Commit Graph

5282 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane f3db7f164a Prevent running pg_resetwal/pg_resetxlog against wrong-version data dirs.
pg_resetwal (formerly pg_resetxlog) doesn't insist on finding a matching
version number in pg_control, and that seems like an important thing to
preserve since recovering from corrupt pg_control is a prime reason to
need to run it.  However, that means you can try to run it against a
data directory of a different major version, which is at best useless
and at worst disastrous.  So as to provide some protection against that
type of pilot error, inspect PG_VERSION at startup and refuse to do
anything if it doesn't match.  PG_VERSION is read-only after initdb,
so it's unlikely to get corrupted, and even if it were corrupted it would
be easy to fix by hand.

This hazard has been there all along, so back-patch to all supported
branches.

Michael Paquier, with some kibitzing by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f4b8eb91-b934-8a0d-b3cc-68f06e2279d1@enterprisedb.com
2017-05-29 17:08:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 764cb2b596 Fix typo in pg_dump's support for dumping collations from pre-v10 servers.
Dunno what 'p' was supposed to mean, but since neither the code below
here nor pg_collation.h think it's valid, it must be a mistake.

Per report from Thomas Kellerer.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/og9q8f%24oes%241%40blaine.gmane.org
2017-05-26 15:37:06 -04:00
Tom Lane 0461b66e36 Fix pg_dump to not emit invalid SQL for an empty operator class.
If an operator class has no operators or functions, and doesn't need
a STORAGE clause, we emitted "CREATE OPERATOR CLASS ... AS ;" which
is syntactically invalid.  Fix by forcing a STORAGE clause to be
emitted anyway in this case.

(At some point we might consider changing the grammar to allow CREATE
OPERATOR CLASS without an opclass_item_list.  But probably we'd want to
omit the AS in that case, so that wouldn't fix this pg_dump issue anyway.)

It's been like this all along, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Daniel Gustafsson, tweaked by me to avoid a dangling-pointer bug

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/D9E5FC64-7A37-4F3D-B946-7E4FB468F88A@yesql.se
2017-05-26 12:51:05 -04:00
Robert Haas a95410e2ec pg_upgrade: Handle hash index upgrades more smoothly.
Mark any old hash indexes as invalid so that they don't get used, and
create a script to run REINDEX on all of them.  Without this, we'd
still try to use any upgraded hash indexes, but it would fail.

Amit Kapila, reviewed by me.  Per a suggestion from Tom Lane.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1Jidtagm7Q81q-WoegOVgkotv0OxvHOjFxcvFRP4X=mSw@mail.gmail.com
2017-05-19 16:49:38 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 157239d2cd pg_dump: Fix dumping of slot_name = NONE
It previously wrote out slot_name = '', which was incorrect.

Reported-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
2017-05-17 21:19:14 -04:00
Bruce Momjian ce55481032 Post-PG 10 beta1 pgperltidy run 2017-05-17 19:01:23 -04:00
Bruce Momjian a6fd7b7a5f Post-PG 10 beta1 pgindent run
perltidy run not included.
2017-05-17 16:31:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 05b5feb60e Revert changes to pg_basebackup and pg_waldump usage() code.
Partially revert commit c079673dcb.
There were complaints that splitting switch descriptions would
complicate translation efforts.  There are probably ways to resolve
the formatting problem without doing that, but undo it while we're
discussing.
2017-05-17 13:04:03 -04:00
Tom Lane 9485516ea2 Make psql handle EOF during COPY FROM STDIN properly on all platforms.
When stdin is a terminal, it's possible to end a COPY FROM STDIN with
a keyboard EOF signal (typically control-D), and then keep on issuing
SQL commands.  One would expect another COPY FROM STDIN to work as well,
but on some platforms it did not.  This turns out to be because we were
not resetting the stream's feof() flag, and BSD-ish versions of fread()
and fgets() won't attempt to read more data if that's set.

The misbehavior is observed on BSDen (including macOS), but not Linux,
Windows, or SysV-ish Unixen, which makes this a portability bug not
just a missing feature.

Add a clearerr() call to fix the behavior, and improve the prompt that's
issued when copying from a TTY to mention that EOF signals work.

It's been like this forever, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Thomas Munro

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0MCGfYf=JAMiYhO6JPtv9-3ZfBo8fcGeCZ8oMzaw+Z+Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-05-17 12:24:19 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 0fbfb65d4b psql: publication/subscription tab completion fixes 2017-05-16 22:19:21 -04:00
Tom Lane c079673dcb Preventive maintenance in advance of pgindent run.
Reformat various places in which pgindent will make a mess, and
fix a few small violations of coding style that I happened to notice
while perusing the diffs from a pgindent dry run.

There is one actual bug fix here: the need-to-enlarge-the-buffer code
path in icu_convert_case was obviously broken.  Perhaps it's unreachable
in our usage?  Or maybe this is just sadly undertested.
2017-05-16 20:36:35 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 82d24bab75 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 398beeef4921df0956f917becd7b5669d2a8a5c4
2017-05-15 12:19:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 4041808b5b Fix bogus syntax for CREATE PUBLICATION commands emitted by pg_dump.
Original coding was careless about where to insert commas.

Masahiko Sawada

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3427593a-61aa-b17e-64ef-383b7742d6d9@enterprisedb.com
2017-05-15 11:48:39 -04:00
Magnus Hagander b1c45afb01 Fix typo in comment
Michael Paquier
2017-05-15 11:08:02 +02:00
Tom Lane f04c9a6146 Standardize terminology for pg_statistic_ext entries.
Consistently refer to such an entry as a "statistics object", not just
"statistics" or "extended statistics".  Previously we had a mismash of
terms, accompanied by utter confusion as to whether the term was
singular or plural.  That's not only grating (at least to the ear of
a native English speaker) but could be outright misleading, eg in error
messages that seemed to be referring to multiple objects where only one
could be meant.

This commit fixes the code and a lot of comments (though I may have
missed a few).  I also renamed two new SQL functions,
pg_get_statisticsextdef -> pg_get_statisticsobjdef
pg_statistic_ext_is_visible -> pg_statistics_obj_is_visible
to conform better with this terminology.

I have not touched the SGML docs other than fixing those function
names; the docs certainly need work but it seems like a separable task.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/22676.1494557205@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-05-14 10:55:01 -04:00
Robert Haas 1848b73d45 Teach \d+ to show partitioning constraints.
The fact that we didn't have this in the first place is likely why
the problem fixed by f8bffe9e6d
escaped detection.

Patch by Amit Langote, reviewed and slightly adjusted by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYWnV2GMnYLG-Czsix-E1WGAbo4D+0tx7t9NdfYBDMFsA@mail.gmail.com
2017-05-13 12:04:53 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera d99d58cdc8 Complete tab completion for DROP STATISTICS
Tab-completing DROP STATISTICS would only work if you started writing
the schema name containing the statistics object, because the visibility
clause was missing.  To add it, we need to add SQL-callable support for
testing visibility of a statistics object, like all other object types
already have.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/22676.1494557205@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-05-13 01:05:48 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera bc085205c8 Change CREATE STATISTICS syntax
Previously, we had the WITH clause in the middle of the command, where
you'd specify both generic options as well as statistic types.  Few
people liked this, so this commit changes it to remove the WITH keyword
from that clause and makes it accept statistic types only.  (We
currently don't have any generic options, but if we invent in the
future, we will gain a new WITH clause, probably at the end of the
command).

Also, the column list is now specified without parens, which makes the
whole command look more similar to a SELECT command.  This change will
let us expand the command to supporting expressions (not just columns
names) as well as multiple tables and their join conditions.

Tom added lots of code comments and fixed some parts of the CREATE
STATISTICS reference page, too; more changes in this area are
forthcoming.  He also fixed a potential problem in the alter_generic
regression test, reducing verbosity on a cascaded drop to avoid
dependency on message ordering, as we do in other tests.

Tom also closed a security bug: we documented that table ownership was
required in order to create a statistics object on it, but didn't
actually implement it.

Implement tab-completion for statistics objects.  This can stand some
more improvement.

Authors: Alvaro Herrera, with lots of cleanup by Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170420212426.ltvgyhnefvhixm6i@alvherre.pgsql
2017-05-12 14:59:35 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut d496a65790 Standardize "WAL location" terminology
Other previously used terms were "WAL position" or "log position".
2017-05-12 13:51:27 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c1a7f64b4a Replace "transaction log" with "write-ahead log"
This makes documentation and error messages match the renaming of "xlog"
to "wal" in APIs and file naming.
2017-05-12 11:52:43 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 96e1cb4c0f pg_dump: Add --no-publications option
Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-05-12 09:15:40 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut b807f59828 Rework the options syntax for logical replication commands
For CREATE/ALTER PUBLICATION/SUBSCRIPTION, use similar option style as
other statements that use a WITH clause for options.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-05-12 08:57:49 -04:00
Tom Lane d10c626de4 Rename WAL-related functions and views to use "lsn" not "location".
Per discussion, "location" is a rather vague term that could refer to
multiple concepts.  "LSN" is an unambiguous term for WAL locations and
should be preferred.  Some function names, view column names, and function
output argument names used "lsn" already, but others used "location",
as well as yet other terms such as "wal_position".  Since we've already
renamed a lot of things in this area from "xlog" to "wal" for v10,
we may as well incur a bit more compatibility pain and make these names
all consistent.

David Rowley, minor additional docs hacking by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f8O0njDKe8ePFQ-LK5-EjwThsDws6ohJ-+c6nWK+oUxtg@mail.gmail.com
2017-05-11 11:49:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut b83f4e4a25 psql: Add missing translation markers 2017-05-10 10:15:14 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera e0bf16060b Ignore PQcancel errors properly
Add a (void) cast to all PQcancel() calls that purposefully don't check
the return value, to keep compilers and static checkers happy.

Per Coverity.
2017-05-09 14:58:51 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut 26aa1cf376 pg_dump: Add --no-subscriptions option
Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-05-09 10:58:06 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 013c1178fd Remove the NODROP SLOT option from DROP SUBSCRIPTION
It turned out this approach had problems, because a DROP command should
not have any options other than CASCADE and RESTRICT.  Instead, always
attempt to drop the slot if there is one configured, but also add an
ALTER SUBSCRIPTION action to set the slot to NONE.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
Reported-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/29431.1493730652@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-05-09 10:20:42 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas eb61136dc7 Remove support for password_encryption='off' / 'plain'.
Storing passwords in plaintext hasn't been a good idea for a very long
time, if ever. Now seems like a good time to finally forbid it, since we're
messing with this in PostgreSQL 10 anyway.

Remove the CREATE/ALTER USER UNENCRYPTED PASSSWORD 'foo' syntax, since
storing passwords unencrypted is no longer supported. ENCRYPTED PASSWORD
'foo' is still accepted, but ENCRYPTED is now just a noise-word, it does
the same as just PASSWORD 'foo'.

Likewise, remove the --unencrypted option from createuser, but accept
--encrypted as a no-op for backward compatibility. AFAICS, --encrypted was
a no-op even before this patch, because createuser encrypted the password
before sending it to the server even if --encrypted was not specified. It
added the ENCRYPTED keyword to the SQL command, but since the password was
already in encrypted form, it didn't make any difference. The documentation
was not clear on whether that was intended or not, but it's moot now.

Also, while password_encryption='on' is still accepted as an alias for
'md5', it is now marked as hidden, so that it is not listed as an accepted
value in error hints, for example. That's not directly related to removing
'plain', but it seems better this way.

Reviewed by Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/16e9b768-fd78-0b12-cfc1-7b6b7f238fde@iki.fi
2017-05-08 11:26:07 +03:00
Stephen Frost 09f8421819 pg_dump: Don't leak memory in buildDefaultACLCommands()
buildDefaultACLCommands() didn't destroy the string buffer created in
certain cases, leading to a memory leak.  Fix by destroying the buffer
before returning from the function.

Spotted by Coverity.

Author: Michael Paquier

Back-patch to 9.6 where buildDefaultACLCommands() was added.
2017-05-06 22:58:12 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 499ae5f5db Fix wording in pg_upgrade docs
Author: Daniel Gustafsson
2017-05-05 12:42:21 +02:00
Stephen Frost 44c528810a Change the way pg_dump retrieves partitioning info
This gets rid of the code that issued separate queries to retrieve the
partitioning parent-child relationship, parent partition key, and child
partition bound information.  With this patch, the information is
retrieved instead using the queries issued from getTables() and
getInherits(), which is both more efficient than the previous approach
and doesn't require any new code.

Since the partitioning parent-child relationship is now retrieved with
the same old code that handles inheritance, partition attributes receive
a proper flagInhAttrs() treatment (that it didn't receive before), which
is needed so that the inherited NOT NULL constraints are not emitted if
we already emitted it for the parent.

Also, fix a bug in pg_dump's --binary-upgrade code, which caused pg_dump
to emit invalid command to attach a partition to its parent.

Author: Amit Langote, with some additional changes by me.
2017-05-04 22:17:52 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera a93077ef46 Add pg_dump tests for CREATE STATISTICS
CREATE STATISTICS pg_dump support code was not covered at all by
previous tests.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170503172746.rwftidszir67sgk7@alvherre.pgsql
2017-05-03 15:52:00 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 698923d658 pg_dump/t/002: append terminating semicolon to SQL commands
It's easy to overlook the need for one, and its lack is annoying for the
next developer wanting to create a new test.  Rather than expect every
individual command to add the semicolon, just append one automatically.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/20170503172746.rwftidszir67sgk7@alvherre.pgsql
2017-05-03 15:12:09 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 8f8b9be51f Add PQencryptPasswordConn function to libpq, use it in psql and createuser.
The new function supports creating SCRAM verifiers, in addition to md5
hashes. The algorithm is chosen based on password_encryption, by default.

This fixes the issue reported by Jeff Janes, that there was previously
no way to create a SCRAM verifier with "\password".

Michael Paquier and me

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAMkU%3D1wfBgFPbfAMYZQE78p%3DVhZX7nN86aWkp0QcCp%3D%2BKxZ%3Dbg%40mail.gmail.com
2017-05-03 11:19:07 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut e4fddfd492 psql: Support identity columns in sequence display
Where the footer for an owned serial sequence would say "Owned by", put
something analogous for a sequence belonging to an identity column.

Reported-by: Vitaly Burovoy <vitaly.burovoy@gmail.com>
2017-04-28 14:43:36 -04:00
Stephen Frost b9a3ef55b2 Remove unnecessairly duplicated gram.y productions
Declarative partitioning duplicated the TypedTableElement productions,
evidently to remove the need to specify WITH OPTIONS when creating
partitions.  Instead, simply make WITH OPTIONS optional in the
TypedTableElement production and remove all of the duplicate
PartitionElement-related productions.  This change simplifies the
syntax and makes WITH OPTIONS optional when adding defaults, constraints
or storage parameters to columns when creating either typed tables or
partitions.

Also update pg_dump to no longer include WITH OPTIONS, since it's not
necessary, and update the documentation to reflect that WITH OPTIONS is
now optional.
2017-04-27 20:14:39 -04:00
Tom Lane 7834d20b57 Avoid slow shutdown of pg_basebackup.
pg_basebackup's child process did not pay any attention to the pipe
from its parent while waiting for input from the source server.
If no server data was arriving, it would only wake up and check the
pipe every standby_message_timeout or so.  This creates a problem
since the parent process might determine and send the desired stop
position only after the server has reached end-of-WAL and stopped
sending data.  In the src/test/recovery regression tests, the timing
is repeatably such that it takes nearly 10 seconds for the child
process to realize that it should shut down.  It's not clear how
often that would happen in real-world cases, but it sure seems like
a bug --- and if the user turns off standby_message_timeout or sets
it very large, the delay could be a lot worse.

To fix, expand the StreamCtl API to allow the pipe input FD to be
passed down to the low-level wait routine, and watch both sockets
when sleeping.

(Note: AFAICS this issue doesn't affect the Windows port, since
it doesn't rely on a pipe to transfer the stop position to the
child thread.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6456.1493263884@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-27 18:27:02 -04:00
Tom Lane 3e51725b38 Avoid depending on non-POSIX behavior of fcntl(2).
The POSIX standard does not say that the success return value for
fcntl(F_SETFD) and fcntl(F_SETFL) is zero; it says only that it's not -1.
We had several calls that were making the stronger assumption.  Adjust
them to test specifically for -1 for strict spec compliance.

The standard further leaves open the possibility that the O_NONBLOCK
flag bit is not the only active one in F_SETFL's argument.  Formally,
therefore, one ought to get the current flags with F_GETFL and store
them back with only the O_NONBLOCK bit changed when trying to change
the nonblock state.  In port/noblock.c, we were doing the full pushup
in pg_set_block but not in pg_set_noblock, which is just weird.  Make
both of them do it properly, since they have little business making
any assumptions about the socket they're handed.  The other places
where we're issuing F_SETFL are working with FDs we just got from
pipe(2), so it's reasonable to assume the FDs' properties are all
default, so I didn't bother adding F_GETFL steps there.

Also, while pg_set_block deserves some points for trying to do things
right, somebody had decided that it'd be even better to cast fcntl's
third argument to "long".  Which is completely loony, because POSIX
clearly says the third argument for an F_SETFL call is "int".

Given the lack of field complaints, these missteps apparently are not
of significance on any common platforms.  But they're still wrong,
so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/30882.1492800880@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-21 15:56:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 8bcb31ad5a Sync pg_ctl documentation and usage message with reality.
Commit 05cd12ed5 ("pg_ctl: Change default to wait for all actions")
was a tad sloppy about updating the documentation to match.  The
documentation was also sorely in need of a copy-editing pass, having
been adjusted at different times by different people who took little
care to maintain consistency of style.
2017-04-20 14:41:55 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas c727f120ff Rename "scram" to "scram-sha-256" in pg_hba.conf and password_encryption.
Per discussion, plain "scram" is confusing because we actually implement
SCRAM-SHA-256 rather than the original SCRAM that uses SHA-1 as the hash
algorithm. If we add support for SCRAM-SHA-512 or some other mechanism in
the SCRAM family in the future, that would become even more confusing.

Most of the internal files and functions still use just "scram" as a
shorthand for SCRMA-SHA-256, but I did change PASSWORD_TYPE_SCRAM to
PASSWORD_TYPE_SCRAM_SHA_256, as that could potentially be used by 3rd
party extensions that hook into the password-check hook.

Michael Paquier did this in an earlier version of the SCRAM patch set
already, but I didn't include that in the version that was committed.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/fde71ff1-5858-90c8-99a9-1c2427e7bafb@iki.fi
2017-04-18 14:50:50 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera ee6922112e Rename columns in new pg_statistic_ext catalog
The new catalog reused a column prefix "sta" from pg_statistic, but this
is undesirable, so change the catalog to use prefix "stx" instead.
Also, rename the column that lists enabled statistic kinds as "stxkind"
rather than "enabled".

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_2t5jhSN7huYRFH3w3rrHfG2QU7hiUHsu-Vdjd1rYT3w@mail.gmail.com
2017-04-17 18:34:29 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 8c5cdb7f4f Tighten up relation kind checks for extended statistics
We were accepting creation of extended statistics only for regular
tables, but they can usefully be created for foreign tables, partitioned
tables, and materialized views, too.  Allow those cases.

While at it, make sure all the rejected cases throw a consistent error
message, and add regression tests for the whole thing.

Author: David Rowley, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-BmGo410bh5RSPZUvOO0LhmHL2NYmdrC_Jm8pk_FfyCA@mail.gmail.com
2017-04-17 17:55:55 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut 6275f5d28a Fix new warnings from GCC 7
This addresses the new warning types -Wformat-truncation
-Wformat-overflow that are part of -Wall, via -Wformat, in GCC 7.
2017-04-17 13:59:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 419a23b478 pg_dump: Emit ONLY before table added to publication
This is necessary to be able to reproduce publication membership
correctly if tables are involved in inheritance.

Author: Amit Langote <Langote_Amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp>
2017-04-17 09:51:53 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 033b969edd Make sure to run one initdb TAP test with no TZ set
That way we make sure that initdb's time zone setting code is exercised.
This doesn't add an extra test, it just alters an existing test.

Discussion: <https://postgr.es/m/5807.1492229253@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2017-04-15 18:50:20 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 887227a1cc Add option to modify sync commit per subscription
This also changes default behaviour of subscription workers to
synchronous_commit = off.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-04-14 13:58:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 0c22327f26 Remove useless trailing spaces in queries in C strings
Author: Alexander Law <exclusion@gmail.com>
2017-04-13 23:47:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 674677c705 Remove trailing spaces in some output
Author: Alexander Law <exclusion@gmail.com>
2017-04-13 23:15:52 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut cf615fbaa9 pg_dump: Dump comments and security labels for publication and subscriptions 2017-04-13 22:46:17 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut ff46f2a053 pg_dumpall: Allow --no-role-passwords and --binary-upgrade together
This was introduced as part of the patch to add --no-role-passwords, but
while it's an unusual combination, there is no actual reason to prevent
it.
2017-04-13 21:23:34 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a9254e675b pg_dump: Always dump subscriptions NOCONNECT
This removes the pg_dump option --no-subscription-connect and makes it
the default.  Dumping a subscription so that it activates right away
when restored is not very useful, because the state of the publication
server is unclear.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/e4fbfad5-c6ac-fd50-6777-18c84b34eb2f@2ndquadrant.com
2017-04-13 12:01:27 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c31671f9b5 pg_dump: Dump subscriptions by default
Dump subscriptions if the current user is a superuser, otherwise write a
warning and skip them.  Remove the pg_dump option
--include-subscriptions.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/e4fbfad5-c6ac-fd50-6777-18c84b34eb2f@2ndquadrant.com
2017-04-13 12:01:27 -04:00
Fujii Masao c525f74066 Improve tab-completion of DDL for publication and subscription.
Author: Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoC32YgtateNqTFXzTJmHHe6hXs4cpJTND3n-Ts8f-aMqw@mail.gmail.com
2017-04-13 11:26:36 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 35b5f7b608 Remove some tabs in SQL code in C string literals
This is not handled uniformly throughout the code, but at least nearby
code can be consistent.
2017-04-12 14:43:01 -04:00
Magnus Hagander b935eb7da3 Fix reversed check of return value from sync
While at it also update the comments in walmethods.h to make it less
likely for mistakes like this to appear in the future (thanks to Tom for
improvements to the comments).

And finally, in passing change the return type of walmethod.getlasterror
to being const, also per suggestion from Tom.
2017-04-12 13:46:38 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 6da56f3f84 Remove support for bcc and msvc standalone libpq builds
This removes the support for building just libpq using Borland C++ or
Visual C++. This has not worked properly for years, and given the number
of complaints it's clearly not worth the maintenance burden.

Building libpq using the standard MSVC build system is of course still
supported, along with mingw.
2017-04-11 15:22:21 +02:00
Tom Lane feffa0e079 Fix pgbench's --progress-timestamp option to print Unix-epoch timestamps.
As a consequence of commit 1d63f7d2d, on platforms with CLOCK_MONOTONIC,
you got some random timescale or other instead of standard Unix timestamps
as expected.  I'd attempted to fix pgbench for that change in commits
74baa1e3b and 67a875355, but missed this place.  Fix in the same way as
those previous commits, ie, just eat the cost of an extra gettimeofday();
one extra syscall per progress report isn't worth sweating over.  Per
report from Jeff Janes.

In passing, use snprintf not sprintf for this purpose.  I don't think
there's any chance of actual buffer overrun, but it just looks safer.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU=1zrQaPwBN+NcBd3pWCb=vWaiL=mmWfJjDJjh-a7eVr-Og@mail.gmail.com
2017-04-11 08:59:40 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 3820c63da8 Run most pg_dump and pg_dumpall tests with --no-sync
Commit 96a7128b made pg_dump and pg_dumpall sync their output by
default. However, there's no great need for that in testing, and it
could impose a performance penalty, so we add the --no-sync flag to most
of the test cases.

Michael Paquier
2017-04-10 19:53:47 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 4be613f692 pg_dump: Rename some typedefs to avoid name conflicts
In struct _archiveHandle, some of the fields have the same name as a
typedef.  This is kind of confusing, so rename the types so they have
names distinct from the struct fields.  In C++, the previous coding
changes the meaning of the typedef in the scope of the struct, causing
warnings and possibly other problems.

Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
2017-04-06 14:16:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 20c95f27e7 Clean up psql/describe.c's messy query for extended stats.
Remove unnecessary casts, safely schema-qualify the ones that remain,
lose an unnecessary level of sub-SELECT, reformat for tidiness.
2017-04-06 13:21:47 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 3217327053 Identity columns
This is the SQL standard-conforming variant of PostgreSQL's serial
columns.  It fixes a few usability issues that serial columns have:

- CREATE TABLE / LIKE copies default but refers to same sequence
- cannot add/drop serialness with ALTER TABLE
- dropping default does not drop sequence
- need to grant separate privileges to sequence
- other slight weirdnesses because serial is some kind of special macro

Reviewed-by: Vitaly Burovoy <vitaly.burovoy@gmail.com>
2017-04-06 08:41:37 -04:00
Simon Riggs 2686ee1b7c Collect and use multi-column dependency stats
Follow on patch in the multi-variate statistics patch series.

CREATE STATISTICS s1 WITH (dependencies) ON (a, b) FROM t;
ANALYZE;
will collect dependency stats on (a, b) and then use the measured
dependency in subsequent query planning.

Commit 7b504eb282 added
CREATE STATISTICS with n-distinct coefficients. These are now
specified using the mutually exclusive option WITH (ndistinct).

Author: Tomas Vondra, David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro HORIGUCHI, Álvaro Herrera, Dean Rasheed, Robert Haas
and many other comments and contributions
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/56f40b20-c464-fad2-ff39-06b668fac47c@2ndquadrant.com
2017-04-05 18:00:42 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 6785fbd60f Use American English in error message
All error messages use the American English spelling of recognize,
apply to the single one not doing so to be consistent.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2017-04-05 14:06:15 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut afd79873a0 Capitalize names of PLs consistently
Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2017-04-05 00:38:25 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 553c3bef4c psql: Add some missing tab completion
Add tab completion for COMMENT/SECURITY LABEL ON
PUBLICATION/SUBSCRIPTION.

Reported-by: Stephen Frost <sfrost@snowman.net>
2017-04-04 08:59:13 -04:00
Tom Lane 5dbc5da118 Fix behavior of psql's \p to agree with \g, \w, etc.
In commit e984ef586 I (tgl) simplified the behavior of \p to just print
the current query buffer; but Daniel Vérité points out that this made it
inconsistent with the behavior of \g and \w.  It should print the same
thing \g would execute.  Fix that, and improve related comments.

Daniel Vérité

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9b4ea968-753f-4b5f-b46c-d7d3bf7c8f90@manitou-mail.org
2017-04-02 16:50:25 -04:00
Tom Lane f833c847b8 Allow psql variable substitution to occur in backtick command strings.
Previously, text between backquotes in a psql metacommand's arguments
was always passed to the shell literally.  That considerably hobbles
the usefulness of the feature for scripting, so we'd foreseen for a long
time that we'd someday want to allow substitution of psql variables into
the shell command.  IMO the addition of \if metacommands has brought us to
that point, since \if can greatly benefit from some sort of client-side
expression evaluation capability, and psql itself is not going to grow any
such thing in time for v10.  Hence, this patch.  It allows :VARIABLE to be
replaced by the exact contents of the named variable, while :'VARIABLE'
is replaced by the variable's contents suitably quoted to become a single
shell-command argument.  (The quoting rules for that are different from
those for SQL literals, so this is a bit of an abuse of the :'VARIABLE'
notation, but I doubt anyone will be confused.)

