Commit Graph

11113 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Peter Eisentraut 2c4d456d51 Update SQL features supported list 2010-01-01 16:54:48 +00:00
Tom Lane 2aff8c422e Suppress compiler warning, per buildfarm member narwhal 2009-12-31 22:11:10 +00:00
Tom Lane bd8a35655b Suppress compiler warning (pid_t isn't int everywhere) 2009-12-31 22:07:36 +00:00
Tom Lane b4594a66ba Add missing 'static' tag. 2009-12-31 21:47:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 85d02a6586 Redefine Datum as uintptr_t, instead of unsigned long.
This is more in keeping with modern practice, and is a first step towards
porting to Win64 (which has sizeof(pointer) > sizeof(long)).

Tsutomu Yamada, Magnus Hagander, Tom Lane
2009-12-31 19:41:37 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 8abb011047 Update SQL features list for aggregate ORDER BY support 2009-12-31 14:51:16 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut c584d11bb3 Add information_schema.triggered_update_columns
This reflects the recently added support for triggers on columns.
2009-12-31 14:41:23 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 3c505ef577 Fill in information schema column for trigger WHEN condition 2009-12-30 22:48:10 +00:00
Tom Lane e6df063cf2 Dept of second thoughts: recursive case in ANALYZE shouldn't emit a
pgstats message.  This might need to be done differently later, but
with the current logic that's what should happen.
2009-12-30 21:21:33 +00:00
Tom Lane 48c192c15e Revise pgstat's tracking of tuple changes to improve the reliability of
decisions about when to auto-analyze.

The previous code depended on n_live_tuples + n_dead_tuples - last_anl_tuples,
where all three of these numbers could be bad estimates from ANALYZE itself.
Even worse, in the presence of a steady flow of HOT updates and matching
HOT-tuple reclamations, auto-analyze might never trigger at all, even if all
three numbers are exactly right, because n_dead_tuples could hold steady.

To fix, replace last_anl_tuples with an accurately tracked count of the total
number of committed tuple inserts + updates + deletes since the last ANALYZE
on the table.  This can still be compared to the same threshold as before, but
it's much more trustworthy than the old computation.  Tracking this requires
one more intra-transaction counter per modified table within backends, but no
additional memory space in the stats collector.  There probably isn't any
measurable speed difference; if anything it might be a bit faster than before,
since I was able to eliminate some per-tuple arithmetic operations in favor of
adding sums once per (sub)transaction.

Also, simplify the logic around pgstat vacuum and analyze reporting messages
by not trying to fold VACUUM ANALYZE into a single pgstat message.

The original thought behind this patch was to allow scheduling of analyzes
on parent tables by artificially inflating their changes_since_analyze count.
I've left that for a separate patch since this change seems to stand on its
own merit.
2009-12-30 20:32:14 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 6761cff376 Update SQL conformance: search conditions on triggers are supported 2009-12-30 19:37:47 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas ff1e1e45b9 Reset minRecoveryPoint at checkpoints, so that we don't uselessly update
it in the control file at crash recovery following an archive recovery.

Per Fujii Masao and subsequent discussion.
2009-12-30 08:37:21 +00:00
Tom Lane 4847d5956c Set errno to zero before invoking SSL_read or SSL_write. It appears that
at least in some Windows versions, these functions are capable of returning
a failure indication without setting errno.  That puts us into an infinite
loop if the previous value happened to be EINTR.  Per report from Brendan
Hill.

Back-patch to 8.2.  We could take it further back, but since this is only
known to be an issue on Windows and we don't support Windows before 8.2,
it does not seem worth the trouble.
2009-12-30 03:45:46 +00:00
Robert Haas 3d4b0ab29c Reject invalid input in int2vectorin.
Since the int2vector type is intended only for internal use, this patch doesn't
worry about prettifying the error messages, which has the fringe benefit of
avoiding creating additional translatable strings.  For a type intended to be
used by end-users, we would want to do better, but the approach taken here
seems like the correct trade-off for this case.

Caleb Welton
2009-12-30 01:29:22 +00:00
Tom Lane 540e69a061 Add an index on pg_inherits.inhparent, and use it to avoid seqscans in
find_inheritance_children().  This is a complete no-op in databases without
any inheritance.  In databases where there are just a few entries in
pg_inherits, it could conceivably be a small loss.  However, in databases with
many inheritance parents, it can be a big win.
2009-12-29 22:00:14 +00:00
Tom Lane 649b5ec7c8 Add the ability to store inheritance-tree statistics in pg_statistic,
and teach ANALYZE to compute such stats for tables that have subclasses.
Per my proposal of yesterday.

autovacuum still needs to be taught about running ANALYZE on parent tables
when their subclasses change, but the feature is useful even without that.
2009-12-29 20:11:45 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 84d723b6ce Previous fix for temporary file management broke returning a set from
PL/pgSQL function within an exception handler. Make sure we use the right
resource owner when we create the tuplestore to hold returned tuples.

Simplify tuplestore API so that the caller doesn't need to be in the right
memory context when calling tuplestore_put* functions. tuplestore.c
automatically switches to the memory context used when the tuplestore was
created. Tuplesort was already modified like this earlier. This patch also
removes the now useless MemoryContextSwitch calls from callers.

Report by Aleksei on pgsql-bugs on Dec 22 2009. Backpatch to 8.1, like
the previous patch that broke this.
2009-12-29 17:40:59 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 0d399d57d5 Remove PGDLLIMPORT used for binary upgrade; must be on the externs, per Tom. 2009-12-28 18:49:05 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 3687b2e0eb Add PGDLLIMPORT for binary_upgrade global variables so shared object
libraries can access them.
2009-12-28 18:39:03 +00:00
Bruce Momjian d2225da79f Remove non-ascii characters from source code. 2009-12-28 18:09:44 +00:00
Tom Lane 0b39231431 Avoid memory leak if pgstat_vacuum_stat is interrupted partway through.
The temporary hash tables made by pgstat_collect_oids should be allocated
in a short-term memory context, which is not the default behavior of
hash_create.  Noted while looking through hash_create calls in connection
with Robert Haas' recent complaint.

This is a pre-existing bug, but it doesn't seem important enough to
back-patch.  The hash table is not so large that it would matter unless this
happened many times within a session, which seems quite unlikely.
2009-12-27 19:40:07 +00:00
Tom Lane d4d1885e42 Remove a couple of unnecessary calls of CreateCacheMemoryContext. These
probably got there via blind copy-and-paste from one of the legitimate
callers, so rearrange and comment that code a bit to make it clearer that
this isn't a necessary prerequisite to hash_create.  Per observation
from Robert Haas.
2009-12-27 18:55:52 +00:00
Bruce Momjian e5b457c2ac Add backend and pg_dump code to allow preservation of pg_enum oids, for
use in binary upgrades.

Bump catalog version for detection by pg_migrator of new backend API.
2009-12-27 14:50:46 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 1fd9883ff4 Zero-label enums:
Allow enums to be created with zero labels, for use during binary upgrade.
2009-12-26 16:55:21 +00:00
Tom Lane f9845aca2b Fix brain fade in join-removal patch: a pushed-down clause in the outer join's
restrict list is not just something to ignore, it's actually grounds to
abandon the optimization entirely.  Per bug #5255 from Matteo Beccati.
2009-12-25 17:11:32 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 0ef5910d6d Rename EnumValuesCreate() single-letter variable names to useful
variable names.
2009-12-24 22:17:58 +00:00
Bruce Momjian c44327afa4 Binary upgrade:
Modify pg_dump --binary-upgrade and add backend support routines to
support the preservation of pg_type oids when doing a binary upgrade.
This allows user-defined composite types and arrays to be binary
upgraded.
2009-12-24 22:09:24 +00:00
Tom Lane 668e37d138 Fix wrong WAL info value generated when gistContinueInsert() performs an
index page split.  This would result in index corruption, or even more likely
an error during WAL replay, if we were unlucky enough to crash during
end-of-recovery cleanup after having completed an incomplete GIST insertion.

Yoichi Hirai
2009-12-24 17:52:04 +00:00
Tom Lane d68e08d1fe Allow the index name to be omitted in CREATE INDEX, causing the system to
choose an index name the same as it would do for an unnamed index constraint.
(My recent changes to the index naming logic have helped to ensure that this
will be a reasonable choice.)  Per a suggestion from Peter.

A necessary side-effect is to promote CONCURRENTLY to type_func_name_keyword
status, ie, it can't be a table/column/index name anymore unless quoted.
This is not all bad, since we have heard more than once of people typing
CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY ON foo (...) and getting a normal index build of
an index named "concurrently", which was not what they wanted.  Now this
syntax will result in a concurrent build of an index with system-chosen
name; which they can rename afterwards if they want something else.
2009-12-23 17:41:45 +00:00
Tom Lane c176e12222 Remove code that attempted to rename index columns to keep them in sync with
their underlying table columns.  That code was not bright enough to cope with
collision situations (ie, new name conflicts with some other column of the
index).  Since there is no functional reason to do this at all, trying to
upgrade the logic to be bulletproof doesn't seem worth the trouble.

This change means that both the index name and the column names of an index
are set when it's created, and won't be automatically changed when the
underlying table columns are renamed.  Neatnik DBAs are still free to rename
them manually, of course.
2009-12-23 16:43:43 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4e766f2d17 Always pass catalog id to the options validator function specified in
CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER. Arguably it wasn't a bug because the
documentation said that it's passed the catalog ID or zero, but surely
we should provide it when it's known. And there isn't currently any
scenario where it's not known, and I can't imagine having one in the
future either, so better remove the "or zero" escape hatch and always
pass a valid catalog ID. Backpatch to 8.4.

Martin Pihlak
2009-12-23 12:23:59 +00:00
Tom Lane cfc5008a51 Adjust naming of indexes and their columns per recent discussion.
Index expression columns are now named after the FigureColname result for
their expressions, rather than always being "pg_expression_N".  Digits are
appended to this name if needed to make the column name unique within the
index.  (That happens for regular columns too, thus fixing the old problem
that CREATE INDEX fooi ON foo (f1, f1) fails.  Before exclusion indexes
there was no real reason to do such a thing, but now maybe there is.)

Default names for indexes and associated constraints now include the column
names of all their columns, not only the first one as in previous practice.
(Of course, this will be truncated as needed to fit in NAMEDATALEN.  Also,
pkey indexes retain the historical behavior of not naming specific columns
at all.)

An example of the results:

regression=# create table foo (f1 int, f2 text,
regression(# exclude (f1 with =, lower(f2) with =));
NOTICE:  CREATE TABLE / EXCLUDE will create implicit index "foo_f1_lower_exclusion" for table "foo"
CREATE TABLE
regression=# \d foo_f1_lower_exclusion
Index "public.foo_f1_lower_exclusion"
 Column |  Type   | Definition
--------+---------+------------
 f1     | integer | f1
 lower  | text    | lower(f2)
btree, for table "public.foo"
2009-12-23 02:35:25 +00:00
Tom Lane b7d6795445 Disallow comments on columns of relation types other than tables, views,
and composite types, which are the only relkinds for which pg_dump support
exists for dumping column comments.  There is no obvious usefulness for
comments on columns of sequences or toast tables; and while comments on
index columns might have some value, it's not worth the risk of compatibility
problems due to possible changes in the algorithm for assigning names to
index columns.  Per discussion.

In consequence, remove now-dead code for copying such comments in CREATE TABLE
LIKE.
2009-12-22 23:54:17 +00:00
Robert Haas c7e4be59ae More cleanups for the recent large object permissions patch.
Rewrite or adjust various comments for clarity.  Remove one bogus comment that
doesn't reflect what the code actually does.  Improve the description of the
lo_compat_privileges option.
2009-12-21 01:34:11 +00:00
Tom Lane cb05f5388d There is no good reason for the CREATE TABLE LIKE INCLUDING COMMENTS code to
have hard-wired knowledge of the rules for naming index columns.  It can
just look at the actual names in the source index, instead.  Do some minor
formatting cleanup too.
2009-12-20 18:28:14 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut baab7a0427 Translation updates 2009-12-19 20:23:26 +00:00
Simon Riggs efc16ea520 Allow read only connections during recovery, known as Hot Standby.
Enabled by recovery_connections = on (default) and forcing archive recovery using a recovery.conf. Recovery processing now emulates the original transactions as they are replayed, providing full locking and MVCC behaviour for read only queries. Recovery must enter consistent state before connections are allowed, so there is a delay, typically short, before connections succeed. Replay of recovering transactions can conflict and in some cases deadlock with queries during recovery; these result in query cancellation after max_standby_delay seconds have expired. Infrastructure changes have minor effects on normal running, though introduce four new types of WAL record.

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

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

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

Important contributions from Florian Pflug, Mark Kirkwood, Merlin Moncure, Greg Stark, Gianni Ciolli, Gabriele Bartolini, Hannu Krosing, Robert Haas, Tatsuo Ishii, Hiroyuki Yamada plus support and feedback from many other community members.
2009-12-19 01:32:45 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 78a09145e0 binary migration: pg_migrator
Add comments about places where system oids have to be preserved for
binary migration.
2009-12-19 00:47:57 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut d6de43099a Don't unblock SIGQUIT in the SIGQUIT handler
This was possibly linked to a deadlock-like situation in glibc syslog code
invoked by the ereport call in quickdie().  In any case, a signal handler
should not unblock its own signal unless there is a specific reason to.
2009-12-16 23:05:00 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut b63b967a7e If there is no sigdelset(), define it as a macro.
This removes some duplicate code that recreated the identical workaround
when the newer signal API is missing.
2009-12-16 22:55:34 +00:00
Tom Lane 52fc0075ab Avoid a premature coercion failure in transformSetOperationTree() when
presented with an UNKNOWN-type Var, which can happen in cases where an
unknown literal appeared in a subquery.  While many such cases will fail
later on anyway in the planner, there are some cases where the planner is
able to flatten the query and replace the Var by the constant before it has
to coerce the union column to the final type.  I had added this check in 8.4
to provide earlier/better error detection, but it causes a regression for
some cases that worked OK before.  Fix by not making the check if the input
node is UNKNOWN type and not a Const or Param.  If it isn't going to work,
it will fail anyway at plan time, with the only real loss being inability to
provide an error cursor.  Per gripe from Britt Piehler.

In passing, rename a couple of variables to remove confusion from an
inner scope masking the same variable names in an outer scope.
2009-12-16 22:24:13 +00:00
Robert Haas ff499613d2 Several fixes for EXPLAIN (FORMAT YAML), plus one for EXPLAIN (FORMAT JSON).
ExplainSeparatePlans() was busted for both JSON and YAML output - the present
code is a holdover from the original version of my machine-readable explain
patch, which didn't have the grouping_stack machinery.  Also, fix an odd
distribution of labor between ExplainBeginGroup() and ExplainYAMLLineStarting()
when marking lists with "- ", with each providing one character.  This broke
the output format for multi-query statements.  Also, fix ExplainDummyGroup()
for the YAML output format.

Along the way, make the YAML format use escape_yaml() in situations where the
JSON format uses escape_json().  Right now, it doesn't matter because all the
values are known not to need escaping, but it seems safer this way.  Finally,
I added some comments to better explain what the YAML output format is doing.

Greg Sabino Mullane reported the issues with multi-query statements.
Analysis and remaining cleanups by me.
2009-12-16 22:16:16 +00:00
Tom Lane 21d11e7ee2 Avoid unnecessary copying of source string when generating a cloned TParser.
For long source strings the copying results in O(N^2) behavior, and the
multiplier can be significant if wide-char conversion is involved.

Andres Freund, reviewed by Kevin Grittner.
2009-12-15 20:37:17 +00:00
Tom Lane a5495cd841 Add a hook to let loadable modules get control at ProcessUtility execution,
and use it to extend contrib/pg_stat_statements to track utility commands.

Itagaki Takahiro, reviewed by Euler Taveira de Oliveira.
2009-12-15 20:04:49 +00:00
Tom Lane 34d26872ed Support ORDER BY within aggregate function calls, at long last providing a
non-kluge method for controlling the order in which values are fed to an
aggregate function.  At the same time eliminate the old implementation
restriction that DISTINCT was only supported for single-argument aggregates.

Possibly release-notable behavioral change: formerly, agg(DISTINCT x)
dropped null values of x unconditionally.  Now, it does so only if the
agg transition function is strict; otherwise nulls are treated as DISTINCT
normally would, ie, you get one copy.

