on myself to do something about the non-self-consistency of the inet
comparison functions. The results are probably still semantically wrong
(inet and cidr should have different comparison semantics, I think)
but at least the boolean operators now agree with each other and with
the sort order of indexes on inet/cidr.
These two routines will now ALWAYS elog() on failure, whether you ask for
a lock or not. If you really want to get a NULL return on failure, call
the new routines heap_open_nofail()/heap_openr_nofail(). By my count there
are only about three places that actually want that behavior. There were
rather more than three places that were missing the check they needed to
make under the old convention :-(.
result, in fact nearly the opposite of what it should, because it
was passing the not-equal operator to eqsel() which would use it to
compare the value against the most common value in the column, and
of course obtain the wrong result therefrom. Must pass the equality
operator to eqsel() instead. Fortunately that's easy to get from
the oprnegate link.
At this point I think it'd be possible to make float4 be pass-by-value
without too much work --- and float8 too on machines where Datum is
8 bytes. Something to try when the mood strikes, anyway.
- Added code to dump 'Create Schema' statement (pg_dump)
- Don't bother to disable/enable triggers if we don't have a superuser (pg_restore)
- Cleaned up code for reconnecting to database.
- Force a reconnect as superuser before enabling/disabling triggers.
- Added & Removed --throttle (pg_dump)
- Fixed minor bug in language dumping code: expbuffres were not being reset.
- Fixed version number initialization in _allocAH (pg_backup_archiver.c)
- Added second connection when restoring BLOBs to allow temp. table to survive
(db reconnection causes temp tables to be lost).
(Sorry, couldn't help it...)
Removed type filename as well, since it's unused and probably useless.
INITDB FORCED, because pg_rewrite columns are now plain text again.
allows fixing problems with operators that expected to be able to
return a NULL, such as the '#' line-segment-intersection operator
that tried to return NULL when the two segments don't intersect.
(See, eg, bug report from 1-Nov-99 on pghackers.) Fix some other
bugs in passing, such as backwards comparison in path_distance().
I did not force. I marked numeric as compressable-but-not-move-off-able,
partly to test that storage mode and partly because I've got doubts
that numerics are large enough to need external storage.
Note that this has changed some of the edge cases for what is accepted
as a type name and/or column id. Regression test passes, but more
tweaks may be coming...
the planner may try to generate them as a result of transitivity of the
existing int2-vs-int4 and int4-vs-int8 operators. In fact, it is now
necessary that mergejoinable cross-datatype operators form closed sets.
Add an opr_sanity regress test to detect missing operators.
FreeBSD/Intel and DecUX/Alpha machines. The bug appears in postgresql
6.5.3 and 7.0.2. Can someone please review it and apply it to the
source tree?
Sometimes when the postgres connection dies it is necessary to
attempt to reconnect. Calling the pgconnection::Connect method in a
derived class leaks memory because it does not clear the current
connection (if there is one). These patches ensures that any open
connections are closed before attempting to open a new one.
-Michael Richards
to use with a multiple-key index. Formerly we would only extract clauses
that had to do with the first key of the index, which was correct but
didn't exploit the index fully.
actually, but who could understand it with no comments? Fix bug
while at it: _bt_orderkeys would try to invoke comparisons on
NULL inputs, given the right sort of redundant quals.
mergejoinable qual clauses, and add them to the query quals. For
example, WHERE a = b AND b = c will cause us to add AND a = c.
This is necessary to ensure that it's safe to use these variables
as interchangeable sort keys, which is something 7.0 knows how to do.
Should provide a useful improvement in planning ability, too.