As with other situations in psql, no substitution occurs if the word
following a colon is not a known variable name.  That limits the risk of
compatibility problems for existing psql scripts; but the risk isn't zero,
so this needs to be called out in the v10 release notes.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9561.1490895211@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-04-01 21:44:54 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 7220c7b3e5 Write "waiting for checkpoint" on regular progress row
When reporting progress, make the "waiting for checkpoint" test be
overwritten by the file-based progress once it's completed. This is more
consistent with how we report the rest of the progress.

Suggested by Jeff Janes
2017-04-01 17:04:14 +02:00
Tom Lane e984ef5861 Support \if ... \elif ... \else ... \endif in psql scripting.
This patch adds nestable conditional blocks to psql.  The control
structure feature per se is complete, but the boolean expressions
understood by \if and \elif are pretty primitive; basically, after
variable substitution and backtick expansion, the result has to be
"true" or "false" or one of the other standard spellings of a boolean
value.  But that's enough for many purposes, since you can always
do the heavy lifting on the server side; and we can extend it later.

Along the way, pay down some of the technical debt that had built up
around psql/command.c:
* Refactor exec_command() into a function per command, instead of
being a 1500-line monstrosity.  This makes the file noticeably longer
because of repetitive function header/trailer overhead, but it seems
much more readable.
* Teach psql_get_variable() and psqlscanslash.l to suppress variable
substitution and backtick expansion on the basis of the conditional
stack state, thereby allowing removal of the OT_NO_EVAL kluge.
* Fix the no-doubt-once-expedient hack of sometimes silently substituting
mainloop.c's previous_buf for query_buf when calling HandleSlashCmds.
(It's a bit remarkable that commands like \r worked at all with that.)
Recall of a previous query is now done explicitly in the slash commands
where that should happen.

Corey Huinker, reviewed by Fabien Coelho, further hacking by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADkLM=c94OSRTnat=LX0ivNq4pxDNeoomFfYvBKM5N_xfmLtAA@mail.gmail.com
2017-03-30 12:59:24 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5baf869f74 pg_dump: Remove query truncation in error messages
Remove the behavior that a query mentioned in an error message would be
truncated to 128 characters.  The queries that pg_dump runs are often
longer than that, and this behavior makes analyzing failures harder
unnecessarily.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/63201ef9-26fb-3f1f-664d-98531678cebc%402ndquadrant.com
2017-03-29 15:17:14 -04:00
Tom Lane 8cfeaecfc7 Suppress implicit-conversion warnings seen with newer clang versions.
We were assigning values near 255 through "char *" pointers.  On machines
where char is signed, that's not entirely kosher, and it's reasonable
for compilers to warn about it.

A better solution would be to change the pointer type to "unsigned char *",
but that would be vastly more invasive.  For the moment, let's just apply
this simple backpatchable solution.

Aleksander Alekseev

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170220141239.GD12278@e733.localdomain
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2839.1490714708@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-03-28 13:16:19 -04:00
Teodor Sigaev ab89e465cb Altering default privileges on schemas
Extend ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES command to schemas.

Author: Matheus Oliveira
Reviewed-by: Petr Jelínek, Ashutosh Sharma

https://commitfest.postgresql.org/13/887/
2017-03-28 18:58:55 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut facde2a98f Clean up Perl code according to perlcritic
Fix all perlcritic warnings of severity level 5, except in
src/backend/utils/Gen_dummy_probes.pl, which is automatically generated.

Reviewed-by: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker <ilmari@ilmari.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2017-03-27 08:18:22 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 19f7e1a7f7 psql: Add missing schema qualification 2017-03-25 00:49:08 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 7b504eb282 Implement multivariate n-distinct coefficients
Add support for explicitly declared statistic objects (CREATE
STATISTICS), allowing collection of statistics on more complex
combinations that individual table columns.  Companion commands DROP
STATISTICS and ALTER STATISTICS ... OWNER TO / SET SCHEMA / RENAME are
added too.  All this DDL has been designed so that more statistic types
can be added later on, such as multivariate most-common-values and
multivariate histograms between columns of a single table, leaving room
for permitting columns on multiple tables, too, as well as expressions.

This commit only adds support for collection of n-distinct coefficient
on user-specified sets of columns in a single table.  This is useful to
estimate number of distinct groups in GROUP BY and DISTINCT clauses;
estimation errors there can cause over-allocation of memory in hashed
aggregates, for instance, so it's a worthwhile problem to solve.  A new
special pseudo-type pg_ndistinct is used.

(num-distinct estimation was deemed sufficiently useful by itself that
this is worthwhile even if no further statistic types are added
immediately; so much so that another version of essentially the same
functionality was submitted by Kyotaro Horiguchi:
https://postgr.es/m/20150828.173334.114731693.horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp
though this commit does not use that code.)

Author: Tomas Vondra.  Some code rework by Álvaro.
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed, David Rowley, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Jeff Janes,
    Ideriha Takeshi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/543AFA15.4080608@fuzzy.cz
    https://postgr.es/m/20170320190220.ixlaueanxegqd5gr@alvherre.pgsql
2017-03-24 14:06:10 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut eccfef81e1 ICU support
Add a column collprovider to pg_collation that determines which library
provides the collation data.  The existing choices are default and libc,
and this adds an icu choice, which uses the ICU4C library.

The pg_locale_t type is changed to a union that contains the
provider-specific locale handles.  Users of locale information are
changed to look into that struct for the appropriate handle to use.

Also add a collversion column that records the version of the collation
when it is created, and check at run time whether it is still the same.
This detects potentially incompatible library upgrades that can corrupt
indexes and other structures.  This is currently only supported by
ICU-provided collations.

initdb initializes the default collation set as before from the `locale
-a` output but also adds all available ICU locales with a "-x-icu"
appended.

Currently, ICU-provided collations can only be explicitly named
collations.  The global database locales are still always libc-provided.

ICU support is enabled by configure --with-icu.

Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
2017-03-23 15:28:48 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 50c956add8 Remove createlang and droplang
They have been deprecated since PostgreSQL 9.1.

Reviewed-by: Magnus Hagander <magnus@hagander.net>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2017-03-23 14:16:45 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 7c4f52409a Logical replication support for initial data copy
Add functionality for a new subscription to copy the initial data in the
tables and then sync with the ongoing apply process.

For the copying, add a new internal COPY option to have the COPY source
data provided by a callback function.  The initial data copy works on
the subscriber by receiving COPY data from the publisher and then
providing it locally into a COPY that writes to the destination table.

A WAL receiver can now execute full SQL commands.  This is used here to
obtain information about tables and publications.

Several new options were added to CREATE and ALTER SUBSCRIPTION to
control whether and when initial table syncing happens.

Change pg_dump option --no-create-subscription-slots to
--no-subscription-connect and use the new CREATE SUBSCRIPTION
... NOCONNECT option for that.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
Tested-by: Erik Rijkers <er@xs4all.nl>
2017-03-23 08:55:37 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 96a7128b7b Sync pg_dump and pg_dumpall output
Before exiting any files are fsync'ed. A --no-sync option is also
provided for a faster exit if desired.

Michael Paquier.

Reviewed by Albe Laurenz

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqS1uZ=Ov+UruW6jr3vB-S_DLVMPc0dQpV-fTDjmm0ZQMg@mail.gmail.com
2017-03-22 10:20:13 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 05227e0c34 pg_dump: Only dump publications when dumping everything
Don't dump publications with pg_dump -t or similar cases that select
specific groups of objects.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-03-21 23:34:40 -04:00
Stephen Frost de34123834 pg_dump: Skip COLLATION-related regression tests
Not every platform supports non-default collations, as pointed out by
the buildfarm, so skip collation-related regression tests in pg_dump
when they aren't supported.
2017-03-19 16:56:14 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 839da3c7d9 Update obsolete comment
Commit ff27db5d changed this function to no longer return the start
position, but forgot the comment.
2017-03-19 17:07:27 +01:00
Stephen Frost 805e8bc702 Adjust number of tests for pg_dump 001_basic.pl
When removing a test, need to make sure the count of tests is adjusted
when it isn't calculated.
2017-03-18 13:53:29 -04:00
Stephen Frost 5abda5a3e9 pg_dump: Remove "option requires an argument -- j" test
This is really testing getopt more than pg_dump, and what getopt returns
exactly appears to differ based on platform, so remove this test.

Per buildfarm.
2017-03-18 13:46:45 -04:00
Stephen Frost 31a8b77a92 Improve pg_dump regression tests and code coverage
These improvements bring the lines-of-code coverage of pg_dump.c up to
87.7% (at least using LCOV 1.12, 1.11 seems to differ slightly).  Nearly
every function is covered, three of the four which aren't are only
called when talking to older PG instances.

There is more which can, and should, be done here to improve the
coverage but it's past time to see what the buildfarm thinks of this.

What has been added:

- Coverage for many more command-line options
- Use command_fails_like instead of command_exit_is
- Operator classes, operator families
- Text search configuration, templates, parsers, dictionaries
- FDWs, servers, foreign tables
- Materialized views
- Improved Publications / Subscriptions test (though this needs work,
  see PG10 open items and tests marked with XXX in 002_pg_dump.pl)
- Unlogged tables
- Partitioned tables
- Additional ACL testing for various object types

There is room for improvement, specifically:

- Various type-based option (alignment, storage, etc)
- Composite type collation
- Extra Procedural language functions (inline, validator)
- Different function options (SRF, Transform, config, security definer,
  cost, leakproof)
- OpClass options (default, storage, order by, recheck)
- OpFamily options (order by, recheck)
- Aggregate functions (combinefunc, serialfunc, deserialfunc, etc)
- Text Search parser 'headline'
- Text Search template 'init'
- FDW options (handler, validator, options)
- Server options (type, version, options)
- User mapping options
- Default ACLs for sequences, types
- Security labels
- View circular dependencies (last function that needs coverage)
- Toast table autovacuum options
- Replica identity options
- Independent indexes (plus marking them as clustered on)
- Deferrable / initially deferred constraints
- Independent domain constraints

There's bits of extension pg_dump'ing also not covered, but those will
need to go into test_pg_dump (such as having a filter for config
tables).

Last, but not least, this approximately halves the number of tests run
with 'ok()' by removing the ok()-based checking of if all runs are
covered by each test.  Instead, 002_pg_dump.pl will just exit out in
such a case (with a message in the log file).  In general, when adding
tests, cover all runs unless there is a very good reason not to (such as
adding a 'catch-all' case).  With these changes, the resulting output
and number of "tests" run is actually reduced.
2017-03-18 13:18:24 -04:00
Robert Haas 88e66d193f Rename "pg_clog" directory to "pg_xact".
Names containing the letters "log" sometimes confuse users into
believing that only non-critical data is present.  It is hoped
this renaming will discourage ill-considered removals of transaction
status data.

Michael Paquier

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmoa9xFQyjRZupbdEFuwUerFTvC6HjZq1ud6GYragGDFFgA@mail.gmail.com
2017-03-17 09:48:38 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut d7d77f3825 psql: Add completion for \help DROP|ALTER
While \help CREATE would complete usefully, \help DROP or \help ALTER
did not complete anything.

Expand the list of things after CREATE and DROP to cover ALTER as well,
and use that for the ALTER completion.  Also make minor tweaks to that
list.

Also add support for completing \help on multiword commands like CREATE
TEXT SEARCH ...

Author: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
2017-03-16 18:56:27 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut eb4da3e380 Add option to control snapshot export to CREATE_REPLICATION_SLOT
We used to export snapshots unconditionally in CREATE_REPLICATION_SLOT
in the replication protocol, but several upcoming patches want more
control over what happens.

Suppress snapshot export in pg_recvlogical, which neither needs nor can
use the exported snapshot.  Since snapshot exporting can fail this
improves reliability.

This also paves the way for allowing the creation of replication slots
on standbys, which cannot export snapshots because they cannot allocate
new XIDs.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-03-14 17:34:22 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a47b38c9ee Spelling fixes
From: Josh Soref <jsoref@gmail.com>
2017-03-14 12:58:39 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut f97a028d8e Spelling fixes in code comments
From: Josh Soref <jsoref@gmail.com>
2017-03-14 12:58:39 -04:00
Tom Lane 895e36bb3f Add a "void *" passthrough pointer for psqlscan.l's callback functions.
The immediate motivation for this is to provide clean infrastructure
for the proposed \if...\endif patch for psql; but it seems like a good
thing to have even if that patch doesn't get in.  Previously the callback
functions could only make use of application-global state, which is a
pretty severe handicap.

For the moment, the pointer is only passed through to the get_variable
callback function.  I considered also passing it to the write_error
callback, but for now let's not.  Neither psql nor pgbench has a use
for that, and in the case of psql we'd have to invent a separate wrapper
function because we would certainly not want to change the signature of
psql_error().

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10108.1489418309@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-03-13 17:14:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut d69fae203c initdb: Re-add translatable string that got lost 2017-03-13 09:10:49 -04:00
Tom Lane 835cc11367 Fix typo in initdb's SCRAM password processing.
Noted by Coverity (a rather impressive catch).

Michael Paquier
2017-03-12 15:57:03 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut de75281637 pg_dump: Fix dumping of publications
Dumping a publication with more than one table crashed pg_dump.

patch by Amit Langote <Langote_Amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp>, test by me
2017-03-10 15:31:47 -05:00
Tom Lane f39ddd8436 Sanitize newlines in object names in "pg_restore -l" output.
Commits 89e0bac86 et al replaced newlines with spaces in object names
printed in SQL comments, but we neglected to consider that the same
names are also printed by "pg_restore -l", and a newline would render
the output unparseable by "pg_restore -L".  Apply the same replacement
in "-l" output.  Since "pg_restore -L" doesn't actually examine any
object names, only the dump ID field that starts each line, this is
enough to fix things for its purposes.

The previous fix was treated as a security issue, and we might have
done that here as well, except that the issue was reported publicly
to start with.  Anyway it's hard to see how this could be exploited
for SQL injection; "pg_restore -L" doesn't do much with the file
except parse it for leading integers.

Per bug #14587 from Milos Urbanek.  Back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170310155318.1425.30483@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-03-10 14:15:09 -05:00
Tom Lane a83e4b4f31 Un-break things on IPv6-less platforms.
Commit be37c2120 forgot to teach initdb about commenting out the IPv6
replication entry that it caused to exist in pg_hba.conf.sample.
Per buildfarm.
2017-03-10 12:17:56 -05:00
Tom Lane fcd778eb70 Fix hard-coded relkind constants in assorted src/bin files.
Although it's reasonable to expect that most of these constants will
never change, that does not make it good programming style to hard-code
the value rather than using the RELKIND_FOO macros.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11145.1488931324@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-03-09 22:42:16 -05:00
Tom Lane 395bfaae8e Fix hard-coded relkind constants in psql/describe.c.
Although it's reasonable to expect that most of these constants will
never change, that does not make it good programming style to hard-code
the value rather than using the RELKIND_FOO macros.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11145.1488931324@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-03-09 20:45:59 -05:00
Tom Lane fe797b4a6a Fix hard-coded relkind constants in pg_dump.c.
Although it's reasonable to expect that most of these constants will
never change, that does not make it good programming style to hard-code
the value rather than using the RELKIND_FOO macros.  There were only
a few such violations, and all relatively new AFAICT.

Existing style is mostly to inject relkind values into constructed
query strings using %c.  I did not bother to touch places that did it
like that, but really a better technique is to stringify the RELKIND
macro, at least in places where you'd want single quotes around the
code character.  That avoids any runtime effort and keeps the RELKIND
symbol close to where it's used.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11145.1488931324@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-03-09 19:19:25 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut be37c2120a Enable replication connections by default in pg_hba.conf
initdb now initializes a pg_hba.conf that allows replication connections
from the local host, same as it does for regular connections.  The
connecting user still needs to have the REPLICATION attribute or be a
superuser.

The intent is to allow pg_basebackup from the local host to succeed
without requiring additional configuration.

Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com> and me
2017-03-09 08:39:44 -05:00
Tom Lane a72f0365db Fix inclusions of c.h from .h files.
We have a project policy that every .c file should start by including
postgres.h, postgres_fe.h, or c.h as appropriate; and then there is no
need for any .h file to explicitly include any of these.  Fix a few
headers that were violating this policy by including c.h.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2zCoeq3QxVwhS5DFeUh=yU6z81pbWMgfOB8OzyiBwxzw@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11634.1488932128@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-03-08 20:58:17 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 911244610c pg_waldump: Remove extra newline in error message
fatal_error() already prints out a trailing newline.
2017-03-08 10:08:32 -05:00
Tom Lane ef26623944 Fix pgbench's failure to honor the documented long-form option "--builtin".
Not only did it not accept --builtin as a synonym for -b, but what it did
accept as a synonym was --tpc-b (huh?), which it got even further wrong
by marking as no_argument, so that if you did try that you got a core
dump.  I suppose this is leftover from some early design for the new
switches added by commit 8bea3d221, but it's still pretty sloppy work.

Per bug #14580 from Stepan Pesternikov.  Back-patch to 9.6 where the
error was introduced.

Report: https://postgr.es/m/20170307123347.25054.73207@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-03-07 11:36:42 -05:00
Stephen Frost b2678efd43 psql: Add \gx command
It can often be useful to use expanded mode output (\x) for just a
single query.  Introduce a \gx which acts exactly like \g except that it
will force expanded output mode for that one \gx call.  This is simpler
than having to use \x as a toggle and also means that the user doesn't
have to worry about the current state of the expanded variable, or
resetting it later, to ensure a given query is always returned in
expanded mode.

Primairly Christoph's patch, though I did tweak the documentation and help
text a bit, and re-indented the tab completion section.

Author: Christoph Berg
Reviewed By: Daniel Verite
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170127132737.6skslelaf4txs6iw%40msg.credativ.de
2017-03-07 09:31:52 -05:00
Simon Riggs 9a83d56b38 Allow pg_dumpall to dump roles w/o user passwords
Add new option --no-role-passwords which dumps roles without passwords.
Since we don’t need passwords, we choose to use pg_roles in preference
to pg_authid since access may be restricted for security reasons in
some configrations.

Robins Tharakan and Simon Riggs
2017-03-07 22:00:54 +08:00
Heikki Linnakangas 818fd4a67d Support SCRAM-SHA-256 authentication (RFC 5802 and 7677).
This introduces a new generic SASL authentication method, similar to the
GSS and SSPI methods. The server first tells the client which SASL
authentication mechanism to use, and then the mechanism-specific SASL
messages are exchanged in AuthenticationSASLcontinue and PasswordMessage
messages. Only SCRAM-SHA-256 is supported at the moment, but this allows
adding more SASL mechanisms in the future, without changing the overall
protocol.

Support for channel binding, aka SCRAM-SHA-256-PLUS is left for later.

The SASLPrep algorithm, for pre-processing the password, is not yet
implemented. That could cause trouble, if you use a password with
non-ASCII characters, and a client library that does implement SASLprep.
That will hopefully be added later.

Authorization identities, as specified in the SCRAM-SHA-256 specification,
are ignored. SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION provides more or less the same
functionality, anyway.

If a user doesn't exist, perform a "mock" authentication, by constructing
an authentic-looking challenge on the fly. The challenge is derived from
a new system-wide random value, "mock authentication nonce", which is
created at initdb, and stored in the control file. We go through these
motions, in order to not give away the information on whether the user
exists, to unauthenticated users.

Bumps PG_CONTROL_VERSION, because of the new field in control file.

Patch by Michael Paquier and Heikki Linnakangas, reviewed at different
stages by Robert Haas, Stephen Frost, David Steele, Aleksander Alekseev,
and many others.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAB7nPqRbR3GmFYdedCAhzukfKrgBLTLtMvENOmPrVWREsZkF8g%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAB7nPqSMXU35g%3DW9X74HVeQp0uvgJxvYOuA4A-A3M%2B0wfEBv-w%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/55192AFE.6080106@iki.fi
2017-03-07 14:25:40 +02:00
Stephen Frost 330b84d8c4 pg_dump: Properly handle public schema ACLs with --clean
pg_dump has always handled the public schema in a special way when it
comes to the "--clean" option.  To wit, we do not drop or recreate the
public schema in "normal" mode, but when we are run in "--clean" mode
then we do drop and recreate the public schema.

When running in "--clean" mode, the public schema is dropped and then
recreated and it is recreated with the normal schema-default privileges
of "nothing".  This is unlike how the public schema starts life, which
is to have CREATE and USAGE GRANT'd to the PUBLIC role, and that is what
is recorded in pg_init_privs.

Due to this, in "--clean" mode, pg_dump would mistakenly only dump out
the set of privileges required to go from the initdb-time privileges on
the public schema to whatever the current-state privileges are.  If the
privileges were not changed from initdb time, then no privileges would
be dumped out for the public schema, but with the schema being dropped
and recreated, the result was that the public schema would have no ACLs
on it instead of what it should have, which is the initdb-time
privileges.

Practically speaking, this meant that pg_dump with --clean mode dumping
a database where the ACLs on the public schema were not changed from the
default would, upon restore, result in a public schema with *no*
privileges GRANT'd, not matching the state of the existing database
(where the initdb-time privileges would have been CREATE and USAGE to
the PUBLIC role for the public schema).

To fix, adjust the query in getNamespaces() to ignore the pg_init_privs
entry for the public schema when running in "--clean" mode, meaning that
the privileges for the public schema would be dumped, correctly, as if
it was going from a newly-created schema to the current state (which is,
indeed, what will happen during the restore thanks to the DROP/CREATE).

Only the public schema is handled in this special way by pg_dump, no
other initdb-time objects are dropped/recreated in --clean mode.

Back-patch to 9.6 where the bug was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3534542.o3cNaKiDID%40techfox
2017-03-06 23:29:02 -05:00
Tom Lane 299990ba16 Repair incorrect pg_dump labeling for some comments and security labels.
We attached no schema label to comments for procedural languages, casts,
transforms, operator classes, operator families, or text search objects.
The first three categories of objects don't really have schemas, but
pg_dump treats them as if they do, and it seems like the TocEntry fields
for their comments had better match the TocEntry fields for the parent
objects.  (As an example of a possible hazard, the type names in a CAST
will be formatted with the assumption of a particular search_path, so
failing to ensure that this same path is active for the COMMENT ON command
could lead to an error or to attaching the comment to the wrong cast.)
In the last six cases, this was a flat-out error --- possibly mine to
begin with, but it was a long time ago.

The security label for a procedural language was likewise not correctly
labeled as to schema, and both the comment and security label for a
procedural language were not correctly labeled as to owner.

In simple cases the restore would accidentally work correctly anyway, since
these comments and security labels would normally get emitted right after
the owning object, and so the search path and active user would be correct
anyhow.  But it could fail in corner cases; for example a schema-selective
restore would omit comments it should include.

Giuseppe Broccolo noted the oversight, and proposed the correct fix, for
text search dictionary objects; I found the rest by cross-checking other
dumpComment() calls.  These oversights are ancient, so back-patch all
the way.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFzmHiWwwzLjzwM4x5ki5s_PDMR6NrkipZkjNnO3B0xEpBgJaA@mail.gmail.com
2017-03-06 19:33:59 -05:00
Stephen Frost ff992c074e pg_upgrade: Fix large object COMMENTS, SECURITY LABELS
When performing a pg_upgrade, we copy the files behind pg_largeobject
and pg_largeobject_metadata, allowing us to avoid having to dump out and
reload the actual data for large objects and their ACLs.

Unfortunately, that isn't all of the information which can be associated
with large objects.  Currently, we also support COMMENTs and SECURITY
LABELs with large objects and these were being silently dropped during a
pg_upgrade as pg_dump would skip everything having to do with a large
object and pg_upgrade only copied the tables mentioned to the new
cluster.

As the file copies happen after the catalog dump and reload, we can't
simply include the COMMENTs and SECURITY LABELs in pg_dump's binary-mode
output but we also have to include the actual large object definition as
well.  With the definition, comments, and security labels in the pg_dump
output and the file copies performed by pg_upgrade, all of the data and
metadata associated with large objects is able to be successfully pulled
forward across a pg_upgrade.

In 9.6 and master, we can simply adjust the dump bitmask to indicate
which components we don't want.  In 9.5 and earlier, we have to put
explciit checks in in dumpBlob() and dumpBlobs() to not include the ACL
or the data when in binary-upgrade mode.

Adjustments made to the privileges regression test to allow another test
(large_object.sql) to be added which explicitly leaves a large object
with a comment in place to provide coverage of that case with
pg_upgrade.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170221162655.GE9812@tamriel.snowman.net
2017-03-06 17:03:57 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut d77ff69341 pg_dump: Fix ordering
Materialized views refresh should be last.

From: Jim Nasby <Jim.Nasby@BlueTreble.com>
2017-03-04 14:47:27 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 6f236e1eb8 psql: Add tab completion for logical replication
Add tab completion for publications and subscriptions.  Also, to be able
to get a list of subscriptions, make pg_subscription world-readable but
revoke access to subconninfo using column privileges.

From: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-03-03 14:13:48 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 6da9759a03 Add RENAME support for PUBLICATIONs and SUBSCRIPTIONs
From: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-03-03 10:47:04 -05:00
Robert Haas 19dc233c32 Add pg_current_logfile() function.
The syslogger will write out the current stderr and csvlog names, if
it's running and there are any, to a new file in the data directory
called "current_logfiles".  We take care to remove this file when it
might no longer be valid (but not at shutdown).  The function
pg_current_logfile() can be used to read the entries in the file.

Gilles Darold, reviewed and modified by Karl O.  Pinc, Michael
Paquier, and me.  Further review by Álvaro Herrera and Christoph Berg.
2017-03-03 11:43:11 +05:30
Peter Eisentraut 788af6f854 Move atooid() definition to a central place 2017-03-01 11:55:28 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut b5a388392d psql: Add tab completion for DEALLOCATE
EXECUTE already tab-completes the list of prepared statements, but
DEALLOCATE was missing.

From: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker <ilmari@ilmari.org>
2017-03-01 08:51:57 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 1513dbea7f Add missing progname prefix to some messages
Author: Michael Banck
2017-02-26 21:32:00 +01:00
Magnus Hagander 51e26c9c3d Clarify the role of checkpoint at the begininng of base backups
Output a message about checkpoint starting in verbose mode of
pg_basebackup, and make the documentation state more clearly that this
happens.

Author: Michael Banck
2017-02-26 21:31:54 +01:00
Robert Haas 9d1fb11a95 Basic tab completion for partitioning.
Amit Langote

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobYOj=A8GesiEs_V2Wq46-_w0+7MOwPiNWC+iuzJ-uWjA@mail.gmail.com
2017-02-26 22:54:56 +05:30
Tom Lane 2bd7f85796 Remove some configure header-file checks that we weren't really using.
We had some AC_CHECK_HEADER tests that were really wastes of cycles,
because the code proceeded to #include those headers unconditionally
anyway, in all or a large majority of cases.  The lack of complaints
shows that those headers are available on every platform of interest,
so we might as well let configure run a bit faster by not probing
those headers at all.

I suspect that some of the tests I left alone are equally useless, but
since all the existing #includes of the remaining headers are properly
guarded, I didn't touch them.
2017-02-25 18:10:09 -05:00
Tom Lane 9e3755ecb2 Remove useless duplicate inclusions of system header files.
c.h #includes a number of core libc header files, such as <stdio.h>.
There's no point in re-including these after having read postgres.h,
postgres_fe.h, or c.h; so remove code that did so.

While at it, also fix some places that were ignoring our standard pattern
of "include postgres[_fe].h, then system header files, then other Postgres
header files".  While there's not any great magic in doing it that way
rather than system headers last, it's silly to have just a few files
deviating from the general pattern.  (But I didn't attempt to enforce this
globally, only in files I was touching anyway.)