Andrew Gierth, reviewed by Hitoshi Harada
2009-12-15 17:57:48 +00:00
Robert Haas cddca5ec13 Add an EXPLAIN (BUFFERS) option to show buffer-usage statistics.
This patch also removes buffer-usage statistics from the track_counts
output, since this (or the global server statistics) is deemed to be a better
interface to this information.

Itagaki Takahiro, reviewed by Euler Taveira de Oliveira.
2009-12-15 04:57:48 +00:00
Tom Lane a620d5005d Fix a bug introduced when set-returning SQL functions were made inline-able:
we have to cope with the possibility that the declared result rowtype contains
dropped columns.  This fails in 8.4, as per bug #5240.

While at it, be more paranoid about inserting binary coercions when inlining.
The pre-8.4 code did not really need to worry about that because it could not
inline at all in any case where an added coercion could change the behavior
of the function's statement.  However, when inlining a SRF we allow sorting,
grouping, and set-ops such as UNION.  In these cases, modifying one of the
targetlist entries that the sort/group/setop depends on could conceivably
change the behavior of the function's statement --- so don't inline when
such a case applies.
2009-12-14 02:15:54 +00:00
Magnus Hagander 0182d6f646 Allow LDAP authentication to operate in search+bind mode, meaning it
does a search for the user in the directory first, and then binds with
the DN found for this user.

This allows for LDAP logins in scenarios where the DN of the user cannot
be determined simply by prefix and suffix, such as the case where different
users are located in different containers.

The old way of authentication can be significantly faster, so it's kept
as an option.

Robert Fleming and Magnus Hagander
2009-12-12 21:35:21 +00:00
Tom Lane a4e035b2f1 Fix integer-to-bit-string conversions to handle the first fractional byte
correctly when the output bit width is wider than the given integer by
something other than a multiple of 8 bits.

This has been wrong since I first wrote that code for 8.0 :-(.  Kudos to
Roman Kononov for being the first to notice, though I didn't use his
patch.  Per bug #5237.
2009-12-12 19:24:35 +00:00
Robert Haas 02490d4692 Export ExplainBeginOutput() and ExplainEndOutput() for auto_explain.
Without these functions, anyone outside of explain.c can't actually use
ExplainPrintPlan, because the ExplainState won't be initialized properly.
The user-visible result of this was a crash when using auto_explain with
the JSON output format.

Report by Euler Taveira de Oliveira.  Analysis by Tom Lane.  Patch by me.
2009-12-12 00:35:34 +00:00
Tom Lane d8e511fabb Ensure that the result tuple of an EvalPlanQual cycle gets materialized
before we zap the input tuple.  Otherwise, pass-by-reference columns of
the result slot are likely to contain just references to the input
tuple, leading to big trouble if the pfree'd space is reused.  Per
trouble report from Jaime Casanova.  This is a new bug in the recent
rewrite of EvalPlanQual, so nothing to back-patch.
2009-12-11 18:14:43 +00:00
Itagaki Takahiro f1325ce213 Add large object access control.
A new system catalog pg_largeobject_metadata manages
ownership and access privileges of large objects.

KaiGai Kohei, reviewed by Jaime Casanova.
2009-12-11 03:34:57 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan 324385d67f Add YAML to list of EXPLAIN formats. Greg Sabino Mullane, reviewed by Takahiro Itagaki. 2009-12-11 01:33:35 +00:00
Tom Lane 62aba76568 Prevent indirect security attacks via changing session-local state within
an allegedly immutable index function.  It was previously recognized that
we had to prevent such a function from executing SET/RESET ROLE/SESSION
AUTHORIZATION, or it could trivially obtain the privileges of the session
user.  However, since there is in general no privilege checking for changes
of session-local state, it is also possible for such a function to change
settings in a way that might subvert later operations in the same session.
Examples include changing search_path to cause an unexpected function to
be called, or replacing an existing prepared statement with another one
that will execute a function of the attacker's choosing.

The present patch secures VACUUM, ANALYZE, and CREATE INDEX/REINDEX against
these threats, which are the same places previously deemed to need protection
against the SET ROLE issue.  GUC changes are still allowed, since there are
many useful cases for that, but we prevent security problems by forcing a
rollback of any GUC change after completing the operation.  Other cases are
handled by throwing an error if any change is attempted; these include temp
table creation, closing a cursor, and creating or deleting a prepared
statement.  (In 7.4, the infrastructure to roll back GUC changes doesn't
exist, so we settle for rejecting changes of "search_path" in these contexts.)

Original report and patch by Gurjeet Singh, additional analysis by
Tom Lane.

Security: CVE-2009-4136
2009-12-09 21:57:51 +00:00
Magnus Hagander abf23ee86d Reject certificates with embedded NULLs in the commonName field. This stops
attacks where an attacker would put <attack>\0<propername> in the field and
trick the validation code that the certificate was for <attack>.

This is a very low risk attack since it reuqires the attacker to trick the
CA into issuing a certificate with an incorrect field, and the common
PostgreSQL deployments are with private CAs, and not external ones. Also,
default mode in 8.4 does not do any name validation, and is thus also not
vulnerable - but the higher security modes are.

Backpatch all the way. Even though versions 8.3.x and before didn't have
certificate name validation support, they still exposed this field for
the user to perform the validation in the application code, and there
is no way to detect this problem through that API.

Security: CVE-2009-4034
2009-12-09 06:37:06 +00:00
Tom Lane 0cb65564e5 Add exclusion constraints, which generalize the concept of uniqueness to
support any indexable commutative operator, not just equality.  Two rows
violate the exclusion constraint if "row1.col OP row2.col" is TRUE for
each of the columns in the constraint.

Jeff Davis, reviewed by Robert Haas
2009-12-07 05:22:23 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 36f887c41c Speed up information schema privilege views
Instead of expensive cross joins to resolve the ACL, add table-returning
function aclexplode() that expands the ACL into a useful form, and join
against that.

Also, implement the role_*_grants views as a thin layer over the respective
*_privileges views instead of essentially repeating the same code twice.

fixes bug #4596

by Joachim Wieland, with cleanup by me
2009-12-05 21:43:36 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas ab3148b712 Fix bug in temporary file management with subtransactions. A cursor opened
in a subtransaction stays open even if the subtransaction is aborted, so
any temporary files related to it must stay alive as well. With the patch,
we use ResourceOwners to track open temporary files and don't automatically
close them at subtransaction end (though in the normal case temporary files
are registered with the subtransaction resource owner and will therefore be
closed).

At end of top transaction, we still check that there's no temporary files
marked as close-at-end-of-transaction open, but that's now just a debugging
cross-check as the resource owner cleanup should've closed them already.
2009-12-03 11:03:29 +00:00
Tom Lane 59ed94ad0c Mark application_name as GUC_REPORT so that the value will be reported back
to the client by the server.  This might seem pretty pointless but apparently
it will help pgbouncer, and perhaps other connection poolers.  Anyway it's
practically free to do so for the normal use-case where appname is only set
in the startup packet --- we're just adding a few more bytes to the initial
ParameterStatus response packet.  Per comments from Marko Kreen.
2009-12-02 04:54:10 +00:00
Tom Lane 0d32342501 Teach the regular expression functions to do case-insensitive matching and
locale-dependent character classification properly when the database encoding
is UTF8.

The previous coding worked okay in single-byte encodings, or in any case for
ASCII characters, but failed entirely on multibyte characters.  The fix
assumes that the <wctype.h> functions use Unicode code points as the wchar
representation for Unicode, ie, wchar matches pg_wchar.

This is only a partial solution, since we're still stupid about non-ASCII
characters in multibyte encodings other than UTF8.  The practical effect
of that is limited, however, since those cases are generally Far Eastern
glyphs for which concepts like case-folding don't apply anyway.  Certainly
all or nearly all of the field reports of problems have been about UTF8.
A more general solution would require switching to the platform's wchar
representation for all regex operations; which is possible but would have
substantial disadvantages.  Let's try this and see if it's sufficient in
practice.
2009-12-01 21:00:24 +00:00
Bruce Momjian ef51395e24 Revert due to Tom's concerns:
Add ProcessUtility_hook() to handle all DDL to
contrib/pg_stat_statements.
2009-12-01 02:31:13 +00:00
Bruce Momjian d85cb27293 ProcessUtility_hook:
Add ProcessUtility_hook() to handle all DDL to contrib/pg_stat_statements.

Itagaki Takahiro
2009-12-01 01:08:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 908854209b Avoid core dump on empty thesaurus dictionary.
Per report from Robert Gravsjö.
2009-11-30 16:38:31 +00:00
Tom Lane 0c61cff57a Make pg_stat_activity.application_name visible to all users, rather than
being hidden when current_query is.  Relocate it to a column position
more consistent with that behavior.  Per discussion.
2009-11-29 18:14:32 +00:00
Tom Lane 8217cfbd99 Add support for an application_name parameter, which is displayed in
pg_stat_activity and recorded in log entries.

Dave Page, reviewed by Andres Freund
2009-11-28 23:38:08 +00:00
Tom Lane 1a95f12702 Eliminate a lot of list-management overhead within join_search_one_level
by adding a requirement that build_join_rel add new join RelOptInfos to the
appropriate list immediately at creation.  Per report from Robert Haas,
the list_concat_unique_ptr() calls that this change eliminates were taking
the lion's share of the runtime in larger join problems.  This doesn't do
anything to fix the fundamental combinatorial explosion in large join
problems, but it should push out the threshold of pain a bit further.

Note: because this changes the order in which joinrel lists are built,
it might result in changes in selected plans in cases where different
alternatives have exactly the same costs.  There is one example in the
regression tests.
2009-11-28 00:46:19 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas cd87b6f8a5 Fix an old bug in multixact and two-phase commit. Prepared transactions can
be part of multixacts, so allocate a slot for each prepared transaction in
the "oldest member" array in multixact.c. On PREPARE TRANSACTION, transfer
the oldest member value from the current backends slot to the prepared xact
slot. Also save and recover the value from the 2pc state file.

The symptom of the bug was that after a transaction prepared, a shared lock
still held by the prepared transaction was sometimes ignored by other
transactions.

Fix back to 8.1, where both 2PC and multixact were introduced.
2009-11-23 09:58:36 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 997a6a278f Remove superfluous curly brace, fixing compilation with OPTIMIZER_DEBUG.
Jan Urbanski
2009-11-22 14:54:31 +00:00
Tom Lane 7fc0f06221 Add a WHEN clause to CREATE TRIGGER, allowing a boolean expression to be
checked to determine whether the trigger should be fired.

For BEFORE triggers this is mostly a matter of spec compliance; but for AFTER
triggers it can provide a noticeable performance improvement, since queuing of
a deferred trigger event and re-fetching of the row(s) at end of statement can
be short-circuited if the trigger does not need to be fired.

Takahiro Itagaki, reviewed by KaiGai Kohei.
2009-11-20 20:38:12 +00:00
Tom Lane b1d55dca91 Fix memory leak in syslogger: logfile_rotate() would leak a copy of the
output filename if CSV logging was enabled and only one of the two possible
output files got rotated during a particular call (which would, in fact,
typically be the case during a size-based rotation).  This would amount to
about MAXPGPATH (1KB) per rotation, and it's been there since the CSV
code was put in, so it's surprising that nobody noticed it before.
Per bug #5196 from Thomas Poindessous.
2009-11-19 02:45:33 +00:00
Tom Lane c742b795dd Add a hook to CREATE/ALTER ROLE to allow an external module to check the
strength of database passwords, and create a sample implementation of
such a hook as a new contrib module "passwordcheck".

Laurenz Albe, reviewed by Takahiro Itagaki
2009-11-18 21:57:56 +00:00
Tom Lane 5e66a51c2e Provide a parenthesized-options syntax for VACUUM, analogous to that recently
adopted for EXPLAIN.  This will allow additional options to be implemented
in future without having to make them fully-reserved keywords.  The old syntax
remains available for existing options, however.

Itagaki Takahiro
2009-11-16 21:32:07 +00:00
Tom Lane 49ed392cd8 While doing the final setrefs.c pass over a plan tree, try to match up
non-Var sort/group expressions using ressortgroupref labels instead of
depending entirely on equal()-ity of the upper node's tlist expressions
to the lower node's.  This avoids emitting the wrong outputs in cases
where there are textually identical volatile sort/group expressions,
as for example
	select distinct random(),random() from generate_series(1,10);
Per report from Andrew Gierth.

Backpatch to 8.4.  Arguably this is wrong all the way back, but the only known
case where there's an observable problem is when using hash aggregation to
implement DISTINCT, which is new as of 8.4.  So for the moment I'll refrain
from backpatching further.
2009-11-16 18:04:40 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 66363e8d6d Make text search parser accept underscores in XML attributes (bug #5075) 2009-11-15 13:57:01 +00:00
Tom Lane caf9c830d9 Improve planning of Materialize nodes inserted atop the inner input of a
mergejoin to shield it from doing mark/restore and refetches.  Put an explicit
flag in MergePath so we can centralize the logic that knows about this,
and add costing logic that considers using Materialize even when it's not
forced by the previously-existing considerations.  This is in response to
a discussion back in August that suggested that materializing an inner
indexscan can be helpful when the refetch percentage is high enough.
2009-11-15 02:45:35 +00:00
Tom Lane ef679ff6b7 Clean up a couple of bizarre code formatting choices in recent CREATE LIKE patch. 2009-11-13 23:49:23 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 01038d4ad7 A better fix for the "ARRAY[...]::domain" problem. The previous patch worked,
but the transformed ArrayExpr claimed to have a return type of "domain",
even though the domain constraint was only checked by the enclosing
CoerceToDomain node. With this fix, the ArrayExpr is correctly labeled with
the base type of the domain. Per gripe by Tom Lane.
2009-11-13 19:48:20 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 942702a496 When you do "ARRAY[...]::domain", where domain is a domain over an array type,
we need to check domain constraints. We used to do it correctly, but 8.4
introduced a separate code path for the "ARRAY[]::arraytype" case to infer
the type of an empty ARRAY construct from the cast target, and forgot to take
domains into account.

Per report from Florian G. Pflug.
2009-11-13 16:09:10 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev 5e75f6790c Fix multicolumn GIN's wrong results with fastupdate enabled.
User-defined consistent functions believes the check array
contains at least one true element which was not a true for
scanning pending list.

Per report from Yury Don <yura@vpcit.ru>
2009-11-13 11:17:04 +00:00
Tom Lane 0894c6b838 The recent patch to log changes in postgresql.conf settings dumped core
if the initial value of a string variable was NULL, which is entirely
possible.  Noted while experimenting with custom_variable_classes.
2009-11-12 18:20:23 +00:00
Tom Lane 8f8a5df694 Make initdb behave sanely when the selected locale has codeset "US-ASCII".
Per discussion, this should result in defaulting to SQL_ASCII encoding.
The original coding could not support that because it conflated selection
of SQL_ASCII encoding with not being able to determine the encoding.
Adjust pg_get_encoding_from_locale()'s API to distinguish these cases,
and fix callers appropriately.  Only initdb actually changes behavior,
since the other callers were perfectly content to consider these cases
equivalent.

Per bug #5178 from Boh Yap.  Not going to bother back-patching, since
no one has complained before and there's an easy workaround (namely,
specify the encoding you want).
2009-11-12 02:46:16 +00:00
Tom Lane 19d802767d Remove pg_parse_string_token() --- not needed anymore. 2009-11-12 01:13:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 2dee828cac Remove plpgsql's separate lexer (finally!), in favor of using the core lexer
directly.  This was a lot of trouble, but should be worth it in terms of
not having to keep the plpgsql lexer in step with core anymore.  In addition
the handling of keywords is significantly better-structured, allowing us to
de-reserve a number of words that plpgsql formerly treated as reserved.
2009-11-12 00:13:00 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera e9984c47e9 Change "name" nonterminal in cursor-related productions to cursor_name.
This is a preparatory patch for allowing a dynamic cursor name be used in the
ECPG grammar.

Author: Zoltan Boszormenyi
2009-11-11 20:31:26 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 2ea179f361 Support optional FROM/IN in FETCH and MOVE
The main motivation for this is that it's required for Informix compatibility
in ECPG.

This patch makes the ECPG and core grammars a bit closer to one another for
these productions.

