not quite accurate,
because the total time spend doing so is spent in parallel - but it's
hard to do much better.  For additional detail, when VERBOSE is
specified, the stats for workers are displayed separately.

Author: Amit Khandekar and Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9eLrz51RK_gTkod+71iDcjpB_N8eC6vU2AW-VicsAERpQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 11-
2018-09-25 13:12:44 -07:00
Tom Lane
5e22171310 Make some fixes to allow building Postgres on macOS 10.14 ("Mojave").
Apple's latest rearrangements of the system-supplied headers have broken
building of PL/Perl and PL/Tcl.  The only practical way to fix PL/Tcl is to
start using the "-isysroot" compiler flag to point to SDK-supplied headers,
as Apple expects.  We must also start distinguishing where to find Perl's
headers from where to find its shared library; but that seems like good
cleanup anyway.

Extensions that formerly did something like -I$(perl_archlibexp)/CORE
should now do -I$(perl_includedir)/CORE instead.  perl_archlibexp
is still the place to look for libperl.so, though.

If for some reason you don't like the default -isysroot setting, you can
override that by setting PG_SYSROOT in configure's arguments.  I don't
currently think people would need to do so, unless maybe for cross-version
build purposes.

In addition, teach configure where to find tclConfig.sh.  Our traditional
method of searching $auto_path hasn't worked for the last couple of macOS
releases, and it now seems clear that Apple's not going to change that.
The workaround of manually specifying --with-tclconfig was annoying
already, but Mojave's made it a lot more so because the sysroot path now
has to be included as well.  Let's just wire the knowledge into configure
instead.  To avoid breaking builds against non-default Tcl installations
(e.g. MacPorts) wherein the $auto_path method probably still works,
arrange to try the additional case only after all else has failed.

Back-patch to all supported versions, since at least the buildfarm
cares about that.  The changes are set up to not do anything on macOS
releases that are old enough to not have functional sysroot trees.
2018-09-25 13:23:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
5b7e036707 Avoid unnecessary precision loss for pgbench's --rate target.
It's fairly silly to truncate the throttle_delay to integer when the only
math we ever do with it requires converting back to double.  Furthermore,
given that people are starting to complain about restrictions like only
supporting 1K client connections, I don't think we're very far away from
situations where the precision loss matters.  As the code stood, for
example, there's no difference between --rate 100001 and --rate 111111;
both get converted to throttle_delay = 9.  Somebody trying to run 100
threads and have each one dispatch around 1K TPS would find this lack of
precision rather surprising, especially since the required per-thread
delays are around 1ms, well within the timing precision of modern systems.
2018-09-25 11:09:18 -04:00
Thomas Munro
64171b3206 Constify dsa_size_class_map and use a better type.
Author: Mark G
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEeOP_Zy_FvVwcAU0UX9nkOhnoR5KN%3D0B6LWX_kv0ZuSc4wbGw%40mail.gmail.com
2018-09-25 14:58:41 +12:00
Michael Paquier
08c9917e24 Ignore publication tables when --no-publications is used
96e1cb4 has added support for --no-publications in pg_dump, pg_dumpall
and pg_restore, but forgot the fact that publication tables also need to
be ignored when this option is used.

Author: Gilles Darold
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3f48e812-b0fa-388e-2043-9a176bdee27e@dalibo.com
Backpatch-through: 10, where publications have been added.
2018-09-25 11:03:56 +09:00
Tom Lane
fd582317e1 Sync our Snowball stemmer dictionaries with current upstream.
We haven't touched these since text search functionality landed in core
in 2007 :-(.  While the upstream project isn't a beehive of activity,
they do make additions and bug fixes from time to time.  Update our
copies of these files.

Also update our documentation about how to keep things in sync, since
they're not making distribution tarballs these days.  Fortunately,
their source code turns out to be a breeze to build.

Notable changes:

* The non-UTF8 version of the hungarian stemmer now works in LATIN2
not LATIN1.

* New stemmers have appeared for arabic, indonesian, irish, lithuanian,
nepali, and tamil.  These all work in UTF8, and the indonesian and
irish ones also work in LATIN1.

(There are some new stemmers that I did not incorporate, mainly because
their names don't match the underlying languages, suggesting that they're
not to be considered mainstream.)

Worth noting: the upstream Nepali dictionary was contributed by
Arthur Zakirov.

initdb forced because the contents of snowball_create.sql have
changed.

Still TODO: see about updating the stopword lists.

Arthur Zakirov, minor mods and doc work by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180626122025.GA12647@zakirov.localdomain
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180219140849.GA9050@zakirov.localdomain
2018-09-24 17:29:38 -04:00
Andres Freund
52050ad8eb Make EXPLAIN output for JIT compilation more dense.
A discussion about also reporting JIT compilation overhead on workers
brought unhappiness with the verbosity of the current explain format
to light.  Make the text format more dense, and restructure the
structured output to mirror that more closely.

As we're re-jiggering the output format anyway: The denser format
allows us to report all flags for JIT compilation (now also reporting
PGJIT_EXPR and PGJIT_DEFORM), and report the total time in addition to
the individual times.

Per complaint from Tom Lane.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/27812.1537221015@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch: 11-, where JIT compilation was introduced
2018-09-24 13:35:45 -07:00
Andrew Dunstan
7636e5c60f Fast default trigger and expand_tuple fixes
Ensure that triggers get properly filled in tuples for the OLD value.
Also fix the logic of detecting missing null values. The previous logic
failed to detect a missing null column before the first missing column
with a default. Fixing this has simplified the logic a bit.

Regression tests are added to test changes. This should ensure better
coverage of expand_tuple().

Original bug reports, and some code and test scripts from Tomas Vondra

Backpatch to release 11.
2018-09-24 16:11:24 -04:00
Tom Lane
60e612b602 Use ppoll(2), if available, to wait for input in pgbench.
Previously, pgbench always used select(2) for this purpose, but that's
problematic for very high client counts, because select() can't deal
with file descriptor numbers larger than FD_SETSIZE.  It's pretty common
for that to be only 1024 or so, whereas modern OSes can allow many more
open files than that.  Using poll(2) would surmount that problem, but it
creates another one: poll()'s timeout resolution is only 1ms, which is
poor enough to cause problems with --rate specifications approaching or
exceeding 1K TPS.

On platforms that have ppoll(2), which includes Linux and recent
FreeBSD, we can use that to avoid the FD_SETSIZE problem without any
loss of timeout resolution.  Hence, add configure logic to test for
ppoll(), and use it if available.

This patch introduces an abstraction layer into pgbench that could
be extended to support other kernel event-wait APIs such as kevents.
But actually adding such support is a matter for some future patch.

Doug Rady, reviewed by Robert Haas and Fabien Coelho, and whacked around
a good bit more by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/23D017C9-81B7-484D-8490-FD94DEC4DF59@amazon.com
2018-09-24 14:40:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
87d9bbca13 Fix over-allocation of space for array_out()'s result string.
array_out overestimated the space needed for its output, possibly by
a very substantial amount if the array is multi-dimensional, because
of wrong order of operations in the loop that counts the number of
curly-brace pairs needed.  While the output string is normally
short-lived, this could still cause problems in extreme cases.

An additional minor error was that it counted one more delimiter than
is actually needed.

Repair those errors, add an Assert that the space is now correctly
calculated, and make some minor improvements in the comments.

I also failed to resist the temptation to get rid of an integer
modulus operation per array element; a simple comparison is sufficient.

This bug dates clear back to Berkeley days, so back-patch to all
supported versions.

Keiichi Hirobe, minor additional work by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH=EFxE9W0tRvQkixR2XJRRCToUYUEDkJZk6tnADXugPBRdcdg@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-24 11:30:59 -04:00
Joe Conway
c62dd80cdf Document aclitem functions and operators
aclitem functions and operators have been heretofore undocumented.
Fix that. While at it, ensure the non-operator aclitem functions have
pg_description strings.

Does not seem worthwhile to back-patch.