I'd be the first to say that this is mostly compulsive neatnik-ism,
but over time it might save enough compile cycles to be useful.
2017-02-25 16:12:55 -05:00
Tom Lane c29aff959d Consistently declare timestamp variables as TimestampTz.
Twiddle the replication-related code so that its timestamp variables
are declared TimestampTz, rather than the uninformative "int64" that
was previously used for meant-to-be-always-integer timestamps.
This resolves the int64-vs-TimestampTz declaration inconsistencies
introduced by commit 7c030783a, though in the opposite direction to
what was originally suggested.

This required including datatype/timestamp.h in a couple more places
than before.  I decided it would be a good idea to slim down that
header by not having it pull in <float.h> etc, as those headers are
no longer at all relevant to its purpose.  Unsurprisingly, a small number
of .c files turn out to have been depending on those inclusions, so add
them back in the .c files as needed.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26788.1487455319@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/27694.1487456324@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-23 15:57:08 -05:00
Tom Lane b9d092c962 Remove now-dead code for !HAVE_INT64_TIMESTAMP.
This is a basically mechanical removal of #ifdef HAVE_INT64_TIMESTAMP
tests and the negative-case controlled code.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26788.1487455319@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-23 14:04:43 -05:00
Tom Lane d28aafb6dd Remove pg_control's enableIntTimes field.
We don't need it any more.

pg_controldata continues to report that date/time type storage is
"64-bit integers", but that's now a hard-wired behavior not something
it sees in the data.  This avoids breaking pg_upgrade, and perhaps other
utilities that inspect pg_control this way.  Ditto for pg_resetwal.

I chose to remove the "bigint_timestamps" output column of
pg_control_init(), though, as that function hasn't been around long
and probably doesn't have ossified users.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26788.1487455319@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-23 12:23:12 -05:00
Tom Lane 65d508fd4d Suppress "unused variable" warnings with older versions of flex.
Versions of flex before 2.5.36 might generate code that results in an
"unused variable" warning, when using %option reentrant.  Historically
we've worked around that by specifying -Wno-error, but that's an
unsatisfying solution.  The official "fix" for this was just to insert a
dummy reference to the variable, so write a small perl script that edits
the generated C code similarly.

The MSVC side of this is untested, but the buildfarm should soon reveal
if I broke that.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25456.1487437842@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-19 13:04:30 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 1a16af8b35 Fix help message for pg_basebackup -R
The recovery.conf file that's generated is specifically for replication,
and not needed (or wanted) for regular backup restore, so indicate that
in the message.
2017-02-18 13:45:52 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 363ac78aee pg_dump: Message style improvements 2017-02-17 18:58:55 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 39370e6a0a pg_dump: Fix typo in query
This could lead to incorrect dumping of language privileges in some
cases, which is probably a rare situation.
2017-02-17 15:06:28 -05:00
Tom Lane a5d4e3ff79 Fix tab completion for "ALTER SYSTEM SET variable ...".
It wouldn't complete "TO" after the variable name, which is certainly
minor enough.  But since we do complete "TO" after "SET variable ...",
and since this case used to work pre-9.6, I think this is a bug.

Also, fix the query used to collect the variable names; whoever last
touched it evidently didn't understand how the pieces are supposed
to fit together.  It accidentally worked anyway, because readline
ignores irrelevant completions, but it was randomly unlike the ones
around it, and could be a source of actual bugs if someone copied
it as a prototype for another query.
2017-02-15 15:23:19 -05:00
Robert Haas b877761123 pg_upgrade: Fix problems caused by renaming pg_resetxlog.
Commit 85c11324ca renamed pg_resetxlog
to pg_resetwal, but didn't make pg_upgrade smart enough to cope with
the situation.

Michael Paquier, per a complaint from Jeff Janes
2017-02-15 10:14:16 -05:00
Robert Haas 8da9a22636 Split index xlog headers from other private index headers.
The xlog-specific headers need to be included in both frontend code -
specifically, pg_waldump - and the backend, but the remainder of the
private headers for each index are only needed by the backend.  By
splitting the xlog stuff out into separate headers, pg_waldump pulls
in fewer backend headers, which is a good thing.

Patch by me, reviewed by Michael Paquier and Andres Freund, per a
complaint from Dilip Kumar.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoZ=F=GkxV0YEv-A8tb+AEGy_Qa7GSiJ8deBKFATnzfEug@mail.gmail.com
2017-02-14 15:37:59 -05:00
Fujii Masao 0dfa89ba29 Replace reference to "xlog-method" with "wal-method" in error message.
Commit 62e8b38 renamed "--xlog-method" option for pg_basebackup to
"--wal-method", but forgot to update the error message mentioning that option.
2017-02-15 01:26:44 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 2ea5b06c7a Add CREATE SEQUENCE AS <data type> clause
This stores a data type, required to be an integer type, with the
sequence.  The sequences min and max values default to the range
supported by the type, and they cannot be set to values exceeding that
range.  The internal implementation of the sequence is not affected.

Change the serial types to create sequences of the appropriate type.
This makes sure that the min and max values of the sequence for a serial
column match the range of values supported by the table column.  So the
sequence can no longer overflow the table column.

This also makes monitoring for sequence exhaustion/wraparound easier,
which currently requires various contortions to cross-reference the
sequences with the table columns they are used with.

This commit also effectively reverts the pg_sequence column reordering
in f3b421da5f, because the new seqtypid
column allows us to fill the hole in the struct and create a more
natural overall column ordering.

Reviewed-by: Steve Singer <steve@ssinger.info>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-02-10 15:34:35 -05:00
Robert Haas 62e8b38751 Rename command line options for ongoing xlog -> wal conversion.
initdb and pg_basebackup now have a --waldir option rather --xlogdir,
and pg_basebackup now has --wal-method rather than --xlog-method.
2017-02-09 16:42:51 -05:00
Robert Haas 85c11324ca Rename user-facing tools with "xlog" in the name to say "wal".
This means pg_receivexlog because pg_receivewal, pg_resetxlog
becomes pg_resetwal, and pg_xlogdump becomes pg_waldump.
2017-02-09 16:23:46 -05:00
Robert Haas 806091c96f Remove all references to "xlog" from SQL-callable functions in pg_proc.
Commit f82ec32ac3 renamed the pg_xlog
directory to pg_wal.  To make things consistent, and because "xlog" is
terrible terminology for either "transaction log" or "write-ahead log"
rename all SQL-callable functions that contain "xlog" in the name to
instead contain "wal".  (Note that this may pose an upgrade hazard for
some users.)

Similarly, rename the xlog_position argument of the functions that
create slots to be called wal_position.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CA+Tgmob=YmA=H3DbW1YuOXnFVgBheRmyDkWcD9M8f=5bGWYEoQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-02-09 15:10:09 -05:00
Robert Haas a507b86900 Add WAL consistency checking facility.
When the new GUC wal_consistency_checking is set to a non-empty value,
it triggers recording of additional full-page images, which are
compared on the standby against the results of applying the WAL record
(without regard to those full-page images).  Allowable differences
such as hints are masked out, and the resulting pages are compared;
any difference results in a FATAL error on the standby.

Kuntal Ghosh, based on earlier patches by Michael Paquier and Heikki
Linnakangas.  Extensively reviewed and revised by Michael Paquier and
by me, with additional reviews and comments from Amit Kapila, Álvaro
Herrera, Simon Riggs, and Peter Eisentraut.
2017-02-08 15:45:30 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut afcb0c97ef Add missing newline to error messages
Also improve the message style a bit while we're here.
2017-02-06 09:47:39 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 181bdb90ba Fix typos in comments.
Backpatch to all supported versions, where applicable, to make backpatching
of future fixes go more smoothly.

Josh Soref

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CACZqfqCf+5qRztLPgmmosr-B0Ye4srWzzw_mo4c_8_B_mtjmJQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-02-06 11:33:58 +02:00
Tom Lane fd6cd69803 Clean up psql's behavior for a few more control variables.
Modify FETCH_COUNT to always have a defined value, like other control
variables, mainly so it will always appear in "\set" output.

Add hooks to force HISTSIZE to be defined and require it to have an
integer value.  (I don't see any point in allowing it to be set to
non-integral values.)

Add hooks to force IGNOREEOF to be defined and require it to have an
integer value.  Unlike the other cases, here we're trying to be
bug-compatible with a rather bogus externally-defined behavior, so I think
we need to continue to allow "\set IGNOREEOF whatever".  Fix it so that
the substitution hook silently replace non-numeric values with "10",
so that the stored value always reflects what we're really doing.

Add a dummy assign hook for HISTFILE, just so it's always in
variables.c's list.  We can't require it to be defined always, because
that would break the interaction with the PSQL_HISTORY environment
variable, so there isn't any change in visible behavior here.

Remove tab-complete.c's private list of known variable names, since that's
really a maintenance nuisance.  Given the preceding changes, there are no
control variables it won't show anyway.  This does mean that if for some
reason you've unset one of the status variables (DBNAME, HOST, etc), that
variable would not appear in tab completion for \set.  But I think that's
fine, for at least two reasons: we shouldn't be encouraging people to use
those variables as regular variables, and if someone does do so anyway,
why shouldn't it act just like a regular variable?

Remove ugly and no-longer-used-anywhere GetVariableNum().  In general,
future additions of integer-valued control variables should follow the
paradigm of adding an assign hook using ParseVariableNum(), so there's
no reason to expect we'd need this again later.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17516.1485973973@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-02 20:16:17 -05:00
Tom Lane c3e3844a92 Make psql's \set display variables in alphabetical order.
"\set" with no arguments displays all defined variables, but it does so
in the order that they appear in variables.c's list, which previously
was mostly creation order.  That makes the list ugly and hard to find
things in, and it exposes some psql implementation details to users.
(For instance, ordinary variables will move to the bottom of the list
if unset and set again, but variables that have hooks won't.)

Fix that by keeping the list in alphabetical order at all times, which
isn't much more complicated than breaking out of the insertion search
loops once we reach an entry that should be after the one to be inserted.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/31785.1485900786@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-01 11:25:19 -05:00
Tom Lane 86322dc7e0 Improve psql's behavior for \set and \unset of its control variables.
This commit improves on the results of commit 511ae628f in two ways:

1. It restores the historical behavior that "\set FOO" is interpreted
as setting FOO to "on", if FOO is a boolean control variable.  We
already found one test script that was expecting that behavior, and
the psql documentation certainly does nothing to discourage people
from assuming that would work, since it often says just "if FOO is set"
when describing the effects of a boolean variable.  However, now this
case will result in actually setting FOO to "on", not an empty string.

2. It arranges for an "\unset" of a control variable to set the value
back to its default value, rather than becoming apparently undefined.
The control variables are also initialized that way at psql startup.

In combination, these things guarantee that a control variable always
has a displayable value that reflects what psql is actually doing.
That is a pretty substantial usability improvement.

The implementation involves adding a second type of variable hook function
that is able to replace a proposed new value (including NULL) with another
one.  We could alternatively have complicated the API of the assign hook,
but this way seems better since many variables can share the same
substitution hook function.

Also document the actual behavior of these variables more fully,
including covering assorted behaviors that were there before but
never documented.

This patch also includes some minor cleanup that should have been in
511ae628f but was missed.

Patch by me, but it owes a lot to discussions with Daniel Vérité.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9572.1485821620@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-02-01 11:02:40 -05:00
Stephen Frost e2090d9d20 pg_dump: Fix handling of ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
In commit 23f34fa, we changed how ACLs were handled to use the new
pg_init_privs catalog and to dump out the ACL commands as REVOKE+GRANT
combinations instead of trying to REVOKE all rights always and then
GRANT back just the ones which were in place.

Unfortunately, the DEFAULT PRIVILEGES system didn't quite get the
correct treatment with this change and ended up (incorrectly) only
including positive GRANTs instead of both the REVOKEs and GRANTs
necessary to preserve the correct privileges.

There are only a couple cases where such REVOKEs are possible because,
generally speaking, there's few rights which exist on objects by
default to be revoked.

Examples of REVOKEs which weren't being correctly preserved are when
privileges are REVOKE'd from the creator/owner, like so:

ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
  FOR ROLE myrole
  REVOKE SELECT ON TABLES FROM myrole;

or when other default privileges are being revoked, such as EXECUTE
rights granted to public for functions:

ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
  FOR ROLE myrole
  REVOKE EXECUTE ON FUNCTIONS FROM PUBLIC;

Fix this by correctly working out what the correct REVOKE statements are
(if any) and dump them out, just as we do for everything else.

Noticed while developing additional regression tests for pg_dump, which
will be landing shortly.

Back-patch to 9.6 where the bug was introduced.
2017-01-31 16:24:11 -05:00
Stephen Frost 6af8b89adb perltidy pg_dump TAP tests
The pg_dump TAP tests have gotten pretty far from what perltidy thinks
they should be, so fix that, and in passing use long-form argument names
with arguments passed via "=" in a similar vein to 58da833.

No functional changes here, just whitespace and changing runs from
"-f" to "--file=", and similar.
2017-01-31 12:42:16 -05:00
Tom Lane 511ae628f3 Make psql reject attempts to set special variables to invalid values.
Previously, if the user set a special variable such as ECHO to an
unrecognized value, psql would bleat but store the new value anyway, and
then fall back to a default setting for the behavior controlled by the
variable.  This was agreed to be a not particularly good idea.  With
this patch, invalid values result in an error message and no change in
state.

(But this applies only to variables that affect psql's behavior; purely
informational variables such as ENCODING can still be set to random
values.)

To do this, modify the API for psql's assign-hook functions so that they
can return an OK/not OK result, and give them the responsibility for
printing error messages when they reject a value.  Adjust the APIs for
ParseVariableBool and ParseVariableNum to support the new behavior
conveniently.

In passing, document the variable VERSION, which had somehow escaped that.
And improve the quite-inadequate commenting in psql/variables.c.

Daniel Vérité, reviewed by Rahila Syed, some further tweaking by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7356e741-fa59-4146-a8eb-cf95fd6b21fb@mm
2017-01-30 16:37:26 -05:00
Tom Lane 1e7c4bb004 Change unknown-type literals to type text in SELECT and RETURNING lists.
Previously, we left such literals alone if the query or subquery had
no properties forcing a type decision to be made (such as an ORDER BY or
DISTINCT clause using that output column).  This meant that "unknown" could
be an exposed output column type, which has never been a great idea because
it could result in strange failures later on.  For example, an outer query
that tried to do any operations on an unknown-type subquery output would
generally fail with some weird error like "failed to find conversion
function from unknown to text" or "could not determine which collation to
use for string comparison".  Also, if the case occurred in a CREATE VIEW's
query then the view would have an unknown-type column, causing similar
failures in queries trying to use the view.

To fix, at the tail end of parse analysis of a query, forcibly convert any
remaining "unknown" literals in its SELECT or RETURNING list to type text.
However, provide a switch to suppress that, and use it in the cases of
SELECT inside a set operation or INSERT command.  In those cases we already
had type resolution rules that make use of context information from outside
the subquery proper, and we don't want to change that behavior.

Also, change creation of an unknown-type column in a relation from a
warning to a hard error.  The error should be unreachable now in CREATE
VIEW or CREATE MATVIEW, but it's still possible to explicitly say "unknown"
in CREATE TABLE or CREATE (composite) TYPE.  We want to forbid that because
it's nothing but a foot-gun.

This change creates a pg_upgrade failure case: a matview that contains an
unknown-type column can't be pg_upgraded, because reparsing the matview's
defining query will now decide that the column is of type text, which
doesn't match the cstring-like storage that the old materialized column
would actually have.  Add a checking pass to detect that.  While at it,
we can detect tables or composite types that would fail, essentially
for free.  Those would fail safely anyway later on, but we might as
well fail earlier.

This patch is by me, but it owes something to previous investigations
by Rahila Syed.  Also thanks to Ashutosh Bapat and Michael Paquier for
review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2L28uwwbL9HUM-WR=hromW1Cvamkn7O-g8fPY2m=_7muJ0oA@mail.gmail.com
2017-01-25 09:17:24 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut da4d1c0c15 pg_dump: Fix some schema issues when dumping sequences
In the new code for selecting sequence data from pg_sequence, set the
schema to pg_catalog instead of the sequences own schema, and refer to
the sequence by OID instead of name, which was missing a schema
qualification.

Reported-by: Stephen Frost <sfrost@snowman.net>
2017-01-24 17:19:55 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 0bc1207aeb Fix default minimum value for descending sequences
For some reason that is lost in history, a descending sequence would
default its minimum value to -2^63+1 (-PG_INT64_MAX) instead of
-2^63 (PG_INT64_MIN), even though explicitly specifying a minimum value
of -2^63 would work.  Fix this inconsistency by using the full range by
default.

Reported-by: Daniel Verite <daniel@manitou-mail.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-01-23 14:00:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 366d2a3d88 pg_dump: Fix minor memory leak
Missing a destroyPQExpBuffer() in the early exit branch.  The early
exits aren't really necessary.  Most similar functions just proceed
running the rest of the code zero times and clean up at the end.
2017-01-23 08:28:39 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 5654912907 Fix typo 2017-01-23 08:26:31 -05:00
Tom Lane d2ab117616 Fix cross-shlib linking in temporary installs on HPUX 10.
Turns out this has been broken for years and we'd not noticed.  The one
case that was getting exercised in the buildfarm, or probably anywhere
else, was postgres_fdw.sl's reference to libpq.sl; and it turns out that
that was always going to libpq.sl in the actual installation directory
not the temporary install.  We'd not noticed because the buildfarm script
does "make install" before it tests contrib.  However, the recent addition
of a logical-replication test to the core regression scripts resulted in
trying to use libpqwalreceiver.sl before "make install" happens, and that
failed for lack of finding libpq.sl, as shown by failures on buildfarm
members gaur and pademelon.

There are two changes needed to fix it: the magic environment variable to
specify shlib search path at runtime is SHLIB_PATH not LD_LIBRARY_PATH,
and the shlib link command needs to specify the +s switch else the library
will not honor SHLIB_PATH.

I'm not quite sure why buildfarm members anole and gharial (HPUX 11) didn't
show the same failure.  Consulting man pages on the web says that HPUX 11
honors both LD_LIBRARY_PATH and SHLIB_PATH, which would explain half of it,
and the rather confusing wording I've been able to find suggests that +s
might effectively be the default in HPUX 11.  But it seems at least as
likely that there's just a libpq.so installed in /usr/lib on that machine;
as long as it's not too ancient, that would satisfy the test.  In any case
I do not think this patch will break HPUX 11.

At the moment I don't see a need to back-patch this, since it only matters
for testing purposes, not to mention that HPUX 10 is probably dead in the
real world anyway.
2017-01-21 15:15:39 -05:00
Tom Lane cdc2a70470 Allow backslash line continuations in pgbench's meta commands.
A pgbench meta command can now be continued onto additional line(s) of a
script file by writing backslash-return.  The continuation marker is
equivalent to white space in that it separates tokens.

Eventually it'd be nice to have the same thing in psql, but that will
be a much larger project.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Rafia Sabih

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1610031049310.19411@lancre
2017-01-20 11:10:22 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 665d1fad99 Logical replication
- Add PUBLICATION catalogs and DDL
- Add SUBSCRIPTION catalog and DDL
- Define logical replication protocol and output plugin
- Add logical replication workers

From: Petr Jelinek <petr@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Steve Singer <steve@ssinger.info>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Erik Rijkers <er@xs4all.nl>
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-01-20 09:04:49 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 8b0fec93ec initdb: Fix for mixed-case superuser names
The previous coding did not properly quote the user name before casting
it to regrole.  To avoid all that, just pass in BOOTSTRAP_SUPERUSERID
numerically.

Also fix one place where the BOOTSTRAP_SUPERUSERID was hardcoded as 10.
2017-01-19 16:17:36 -05:00
Stephen Frost bec96c82f8 Dump sequence data based on the TableDataInfo flag
When considering a sequence's Data entry in dumpSequenceData, we were
actually looking at the sequence definition's dump flag to decide if we
should dump the data or not.  That's generally fine, except for when the
sequence data entry was created by processExtensionTables() because it's
a config sequence.  In that case, the sequence itself won't be marked as
dumping data because it's part of an extension, leading to the need for
processExtensionTables() to create the sequence data entry.

This leads to extension config sequence data not being included in the
dump when it should be.  Fix this by looking at the sequence data's dump
flag instead, just as dumpTableData() was doing for tables (which is why
config tables were correctly being handled), and add a regression test
to make sure we don't break it moving forward.

All of this is a bit round-about since we can now represent which
components of a given dump item should be dumped out through the dump
flag.  A future improvement might be to change checkExtensionMembership()
to check for config sequences/tables and set the dump flag based on that
directly, possibly removing the need for processExtensionTables().

Bug found by Daniele Varrazzo.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+mi_8ZmxQM7+nZ7pJ8uyfxc9V3o=UAG14dVqvftdmvw8OJ3gQ@mail.gmail.com

Patch by Michael Paquier, with some tweaking of the regression tests by
me.

Back-patch to 9.6 where the bug was introduced.
2017-01-19 12:06:21 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut aa17c06fb5 Add function to import operating system collations
Move this logic out of initdb into a user-callable function.  This
simplifies the code and makes it possible to update the standard
collations later on if additional operating system collations appear.

Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Euler Taveira <euler@timbira.com.br>
2017-01-18 09:35:56 -05:00
Magnus Hagander cada1af31d Add compression support to pg_receivexlog
Author: Michael Paquier, review and small changes by me
2017-01-17 12:10:26 +01:00
Magnus Hagander fcf708623e Fix incorrect comparison due to bad merge
Noted by Fujii Masao
2017-01-16 18:20:57 +01:00
Magnus Hagander e7b020f786 Make pg_basebackup use temporary replication slots
Temporary replication slots will be used by default when wal streaming
is used and no slot name is specified with -S. If a slot name is
specified, then a permanent slot with that name is used. If --no-slot is
specified, then no permanent or temporary slot will be used.

Temporary slots are only used on 10.0 and newer, of course.
2017-01-16 13:56:43 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 05cd12ed5b pg_ctl: Change default to wait for all actions
The different actions in pg_ctl had different defaults for -w and -W,
mostly for historical reasons.  Most users will want the -w behavior, so
make that the default.

Remove the -w option in most example and test code, so avoid confusion
and reduce verbosity.  pg_upgrade is not touched, so it can continue to
work with older installations.

Reviewed-by: Beena Emerson <memissemerson@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Murphy <ryanfmurphy@gmail.com>
2017-01-14 09:15:08 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut e574f15d62 Updates to reflect that pg_ctl stop -m fast is the default
Various example and test code used -m fast explicitly, but since it's
the default, this can be omitted now or should be replaced by a better
example.

pg_upgrade is not touched, so it can continue to operate with older
installations.
2017-01-13 21:25:36 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 7f5b043d69 pg_upgrade: Fix for changed pg_ctl default stop mode
In 9.5, the default pg_ctl stop mode was changed from "smart" to "fast".
pg_upgrade still thought the default mode was "smart" and only specified
the mode when "fast" was asked for.  This results in using "fast" all
the time.  It's not clear what the effect in practice is, but fix it
nonetheless to restore the previous behavior.
2017-01-13 16:07:18 -05:00
Stephen Frost e72059f375 pg_restore: Don't allow non-positive number of jobs
pg_restore will currently accept invalid values for the number of
parallel jobs to run (eg: -1), unlike pg_dump which does check that the
value provided is reasonable.

Worse, '-1' is actually a valid, independent, parameter (as an alias for
--single-transaction), leading to potentially completely unexpected
results from a command line such as:

  -> pg_restore -j -1

Where a user would get neither parallel jobs nor a single-transaction.

Add in validity checking of the parallel jobs option, as we already have
in pg_dump, before we try to open up the archive.  Also move the check
that we haven't been asked to run more parallel jobs than possible on
Windows to the same place, so we do all the option validity checking
before opening the archive.

Back-patch all the way, though for 9.2 we're adding the Windows-specific
check against MAXIMUM_WAIT_OBJECTS as that check wasn't back-patched
originally.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20170110044815.GC18360%40tamriel.snowman.net
2017-01-11 15:45:50 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 73f8d73313 pg_xlogdump: document --path behavior
The previous --path documentation and --help output were wrong in both
its meaning and the defaults.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier

Backpatch-through: 9.6
2017-01-10 22:38:14 -05:00
Stephen Frost abfd0095c1 pg_dump: Strict names with no matching schema
When using pg_dump --strict-names and a schema pattern which doesn't
match any schemas (eg: --schema='nonexistant*'), we were incorrectly
throwing an error claiming no tables were found when, really, there
were no schemas found:

  -> pg_dump --strict-names --schema='nonexistant*'
  pg_dump: no matching tables were found for pattern "nonexistant*"

Fix that by changing the error message to say 'schemas' instead, since
that is what we are actually complaining about.

Noticed while testing pg_dump error cases.

Back-patch to 9.6 where --strict-names and this error message were
introduced.
2017-01-10 11:34:51 -05:00
Stephen Frost 2ef6fe9cba Fix invalid-parallel-jobs error message
Including the program name twice is not helpful:

-> pg_dump -j -1
pg_dump: pg_dump: invalid number of parallel jobs

Correct by removing the progname from the exit_horribly() call used when
validating the number of parallel jobs.

Noticed while testing various pg_dump error cases.

Back-patch to 9.3 where parallel pg_dump was added.
2017-01-09 23:09:29 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 534b6f3ef2 Use an enum instead of two bools to indicate wal inclusion in base backups
This makes the code easier to read as it becomes more explicit what the
different allowed combinations really are.

Suggested by Michael Paquier
2017-01-09 16:03:47 +01:00
Stephen Frost 9b815a8ff2 Add basic pg_dumpall/pg_restore TAP tests
For reasons unknown, pg_dumpall and pg_restore managed to escape the
basic set of TAP tests that were added for pg_dump in 6bd356c3, so
let's get them added now.  A few minor adjustments are also made to the
dump/restore tests to improve code coverage for pg_restore/pg_dumpall.
2017-01-06 16:29:31 -05:00
Stephen Frost d74ecbc8d8 Protect against NULL-dereference in pg_dump
findTableByOid() is allowed to return NULL and we should therefore be
checking for that case.  getOwnedSeqs() and dumpSequence() shouldn't
ever actually see this happen, but given odd circumstances it might and
commit f9e439b1 probably shouldn't have removed that check.

Pointed out by Coverity.  Initial patch from Michael Paquier.

Back-patch to 9.6, where that commit had removed the check.
2017-01-06 15:27:47 -05:00
Robert Haas 3633b3f656 Assorted code improvements for table partitioning.
Michael Paquier, per Coverity.
2017-01-04 15:59:00 -05:00
Simon Riggs 3e353a7bc2 Add new TAP tests for pg_recvlogical
Craig Ringer, reviewed by Euler Taveira and Naoki Okano
2017-01-04 19:06:45 +00:00
Simon Riggs 7c030783a5 Add pg_recvlogical —-endpos=LSN
Allow pg_recvlogical to specify an ending LSN, complementing
the existing -—startpos=LSN option.

Craig Ringer, reviewed by Euler Taveira and Naoki Okano
2017-01-04 19:02:07 +00:00
Magnus Hagander 9a4d51077c Make wal streaming the default mode for pg_basebackup
Since streaming is now supported for all output formats, make this the
default as this is what most people want.

To get the old behavior, the parameter -X none can be specified to turn
it off.

This also removes the parameter -x for fetch, now requiring -X fetch to
be specified to use that.