Author: Zoltan Boszormenyi
2009-11-11 19:25:42 +00:00
Tom Lane 21e3edd6ca Revert the temporary patch to work around Snow Leopard readdir() bug.
Apple has fixed that bug in 10.6.2, and we should encourage users to
update to that version rather than trusting this cosmetic patch.
As was recently noted by Stephen Tyler, this patch was only masking
the problem in the context of DROP TABLESPACE, but the failure could
occur in other places such as pg_xlog cleanup.
2009-11-10 18:53:38 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 089f4b921c interval_abs():
Add C comment about why there is no interval_abs():  it is unclear what
value to return:

    http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-general/2009-10/msg01031.php
    http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-general/2009-11/msg00041.php
2009-11-10 18:41:24 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera e7ec022266 Fix longstanding problems in VACUUM caused by untimely interruptions
In VACUUM FULL, an interrupt after the initial transaction has been recorded
as committed can cause postmaster to restart with the following error message:
PANIC: cannot abort transaction NNNN, it was already committed
This problem has been reported many times.

In lazy VACUUM, an interrupt after the table has been truncated by
lazy_truncate_heap causes other backends' relcache to still point to the
removed pages; this can cause future INSERT and UPDATE queries to error out
with the following error message:
could not read block XX of relation 1663/NNN/MMMM: read only 0 of 8192 bytes
The window to this race condition is extremely narrow, but it has been seen in
the wild involving a cancelled autovacuum process.

The solution for both problems is to inhibit interrupts in both operations
until after the respective transactions have been committed.  It's not a
complete solution, because the transaction could theoretically be aborted by
some other error, but at least fixes the most common causes of both problems.
2009-11-10 18:00:06 +00:00
Tom Lane 10bcfa189b Re-refactor the core scanner's API, in order to get out from under the problem
of different parsers having different YYSTYPE unions that they want to use
with it.  I defined a new union core_YYSTYPE that is just the (very short)
list of semantic values returned by the core scanner.  I had originally
worried that this would require an extra interface layer, but actually we can
have parser.c's base_yylex (formerly filtered_base_yylex) take care of that at
no extra cost.  Names associated with the core scanner are now "core_yy_foo",
with "base_yy_foo" being used in the core Bison parser and the parser.c
interface layer.

This solves the last serious stumbling block to eliminating plpgsql's separate
lexer.  One restriction that will still be present is that plpgsql and the
core will have to agree on the token numbers assigned to tokens that can be
returned by the core lexer.  Since Bison doesn't seem willing to accept
external assignments of those numbers, we'll have to live with decreeing that
core and plpgsql grammars declare these tokens first and in the same order.
2009-11-09 18:38:48 +00:00
Tom Lane 2ace38d226 Fix WHERE CURRENT OF to work as designed within plpgsql. The argument
can be the name of a plpgsql cursor variable, which formerly was converted
to $N before the core parser saw it, but that's no longer the case.
Deal with plain name references to plpgsql variables, and add a regression
test case that exposes the failure.
2009-11-09 02:36:59 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan b79f49c780 Keep track of language's trusted flag in InlineCodeBlock. Needed to support DO blocks for languages that have both trusted and untrusted variants. 2009-11-06 21:57:57 +00:00
Tom Lane 593f4b854a Don't treat NEW and OLD as reserved words anymore. For the purposes of rules
it works just as well to have them be ordinary identifiers, and this gets rid
of a number of ugly special cases.  Plus we aren't interfering with non-rule
usage of these names.

catversion bump because the names change internally in stored rules.
2009-11-05 23:24:27 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 45d7e04fce reenable -> re-enable
Pointed out by Debian's lintian.
2009-11-05 20:13:06 +00:00
Tom Lane 8e79277699 Allow binary-coercible cases in ri_HashCompareOp; there are some such cases
that are not handled by find_coercion_pathway, notably composite->RECORD.
Now that 8.4 supports composites as primary keys, it's worth dealing with
this case.
2009-11-05 04:38:29 +00:00
Tom Lane 6bef82b38a Rename some encoding conversion modules to keep pathnames in our source
tarballs under 100 characters.  This should avoid failures with certain
untarring tools (WinZip and Midnight Commander have been mentioned as
likely suspects).  Per my proposal of yesterday.
catversion bumped since the initial contents of pg_proc change.
2009-11-04 23:47:04 +00:00
Tom Lane 9ab6c3033e Make expression locations for LIKE and SIMILAR TO constructs uniformly point
at the first keyword of the expression, rather than drawing a rather
artificial distinction between the ESCAPE subclause and the rest.
Per gripe from Gokulakannan Somasundaram and subsequent discusssion.
2009-11-04 23:15:08 +00:00
Tom Lane 9bedd128d6 Add support for invoking parser callback hooks via SPI and in cached plans.
As proof of concept, modify plpgsql to use the hooks.  plpgsql is still
inserting $n symbols textually, but the "back end" of the parsing process now
goes through the ParamRef hook instead of using a fixed parameter-type array,
and then execution only fetches actually-referenced parameters, using a hook
added to ParamListInfo.

Although there's a lot left to be done in plpgsql, this already cures the
"if (TG_OP = 'INSERT' and NEW.foo ...)"  problem, as illustrated by the
changed regression test.
2009-11-04 22:26:08 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 91ce16a903 Allow rewriting ALTER TABLE to skip WAL logging.
Itagaki Takahiro, with small changes by me and Simon.
2009-11-04 12:24:23 +00:00
Tom Lane 7d535ebe5b Dept of second thoughts: after studying index_getnext() a bit more I realize
that it can scribble on scan->xs_ctup.t_self while following HOT chains,
so we can't rely on that to stay valid between hashgettuple() calls.
Introduce a private variable in HashScanOpaque, instead.
2009-11-01 22:30:54 +00:00
Tom Lane c4afdca4c2 Fix two serious bugs introduced into hash indexes by the 8.4 patch that made
hash indexes keep entries sorted by hash value.  First, the original plans for
concurrency assumed that insertions would happen only at the end of a page,
which is no longer true; this could cause scans to transiently fail to find
index entries in the presence of concurrent insertions.  We can compensate
by teaching scans to re-find their position after re-acquiring read locks.
Second, neither the bucket split nor the bucket compaction logic had been
fixed to preserve hashvalue ordering, so application of either of those
processes could lead to permanent corruption of an index, in the sense
that searches might fail to find entries that are present.

This patch fixes the split and compaction logic to preserve hashvalue
ordering, but it cannot do anything about pre-existing corruption.  We will
need to recommend reindexing all hash indexes in the 8.4.2 release notes.

To buy back the performance loss hereby induced in split and compaction,
fix them to use PageIndexMultiDelete instead of retail PageIndexDelete
operations.  We might later want to do something with qsort'ing the
page contents rather than doing a binary search for each insertion,
but that seemed more invasive than I cared to risk in a back-patch.

Per bug #5157 from Jeff Janes and subsequent investigation.
2009-11-01 21:25:25 +00:00
Tom Lane fb5d05805b Implement parser hooks for processing ColumnRef and ParamRef nodes, as per my
recent proposal.  As proof of concept, remove knowledge of Params from the
core parser, arranging for them to be handled entirely by parser hook
functions.  It turns out we need an additional hook for that --- I had
forgotten about the code that handles inferring a parameter's type from
context.

This is a preliminary step towards letting plpgsql handle its variables
through parser hooks.  Additional work remains to be done to expose the
facility through SPI, but I think this is all the changes needed in the core
parser.
2009-10-31 01:41:31 +00:00
Tom Lane 8442317beb Make the overflow guards in ExecChooseHashTableSize be more protective.
The original coding ensured nbuckets and nbatch didn't exceed INT_MAX,
which while not insane on its own terms did nothing to protect subsequent
code like "palloc(nbatch * sizeof(BufFile *))".  Since enormous join size
estimates might well be planner error rather than reality, it seems best
to constrain the initial sizes to be not more than work_mem/sizeof(pointer),
thus ensuring the allocated arrays don't exceed work_mem.  We will allow
nbatch to get bigger than that during subsequent ExecHashIncreaseNumBatches
calls, but we should still guard against integer overflow in those palloc
requests.  Per bug #5145 from Bernt Marius Johnsen.

Although the given test case only seems to fail back to 8.2, previous
releases have variants of this issue, so patch all supported branches.
2009-10-30 20:58:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 77c666fe42 Un-break EXPLAIN for Append plans. I messed this up a few days ago while
adding the ModifyTable node type --- I had been thinking ModifyTable should
replace Append as a special case in push_plan(), but actually both of them
have to be special-cased.
2009-10-28 18:51:56 +00:00
Tom Lane cbcd1701f1 Fix AcquireRewriteLocks to be sure that it acquires the right lock strength
when FOR UPDATE is propagated down into a sub-select expanded from a view.
Similar bug to parser's isLockedRel issue that I fixed yesterday; likewise
seems not quite worth the effort to back-patch.
2009-10-28 17:36:50 +00:00
Tom Lane 46e3a16b05 When FOR UPDATE/SHARE is used with LIMIT, put the LockRows plan node
underneath the Limit node, not atop it.  This fixes the old problem that such
a query might unexpectedly return fewer rows than the LIMIT says, due to
LockRows discarding updated rows.

There is a related problem that LockRows might destroy the sort ordering
produced by earlier steps; but fixing that by pushing LockRows below Sort
would create serious performance problems that are unjustified in many
real-world applications, as well as potential deadlock problems from locking
many more rows than expected.  Instead, keep the present semantics of applying
FOR UPDATE after ORDER BY within a single query level; but allow the user to
specify the other way by writing FOR UPDATE in a sub-select.  To make that
work, track whether FOR UPDATE appeared explicitly in sub-selects or got
pushed down from the parent, and don't flatten a sub-select that contained an
explicit FOR UPDATE.
2009-10-28 14:55:47 +00:00
Tom Lane 44956c52c5 Fix AfterTriggerSaveEvent to use a test and elog, not just Assert, to check
that it's called within an AfterTriggerBeginQuery/AfterTriggerEndQuery pair.
The RI cascade triggers suppress that overhead on the assumption that they
are always run non-deferred, so it's possible to violate the condition if
someone mistakenly changes pg_trigger to mark such a trigger deferred.
We don't really care about supporting that, but throwing an error instead
of crashing seems desirable.  Per report from Marcelo Costa.
2009-10-27 20:14:27 +00:00
Tom Lane 61e5328208 Make FOR UPDATE/SHARE in the primary query not propagate into WITH queries;
for example in
  WITH w AS (SELECT * FROM foo) SELECT * FROM w, bar ... FOR UPDATE
the FOR UPDATE will now affect bar but not foo.  This is more useful and
consistent than the original 8.4 behavior, which tried to propagate FOR UPDATE
into the WITH query but always failed due to assorted implementation
restrictions.  Even though we are in process of removing those restrictions,
it seems correct on philosophical grounds to not let the outer query's
FOR UPDATE affect the WITH query.

In passing, fix isLockedRel which frequently got things wrong in
nested-subquery cases: "FOR UPDATE OF foo" applies to an alias foo in the
current query level, not subqueries.  This has been broken for a long time,
but it doesn't seem worth back-patching further than 8.4 because the actual
consequences are minimal.  At worst the parser would sometimes get
RowShareLock on a relation when it should be AccessShareLock or vice versa.
That would only make a difference if someone were using ExclusiveLock
concurrently, which no standard operation does, and anyway FOR UPDATE
doesn't result in visible changes so it's not clear that the someone would
notice any problem.  Between that and the fact that FOR UPDATE barely works
with subqueries at all in existing releases, I'm not excited about worrying
about it.
2009-10-27 17:11:18 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut f1c5247563 Simplify a few makefile rules since install-sh can now install multiple
files in one run.
2009-10-26 21:33:01 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2078e384a3 Fix range check in date_recv that tried to limit accepted values to only
those accepted by date_in(). I confused julian day numbers and number of
days since the postgres epoch 2000-01-01 in the original patch.

I just noticed that it's still easy to get such out-of-range values into
the database using to_date or +- operators, but this patch doesn't do
anything about those functions.

Per report from James Pye.
2009-10-26 16:13:11 +00:00
Tom Lane 9f2ee8f287 Re-implement EvalPlanQual processing to improve its performance and eliminate
a lot of strange behaviors that occurred in join cases.  We now identify the
"current" row for every joined relation in UPDATE, DELETE, and SELECT FOR
UPDATE/SHARE queries.  If an EvalPlanQual recheck is necessary, we jam the
appropriate row into each scan node in the rechecking plan, forcing it to emit
only that one row.  The former behavior could rescan the whole of each joined
relation for each recheck, which was terrible for performance, and what's much
worse could result in duplicated output tuples.

Also, the original implementation of EvalPlanQual could not re-use the recheck
execution tree --- it had to go through a full executor init and shutdown for
every row to be tested.  To avoid this overhead, I've associated a special
runtime Param with each LockRows or ModifyTable plan node, and arranged to
make every scan node below such a node depend on that Param.  Thus, by
signaling a change in that Param, the EPQ machinery can just rescan the
already-built test plan.

This patch also adds a prohibition on set-returning functions in the
targetlist of SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE.  This is needed to avoid the
duplicate-output-tuple problem.  It seems fairly reasonable since the
other restrictions on SELECT FOR UPDATE are meant to ensure that there
is a unique correspondence between source tuples and result tuples,
which an output SRF destroys as much as anything else does.
2009-10-26 02:26:45 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 76d8883c8e When querying a table with child tables, do not check permissions on the
child tables.  This was found to be useless and confusing in virtually all
cases, and also contrary to the SQL standard.
2009-10-23 05:24:52 +00:00
Tom Lane ab61df9e52 Remove regex_flavor GUC, so that regular expressions are always "advanced"
style by default.  Per discussion, there seems to be hardly anything that
really relies on being able to change the regex flavor, so the ability to
select it via embedded options ought to be enough for any stragglers.
Also, if we didn't remove the GUC, we'd really be morally obligated to
mark the regex functions non-immutable, which'd possibly create performance
issues.
2009-10-21 20:38:58 +00:00
Tom Lane 289e2905c8 Remove add_missing_from GUC and associated parser support for "implicit RTEs".
Per recent discussion, add_missing_from has been deprecated for long enough to
consider removing, and it's getting in the way of planned parser refactoring.
The system now always behaves as though add_missing_from were OFF.
2009-10-21 20:22:38 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut ef8df75e67 Translations update for 8.5alpha2 2009-10-20 18:23:27 +00:00
Magnus Hagander c7b5e851eb Fix typo in previous release as reported by Itagaki Takahiro, but missed
by me.
2009-10-17 05:14:52 +00:00
Magnus Hagander 748771379b Write to the Windows eventlog in UTF16, converting the message encoding
as necessary.

Itagaki Takahiro with some changes from me
2009-10-17 00:24:51 +00:00
Tom Lane 76c09dbe8d Rewrite pam_passwd_conv_proc to be more robust: avoid assuming that the
pam_message array contains exactly one PAM_PROMPT_ECHO_OFF message.
Instead, deal with however many messages there are, and don't throw error
for PAM_ERROR_MSG and PAM_TEXT_INFO messages.  This logic is borrowed from
openssh 5.2p1, which hopefully has seen more real-world PAM usage than we
have.  Per bug #5121 from Ryan Douglas, which turned out to be caused by
the conv_proc being called with zero messages.  Apparently that is normal
behavior given the combination of Linux pam_krb5 with MS Active Directory
as the domain controller.

Patch all the way back, since this code has been essentially untouched
since 7.4.  (Surprising we've not heard complaints before.)
2009-10-16 22:08:36 +00:00
Tom Lane b2734a0d79 Support SQL-compliant triggers on columns, ie fire only if certain columns
are named in the UPDATE's SET list.

Note: the schema of pg_trigger has not actually changed; we've just started
to use a column that was there all along.  catversion bumped anyway so that
this commit is included in the history of potentially interesting changes
to system catalog contents.

Itagaki Takahiro
2009-10-14 22:14:25 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas be922e8555 Rename the new MAX_AUTH_TOKEN_LENGTH #define to PG_MAX_AUTH_MAX_TOKEN_LENGTH,
to make it more obvious that it's a PostgreSQL internal limit, not something
that comes from system header files.
2009-10-14 22:09:46 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas e2a41957a4 Raise the maximum authentication token (Kerberos ticket) size in GSSAPI
and SSPI athentication methods. While the old 2000 byte limit was more than
enough for Unix Kerberos implementations, tickets issued by Windows Domain
Controllers can be much larger.