Author: Fabien Coelho, with pg_description from John Naylor, and significant
refactoring and editorialization by me.
Reviewed by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/flat/alpine.DEB.2.21.1808010825490.18204%40lancre
2018-09-24 10:14:57 -04:00
Noah Misch
d18f6674bd Initialize random() in bootstrap/stand-alone postgres and in initdb.
This removes a difference between the standard IsUnderPostmaster
execution environment and that of --boot and --single.  In a stand-alone
backend, "SELECT random()" always started at the same seed.

On a system capable of using posix shared memory, initdb could still
conclude "selecting dynamic shared memory implementation ... sysv".
Crashed --boot or --single postgres processes orphaned shared memory
objects having names that collided with the not-actually-random names
that initdb probed.  The sysv fallback appeared after ten crashes of
--boot or --single postgres.  Since --boot and --single are rare in
production use, systems used for PostgreSQL development are the
principal candidate to notice this symptom.

Back-patch to 9.3 (all supported versions).  PostgreSQL 9.4 introduced
dynamic shared memory, but 9.3 does share the "SELECT random()" problem.

Reviewed by Tom Lane and Kyotaro HORIGUCHI.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180915221546.GA3159382@rfd.leadboat.com
2018-09-23 22:56:39 -07:00
Tom Lane
89b280e139 Fix failure in WHERE CURRENT OF after rewinding the referenced cursor.
In a case where we have multiple relation-scan nodes in a cursor plan,
such as a scan of an inheritance tree, it's possible to fetch from a
given scan node, then rewind the cursor and fetch some row from an
earlier scan node.  In such a case, execCurrent.c mistakenly thought
that the later scan node was still active, because ExecReScan hadn't
done anything to make it look not-active.  We'd get some sort of
failure in the case of a SeqScan node, because the node's scan tuple
slot would be pointing at a HeapTuple whose t_self gets reset to
invalid by heapam.c.  But it seems possible that for other relation
scan node types we'd actually return a valid tuple TID to the caller,
resulting in updating or deleting a tuple that shouldn't have been
considered current.  To fix, forcibly clear the ScanTupleSlot in
ExecScanReScan.

Another issue here, which seems only latent at the moment but could
easily become a live bug in future, is that rewinding a cursor does
not necessarily lead to *immediately* applying ExecReScan to every
scan-level node in the plan tree.  Upper-level nodes will think that
they can postpone that call if their child node is already marked
with chgParam flags.  I don't see a way for that to happen today in
a plan tree that's simple enough for execCurrent.c's search_plan_tree
to understand, but that's one heck of a fragile assumption.  So, add
some logic in search_plan_tree to detect chgParam flags being set on
nodes that it descended to/through, and assume that that means we
should consider lower scan nodes to be logically reset even if their
ReScan call hasn't actually happened yet.

Per bug #15395 from Matvey Arye.  This has been broken for a long time,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/153764171023.14986.280404050547008575@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-09-23 16:05:45 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov
2f39106a20 Replace CAS loop with single TAS in ProcArrayGroupClearXid()
Single pg_atomic_exchange_u32() is expected to be faster than loop of
pg_atomic_compare_exchange_u32().  Also, it would be consistent with
clog group update code.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPpHfdtxLsC-bqfxFcHswZ91OxXcZVNDBBVfg9tAWU0jvn1tQA%40mail.gmail.com
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
2018-09-22 16:22:30 +03:00
Michael Paquier
db361db2fc Make GUC wal_sender_timeout user-settable
Being able to use a value that can be changed on a connection basis is
useful with clusters distributed geographically, and makes failure
detection more flexible.  A note is added in the documentation about the
use of "options" in primary_conninfo, which can be hard to grasp for
newcomers with the need of two single quotes when listing a set of
parameters.

Author: Tsunakawa Takayuki
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0A3221C70F24FB45833433255569204D1FAAD3AE@G01JPEXMBYT05
2018-09-22 15:23:59 +09:00
Tom Lane
4f3b38fe2b Get rid of explicit argument-count markings in tab-complete.c.
This replaces the "TailMatchesN" macros with just "TailMatches",
and likewise "HeadMatchesN" becomes "HeadMatches" and "MatchesN"
becomes "Matches".  The various COMPLETE_WITH_LISTn macros are
reduced to COMPLETE_WITH, and the single-item COMPLETE_WITH_CONST
also gets folded into that.  This eliminates a lot of minor
annoyance in writing tab-completion rules.  Usefully, the compiled
code also gets a bit smaller (10% or so, on my machine).

The implementation depends on variadic macros, so we couldn't have
done this before we required C99.

Andres Freund and Thomas Munro; some cosmetic cleanup by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d8jo9djvm7h.fsf@dalvik.ping.uio.no
2018-09-21 20:50:41 -04:00
Tom Lane
e8fe426baa Fix bogus tab-completion rule for CREATE PUBLICATION.
You can't use "FOR TABLE" as a single Matches argument, because readline
will consider that input to be two words not one.  It's necessary to make
the pattern contain two arguments.

The case accidentally worked anyway because the words_after_create
test fired ... but only for the first such table name.

Noted by Edmund Horner, though this isn't exactly his proposed fix.
Backpatch to v10 where the faulty code came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMyN-kDe=gBmHgxWwUUaXuwK+p+7g1vChR7foPHRDLE592nJPQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-21 15:58:37 -04:00
Tom Lane
121213d9d8 Improve tab completion for ANALYZE, EXPLAIN, and VACUUM.
Previously, we made no attempt to provide tab completion in these
statements' optional parenthesized options lists.  This patch teaches
psql to do so.

To prevent the option completions from being offered after we've already
seen a complete parenthesized option list, it's necessary to improve
word_matches() so that it allows a wildcard '*' in the middle of an
alternative, not only at the end as formerly.  That requires only a
little more code than before, and it allows us to test for "incomplete
parenthesized options" with a test like

    else if (HeadMatches2("EXPLAIN", "(*") &&
             !HeadMatches2("EXPLAIN", "(*)"))

In addition, add some logic to offer column names in the context of
"ANALYZE tablename ( ...", and likewise for VACUUM.  This isn't real
complete; it won't offer column names again after a comma.  But it's
better than before, and it doesn't take much code.

Justin Pryzby, reviewed at various times by Álvaro Herrera, Arthur
Zakirov, and Edmund Horner; some additional fixups by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180529000623.GA21896@telsasoft.com
2018-09-21 15:22:26 -04:00
Tom Lane
e3b7a6d165 Rationalize Query_for_list_of_[relations] query names in tab-complete.c.
The previous convention was to use names based on the set of relkinds being
selected for, which was not at all helpful for maintenance, especially
since people had been quite inconsistent about whether to change the names
when they changed the relkinds being selected for.  Instead, use names
based on the functionality we need the relation to have, following the
model established by Query_for_list_of_updatables.

While at it, sort the list of Query constants a bit better; it had the
distinct air of code-assembled-by-dartboard before.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/14830.1537481254@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-21 12:41:00 -04:00
Thomas Munro
f025bd2ddd Use size_t consistently in dsa.{ch}.
Takeshi Ideriha complained that there is a mixture of Size and size_t
in dsa.c and corresponding header.  Let's use size_t.  Back-patch to 10
where dsa.c landed, to make future back-patching easy.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4E72940DA2BF16479384A86D54D0988A6F19ABD9%40G01JPEXMBKW04
2018-09-22 00:40:13 +12:00
Michael Paquier
925673f27b Remove special handling for open() in initdb for Windows
40cfe86 enforces the translation mode to text for all frontends, so this
special handling in initdb is not needed anymore.
2018-09-21 06:41:44 +09:00
Tom Lane
c9a8a401f1 Fix psql's tab completion for TABLE.
This should offer the same relation types that SELECT ... FROM would.
You can't select from an index for instance, so offering it here is
unhelpful.  Noted while testing ilmari's recent patch.
2018-09-20 17:21:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
a7c4dad1a7 Fix psql's tab completion for ALTER DATABASE ... SET TABLESPACE.
We have the infrastructure to offer a list of tablespace names, but
it wasn't being used here; instead you got "FROM", "CURRENT", and "TO"
which aren't actually legal in this syntax.

Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker, reviewed by Arthur Zakirov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d8jo9djvm7h.fsf@dalvik.ping.uio.no
2018-09-20 17:16:06 -04:00
Tom Lane
1dba1b61c2 Add a "return" statement to pacify perlcritic.
Per buildfarm member crake.
2018-09-20 16:10:23 -04:00
Tom Lane
b09a64d602 Add missing pg_description strings for pg_type entries.
I noticed that all non-composite, non-array entries in pg_type.dat
had descr strings, except for "json" and the pseudo-types.  The
lack for json seems certainly an oversight, and there's surely
little reason to not have entries for the pseudo-types either.
So add some.

"make reformat-dat-files" turned up some formatting issues in
pg_amop.dat, too, so fix those in passing.

No catversion bump since the backend doesn't care too much what is
in pg_description.
2018-09-20 16:06:18 -04:00
Tom Lane
3dc820c43e Teach genbki.pl to auto-generate pg_type entries for array types.
This eliminates some more tedium in adding new catalog entries,
specifically the need to set up an array type when adding a new
built-in data type.  Now it's sufficient to assign an OID for the
array type and write it in an "array_type_oid" metadata field.
You don't have to fill the base type's typarray link explicitly, either.

No catversion bump since the contents of pg_type aren't changed.
(Well, their order might be different, but that doesn't matter.)

John Naylor, reviewed and whacked around a bit by
Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker, and some more by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGVTb6m9pJF49b3SuA8J+T-THO9c0hxOmoyv-yGKh-FbNg@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-20 15:14:46 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov
09e99ce86e Fix handling of format string text characters in to_timestamp()/to_date()
cf984672 introduced improvement of handling of spaces and separators in
to_timestamp()/to_date() functions.  In particular, now we're skipping spaces
both before and after fields.  That may cause format string text character to
consume part of field in the situations, when it didn't happen before cf984672.
This commit cause format string text character consume input string characters
only when since previous field (or string beginning) number of skipped input
string characters is not greater than number of corresponding format string
characters (that is we didn't skip any extra characters in input string).
2018-09-20 15:48:04 +03:00
Thomas Munro
38763d6778 Fix segment_bins corruption in dsa.c.
If a segment has been freed by dsa.c because it is entirely empty, other
backends must make sure to unmap it before following links to new
segments that might happen to have the same index number, or they could
finish up looking at a defunct segment and then corrupt the segment_bins
lists.  The correct protocol requires checking freed_segment_counter
after acquiring the area lock and before resolving any index number to a
segment.  Add the missing checks and an assertion.

Back-patch to 10, where dsa.c first arrived.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Tomas Vondra
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm%3D0thg%2Bja5zGVa7jBy-uqyHrTqTm8HGhEOtMmigGrAqTbw%40mail.gmail.com
2018-09-20 15:52:39 +12:00
Thomas Munro
6c3c9d4189 Defer restoration of libraries in parallel workers.
Several users of extensions complained of crashes in parallel workers
that turned out to be due to syscache access from their _PG_init()
functions.  Reorder the initialization of parallel workers so that
libraries are restored after the caches are initialized, and inside a
transaction.

This was reported in bug #15350 and elsewhere.  We don't consider it
to be a bug: extensions shouldn't do that, because then they can't be
used in shared_preload_libraries.  However, it's a fairly obscure
hazard and these extensions worked in practice before parallel query
came along.  So let's make it work.  Later commits might add a warning
message and eventually an error.

Back-patch to 9.6, where parallel query landed.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Reported-by: Kieran McCusker, Jimmy
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/153512195228.1489.8545997741965926448%40wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-09-20 14:21:18 +12:00
Michael Paquier
40cfe86068 Enforce translation mode for Windows frontends to text with open/fopen
Allowing frontends to use concurrent-safe open() and fopen() via 0ba06e0
has the side-effect of switching the default translation mode from text
to binary, so the switch can cause breakages for frontend tools when the
caller of those new versions specifies neither binary and text.  This
commit makes sure to maintain strict compatibility with past versions,
so as no frontends should see a difference when upgrading.

Author: Laurenz Albe
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180917140202.GF31460@paquier.xyz
2018-09-20 08:54:37 +09:00
Tom Lane
0d38e4ebb7 Fix minor error message style guide violation.
No periods at the ends of primary error messages, please.

Daniel Gustafsson

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/43E004C0-18C6-42B4-A313-003B43EB0571@yesql.se
2018-09-19 17:06:40 -04:00
Tom Lane
8f0de712c3 Don't ignore locktable-full failures in StandbyAcquireAccessExclusiveLock.
Commit 37c54863c removed the code in StandbyAcquireAccessExclusiveLock
that checked the return value of LockAcquireExtended.  That created a
bug, because it's still passing reportMemoryError = false to
LockAcquireExtended, meaning that LOCKACQUIRE_NOT_AVAIL will be returned
if we're out of shared memory for the lock table.

In such a situation, the startup process would believe it had acquired an
exclusive lock even though it hadn't, with potentially dire consequences.

To fix, just drop the use of reportMemoryError = false, which allows us
to simplify the call into a plain LockAcquire().  It's unclear that the
locktable-full situation arises often enough that it's worth having a
better recovery method than crash-and-restart.  (I strongly suspect that
the only reason the code path existed at all was that it was relatively
simple to do in the pre-37c54863c implementation.  But now it's not.)

LockAcquireExtended's reportMemoryError parameter is now dead code and
could be removed.  I refrained from doing so, however, because there
was some interest in resurrecting the behavior if we do get reports of
locktable-full failures in the field.  Also, it seems unwise to remove
the parameter concurrently with shipping commit f868a8143, which added a
parameter; if there are any third-party callers of LockAcquireExtended,
we want them to get a wrong-number-of-parameters compile error rather
than a possibly-silent misinterpretation of its last parameter.

Back-patch to 9.6 where the bug was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6202.1536359835@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-19 12:43:51 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov
2a6368343f Add support for nearest-neighbor (KNN) searches to SP-GiST
Currently, KNN searches were supported only by GiST.  SP-GiST also capable to
support them.  This commit implements that support.  SP-GiST scan stack is
replaced with queue, which serves as stack if no ordering is specified.  KNN
support is provided for three SP-GIST opclasses: quad_point_ops, kd_point_ops
and poly_ops (catversion is bumped).  Some common parts between GiST and SP-GiST
KNNs are extracted into separate functions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/570825e8-47d0-4732-2bf6-88d67d2d51c8%40postgrespro.ru
Author: Nikita Glukhov, Alexander Korotkov based on GSoC work by Vlad Sterzhanov
Review: Andrey Borodin, Alexander Korotkov
2018-09-19 01:54:10 +03:00
Tom Lane
d0cfc3d6a4 Add a debugging option to stress-test outfuncs.c and readfuncs.c.
In the normal course of operation, query trees will be serialized only if
they are stored as views or rules; and plan trees will be serialized only
if they get passed to parallel-query workers.  This leaves an awful lot of
opportunity for bugs/oversights to not get detected, as indeed we've just
been reminded of the hard way.

To improve matters, this patch adds a new compile option
WRITE_READ_PARSE_PLAN_TREES, which is modeled on the longstanding option
COPY_PARSE_PLAN_TREES; but instead of passing all parse and plan trees
through copyObject, it passes them through nodeToString + stringToNode.
Enabling this option in a buildfarm animal or two will catch problems
at least for cases that are exercised by the regression tests.

A small problem with this idea is that readfuncs.c historically has
discarded location fields, on the reasonable grounds that parse
locations in a retrieved view are not relevant to the current query.
But doing that in WRITE_READ_PARSE_PLAN_TREES breaks pg_stat_statements,
and it could cause problems for future improvements that might try to
report error locations at runtime.  To fix that, provide a variant
behavior in readfuncs.c that makes it restore location fields when
told to.