Reviewed by Vladimir Rusinov, Michael Paquier and Simon Riggs
2017-01-04 10:40:38 +01:00
Bruce Momjian 1d25779284 Update copyright via script for 2017 2017-01-03 13:48:53 -05:00
Tom Lane 67a875355e In pgbench logging, avoid assuming that instr_times match Unix timestamps.
For aggregated logging, pg_bench supposed that printing the integer part of
INSTR_TIME_GET_DOUBLE() would produce a Unix timestamp.  That was already
broken on Windows, and it's about to get broken on most other platforms as
well.  As in commit 74baa1e3b, we can remove the entanglement at the price
of one extra syscall per transaction; though here it seems more convenient
to use time(NULL) instead of gettimeofday(), since we only need
integral-second precision.

I took the time to do some wordsmithing on the documentation about
pgbench's logging features, too.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8837.1483216839@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-01-02 12:26:03 -05:00
Tom Lane 74baa1e3b8 Avoid assuming that instr_time == struct timeval in pgbench logging.
This code was presuming undue familiarity with the contents of the
instr_time struct.  That was already broken on Windows, and it's about
to get broken on most other platforms as well.  The simplest solution
that preserves the current output definition is to just do our own
gettimeofday() call here.  Realistically, the extra cost is probably
negligible in comparison to everything else that's going on in a
pgbench transaction, so it's not worth sweating over.

On Windows, the precision delivered by gettimeofday() is lower than
one could wish, but this is still a big improvement over printing
zeroes, as the code did before.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8837.1483216839@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-01-01 15:17:08 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 3ea56fffd6 Don't rename .partial files in pg_receivexlog if an error occured
In 56c7d8d the behavior to keep .partial segments around
(considered corrupt) in case an connection failure occurs was
accidentally removed. This would lead to an incomplete segment
being considered complete.

Author: Michael Paquier
2016-12-27 10:37:11 +01:00
Tom Lane a3aef88e6a Fix incorrect error reporting for duplicate data in \crosstabview.
\crosstabview's complaint about multiple entries for the same crosstab
cell quoted the wrong row and/or column values.  It would accidentally
appear to work if the data had been in strcmp() order to start with,
which probably explains how we missed noticing this during development.

This could be fixed in more than one way, but the way I chose was to
hang onto both result pointers from bsearch() and use those to get at
the value names.

In passing, avoid casting away const in the bsearch comparison functions.
No bug there, just poor style.

Per bug #14476 from Tomonari Katsumata.  Back-patch to 9.6 where
\crosstabview was introduced.

Report: https://postgr.es/m/20161225021519.10139.45460@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2016-12-25 16:04:45 -05:00
Stephen Frost 86d216c775 pg_dumpall: Include --verbose option in --help output
The -v/--verbose option was not included in the output from --help for
pg_dumpall even though it's in the pg_dumpall documentation and has
apparently been around since pg_dumpall was reimplemented in C in 2002.

Fix that by adding it.

Pointed out by Daniel Westermann.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/2020970042.4589542.1482482101585.JavaMail.zimbra%40dbi-services.com
2016-12-24 01:41:59 -05:00
Stephen Frost f3fd531a51 Fix tab completion in psql for ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
When providing tab completion for ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES, we are
including the list of roles as possible options for completion after the
GRANT or REVOKE.  Further, we accept FOR ROLE/IN SCHEMA at the same time
and in either order, but the tab completion was only working for one or
the other.  Lastly, we weren't using the actual list of allowed kinds of
objects for default privileges for completion after the 'GRANT X ON' but
instead were completeing to what 'GRANT X ON' supports, which isn't the
ssame at all.

Address these issues by improving the forward tab-completion for ALTER
DEFAULT PRIVILEGES and then constrain and correct how the tail
completion is done when it is for ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES.

Back-patch the forward/tail tab-completion to 9.6, where we made it easy
to handle such cases.

For 9.5 and earlier, correct the initial tab-completion to at least be
correct as far as it goes and then add a check for GRANT/REVOKE to only
tab-complete when the GRANT/REVOKE is the start of the command, so we
don't try to do tab-completion after we get to the GRANT/REVOKE part of
the ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES command, which is better than providing
incorrect completions.

Initial patch for master and 9.6 by Gilles Darold, though I cleaned it
up and added a few comments.  All bugs in the 9.5 and earlier patch are
mine.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/1614593c-e356-5b27-6dba-66320a9bc68b@dalibo.com
2016-12-23 21:01:29 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 3e6639a465 pg_dump: Remove obsolete handling of sequence names
There was code that attempted to check whether the sequence name stored
inside the sequence was the same as the name in pg_class.  But that code
was already ifdef'ed out, and now that the sequence no longer stores its
own name, it's altogether obsolete, so remove it.
2016-12-23 10:55:06 -05:00
Stephen Frost 2259bf672c Fix dumping of casts and transforms using built-in functions
In pg_dump.c dumpCast() and dumpTransform(), we would happily ignore the
cast or transform if it happened to use a built-in function because we
weren't including the information about built-in functions when querying
pg_proc from getFuncs().

Modify the query in getFuncs() to also gather information about
functions which are used by user-defined casts and transforms (where
"user-defined" means "has an OID >= FirstNormalObjectId").  This also
adds to the TAP regression tests for 9.6 and master to cover these
types of objects.

Back-patch all the way for casts, back to 9.5 for transforms.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20160504183952.GE10850%40tamriel.snowman.net
2016-12-21 13:47:06 -05:00
Stephen Frost 19990918d3 For 8.0 servers, get last built-in oid from pg_database
We didn't start ensuring that all built-in objects had OIDs less than
16384 until 8.1, so for 8.0 servers we still need to query the value out
of pg_database.  We need this, in particular, to distinguish which casts
were built-in and which were user-defined.

For HEAD, we only worry about going back to 8.0, for the back-branches,
we also ensure that 7.0-7.4 work.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20160504183952.GE10850%40tamriel.snowman.net
2016-12-21 13:47:06 -05:00
Fujii Masao ecbdc4c555 Forbid invalid combination of options in pg_basebackup.
Commit 56c7d8d455 allowed pg_basebackup
to stream WAL in tar mode. But there is the restriction that WAL
streaming in tar mode works only when the value - (dash) is not
specified as output directory. This means that the combination of
three options "-D -", "-F t" and "-X stream" is invalid. However,
previously, even when those options were specified at the same time,
pg_basebackup background process unexpectedly started streaming WAL.
And then it exited with an error.

This commit changes pg_basebackup so that it errors out on such
invalid combination of options at the beginning.

Reviewed by Magnus Hagander, and patch by me.
2016-12-21 20:27:37 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 1753b1b027 Add pg_sequence system catalog
Move sequence metadata (start, increment, etc.) into a proper system
catalog instead of storing it in the sequence heap object.  This
separates the metadata from the sequence data.  Sequence metadata is now
operated on transactionally by DDL commands, whereas previously
rollbacks of sequence-related DDL commands would be ignored.

Reviewed-by: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
2016-12-20 08:28:18 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 8cb545bfd4 Add missing newline in message 2016-12-15 16:45:31 +01:00
Robert Haas 06e184876b psql: Fix incorrect version check for table partitining.
Table partitioning was added in 10, not 9.6.

Fabrízio de Royes Mello, per report from Jeff Janes
2016-12-12 11:57:58 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2560d244b4 Fix quoting and a compiler warning in dumping partitions.
Partition name needs to be quoted in the ATTACH PARTITION command
constructed in binary-upgrade mode.

Silence compiler warning about set but unused variable, without
--enable-cassert.
2016-12-08 14:10:10 +02:00
Robert Haas f0e44751d7 Implement table partitioning.
Table partitioning is like table inheritance and reuses much of the
existing infrastructure, but there are some important differences.
The parent is called a partitioned table and is always empty; it may
not have indexes or non-inherited constraints, since those make no
sense for a relation with no data of its own.  The children are called
partitions and contain all of the actual data.  Each partition has an
implicit partitioning constraint.  Multiple inheritance is not
allowed, and partitioning and inheritance can't be mixed.  Partitions
can't have extra columns and may not allow nulls unless the parent
does.  Tuples inserted into the parent are automatically routed to the
correct partition, so tuple-routing ON INSERT triggers are not needed.
Tuple routing isn't yet supported for partitions which are foreign
tables, and it doesn't handle updates that cross partition boundaries.

Currently, tables can be range-partitioned or list-partitioned.  List
partitioning is limited to a single column, but range partitioning can
involve multiple columns.  A partitioning "column" can be an
expression.

Because table partitioning is less general than table inheritance, it
is hoped that it will be easier to reason about properties of
partitions, and therefore that this will serve as a better foundation
for a variety of possible optimizations, including query planner
optimizations.  The tuple routing based which this patch does based on
the implicit partitioning constraints is an example of this, but it
seems likely that many other useful optimizations are also possible.

Amit Langote, reviewed and tested by Robert Haas, Ashutosh Bapat,
Amit Kapila, Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, Corey Huinker, Jaime Casanova,
Rushabh Lathia, Erik Rijkers, among others.  Minor revisions by me.
2016-12-07 13:17:55 -05:00
Stephen Frost 093129c9d9 Add support for restrictive RLS policies
We have had support for restrictive RLS policies since 9.5, but they
were only available through extensions which use the appropriate hooks.
This adds support into the grammer, catalog, psql and pg_dump for
restrictive RLS policies, thus reducing the cases where an extension is
necessary.

In passing, also move away from using "AND"d and "OR"d in comments.
As pointed out by Alvaro, it's not really appropriate to attempt
to make verbs out of "AND" and "OR", so reword those comments which
attempted to.

Reviewed By: Jeevan Chalke, Dean Rasheed
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20160901063404.GY4028@tamriel.snowman.net
2016-12-05 15:50:55 -05:00
Robert Haas 2b959d4957 Reduce the default for max_worker_processes back to 8.
Commit b460f5d669 -- at my suggestion --
increased the default value of max_worker_processes from 8 to 16, on
the theory that this would be harmless and convenient for users.
Unfortunately, this caused some buildfarm machines with low connection
limits to start failing, so apparently it's not harmless after all.
2016-12-05 10:53:21 -05:00
Robert Haas b460f5d669 Add max_parallel_workers GUC.
Increase the default value of the existing max_worker_processes GUC
from 8 to 16, and add a new max_parallel_workers GUC with a maximum
of 8.  This way, even if the maximum amount of parallel query is
happening, there is still room for background workers that do other
things, as originally envisioned when max_worker_processes was added.

Julien Rouhaud, reviewed by Amit Kapila and by revised by me.
2016-12-02 07:42:58 -05:00
Stephen Frost 4fafa579b0 Add --no-blobs option to pg_dump
Add an option to exclude blobs when running pg_dump.  By default, blobs
are included but this option can be used to exclude them while keeping
the rest of the dump.

Commment updates and regression tests from me.

Author: Guillaume Lelarge
Reviewed-by: Amul Sul
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/VisenaEmail.48.49926ea6f91dceb6.15355a48249@tc7-visena
2016-11-29 11:09:35 -05:00
Tom Lane 404e667580 Fix busted tab-completion pattern for ALTER TABLE t ALTER c DROP ...
Evidently a thinko in commit 9b181b036.

Kyotaro Horiguchi
2016-11-28 11:51:30 -05:00
Tom Lane dbdfd114f3 Bring some clarity to the defaults for the xxx_flush_after parameters.
Instead of confusingly stating platform-dependent defaults for these
parameters in the comments in postgresql.conf.sample (with the main
entry being a lie on Linux), teach initdb to install the correct
platform-dependent value in postgresql.conf, similarly to the way
we handle other platform-dependent defaults.  This won't do anything
for existing 9.6 installations, but since it's effectively only a
documentation improvement, that seems OK.

Since this requires initdb to have access to the default values,
move the #define's for those to pg_config_manual.h; the original
placement in bufmgr.h is unworkable because that file can't be
included by frontend programs.

Adjust the default value for wal_writer_flush_after so that it is 1MB
regardless of XLOG_BLCKSZ, conforming to what is stated in both the
SGML docs and postgresql.conf.  (We could alternatively make it scale
with XLOG_BLCKSZ, but I'm not sure I see the point.)

Copy-edit related SGML documentation.

Fabien Coelho and Tom Lane, per a gripe from Tomas Vondra.

Discussion: <30ebc6e3-8358-09cf-44a8-578252938424@2ndquadrant.com>
2016-11-25 18:36:10 -05:00
Stephen Frost 8f91f323b4 Clean up pg_dump tests, re-enable BLOB testing
Add a loop to check that each test covers all of the pg_dump runs.  We
(I) had been a bit sloppy when adding new runs and not making sure to
mark if they should be under like or unlike for each test, this loop
makes sure that the test system will complain if any are forgotten in
the future.

The loop also correctly handles the 'catch all' cases, which are used to
avoid running unnecessary specific checks when a single catch-all can be
done (eg: a no-acl run should not have any GRANT commands).

Also, re-enable the testing of blobs, but use lo_from_bytea() instead of
trying to be cute and writing out to a file and then reading it back in
with psql, which proved to be difficult for some buildfarm members.
This allows us to add support for testing the --no-blobs option which
will be getting added shortly, provided the buildfarm doesn't blow up on
this.
2016-11-18 14:21:33 -05:00
Tom Lane d8c05aff56 Fix pg_dump's handling of circular dependencies in views.
pg_dump's traditional solution for breaking a circular dependency involving
a view was to create the view with CREATE TABLE and then later issue CREATE
RULE "_RETURN" ... to convert the table to a view, relying on the backend's
very very ancient code that supports making views that way.  We've wanted
to get rid of that kluge for a long time, but the thing that finally
motivates doing something about it is the recognition that this method
fails with the --clean option, because it leads to issuing DROP RULE
"_RETURN" followed by DROP TABLE --- and the backend won't let you drop a
view's _RETURN rule.

Instead, let's break circular dependencies by initially creating the view
using CREATE VIEW AS SELECT NULL::columntype AS columnname, ... (so that
it has the right column names and types to support external references,
but no dependencies beyond the column data types), and then later dumping
the ON SELECT rule using the spelling CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW.  This method
wasn't available when this code was originally written, but it's been
possible since PG 7.3, so it seems fine to start relying on it now.

To solve the --clean problem, make the dropStmt for an ON SELECT rule
be CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW with the same dummy target list as above.
In this way, during the DROP phase, we first reduce the view to have
no extra dependencies, and then we can drop it entirely when we've
gotten rid of whatever had a circular dependency on it.

(Note: this should work adequately well with the --if-exists option, since
the CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW will go through whether the view exists or not.
It could fail if the view exists with a conflicting column set, but we
don't really support --clean against a non-matching database anyway.)

This allows cleaning up some other kluges inside pg_dump, notably that
we don't need a notion of reloptions attached to a rule anymore.

Although this is a bug fix, commit to HEAD only for now.  The problem's
existed for a long time and we've had relatively few complaints, so it
doesn't really seem worth taking risks to fix it in the back branches.
We might revisit that choice if no problems emerge.

Discussion: <19092.1479325184@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-11-17 15:25:59 -05:00
Tom Lane ac888986fc Improve pg_dump/pg_restore --create --if-exists logic.
Teach it not to complain if the dropStmt attached to an archive entry
is actually spelled CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW, since that will happen due to
an upcoming bug fix.  Also, if it doesn't recognize a dropStmt, have it
print a WARNING and then emit the dropStmt unmodified.  That seems like a
much saner behavior than Assert'ing or dumping core due to a null-pointer
dereference, which is what would happen before :-(.

Back-patch to 9.4 where this option was introduced.

Discussion: <19092.1479325184@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-11-17 14:59:13 -05:00
Tom Lane fcf70e0dbc Re-pgindent src/bin/pg_dump/*
Cleanup for recent patches --- it's not much change, but I got annoyed
while re-indenting the view-rule fix I'm working on.
2016-11-17 14:36:59 -05:00
Robert Haas 56eba9b8a1 pgbench: Increase maximum size of log filename from 64 to MAXPGPATH.
Commit 41124a91e6 allowed the
transaction log file prefix to be changed but left in place the
existing 64-character limit on the total length of a log file name.
It's possible that could be inconvenient for somebody, so increase the
limit to MAXPGPATH, which ought to be enough for anybody.

Per a suggestion from Tom Lane.
2016-11-15 09:11:51 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut a7e5457db8 pg_upgrade: Upgrade sequence data via pg_dump
Previously, pg_upgrade migrated sequence data like tables by copying the
on-disk file.  This does not allow any changes in the on-disk format for
sequences.  It's simpler to just have pg_dump set the new sequence
values as it normally does.  To do that, create a hidden submode in
pg_dump that dumps sequence data even when a schema-only dump is
requested, and trigger that submode in binary upgrade mode.  (This new
submode could easily be exposed as a command-line option, but it has
limited use outside of pg_dump and would probably cause some confusion,
so we don't do that at this time.)

Reviewed-by: Anastasia Lubennikova <a.lubennikova@postgrespro.ru>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-11-13 21:44:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 27d2c12328 pg_dump: Separate table and sequence data object types
Instead of handling both sequence data and table data internally as
"table data", handle sequences separately under a "sequence set" type.
We already handled materialized view data differently, so it makes the
code somewhat cleaner to handle each relation kind separately at the top
level.

This does not change the output format, since there already was a
separate "SEQUENCE SET" archive entry type.  A noticeable difference is
that SEQUENCE SET entries now always appear after TABLE DATA entries.
And in parallel mode there is less sorting to do, because the sequence
data entries are no longer considered table data.

Reviewed-by: Anastasia Lubennikova <a.lubennikova@postgrespro.ru>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-11-13 21:44:58 -05:00
Robert Haas 41124a91e6 pgbench: Allow the transaction log file prefix to be changed.
Masahiko Sawada, reviewed by Fabien Coelho and Beena Emerson, with
some a bit of wordsmithing and cosmetic adjustment by me.
2016-11-09 16:28:43 -05:00
Robert Haas 577f0bdd2b psql: Tab completion for renaming enum values.
For ALTER TYPE .. RENAME, add "VALUE" to the list of possible
completions.  Complete ALTER TYPE .. RENAME VALUE with possible
enum values.  After that, complete with "TO".

Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker, reviewed by Artur Zakirov.
2016-11-08 16:30:51 -05:00
Noah Misch 650b967076 Change qr/foo$/m to qr/foo\n/m, for Perl 5.8.8.
In each case, absence of a trailing newline would itself constitute a
PostgreSQL bug.  Therefore, this slightly enhances the changed tests.
This works around a bug that last appeared in Perl 5.8.8, fixing
src/test/modules/test_pg_dump when run against that version.  Commit
e7293e3271 worked around the bug, but the
subsequent addition of test_pg_dump introduced affected code.  As that
commit had shown, slight increases in pattern complexity can suppress
the bug.  This commit edits qr/foo$/m patterns too complex to encounter
the bug today, for style consistency and robustness against unrelated
pattern changes.  Back-patch to 9.6, where test_pg_dump was introduced.

As of this writing, a fresh MSYS installation includes an affected Perl
5.8.8.  The Perl 5.8.8 in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.11 carries a patch
that renders it unaffected, but the Perl 5.8.5 of Red Hat Enterprise
Linux 4.4 is affected.
2016-11-07 20:27:30 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 77517ba59f pg_upgrade: Add NLS
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-11-07 10:12:52 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 48dbcbf22c pg_rewing pg_upgrade: Fix translation markers
In pg_log_v(), we need to translate the fmt before processing, not the
formatted message afterwards.
2016-11-07 09:31:26 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 927d7bb6b1 Improve tab completion for CREATE TRIGGER.
This includes support for the new REFERENCING clause.
2016-11-04 11:02:07 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 69d590fffb pg_xlogdump: Add NLS
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-11-04 10:40:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 59fa9d2d9d pg_test_timing: Add NLS
Also straighten out use of time unit abbreviations a bit.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-11-04 10:40:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a39255d766 pg_test_fsync: Add NLS
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-11-04 10:40:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 632fbe772c pg_archivecleanup: Add NLS
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-11-04 10:40:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a0f357e570 psql: Split up "Modifiers" column in \d and \dD
Make separate columns "Collation", "Nullable", "Default".

Reviewed-by: Kuntal Ghosh <kuntalghosh.2007@gmail.com>
2016-11-03 14:02:46 -04:00
Robert Haas 1d15d0db50 psql: Tab-complete LOCK [TABLE] ... IN {ACCESS|ROW|SHARE}.
Suggest the lock modes that begin with the word in question.

Thomas Munro, reviewed by Marllius Ribeiro.  Comments tweaked by me.
2016-11-03 11:42:13 -04:00
Magnus Hagander a775406ec4 Fix memory leak in tar file padding
Spotted by Coverity, patch by Michael Paquier
2016-10-30 14:10:39 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 8c035e55c4 pg_dump: Simplify internal archive version handling
The ArchiveHandle structure contained the archive format version number
twice, once as a single field and once split into components.  Simplify
that by just keeping the single field and adding some macros to extract
the components.  Introduce some macros for composing version numbers, to
eliminate the repeated use of magic formulas.  Drop the unused trailing
zero byte from the run-time composite version representation.

reviewed by Tom Lane
2016-10-25 17:02:22 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 78d109150b Free walmethods before exiting
Not strictly necessary since we quite after, but could become important
in the future if we do restarts etc.

Michael Paquier with nitpicking from me
2016-10-25 19:00:12 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 8c46f0c9ce Don't fsync() files when --no-sync is specified
Michael Paquier
2016-10-25 19:00:01 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 2dde01ccbf Use ssize_t where signed results can happen
Noted by Alexander Korotkov
2016-10-24 20:10:18 +02:00
Magnus Hagander eade082b12 Rename walmethod fsync method to sync
Using the name fsync clashed with the #define we have on Windows that
redefines it to _commit. Naming it sync should remove that conflict.

Per all the Windows buildfarm members
2016-10-23 18:04:34 +02:00
Magnus Hagander a5c17c1dce Fix obviously too quickly applied fix to zlib issue 2016-10-23 16:07:31 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 9ae6713cdf Fix walmethods.c build without libz
Per numerous buildfarm manuals
2016-10-23 16:00:42 +02:00
Magnus Hagander d97a59a4c5 Remove extra comma at end of enum list
C99-specific feature, and wasn't intentional in the first place.

Per buildfarm member mylodon
2016-10-23 15:57:25 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 56c7d8d455 Allow pg_basebackup to stream transaction log in tar mode
This will write the received transaction log into a file called
pg_wal.tar(.gz) next to the other tarfiles instead of writing it to
base.tar. When using fetch mode, the transaction log is still written to
base.tar like before, and when used against a pre-10 server, the file
is named pg_xlog.tar.

To do this, implement a new concept of a "walmethod", which is
responsible for writing the WAL. Two implementations exist, one that
writes to a plain directory (which is also used by pg_receivexlog) and
one that writes to a tar file with optional compression.

Reviewed by Michael Paquier
2016-10-23 15:23:11 +02:00
Robert Haas f82ec32ac3 Rename "pg_xlog" directory to "pg_wal".
"xlog" is not a particularly clear abbreviation for "write-ahead log",
and it sometimes confuses users into believe that the contents of the
"pg_xlog" directory are not critical data, leading to unpleasant
consequences.  So, rename the directory to "pg_wal".

This patch modifies pg_upgrade and pg_basebackup to understand both
the old and new directory layouts; the former is necessary given the
purpose of the tool, while the latter merely avoids an unnecessary
backward-compatibility break.

We may wish to consider renaming other programs, switches, and
functions which still use the old "xlog" naming to also refer to
"wal".  However, that's still under discussion, so let's do just this
much for now.

Discussion: CAB7nPqTeC-8+zux8_-4ZD46V7YPwooeFxgndfsq5Rg8ibLVm1A@mail.gmail.com

Michael Paquier
2016-10-20 11:32:18 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e5a9bcb529 Use pg_ctl promote -w in TAP tests
Switch TAP tests to use the new wait mode of pg_ctl promote.  This
allows avoiding extra logic with poll_query_until() to be sure that a
promoted standby is ready for read-write queries.

From: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-10-19 09:18:50 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5d58c07a44 initdb pg_basebackup: Rename --noxxx options to --no-xxx
--noclean and --nosync were the only options spelled without a hyphen,
so change this for consistency with other options.  The options in
pg_basebackup have not been in a release, so we just rename them.  For
initdb, we retain the old variants.

Vik Fearing and me
2016-10-19 08:48:48 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut caf936b09f pg_ctl: Add long option for -o
Now all normally used options are covered by long options as well.
2016-10-19 08:48:48 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 0be22457d7 pg_ctl: Add long options for -w and -W
From: Vik Fearing <vik@2ndquadrant.fr>
2016-10-19 08:48:22 -04:00
Tom Lane c08521eb55 Remove dead code in pg_dump.
I'm not sure if this provision for "pg_backup" behaving a bit differently
from "pg_dump" ever did anything useful in a released version.  But it's
definitely dead code now.

Michael Paquier
2016-10-13 16:08:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 0a4bf6b192 Fix pg_dumpall regression test to be locale-independent.
The expected results in commit b4fc64578 seem to have been generated
in a non-C locale, which just points up the fact that the ORDER BY
clause was locale-sensitive.

Per buildfarm.
2016-10-13 10:46:22 -04:00
Andres Freund b4fc645787 Make pg_dumpall's database ACL query independent of hash table order.
Previously GRANT order on databases was not well defined, due to the use
of EXCEPT without an ORDER BY.  Add an ORDER BY, adapt test output.

I don't, at the moment, see reason to backpatch this.
2016-10-12 18:29:57 -07:00
Tom Lane c0a3b211bc pg_dump's getTypes() needn't retrieve typinput or typoutput anymore.
Commit 64f3524e2 removed the stanza of code that examined these values.
I failed to notice they were unnecessary because my compiler didn't
warn about the un-read variables.  Noted by Peter Eisentraut.
2016-10-12 15:11:31 -04:00
Tom Lane 64f3524e2c Remove pg_dump/pg_dumpall support for dumping from pre-8.0 servers.
The need for dumping from such ancient servers has decreased to about nil
in the field, so let's remove all the code that catered to it.  Aside
from removing a lot of boilerplate variant queries, this allows us to not
have to cope with servers that don't have (a) schemas or (b) pg_depend.
That means we can get rid of assorted squishy code around that.  There
may be some nonobvious additional simplifications possible, but this patch
already removes about 1500 lines of code.

I did not remove the ability for pg_restore to read custom-format archives
generated by these old versions (and light testing says that that does
still work).  If you have an old server, you probably also have a pg_dump
that will work with it; but you have an old custom-format backup file,
that might be all you have.

It'd be possible at this point to remove fmtQualifiedId()'s version
argument, but I refrained since that would affect code outside pg_dump.

Discussion: <2661.1475849167@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-10-12 12:20:02 -04:00
Tom Lane 4806f26f9e Fix pg_dump to work against pre-9.0 servers again.
getBlobs' queries for pre-9.0 servers were broken in two ways:
the 7.x/8.x query uses DISTINCT so it can't have unspecified-type
NULLs in the target list, and both that query and the 7.0 one
failed to provide the correct output column labels, so that the
subsequent code to extract data from the PGresult would fail.

Back-patch to 9.6 where the breakage was introduced (by commit 23f34fa4b).

Amit Langote and Tom Lane

Discussion: <0a3e7a0e-37bd-8427-29bd-958135862f0a@lab.ntt.co.jp>
2016-10-07 09:51:18 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 0d4d7d6185 Don't allow both --source-server and --source-target args to pg_rewind.
They are supposed to be mutually exclusive, but there was no check for
that.