Ian Turner
2009-10-14 07:27:13 +00:00
Tom Lane b140711643 Fix ts_stat's failure on empty tsvector.
Also insert a couple of Asserts that check for stack overflow.
Bogus coding appears to be new in 8.4 --- older releases had a much
simpler algorithm here.  Per bug #5111.
2009-10-13 14:33:14 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 201e5b282b Add new PGC_S_DATABASE_USER enum value to several places missed by my patch
last week.

Per note and patch from Jeff Davis.
2009-10-13 14:18:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 8d54c2482b Code review for LIKE INCLUDING patch --- clean up some cosmetic and not
so cosmetic stuff.
2009-10-13 00:53:08 +00:00
Tom Lane 5ec1341136 Use plurals (TABLES, FUNCTIONS, etc) in ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES. We have
the keywords as a consequence of the GRANT ALL patch, so we might as well
use them and make the ALTER commands read more naturally.
2009-10-12 23:41:45 +00:00
Tom Lane 11ca04b4b7 Support GRANT/REVOKE ON ALL TABLES/SEQUENCES/FUNCTIONS IN SCHEMA.
Petr Jelinek
2009-10-12 20:39:42 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan faa1afc6c1 CREATE LIKE INCLUDING COMMENTS and STORAGE, and INCLUDING ALL shortcut. Itagaki Takahiro. 2009-10-12 19:49:24 +00:00
Tom Lane 0adaf4cb31 Move the handling of SELECT FOR UPDATE locking and rechecking out of
execMain.c and into a new plan node type LockRows.  Like the recent change
to put table updating into a ModifyTable plan node, this increases planning
flexibility by allowing the operations to occur below the top level of the
plan tree.  It's necessary in any case to restore the previous behavior of
having FOR UPDATE locking occur before ModifyTable does.

This partially refactors EvalPlanQual to allow multiple rows-under-test
to be inserted into the EPQ machinery before starting an EPQ test query.
That isn't sufficient to fix EPQ's general bogosity in the face of plans
that return multiple rows per test row, though.  Since this patch is
mostly about getting some plan node infrastructure in place and not about
fixing ten-year-old bugs, I will leave EPQ improvements for another day.

Another behavioral change that we could now think about is doing FOR UPDATE
before LIMIT, but that too seems like it should be treated as a followon
patch.
2009-10-12 18:10:51 +00:00
Tom Lane 05d249717d Improve similar_escape() in two different ways:
* Stop escaping ? and {.  As of SQL:2008, SIMILAR TO is defined to have
POSIX-compatible interpretation of ? as well as {m,n} and related constructs,
so we should allow these things through to our regex engine.

* Escape ^ and $.  It appears that our regex engine will treat ^^ at the
beginning of the string the same as ^, and similarly for $$ at the end of
the string, which meant that SIMILAR TO was effectively ignoring ^ at the
start of the pattern and $ at the end.  Since these are not supposed to be
metacharacters, this is a bug.

The second part of this is arguably a back-patchable bug fix, but I'm
hesitant to do that because it might break applications that are expecting
something like "col SIMILAR TO '^foo$'" to work like a POSIX pattern.
Seems safer to only change it at a major version boundary.

Per discussion of an example from Doug Gorley.
2009-10-10 03:50:15 +00:00
Tom Lane 8a5849b7ff Split the processing of INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE operations out of execMain.c.
They are now handled by a new plan node type called ModifyTable, which is
placed at the top of the plan tree.  In itself this change doesn't do much,
except perhaps make the handling of RETURNING lists and inherited UPDATEs a
tad less klugy.  But it is necessary preparation for the intended extension of
allowing RETURNING queries inside WITH.

Marko Tiikkaja
2009-10-10 01:43:50 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut b865d27582 Use pg_get_triggerdef in pg_dump
Add a variant of pg_get_triggerdef with a second argument "pretty" that
causes the output to be formatted in the way pg_dump used to do.  Use this
variant in pg_dump with server versions >= 8.5.

This insulates pg_dump from most future trigger feature additions, such as
the upcoming column triggers patch.

Author: Itagaki Takahiro <itagaki.takahiro@oss.ntt.co.jp>
2009-10-09 21:02:56 +00:00
Tom Lane c970292a94 Remove very ancient tuple-counting infrastructure (IncrRetrieved() and
friends).  This code has all been ifdef'd out for many years, and doesn't
seem to have any prospect of becoming any more useful in the future.
EXPLAIN ANALYZE is what people use in practice, and I think if we did want
process-wide counters we'd be more likely to put in dtrace events for that
than try to resurrect this code.  Get rid of it so as to have one less detail
to worry about while refactoring execMain.c.
2009-10-08 22:34:57 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas eab94d8182 Fix off-by-one bug in bitncmp(): When comparing a number of bits divisible by
8, bitncmp() may dereference a pointer one byte out of bounds.

Chris Mikkelson (bug #5101)
2009-10-08 04:46:21 +00:00
Tom Lane 717fa274d1 Support use of function argument names to identify which actual arguments
match which function parameters.  The syntax uses AS, for example
	funcname(value AS arg1, anothervalue AS arg2)

Pavel Stehule
2009-10-08 02:39:25 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 2eda8dfb52 Make it possibly to specify GUC params per user and per database.
Create a new catalog pg_db_role_setting where they are now stored, and better
encapsulate the code that deals with settings into its realm.  The old
datconfig and rolconfig columns are removed.

psql has gained a \drds command to display the settings.

Backwards compatibility warning: while the backwards-compatible system views
still have the config columns, they no longer completely represent the
configuration for a user or database.

Catalog version bumped.
2009-10-07 22:14:26 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 07cefdfb7a Fix snapshot management, take two.
Partially revert the previous patch I installed and replace it with a more
general fix: any time a snapshot is pushed as Active, we need to ensure that it
will not be modified in the future.  This means that if the same snapshot is
used as CurrentSnapshot, it needs to be copied separately.  This affects
serializable transactions only, because CurrentSnapshot has already been copied
by RegisterSnapshot and so PushActiveSnapshot does not think it needs another
copy.  However, CommandCounterIncrement would modify CurrentSnapshot, whereas
ActiveSnapshots must not have their command counters incremented.

I say "partially" because the regression test I added for the previous bug
has been kept.

(This restores 8.3 behavior, because before snapmgr.c existed, any snapshot set
as Active was copied.)

Per bug report from Stuart Bishop in
6bc73d4c0910042358k3d1adff3qa36f8df75198ecea@mail.gmail.com
2009-10-07 16:27:18 +00:00
Tom Lane e0c433c4a3 Change CREATE TABLE so that column default expressions coming from different
inheritance parent tables are compared using equal(), instead of doing
strcmp() on the nodeToString representation.  The old implementation was
always a tad cheesy, and it finally fails completely as of 8.4, now that the
node tree might contain syntax location information.  equal() knows it's
supposed to ignore those fields, but strcmp() hardly can.  Per recent
report from Scott Ribe.
2009-10-06 00:55:26 +00:00
Tom Lane 249724cb01 Create an ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES command, which allows users to adjust
the privileges that will be applied to subsequently-created objects.

Such adjustments are always per owning role, and can be restricted to objects
created in particular schemas too.  A notable benefit is that users can
override the traditional default privilege settings, eg, the PUBLIC EXECUTE
privilege traditionally granted by default for functions.

Petr Jelinek
2009-10-05 19:24:49 +00:00
Tom Lane 35a173ab33 Fix assorted memory leaks in pg_hba.conf parsing. Over a sufficiently
large number of SIGHUP cycles, these would have run the postmaster out
of memory.  Noted while testing memory-leak scenario in postgresql.conf
configuration-change-printing patch.
2009-10-03 20:04:39 +00:00
Tom Lane 54d60bbd07 Fix a couple of issues in recent patch to print updates to postgresql.conf
settings: avoid calling superuser() in contexts where it's not defined,
don't leak the transient copies of GetConfigOption output, and avoid the
whole exercise in postmaster child processes.

I found that actually no current caller of GetConfigOption has any use for
its internal check of GUC_SUPERUSER_ONLY.  But rather than just remove
that entirely, it seemed better to add a parameter indicating whether to
enforce the check.

Per report from Simon and subsequent testing.
2009-10-03 18:04:57 +00:00
Tom Lane 66a8417f4e Fix an oversight in an 8.3-era patch: pgstat_initstats should allow stats
to be collected for sequences.

Report and fix by Akira Kurosawa
2009-10-02 22:49:50 +00:00
Tom Lane e66d714386 Make sure that GIN fast-insert and regular code paths enforce the same
tuple size limit.  Improve the error message for index-tuple-too-large
so that it includes the actual size, the limit, and the index name.
Sync with the btree occurrences of the same error.

Back-patch to 8.4 because it appears that the out-of-sync problem
is occurring in the field.

Teodor and Tom
2009-10-02 21:14:04 +00:00
Tom Lane d691cb9141 Fix erroneous handling of shared dependencies (ie dependencies on roles)
in CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION.  The original code would update pg_shdepend
as if a new function was being created, even if it wasn't, with two bad
consequences: pg_shdepend might record the wrong owner for the function,
and any dependencies for roles mentioned in the function's ACL would be lost.
The fix is very easy: just don't touch pg_shdepend at all when doing a
function replacement.

Also update the CREATE FUNCTION reference page, which never explained
exactly what changes and doesn't change in a function replacement.
In passing, fix the CREATE VIEW reference page similarly; there's no
code bug there, but the docs didn't say what happens.
2009-10-02 18:13:04 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera caa4cfa369 Ensure that a cursor has an immutable snapshot throughout its lifespan.
The old coding was using a regular snapshot, referenced elsewhere, that was
subject to having its command counter updated.  Fix by creating a private copy
of the snapshot exclusively for the cursor.

Backpatch to 8.4, which is when the bug was introduced during the snapshot
management rewrite.
2009-10-02 17:57:30 +00:00
Tom Lane f3aec2c7f5 Support "samehost" and "samenet" specifications in pg_hba.conf,
by enumerating the machine's IP interfaces to look for a match.

Stef Walter
2009-10-01 01:58:58 +00:00
Tom Lane 25549edb26 Fix equivclass.c's not-quite-right strategy for handling X=X clauses.
The original coding correctly noted that these aren't just redundancies
(they're effectively X IS NOT NULL, assuming = is strict).  However, they
got treated that way if X happened to be in a single-member EquivalenceClass
already, which could happen if there was an ORDER BY X clause, for instance.
The simplest and most reliable solution seems to be to not try to process
such clauses through the EquivalenceClass machinery; just throw them back
for traditional processing.  The amount of work that'd be needed to be
smarter than that seems out of proportion to the benefit.

Per bug #5084 from Bernt Marius Johnsen, and analysis by Andrew Gierth.
2009-09-29 01:20:34 +00:00
Tom Lane 421d7d8edb Remove no-longer-needed ExecCountSlots infrastructure. 2009-09-27 21:10:53 +00:00
Tom Lane f92e8a4b5e Replace the array-style TupleTable data structure with a simple List of
TupleTableSlot nodes.  This eliminates the need to count in advance
how many Slots will be needed, which seems more than worth the small
increase in the amount of palloc traffic during executor startup.

The ExecCountSlots infrastructure is now all dead code, but I'll remove it
in a separate commit for clarity.

Per a comment from Robert Haas.
2009-09-27 20:09:58 +00:00
Tom Lane 799ac99201 Sync psql's scanner with recent changes in backend scanner's flex rules.
Marko Kreen, Tom Lane
2009-09-27 03:27:24 +00:00
Tom Lane 12d8fae4cd Simplify the bootstrap (BKI) code by getting rid of a useless table of all
the strings seen during the bootstrap run.  There might have been some
actual point to doing that, many years ago, but as far as I can see the only
value now is to conserve a bit of memory.  Even if we cared about wasting
a megabyte or so during the initdb run, it'd be far more effective to
arrange to release memory at the end of each BKI command, instead of
intentionally hanging onto strings that might never be used again.
Not maintaining the table probably makes it faster too; but the main point
of this patch is to get rid of a couple hundred lines of unnecessary and
rather crufty code.
2009-09-27 01:32:11 +00:00
Tom Lane 23cf415a65 Hmm, seems a lot of the buildfarm is running versions of awk that
don't have gensub().  Use sub() instead, tedious though it be.
2009-09-26 23:22:48 +00:00
Tom Lane ca70c3cfda Revert my ill-considered change that made formrdesc not insert the correct
relation rowtype OID into the relcache entries it builds.  This ensures
that catcache copies of the relation tupdescs will be fully correct.
While the deficiency doesn't seem to have any effect in the current
sources, we have been bitten by not-quite-right catcache tupdescs before,
so it seems like a good idea to maintain the rule that they should be right.
2009-09-26 23:08:22 +00:00
Tom Lane 4985635230 Extend the BKI infrastructure to allow system catalogs to be given
hand-assigned rowtype OIDs, even when they are not "bootstrapped" catalogs
that have handmade type rows in pg_type.h.  Give pg_database such an OID.
Restore the availability of C macros for the rowtype OIDs of the bootstrapped
catalogs.  (These macros are now in the individual catalogs' .h files,
though, not in pg_type.h.)

This commit doesn't do anything especially useful by itself, but it's
necessary infrastructure for reverting some ill-considered changes in
relcache.c.
2009-09-26 22:42:03 +00:00
Tom Lane c2e228d44e Fix RelationCacheInitializePhase2 (Phase3, in HEAD) to cope with the
possibility of shared-inval messages causing a relcache flush while it tries
to fill in missing data in preloaded relcache entries.  There are actually
two distinct failure modes here:

1. The flush could delete the next-to-be-processed cache entry, causing
the subsequent hash_seq_search calls to go off into the weeds.  This is
the problem reported by Michael Brown, and I believe it also accounts
for bug #5074.  The simplest fix is to restart the hashtable scan after
we've read any new data from the catalogs.  It appears that pre-8.4
branches have not suffered from this failure, because by chance there were
no other catalogs sharing the same hash chains with the catalogs that
RelationCacheInitializePhase2 had work to do for.  However that's obviously
pretty fragile, and it seems possible that derivative versions with
additional system catalogs might be vulnerable, so I'm back-patching this
part of the fix anyway.

2. The flush could delete the *current* cache entry, in which case the
pointer to the newly-loaded data would end up being stored into an
already-deleted Relation struct.  As long as it was still deleted, the only
consequence would be some leaked space in CacheMemoryContext.  But it seems
possible that the Relation struct could already have been recycled, in
which case this represents a hard-to-reproduce clobber of cached data
structures, with unforeseeable consequences.  The fix here is to pin the
entry while we work on it.

In passing, also change RelationCacheInitializePhase2 to Assert that
formrdesc() set up the relation's cached TupleDesc (rd_att) with the
correct type OID and hasoids values.  This is more appropriate than
silently updating the values, because the original tupdesc might already
have been copied into the catcache.  However this part of the patch is
not in HEAD because it fails due to some questionable recent changes in
formrdesc :-(.  That will be cleaned up in a subsequent patch.
2009-09-26 18:24:49 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut d39a84a612 Prevent isolated second surrogate in U& syntax 2009-09-25 21:13:06 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut ada0116e56 Remove backup states from Unicode escapes patch 2009-09-25 20:51:37 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut c2bb0378cf Unicode escapes in E'...' strings
Author: Marko Kreen <markokr@gmail.com>
2009-09-22 23:52:53 +00:00
Tom Lane 9048b73184 Implement the DO statement to support execution of PL code without having
to create a function for it.

Procedural languages now have an additional entry point, namely a function
to execute an inline code block.  This seemed a better design than trying
to hide the transient-ness of the code from the PL.  As of this patch, only
plpgsql has an inline handler, but probably people will soon write handlers
for the other standard PLs.

In passing, remove the long-dead LANCOMPILER option of CREATE LANGUAGE.