In passing, const-ify the string arguments of stringToNode and its
subsidiary functions, just because it annoyed me that they weren't
const already.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17114.1537138992@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-18 17:11:54 -04:00
Tom Lane
db1071d4ee Fix some minor issues exposed by outfuncs/readfuncs testing.
A test patch to pass parse and plan trees through outfuncs + readfuncs
exposed several issues that need to be fixed to get clean matches:

Query.withCheckOptions failed to get copied; it's intentionally ignored
by outfuncs/readfuncs on the grounds that it'd always be NIL anyway in
stored rules.  This seems less than future-proof, and it's not even
saving very much, so just undo the decision and treat the field like
all others.

Several places that convert a view RTE into a subquery RTE, or similar
manipulations, failed to clear out fields that were specific to the
original RTE type and should be zero in a subquery RTE.  Since readfuncs.c
will leave such fields as zero, equalfuncs.c thinks the nodes are different
leading to a reported mismatch.  It seems like a good idea to clear out the
no-longer-needed fields, even though in principle nothing should look at
them; the node ought to be indistinguishable from how it would look if
we'd built a new node instead of scribbling on the old one.

BuildOnConflictExcludedTargetlist randomly set the resname of some
TargetEntries to "" not NULL.  outfuncs/readfuncs don't distinguish those
cases, and so the string will read back in as NULL ... but equalfuncs.c
does distinguish.  Perhaps we ought to try to make things more consistent
in this area --- but it's just useless extra code space for
BuildOnConflictExcludedTargetlist to not use NULL here, so I fixed it for
now by making it do that.

catversion bumped because the change in handling of Query.withCheckOptions
affects stored rules.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17114.1537138992@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-18 15:08:28 -04:00
Tom Lane
09991e5a47 Fix some probably-minor oversights in readfuncs.c.
The system expects TABLEFUNC RTEs to have coltypes, coltypmods, and
colcollations lists, but outfuncs doesn't dump them and readfuncs doesn't
restore them.  This doesn't cause obvious failures, because the only things
that look at those fields are expandRTE() and get_rte_attribute_type(),
which are mostly used during parse analysis, before anything would've
passed the parsetree through outfuncs/readfuncs.  But expandRTE() is used
in build_physical_tlist(), which means that that function will return a
wrong answer for a TABLEFUNC RTE that came from a view.  Very accidentally,
this doesn't cause serious problems, because what it will return is NIL
which callers will interpret as "couldn't build a physical tlist because
of dropped columns".  So you still get a plan that works, though it's
marginally less efficient than it could be.  There are also some other
expandRTE() calls associated with transformation of whole-row Vars in
the planner.  I have been unable to exhibit misbehavior from that, and
it may be unreachable in any case that anyone would care about ... but
I'm not entirely convinced, so this seems like something we should back-
patch a fix for.  Fortunately, we can fix it without forcing a change
of stored rules and a catversion bump, because we can just copy these
lists from the subsidiary TableFunc object.

readfuncs.c was also missing support for NamedTuplestoreScan plan nodes.
This accidentally fails to break parallel query because a query using
a named tuplestore would never be considered parallel-safe anyway.
However, project policy since parallel query came in is that all plan
node types should have outfuncs/readfuncs support, so this is clearly
an oversight that should be repaired.

Noted while fooling around with a patch to test outfuncs/readfuncs more
thoroughly.  That exposed some other issues too, but these are the only
ones that seem worth back-patching.

Back-patch to v10 where both of these features came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17114.1537138992@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-18 13:02:27 -04:00
Thomas Munro
422952ee78 Allow DSM allocation to be interrupted.
Chris Travers reported that the startup process can repeatedly try to
cancel a backend that is in a posix_fallocate()/EINTR loop and cause it
to loop forever.  Teach the retry loop to give up if an interrupt is
pending.  Don't actually check for interrupts in that loop though,
because a non-local exit would skip some clean-up code in the caller.

Back-patch to 9.4 where DSM was added (and posix_fallocate() was later
back-patched).

Author: Chris Travers
Reviewed-by: Ildar Musin, Murat Kabilov, Oleksii Kliukin
Tested-by: Oleksii Kliukin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAN-RpxB-oeZve_J3SM_6%3DHXPmvEG%3DHX%2B9V9pi8g2YR7YW0rBBg%40mail.gmail.com
2018-09-18 22:56:36 +12:00
Michael Paquier
1d6fbc38d9 Refactor routines for subscription and publication lookups
Those routines gain a missing_ok argument, allowing a caller to get a
NULL result instead of an error if set to true.  This is part of a
larger refactoring effort for objectaddress.c where trying to check for
non-existing objects does not result in cache lookup failures.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Aleksander Alekseev, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqSZxrSmdHK-rny7z8mi=EAFXJ5J-0RbzDw6aus=wB5azQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-18 12:00:18 +09:00
Tom Lane
07a3af0ff8 Fix parsetree representation of XMLTABLE(XMLNAMESPACES(DEFAULT ...)).
The original coding for XMLTABLE thought it could represent a default
namespace by a T_String Value node with a null string pointer.  That's
not okay, though; in particular outfuncs.c/readfuncs.c are not on board
with such a representation, meaning you'll get a null pointer crash
if you try to store a view or rule containing this construct.

To fix, change the parsetree representation so that we have a NULL
list element, instead of a bogus Value node.

This isn't really a functional limitation since default XML namespaces
aren't yet implemented in the executor; you'd just get "DEFAULT
namespace is not supported" anyway.  But crashes are not nice, so
back-patch to v10 where this syntax was added.  Ordinarily we'd consider
a parsetree representation change to be un-backpatchable; but since
existing releases would crash on the way to storing such constructs,
there can't be any existing views/rules to be incompatible with.

Per report from Andrey Lepikhov.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3690074f-abd2-56a9-144a-aa5545d7a291@postgrespro.ru
2018-09-17 13:16:32 -04:00
Tom Lane
789ba5029a Remove dead code from pop_next_work_item().
The pref_non_data heuristic has been dead code for nearly ten years,
and as far as I can tell was dead code even when it was first committed.
I'm tired of silencing Coverity complaints about it, so get rid of it.
If anyone is ever interested in pursuing the concept, they can get the
code out of our git history.
2018-09-17 12:43:07 -04:00
Tom Lane
db37ab2c60 Fix pgbench lexer's "continuation" rule to cope with Windows newlines.
Our general practice in frontend code is to accept input with either
Unix-style newlines (\n) or DOS-style (\r\n).  pgbench was mostly down
with that, but its rule for line continuations (backslash-newline) was
not.  This had been masked on Windows buildfarm machines before commit
0ba06e0bf by use of Windows text mode to read files.  We could have fixed
it by forcing text mode again, but it's better to fix the parsing code
so that Windows-style text files on Unix systems don't cause problems.

Back-patch to v10 where pgbench grew line continuations.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17194.1537191697@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-17 12:11:43 -04:00
Andrew Gierth
60f6756f92 Fix out-of-tree build for transform modules.
Neither plperl nor plpython installed sufficient header files to
permit transform modules to be built out-of-tree using PGXS. Fix that
by installing all plperl and plpython header files (other than those
with special purposes such as generated data tables), and also install
plpython's special .mk file for mangling regression tests.

(This commit does not fix the windows install, which does not
currently install _any_ plperl or plpython headers.)

Also fix the existing transform modules for hstore and ltree so that
their cross-module #include directives work as anticipated by commit
df163230b9 et seq. This allows them to serve as working examples of
how to reference other modules when doing separate out-of-tree builds.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87o9ej8bgl.fsf%40news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2018-09-16 18:46:45 +01:00
Tom Lane
3844adbf3c Add outfuncs.c support for RawStmt nodes.
I noticed while poking at a report from Andrey Lepikhov that the
recent addition of RawStmt nodes at the top of raw parse trees
makes it impossible to print any raw parse trees whatsoever,
because outfuncs.c doesn't know RawStmt and hence fails to descend
into it.

While we generally lack outfuncs.c support for utility statements,
there is reasonably complete support for what you can find in a
raw SELECT statement.  It was not my intention to make that all
dead code ... so let's add support for RawStmt.

Back-patch to v10 where RawStmt appeared.
2018-09-16 13:02:47 -04:00
Tom Lane
8f32bacc00 In v11, disable JIT by default (it's still enabled by default in HEAD).
Per discussion, JIT isn't quite mature enough to ship enabled-by-default.