Michael Banck

Discussion: <20161007103414.GD12247@nighthawk.caipicrew.dd-dns.de>
2016-10-07 14:35:17 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas d7eb76b908 Disable synchronous commits in pg_rewind.
If you point pg_rewind to a server that is using synchronous replication,
with "pg_rewind --source-server=...", and the replication is not working
for some reason, pg_rewind will get stuck because it creates a temporary
table, which needs to be replicated. You could call broken replication a
pilot error, but pg_rewind is often used in special circumstances, when
there are changes to the replication setup.

We don't do any "real" updates, and we don't care about fsyncing or
replicating the operations on the temporary tables, so fix that by
setting synchronous_commit off.

Michael Banck, Michael Paquier. Backpatch to 9.5, where pg_rewind was
introduced.

Discussion: <20161005143938.GA12247@nighthawk.caipicrew.dd-dns.de>
2016-10-06 13:24:46 +03:00
Tom Lane 83c2492002 Enforce a specific order for probing library loadability in pg_upgrade.
pg_upgrade checks whether all the shared libraries used in the old cluster
are also available in the new one by issuing LOAD for each library name.
Previously, it cared not what order it did the LOADs in.  Ideally it
should not have to care, but currently the transform modules in contrib
fail unless both the language and datatype modules they depend on are
loaded first.  A backend-side solution for that looks possible but
probably not back-patchable, so as a stopgap measure, let's do the LOAD
tests in order by library name length.  That should fix the problem for
reasonably-named transform modules, eg "hstore_plpython" will be loaded
after both "hstore" and "plpython".  (Yeah, it's a hack.)

In a larger sense, having a predictable order of these probes is a good
thing, since it will make upgrades predictably work or not work in the
face of inter-library dependencies.  Also, this patch replaces O(N^2)
de-duplication logic with O(N log N) logic, which could matter in
installations with very many databases.  So I don't foresee reverting this
even after we have a proper fix for the library-dependency problem.

In passing, improve a couple of SQL queries used here.

Per complaint from Andrew Dunstan that pg_upgrade'ing the transform contrib
modules failed.  Back-patch to 9.5 where transform modules were introduced.

Discussion: <f7ac29f3-515c-2a44-21c5-ec925053265f@dunslane.net>
2016-10-03 10:07:49 -04:00
Tom Lane e8bdee2770 Add ALTER EXTENSION ADD/DROP ACCESS METHOD, and use it in pg_upgrade.
Without this, an extension containing an access method is not properly
dumped/restored during pg_upgrade --- the AM ends up not being a member
of the extension after upgrading.

Another oversight in commit 473b93287, reported by Andrew Dunstan.

Report: <f7ac29f3-515c-2a44-21c5-ec925053265f@dunslane.net>
2016-10-02 14:31:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 728ceba938 Avoid leaking FDs after an fsync failure.
Fixes errors introduced in commit bc34223bc, as detected by Coverity.

In passing, report ENOSPC for a short write while padding a new wal file in
open_walfile, make certain that close_walfile closes walfile in all cases,
and improve a couple of comments.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane
2016-10-02 12:33:46 -04:00
Tom Lane f002ed2b8e Improve error reporting in pg_upgrade's file copying/linking/rewriting.
The previous design for this had copyFile(), linkFile(), and
rewriteVisibilityMap() returning strerror strings, with the caller
producing one-size-fits-all error messages based on that.  This made it
impossible to produce messages that described the failures with any degree
of precision, especially not short-read problems since those don't set
errno at all.

Since pg_upgrade has no intention of continuing after any error in this
area, let's fix this by just letting these functions call pg_fatal() for
themselves, making it easy for each point of failure to have a suitable
error message.  Taking this approach also allows dropping cleanup code
that was unnecessary and was often rather sloppy about preserving errno.
To not lose relevant info that was reported before, pass in the schema name
and table name of the current table so that they can be included in the
error reports.

An additional problem was the use of getErrorText(), which was flat out
wrong for all but a couple of call sites, because it unconditionally did
"_dosmaperr(GetLastError())" on Windows.  That's only appropriate when
reporting an error from a Windows-native API, which only a couple of
the callers were actually doing.  Thus, even the reported strerror string
would be unrelated to the actual failure in many cases on Windows.
To fix, get rid of getErrorText() altogether, and just have call sites
do strerror(errno) instead, since that's the way all the rest of our
frontend programs do it.  Add back the _dosmaperr() calls in the two
places where that's actually appropriate.

In passing, make assorted messages hew more closely to project style
guidelines, notably by removing initial capitals in not-complete-sentence
primary error messages.  (I didn't make any effort to clean up places
I didn't have another reason to touch, though.)

Per discussion of a report from Thomas Kellerer.  Back-patch to 9.6,
but no further; given the relative infrequency of reports of problems
here, it's not clear it's worth adapting the patch to older branches.

Patch by me, but with credit to Alvaro Herrera for spotting the issue
with getErrorText's misuse of _dosmaperr().

Discussion: <nsjrbh$8li$1@blaine.gmane.org>
2016-09-30 20:40:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 5afcd2aa74 Fix multiple portability issues in pg_upgrade's rewriteVisibilityMap().
This is new code in 9.6, and evidently we missed out testing it as
thoroughly as it should have been.  Bugs fixed here:

1. Use binary not text mode to open the files on Windows.  Before, if
the visibility map chanced to contain two bytes that looked like \r\n,
Windows' read() would convert that to \n, which both corrupts the map
data and causes the file to look shorter than it should.  Unless you
were *very* unlucky and had an exact multiple of 8K such occurrences
in each VM file, this would cause pg_upgrade to report a failure,
though with a rather obscure error message.

2. The code for copying rebuilt bytes into the output was simply wrong.
It chanced to work okay on little-endian machines but would emit the
bytes in the wrong order on big-endian, leading to silent corruption
of the visibility map data.

3. The code was careless about alignment of the working buffers.  Given
all three of an alignment-picky architecture, a compiler that chooses
to put the new_vmbuf[] local variable at an odd starting address, and
a checksum-enabled database, pg_upgrade would dump core.

Point one was reported by Thomas Kellerer, the other two detected by
code-reading.

Point two is much the nastiest of these issues from an impact standpoint,
though fortunately it affects only a minority of users.  The Windows issue
will definitely bite people, but it seems quite unlikely that there would
be undetected corruption from that.

In addition, I failed to resist the temptation to do some minor cosmetic
adjustments, mostly improving the comments.

It would be a good idea to try to improve the error reporting here, but
that seems like material for a separate patch.

Discussion: <nsjrbh$8li$1@blaine.gmane.org>
2016-09-30 20:40:55 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 3d39244e6e Retry opening new segments in pg_xlogdump --folllow
There is a small window between when the server closes out the existing
segment and the new one is created. Put a loop around the open call in
this case to make sure we wait for the new file to actually appear.
2016-09-30 11:22:00 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 6ed2d8584c pg_basebackup: Add --nosync option
This is useful for testing, similar to initdb's --nosync.

From: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-09-29 12:00:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut bc34223bc1 pg_basebackup pg_receivexlog: Issue fsync more carefully
Several places weren't careful about fsyncing in the way.  See 1d4a0ab1
and 606e0f98 for details about required fsyncs.

This adds a couple of functions in src/common/ that have an equivalent
in the backend: durable_rename(), fsync_parent_path()

From: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-09-29 12:00:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut bf5bb2e85b Move fsync routines of initdb into src/common/
The intention is to used those in other utilities such as pg_basebackup
and pg_receivexlog.

From: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-09-29 12:00:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 6ad8ac6026 Exclude additional directories in pg_basebackup
The list of files and directories that pg_basebackup excludes from the
backup was somewhat incomplete and unorganized.  Change that with having
the exclusion driven from tables.  Clean up some code around it.  Also
document the exclusions in more detail so that users of pg_start_backup
can make use of it as well.

The contents of these directories are now excluded from the backup:
pg_dynshmem, pg_notify, pg_serial, pg_snapshots, pg_subtrans

Also fix a bug that a pg_repl_slot or pg_stat_tmp being a symlink would
cause a corrupt tar header to be created.  Now such symlinks are
included in the backup as empty directories.  Bug found by Ashutosh
Sharma <ashu.coek88@gmail.com>.

From: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-09-28 12:00:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e79e6c4da1 Fix CRC check handling in get_controlfile
The previous patch broke this by returning NULL for a failed CRC check,
which pg_controldata would then try to read.  Fix by returning the
result of the CRC check in a separate argument.

Michael Paquier and myself
2016-09-28 12:00:00 -04:00
Tom Lane 0109ab2760 Make struct ParallelSlot private within pg_dump/parallel.c.
The only field of this struct that other files have any need to touch
is the pointer to the TocEntry a worker is working on.  (Well,
pg_backup_archiver.c is actually looking at workerStatus too, but that
can be finessed by specifying that the TocEntry pointer is NULL for a
non-busy worker.)

Hence, move out the TocEntry pointers to a separate array within
struct ParallelState, and then we can make struct ParallelSlot private.

I noted the possibility of this previously, but hadn't got round to
actually doing it.

Discussion: <1188.1464544443@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-09-27 14:29:12 -04:00
Tom Lane fb03d08a89 Rationalize parallel dump/restore's handling of worker cmd/status messages.
The existing APIs for creating and parsing command and status messages are
rather messy; for example, archive-format modules have to provide code
for constructing command messages, which is entirely pointless since
the code to read them is hard-wired in WaitForCommands() and hence
no format-specific variation is actually possible.  But there's little
foreseeable reason to need format-specific variation anyway.

The situation for status messages is no better; at least those are both
constructed and parsed by format-specific code, but said code is quite
redundant since there's no actual need for format-specific variation.

To add insult to injury, the first API involves returning pointers to
static buffers, which is bad, while the second involves returning pointers
to malloc'd strings, which is safer but randomly inconsistent.

Hence, get rid of the MasterStartParallelItem and MasterEndParallelItem
APIs, and instead write centralized functions that construct and parse
command and status messages.  If we ever do need more flexibility, these
functions can be the standard implementations of format-specific
callback methods, but that's a long way off if it ever happens.

Tom Lane, reviewed by Kevin Grittner

Discussion: <17340.1464465717@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-09-27 13:56:04 -04:00
Tom Lane b7b8cc0cfc Redesign parallel dump/restore's wait-for-workers logic.
The ListenToWorkers/ReapWorkerStatus APIs were messy and hard to use.
Instead, make DispatchJobForTocEntry register a callback function that
will take care of state cleanup, doing whatever had been done by the caller
of ReapWorkerStatus in the old design.  (This callback is essentially just
the old mark_work_done function in the restore case, and a trivial test for
worker failure in the dump case.)  Then we can have ListenToWorkers call
the callback immediately on receipt of a status message, and return the
worker to WRKR_IDLE state; so the WRKR_FINISHED state goes away.

This allows us to design a unified wait-for-worker-messages loop:
WaitForWorkers replaces EnsureIdleWorker and EnsureWorkersFinished as well
as the mess in restore_toc_entries_parallel.  Also, we no longer need the
fragile API spec that the caller of DispatchJobForTocEntry is responsible
for ensuring there's an idle worker, since DispatchJobForTocEntry can just
wait until there is one.

In passing, I got rid of the ParallelArgs struct, which was a net negative
in terms of notational verboseness, and didn't seem to be providing any
noticeable amount of abstraction either.

Tom Lane, reviewed by Kevin Grittner

Discussion: <1188.1464544443@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-09-27 13:22:39 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 51c3e9fade Include <sys/select.h> where needed
<sys/select.h> is required by POSIX.1-2001 to get the prototype of
select(2), but nearly no systems enforce that because older standards
let you get away with including some other headers.  Recent OpenBSD
hacking has removed that frail touch of friendliness, however, which
broke some compiles; fix all the way back to 9.1 by adding the required
standard.  Only vacuumdb.c was reported to fail, but it seems easier to
fix the whole lot in a fell swoop.

Per bug #14334 by Sean Farrell.
2016-09-27 01:05:21 -03:00
Tom Lane 9779bda86c Fix newly-introduced issues in pgbench.
The result of FD_ISSET() doesn't necessarily fit in a bool, though
assigning it to one might accidentally work depending on platform and which
socket FD number is being inquired of.  Rewrite to test it with if(),
rather than making any specific assumption about the result width,
to match the way every other such call in PG is written.

Don't break out of the input_mask-filling loop after finding the first
client that we're waiting for results from.  That mostly breaks parallel
query management.

Also, if we choose not to call select(), be sure to clear out any bits
the mask-filling loop might have set, so that we don't accidentally call
doCustom for clients we don't know have input.  Doing so would likely
be harmless, but it's a waste of cycles and doesn't seem to be intended.

Make this_usec wide enough.  (Yeah, the value would usually fit in an
int, but then why are we using int64 everywhere else?)

Minor cosmetic adjustments, mostly comment improvements.

Problems introduced by commit 12788ae49.  The first issue was discovered
by buildfarm testing, the others by code review.
2016-09-26 20:23:50 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 12788ae49e Refactor script execution state machine in pgbench.
The doCustom() function had grown into quite a mess. Rewrite it, in a more
explicit state machine style, for readability.

This also fixes one minor bug: if a script consisted entirely of meta
commands, doCustom() never returned to the caller, so progress reports
with the -P option were not printed. I don't want to backpatch this
refactoring, and the bug is quite insignificant, so only commit this to
master, and leave the bug unfixed in back-branches.

Review and original bug report by Fabien Coelho.

Discussion: <alpine.DEB.2.20.1607090850120.3412@sto>
2016-09-26 10:56:02 +03:00
Tom Lane da6c4f6ca8 Refer to OS X as "macOS", except for the port name which is still "darwin".
We weren't terribly consistent about whether to call Apple's OS "OS X"
or "Mac OS X", and the former is probably confusing to people who aren't
Apple users.  Now that Apple has rebranded it "macOS", follow their lead
to establish a consistent naming pattern.  Also, avoid the use of the
ancient project name "Darwin", except as the port code name which does not
seem desirable to change.  (In short, this patch touches documentation and
comments, but no actual code.)

I didn't touch contrib/start-scripts/osx/, either.  I suspect those are
obsolete and due for a rewrite, anyway.

I dithered about whether to apply this edit to old release notes, but
those were responsible for quite a lot of the inconsistencies, so I ended
up changing them too.  Anyway, Apple's being ahistorical about this,
so why shouldn't we be?
2016-09-25 15:40:57 -04:00
Tom Lane 12f6eadffd Fix incorrect logic for excluding range constructor functions in pg_dump.
Faulty AND/OR nesting in the WHERE clause of getFuncs' SQL query led to
dumping range constructor functions if they are part of an extension
and we're in binary-upgrade mode.  Actually, we don't want to dump them
separately even then, since CREATE TYPE AS RANGE will create the range's
constructor functions regardless.  Per report from Andrew Dunstan.

It looks like this mistake was introduced by me, in commit b985d4877, in
perhaps-overzealous refactoring to reduce code duplication.  I'm suitably
embarrassed.

Report: <34854939-02d7-f591-5677-ce2994104599@dunslane.net>
2016-09-23 13:49:26 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 6fa51c79c7 pg_ctl: Add promote wait option to help output
pointed out by Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
2016-09-23 12:00:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 8b845520fb Add tests for various connection string issues
Add tests for consistent support of connection strings in frontend
programs as well as proper handling of unusual characters in database
and user names.  These tests were developed for the issues of
CVE-2016-5424.

To allow testing of names with spaces, change the pg_regress
command-line options --create-role and --dbname to split their arguments
by comma only, not space or comma as before.  Only commas were actually
used in existing uses.

Noah Misch, Michael Paquier, Peter Eisentraut
2016-09-22 12:00:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e7010ce479 pg_ctl: Add wait option to promote action
When waiting is selected for the promote action, look into pg_control
until the state changes, then use the PQping-based waiting until the
server is reachable.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-09-21 12:00:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c1dc51d484 pg_ctl: Detect current standby state from pg_control
pg_ctl used to determine whether a server was in standby mode by looking
for a recovery.conf file.  With this change, it instead looks into
pg_control, which is potentially more accurate.  There are also
occasional discussions about removing recovery.conf, so this removes one
dependency.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-09-21 12:00:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut eb5089a05b pg_ctl: Add tests for promote action
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-09-21 12:00:00 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2a7f4f7643 Print test parameters like "foo: 123", and results like "foo = 123".
The way "latency average" was printed was differently if it was calculated
from the overall run time or was measured on a per-transaction basis.
Also, the per-script weight is a test parameter, rather than a result, so
use the "weight: %f" style for that.

Backpatch to 9.6, since the inconsistency on "latency average" was
introduced there.

Fabien Coelho

Discussion: <alpine.DEB.2.20.1607131015370.7486@sto>
2016-09-21 13:24:13 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 65c6556384 Fix pgbench's calculation of average latency, when -T is not used.
If the test duration was given in # of transactions (-t or no option),
rather as a duration (-T), the latency average was always printed as 0.
It has been broken ever since the display of latency average was added,
in 9.4.

Fabien Coelho

Discussion: <alpine.DEB.2.20.1607131015370.7486@sto>
2016-09-21 13:14:48 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 46b55e7f85 pg_restore: Add -N option to exclude schemas
This is similar to the -N option in pg_dump, except that it doesn't take
a pattern, just like the existing -n option in pg_restore.

From: Michael Banck <michael.banck@credativ.de>
2016-09-20 12:00:00 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 40c3fe4980 Fix latency calculation when there are \sleep commands in the script.
We can't use txn_scheduled to hold the sleep-until time for \sleep, because
that interferes with calculation of the latency of the transaction as whole.

Backpatch to 9.4, where this bug was introduced.

Fabien COELHO

Discussion: <alpine.DEB.2.20.1608231622170.7102@lancre>
2016-09-19 22:55:43 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 9083353b15 pg_basebackup: Clean created directories on failure
Like initdb, clean up created data and xlog directories, unless the new
-n/--noclean option is specified.

Tablespace directories are not cleaned up, but a message is written
about that.

Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
2016-09-12 12:00:00 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 63c1a87194 Fix recent commit for tab-completion of database template.
The details of commit 52803098ab were
based on a misunderstanding of the role inheritance allowing use
of a database for a template.  While the CREATEDB privilege is not
inherited, the database ownership is privileges are.

Pointed out by Vitaly Burovoy and Tom Lane.
Fix provided by Tom Lane, reviewed by Vitaly Burovoy.
2016-09-12 09:22:57 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 52803098ab psql tab completion for CREATE DATABASE ... TEMPLATE ...
Sehrope Sarkuni, reviewed by Merlin Moncure & Vitaly Burovoy
with some editing by me
2016-09-11 15:37:27 -05:00
Tom Lane df5d9bb8d5 Allow pg_dump to dump non-extension members of an extension-owned schema.
Previously, if a schema was created by an extension, a normal pg_dump run
(not --binary-upgrade) would summarily skip every object in that schema.
In a case where an extension creates a schema and then users create other
objects within that schema, this does the wrong thing: we want pg_dump
to skip the schema but still create the non-extension-owned objects.

There's no easy way to fix this pre-9.6, because in earlier versions the
"dump" status for a schema is just a bool and there's no way to distinguish
"dump me" from "dump my members".  However, as of 9.6 we do have enough
state to represent that, so this is a simple correction of the logic in
selectDumpableNamespace.

In passing, make some cosmetic fixes in nearby code.

Martín Marqués, reviewed by Michael Paquier

Discussion: <99581032-71de-6466-c325-069861f1947d@2ndquadrant.com>
2016-09-08 13:12:01 -04:00
Tom Lane e97e9c57bd Don't print database's tablespace in pg_dump -C --no-tablespaces output.
If the database has a non-default tablespace, we emitted a TABLESPACE
clause in the CREATE DATABASE command emitted by -C, even if
--no-tablespaces was also specified.  This seems wrong, and it's
inconsistent with what pg_dumpall does, so change it.  Per bug #14315
from Danylo Hlynskyi.

Back-patch to 9.5.  The bug is much older, but it'd be a more invasive
change before 9.5 because dumpDatabase() hasn't got an easy way to get
to the outputNoTablespaces flag.  Doesn't seem worth the work given
the lack of previous complaints.

Report: <20160908081953.1402.75347@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-09-08 10:48:03 -04:00
Tom Lane a2ee579b6d Repair whitespace in initdb message.
What used to be four spaces somehow turned into a tab and a couple of
spaces in commit a00c58314, no doubt from overhelpful emacs autoindent.
Noted by Peter Eisentraut.
2016-09-06 13:26:43 -04:00
Tom Lane 6591f4226c Improve readability of the output of psql's \timing command.
In addition to the existing decimal-milliseconds output value,
display the same value in mm:ss.fff format if it exceeds one second.
Tack on hours and even days fields if the interval is large enough.
This avoids needing mental arithmetic to convert the values into
customary time units.

Corey Huinker, reviewed by Gerdan Santos; bikeshedding by many

Discussion: <CADkLM=dbC4R8sbbuFXQVBFWoJGQkTEW8RWnC0PbW9nZsovZpJQ@mail.gmail.com>
2016-09-03 15:29:03 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 76f9dd4fa8 Improve tab completion for BEGIN & START|SET TRANSACTION.
Andreas Karlsson with minor change by me for SET TRANSACTION
SNAPSHOT.
2016-09-01 16:10:30 -05:00
Tom Lane 052cc223d5 Fix a bunch of places that called malloc and friends with no NULL check.
Where possible, use palloc or pg_malloc instead; otherwise, insert
explicit NULL checks.

Generally speaking, these are places where an actual OOM is quite
unlikely, either because they're in client programs that don't
allocate all that much, or they're very early in process startup
so that we'd likely have had a fork() failure instead.  Hence,
no back-patch, even though this is nominally a bug fix.

Michael Paquier, with some adjustments by me

Discussion: <CAB7nPqRu07Ot6iht9i9KRfYLpDaF2ZuUv5y_+72uP23ZAGysRg@mail.gmail.com>
2016-08-30 18:22:43 -04:00
Tom Lane 9daec77e16 Simplify correct use of simple_prompt().
The previous API for this function had it returning a malloc'd string.
That meant that callers had to check for NULL return, which few of them
were doing, and it also meant that callers had to remember to free()
the string later, which required extra logic in most cases.

Instead, make simple_prompt() write into a buffer supplied by the caller.
Anywhere that the maximum required input length is reasonably small,
which is almost all of the callers, we can just use a local or static
array as the buffer instead of dealing with malloc/free.

A fair number of callers used "pointer == NULL" as a proxy for "haven't
requested the password yet".  Maintaining the same behavior requires
adding a separate boolean flag for that, which adds back some of the
complexity we save by removing free()s.  Nonetheless, this nets out
at a small reduction in overall code size, and considerably less code
than we would have had if we'd added the missing NULL-return checks
everywhere they were needed.

In passing, clean up the API comment for simple_prompt() and get rid
of a very-unnecessary malloc/free in its Windows code path.

This is nominally a bug fix, but it does not seem worth back-patching,
because the actual risk of an OOM failure in any of these places seems
pretty tiny, and all of them are client-side not server-side anyway.

This patch is by me, but it owes a great deal to Michael Paquier
who identified the problem and drafted a patch for fixing it the
other way.

Discussion: <CAB7nPqRu07Ot6iht9i9KRfYLpDaF2ZuUv5y_+72uP23ZAGysRg@mail.gmail.com>
2016-08-30 17:02:02 -04:00
Tom Lane 37f6fd1eaa Fix initdb misbehavior when user mis-enters superuser password.
While testing simple_prompt() revisions, I happened to notice that
current initdb behaves rather badly when --pwprompt is specified and
the user miskeys the second password.  It complains about the mismatch,
does "rm -rf" on the data directory, and exits.  The problem is that
since commit c4a8812cf, there's a standalone backend sitting waiting
for commands at that point.  It gets unhappy about its datadir having
gone away, and spews a PANIC message at the user, which is not nice.
(And the shell then adds to the mess with meaningless bleating about a
core dump...)  We don't really want that sort of thing to happen unless
there's an internal failure in initdb, which this surely is not.

The best fix seems to be to move the collection of the password
earlier, so that it's done essentially as part of argument collection,
rather than at the rather ad-hoc time it was done before.

Back-patch to 9.6 where the problem was introduced.
2016-08-30 15:25:01 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 8e1e3f958f Split hash.h → hash_xlog.h
Since the hash AM is going to be revamped to have WAL, this is a good
opportunity to clean up the include file a little bit to avoid including
a lot of extra stuff in the future.

Author: Amit Kapila
2016-08-29 18:55:49 -03:00
Simon Riggs 49340627f9 Fix pg_receivexlog --synchronous
Make pg_receivexlog work correctly with --synchronous without slots

Backpatch to 9.5

Gabriele Bartolini, reviewed by Michael Paquier and Simon Riggs
2016-08-29 12:16:18 +01:00
Noah Misch 0395198728 Build libpgfeutils before src/bin/pg_basebackup programs.
Oversight in commit 9132c01429.
2016-08-23 23:40:38 -04:00
Noah Misch b6418a0919 Build libpgfeutils before pg_isready.
Every program having -lpgfeutils in LDFLAGS must have this dependency,
whether or not the program uses a libpgfeutils symbol.  Back-patch to
9.6, where libpgfeutils was introduced.
2016-08-23 23:40:38 -04:00
Tom Lane 234309fa87 initdb now needs submake-libpq and submake-libpgfeutils.
More fallout from commit a00c58314.  Pointed out by Michael Paquier.
2016-08-22 08:01:12 -04:00
Noah Misch 9132c01429 Retire escapeConnectionParameter().
It is redundant with appendConnStrVal(), which became an extern function
in commit 41f18f021a.  This changes the
handling of out-of-memory and of certain inputs for which quoting is
optional, but pg_basebackup has no need for unusual treatment thereof.
2016-08-21 22:05:57 -04:00
Tom Lane a00c583147 Make initdb's suggested "pg_ctl start" command line more reliable.
The original coding here was not nearly careful enough about quoting
special characters, and it didn't get corner cases right for constructing
the pg_ctl path either.  Use join_path_components() and appendShellString()
to do it honestly, so that the string will more likely work if blindly
copied-and-pasted.

While at it, teach appendShellString() not to quote strings that clearly
don't need it, so that the output from initdb doesn't become uglier than
it was before in typical cases where quoting is not needed.

Ryan Murphy, reviewed by Michael Paquier and myself

Discussion: <CAHeEsBeAe1FeBypT3E8R1ZVZU0e8xv3A-7BHg6bEOi=jZny2Uw@mail.gmail.com>
2016-08-20 15:05:25 -04:00
Tom Lane 6471045230 Allow empty queries in pgbench.
This might have been too much of a foot-gun before 9.6, but with the
new commands-end-at-semicolons parsing rule, the only way to get an
empty query into a script is to explicitly write an extra ";".
So we may as well allow the case.

Fabien Coelho

Patch: <alpine.DEB.2.20.1607090922170.3412@sto>
2016-08-19 17:32:59 -04:00
Tom Lane c5d4f40cb5 Update line count totals for psql help displays.
As usual, we've been pretty awful about maintaining these counts.
They're not all that critical, perhaps, but let's get them right
at release time.  Also fix 9.5, which I notice is just as bad.
It's probably wrong further back, but the lack of --help=foo
options before 9.5 makes it too painful to count.
2016-08-18 16:04:35 -04:00
Tom Lane 8019b5a89c Improve psql's tab completion for \l.
Offer a list of database names; formerly no help was offered.

Ian Barwick, reviewed by Gerdan Santos

Patch: <5724132E.1030804@2ndquadrant.com>
2016-08-18 11:29:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 49917dbd76 Improve psql's tab completion for ALTER EXTENSION foo UPDATE ...
Offer a list of available versions for that extension.  Formerly, since
there was no special support for this, it triggered off the UPDATE
keyword and offered a list of table names --- not too helpful.