Petr Jelinek
2009-09-22 23:43:43 +00:00
Tom Lane d5a43ffde0 Fix crash if a DROP is attempted on an internally-dependent object.
Introduced in 8.4 rewrite of dependency.c.
Per bug #5072 from Amit Khandekar.
2009-09-22 15:46:35 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 02faeb4ac8 Surrogate pair support for U& string and identifier syntax
This is mainly to make the functionality consistent with the proposed \u
escape syntax.
2009-09-21 22:22:07 +00:00
Tom Lane 923413ac6d Define a new, more extensible syntax for COPY options.
This is intentionally similar to the recently revised syntax for EXPLAIN
options, ie, (name value, ...).  The old syntax is still supported for
backwards compatibility, but we intend that any options added in future
will be provided only in the new syntax.

Robert Haas, Emmanuel Cecchet
2009-09-21 20:10:21 +00:00
Tom Lane 9a98dd49f4 Rename new subroutine, per discussion with Robert Haas. 2009-09-19 17:48:09 +00:00
Tom Lane 1bd263537f Marginal code cleanup in joinpath.c: factor out clause variable-membership
tests into a small common subroutine, and eliminate an unnecessary difference
in the order in which conditions are tested.  Per a comment from Robert Haas.
2009-09-18 17:24:51 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev f92bbb899a Fix incorrect arguments for gist_box_penalty call. The bug could be observed
only for secondary page split (i.e. for non-first columns of index)

 Patch by Paul Ramsey <pramsey@opengeo.org>
2009-09-18 14:01:56 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 87f4a26e5d Improve wording of error message when a postgresql.conf setting is
ignored because it can only be set at server start.  In particular,
hiding the main reason in the detail message was suboptimal.
2009-09-17 21:15:18 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 44608aee04 When reloading postgresql.conf, log what parameters actually changed 2009-09-17 20:54:03 +00:00
Tom Lane 488d70ab46 Implement "join removal" for cases where the inner side of a left join
is unique and is not referenced above the join.  In this case the inner
side doesn't affect the query result and can be thrown away entirely.
Although perhaps nobody would ever write such a thing by hand, it's
a reasonably common case in machine-generated SQL.

The current implementation only recognizes the case where the inner side
is a simple relation with a unique index matching the query conditions.
This is enough for the use-cases that have been shown so far, but we
might want to try to handle other cases later.

Robert Haas, somewhat rewritten by Tom
2009-09-17 20:49:29 +00:00
Tom Lane 384cad5c7b Fix two distinct errors in creation of GIN_INSERT_LISTPAGE xlog records.
In practice these mistakes were always masked when full_page_writes was on,
because XLogInsert would always choose to log the full page, and then
ginRedoInsertListPage wouldn't try to do anything.  But with full_page_writes
off a WAL replay failure was certain.

The GIN_INSERT_LISTPAGE record type could probably be eliminated entirely
in favor of using XLOG_HEAP_NEWPAGE, but I refrained from doing that now
since it would have required a significantly more invasive patch.

In passing do a little bit of code cleanup, including making the accounting
for free space on GIN list pages more precise.  (This wasn't a bug as the
errors were always in the conservative direction.)

Per report from Simon.  Back-patch to 8.4 which contains the identical code.
2009-09-15 20:31:30 +00:00
Tom Lane 9a3f5301ff Fix possible buffer overrun and/or unportable behavior in pg_md5_encrypt()
if salt_len == 0.  This seems to be mostly academic, since nearly all calling
code paths guarantee nonempty salt; the only case that doesn't is
PQencryptPassword where the caller could mistakenly pass an empty username.
So, fix it but don't bother backpatching.  Per ljb.
2009-09-15 02:31:15 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7f2a10fecd Don't error out if recycling or removing an old WAL segment fails at the end
of checkpoint. Although the checkpoint has been written to WAL at that point
already, so that all data is safe, and we'll retry removing the WAL segment at
the next checkpoint, if such a failure persists we won't be able to remove any
other old WAL segments either and will eventually run out of disk space. It's
better to treat the failure as non-fatal, and move on to clean any other WAL
segment and continue with any other end-of-checkpoint cleanup.

We don't normally expect any such failures, but on Windows it can happen with
some anti-virus or backup software that lock files without FILE_SHARE_DELETE
flag.

Also, the loop in pgrename() to retry when the file is locked was broken. If a
file is locked on Windows, you get ERROR_SHARE_VIOLATION, not
ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED, at least on modern versions. Fix that, although I left
the check for ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED in there as well (presumably it was correct
in some environment), and added ERROR_LOCK_VIOLATION to be consistent with
similar checks in pgwin32_open(). Reduce the timeout on the loop from 30s to
10s, on the grounds that since it's been broken, we've effectively had a
timeout of 0s and no-one has complained, so a smaller timeout is actually
closer to the old behavior. A longer timeout would mean that if recycling a
WAL file fails because it's locked for some reason, InstallXLogFileSegment()
will hold ControlFileLock for longer, potentially blocking other backends, so
a long timeout isn't totally harmless.

While we're at it, set errno correctly in pgrename().

Backpatch to 8.2, which is the oldest version supported on Windows. The xlog.c
changes would make sense on other platforms and thus on older versions as
well, but since there's no such locking issues on other platforms, it's not
worth it.
2009-09-13 18:32:08 +00:00
Tom Lane 9bb342811b Rewrite the planner's handling of materialized plan types so that there is
an explicit model of rescan costs being different from first-time costs.
The costing of Material nodes in particular now has some visible relationship
to the actual runtime behavior, where before it was essentially fantasy.
This also fixes up a couple of places where different materialized plan types
were treated differently for no very good reason (probably just oversights).

A couple of the regression tests are affected, because the planner now chooses
to put the other relation on the inside of a nestloop-with-materialize.
So far as I can see both changes are sane, and the planner is now more
consistently following the expectation that it should prefer to materialize
the smaller of two relations.

Per a recent discussion with Robert Haas.
2009-09-12 22:12:09 +00:00
Tom Lane 325aeb4a65 Install a hopefully-temporary workaround for Snow Leopard readdir() bug.
If Apple doesn't fix that reasonably soon, we'll have to consider
back-patching a workaround; but for now, just hack it in HEAD so that
we can get buildfarm reports on HEAD from OS X machines.
Per Jan Otto.
2009-09-12 15:51:52 +00:00
Tom Lane d5a4b69c3a Fix assertion failure when a SELECT DISTINCT ON expression is volatile.
In this case we generate two PathKey references to the expression (one for
DISTINCT and one for ORDER BY) and they really need to refer to the same
EquivalenceClass.  However get_eclass_for_sort_expr was being overly paranoid
and creating two different EC's.  Correct behavior is to use the SortGroupRef
index to decide whether two references to volatile expressions that are
equal() (ie textually equivalent) should be considered the same.

Backpatch to 8.4.  Possibly this should be changed in 8.3 as well, but
I'll refrain in the absence of evidence of a visible failure in that branch.

Per bug #5049.
2009-09-12 00:04:59 +00:00
Tom Lane 8c5463a511 Increase the maximum value of extra_float_digits to 3, and have pg_dump
use that value when the backend is new enough to allow it.  This responds
to bug report from Keh-Cheng Chu pointing out that although 2 extra digits
should be sufficient to dump and restore float8 exactly, it is possible to
need 3 extra digits for float4 values.
2009-09-11 19:17:04 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4e2d5efc6a On Windows, when a file is deleted and another process still has an open
file handle on it, the file goes into "pending deletion" state where it
still shows up in directory listing, but isn't accessible otherwise. That
confuses RemoveOldXLogFiles(), making it think that the file hasn't been
archived yet, while it actually was, and it was deleted along with the .done
file.

Fix that by renaming the file with ".deleted" extension before deleting it.
Also check the return value of rename() and unlink(), so that if the removal
fails for any reason (e.g another process is holding the file locked), we
don't delete the .done file until the WAL file is really gone.

Backpatch to 8.2, which is the oldest version supported on Windows.
2009-09-10 09:42:10 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 3ab8b7fa6f Fix/improve bytea and boolean support in PL/Python
Before, PL/Python converted data between SQL and Python by going
through a C string representation.  This broke for bytea in two ways:

- On input (function parameters), you would get a Python string that
  contains bytea's particular external representation with backslashes
  etc., instead of a sequence of bytes, which is what you would expect
  in a Python environment.  This problem is exacerbated by the new
  bytea output format.

- On output (function return value), null bytes in the Python string
  would cause truncation before the data gets stored into a bytea
  datum.

This is now fixed by converting directly between the PostgreSQL datum
and the Python representation.

The required generalized infrastructure also allows for other
improvements in passing:

- When returning a boolean value, the SQL datum is now true if and
  only if Python considers the value that was passed out of the
  PL/Python function to be true.  Previously, this determination was
  left to the boolean data type input function.  So, now returning
  'foo' results in true, because Python considers it true, rather than
  false because PostgreSQL considers it false.

- On input, we can convert the integer and float types directly to
  their Python equivalents without having to go through an
  intermediate string representation.

original patch by Caleb Welton, with updates by myself
2009-09-09 19:00:09 +00:00
Tom Lane 255f66efa9 Fix bug with WITH RECURSIVE immediately inside WITH RECURSIVE. 99% of the
code was already okay with this, but the hack that obtained the output
column types of a recursive union in advance of doing real parse analysis
of the recursive union forgot to handle the case where there was an inner
WITH clause available to the non-recursive term.  Best fix seems to be to
refactor so that we don't need the "throwaway" parse analysis step at all.
Instead, teach the transformSetOperationStmt code to set up the CTE's output
column information after it's processed the non-recursive term normally.
Per report from David Fetter.
2009-09-09 03:32:52 +00:00
Tom Lane eeb6cb143a Add a boolean GUC parameter "bonjour" to control whether a Bonjour-enabled
build actually attempts to advertise itself via Bonjour.  Formerly it always
did so, which meant that packagers had to decide for their users whether
this behavior was wanted or not.  The default is "off" to be on the safe
side, though this represents a change in the default behavior of a
Bonjour-enabled build.  Per discussion.
2009-09-08 17:08:36 +00:00
Tom Lane 59b9f3d36d Replace use of the long-deprecated Bonjour API DNSServiceRegistrationCreate
with the not-so-deprecated DNSServiceRegister.  This patch shouldn't change
any user-visible behavior, it just gets rid of a deprecation warning in
--with-bonjour builds.  The new code will fail on OS X releases before 10.3,
but it seems unlikely that anyone will want to run Postgres 8.5 on 10.2.
2009-09-08 16:08:26 +00:00
Tom Lane e3b3878a08 Put back "ifeq ($(PORTNAME), solaris)", this time with some documentation
of why it's not as broken as it appears on first glance.
2009-09-05 21:14:04 +00:00
Tom Lane db13a81ab4 Revert ill-considered restriction of dtrace support to Solaris only. 2009-09-04 23:11:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 47ef623c0b Remove pgstat's discrimination against MsgVacuum and MsgAnalyze messages.
Formerly, these message types would be discarded unless there was already
a stats hash table entry for the target table.  However, the intent of
saving hash table space for unused tables was subverted by the fact that
the physical I/O done by the vacuum or analyze would result in an immediately
following tabstat message, which would create the hash table entry anyway.
All that we had left was surprising loss of statistical data, as in a recent
complaint from Jaime Casanova.

It seems unlikely that a real database would have many tables that go totally
untouched over the long haul, so the consensus is that this "optimization"
serves little purpose anyhow.  Remove it, and just create the hash table
entry on demand in all cases.
2009-09-04 22:32:33 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7be39bb0be Tigthen binary receive functions so that they reject values that the text
input functions don't accept either. While the backend can handle such
values fine, they can cause trouble in clients and in pg_dump/restore.

This is followup to the original issue on time datatype reported by Andrew
McNamara a while ago. Like that one, none of these seem worth
back-patching.
2009-09-04 11:20:23 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 237859e4fb Fix encoding handling in xml binary input function. If the XML header didn't
specify an encoding explicitly, we used to treat it as being in database
encoding when we parsed it, but then perform a UTF-8 -> database encoding
conversion on it, which was completely bogus. It's now consistently treated as
UTF-8.
2009-09-04 10:49:29 +00:00
Tom Lane 602a9ef5a7 Make LOAD of an already-loaded library into a no-op, instead of attempting
to unload and re-load the library.

The difficulty with unloading a library is that we haven't defined safe
protocols for doing so.  In particular, there's no safe mechanism for
getting out of a "hook" function pointer unless libraries are unloaded
in reverse order of loading.  And there's no mechanism at all for undefining
a custom GUC variable, so GUC would be left with a pointer to an old value
that might or might not still be valid, and very possibly wouldn't be in
the same place anymore.

While the unload and reload behavior had some usefulness in easing
development of new loadable libraries, it's of no use whatever to normal
users, so just disabling it isn't giving up that much.  Someday we might
care to expend the effort to develop safe unload protocols; but even if
we did, there'd be little certainty that every third-party loadable module
was following them, so some security restrictions would still be needed.

Back-patch to 8.2; before that, LOAD was superuser-only anyway.

Security: unprivileged users could crash backend.  CVE not assigned yet
2009-09-03 22:11:07 +00:00
Tom Lane 187e5d8981 Disallow RESET ROLE and RESET SESSION AUTHORIZATION inside security-definer
functions.

This extends the previous patch that forbade SETting these variables inside
security-definer functions.  RESET is equally a security hole, since it
would allow regaining privileges of the caller; furthermore it can trigger
Assert failures and perhaps other internal errors, since the code is not
expecting these variables to change in such contexts.  The previous patch
did not cover this case because assign hooks don't really have enough
information, so move the responsibility for preventing this into guc.c.

Problem discovered by Heikki Linnakangas.

Security: no CVE assigned yet, extends CVE-2007-6600
2009-09-03 22:08:05 +00:00
Tom Lane d0a368c656 Install a workaround for a longstanding gcc bug that allows SIGFPE traps
to occur for division by zero, even though the code is carefully avoiding
that.  All available evidence is that the only functions affected are
int24div, int48div, and int28div, so patch just those three functions to
include a "return" after the ereport() call.

Backpatch to 8.4 so that the fix can be tested in production builds.
For older branches our recommendation will continue to be to use -O1
on affected platforms (which are mostly non-mainstream anyway).
2009-09-03 18:48:14 +00:00
Tom Lane 57c9dff9d1 Fix subquery pullup to wrap a PlaceHolderVar around the entire RowExpr
that's generated for a whole-row Var referencing the subquery, when the
subquery is in the nullable side of an outer join.  The previous coding
instead put PlaceHolderVars around the elements of the RowExpr.  The effect
was that when the outer join made the subquery outputs go to null, the
whole-row Var produced ROW(NULL,NULL,...) rather than just NULL.  There
are arguments afoot about whether those things ought to be semantically
indistinguishable, but for the moment they are not entirely so, and the
planner needs to take care that its machinations preserve the difference.
Per bug #5025.

Making this feasible required refactoring ResolveNew() to allow more caller
control over what is substituted for a Var.  I chose to make ResolveNew()
a wrapper around a new general-purpose function replace_rte_variables().
I also fixed the ancient bogosity that ResolveNew might fail to set
a query's hasSubLinks field after inserting a SubLink in it.  Although
all current callers make sure that happens anyway, we've had bugs of that
sort before, and it seemed like a good time to install a proper solution.

Back-patch to 8.4.  The problem can be demonstrated clear back to 8.0,
but the fix would be too invasive in earlier branches; not to mention
that people may be depending on the subtly-incorrect behavior.  The
8.4 series is new enough that fixing this probably won't cause complaints,
but it might in older branches.  Also, 8.4 shows the incorrect behavior
in more cases than older branches do, because it is able to flatten
subqueries in more cases.
2009-09-02 17:52:24 +00:00
Tom Lane 794e3e81a0 Force VACUUM to recalculate oldestXmin even when we haven't changed our
own database's datfrozenxid, if the current value is old enough to be
forcing autovacuums or warning messages.  This ensures that a bogus
value is replaced as soon as possible.  Per a comment from Heikki.
2009-09-01 04:46:49 +00:00
Tom Lane 14f445fccf Actually, we need to bump the format identifier on twophase files
because of readjustment of 2PC rmgr IDs for flatfile removal.
2009-09-01 04:15:45 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera a8bb8eb583 Remove flatfiles.c, which is now obsolete.
Recent commits have removed the various uses it was supporting.  It was a
performance bottleneck, according to bug report #4919 by Lauris Ulmanis; seems
it slowed down user creation after a billion users.
2009-09-01 02:54:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 0905e8aeeb Move processing of startup-packet switches and GUC settings into InitPostgres,
to fix the problem that SetClientEncoding needs to be done before
InitializeClientEncoding, as reported by Zdenek Kotala.  We get at least
the small consolation of being able to remove the bizarre API detail that
had InitPostgres returning whether user is a superuser.
2009-09-01 00:09:42 +00:00
Tom Lane 00e6a16d01 Change the autovacuum launcher to read pg_database directly, rather than
via the "flat files" facility.  This requires making it enough like a backend
to be able to run transactions; it's no longer an "auxiliary process" but
more like the autovacuum worker processes.  Also, its signal handling has
to be brought into line with backends/workers.  In particular, since it
now has to handle procsignal.c processing, the special autovac-launcher-only
signal conditions are moved to SIGUSR2.