I failed to resist the temptation to do a bunch of copy-editing on the
related documentation.  Also, clean up some inconsistencies in which
section of config.sgml the JIT GUCs are documented in vs. what guc.c
and postgresql.config.sample had.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180914222657.mw25esrzbcnu6qlu@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-09-15 17:24:35 -04:00
Tom Lane
1f4a920b73 Fix failure with initplans used conditionally during EvalPlanQual rechecks.
The EvalPlanQual machinery assumes that any initplans (that is,
uncorrelated sub-selects) used during an EPQ recheck would have already
been evaluated during the main query; this is implicit in the fact that
execPlan pointers are not copied into the EPQ estate's es_param_exec_vals.
But it's possible for that assumption to fail, if the initplan is only
reached conditionally.  For example, a sub-select inside a CASE expression
could be reached during a recheck when it had not been previously, if the
CASE test depends on a column that was just updated.

This bug is old, appearing to date back to my rewrite of EvalPlanQual in
commit 9f2ee8f28, but was not detected until Kyle Samson reported a case.

To fix, force all not-yet-evaluated initplans used within the EPQ plan
subtree to be evaluated at the start of the recheck, before entering the
EPQ environment.  This could be inefficient, if such an initplan is
expensive and goes unused again during the recheck --- but that's piling
one layer of improbability atop another.  It doesn't seem worth adding
more complexity to prevent that, at least not in the back branches.

It was convenient to use the new-in-v11 ExecEvalParamExecParams function
to implement this, but I didn't like either its name or the specifics of
its API, so revise that.

Back-patch all the way.  Rather than rewrite the patch to avoid depending
on bms_next_member() in the oldest branches, I chose to back-patch that
function into 9.4 and 9.3.  (This isn't the first time back-patches have
needed that, and it exhausted my patience.)  I also chose to back-patch
some test cases added by commits 71404af2a and 342a1ffa2 into 9.4 and 9.3,
so that the 9.x versions of eval-plan-qual.spec are all the same.

Andrew Gierth diagnosed the problem and contributed the added test cases,
though the actual code changes are by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/A033A40A-B234-4324-BE37-272279F7B627@tripadvisor.com
2018-09-15 13:42:33 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
6b78231d91 Move PartitionDispatchData struct definition to execPartition.c
There's no reason to expose the struct definition, so don't.

Author: Amit Langote <Langote_Amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d3fa24c1-bc65-7133-81df-6474387ccc4f@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-09-14 19:06:57 -03:00
Tom Lane
548e50976c Improve parallel scheduling logic in pg_dump/pg_restore.
Previously, the way this worked was that a parallel pg_dump would
re-order the TABLE_DATA items in the dump's TOC into decreasing size
order, and separately re-order (some of) the INDEX items into decreasing
size order.  Then pg_dump would dump the items in that order.  Later,
parallel pg_restore just followed the TOC order.  This method had lots
of deficiencies:

* TOC ordering randomly differed between parallel and non-parallel
dumps, and was hard to predict in the former case, causing problems
for building stable pg_dump test cases.

* Parallel restore only followed a well-chosen order if the dump had
been done in parallel; in particular, this never happened for restore
from custom-format dumps.

* The best order for restore isn't necessarily the same as for dump,
and it's not really static either because of locking considerations.

* TABLE_DATA and INDEX items aren't the only things that might take a lot
of work during restore.  Scheduling was particularly stupid for the BLOBS
item, which might require lots of work during dump as well as restore,
but was left to the end in either case.

This patch removes the logic that changed the TOC order, fixing the
test instability problem.  Instead, we sort the parallelizable items
just before processing them during a parallel dump.  Independently
of that, parallel restore prioritizes the ready-to-execute tasks
based on the size of the underlying table.  In the case of dependent
tasks such as index, constraint, or foreign key creation, the largest
relevant table is used as the metric for estimating the task length.
(This is pretty crude, but it should be enough to avoid the case we
want to avoid, which is ending the run with just a few large tasks
such that we can't make use of all N workers.)

Patch by me, responding to a complaint from Peter Eisentraut,
who also reviewed the patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5137fe12-d0a2-4971-61b6-eb4e7e8875f8@2ndquadrant.com
2018-09-14 17:31:51 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
20bef2c311 Fix ALTER/TYPE on columns referenced by FKs in partitioned tables
When ALTER TABLE ... SET DATA TYPE affects a column referenced by
constraints and indexes, it drop those constraints and indexes and
recreates them afterwards, so that the definitions match the new data
type.  The original code did this by dropping one object at a time
(commit 077db40fa1 of May 2004), which worked fine because the
dependencies between the objects were pretty straightforward, and
ordering the objects in a specific way was enough to make this work.
However, when there are foreign key constraints in partitioned tables,
the dependencies are no longer so straightforward, and we were getting
errors when attempted:
  ERROR:  cache lookup failed for constraint 16398

This can be fixed by doing all the drops in one pass instead, using
performMultipleDeletions (introduced by df18c51f29 of Aug 2006).  With
this change we can also remove the code to carefully order the list of
objects to be deleted.

Reported-by: Rajkumar Raghuwanshi <rajkumar.raghuwanshi@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6nWS_m+s=1Udk_U9B+QY7pA-Ac58qR5BdUfOyrwnWHDew@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-14 13:41:20 -03:00
Andrew Gierth
728202b63c Order active window clauses for greater reuse of Sort nodes.
By sorting the active window list lexicographically by the sort clause
list but putting longer clauses before shorter prefixes, we generate
more chances to elide Sort nodes when building the path.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson (with some editorialization by me)
Reviewed-by: Alexander Kuzmenkov, Masahiko Sawada, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/124A7F69-84CD-435B-BA0E-2695BE21E5C2%40yesql.se
2018-09-14 17:35:42 +01:00
Amit Kapila
75f9c4ca5a Don't allow LIMIT/OFFSET clause within sub-selects to be pushed to workers.
Allowing sub-select containing LIMIT/OFFSET in workers can lead to
inconsistent results at the top-level as there is no guarantee that the
row order will be fully deterministic.  The fix is to prohibit pushing
LIMIT/OFFSET within sub-selects to workers.

Reported-by: Andrew Fletcher
Bug: 15324
Author: Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Dilip Kumar
Backpatch-through: 9.6
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/153417684333.10284.11356259990921828616@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-09-14 09:36:30 +05:30
Michael Paquier
0ba06e0bfb Allow concurrent-safe open() and fopen() in frontend code for Windows
PostgreSQL uses a custom wrapper for open() and fopen() which is
concurrent-safe, allowing multiple processes to open and work on the
same file.  This has a couple of advantages:
- pg_test_fsync does not handle O_DSYNC correctly otherwise, leading to
false claims that disks are unsafe.
- TAP tests can run into race conditions when a postmaster and pg_ctl
open postmaster.pid, fixing some random failures in the buildfam.

pg_upgrade is one frontend tool using workarounds to bypass file locking
issues with the log files it generates, however the interactions with
pg_ctl are proving to be tedious to get rid of, so this is left for
later.

Author: Laurenz Albe
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Kuntal Ghosh
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1527846213.2475.31.camel@cybertec.at
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16922.1520722108@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-14 10:04:14 +09:00
Michael Paquier
28a8fa984c Improve autovacuum logging for aggressive and anti-wraparound runs
A log message was being generated when log_min_duration is reached for
autovacuum on a given relation to indicate if it was an aggressive run,
and missed the point of mentioning if it is doing an anti-wrapround
run.  The log message generated is improved so as one, both or no extra
details are added depending on the option set.

Author: Sergei Kornilov
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11587951532155118@sas1-19a94364928d.qloud-c.yandex.net
2018-09-14 07:35:39 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
f48fa2bc8b Message style improvements
Fix one untranslatable string concatenation in pg_rewind.

Fix one message in pg_verify_checksums to use a style use elsewhere
and avoid plural issues.