Jeff Janes, reviewed by Gerdan Santos

Patch: <CAMkU=1z0gxEOLg2BWa69P4X4Ot8xBxipGUiGkXe_tC+raj79-Q@mail.gmail.com>
2016-08-18 11:17:10 -04:00
Magnus Hagander a79a685622 Update Windows timezone mapping from Windows 7 and 10
This adds a couple of new timezones that are present in the newer
versions of Windows. It also updates comments to reference UTC rather
than GMT, as this change has been made in Windows.

Michael Paquier
2016-08-18 12:32:42 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 0921554657 Disable update_process_title by default on Windows
The performance overhead of this can be significant on Windows, and most
people don't have the tools to view it anyway as Windows does not have
native support for process titles.

Discussion: <0A3221C70F24FB45833433255569204D1F5BE3E8@G01JPEXMBYT05>

Takayuki Tsunakawa
2016-08-17 10:43:16 +02:00
Tom Lane 7f61fd10ce Fix assorted places in psql to print version numbers >= 10 in new style.
This is somewhat cosmetic, since as long as you know what you are looking
at, "10.0" is a serviceable substitute for "10".  But there is a potential
for confusion between version numbers with minor numbers and those without
--- we don't want people asking "why is psql saying 10.0 when my server is
10.2".  Therefore, back-patch as far as practical, which turns out to be
9.3.  I could have redone the patch to use fprintf(stderr) in place of
psql_error(), but it seems more work than is warranted for branches that
will be EOL or nearly so by the time v10 comes out.

Although only psql seems to contain any code that needs this, I chose
to put the support function into fe_utils, since it seems likely we'll
need it in other client programs in future.  (In 9.3-9.5, use dumputils.c,
the predecessor of fe_utils/string_utils.c.)

In HEAD, also fix the backend code that whines about loadable-library
version mismatch.  I don't see much need to back-patch that.
2016-08-16 15:58:45 -04:00
Tom Lane ca9112a424 Stamp HEAD as 10devel.
This is a good bit more complicated than the average new-version stamping
commit, because it includes various adjustments in pursuit of changing
from three-part to two-part version numbers.  It's likely some further
work will be needed around that change; but this is enough to get through
the regression tests, at least in Unix builds.

Peter Eisentraut and Tom Lane
2016-08-15 13:49:49 -04:00
Tom Lane b5bce6c1ec Final pgindent + perltidy run for 9.6. 2016-08-15 13:42:51 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 34927b2920 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: cda21c1d7b160b303dc21dfe9d4169f2c8064c60
2016-08-08 11:08:00 -04:00
Noah Misch fcd15f1358 Obstruct shell, SQL, and conninfo injection via database and role names.
Due to simplistic quoting and confusion of database names with conninfo
strings, roles with the CREATEDB or CREATEROLE option could escalate to
superuser privileges when a superuser next ran certain maintenance
commands.  The new coding rule for PQconnectdbParams() calls, documented
at conninfo_array_parse(), is to pass expand_dbname=true and wrap
literal database names in a trivial connection string.  Escape
zero-length values in appendConnStrVal().  Back-patch to 9.1 (all
supported versions).

Nathan Bossart, Michael Paquier, and Noah Misch.  Reviewed by Peter
Eisentraut.  Reported by Nathan Bossart.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:46 -04:00
Noah Misch 41f18f021a Promote pg_dumpall shell/connstr quoting functions to src/fe_utils.
Rename these newly-extern functions with terms more typical of their new
neighbors.  No functional changes; a subsequent commit will use them in
more places.  Back-patch to 9.1 (all supported versions).  Back branches
lack src/fe_utils, so instead rename the functions in place; the
subsequent commit will copy them into the other programs using them.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:46 -04:00
Noah Misch bd65371851 Fix Windows shell argument quoting.
The incorrect quoting may have permitted arbitrary command execution.
At a minimum, it gave broader control over the command line to actors
supposed to have control over a single argument.  Back-patch to 9.1 (all
supported versions).

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:46 -04:00
Noah Misch 142c24c234 Reject, in pg_dumpall, names containing CR or LF.
These characters prematurely terminate Windows shell command processing,
causing the shell to execute a prefix of the intended command.  The
chief alternative to rejecting these characters was to bypass the
Windows shell with CreateProcess(), but the ability to use such names
has little value.  Back-patch to 9.1 (all supported versions).

This change formally revokes support for these characters in database
names and roles names.  Don't document this; the error message is
self-explanatory, and too few users would benefit.  A future major
release may forbid creation of databases and roles so named.  For now,
check only at known weak points in pg_dumpall.  Future commits will,
without notice, reject affected names from other frontend programs.

Also extend the restriction to pg_dumpall --dbname=CONNSTR arguments and
--file arguments.  Unlike the effects on role name arguments and
database names, this does not reflect a broad policy change.  A
migration to CreateProcess() could lift these two restrictions.

Reviewed by Peter Eisentraut.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:46 -04:00
Noah Misch c400717172 Field conninfo strings throughout src/bin/scripts.
These programs nominally accepted conninfo strings, but they would
proceed to use the original dbname parameter as though it were an
unadorned database name.  This caused "reindexdb dbname=foo" to issue an
SQL command that always failed, and other programs printed a conninfo
string in error messages that purported to print a database name.  Fix
both problems by using PQdb() to retrieve actual database names.
Continue to print the full conninfo string when reporting a connection
failure.  It is informative there, and if the database name is the sole
problem, the server-side error message will include the name.  Beyond
those user-visible fixes, this allows a subsequent commit to synthesize
and use conninfo strings without that implementation detail leaking into
messages.  As a side effect, the "vacuuming database" message now
appears after, not before, the connection attempt.  Back-patch to 9.1
(all supported versions).

Reviewed by Michael Paquier and Peter Eisentraut.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:46 -04:00
Noah Misch 9d924e9a64 Introduce a psql "\connect -reuse-previous=on|off" option.
The decision to reuse values of parameters from a previous connection
has been based on whether the new target is a conninfo string.  Add this
means of overriding that default.  This feature arose as one component
of a fix for security vulnerabilities in pg_dump, pg_dumpall, and
pg_upgrade, so back-patch to 9.1 (all supported versions).  In 9.3 and
later, comment paragraphs that required update had already-incorrect
claims about behavior when no connection is open; fix those problems.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:46 -04:00
Noah Misch 984e5beb38 Sort out paired double quotes in \connect, \password and \crosstabview.
In arguments, these meta-commands wrongly treated each pair as closing
the double quoted string.  Make the behavior match the documentation.
This is a compatibility break, but I more expect to find software with
untested reliance on the documented behavior than software reliant on
today's behavior.  Back-patch to 9.1 (all supported versions).

Reviewed by Tom Lane and Peter Eisentraut.

Security: CVE-2016-5424
2016-08-08 10:07:46 -04:00
Tom Lane e2e95f5ef3 Fix pg_dump's handling of public schema with both -c and -C options.
Since -c plus -C requests dropping and recreating the target database
as a whole, not dropping individual objects in it, we should assume that
the public schema already exists and need not be created.  The previous
coding considered only the state of the -c option, so it would emit
"CREATE SCHEMA public" anyway, leading to an unexpected error in restore.

Back-patch to 9.2.  Older versions did not accept -c with -C so the
issue doesn't arise there.  (The logic being patched here dates to 8.0,
cf commit 2193121fa, so it's not really wrong that it didn't consider
the case at the time.)

Note that versions before 9.6 will still attempt to emit REVOKE/GRANT
on the public schema; but that happens without -c/-C too, and doesn't
seem to be the focus of this complaint.  I considered extending this
stanza to also skip the public schema's ACL, but that would be a
misfeature, as it'd break cases where users intentionally changed that
ACL.  The real fix for this aspect is Stephen Frost's work to not dump
built-in ACLs, and that's not going to get back-ported.

Per bugs #13804 and #14271.  Solution found by David Johnston and later
rediscovered by me.

Report: <20151207163520.2628.95990@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
Report: <20160801021955.1430.47434@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-08-02 12:49:40 -04:00
Fujii Masao 74d8c95b74 Fix pg_basebackup so that it accepts 0 as a valid compression level.
The help message for pg_basebackup specifies that the numbers 0 through 9
are accepted as valid values of -Z option. But, previously -Z 0 was rejected
as an invalid compression level.

Per discussion, it's better to make pg_basebackup treat 0 as valid
compression level meaning no compression, like pg_dump.

Back-patch to all supported versions.

Reported-By: Jeff Janes
Reviewed-By: Amit Kapila
Discussion: CAMkU=1x+GwjSayc57v6w87ij6iRGFWt=hVfM0B64b1_bPVKRqg@mail.gmail.com
2016-08-01 17:36:14 +09:00
Stephen Frost f9e439b1ca Correctly handle owned sequences with extensions
With the refactoring of pg_dump to handle components, getOwnedSeqs needs
to be a bit more intelligent regarding which components to dump when.
Specifically, we can't simply use the owning table's components as the
set of components to dump as the table might only be including certain
components while all components of the sequence should be dumped, for
example, when the table is a member of an extension while the sequence
is not.

Handle this by combining the set of components to be dumped for the
sequence explicitly and those to be dumped for the table when setting
the components to be dumped for the sequence.

Also add a number of regression tests around this to, hopefully, catch
any future changes which break the expected behavior.

Discovered by: Philippe BEAUDOIN
Reviewed by: Michael Paquier
2016-07-31 10:57:15 -04:00
Tom Lane ed0b228d7a Guard against empty buffer in gets_fromFile()'s check for a newline.
Per the fgets() specification, it cannot return without reading some data
unless it reports EOF or error.  So the code here assumed that the data
buffer would necessarily be nonempty when we go to check for a newline
having been read.  However, Agostino Sarubbo noticed that this could fail
to be true if the first byte of the data is a NUL (\0).  The fgets() API
doesn't really work for embedded NULs, which is something I don't feel
any great need for us to worry about since we generally don't allow NULs
in SQL strings anyway.  But we should not access off the end of our own
buffer if the case occurs.  Normally this would just be a harmless read,
but if you were unlucky the byte before the buffer would contain '\n'
and we'd overwrite it with '\0', and if you were really unlucky that
might be valuable data and psql would crash.

Agostino reported this to pgsql-security, but after discussion we concluded
that it isn't worth treating as a security bug; if you can control the
input to psql you can do far more interesting things than just maybe-crash
it.  Nonetheless, it is a bug, so back-patch to all supported versions.
2016-07-28 18:57:24 -04:00
Tom Lane d9e74959a7 Register atexit hook only once in pg_upgrade.
start_postmaster() registered stop_postmaster_atexit as an atexit(3)
callback each time through, although the obvious intention was to do
so only once per program run.  The extra registrations were harmless,
so long as we didn't exceed ATEXIT_MAX, but still it's a bug.

Artur Zakirov, with bikeshedding by Kyotaro Horiguchi and me

Discussion: <d279e817-02b5-caa6-215f-cfb05dce109a@postgrespro.ru>
2016-07-28 11:39:10 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 7d67606569 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 3d71988dffd3c0798a8864c55ca4b7833b48abb1
2016-07-18 12:07:49 -04:00
Tom Lane 18555b1323 Establish conventions about global object names used in regression tests.
To ensure that "make installcheck" can be used safely against an existing
installation, we need to be careful about what global object names
(database, role, and tablespace names) we use; otherwise we might
accidentally clobber important objects.  There's been a weak consensus that
test databases should have names including "regression", and that test role
names should start with "regress_", but we didn't have any particular rule
about tablespace names; and neither of the other rules was followed with
any consistency either.

This commit moves us a long way towards having a hard-and-fast rule that
regression test databases must have names including "regression", and that
test role and tablespace names must start with "regress_".  It's not
completely there because I did not touch some test cases in rolenames.sql
that test creation of special role names like "session_user".  That will
require some rethinking of exactly what we want to test, whereas the intent
of this patch is just to hit all the cases in which the needed renamings
are cosmetic.

There is no enforcement mechanism in this patch either, but if we don't
add one we can expect that the tests will soon be violating the convention
again.  Again, that's not such a cosmetic change and it will require
discussion.  (But I did use a quick-hack enforcement patch to find these
cases.)

Discussion: <16638.1468620817@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-07-17 18:42:43 -04:00
Stephen Frost 47f5bb9f53 Correctly dump database and tablespace ACLs
Dump out the appropriate GRANT/REVOKE commands for databases and
tablespaces from pg_dumpall to replicate what the current state is.

This was broken during the changes to buildACLCommands for 9.6+
servers for pg_init_privs.
2016-07-17 09:04:46 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 00e0b67a58 Remove reference to range mode in pg_xlogdump error
pg_xlogdump doesn't have any other mode, so it's just confusing to
include this in the error message as it indicates there might be another
mode.
2016-07-14 15:39:01 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut b9fc9f7c3c Put some things in a better order in psql help 2016-07-12 18:11:45 -04:00
Tom Lane a670c24c38 Improve output of psql's \df+ command.
Add display of proparallel (parallel-safety) when the server is >= 9.6,
and display of proacl (access privileges) for all server versions.
Minor tweak of column ordering to keep related columns together.

Michael Paquier

Discussion: <CAB7nPqTR3Vu3xKOZOYqSm-+bSZV0kqgeGAXD6w5GLbkbfd5Q6w@mail.gmail.com>
2016-07-11 12:35:08 -04:00
Magnus Hagander ae7d78c3e2 Add missing newline in error message 2016-07-11 13:53:17 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut bd406af168 psql: Improve \crosstabview error messages 2016-06-24 01:08:08 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 562e449724 Add tab completion for pager_min_lines to psql.
This was inadvertantly omitted from commit
7655f4ccea. Mea culpa.

Backpatched to 9.5 where pager_min_lines was introduced.
2016-06-23 16:10:15 -04:00
Tom Lane f8ace5477e Fix type-safety problem with parallel aggregate serial/deserialization.
The original specification for this called for the deserialization function
to have signature "deserialize(serialtype) returns transtype", which is a
security violation if transtype is INTERNAL (which it always would be in
practice) and serialtype is not (which ditto).  The patch blithely overrode
the opr_sanity check for that, which was sloppy-enough work in itself,
but the indisputable reason this cannot be allowed to stand is that CREATE
FUNCTION will reject such a signature and thus it'd be impossible for
extensions to create parallelizable aggregates.

The minimum fix to make the signature type-safe is to add a second, dummy
argument of type INTERNAL.  But to lock it down a bit more and make misuse
of INTERNAL-accepting functions less likely, let's get rid of the ability
to specify a "serialtype" for an aggregate and just say that the only
useful serialtype is BYTEA --- which, in practice, is the only interesting
value anyway, due to the usefulness of the send/recv infrastructure for
this purpose.  That means we only have to allow "serialize(internal)
returns bytea" and "deserialize(bytea, internal) returns internal" as
the signatures for these support functions.

In passing fix bogus signature of int4_avg_combine, which I found thanks
to adding an opr_sanity check on combinefunc signatures.

catversion bump due to removing pg_aggregate.aggserialtype and adjusting
signatures of assorted built-in functions.

David Rowley and Tom Lane

Discussion: <27247.1466185504@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-06-22 16:52:41 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 47981a4665 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 0c374f8d25ed31833a10d24252bc928d41438838
2016-06-20 09:48:08 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 3b5a2a8856 Reword bogus comment 2016-06-16 12:43:35 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera b000afea65 Remove unused prototype
Commit 6f56b41ac0 removed function get_pg_database_relfilenode but left
its prototype in place.  Remove it.
2016-06-16 12:06:51 -04:00
Tom Lane 9901d8ac2e Use strftime("%c") to format timestamps in psql's \watch command.
This allows the timestamps to follow local conventions (in particular,
they respond to the LC_TIME environment setting).  In C locale you get
the same results as before.  It seems like a good idea to do this now not
later because we already changed the format of \watch headers for 9.6.

Also, increase the buffer sizes a tad to ensure there's enough space for
translated strings.

Discussion: <20160612145532.GA22965@postgresql.kr>
2016-06-15 19:31:13 -04:00
Tom Lane 8383486f10 Force idle_in_transaction_session_timeout off in pg_dump and autovacuum.
We disable statement_timeout and lock_timeout during dump and restore, to
prevent any global settings that might exist from breaking routine backups.
Commit c6dda1f48 should have added idle_in_transaction_session_timeout to
that list, but failed to.

Another place where these timeouts get turned off is autovacuum.  While
I doubt an idle timeout could fire there, it seems better to be safe than
sorry.

pg_dump issue noted by Bernd Helmle, the other one found by grepping.

Report: <352F9B77DB5D3082578D17BB@eje.land.credativ.lan>
2016-06-15 10:53:03 -04:00
Noah Misch 3be0a62ffe Finish pgindent run for 9.6: Perl files. 2016-06-12 04:19:56 -04:00
Robert Haas 4bc424b968 pgindent run for 9.6 2016-06-09 18:02:36 -04:00
Robert Haas c9ce4a1c61 Eliminate "parallel degree" terminology.
This terminology provoked widespread complaints.  So, instead, rename
the GUC max_parallel_degree to max_parallel_workers_per_gather
(leaving room for a possible future GUC max_parallel_workers that acts
as a system-wide limit), and rename the parallel_degree reloption to
parallel_workers.  Rename structure members to match.

These changes create a dump/restore hazard for users of PostgreSQL
9.6beta1 who have set the reloption (or applied the GUC using ALTER
USER or ALTER DATABASE).
2016-06-09 10:00:26 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 8b3746208c Add missing translate_columns array entry
This omission caused an assertion error in \dA+.
2016-06-07 18:03:31 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 4f04b66f97 Fix loose ends for SQL ACCESS METHOD objects
COMMENT ON ACCESS METHOD was missing; add it, along psql tab-completion
support for it.

psql was also missing a way to list existing access methods; the new \dA
command does that.

Also add tab-completion support for DROP ACCESS METHOD.

Author: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAB7nPqTzdZdu8J7EF8SXr_R2U5bSUUYNOT3oAWBZdEoggnwhGA@mail.gmail.com
2016-06-07 17:59:34 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5c6d2a5e7c Message style and wording fixes 2016-06-07 14:18:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut d8c2dccfdb psql: Add missing file to nls.mk
crosstabview.c was not added to nls.mk when it was added.  Also remove
redundant gettext markers, since psql_error() is already registered as a
gettext keyword.
2016-06-07 10:58:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 298706de26 pgbench: Fix order in --help output
The new option --progress-timestamp was just added at the end.  Put it
in alphabetical order.
2016-06-07 10:41:20 -04:00
Stephen Frost 562f06f3f0 pg_dump only selected components of ACCESS METHODs
dumpAccessMethod() didn't get the memo that we now have a bitfield for
the components which should be dumped instead of a simple boolean.

Correct that by checking if the relevant bit is set for each component
being dumped out (and not dumping it out if it isn't set).

This corrects an issue where CREATE ACCESS METHOD commands were being
included in non-binary-upgrades when an extension included an access
method (as the bloom extensions does).

Also add a regression test to make sure that we only dump out the
ACCESS METHOD commands, when they are part of an extension, when doing
a binary upgrade.

Pointed out by Thom Brown.
2016-06-07 09:56:02 -04:00
Robert Haas e191a69005 pg_upgrade: Don't overwrite existing files.
For historical reasons, copyFile and rewriteVisibilityMap took a force
argument which was always passed as true, meaning that any existing
file should be overwritten.  However, it seems much safer to instead
fail if a file we need to write already exists.

While we're at it, remove the "force" argument altogether, since it was
never passed as anything other than true (and now we would never pass
it as anything other than false, if we kept it).

Noted by Andres Freund during post-commit review of the patch that added
rewriteVisibilityMap, commit 7087166a88,
but this also changes the behavior when copying files without rewriting
them.

Patch by Masahiko Sawada.
2016-06-06 09:51:56 -04:00
Robert Haas aba8943082 pg_upgrade: Improve error checking in rewriteVisibilityMap.
In the old logic, if read() were to return an error, we'd silently stop
rewriting the visibility map at that point in the file.  That's safe,
but reporting the error is better, so do that instead.

Report by Andres Freund.  Patch by Masahiko Sawada, with one correction
by me.
2016-06-06 06:17:10 -04:00
Tom Lane 6c72a28e5c Suppress -Wunused-result warnings about write(), again.
Adopt the same solution as in commit aa90e148ca, but this time
let's put the ugliness inside the write_stderr() macro, instead of
expecting each call site to deal with it.  Back-port that decision
into psql/common.c where I got the macro from in the first place.

Per gripe from Peter Eisentraut.
2016-06-03 11:29:38 -04:00
Greg Stark e1623c3959 Fix various common mispellings.
Mostly these are just comments but there are a few in documentation
and a handful in code and tests. Hopefully this doesn't cause too much
unnecessary pain for backpatching. I relented from some of the most
common like "thru" for that reason. The rest don't seem numerous
enough to cause problems.

Thanks to Kevin Lyda's tool https://pypi.python.org/pypi/misspellings
2016-06-03 16:08:45 +01:00
Tom Lane e652273e07 Redesign handling of SIGTERM/control-C in parallel pg_dump/pg_restore.
Formerly, Unix builds of pg_dump/pg_restore would trap SIGINT and similar
signals and set a flag that was tested in various data-transfer loops.
This was prone to errors of omission (cf commit 3c8aa6654); and even if
the client-side response was prompt, we did nothing that would cause
long-running SQL commands (e.g. CREATE INDEX) to terminate early.
Also, the master process would effectively do nothing at all upon receipt
of SIGINT; the only reason it seemed to work was that in typical scenarios
the signal would also be delivered to the child processes.  We should
support termination when a signal is delivered only to the master process,
though.

Windows builds had no console interrupt handler, so they would just fall
over immediately at control-C, again leaving long-running SQL commands to
finish unmolested.

To fix, remove the flag-checking approach altogether.  Instead, allow the
Unix signal handler to send a cancel request directly and then exit(1).
In the master process, also have it forward the signal to the children.
On Windows, add a console interrupt handler that behaves approximately
the same.  The main difference is that a single execution of the Windows
handler can send all the cancel requests since all the info is available
in one process, whereas on Unix each process sends a cancel only for its
own database connection.

In passing, fix an old problem that DisconnectDatabase tends to send a
cancel request before exiting a parallel worker, even if nothing went
wrong.  This is at least a waste of cycles, and could lead to unexpected
log messages, or maybe even data loss if it happened in pg_restore (though
in the current code the problem seems to affect only pg_dump).  The cause
was that after a COPY step, pg_dump was leaving libpq in PGASYNC_BUSY
state, causing PQtransactionStatus() to report PQTRANS_ACTIVE.  That's
normally harmless because the next PQexec() will silently clear the
PGASYNC_BUSY state; but in a parallel worker we might exit without any
additional SQL commands after a COPY step.  So add an extra PQgetResult()
call after a COPY to allow libpq to return to PGASYNC_IDLE state.

This is a bug fix, IMO, so back-patch to 9.3 where parallel dump/restore
were introduced.

Thanks to Kyotaro Horiguchi for Windows testing and code suggestions.

Original-Patch: <7005.1464657274@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: <20160602.174941.256342236.horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
2016-06-02 13:28:17 -04:00
Tom Lane 763eec6b6d Clean up some minor inefficiencies in parallel dump/restore.
Parallel dump did a totally pointless query to find out the name of each
table to be dumped, which it already knows.  Parallel restore runs issued
lots of redundant SET commands because _doSetFixedOutputState() was invoked
once per TOC item rather than just once at connection start.  While the
extra queries are insignificant if you're dumping or restoring large
tables, it still seems worth getting rid of them.

Also, give the responsibility for selecting the right client_encoding for
a parallel dump worker to setup_connection() where it naturally belongs,
instead of having ad-hoc code for that in CloneArchive().  And fix some
minor bugs like use of strdup() where pg_strdup() would be safer.

Back-patch to 9.3, mostly to keep the branches in sync in an area that
we're still finding bugs in.

Discussion: <5086.1464793073@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-06-01 16:14:21 -04:00
Tom Lane 3c8aa6654a Fix missing abort checks in pg_backup_directory.c.
Parallel restore from directory format failed to respond to control-C
in a timely manner, because there were no checkAborting() calls in the
code path that reads data from a file and sends it to the backend.
If any worker was in the midst of restoring data for a large table,
you'd just have to wait.

This fix doesn't do anything for the problem of aborting a long-running
server-side command, but at least it fixes things for data transfers.

Back-patch to 9.3 where parallel restore was introduced.
2016-05-29 13:18:48 -04:00
Tom Lane 210981a4a9 Remove pg_dump/parallel.c's useless "aborting" flag.
This was effectively dead code, since the places that tested it could not
be reached after we entered the on-exit-cleanup routine that would set it.
It seems to have been a leftover from a design in which error abort would
try to send fresh commands to the workers --- a design which could never
have worked reliably, of course.  Since the flag is not cross-platform, it
complicates reasoning about the code's behavior, which we could do without.

Although this is effectively just cosmetic, back-patch anyway, because
there are some actual bugs in the vicinity of this behavior.

Discussion: <15583.1464462418@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-05-29 13:00:09 -04:00
Tom Lane 6b3094c26f Lots of comment-fixing, and minor cosmetic cleanup, in pg_dump/parallel.c.
The commentary in this file was in extremely sad shape.  The author(s)
had clearly never heard of the project convention that a function header
comment should provide an API spec of some sort for that function.  Much
of it was flat out wrong, too --- maybe it was accurate when written, but
if so it had not been updated to track subsequent code revisions.  Rewrite
and rearrange to try to bring it up to speed, and annotate some of the
places where more work is needed.  (I've refrained from actually fixing
anything of substance ... yet.)

Also, rename a couple of functions for more clarity as to what they do,
do some very minor code rearrangement, remove some pointless Asserts,
fix an incorrect Assert in readMessageFromPipe, and add a missing socket
close in one error exit from pgpipe().  The last would be a bug if we
tried to continue after pgpipe() failure, but since we don't, it's just
cosmetic at present.

Although this is only cosmetic, back-patch to 9.3 where parallel.c was
added.  It's sufficiently invasive that it'll pose a hazard for future
back-patching if we don't.

Discussion: <25239.1464386067@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-05-28 14:02:11 -04:00
Tom Lane 807b45375b Clean up thread management in parallel pg_dump for Windows.
Since we start the worker threads with _beginthreadex(), we should use
_endthreadex() to terminate them.  We got this right in the normal-exit
code path, but not so much during an error exit from a worker.
In addition, be sure to apply CloseHandle to the thread handle after
each thread exits.

It's not clear that these oversights cause any user-visible problems,
since the pg_dump run is about to terminate anyway.  Still, it's clearly
better to follow Microsoft's API specifications than ignore them.

Also a few cosmetic cleanups in WaitForTerminatingWorkers(), including
being a bit less random about where to cast between uintptr_t and HANDLE,
and being sure to clear the worker identity field for each dead worker
(not that false matches should be possible later, but let's be careful).

Original observation and patch by Armin Schöffmann, cosmetic improvements
by Michael Paquier and me.  (Armin's patch also included closing sockets
in ShutdownWorkersHard(), but that's been dealt with already in commit
df8d2d8c4.)  Back-patch to 9.3 where parallel pg_dump was introduced.

Discussion: <zarafa.570306bd.3418.074bf1420d8f2ba2@root.aegaeon.de>
2016-05-27 12:02:09 -04:00
Magnus Hagander d74048defc Make pg_dump error cleanly with -j against hot standby
Getting a synchronized snapshot is not supported on a hot standby node,
and is by default taken when using -j with multiple sessions. Trying to
do so still failed, but with a server error that would also go in the
log. Instead, proprely detect this case and give a better error message.
2016-05-26 22:14:23 +02:00
Tom Lane cae2bb1986 Make pg_dump behave more sanely when built without HAVE_LIBZ.
For some reason the code to emit a warning and switch to uncompressed
output was placed down in the guts of pg_backup_archiver.c.  This is
definitely too late in the case of parallel operation (and I rather
wonder if it wasn't too late for other purposes as well).  Put it in
pg_dump.c's option-processing logic, which seems a much saner place.