Alvaro, with some cleanup from Tom
2009-08-31 19:41:00 +00:00
Tom Lane 25ec228ef7 Track the current XID wrap limit (or more accurately, the oldest unfrozen
XID) in checkpoint records.  This eliminates the need to recompute the value
from scratch during database startup, which is one of the two remaining
reasons for the flatfile code to exist.  It should also simplify life for
hot-standby operation.

To avoid bloating the checkpoint records unreasonably, I switched from
tracking the oldest database by name to tracking it by OID.  This turns
out to save cycles in general (everywhere but the warning-generating
paths, which we hardly care about) and also helps us deal with the case
that the oldest database got dropped instead of being vacuumed.  The prior
coding might go for a long time without updating the wrap limit in that case,
which is bad because it might result in a lot of useless autovacuum activity.
2009-08-31 02:23:23 +00:00
Tom Lane e1cc64197b Remove some useless assignments of the result of fread(). Quiets warnings
from clang static checker, and makes the code more readable anyway IMO.
2009-08-30 17:18:52 +00:00
Tom Lane dd6de24e69 Remove duplicate variable initializations identified by clang static checker.
One of these represents a nontrivial bug (a promptly-leaked palloc), so
backpatch.

Greg Stark
2009-08-30 16:53:31 +00:00
Tom Lane e710b65c1c Remove the use of the pg_auth flat file for client authentication.
(That flat file is now completely useless, but removal will come later.)

To do this, postpone client authentication into the startup transaction
that's run by InitPostgres.  We still collect the startup packet and do
SSL initialization (if needed) at the same time we did before.  The
AuthenticationTimeout is applied separately to startup packet collection
and the actual authentication cycle.  (This is a bit annoying, since it
means a couple extra syscalls; but the signal handling requirements inside
and outside a transaction are sufficiently different that it seems best
to treat the timeouts as completely independent.)

A small security disadvantage is that if the given database name is invalid,
this will be reported to the client before any authentication happens.
We could work around that by connecting to database "postgres" instead,
but consensus seems to be that it's not worth introducing such surprising
behavior.

Processing of all command-line switches and GUC options received from the
client is now postponed until after authentication.  This means that
PostAuthDelay is much less useful than it used to be --- if you need to
investigate problems during InitPostgres you'll have to set PreAuthDelay
instead.  However, allowing an unauthenticated user to set any GUC options
whatever seems a bit too risky, so we'll live with that.
2009-08-29 19:26:52 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 234c7ce9f2 Derived files that are shipped in the distribution used to be built in the
source directory even for out-of-tree builds.  They are now alsl built in
the build tree.  This should be more convenient for certain developers'
workflows, and shouldn't really break anything else.
2009-08-28 20:26:19 +00:00
Tom Lane 0a00c9a8ef Remove useless code that propagated FrontendProtocol to a backend via a
PostgresMain switch.  In point of fact, FrontendProtocol is already set
in a backend process, since ProcessStartupPacket() is executed inside
the backend --- it hasn't been run by the postmaster for many years.
And if it were, we'd still certainly want FrontendProtocol to be set before
we get as far as PostgresMain, so that startup errors get reported in the
right protocol.

-v might have some future use in standalone backends, so I didn't go so
far as to remove the switch outright.

Also, initialize FrontendProtocol to 0 not PG_PROTOCOL_LATEST.  The only
likely result of presetting it like that is to mask failure-to-set-it
mistakes.
2009-08-28 18:23:53 +00:00
Tom Lane c66d9ce774 Non-Windows EXEC_BACKEND path was broken by recent write_inheritable_socket
change ... it's got to return true.
2009-08-28 17:42:54 +00:00
Tom Lane bb16dc49ab Modify the definition of window-function PARTITION BY and ORDER BY clauses
so that their elements are always taken as simple expressions over the
query's input columns.  It originally seemed like a good idea to make them
act exactly like GROUP BY and ORDER BY, right down to the SQL92-era behavior
of accepting output column names or numbers.  However, that was not such a
great idea, for two reasons:

1. It permits circular references, as exhibited in bug #5018: the output
column could be the one containing the window function itself.  (We actually
had a regression test case illustrating this, but nobody thought twice about
how confusing that would be.)

2. It doesn't seem like a good idea for, eg, "lead(foo) OVER (ORDER BY foo)"
to potentially use two completely different meanings for "foo".

Accordingly, narrow down the behavior of window clauses to use only the
SQL99-compliant interpretation that the expressions are simple expressions.
2009-08-27 20:08:03 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 53af86c55c Fix handling of autovacuum reloptions.
In the original coding, setting a single reloption would cause default
values to be used for all the other reloptions.  This is a problem
particularly for autovacuum reloptions.

Itagaki Takahiro
2009-08-27 17:18:44 +00:00
Tom Lane 8f5500e6bd Make it reasonably safe to use pg_ctl to start the postmaster from a boot-time
script.

To do this, have pg_ctl pass down its parent shell's PID in an environment
variable PG_GRANDPARENT_PID, and teach CreateLockFile() to disregard that PID
as a false match if it finds it in postmaster.pid.  This allows us to cope
with one level of postgres-owned shell process even with pg_ctl in the way,
so it's just as safe as starting the postmaster directly.  You still have to
be careful about how you write the initscript though.

Adjust the comments in contrib/start-scripts/ to not deprecate use of
pg_ctl.  Also, fix the ROTATELOGS option in the OSX script, which was
indulging in exactly the sort of unsafe coding that renders this fix
pointless :-(.  A pipe inside the "sudo" will probably result in more
than one postgres-owned process hanging around.
2009-08-27 16:59:38 +00:00
Tom Lane aaa9f7d495 Remove some unnecessary variable assignments, per results of "clang"
static checker.  Paul Matthews
2009-08-27 15:59:22 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9cd6685f91 In the checkpoint written at the end of archive recovery, the WAL page header
was incorrectly initialized with timeline ID 0. That rendered the WAL page
unrecoverable, making a subsequent archive recovery stop at that point.
ThisTimeLineID needs to be initialized before calling AdvanceXLInsertBuffer().

This fixes bug #5011 reported by James Bardin. Backpatch to 8.4, as the bug
was introduced by the changes to use of bgwriter for writing the
end-of-archive-recovery checkpoint. Patch by Tom Lane.
2009-08-27 07:15:41 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 9d182ef002 Update of install-sh, mkinstalldirs, and associated configury
Update install-sh to that from Autoconf 2.63, plus our Darwin-specific
changes (which I simplified a bit).  install-sh is now able to install
multiple files in one run, so we could simplify our makefiles sometime.

install-sh also now has a -d option to create directories, so we don't need
mkinstalldirs anymore.

Use AC_PROG_MKDIR_P in configure.in, so we can use mkdir -p when available
instead of install-sh -d.  For consistency with the rest of the world,
the corresponding make variable has been renamed from $(mkinstalldirs) to
$(MKDIR_P).
2009-08-26 22:24:44 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 7ca774a873 Add -Wno-error to CFLAGS from gram.o as long as it's broken. 2009-08-26 22:15:59 +00:00
Tom Lane 8bed238c87 Try to make silent_mode behave somewhat reasonably.
Instead of sending stdout/stderr to /dev/null after forking away from the
terminal, send them to postmaster.log within the data directory.  Since
this opens the door to indefinite logfile bloat, recommend even more
strongly that log output be redirected when using silent_mode.

Move the postmaster's initial calls of load_hba() and load_ident() down
to after we have started the log collector, if we are going to.  This
is so that errors reported by them will appear in the "usual" place.

Reclassify silent_mode as a LOGGING_WHERE, not LOGGING_WHEN, parameter,
since it's got absolutely nothing to do with the latter category.

In passing, fix some obsolete references to -S ... this option hasn't
had that switch letter for a long time.

Back-patch to 8.4, since as of 8.4 load_hba() and load_ident() are more
picky (and thus more likely to fail) than they used to be.  This entire
change was driven by a complaint about those errors disappearing into
the bit bucket.
2009-08-24 20:08:32 +00:00
Tom Lane 5a4f763841 Small correction to previous patch: we shouldn't ReleasePostmasterChildSlot
for a dead_end child, because we didn't AssignPostmasterChildSlot.
2009-08-24 18:09:37 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 45f9b4646f Avoid calling kill() in a postmaster signal handler.
This causes problems when the system load is high, per report from Zdenek
Kotala in <1250860954.1239.114.camel@localhost>; instead of calling kill
directly, have the signal handler set a flag which is checked in ServerLoop.
This way, the handler can return before being called again by a subsequent
signal sent from the autovacuum launcher.  Also, increase the sleep in the
launcher in this failure path to 1 second.

Backpatch to 8.3, which is when the signalling between autovacuum
launcher/postmaster was introduced.

Also, add a couple of ReleasePostmasterChildSlot calls in error paths; this
part backpatched to 8.4 which is when the child slot stuff was introduced.
2009-08-24 17:23:02 +00:00
Tom Lane 7fc7a7c4d0 Fix a violation of WAL coding rules in the recent patch to include an
"all tuples visible" flag in heap page headers.  The flag update *must*
be applied before calling XLogInsert, but heap_update and the tuple
moving routines in VACUUM FULL were ignoring this rule.  A crash and
replay could therefore leave the flag incorrectly set, causing rows
to appear visible in seqscans when they should not be.  This might explain
recent reports of data corruption from Jeff Ross and others.

In passing, do a bit of editorialization on comments in visibilitymap.c.
2009-08-24 02:18:32 +00:00
Tom Lane cab9a0656c Make TRUNCATE do truncate-in-place when processing a relation that was created
or previously truncated in the current (sub)transaction.  This is safe since
if the (sub)transaction later rolls back, we'd just discard the rel's current
physical file anyway.  This avoids unreasonable growth in the number of
transient files when a relation is repeatedly truncated.  Per a performance
gripe a couple weeks ago from Todd Cook.
2009-08-23 19:23:41 +00:00
Tom Lane c38b75947e Tweak ExecIndexEvalRuntimeKeys to forcibly detoast any toasted comparison
values before they get passed to the index access method.  This avoids
repeated detoastings that will otherwise ensue as the comparison value
is examined by various index support functions.  We have seen a couple of
reports of cases where repeated detoastings result in an order-of-magnitude
slowdown, so it seems worth adding a bit of extra logic to prevent this.

I had previously proposed trying to avoid duplicate detoastings in general,
but this fix takes care of what seems the most important case in practice
with very little effort or risk.

Back-patch to 8.4 so that the PostGIS folk won't have to wait a year to
have this fix in a production release.  (The issue exists further back,
of course, but the code's diverged enough to make backpatching further a
higher-risk action.  Also it appears that the possible gains may be limited
in prior releases because of different handling of lossy operators.)
2009-08-23 18:26:08 +00:00
Tom Lane 56e985d02e Include resjunk columns in EXPLAIN VERBOSE output lists. Per discussion. 2009-08-22 02:06:32 +00:00
Tom Lane be4cd18f71 Allow mixing of traditional and SQL:2008 LIMIT/OFFSET syntax. Being rigid
about it doesn't simplify the grammar at all, and it does invite confusion
among those who only read the SELECT syntax summary and not the full details.
Per gripe from Jaime Casanova.
2009-08-18 23:40:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 3bd2241135 Fix overflow for INTERVAL 'x ms' where x is more than a couple million,
and integer datetimes are in use.  Per bug report from Hubert Depesz
Lubaczewski.

Alex Hunsaker
2009-08-18 21:23:14 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev a88a48011c Introduce filtering dictionary support to tsearch. Propagate --nolocale option
to CREATE DATABASE command in pg_regress to allow correct checking of
locale-sensitive contrib modules.
2009-08-18 10:30:41 +00:00
Tom Lane 67a5f8ff9e Department of marginal improvements: teach tupconvert.c to avoid doing a
physical conversion when there are dropped columns in the same places in
the input and output tupdescs.  This avoids possible performance loss from
the recent patch to improve dropped-column handling, in some cases where
the old code would have worked.
2009-08-17 20:34:31 +00:00
Tom Lane 785cfee031 Fix incorrect encoding-aware name truncation in makeArrayTypeName().
truncate_identifier won't do anything if the passed-in strlen is already
less than NAMEDATALEN, which it always would be given the strlcpy usage.
This has been broken since the arrays-of-composite-types code went in.

Arguably truncate_identifier is suffering from excessive optimization
and should always process the string, but for the moment I'll take the
more localized patch.

Per bug #4987.
2009-08-16 18:14:34 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev abd8c94ff9 Add prefix support for synonym dictionary 2009-08-14 14:53:20 +00:00
Tom Lane f959390cd0 Put back adjust_appendrel_attrs()'s code for dealing with RestrictInfo.
I mistakenly removed it last month, thinking it was no longer needed ---
but it is still needed for dealing with joininfo lists.  Fortunately this
bit of brain fade hadn't made it into any released versions yet.
2009-08-13 16:53:09 +00:00
Tom Lane b6bde524af Improve error message for the case where a requested foreign key constraint
does match some unique index on the referenced table, but that index is
only deferrably unique.  We were doing this nicely for the
default-to-primary-key case, but were being lazy for the other case.

Dean Rasheed
2009-08-12 23:00:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 04011cc970 Allow backends to start up without use of the flat-file copy of pg_database.
To make this work in the base case, pg_database now has a nailed-in-cache
relation descriptor that is initialized using hardwired knowledge in
relcache.c.  This means pg_database is added to the set of relations that
need to have a Schema_pg_xxx macro maintained in pg_attribute.h.  When this
path is taken, we'll have to do a seqscan of pg_database to find the row
we need.

In the normal case, we are able to do an indexscan to find the database's row
by name.  This is made possible by storing a global relcache init file that
describes only the shared catalogs and their indexes (and therefore is usable
by all backends in any database).  A new backend loads this cache file,
finds its database OID after an indexscan on pg_database, and then loads
the local relcache init file for that database.

This change should effectively eliminate number of databases as a factor
in backend startup time, even with large numbers of databases.  However,
the real reason for doing it is as a first step towards getting rid of
the flat files altogether.  There are still several other sub-projects
to be tackled before that can happen.
2009-08-12 20:53:31 +00:00
Tom Lane a1f0c9bab9 Fix old bug in log_autovacuum_min_duration code: it was relying on being able
to access a Relation entry it had just closed.  I happened to be testing with
CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS, which made this a guaranteed core dump (at least on
machines where sprintf %s isn't forgiving of a NULL pointer).  It's probably
quite unlikely that it would fail in the field, but a bug is a bug.  Fix by
moving the relation_close call down past the logging action.
2009-08-12 18:23:49 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 55f927a46e Refactor NUM_cache_remove calls in error report path to a PG_TRY block.
The code in the new block was not reindented; it will be fixed by pgindent
eventually.
2009-08-10 20:16:05 +00:00
Tom Lane e61fd4ac74 Support EEEE (scientific notation) in to_char().
Pavel Stehule, Brendan Jurd
2009-08-10 18:29:27 +00:00
Tom Lane 9bd27b7c9e Extend EXPLAIN to support output in XML or JSON format.
There are probably still some adjustments to be made in the details
of the output, but this gets the basic structure in place.

Robert Haas
2009-08-10 05:46:50 +00:00
Tom Lane 97e14f6e93 Document that LocalSetXLogInsertAllowed can be re-executed.
Per comment from Simon.
2009-08-08 16:39:17 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 7798147a76 Expand test coverage support to entire tree
Test coverage support now covers the entire source tree, including
contrib, instead of just src/backend.  In a related but independent
development, the commands make coverage and make coverage-html can be run
in any directory.