Fix one gratuitous abbreviation in psql.
2018-09-13 23:35:43 +02:00
Tom Lane
23bd3cec6e Attempt to identify system timezone by reading /etc/localtime symlink.
On many modern platforms, /etc/localtime is a symlink to a file within the
IANA database.  Reading the symlink lets us find out the name of the system
timezone directly, without going through the brute-force search embodied in
scan_available_timezones().  This shortens the runtime of initdb by some
tens of ms, which is helpful for the buildfarm, and it also allows us to
reliably select the same zone name the system was actually configured for,
rather than possibly choosing one of IANA's many zone aliases.  (For
example, in a system configured for "Asia/Tokyo", the brute-force search
would not choose that name but its alias "Japan", on the grounds of the
latter string being shorter.  More surprisingly, "Navajo" is preferred
to either "America/Denver" or "US/Mountain", as seen in an old complaint
from Josh Berkus.)

If /etc/localtime doesn't exist, or isn't a symlink, or we can't make
sense of its contents, or the contents match a zone we know but that
zone doesn't match the observed behavior of localtime(), fall back to
the brute-force search.

Also, tweak initdb so that it prints the zone name it selected.

In passing, replace the last few references to the "Olson" database in
code comments with "IANA", as that's been our preferred term since
commit b2cbced9e.

Patch by me, per a suggestion from Robert Haas; review by Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7408.1525812528@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-13 12:36:21 -04:00
Amit Kapila
bc153c941d Attach FPI to the first record after full_page_writes is turned on.
XLogInsert fails to attach a required FPI to the first record after
full_page_writes is turned on by the last checkpoint.  This bug got
introduced in 9.5 due to code rearrangement in commits 2c03216d83 and
2076db2aea.  Fix it by ensuring that XLogInsertRecord performs a
recomputation when the given record is generated with FPW as off but
found that the flag has been turned on while actually inserting the
record.

Reported-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi
Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 9.5 where this problem was introduced
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180420.151043.74298611.horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp
2018-09-13 15:32:50 +05:30
Michael Paquier
514a731ddc Simplify static function in extension.c
An extra argument for the filename defining the extension script
location was present, aimed at being used for error reporting, but has
never been used.  This was around since extensions have been added in
d9572c4.

Author: Yugo Nagata
Reviewed-by: Tatsuo Ishii
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180907180504.1ff19e1675bb44a67e9c7ab1@sraoss.co.jp
2018-09-13 16:56:57 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
e5f1bb92cf Simplify index tuple descriptor initialization
We have two code paths for initializing the tuple descriptor for a new
index: For a normal index, we copy the tuple descriptor from the table
and reset a number of fields that are not applicable to indexes.  For an
expression index, we make a blank tuple descriptor and fill in the
needed fields based on the provided expressions.  As pg_attribute has
grown over time, the number of fields that we need to reset in the first
case is now bigger than the number of fields we actually want to copy,
so it's sensible to do it the other way around: Make a blank descriptor
and copy just the fields we need.  This also allows more code sharing
between the two branches, and it avoids having to touch this code for
almost every unrelated change to the pg_attribute structure.

Reviewed-by: Arthur Zakirov <a.zakirov@postgrespro.ru>
2018-09-13 08:22:03 +02:00
Tom Lane
7046d30246 Minor fixes for psql tab completion.
* Include partitioned tables in what's offered after ANALYZE.

* Include toast_tuple_target in what's offered after ALTER TABLE ... SET|RESET.

* Include HASH in what's offered after PARTITION BY.

This is extracted from a larger patch; these bits seem like
uncontroversial bug fixes for v11 features, so back-patch them into v11.

Justin Pryzby

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180529000623.GA21896@telsasoft.com
2018-09-12 15:25:12 -04:00
Andrew Gierth
b7f6bcbffc Repair bug in regexp split performance improvements.
Commit c8ea87e4b introduced a temporary conversion buffer for
substrings extracted during regexp splits. Unfortunately the code that
sized it was failing to ignore the effects of ignored degenerate
regexp matches, so for regexp_split_* calls it could under-size the
buffer in such cases.

Fix, and add some regression test cases (though those will only catch
the bug if run in a multibyte encoding).

Backpatch to 9.3 as the faulty code was.

Thanks to the PostGIS project, Regina Obe and Paul Ramsey for the
report (via IRC) and assistance in analysis. Patch by me.
2018-09-12 19:31:06 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
ba37349cff ecpg: Change --version output to common style
When we removed the ecpg-specific versions, we also removed the
"(PostgreSQL)" from the --version output, which we show in other
programs.

Reported-by: Ioseph Kim <pgsql-kr@postgresql.kr>
2018-09-12 14:33:15 +02:00
Tom Lane
2970afa6cf Add PQresultMemorySize function to report allocated size of a PGresult.
This number can be useful for application memory management, and the
overhead to track it seems pretty trivial.

Lars Kanis, reviewed by Pavel Stehule, some mods by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fa16a288-9685-14f2-97c8-b8ac84365a4f@greiz-reinsdorf.de
2018-09-11 18:45:12 -04:00
Michael Paquier
e7a2217978 Parse more strictly integer parameters from connection strings in libpq
The following parameters have been parsed in lossy ways when specified
in a connection string processed by libpq:
- connect_timeout
- keepalives
- keepalives_count
- keepalives_idle
- keepalives_interval
- port

Overflowing values or the presence of incorrect characters were not
properly checked, leading to libpq trying to use such values and fail
with unhelpful error messages.  This commit hardens the parsing of those
parameters so as it is possible to find easily incorrect values.

Author: Fabien Coelho
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.21.1808171206180.20841@lancre
2018-09-12 06:46:01 +09:00
Tom Lane
fedc97cdfd Remove ruleutils.c's special case for BIT [VARYING] literals.
Up to now, get_const_expr() insisted on prefixing BIT and VARBIT
literals with 'B'.  That's not really necessary, because we always
append explicit-cast syntax to identify the constant's type.
Moreover, it's subtly wrong for VARBIT, because the parser will
interpret B'...' as '...'::"bit"; see make_const() which explicitly
assigns type BITOID for a T_BitString literal.  So what had been
a simple VARBIT literal is reconstructed as ('...'::"bit")::varbit,
which is not the same thing, at least not before constant folding.
This results in odd differences after dump/restore, as complained
of by the patch submitter, and it could result in actual failures in
partitioning or inheritance DDL operations (see commit 542320c2b,
which repaired similar misbehaviors for some other data types).

Fixing it is pretty easy: just remove the special case and let the
default code path handle these types.  We could have kept the special
case for BIT only, but there seems little point in that.

Like the previous patch, I judge that back-patching this into stable
branches wouldn't be a good idea.  However, it seems not quite too
late for v11, so let's fix it there.

Paul Guo, reviewed by Davy Machado and John Naylor, minor adjustments
by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABQrizdTra=2JEqA6+Ms1D1k1Kqw+aiBBhC9TreuZRX2JzxLAA@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-11 16:32:25 -04:00
Andrew Gierth
500d49794f Repair double-free in SP-GIST rescan (bug #15378)
spgrescan would first reset traversalCxt, and then traverse a
potentially non-empty stack containing pointers to traversalValues
which had been allocated in those contexts, freeing them a second
time. This bug originates in commit ccd6eb49a where traversalValue was
introduced.

Repair by traversing the stack before the context reset; this isn't
ideal, since it means doing retail pfree in a context that's about to
be reset, but the freeing of a stack entry is also done in other
places in the code during the scan so it's not worth trying to
refactor it further. Regression test added.

Backpatch to 9.6 where the problem was introduced.

Per bug #15378; analysis and patch by me, originally from a report on
IRC by user velix; see also PostGIS ticket #4174; review by Alexander
Korotkov.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/153663176628.23136.11901365223750051490@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-09-11 18:14:19 +01:00
Tom Lane
4fa3741d1c Use -Bsymbolic for shared libraries on HP-UX and Solaris.
These platforms are also subject to the mis-linking problem addressed
in commit e3d77ea6b.  It's not clear whether we could solve it with
a solution equivalent to GNU ld's version scripts, but -Bsymbolic
appears to fix it, so let's use that.