Also, the default behavior with custom or directory output format was
to emit the warning telling you the output would be uncompressed.  This
seems unhelpful, so silence that case.

Back-patch to 9.3 where parallel dump was introduced.

Kyotaro Horiguchi, adjusted a bit by me

Report: <20160526.185551.242041780.horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
2016-05-26 11:51:04 -04:00
Tom Lane df8d2d8c42 In Windows pg_dump, ensure idle workers will shut down during error exit.
The Windows coding of ShutdownWorkersHard() thought that setting termEvent
was sufficient to make workers exit after an error.  But that only helps
if a worker is busy and passes through checkAborting().  An idle worker
will just sit, resulting in pg_dump failing to exit until the user gives up
and hits control-C.  We should close the write end of the command pipe
so that idle workers will see socket EOF and exit, as the Unix coding was
already doing.

Back-patch to 9.3 where parallel pg_dump was introduced.

Kyotaro Horiguchi
2016-05-26 10:50:30 -04:00
Tom Lane 9abd64ec99 Fix broken error handling in parallel pg_dump/pg_restore.
In the original design for parallel dump, worker processes reported errors
by sending them up to the master process, which would print the messages.
This is unworkably fragile for a couple of reasons: it risks deadlock if a
worker sends an error at an unexpected time, and if the master has already
died for some reason, the user will never get to see the error at all.
Revert that idea and go back to just always printing messages to stderr.
This approach means that if all the workers fail for similar reasons (eg,
bad password or server shutdown), the user will see N copies of that
message, not only one as before.  While that's slightly annoying, it's
certainly better than not seeing any message; not to mention that we
shouldn't assume that only the first failure is interesting.

An additional problem in the same area was that the master failed to
disable SIGPIPE (at least until much too late), which meant that sending a
command to an already-dead worker would cause the master to crash silently.
That was bad enough in itself but was made worse by the total reliance on
the master to print errors: even if the worker had reported an error, you
would probably not see it, depending on timing.  Instead disable SIGPIPE
right after we've forked the workers, before attempting to send them
anything.

Additionally, the master relies on seeing socket EOF to realize that a
worker has exited prematurely --- but on Windows, there would be no EOF
since the socket is attached to the process that includes both the master
and worker threads, so it remains open.  Make archive_close_connection()
close the worker end of the sockets so that this acts more like the Unix
case.  It's not perfect, because if a worker thread exits without going
through exit_nicely() the closures won't happen; but that's not really
supposed to happen.

This has been wrong all along, so back-patch to 9.3 where parallel dump
was introduced.

Report: <2458.1450894615@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-05-25 12:40:12 -04:00
Stephen Frost 018eb027f1 Do not DROP default roles in pg_dumpall -c
When pulling the list of roles to drop, exclude roles whose names
begin with "pg_" (as we do when we are dumping the roles out to
recreate them).

Also add regression tests to cover pg_dumpall -c and this specific
issue.

Noticed by Rushabh Lathia.  Patch by me.
2016-05-24 23:31:55 -04:00
Stephen Frost 2e8b4bf804 Qualify table usage in dumpTable() and use regclass
All of the other tables used in the query in dumpTable(), which is
collecting column-level ACLs, are qualified, so we should be qualifying
the pg_init_privs, the related sub-select against pg_class and the
other queries added by the pg_dump catalog ACLs work.

Also, use ::regclass (or ::pg_catalog.regclass, where appropriate)
instead of using a poorly constructed query to get the OID for various
catalog tables.

Issues identified by Noah and Alvaro, patch by me.
2016-05-24 20:10:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 1087aa2314 Fix typo in TAP test identification string.
Michael Paquier
2016-05-23 20:04:27 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a50b605aa4 psql: Message style improvements 2016-05-21 22:17:00 -04:00
Tom Lane 16ea51a263 Pin the built-in index access methods.
This was overlooked in commit 473b93287, which introduced DROP ACCESS
METHOD.  Although that command is restricted to superusers, we don't want
even superusers dropping the built-in methods; "DROP ACCESS METHOD btree"
in particular is unrecoverable from.  Pin these objects in the same way
that other initdb-created objects are pinned.

I chose to bump catversion for this fix.  That's not absolutely necessary
perhaps, but it will ensure that no 9.6 production systems are missing
the pin entries.
2016-05-19 14:40:02 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 48aaba4acf Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 17bf3e8564abf600274789fcc90e72532d5e7c05
2016-05-09 10:04:41 -04:00
Stephen Frost 6f69b96390 Wording quibbles regarding initdb username
Use disallowed instead of reserved, cannot instead of can not, and
double quotes instead of single quotes.

Also add a test to cover the bug which started this discussion.

Per discussion with Tom.
2016-05-08 12:58:21 -04:00
Stephen Frost 7df974ee0b Disallow superuser names starting with 'pg_' in initdb
As with CREATE ROLE, disallow users from specifying initial
superuser names which begin with 'pg_' in initdb.

Per discussion with Tom.
2016-05-08 11:55:44 -04:00
Tom Lane b818088408 In new pg_dump TAP tests, remove trailing "$" from regexps using /m.
It emerges that some Perl versions before 5.8.9 have a bug with regexps
that use the /m flag and contain "$".  This is the reason why jacana
is still failing on HEAD, and I was able to duplicate the failure on
prairiedog's host.  There's no real need for "$" in these patterns,
since they are already matching through the statement-terminating
semicolons (or matching an explicit \n in some cases).  So just
remove it.

Note: the reason jacana hasn't actually reported any failures in the
last little while is that the way the pg_dump TAP tests are set up, any
failure of this sort results in echoing the entire pg_dump dump output
to stderr.  Since there were about a hundred such failures, that resulted
in a 30MB log file which choked the buildfarm upload script.  There is
room for improvement here :-(.

Per off-list discussion with Andrew and Stephen.
2016-05-07 16:36:50 -04:00
Tom Lane 74a73b1722 Clean up after pg_dump test runs.
The tmp_check directory needs to be removed by "make clean",
and also ignored by .gitignore.
2016-05-06 22:28:01 -04:00
Tom Lane 1a2c17f8e2 Fix pg_upgrade to not fail when new-cluster TOAST rules differ from old.
This patch essentially reverts commit 4c6780fd17, in favor of a much
simpler solution for the case where the new cluster would choose to create
a TOAST table but the old cluster doesn't have one: just don't create a
TOAST table.

The existing code failed in at least two different ways if the situation
arose: (1) ALTER TABLE RESET didn't grab an exclusive lock, so that the
lock sanity check in create_toast_table failed; (2) pg_upgrade did not
provide a pg_type OID for the new toast table, so that the crosscheck in
TypeCreate failed.  While both these problems were introduced by later
patches, they show that the hack being used to cause TOAST table creation
is overwhelmingly fragile (and untested).  I also note that before the
TypeCreate crosscheck was added, the code would have resulted in assigning
an indeterminate pg_type OID to the toast table, possibly causing a later
OID conflict in that catalog; so that it didn't really work even when
committed.

If we simply don't create a TOAST table, there will only be a problem if
the code tries to store a tuple that's wider than a page, and field
compression isn't sufficient to get it under a page.  Given that the TOAST
creation threshold is intended to be about a quarter of a page, it's very
hard to believe that cross-version differences in the do-we-need-a-toast-
table heuristic could result in an observable problem.  So let's just
follow the old version's conclusion about whether a TOAST table is needed.

(If we ever do change needs_toast_table() so much that this conclusion
doesn't apply, we can devise a solution at that time, and hopefully do
it in a less klugy way than 4c6780fd17 did.)

Back-patch to 9.3, like the previous patch.

Discussion: <8110.1462291671@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-05-06 22:05:56 -04:00
Stephen Frost 0f97c722bb Disable BLOB test in pg_dump TAP tests
Buildfarm member jacana appears to have an issue with running this
test.  It's not entirely clear to me why, but rather than try to
fight with it, just disable it for now.

None of the other tests try to write out from psql directly as
this test does, so it seems likely that the rest of the tests will
be fine (as they have been on numerous other systems).
2016-05-06 21:24:31 -04:00
Stephen Frost c778e27e13 Correct query in pg_dumpall:dumpRoles
We need to use a new branch due to the 9.5 addition of bypassrls
when adding in the clause to exclude pg_* roles from being dumped
by pg_dumpall.

Pointed out by Noah, patch by me.
2016-05-06 16:15:52 -04:00
Stephen Frost eccfeeb631 Remove MODULES_big from test_pg_dump
The Makefile for test_pg_dump shouldn't have a MODULES_big line
because there's no actual compiled bit for that extension.  Hopefully
this will fix the Windows buildfarm members which were complaining.

In passing, also add the 'prove_installcheck' bit to the pg_dump and
test_pg_dump Makefiles, to get the buildfarm members to actually run
those tests.
2016-05-06 15:26:57 -04:00
Tom Lane 73b9952e82 Improve pg_upgrade's report about failure to match up old and new tables.
Ordinarily, pg_upgrade shouldn't have any difficulty in matching up all
the relations it sees in the old and new databases.  If it does, however,
it just goes belly-up with a pretty unhelpful error message.  That seemed
fine as long as we expected the case never to occur in the wild, but
Alvaro reported that it had been seen in a database whose pg_largeobject
table had somehow acquired a TOAST table.  That doesn't quite seem like
a case that pg_upgrade actually needs to handle, but it would be good if
the report were more diagnosable.  Hence, extend the logic to print out
as much information as we can about the mismatch(es) before we quit.

In passing, improve the readability of get_rel_infos()'s data collection
query, which had suffered seriously from lets-not-bother-to-update-comments
syndrome, and generally was unnecessarily disrespectful to readers.

It could be argued that this is a bug fix, but given that we have so few
reports, I don't feel a need to back-patch; at least not before this has
baked awhile in HEAD.
2016-05-06 14:45:01 -04:00
Stephen Frost 6bd356c33a Add TAP tests for pg_dump
This TAP test suite will create a new cluster, populate it based on
the 'create_sql' values in the '%tests' hash, run all of the runs
defined in the '%pgdump_runs' hash, and then for each test in the
'%tests' hash, compare each run's output the the regular expression
defined for the test under the 'like' and 'unlike' functions, as
appropriate.

While this test suite covers a fair bit of ground (67% of pg_dump.c
and quite a bit of the other files in src/bin/pg_dump), there is
still quite a bit which remains to be added to provide better code
coverage.  Still, this is quite a bit better than we had, and has
found a few bugs already (note that the CREATE TRANSFORM test is
commented out, as it is currently failing).

Idea for using the TAP system from Tom, though all of the code is mine.
2016-05-06 14:06:50 -04:00
Stephen Frost e1b120a8cb Only issue LOCK TABLE commands when necessary
Reviewing the cases where we need to LOCK a given table during a dump,
it was pointed out by Tom that we really don't need to LOCK a table if
we are only looking to dump the ACL for it, or certain other
components.  After reviewing the queries run for all of the component
pieces, a list of components were determined to not require LOCK'ing
of the table.

This implements a check to avoid LOCK'ing those tables.

Initial complaint from Rushabh Lathia, discussed with Robert and Tom,
the patch is mine.
2016-05-06 14:06:50 -04:00
Stephen Frost 5d589993ca pg_dump performance and other fixes
Do not try to dump objects which do not have ACLs when only ACLs are
being requested.  This results in a significant performance improvement
as we can avoid querying for further information on these objects when
we don't need to.

When limiting the components to dump for an extension, consider what
components have been requested.  Initially, we incorrectly hard-coded
the components of the extension objects to dump, which would mean that
we wouldn't dump some components even with they were asked for and in
other cases we would dump components which weren't requested.

Correct defaultACLs to use 'dump_contains' instead of 'dump'.  The
defaultACL is considered a member of the namespace and should be
dumped based on the same set of components that the other objects in
the schema are, not based on what we're dumping for the namespace
itself (which might not include ACLs, if the namespace has just the
default or initial ACL).

Use DUMP_COMPONENT_ACL for from-initdb objects, to allow users to
change their ACLs, should they wish to.  This just extends what we
are doing for the pg_catalog namespace to objects which are not
members of namespaces.

Due to column ACLs being treated a bit differently from other ACLs
(they are actually reset to NULL when all privileges are revoked),
adjust the query which gathers column-level ACLs to consider all of
the ACL-relevant columns.
2016-05-06 14:06:50 -04:00
Stephen Frost 64d60c8bf0 Correct pg_dump WHERE clause for functions/aggregates
The query to grab the function/aggregate information is now joining
to pg_init_privs, so we can simplify (and correct) the WHERE clause
used to determine if a given function's ACL has changed from the
initial ACL on the function.

Bug found by Noah, patch by me.
2016-05-06 14:06:50 -04:00
Tom Lane 6b8b4e4d83 Fix pgbench's parsing of double values to notice trailing garbage.
Noted by Fabien Coelho, though this isn't exactly his proposed patch.
(The technique used here is borrowed from the zic sources.)
2016-05-06 11:08:48 -04:00
Tom Lane 9515299485 Improve handling of numeric-valued variables in pgbench.
The previous coding always stored variable values as strings, doing
conversion on-the-fly when a numeric value was needed or a number was to be
assigned.  This was a bit inefficient and risked loss of precision for
floating-point values.  The precision aspect had been hacked around by
printing doubles in "%.18e" format, which is ugly and has machine-dependent
results.  Instead, arrange to preserve an assigned numeric value in the
original binary numeric format, converting to string only when and if
needed.  When we do need to convert a double to string, convert in "%g"
format with DBL_DIG precision, which is the standard way to do it and
produces the least surprising results in most cases.

The implementation supports storing both a string value and a numeric
value for any one variable, with lazy conversion between them.  I also
arranged for lazy re-sorting of the variable array when new variables are
added.  That was mainly to allow a clean refactoring of putVariable()
into two levels of subroutine, but it may allow us to save a few sorts.

Discussion: <9188.1462475559@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-05-06 11:01:05 -04:00
Dean Rasheed 9b66aa006f Fix psql's \ev and \sv commands so that they handle view reloptions.
Commit 8eb6407aae added support for
editing and showing view definitions, but neglected to account for
view options such as security_barrier and WITH CHECK OPTION which are
not returned by pg_get_viewdef() and so need special handling.

Author: Dean Rasheed
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut
Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAEZATCWZjCgKRyM-agE0p8ax15j9uyQoF=qew7D2xB6cF76T8A@mail.gmail.com
2016-05-06 12:48:27 +01:00
Dean Rasheed 93a8c6fd6c Move and rename fmtReloptionsArray().
Move fmtReloptionsArray() from pg_dump.c to string_utils.c so that it
is available to other frontend code. In particular psql's \ev and \sv
commands need it to handle view reloptions. Also rename the function
to appendReloptionsArray(), which is a more accurate description of
what it does.

Author: Dean Rasheed
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut
Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAEZATCWZjCgKRyM-agE0p8ax15j9uyQoF=qew7D2xB6cF76T8A@mail.gmail.com
2016-05-06 12:45:36 +01:00
Tom Lane 7a622b2731 Rename pgbench min/max to least/greatest, and fix handling of double args.
These functions behave like the backend's least/greatest functions,
not like min/max, so the originally-chosen names invite confusion.
Per discussion, rename to least/greatest.

I also took it upon myself to make them return double if any input is
double.  The previous behavior of silently coercing all inputs to int
surely does not meet the principle of least astonishment.

Copy-edit some of the other new functions' documentation, too.
2016-05-05 14:51:00 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 0fb54de9aa Support building with Visual Studio 2015
Adjust the way we detect the locale. As a result the minumum Windows
version supported by VS2015 and later is Windows Vista. Add some tweaks
to remove new compiler warnings. Remove documentation references to the
now obsolete msysGit.

Michael Paquier, somewhat edited by me, reviewed by Christian Ullrich.

Backpatch to 9.5
2016-04-29 08:09:07 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 3019f432d6 pg_dump: Message style improvements
forgotten in b6dacc173b
2016-04-26 21:37:06 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut b6dacc173b pg_dump: Message style improvements 2016-04-25 17:16:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 63417b4b2e Update GETTEXT_FILES after config and controldata refactoring 2016-04-24 20:58:11 -04:00
Robert Haas b4e0f18382 Add pg_dump support for the new PARALLEL option for aggregates.
This was an oversight in commit 41ea0c2376.

Fabrízio de Royes Mello, per a report from Tushar Ahuja
2016-04-20 23:06:06 -04:00
Tom Lane 9603a32594 Avoid code duplication in \crosstabview.
In commit 6f0d6a507 I added a duplicate copy of psqlscanslash's identifier
downcasing code, but actually it's not hard to split that out as a callable
subroutine and avoid the duplication.
2016-04-17 11:37:58 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c313687673 psql: Add new gettext trigger 2016-04-15 20:23:41 -04:00
Tom Lane 6f0d6a5078 Rethink \crosstabview's argument parsing logic.
\crosstabview interpreted its arguments in an unusual way, including
doing case-insensitive matching of unquoted column names, which is
surely not the right thing.  Rip that out in favor of doing something
equivalent to the dequoting/case-folding rules used by other psql
commands.  To keep it simple, change the syntax so that the optional
sort column is specified as a separate argument, instead of the
also-quite-unusual syntax that attached it to the colH argument with
a colon.

Also, rework the error messages to be closer to project style.
2016-04-14 22:54:31 -04:00
Tom Lane 6cead413bb Fix pg_dump so pg_upgrade'ing an extension with simple opfamilies works.
As reported by Michael Feld, pg_upgrade'ing an installation having
extensions with operator families that contain just a single operator class
failed to reproduce the extension membership of those operator families.
This caused no immediate ill effects, but would create problems when later
trying to do a plain dump and restore, because the seemingly-not-part-of-
the-extension operator families would appear separately in the pg_dump
output, and then would conflict with the families created by loading the
extension.  This has been broken ever since extensions were introduced,
and many of the standard contrib extensions are affected, so it's a bit
astonishing nobody complained before.

The cause of the problem is a perhaps-ill-considered decision to omit
such operator families from pg_dump's output on the grounds that the
CREATE OPERATOR CLASS commands could recreate them, and having explicit
CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY commands would impede loading the dump script into
pre-8.3 servers.  Whatever the merits of that decision when 8.3 was being
written, it looks like a poor tradeoff now.  We can fix the pg_upgrade
problem simply by removing that code, so that the operator families are
dumped explicitly (and then will be properly made to be part of their
extensions).

Although this fixes the behavior of future pg_upgrade runs, it does nothing
to clean up existing installations that may have improperly-linked operator
families.  Given the small number of complaints to date, maybe we don't
need to worry about providing an automated solution for that; anyone who
needs to clean it up can do so with manual "ALTER EXTENSION ADD OPERATOR
FAMILY" commands, or even just ignore the duplicate-opfamily errors they
get during a pg_restore.  In any case we need this fix.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: <20228.1460575691@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-04-13 18:58:14 -04:00
Tom Lane 7a5f8b5c59 Improve coding of column-name parsing in psql's new crosstabview.c.
Coverity complained about this code, not without reason because it was
rather messy.  Adjust it to not scribble on the passed string; that adds
one malloc/free cycle per column name, which is going to be insignificant
in context.  We can actually const-ify both the string argument and the
PGresult.

Daniel Verité, with some further cleanup by me
2016-04-12 12:52:42 -04:00
Tom Lane 074050f16a pg_dump: add missing "destroyPQExpBuffer(query)" in dumpForeignServer().
Coverity complained about this resource leak (why now, I don't know,
since it's been like that a long time).  Our general policy in pg_dump
is that PQExpBuffers are worth cleaning up, so do it here too.  But
don't bother with a back-patch, because it seems unlikely that very
many databases contain enough FOREIGN SERVER objects to notice.
2016-04-11 00:00:08 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera c09b18f21c Support \crosstabview in psql
\crosstabview is a completely different way to display results from a
query: instead of a vertical display of rows, the data values are placed
in a grid where the column and row headers come from the data itself,
similar to a spreadsheet.

The sort order of the horizontal header can be specified by using
another column in the query, and the vertical header determines its
ordering from the order in which they appear in the query.

This only allows displaying a single value in each cell.  If more than
one value correspond to the same cell, an error is thrown.  Merging of
values can be done in the query itself, if necessary.  This may be
revisited in the future.

Author: Daniel Verité
Reviewed-by: Pavel Stehule, Dean Rasheed
2016-04-08 20:23:18 -03:00
Stephen Frost 293007898d Reserve the "pg_" namespace for roles
This will prevent users from creating roles which begin with "pg_" and
will check for those roles before allowing an upgrade using pg_upgrade.

This will allow for default roles to be provided at initdb time.

Reviews by José Luis Tallón and Robert Haas
2016-04-08 16:56:27 -04:00
Stephen Frost fa6075e551 Fix improper usage of 'dump' bitmap
Now that 'dump' is a bitmap, we can't simply set it to 'true'.

Noticed while debugging the prior issue.
2016-04-08 16:30:02 -04:00
Stephen Frost 689f9a0588 In dumpTable, re-instate the skipping logic
Pretty sure I removed this based on some incorrect thinking that it was
no longer possible to reach this point for a table which will not be
dumped, but that's clearly wrong.

Pointed out on IRC by Erik Rijkers.
2016-04-08 15:00:44 -04:00
Teodor Sigaev 8b99edefca Revert CREATE INDEX ... INCLUDING ...
It's not ready yet, revert two commits
690c543550 - unstable test output
386e3d7609 - patch itself
2016-04-08 21:52:13 +03:00
Tom Lane 34c33a1f00 Add BSD authentication method.
Create a "bsd" auth method that works the same as "password" so far as
clients are concerned, but calls the BSD Authentication service to
check the password.  This is currently only available on OpenBSD.

Marisa Emerson, reviewed by Thomas Munro
2016-04-08 13:52:06 -04:00
Teodor Sigaev 386e3d7609 CREATE INDEX ... INCLUDING (column[, ...])
Now indexes (but only B-tree for now) can contain "extra" column(s) which
doesn't participate in index structure, they are just stored in leaf
tuples. It allows to use index only scan by using single index instead
of two or more indexes.

Author: Anastasia Lubennikova with minor editorializing by me
Reviewers: David Rowley, Peter Geoghegan, Jeff Janes
2016-04-08 19:45:59 +03:00
Robert Haas 25fe8b5f1a Add a 'parallel_degree' reloption.
The code that estimates what parallel degree should be uesd for the
scan of a relation is currently rather stupid, so add a parallel_degree
reloption that can be used to override the planner's rather limited
judgement.

Julien Rouhaud, reviewed by David Rowley, James Sewell, Amit Kapila,
and me.  Some further hacking by me.
2016-04-08 11:14:56 -04:00
Stephen Frost 23f34fa4ba In pg_dump, include pg_catalog and extension ACLs, if changed
Now that all of the infrastructure exists, add in the ability to
dump out the ACLs of the objects inside of pg_catalog or the ACLs
for objects which are members of extensions, but only if they have
been changed from their original values.

The original values are tracked in pg_init_privs.  When pg_dump'ing
9.6-and-above databases, we will dump out the ACLs for all objects
in pg_catalog and the ACLs for all extension members, where the ACL
has been changed from the original value which was set during either
initdb or CREATE EXTENSION.

This should not change dumps against pre-9.6 databases.

Reviews by Alexander Korotkov, Jose Luis Tallon
2016-04-06 21:45:32 -04:00
Stephen Frost d217b2c360 In pg_dump, split "dump" into "dump" and "dump_contains"
Historically, the "dump" component of the namespace has been used
to decide if the objects inside of the namespace should be dumped
also.  Given that "dump" is now a bitmask and may be partial, and
we may want to dump out all components of the namespace object but
only some of the components of objects contained in the namespace,
create a "dump_contains" bitmask which will represent what components
of the objects inside of a namespace should be dumped out.

No behavior change here, but in preparation for a change where we
will dump out just the ACLs of objects in pg_catalog, but we might
not dump out the ACL of the pg_catalog namespace itself (for instance,
when it hasn't been changed from the value set at initdb time).

Reviews by Alexander Korotkov, Jose Luis Tallon
2016-04-06 21:45:32 -04:00
Stephen Frost a9f0e8e5a2 In pg_dump, use a bitmap to represent what to include
pg_dump has historically used a simple boolean 'dump' value to indicate
if a given object should be included in the dump or not.  Instead, use
a bitmap which breaks down the components of an object into their
distinct pieces and use that bitmap to only include the components
requested.

This does not include any behavioral change, but is in preperation for
the change to dump out just ACLs for objects in pg_catalog.

Reviews by Alexander Korotkov, Jose Luis Tallon
2016-04-06 21:45:32 -04:00
Stephen Frost 6c268df127 Add new catalog called pg_init_privs
This new catalog holds the privileges which the system was
initialized with at initdb time, along with any permissions set
by extensions at CREATE EXTENSION time.  This allows pg_dump
(and any other similar use-cases) to detect when the privileges
set on initdb-created or extension-created objects have been
changed from what they were set to at initdb/extension-creation
time and handle those changes appropriately.

Reviews by Alexander Korotkov, Jose Luis Tallon
2016-04-06 21:45:32 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 3b3fcc4eea pg_dump: Add table qualifications to some tags
Some object types have names that are only unique for one table.  But
for those we generally didn't put the table name into the dump TOC tag.
So it was impossible to identify these objects if the same name was used
for multiple tables.  This affects policies, column defaults,
constraints, triggers, and rules.

Fix by adding the table name to the TOC tag, so that it now reads
"$schema $table $object".

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-04-06 12:13:11 -04:00
Simon Riggs 3fe3511d05 Generic Messages for Logical Decoding
API and mechanism to allow generic messages to be inserted into WAL that are
intended to be read by logical decoding plugins. This commit adds an optional
new callback to the logical decoding API.

Messages are either text or bytea. Messages can be transactional, or not, and
are identified by a prefix to allow multiple concurrent decoding plugins.

(Not to be confused with Generic WAL records, which are intended to allow crash
recovery of extensible objects.)

Author: Petr Jelinek and Andres Freund
Reviewers: Artur Zakirov, Tomas Vondra, Simon Riggs
Discussion: 5685F999.6010202@2ndquadrant.com
2016-04-06 10:05:41 +01:00
Tom Lane 2bbe9112ae Add a \gexec command to psql for evaluation of computed queries.
\gexec executes the just-entered query, like \g, but instead of printing
the results it takes each field as a SQL command to send to the server.
Computing a series of queries to be executed is a fairly common thing,
but up to now you always had to resort to kluges like writing the queries
to a file and then inputting the file.  Now it can be done with no
intermediate step.

The implementation is fairly straightforward except for its interaction
with FETCH_COUNT.  ExecQueryUsingCursor isn't capable of being called
recursively, and even if it were, its need to create a transaction
block interferes unpleasantly with the desired behavior of \gexec after
a failure of a generated query (i.e., that it can continue).  Therefore,
disable use of ExecQueryUsingCursor when doing the master \gexec query.
We can still apply it to individual generated queries, however, and there
might be some value in doing so.

While testing this feature's interaction with single-step mode, I (tgl) was
led to conclude that SendQuery needs to recognize SIGINT (cancel_pressed)
as a negative response to the single-step prompt.  Perhaps that's a
back-patchable bug fix, but for now I just included it here.