This turned out to be much easier than feared.  Besides a few ad hoc fixes
to pass the make target down the tree, change all affected makefiles to
list their directories in the SUBDIRS variable, changed from variants like
DIRS and WANTED_DIRS.  MSVC build fix was attempted as well.
2009-08-07 20:50:22 +00:00
Tom Lane 87740caa01 rm_cleanup functions need to be allowed to write WAL entries. This oversight
appears to explain the recent reports of "PANIC: cannot make new WAL entries
during recovery".
2009-08-07 19:29:49 +00:00
Tom Lane b1114f5576 Fix some omissions in the dependency-object-class support for SQL/MED objects.
Main problem found by Muhammad Aqeel, some cosmetic additions by me.
2009-08-07 15:27:56 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 06f1f53ea9 Fast shutdown stop should forcibly disconnect any active backends, even
if a smart shutdown is already in progress. Backpatch to 8.3, this was broken
in the patch that introduced "dead-end backends".

Per report by Itagaki Takahiro, patch by Fujii Masao.
2009-08-07 05:58:55 +00:00
Tom Lane dcb2bda9b7 Improve plpgsql's ability to cope with rowtypes containing dropped columns,
by supporting conversions in places that used to demand exact rowtype match.

Since this issue is certain to come up elsewhere (in fact, already has,
in ExecEvalConvertRowtype), factor out the support code into new core
functions for tuple conversion.  I chose to put these in a new source
file since heaptuple.c is already overly long.

Heavily revised version of a patch by Pavel Stehule.
2009-08-06 20:44:32 +00:00
Magnus Hagander 4000170535 Avoid terminating the postmaster on a number of "can't happen" cases during
backend startup on Win32. Instead, log the error and just forget about
the potentially dangling process, since we can't do anything about it anyway.
2009-08-06 09:50:22 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 23dc89d2c3 Improve error messages in md.c. When a filesystem operation like open() or
fsync() fails, say "file" rather than "relation" when printing the filename.

This makes messages that display block numbers a bit confusing. For example,
in message 'could not read block 150000 of file "base/1234/5678.1"', 150000
is the block number from the beginning of the relation, ie. segment 0, not
150000th block within that segment. Per discussion, users aren't usually
interested in the exact location within the file, so we can live with that.

To ease constructing error messages, add FilePathName(File) function to
return the pathname of a virtual fd.
2009-08-05 18:01:54 +00:00
Tom Lane a2a8c7a662 Support hex-string input and output for type BYTEA.
Both hex format and the traditional "escape" format are automatically
handled on input.  The output format is selected by the new GUC variable
bytea_output.

As committed, bytea_output defaults to HEX, which is an *incompatible
change*.  We will keep it this way for awhile for testing purposes, but
should consider whether to switch to the more backwards-compatible
default of ESCAPE before 8.5 is released.

Peter Eisentraut
2009-08-04 16:08:37 +00:00
Joe Conway be6bca23b3 Implement has_sequence_privilege()
Add family of functions that did not exist earlier,
mainly due to historical omission. Original patch by
Abhijit Menon-Sen, with review and modifications by
Joe Conway. catversion.h bumped.
2009-08-03 21:11:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 9072592946 Add ALTER TABLE ... ALTER COLUMN ... SET STATISTICS DISTINCT
Robert Haas
2009-08-02 22:14:53 +00:00
Tom Lane 527f0ae3fa Department of second thoughts: let's show the exact key during unique index
build failures, too.  Refactor a bit more since that error message isn't
spelled the same.
2009-08-01 20:59:17 +00:00
Tom Lane b680ae4bdb Improve unique-constraint-violation error messages to include the exact
values being complained of.

In passing, also remove the arbitrary length limitation in the similar
error detail message for foreign key violations.

Itagaki Takahiro
2009-08-01 19:59:41 +00:00
Tom Lane 2487d872e0 Create a multiplexing structure for signals to Postgres child processes.
This patch gets us out from under the Unix limitation of two user-defined
signal types.  We already had done something similar for signals directed to
the postmaster process; this adds multiplexing for signals directed to
backends and auxiliary processes (so long as they're connected to shared
memory).

As proof of concept, replace the former usage of SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2
for backends with use of the multiplexing mechanism.  There are still some
hard-wired definitions of SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2 for other process types,
but getting rid of those doesn't seem interesting at the moment.

Fujii Masao
2009-07-31 20:26:23 +00:00
Tom Lane 060baf2784 Merge the Constraint and FkConstraint node types into a single type.
This was foreseen to be a good idea long ago, but nobody had got round
to doing it.  The recent patch for deferred unique constraints made
transformConstraintAttrs() ugly enough that I decided it was time.
This change will also greatly simplify parsing of deferred CHECK constraints,
if anyone ever gets around to implementing that.

While at it, add a location field to Constraint, and use that to provide
an error cursor for some of the constraint-related error messages.
2009-07-30 02:45:38 +00:00
Tom Lane 78aef14c59 Fix time_part and timetz_part (ie, EXTRACT() for those datatypes) to
include a fractional part in the output for MILLISECOND and SECOND cases,
rather than truncating the source value.  This is what the float-timestamp
code has always done, and it was clearly the code author's intent to do
the same for integer timestamps, but he forgot about integer division in C.
The other datatypes supported by EXTRACT() already do this correctly.

Backpatch to 8.4, so that the default (integer) behavior of that branch will
match the default (float) behavior of older branches.  Arguably we should
patch further back, but it's possible that applications are expecting the
broken behavior in older branches.  8.4 is new enough that expectations
shouldn't be too settled.

Per report from Greg Stark.
2009-07-29 22:19:18 +00:00
Tom Lane 25d9bf2e3e Support deferrable uniqueness constraints.
The current implementation fires an AFTER ROW trigger for each tuple that
looks like it might be non-unique according to the index contents at the
time of insertion.  This works well as long as there aren't many conflicts,
but won't scale to massive unique-key reassignments.  Improving that case
is a TODO item.

Dean Rasheed
2009-07-29 20:56:21 +00:00
Tom Lane 8504905793 Fix a thinko introduced into CountActiveBackends by a recent patch:
we should ignore NULL array entries, not non-NULL ones.  This had the
effect of disabling commit_delay, and could have caused a crash in the
rare race condition the patch was intended to fix.

Bug report and diagnosis by Jeff Janes, in bug #4952.
2009-07-29 15:57:11 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev 49475aab8d Correct calculations of overlap and contains operations over polygons. 2009-07-28 09:48:00 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev 1f4b046c18 Fix incorrect cleanup of tsquery in ts_rewrite(). Per bug #4933 by
Aaron Marcuse-Kubitza <aaronmk@blackducksoftware.com>
2009-07-28 09:31:55 +00:00
Tom Lane c1b9ec24ef Add system catalog columns pg_constraint.conindid and pg_trigger.tgconstrindid.
conindid is the index supporting a constraint.  We can use this not only for
unique/primary-key constraints, but also foreign-key constraints, which
depend on the unique index that constrains the referenced columns.
tgconstrindid is just copied from the constraint's conindid field, or is
zero for triggers not associated with constraints.

This is mainly intended as infrastructure for upcoming patches, but it has
some virtue in itself, since it exposes a relationship that you formerly
had to grovel in pg_depend to determine.  I simplified one information_schema
view accordingly.  (There is a pg_dump query that could also use conindid,
but I left it alone because it wasn't clear it'd get any faster.)
2009-07-28 02:56:31 +00:00
Tom Lane d4382c4ae7 Extend EXPLAIN to allow generic options to be specified.
The original syntax made it difficult to add options without making them
into reserved words.  This change parenthesizes the options to avoid that
problem, and makes provision for an explicit (and perhaps non-Boolean)
value for each option.  The original syntax is still supported, but only
for the two original options ANALYZE and VERBOSE.

As a test case, add a COSTS option that can suppress the planner cost
estimates.  This may be useful for including EXPLAIN output in the regression
tests, which are otherwise unable to cope with cross-platform variations in
cost estimates.

Robert Haas
2009-07-26 23:34:18 +00:00
Tom Lane a07e5acebb Code review for FORCE QUOTE * patch: fix error checking to consider FORCE
QUOTE * as a variety of FORCE QUOTE, and update psql documentation to include
the option.  (The actual psql code doesn't seem to need any changes.)
2009-07-25 17:04:19 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan fd9df11f81 Small stylistic improvement in recent FORCE QUOTE * code - use a bool instead of a magic value. 2009-07-25 13:35:32 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan de7531a971 Allow * as parameter for FORCE QUOTE for COPY CSV. Itagaki Takahiro. 2009-07-25 00:07:14 +00:00
Tom Lane 8af12bca3b Assorted minor refactoring in EXPLAIN.
This is believed to not change the output at all, with one known exception:
"Subquery Scan foo" becomes "Subquery Scan on foo".  (We can fix that if
anyone complains, but it would be a wart, because the old code was clearly
inconsistent.)  The main intention is to remove duplicate coding and
provide a cleaner base for subsequent EXPLAIN patching.

Robert Haas
2009-07-24 21:08:42 +00:00
Magnus Hagander a7e587863c Reserve the shared memory region during backend startup on Windows, so
that memory allocated by starting third party DLLs doesn't end up
conflicting with it.

Hopefully this solves the long-time issue with "could not reattach
to shared memory" errors on Win32.

Patch from Tsutomu Yamada and me, based on idea from Trevor Talbot.
2009-07-24 20:12:42 +00:00
Tom Lane 655473a7cd Add commentary about Cygwin's broken erand48, per report from Andrew Dunstan. 2009-07-24 15:03:07 +00:00
Tom Lane adfa04293b Save a few cycles in EXPLAIN and related commands by not bothering to form
a physical tuple in do_tup_output().  A virtual tuple is easier to set up
and also easier for most tuple receivers to process.  Per my comment on
Robert Haas' recent patch in this code.
2009-07-23 21:27:10 +00:00
Tom Lane 6a0865e4bb In a non-hashed Agg node, reset the "aggcontext" at group boundaries, instead
of individually pfree'ing pass-by-reference transition values.  This should
be at least as fast as the prior coding, and it has the major advantage of
clearing out any working data an aggregate function may have stored in or
underneath the aggcontext.  This avoids memory leakage when an aggregate
such as array_agg() is used in GROUP BY mode.  Per report from Chris Spotts.

Back-patch to 8.4.  In principle the problem could arise in prior versions,
but since they didn't have array_agg the issue seems not critical.
2009-07-23 20:45:27 +00:00
Tom Lane 1ca695db38 Fix another thinko in join_is_legal's handling of semijoins: we have to test
for the case that the semijoin was implemented within either input by
unique-ifying its RHS before we test to see if it appears to match the current
join situation.  The previous coding would select semijoin logic in situations
where we'd already unique-ified the RHS and joined it to some unrelated
relation(s), and then came to join it to the semijoin's LHS.  That still gave
the right answer as far as the semijoin itself was concerned, but would lead
to incorrectly examining only an arbitrary one of the matchable rows from the
unrelated relation(s).  The cause of this thinko was incorrect unification of
the pre-8.4 logic for IN joins and OUTER joins --- the comparable case for
outer joins can be handled after making the match test, but that's because
there is nothing like the unique-ification escape hatch for outer joins.
Per bug #4934 from Benjamin Reed.
2009-07-23 17:42:06 +00:00
Tom Lane 846c364dd4 Change do_tup_output() to take Datum/isnull arrays instead of a char * array,
so it doesn't go through BuildTupleFromCStrings.  This is more or less a
wash for current uses, but will avoid inefficiency for planned changes to
EXPLAIN.

Robert Haas
2009-07-22 17:00:23 +00:00
Tom Lane ca7c8168de Tweak TOAST code so that columns marked with MAIN storage strategy are
not forced out-of-line unless that is necessary to make the row fit on a
page.  Previously, they were forced out-of-line if needed to get the row
down to the default target size (1/4th page).

Kevin Grittner
2009-07-22 01:21:22 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 5dedce6770 Change pg_listener attribute number constants to match the usual pattern
It appears that, for no particularly good reason, pg_listener.h deviates from
the usual convention for declaring attribute number constants.  Normally, it's

#define Anum_{catalog-name}_{column-name}  {attribute-number}

pg_listener.h, however substitutes a different string that is similar, but not
the same as, the column name.  This change fixes that.

Author: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
2009-07-21 20:24:51 +00:00
Tom Lane ab5b4e2f9e Speed up AllocSetFreeIndex, which is a significant cost in palloc and pfree,
by using a lookup table instead of a naive shift-and-count loop.  Based on
code originally posted by Sean Eron Anderson at
http://graphics.stanford.edu/%7eseander/bithacks.html.
Greg Stark did the research and benchmarking to show that this is what
we should use.  Jeremy Kerr first noticed that this is a hotspot that
could be optimized, though we ended up not using his suggestion of
platform-specific bit-searching code.
2009-07-21 19:53:12 +00:00
Tom Lane b2c51e6eba Fix another semijoin-ordering bug. We already knew that we couldn't
reorder a semijoin into or out of the righthand side of another semijoin,
but actually it doesn't work to reorder it into or out of the righthand
side of a left or antijoin, either.  Per bug #4906 from Mathieu Fenniak.

This was sloppy thinking on my part.  This identity does work:

	( A left join B on (Pab) ) semijoin C on (Pac)
==
	( A semijoin C on (Pac) ) left join B on (Pab)

but I failed to see that that doesn't mean this does:

	( A left join B on (Pab) ) semijoin C on (Pbc)
!=
	A left join ( B semijoin C on (Pbc) ) on (Pab)
2009-07-21 02:02:44 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan e73131a16a DROP IF EXISTS for columns and constraints. Andres Freund. 2009-07-20 02:42:28 +00:00
Tom Lane 31d1f23302 Teach simplify_boolean_equality to simplify the forms foo <> true and
foo <> false, along with its previous duties of simplifying foo = true
and foo = false.  (All of these are equivalent to just foo or NOT foo
as the case may be.)  It's not clear how often this is really useful;
but it costs almost nothing to do, and it seems some people think we
should be smart about such cases.  Per recent bug report.
2009-07-20 00:24:30 +00:00
Tom Lane 400e2c9344 Rewrite GEQO's gimme_tree function so that it always finds a legal join
sequence, even when the input "tour" doesn't lead directly to such a sequence.
The stack logic that was added in 2004 only supported cases where relations
that had to be joined to each other (due to join order restrictions) were
adjacent in the tour.  However, relying on a random search to figure that out
is tremendously inefficient in large join problems, and could even fail
completely (leading to "failed to make a valid plan" errors) if
random_init_pool ran out of patience.  It seems better to make the
tour-to-plan transformation a little bit fuzzier so that every tour can form
a legal plan, even though this means that apparently different tours will
sometimes yield the same plan.

In the same vein, get rid of the logic that knew that tours (a,b,c,d,...)
are the same as tours (b,a,c,d,...), and therefore insisted the latter
are invalid.  The chance of generating two tours that differ only in
this way isn't that high, and throwing out 50% of possible tours to
avoid such duplication seems more likely to waste valuable genetic-
refinement generations than to do anything useful.

This leaves us with no cases in which geqo_eval will deem a tour invalid,
so get rid of assorted kluges that tried to deal with such cases, in
particular the undocumented assumption that DBL_MAX is an impossible
plan cost.

This is all per testing of Robert Haas' lets-remove-the-collapse-limits
patch.  That idea has crashed and burned, at least for now, but we still
got something useful out of it.

It's possible we should back-patch this change, since the "failed to make a
valid plan" error can happen in existing releases; but I'd rather not until
it has gotten more testing.
2009-07-19 21:00:43 +00:00
Tom Lane a43b190e3c Fix a thinko in join_is_legal: when we decide we can implement a semijoin
by unique-ifying the RHS and then inner-joining to some other relation,
that is not grounds for violating the RHS of some other outer join.
Noticed while regression-testing new GEQO code, which will blindly follow
any path that join_is_legal says is legal, and then complain later if that
leads to a dead end.

I'm not certain that this can result in any visible failure in 8.4: the
mistake may always be masked by the fact that subsequent attempts to join
the rest of the RHS of the other join will fail.  But I'm not certain it
can't, either, and it's definitely not operating as intended.  So back-patch.