Like the previous commit, back-patch as far as v10.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/153626613985.23143.4743626885618266803@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-09-10 22:22:12 -04:00
Tom Lane
14ea365203 Hide a static inline from FRONTEND code.
For some reason pg_waldump is including tuptable.h, and the recent
addition of a static inline function to it is causing problems on
older buildfarm members that fail to optimize such functions away
completely.  I wonder if this situation doesn't mean that some header
refactoring is called for ... but as a band-aid, wrap the static
function in "#ifndef FRONTEND".

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180824154237.mabsv6fsz5q37bma@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-09-10 12:47:02 -04:00
Tom Lane
e3d77ea6b4 Prevent mis-linking of src/port and src/common functions on *BSD.
On ELF-based platforms (and maybe others?) it's possible for a shared
library, when dynamically loaded into the backend, to call the backend
versions of src/port and src/common functions rather than the frontend
versions that are actually linked into the shlib.  This is the cause
of bug #15367 from Jeremy Evans, and is likely to lead to more problems
in future; it's accidental that we've failed to notice any bad effects
up to now.

The recommended way to fix this on ELF-based platforms is to use a
linker "version script" that makes the shlib's versions of the functions
local.  (Apparently, -Bsymbolic would fix it as well, but with other
side effects that we don't want.)  Doing so has the additional benefit
that we can make sure the shlib only exposes the symbols that are meant
to be part of its API, and not ones that are just for cross-file
references within the shlib.  So we'd already been using a version
script for libpq on popular platforms, but it's now apparent that it's
necessary for correctness on every ELF-based platform.

Hence, add appropriate logic to the openbsd, freebsd, and netbsd stanzas
of Makefile.shlib; this is just a copy-and-paste from the linux stanza.
There may be additional work to do if commit ed0cdf0e0 reveals that the
problem exists elsewhere, but this is all that is known to be needed
right now.

Back-patch to v10 where SCRAM support came in.  The problem is ancient,
but analysis suggests that there were no really severe consequences
in older branches.  Hence, I won't take the risk of such a large change
in the build process for older branches.

In passing, remove a rather opaque comment about -Bsymbolic; I don't
think it's very on-point about why we don't use that, if indeed that's
what it's talking about at all.

Patch by me; thanks to Andrew Gierth for helping to diagnose the problem,
and for additional testing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/153626613985.23143.4743626885618266803@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-09-09 15:17:01 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov
cf98467242 Improve behavior of to_timestamp()/to_date() functions
to_timestamp()/to_date() functions were introduced mainly for Oracle
compatibility, and became very popular among PostgreSQL users.  However, some
behavior of to_timestamp()/to_date() functions are both incompatible with Oracle
and confusing for our users.  This behavior is related to handling of spaces and
separators in non FX (fixed format) mode.  This commit reworks this behavior
making less confusing, better documented and more compatible with Oracle.

Nevertheless, there are still following incompatibilities with Oracle.
1) We don't insist that there are no format string patterns unmatched to
   input string.
2) In FX mode we don't insist space and separators in format string to exactly
   match input string.
3) When format string patterns are divided by mix of spaces and separators, we
   don't distinguish them, while Oracle takes into account only last group of
   spaces/separators.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1873520224.1784572.1465833145330.JavaMail.yahoo%40mail.yahoo.com
Author: Artur Zakirov, Alexander Korotkov, Liudmila Mantrova
Review: Amul Sul, Robert Haas, Tom Lane, Dmitry Dolgov, David G. Johnston
2018-09-09 21:19:51 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov
5f08accdad Fix past pd_upper write in ginRedoRecompress()
ginRedoRecompress() replays actions over compressed segments of posting list
in-place.  However, it might lead to write past pg_upper, because intermediate
state during playing the changes can take more space than both original state
and final state.  This commit fixes that by refuse from in-place modification.
Instead page tail is copied once modification is started, and then it's used
as the source of original segments.  Backpatch to 9.4 where posting list
compression was introduced.

Reported-by: Sivasubramanian Ramasubramanian
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1536091151804.6588%40amazon.com
Author: Alexander Korotkov based on patch from and ideas by Sivasubramanian Ramasubramanian
Review: Sivasubramanian Ramasubramanian
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2018-09-09 21:19:29 +03:00
Tom Lane
ff47d4bf1f Work around stdbool problem in dfmgr.c.
Commit 842cb9fa6 refactored things so that dfmgr.c includes <dlfcn.h>,
which before that had only been directly included in platform-specific
stub files.  It turns out that on macOS, <dlfcn.h> includes <stdbool.h>,
and that causes problems on platforms where _Bool is not char-sized ...
which happens to include the PPC versions of macOS.  Work around it
much as we have in plperl.h, by #undef'ing bool after including the
problematic file, but only if we're not using stdbool-style booleans.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1fxqjl-0003YS-NS@gemulon.postgresql.org
2018-09-09 12:41:27 -04:00
Tom Lane
ed0cdf0e05 Install a check for mis-linking of src/port and src/common functions.
On ELF-based platforms (and maybe others?) it's possible for a shared
library, when dynamically loaded into the backend, to call the backend
versions of src/port and src/common functions rather than the frontend
versions that are actually linked into the shlib.  This is definitely
not what we want, because the frontend versions often behave slightly
differently.  Up to now it's been "slight" enough that nobody noticed;
but with the addition of SCRAM support functions in src/common, we're
observing crashes due to the difference between palloc and malloc
memory allocation rules, as reported in bug #15367 from Jeremy Evans.

The purpose of this patch is to create a direct test for this type of
mis-linking, so that we know whether any given platform requires extra
measures to prevent using the wrong functions.  If the test fails, it
will lead to connection failures in the contrib/postgres_fdw regression
test.  At the moment, *BSD platforms using ELF format are known to have
the problem and can be expected to fail; but we need to know whether
anything else does, and we need a reliable ongoing check for future
platforms.

Actually fixing the problem will be the subject of later commit(s).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/153626613985.23143.4743626885618266803@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-09-09 12:23:23 -04:00
Noah Misch
c85ad9cc63 Allow ENOENT in check_mode_recursive().
Buildfarm member tern failed src/bin/pg_ctl/t/001_start_stop.pl when a
check_mode_recursive() call overlapped a server's startup-time deletion
of pg_stat/global.stat.  Just warn.  Also, include errno in the message.
Back-patch to v11, where check_mode_recursive() first appeared.
2018-09-08 18:26:10 -07:00
Noah Misch
076a3c2112 Fix logical subscriber wait in test.
Buildfarm members sungazer and tern revealed this deficit.  Back-patch
to v10, like commit 4f10e7ea7b, which
introduced the test.
2018-09-08 16:20:50 -07:00
Tom Lane
f47f314801 Minor cleanup/future-proofing for pg_saslprep().
Ensure that pg_saslprep() initializes its output argument to NULL in
all failure paths, and then remove the redundant initialization that
some (not all) of its callers did.  This does not fix any live bug,
but it reduces the odds of future bugs of omission.

Also add a comment about why the existing failure-path coding is
adequate.

Back-patch so as to keep the function's API consistent across branches,
again to forestall future bug introduction.

Patch by me, reviewed by Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16558.1536407783@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-08 18:20:36 -04:00
Michael Paquier
9226a3b89b Remove duplicated words split across lines in comments
This has been detected using some interesting tricks with sed, and the
method used is mentioned in details in the discussion below.

Author: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180908013109.GB15350@telsasoft.com
2018-09-08 12:24:19 -07:00
Tom Lane
361844fe56 Save/restore SPI's global variables in SPI_connect() and SPI_finish().
This patch removes two sources of interference between nominally
independent functions when one SPI-using function calls another,
perhaps without knowing that it does so.

Chapman Flack pointed out that xml.c's query_to_xml_internal() expects
SPI_tuptable and SPI_processed to stay valid across datatype output
function calls; but it's possible that such a call could involve
re-entrant use of SPI.  It seems likely that there are similar hazards
elsewhere, if not in the core code then in third-party SPI users.
Previously SPI_finish() reset SPI's API globals to zeroes/nulls, which
would typically make for a crash in such a situation.  Restoring them
to the values they had at SPI_connect() seems like a considerably more
useful behavior, and it still meets the design goal of not leaving any
dangling pointers to tuple tables of the function being exited.