Corey Huinker, reviewed by Jim Nasby, Daniel Vérité, and myself
2016-04-04 15:25:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 3cc38ca7d2 Add psql \errverbose command to see last server error at full verbosity.
Often, upon getting an unexpected error in psql, one's first wish is that
the verbosity setting had been higher; for example, to be able to see the
schema-name field or the server code location info.  Up to now the only way
has been to adjust the VERBOSITY variable and repeat the failing query.
That's a pain, and it doesn't work if the error isn't reproducible.

This commit adds a psql feature that redisplays the most recent server
error at full verbosity, without needing to make any variable changes or
re-execute the failed command.  We just need to hang onto the latest error
PGresult in case the user executes \errverbose, and then apply libpq's
new PQresultVerboseErrorMessage() function to it.  This will consume
some trivial amount of psql memory, but otherwise the cost when the
feature isn't used should be negligible.

Alex Shulgin, reviewed by Daniel Vérité, some improvements by me
2016-04-03 12:29:55 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 5cb882675a pgbench: Remove unused parameter
For some reason this parameter was introduced as unused in 3da0dfb4b1,
and has never been used for anything.  Remove it.

Author: Fabien Coelho
2016-04-01 17:11:18 -03:00
Teodor Sigaev 65578341af Add Generic WAL interface
This interface is designed to give an access to WAL for extensions which
could implement new access method, for example. Previously it was
impossible because restoring from custom WAL would need to access system
catalog to find a redo custom function. This patch suggests generic way
to describe changes on page with standart layout.

Bump XLOG_PAGE_MAGIC because of new record type.

Author: Alexander Korotkov with a help of Petr Jelinek, Markus Nullmeier and
	minor editorization by my
Reviewers: Petr Jelinek, Alvaro Herrera, Teodor Sigaev, Jim Nasby,
	Michael Paquier
2016-04-01 12:21:48 +03:00
Robert Haas 5fe5a2cee9 Allow aggregate transition states to be serialized and deserialized.
This is necessary infrastructure for supporting parallel aggregation
for aggregates whose transition type is "internal".  Such values
can't be passed between cooperating processes, because they are
just pointers.

David Rowley, reviewed by Tomas Vondra and by me.
2016-03-29 15:04:05 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera a1c935d3b7 pgbench: allow a script weight of zero
This refines the previous weight range and allows a script to be "turned
off" by passing a zero weight, which is useful when scripting multiple
pgbench runs.

I did not apply the suggested warning when a script uses zero weight; we
use the principle elsewhere that if there's nothing to be done, do
nothing quietly.

Adjust docs accordingly.

Author: Jeff Janes, Fabien Coelho
2016-03-29 14:47:10 -03:00
Robert Haas ad9566470b pgbench: Remove \setrandom.
You can now do the same thing via \set using the appropriate function,
either random(), random_gaussian(), or random_exponential(), depending
on the desired distribution.  This is not backward-compatible, but per
discussion, it's worth it to avoid having the old syntax hang around
forever.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Michael Paquier, and adjusted by me.
2016-03-29 12:08:49 -04:00
Tom Lane 656ee84890 Fix portability issues in 86c43f4e22.
INT64_MIN/MAX should be spelled PG_INT64_MIN/MAX, per well established
convention in our sources.  Less obviously, a symbol named DOUBLE causes
problems on Windows builds, so rename that to DOUBLE_CONST; and rename
INTEGER to INTEGER_CONST for consistency.

Also, get rid of incorrect/obsolete hand-munging of yycolumn, and fix
the grammar for float constants to handle expected cases such as ".1".

First two items by Michael Paquier, second two by me.
2016-03-29 00:53:53 -04:00
Robert Haas 86c43f4e22 pgbench: Support double constants and functions.
The new functions are pi(), random(), random_exponential(),
random_gaussian(), and sqrt().  I was worried that this would be
slower than before, but, if anything, it actually turns out to be
slightly faster, because we now express the built-in pgbench scripts
using fewer lines; each \setrandom can be merged into a subsequent
\set.

Fabien Coelho
2016-03-28 20:45:57 -04:00
Tom Lane 1f4e9da624 Sync tzload() and tzparse() APIs with IANA release tzcode2016c.
This brings us a bit closer to matching upstream, but since it affects
files outside src/timezone/, we might choose not to back-patch it.
Hence keep it separate from the main update patch.
2016-03-28 17:19:29 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera cad3edef4f pg_rewind: Improve internationalization
This is mostly cosmetic since two of the three changes are debug
messages, and the third one is just a progress indicator.

Author: Michaël Paquier
2016-03-28 14:33:00 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 37732a2555 Fix minor leak in pg_dump for ACCESS METHOD.
Bug reported by Coverity.

Author: Michaël Paquier
2016-03-28 14:27:41 -03:00
Teodor Sigaev 559e7a0a6d psql tab-complete for CREATE/DROP ACCESS METHOD
Alexander Korotkov
2016-03-28 19:32:13 +03:00
Teodor Sigaev dabd255d58 Fix comment in pg_dump.
It was missed in 473b932870,
CREATE ACCESS METHOD

Alexander Korotkov
2016-03-28 19:17:28 +03:00
Andres Freund 408f043853 pg_rewind: fsync target data directory.
Previously pg_rewind did not fsync any files. That's problematic, given
that the target directory is modified. If the database was started
afterwards, 2ce439f33 luckily already caused the data directory to be
synced to disk at postmaster startup; reducing the scope of the problem.

To fix, use initdb -S, at the end of the pg_rewind run. It doesn't seem
worthwhile to duplicate the code into pg_rewind, and initdb -S is
already used that way by pg_upgrade.

Reported-By: Andres Freund
Author: Michael Paquier, somewhat edited by me
Discussion: 20160310034352.iuqgvpmg5qmnxtkz@alap3.anarazel.de
    CAB7nPqSytVG1o4S3S2pA1O=692ekurJ+fckW2PywEG3sNw54Ow@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 9.5, where pg_rewind was introduced
2016-03-27 23:46:25 +02:00
Andres Freund a6c845946d pg_rewind: Close backup_label file descriptor.
This was a relatively harmless leak, as createBackupLabel() is only
called once per pg_rewind invocation.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reported-By: Michael Paquier
Discussion: CAB7nPqRnOw30gOXe2_SPLjh37bgm4V+txbYAPwoXb97nGQ297w@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 9.5, where pg_rewind was introduced
2016-03-27 22:48:31 +02:00
Tom Lane 7caaeaf360 Link libpq after libpgfeutils to satisfy Windows linker.
Some of the non-MSVC Windows buildfarm members seem to need this to avoid
getting "undefined symbol" errors on libpgfeutils' references to libpq.
I could understand that if libpq were a static library, but surely it is
not?  Oh well, at least the extra reference is no more harmful than it is
for libpgcommon or libpgport.
2016-03-24 20:45:31 -04:00
Tom Lane c1156411ad Move psql's psqlscan.l into src/fe_utils.
This completes (at least for now) the project of getting rid of ad-hoc
linkages among the src/bin/ subdirectories.  Everything they share is now
in src/fe_utils/ and is included from a static library at link time.

A side benefit is that we can restore the FLEX_NO_BACKUP check for
psqlscanslash.l.  We might need to think of another way to do that check
if we ever need to build two lexers with that property in the same source
directory, but there's no foreseeable reason to need that.
2016-03-24 20:28:47 -04:00
Tom Lane d65bea26a8 Move psql's print.c and mbprint.c into src/fe_utils.
Just turning the crank ...
2016-03-24 18:27:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 588d963b00 Create src/fe_utils/, and move stuff into there from pg_dump's dumputils.
Per discussion, we want to create a static library and put the stuff into
it that until now has been shared across src/bin/ directories by ad-hoc
methods like symlinking a source file.  This commit creates the library and
populates it with a couple of files that contain the widely-useful portions
of pg_dump's dumputils.c file.  dumputils.c survives, because it has some
stuff that didn't seem appropriate for fe_utils, but it's significantly
smaller and is no longer referenced from any other directory.

Follow-on patches will move more stuff into fe_utils.

The Mkvcbuild.pm hacking here is just a best guess; we'll see how the
buildfarm likes it.
2016-03-24 15:55:57 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 473b932870 Support CREATE ACCESS METHOD
This enables external code to create access methods.  This is useful so
that extensions can add their own access methods which can be formally
tracked for dependencies, so that DROP operates correctly.  Also, having
explicit support makes pg_dump work correctly.

Currently only index AMs are supported, but we expect different types to
be added in the future.

Authors: Alexander Korotkov, Petr Jelínek
Reviewed-By: Teodor Sigaev, Petr Jelínek, Jim Nasby
Commitfest-URL: https://commitfest.postgresql.org/9/353/
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAPpHfdsXwZmojm6Dx+TJnpYk27kT4o7Ri6X_4OSWcByu1Rm+VA@mail.gmail.com
2016-03-23 23:01:35 -03:00
Tom Lane 2c6af4f442 Move keywords.c/kwlookup.c into src/common/.
Now that we have src/common/ for code shared between frontend and backend,
we can get rid of (most of) the klugy ways that the keyword table and
keyword lookup code were formerly shared between different uses.
This is a first step towards a more general plan of getting rid of
special-purpose kluges for sharing code in src/bin/.

I chose to merge kwlookup.c back into keywords.c, as it once was, and
always has been so far as keywords.h is concerned.  We could have
kept them separate, but there is noplace that uses ScanKeywordLookup
without also wanting access to the backend's keyword list, so there
seems little point.

ecpg is still a bit weird, but at least now the trickiness is documented.

I think that the MSVC build script should require no adjustments beyond
what's done here ... but we'll soon find out.
2016-03-23 20:22:08 -04:00
Tom Lane b283096534 Allow the delay in psql's \watch command to be a fractional second.
Instead of just "2" seconds, allow eg. "2.5" seconds.  Per request
from Alvaro Herrera.  No docs change since the docs didn't say you
couldn't do this already.
2016-03-21 18:34:18 -04:00
Tom Lane dea2b5960a Improve header output from psql's \watch command.
Include the \pset title string if there is one, and shorten the prefab
part of the header to be "timestamp (every Ns)".  Per suggestion by
David Johnston.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane
2016-03-21 18:18:13 -04:00
Tom Lane b6afae71aa Use %option bison-bridge in psql/pgbench lexers.
The point of this change is to use %pure-parser in pgbench's exprparse.y.
The immediate reason is that it turns out very ancient versions of bison
have a bug with the combination of a reentrant lexer and non-reentrant
parser.  We could consider dropping support for such ancient bisons; but
considering that we might well need exprparse.y to be reentrant some day,
it seems better to make it so right now than to move the portability
goalposts.  (AFAICT there's no particular performance consequence to this
change, either, so there's no good reason not to do it.)

Now, %pure-parser assumes that the called lexer is built with %option
bison-bridge.  Because we're assuming bitwise compatibility of yyscan_t
(yyguts_t) data structures among all the psql/pgbench lexers, that
requirement propagates back to psql's lexers as well.  But it's just a
few lines of change on that side too; and if psqlscan.l is to set the
baseline for a possibly-large family of lexers, it should err on the
side of including not omitting useful features.
2016-03-20 21:59:03 -04:00
Tom Lane 68ab8e8ba4 SQL commands in pgbench scripts are now ended by semicolons, not newlines.
To allow multiline SQL commands in scripts, adopt the same rules psql uses
to decide what is the end of a SQL command, to wit, an unquoted semicolon
not encased in parentheses.  Do this by importing the same flex lexer that
psql uses, since coping with stuff like dollar-quoted literals is hard to
get right without going the full nine yards.

This makes use of the infrastructure added in commit 0ea9efbe9e to
support independently-written flex lexers scanning the same PsqlScanState
input-buffer data structure.  Since that infrastructure isn't very
friendly to ad-hoc parsing code such as strtok(), improve exprscan.l
so that it can parse either whitespace-separated words or expression
tokens, on demand, and rewrite pgbench.c's backslash-command parsing
code to always use the lexer to fetch tokens.

It's still the case that pgbench backslash commands extend to the end
of the line, no more and no less.  That could be changed in a fairly
localized way now, and there was some interest in doing so, but it
seems like material for a separate patch.

In passing, make some marginal cleanups in syntax error reporting,
const-ify a few data structures that could use it, and run some of
this code through pgindent.

I can't tell whether the MSVC build scripts need to be taught explicitly
about the changes here or not, but the buildfarm will soon tell us.

Kyotaro Horiguchi and Tom Lane
2016-03-20 12:58:51 -04:00
Tom Lane 429ee5a822 Make pgbench's expression lexer reentrant.
This is a necessary preliminary step for making it play with psqlscan.l
given the way I set up the lexer input-buffer sharing mechanism in commit
0ea9efbe9e.

I've not tried to make it *actually* reentrant; there's still some static
variables laying about.  But flex thinks it's reentrant, and that's what
counts.

In support of that, fix exprparse.y to pass through the yyscan_t from the
caller.  Also do some minor code beautification, like not casting away
const.
2016-03-19 16:35:41 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 1038bc91ca pgbench: Silence new compiler warnings
The original coding in 7bafffea64 and previous wasn't all that great
anyway.

Reported by Jeff Janes and Tom Lane
2016-03-19 16:16:39 -03:00
Tom Lane 21c8ee7946 Sync backend/parser/scan.l with bin/psql/psqlscan.l.
Make some minor formatting adjustments to make it easier to diff these
files and see that they indeed implement the same flex rules (at least
to the extent that we want them to be the same).

(Someday it'd be nice to make ecpg's pgc.l more easily diff'able too,
but today is not that day.)

Also run relevant parts of these files and psqlscanslash.l through
pgindent.

No actual behavioral changes here, just obsessive neatnik-ism.
2016-03-19 14:36:22 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 7bafffea64 pgbench: Allow changing weights for scripts
Previously, all scripts had the same probability of being chosen when
multiple of them were specified via -b, -f, -N, -S.  With this commit,
-b and -f now search for an "@" in the script name and use the integer
found after it as the drawing probability for that script.

(One disadvantage is that if you have script whose names contain @, you
are now forced to specify "@1" at the end; otherwise the name's @ is
confused with a weight separator.  We don't expect many pgbench script
with @ in their names in the wild, so this shouldn't be too serious a
problem.)

While at it, rework the interface between addScript, process_file,
process_builtin, and findBuiltin.  It had gotten a bit out of hand with
recent commits.

Author: Fabien Coelho
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund, Robert Haas, Álvaro Herrera, Michaël Paquier
Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/alpine.DEB.2.10.1603160721240.1666@sto
2016-03-19 12:32:42 -03:00
Tom Lane b46d9beb65 With ancient gcc, skip pg_attribute_printf() on function pointer.
Buildfarm results show that the ability to attach pg_attribute_printf
decoration to a function pointer appeared somewhere between gcc 2.95.3
and gcc 4.0.1.  Guess that it was there in 4.0.
2016-03-19 10:59:20 -04:00
Tom Lane ff0a7e6167 Use yylex_init not yylex_init_extra().
Older versions of flex don't have the latter.  Per buildfarm.
2016-03-19 01:02:18 -04:00
Tom Lane a3e39f8363 Suppress FLEX_NO_BACKUP check for psqlscanslash.l.
The existing infrastructure for FLEX_NO_BACKUP doesn't work reliably
when two lexers are built in parallel in the same directory.  We can
probably fix that, but as a short-term workaround, just don't make
the check for psqlscanslash.l.

Per buildfarm.
2016-03-19 00:43:46 -04:00
Tom Lane 0ea9efbe9e Split psql's lexer into two separate .l files for SQL and backslash cases.
This gets us to a point where psqlscan.l can be used by other frontend
programs for the same purpose psql uses it for, ie to detect when it's
collected a complete SQL command from input that is divided across
line boundaries.  Moreover, other programs can supply their own lexers
for backslash commands of their own choosing.  A follow-on patch will
use this in pgbench.

The end result here is roughly the same as in Kyotaro Horiguchi's
0001-Make-SQL-parser-part-of-psqlscan-independent-from-ps.patch, although
the details of the method for switching between lexers are quite different.
Basically, in this patch we share the entire PsqlScanState, YY_BUFFER_STATE
stack, *and* yyscan_t between different lexers.  The only thing we need
to do to switch to a different lexer is to make sure the start_state is
valid for the new lexer.  This works because flex doesn't keep any other
persistent state that depends on the specific lexing tables generated for
a particular .l file.  (We are assuming that both lexers are built with
the same flex version, or at least versions that are compatible with
respect to the contents of yyscan_t; but that doesn't seem likely to
be a big problem in practice, considering how slowly flex changes.)

Aside from being more efficient than Horiguchi-san's original solution,
this avoids possible corner-case changes in semantics: the original code
was capable of popping the input buffer stack while still staying in
backslash-related parsing states.  I'm not sure that that equates to any
useful user-visible behaviors, but I'm not sure it doesn't either, so
I'm loath to assume that we only need to consider the topmost buffer when
parsing a backslash command.

I've attempted to update the MSVC build scripts for the added .l file,
but will rely on the buildfarm to see if I missed anything.

Kyotaro Horiguchi and Tom Lane
2016-03-19 00:24:55 -04:00
Tom Lane 27199058d9 Convert psql's flex lexer to be re-entrant, and make it compile standalone.
Change psqlscan.l to specify '%option reentrant', adjust internal APIs
to match, and get rid of its internal static variables.  While this is
good cleanup in an abstract sense, the reason to do it right now is that
it seems the only practical way to support use of separate flex lexers
with common PsqlScanState infrastructure.  If we build two non-reentrant
lexers then we are going to have problems with dangling buffer pointers
in whichever lexer isn't active when we transition from one buffer to
another, as well as curious side-effects if we try to share any code
between the files.  (Horiguchi-san had a different solution to that in his
pending patch, but I find it ugly and probably broken for corner cases.)

Depending on which version of flex you're using, this may result in getting
a "warning: unused variable 'yyg'" warning from psqlscan, similar to the
one you'd have seen for a long time in backend/parser/scan.l.  I put a
local -Wno-error into CFLAGS for the file, for the convenience of those
who compile with -Werror.

Also, stop compiling psqlscan as part of mainloop.c, and make it a
standalone build target instead.  This is a lot cleaner than before, though
it doesn't really change much in practice as of this commit.  (I'm not sure
whether the MSVC build scripts will need some help with this part, but the
buildfarm will soon tell us.)
2016-03-18 21:22:02 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut b555ed8102 Merge wal_level "archive" and "hot_standby" into new name "replica"
The distinction between "archive" and "hot_standby" existed only because
at the time "hot_standby" was added, there was some uncertainty about
stability.  This is now a long time ago.  We would like to move forward
with simplifying the replication configuration, but this distinction is
in the way, because a primary server cannot tell (without asking a
standby or predicting the future) which one of these would be the
appropriate level.

Pick a new name for the combined setting to make it clearer that it
covers all (non-logical) backup and replication uses.  The old values
are still accepted but are converted internally.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
2016-03-18 23:56:03 +01:00
Tom Lane 4e1d2a1708 Decouple psqlscan.l from surrounding program.
Remove assorted external references from psqlscan.l in preparation for
making it usable by other frontend programs.  This mostly involves
getting rid of direct calls to psql_error() and GetVariable() in favor
of introducing a callback-functions struct to encapsulate variable
fetching and error printing.  In addition, pass the current encoding
and standard-strings status as additional parameters to psql_scan_setup
instead of looking directly at "pset" or calling additional functions.

I did not bother to change some references to psql_error that are in
functions that will soon migrate to a psql-specific backslash-command
lexer.  Other than that, this version of psqlscan.l is capable of
compiling standalone.  It still depends on assorted src/common functions
as well as some encoding-related libpq functions, but we expect that
all programs using it will be happy with those dependencies.

Kyotaro Horiguchi, somewhat editorialized on by me
2016-03-18 15:05:59 -04:00
Tom Lane 3422feccca Clean up some misplaced #includes.
Random .h files have no business including postgres-fe.h (or postgres.h).
If that wasn't the first #include done by the calling .c file, it's the
.c file that's broken.  Noted while prepping Kyotaro Horiguchi's psql
lexer refactoring patch.
2016-03-18 13:43:17 -04:00
Tom Lane 47211af17a Fix "pg_bench -C -M prepared".
This didn't work because when we dropped and re-established a database
connection, we did not bother to reset session-specific state such as
the statements-are-prepared flags.

The st->prepared[] array certainly needs to be flushed, and I cleared a
couple of other fields as well that couldn't possibly retain meaningful
state for a new connection.

In passing, fix some bogus comments and strange field order choices.

Per report from Robins Tharakan.
2016-03-16 23:18:07 -04:00
Robert Haas 3aff33aa68 Fix typos.
Oskari Saarenmaa
2016-03-15 18:06:11 -04:00
Magnus Hagander a1aa8b7ea0 Fix order of MemSet arguments
Noted by Tomas Vondra
2016-03-13 13:11:06 +01:00
Tom Lane fc7a9dfddb Get rid of scribbling on a const variable in psql's print.c.
Commit a2dabf0e1d had the bright idea that it could modify a "const"
global variable if it merely casted away const from a pointer.  This does
not work on platforms where the compiler puts "const" variables into
read-only storage.  Depressingly, we evidently have no such platforms in
our buildfarm ... an oversight I have now remedied.  (The one platform
that is known to catch this is recent OS X with -fno-common.)

Per report from Chris Ruprecht.  Back-patch to 9.5 where the bogus
code was introduced.
2016-03-12 18:16:24 -05:00
Robert Haas 7087166a88 pg_upgrade: Convert old visibility map format to new format.
Commit a892234f83 added a second bit per
page to the visibility map, but pg_upgrade has been unaware of it up
until now.  Therefore, a pg_upgrade from an earlier major release of
PostgreSQL to any commit preceding this one and following the one
mentioned above would result in invalid visibility map contents on the
new cluster, very possibly leading to data corruption.  This plugs
that hole.

Masahiko Sawada, reviewed by Jeff Janes, Bruce Momjian, Simon Riggs,
Michael Paquier, Andres Freund, me, and others.
2016-03-11 12:34:20 -05:00
Robert Haas 69ab7b9d6c psql: Don't automatically use expanded format when there's 1 column.
Andreas Karlsson and Robert Haas
2016-03-11 08:04:01 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 38c83c9b75 Refactor receivelog.c parameters
Much cruft had accumulated over time with a large number of parameters
passed down between functions very deep. With this refactoring, instead
introduce a StreamCtl structure that holds the parameters, and pass around
a pointer to this structure instead. This makes it much easier to add or
remove fields that are needed deeper down in the implementation without
having to modify every function header in the file.

Patch by me after much nagging from Andres
Reviewed by Craig Ringer and Daniel Gustafsson
2016-03-11 11:15:12 +01:00
Robert Haas accf7616ff pgbench: When -T is used, don't wait for transactions beyond end of run.
At low rates, this can lead to pgbench taking significantly longer to
terminate than the user might expect.  Repair.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Aleksander Alekseev, Álvaro Herrera, and me.
2016-03-09 13:11:05 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut a40814d7aa Handle invalid libpq sockets in more places
Also, make error messages consistent.

From: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2016-03-08 21:10:33 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 92d4294d4b psql: Fix some strange code in SQL help creation
Struct QL_HELP used to be defined as static in the sql_help.h header
file, which is included in sql_help.c and help.c, thus creating two
separate instances of the struct.  This causes a warning from GCC 6,
because the struct is not used in sql_help.c.

Instead, declare the struct as extern in the header file and define it
in sql_help.c.  This also allows making a bunch of functions static
because they are no longer needed outside of sql_help.c.

Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
2016-03-08 19:41:51 -05:00
Robert Haas 6f56b41ac0 pg_upgrade: Remove converter plugin facility.
We've not found a use for this so far, and the current need, which
is to convert the visibility map to a new format, does not suit the
existing design anyway.  So just rip it out.

Author: Masahiko Sawada, slightly revised by me.
Discussion: 20160215211313.GB31273@momjian.us
2016-03-08 08:13:02 -05:00
Tom Lane b642e50aea Fix backwards test for Windows service-ness in pg_ctl.
A thinko in a96761391 caused pg_ctl to get it exactly backwards when
deciding whether to report problems to the Windows eventlog or to stderr.
Per bug #14001 from Manuel Mathar, who also identified the fix.
Like the previous patch, back-patch to all supported branches.
2016-03-07 10:40:44 -05:00
Tom Lane 94f1adccd3 Re-fix broken definition for function name in pgbench's exprscan.l.
Wups, my first try wasn't quite right either.  Too focused on fixing
the existing bug, not enough on not introducing new ones.
2016-03-06 21:45:34 -05:00
Tom Lane 3899caf772 Fix broken definition for function name in pgbench's exprscan.l.
As written, this would accept e.g. 123e9 as a function name.  Aside
from being mildly astonishing, that would come back to haunt us if
we ever try to add float constants to the expression syntax.  Insist
that function names start with letters (or at least non-digits).

In passing reset yyline as well as yycol when starting a new expression.
This variable is useless since it's used nowhere, but if we're going
to have it we should have it act sanely.
2016-03-06 21:04:25 -05:00
Joe Conway dc7d70ea05 Expose control file data via SQL accessible functions.
Add four new SQL accessible functions: pg_control_system(),
pg_control_checkpoint(), pg_control_recovery(), and pg_control_init()
which expose a subset of the control file data.

Along the way move the code to read and validate the control file to
src/common, where it can be shared by the new backend functions
and the original pg_controldata frontend program.

Patch by me, significant input, testing, and review by Michael Paquier.
2016-03-05 11:10:19 -08:00
Robert Haas 9445db925e Fix query-based tab completion for multibyte characters.
The existing code confuses the byte length of the string (which is
relevant when passing it to pg_strncasecmp) with the character length
of the string (which is relevant when it is used with the SQL substring
function).  Separate those two concepts.

Report and patch by Kyotaro Horiguchi, reviewed by Thomas Munro and
reviewed and further revised by me.
2016-03-04 11:53:20 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera d561f1caec pgbench: accept unambiguous builtin prefixes for -b
This makes it easier to use "-b se" instead of typing the full "-b
select-only".

Author: Fabien Coelho
Reviewed-by: Michaël Paquier
2016-03-03 19:37:13 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 2c83f435a3 Rework PostgresNode's psql method
This makes the psql() method much more capable: it captures both stdout
and stderr; it now returns the psql exit code rather than stdout; a
timeout can now be specified, as can ON_ERROR_STOP behavior; it gained a
new "on_error_die" (defaulting to off) parameter to raise an exception
if there's any problem.  Finally, additional parameters to psql can be
passed if there's need for further tweaking.

For convenience, a new safe_psql() method retains much of the old
behavior of psql(), except that it uses on_error_die on, so that
problems like syntax errors in SQL commands can be detected more easily.

Many existing TAP test files now use safe_psql, which is what is really
wanted.  A couple of ->psql() calls are now added in the commit_ts
tests, which verify that the right thing is happening on certain errors.
Some ->command_fails() calls in recovery tests that were verifying that
psql failed also became ->psql() calls now.

Author: Craig Ringer. Some tweaks by Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-By: Michaël Paquier
2016-03-03 17:58:30 -03:00
Robert Haas 7e137f846d Extend pgbench's expression syntax to support a few built-in functions.
Fabien Coelho, reviewed mostly by Michael Paquier and me, but also by
Heikki Linnakangas, BeomYong Lee, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Oleksander
Shulgin, and Álvaro Herrera.
2016-03-01 13:08:30 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 89ac7004da Move some code from RewindTest into PostgresNode
Some code in the RewindTest test suite is more generally useful than
just for that suite, so put it where other test suites can reach it.

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

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

Author: Michael Paquier
2016-02-26 13:24:22 -03:00
Noah Misch 25924ac47a Clean the last few TAP suite tmp_check directories.
Back-patch to 9.5, where the suites were introduced.
2016-02-24 23:41:54 -05:00