Also, cause SPI_connect() to reset these variables to zeroes/nulls after
saving them.  This prevents interference in the opposite direction: it's
possible that a SPI-using function that's only ever been tested standalone
contains assumptions that these variables start out as zeroes.  That was
the case as long as you were the outermost SPI user, but not so much for
an inner user.  Now it's consistent.

Report and fix suggestion by Chapman Flack, actual patch by me.
Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9fa25bef-2e4f-1c32-22a4-3ad0723c4a17@anastigmatix.net
2018-09-07 20:09:57 -04:00
Tom Lane
f510412df3 Limit depth of forced recursion for CLOBBER_CACHE_RECURSIVELY.
It's somewhat surprising that we got away with this before.  (Actually,
since nobody tests this routinely AFAIK, it might've been broken for
awhile.  But it's definitely broken in the wake of commit f868a8143.)
It seems sufficient to limit the forced recursion to a small number
of levels.

Back-patch to all supported branches, like the preceding patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12259.1532117714@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-07 18:13:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
f868a8143a Fix longstanding recursion hazard in sinval message processing.
LockRelationOid and sibling routines supposed that, if our session already
holds the lock they were asked to acquire, they could skip calling
AcceptInvalidationMessages on the grounds that we must have already read
any remote sinval messages issued against the relation being locked.
This is normally true, but there's a critical special case where it's not:
processing inside AcceptInvalidationMessages might attempt to access system
relations, resulting in a recursive call to acquire a relation lock.

Hence, if the outer call had acquired that same system catalog lock, we'd
fall through, despite the possibility that there's an as-yet-unread sinval
message for that system catalog.  This could, for example, result in
failure to access a system catalog or index that had just been processed
by VACUUM FULL.  This is the explanation for buildfarm failures we've been
seeing intermittently for the past three months.  The bug is far older
than that, but commits a54e1f158 et al added a new recursion case within
AcceptInvalidationMessages that is apparently easier to hit than any
previous case.

To fix this, we must not skip calling AcceptInvalidationMessages until
we have *finished* a call to it since acquiring a relation lock, not
merely acquired the lock.  (There's already adequate logic inside
AcceptInvalidationMessages to deal with being called recursively.)
Fortunately, we can implement that at trivial cost, by adding a flag
to LOCALLOCK hashtable entries that tracks whether we know we have
completed such a call.

There is an API hazard added by this patch for external callers of
LockAcquire: if anything is testing for LOCKACQUIRE_ALREADY_HELD,
it might be fooled by the new return code LOCKACQUIRE_ALREADY_CLEAR
into thinking the lock wasn't already held.  This should be a fail-soft
condition, though, unless something very bizarre is being done in
response to the test.

Also, I added an additional output argument to LockAcquireExtended,
assuming that that probably isn't called by any outside code given
the very limited usefulness of its additional functionality.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12259.1532117714@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-09-07 18:04:54 -04:00
Michael Paquier
8582b4d044 Improve handling of corrupted two-phase state files at recovery
When a corrupted two-phase state file is found by WAL replay, be it for
crash recovery or archive recovery, then the file is simply skipped and
a WARNING is logged to the user, causing the transaction to be silently
lost.  Facing an on-disk WAL file which is corrupted is as likely to
happen as what is stored in WAL records, but WAL records are already
able to fail hard if there is a CRC mismatch.  On-disk two-phase state
files, on the contrary, are simply ignored if corrupted.  Note that when
restoring the initial two-phase data state at recovery, files newer than
the horizon XID are discarded hence no files present in pg_twophase/
should be torned and have been made durable by a previous checkpoint, so
recovery should never see any corrupted two-phase state file by design.

The situation got better since 978b2f6 which has added two-phase state
information directly in WAL instead of using on-disk files, so the risk
is limited to two-phase transactions which live across at least one
checkpoint for long periods.  Backups having legit two-phase state files
on-disk could also lose silently transactions when restored if things
get corrupted.

This behavior exists since two-phase commit has been introduced, no
back-patch is done for now per the lack of complaints about this
problem.

Author: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180709050309.GM1467@paquier.xyz
2018-09-07 11:00:16 -07:00
Andrew Gierth
7b6b167fa3 Refactor installation of extension headers.
Commit be54b3777 failed on gmake 3.80 due to a chained conditional,
which on closer examination could be removed entirely with some
refactoring elsewhere for a net simplification and more robustness
against empty expansions. Along the way, add some more comments.

Also make explicit in the documentation and comments that built
headers are not removed by 'make clean', since we don't typically want
that for headers generated by a separate ./configure step, and it's
much easier to add your own 'distclean' rule or use EXTRA_CLEAN than
to try and override a deletion rule in pgxs.mk.

Per buildfarm member prariedog and comments by Michael Paquier, though
all the actual changes are my fault.
2018-09-07 14:19:14 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
1fea1e3254 libpq: Change "options" dispchar to normal
libpq connection options as returned by PQconndefaults() have a
"dispchar" field that determines (among other things) whether an option
is a "debug" option, which shouldn't be shown by default to clients.
postgres_fdw makes use of that to control which connection options to
accept from a foreign server configuration.

Curiously, the "options" option, which allows passing configuration
settings to the backend server, was listed as a debug option, which
prevented it from being used by postgres_fdw.  Maybe it was once meant
for debugging, but it's clearly in general use nowadays.

So change the dispchar for it to be the normal non-debug case.  Also
remove the "debug" reference from its label field.

Reported-by: Shinoda, Noriyoshi <noriyoshi.shinoda@hpe.com>
2018-09-07 15:01:25 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
98afa68d93 Use C99 designated initializers for some structs
These are just a few particularly egregious cases that were hard to read
and write, and error prone because of many similar adjacent types.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/4c9f01be-9245-2148-b569-61a8562ef190%402ndquadrant.com
2018-09-07 11:40:03 +02:00
Tom Lane
75f7855369 Fix inconsistent argument naming.
Typo in commit 842cb9fa6.
2018-09-06 11:14:22 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
842cb9fa62 Refactor dlopen() support
Nowadays, all platforms except Windows and older HP-UX have standard
dlopen() support.  So having a separate implementation per platform
under src/backend/port/dynloader/ is a bit excessive.  Instead, treat
dlopen() like other library functions that happen to be missing
sometimes and put a replacement implementation under src/port/.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/e11a49cb-570a-60b7-707d-7084c8de0e61%402ndquadrant.com#54e735ae37476a121abb4e33c2549b03
2018-09-06 11:33:04 +02:00
Amit Kapila
ac27c74def Fix the overrun in hash index metapage for smaller block sizes.
The commit 620b49a1 changed the value of HASH_MAX_BITMAPS with the intent
to allow many non-unique values in hash indexes without worrying to reach
the limit of the number of overflow pages.  At that time, this didn't
occur to us that it can overrun the block for smaller block sizes.

Choose the value of HASH_MAX_BITMAPS based on BLCKSZ such that it gives
the same answer as now for the cases where the overrun doesn't occur, and
some other sufficiently-value for the cases where an overrun currently
does occur.  This allows us not to change the behavior in any case that
currently works, so there's really no reason for a HASH_VERSION bump.

Author: Dilip Kumar
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 10
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1LtF4VmU4mx_+i72ff1MdNZ8XaJMGkt2HV8+uSWcn8t4A@mail.gmail.com
2018-09-06 09:27:19 +05:30
Andrew Gierth
be54b3777f Allow extensions to install built as well as unbuilt headers.
Commit df163230b overlooked the case that an out-of-tree extension
might need to build its header files (e.g. via ./configure). If it is
also doing a VPATH build, the HEADERS_* rules in the original commit
would then fail to find the files, since they would be looking only
under $(srcdir) and not in the build directory.

Fix by adding HEADERS_built and HEADERS_built_$(MODULE) which behave
like DATA_built in that they look in the build dir rather than the
source dir (and also make the files dependencies of the "all" target).

No Windows support appears to be needed for this, since it is only
relevant to out-of-tree builds (no support exists in Mkvcbuild.pm to
build extension header files in any case).
2018-09-05 22:01:21 +01:00