The added regression test depends on the new no-failures-allowed logic
that I'm about to commit in GEQO, so no point back-patching that.
2009-07-19 20:32:48 +00:00
Tom Lane 011eae60ef Fix error cleanup failure caused by 8.4 changes in plpgsql to try to avoid
memory leakage in error recovery.  We were calling FreeExprContext, and
therefore invoking ExprContextCallback callbacks, in both normal and error
exits from subtransactions.  However this isn't very safe, as shown in
recent trouble report from Frank van Vugt, in which releasing a tupledesc
refcount failed.  It's also unnecessary, since the resources that callbacks
might wish to release should be cleaned up by other error recovery mechanisms
(ie the resource owners).  We only really want FreeExprContext to release
memory attached to the exprcontext in the error-exit case.  So, add a bool
parameter to FreeExprContext to tell it not to call the callbacks.

A more general solution would be to pass the isCommit bool parameter on to
the callbacks, so they could do only safe things during error exit.  But
that would make the patch significantly more invasive and possibly break
third-party code that registers ExprContextCallback callbacks.  We might want
to do that later in HEAD, but for now I'll just do what seems reasonable to
back-patch.
2009-07-18 19:15:42 +00:00
Tom Lane fb18055998 Repair bug #4926 "too few pathkeys for mergeclauses". This example shows
that the sanity checking I added to create_mergejoin_plan() in 8.3 was a
few bricks shy of a load: the mergeclauses could reference pathkeys in a
noncanonical order such as x,y,x, not only cases like x,x,y which is all
that the code had allowed for.  The odd cases only turn up when using
redundant clauses in an outer join condition, which is why no one had
noticed before.
2009-07-17 23:19:34 +00:00
Tom Lane f5bc74192d Make GEQO's planning deterministic by having it start from a predictable
random number seed each time.  This is how it used to work years ago, but
we got rid of the seed reset because it was resetting the main random()
sequence and thus having undesirable effects on the rest of the system.
To fix, establish a private random number state for each execution of
geqo(), and initialize the state using the new GUC variable geqo_seed.
People who want to experiment with different random searches can do so
by changing geqo_seed, but you'll always get the same plan for the same
value of geqo_seed (if holding all other planner inputs constant, of course).

The new state is kept in PlannerInfo by adding a "void *" field reserved
for use by join_search hooks.  Most of the rather bulky code changes in
this commit are just arranging to pass PlannerInfo around to all the GEQO
functions (many of which formerly didn't receive it).

Andres Freund, with some editorialization by Tom
2009-07-16 20:55:44 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut de160e2c00 Make backend header files C++ safe
This alters various incidental uses of C++ key words to use other similar
identifiers, so that a C++ compiler won't choke outright.  You still
(probably) need extern "C" { }; around the inclusion of backend headers.

based on a patch by Kurt Harriman <harriman@acm.org>

Also add a script cpluspluscheck to check for C++ compatibility in the
future.  As of right now, this passes without error for me.
2009-07-16 06:33:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 1aa58d3a83 Tweak the core scanner so that it can be used by plpgsql too.
Changes:

Pass in the keyword lookup array instead of having it be hardwired.
(This incidentally allows elimination of some duplicate coding in ecpg.)

Re-order the token declarations in gram.y so that non-keyword tokens have
numbers that won't change when keywords are added or removed.

Add ".." and ":=" to the set of tokens recognized by scan.l.  (Since these
combinations are nowhere legal in core SQL, this does not change anything
except the precise wording of the error you get when you write this.)
2009-07-14 20:24:10 +00:00
Tom Lane 0d4899e448 Do a conditional SPI_push/SPI_pop when replanning a query in
RevalidateCachedPlan.  This is to avoid a "SPI_ERROR_CONNECT" failure when
the planner calls a SPI-using function and we are already inside one.
The alternative fix is to expect callers of RevalidateCachedPlan to do this,
which seems likely to result in additional hard-to-detect bugs of omission.
Per reports from Frank van Vugt and Marek Lewczuk.

Back-patch to 8.3. It's much harder to trigger the bug in 8.3, due to a
smaller set of cases in which plans can be invalidated, but it could happen.
(I think perhaps only a SI reset event could make 8.3 fail here, but that's
certainly within the realm of possibility.)
2009-07-14 15:37:50 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut d1ba29420b Update information schema to SQL:2008
- yes_or_no domain for "boolean" data
 - new columns for VIEWS view
 - slight section renumbering
2009-07-13 20:25:57 +00:00
Tom Lane 34a11144e5 Although the flex documentation avers that yyalloc and yyrealloc take
size_t arguments, the emitted scanner actually prototypes them with
type yy_size_t, which is sometimes not the same thing depending on
flex version and platform.  Easiest fix seems to be to use yy_size_t.
Per buildfarm results.
2009-07-13 03:11:12 +00:00
Tom Lane 91e71929ba Convert the core lexer and parser into fully reentrant code, by making use
of features added to flex and bison since this code was originally written.
This change doesn't in itself offer any new capability, but it's needed
infrastructure for planned improvements in plpgsql.

Another feature now available in flex is the ability to make it use palloc
instead of malloc, so do that to avoid possible memory leaks.  (We should
at some point change the other lexers likewise, but this commit doesn't
touch them.)
2009-07-13 02:02:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 6566e37e02 Move some declarations in the raw-parser header files to create a clearer
distinction between the external API (parser.h) and declarations that only
need to be visible within the raw parser code (gramparse.h, which now is only
included by parser.c, gram.y, scan.l, and keywords.c).  This is in preparation
for the upcoming change to a reentrant lexer, which will require referencing
YYSTYPE in the declarations of base_yylex and filtered_base_yylex, hence
gram.h will have to be included by gramparse.h.  We don't want any more files
than absolutely necessary to depend on gram.h, so some cleanup is called for.
2009-07-12 17:12:34 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 23d830bd9a Alter some gratuitous uses of "ANSI" when "SQL standard" might have been
meant or the reference to a standard was unnecessary.
2009-07-11 21:15:32 +00:00
Tom Lane 014be15047 Fix set_rel_width() to do something reasonable with non-Var items in a
RelOptInfo targetlist.  It used to be that the only possibility other than
a Var was a RowExpr representing a whole-row child Var, but as of 8.4's
expanded ability to flatten appendrel members, we can get arbitrary expressions
in there.  Use the expression's type info and get_typavgwidth() to produce
an at-least-marginally-sane result.  Note that get_typavgwidth()'s fallback
estimate (32 bytes) is the same as what was here before, so there will be
no behavioral change for RowExprs.  Noted while looking at recent gripe
about constant quals pushed down to FunctionScan appendrel members ...
not only were we failing to recognize the constant qual, we were getting
the width estimate wrong :-(
2009-07-11 04:09:33 +00:00
Tom Lane b11ce5608a Remove no-longer-necessary transmission of postmaster's LC_COLLATE and
LC_CTYPE settings to children via BackendParameters.  Per discussion,
the postmaster is now just using system defaults anyway, so we might as
well save a few cycles during backend startup.
2009-07-08 18:55:35 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas e5bb0f04db Need to use pg_perm_setlocale when setting LC_CTYPE and LC_COLLATE at startup.
Otherwise, the LC_CTYPE/COLLATE setting gets reverted when using plperl, which
leads to incorrect query results and index corruption.

This was accidentally broken in the per-database locale patch in 8.4. Pointed
out by Andrew Gierth.
2009-07-08 17:53:29 +00:00
Tom Lane ba3fb57d81 Don't use 'return' where you should use 'PG_RETURN_xxx'. 2009-07-07 19:28:56 +00:00
Tom Lane fc9dd12da0 Query in SQL function still not schema-safe; add a couple
more pg_catalog. qualifications.
2009-07-07 19:28:00 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut e292dbcf54 More sensible character_octet_length
For character types with typmod, character_octet_length columns in the
information schema now show the maximum character length times the
maximum length of a character in the server encoding, instead of some
huge value as before.
2009-07-07 18:23:15 +00:00
Tom Lane 47386fed46 Use floor() not rint() when reducing precision of fractional seconds in
timestamp_trunc, timestamptz_trunc, and interval_trunc().  This change
only affects the float-datetime case; the integer-datetime case already
behaved like truncation instead of rounding.  Per gripe from Mario Splivalo.

This is a pre-existing issue but I'm choosing not to backpatch, because
it's such a corner case and there have not been prior complaints.  The
issue is largely moot anyway given the trend towards integer datetimes.
2009-07-06 20:29:23 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 44886bd878 Fix ancient bug in handling of to_char modifier 'TH', when used with HH.
In what seems like an oversight, we used to treat 'TH' the same as lowercase
'th', but only with HH/HH12.
2009-07-06 19:11:39 +00:00
Tom Lane 9b27eab71c Fix set_append_rel_pathlist() to deal intelligently with cases where
substituting a child rel's output expressions into the appendrel's restriction
clauses yields a pseudoconstant restriction.  We might be able to skip scanning
that child rel entirely (if we get constant FALSE), or generate a one-time
filter.  8.3 more or less accidentally generated plans that weren't completely
stupid in these cases, but that was only because an extra recursive level of
subquery_planner() always occurred and allowed const-simplification to happen.
8.4's ability to pull up appendrel members with non-Var outputs exposes the
fact that we need to work harder here.  Per gripe from Sergey Burladyan.
2009-07-06 18:26:30 +00:00
Tom Lane 869312e65e Per SQL spec (in particular, the grammar in SQL:2008 7.13) we should allow
parentheses around the <query expression body> that follows a WITH clause, eg
	with cte(foo) as ( values(0) ) ((select foo from cte));
This seems to be just an oversight/thinko in gram.y.  Noted while
experimenting with bug #4902.
2009-07-06 02:58:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 9298d2ff39 Fix handling of changed-Param signaling for CteScan plan nodes. We were using
the "cteParam" as a proxy for the possibility that the underlying CTE plan
depends on outer-level variables or Params, but that doesn't work very well
because it sometimes causes calling subqueries to be treated as SubPlans when
they could be InitPlans.  This is inefficient and also causes the outright
failure exhibited in bug #4902.  Instead, leave the cteParam out of it and
copy the underlying CTE plan's extParams directly.  Per bug #4902 from
Marko Tiikkaja.
2009-07-06 02:16:03 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut f39df967e9 Add log_line_prefix placeholder %e to contain the current SQL state
Author: Guillaume Smet <guillaume.smet@gmail.com>
2009-07-03 19:14:25 +00:00
Tom Lane 2de48a83e6 Cleanup and code review for the patch that made bgwriter active during
archive recovery.  Invent a separate state variable and inquiry function
for XLogInsertAllowed() to clarify some tests and make the management of
writing the end-of-recovery checkpoint less klugy.  Fix several places
that were incorrectly testing InRecovery when they should be looking at
RecoveryInProgress or XLogInsertAllowed (because they will now be executed
in the bgwriter not startup process).  Clarify handling of bad LSNs passed
to XLogFlush during recovery.  Use a spinlock for setting/testing
SharedRecoveryInProgress.  Improve quite a lot of comments.

Heikki and Tom
2009-06-26 20:29:04 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut a6667d96c5 Translation updates for 8.4 release.
File that are translated less than 80% have been removed, as per new
translation team policy.
2009-06-26 19:33:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 7a58167ea2 Add __attribute__((format_arg(1))) to the declaration of err_gettext(),
to restore gcc's ability to crosscheck format arguments within elog.c.
Noted in a test compilation with -Wformat-nonliteral enabled.
2009-06-25 23:07:15 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7e48b77b1c Fix some serious bugs in archive recovery, now that bgwriter is active
during it:

When bgwriter is active, the startup process can't perform mdsync() correctly
because it won't see the fsync requests accumulated in bgwriter's private
pendingOpsTable. Therefore make bgwriter responsible for the end-of-recovery
checkpoint as well, when it's active.

When bgwriter is active (= archive recovery), the startup process must not
accumulate fsync requests to its own pendingOpsTable, since bgwriter won't
see them there when it performs restartpoints. Make startup process drop its
pendingOpsTable when bgwriter is launched to avoid that.

Update minimum recovery point one last time when leaving archive recovery.
It won't be updated by the end-of-recovery checkpoint because XLogFlush()
sees us as out of recovery already.

This fixes bug #4879 reported by Fujii Masao.
2009-06-25 21:36:00 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas ebaa1952f1 The code to unlink dropped relations in FinishPreparedTransaction() was
acting like runs inside WAL recovery, but it doesn't. I must've copy-pasted
this from a redo-function in the relation forks patch. Noticed by Tom Lane
while he was looking through callers of smgrdounlink().
2009-06-25 19:05:52 +00:00
Magnus Hagander 6c4637a3b3 Disallow empty passwords in LDAP authentication, the same way
we already do it for PAM.
2009-06-25 11:30:08 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 4183b10661 Correct grammar in picksplit debug messages 2009-06-24 15:16:22 +00:00
Magnus Hagander c7e42c7ce1 parse_ident_usermap() shuold use ereport(LOG) and not ERROR, and put the
return value in the *error_p variable.

Noted by Tom.
2009-06-24 13:39:42 +00:00
Tom Lane b087b018a1 Fix an ancient error in dist_ps (distance from point to line segment), which
a number of other geometric operators also depend on.  It miscalculated the
slope of the perpendicular to the given line segment anytime that slope was
other than 0, infinite, or +/-1.  In some cases the error would be masked
because the true closest point on the line segment was one of its endpoints
rather than the intersection point, but in other cases it could give an
arbitrarily bad answer.  Per bug #4872 from Nick Roosevelt.

Bug goes clear back to Berkeley days, so patch all supported branches.
Make a couple of cosmetic adjustments while at it.
2009-06-23 16:25:02 +00:00
Tom Lane 6382448cf9 For bulk write operations (eg COPY IN), use a ring buffer of 16MB instead
of the 256KB limit originally enforced by a patch committed 2008-11-06.
Per recent test results, the smaller size resulted in an undesirable decrease
in bulk data loading speed, due to COPY processing frequently getting blocked
for WAL flushing.  This area might need more tweaking later, but this setting
seems to be good enough for 8.4.
2009-06-22 20:04:28 +00:00
Tom Lane 3f1e529e78 Make to_timestamp and friends skip leading spaces before an integer field,
even when not in FM mode.  This improves compatibility with Oracle and with
our pre-8.4 behavior, as per bug #4862.

Brendan Jurd

Add a couple of regression test cases for this.  In passing, get rid of the
labeling of the individual test cases; doesn't seem to be good for anything
except causing extra work when inserting a test...

Tom Lane
2009-06-22 17:54:30 +00:00
Tom Lane 1c8f03d4de Revert dubious message wording change. 2009-06-22 04:37:18 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut e8ec0b15a0 Message fixes 2009-06-21 20:15:32 +00:00
Tom Lane 82480e28f5 Fix things so that array_agg_finalfn does not modify or free its input
ArrayBuildState, per trouble report from Merlin Moncure.  By adopting
this fix, we are essentially deciding that aggregate final-functions
should not modify their inputs ever.  Adjust documentation and comments
to match that conclusion.
2009-06-20 18:45:28 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas efa8544fd5 Fix a few errors in comments. Patch by Fujii Masao, plus the one in
visibilitymap.c by me.
2009-06-18 10:08:08 +00:00
Tom Lane f08e5e92e8 Fix the just-reported problem that you can't specify all four trigger event
types in CREATE TRIGGER.  While at it, clean up the amazingly tedious and
inextensible way that the trigger event type list was handled.  Per report
from Greg Sabino Mullane.
2009-06-18 01:27:02 +00:00
Tom Lane e8d78d35f4 ExecAgg() failed to finish running out set-returning functions in the last
aggregated tuple of a run.  Per report from Laurenz Albe.  This is a new
bug in 8.4, but only because prior versions rejected SRFs in an Agg plan
node altogether.
2009-06-17 16:05:34 +00:00
Tom Lane 5f6a14077b Fix get_sort_group_operators() so that it doesn't think arrays can be grouped
via hashing.  Eventually we ought to make that possible, but it won't happen
for 8.4.  Per yesterday's report from Robert Haas.
2009-06-13 15:42:09 +00:00
Tom Lane bfd06a713b Fix several places where a function was declared static and then defined
without static.  Per testing with a compiler that complains about this.
2009-06-12 16:17:29 +00:00
Tom Lane 44aa60fa7c Revisit AlterTableCreateToastTable's API once again, hoping to make it what
pg_migrator actually needs and not just a partial solution.  We have to be
able to specify the OID that the new toast table should be created with.
2009-06-11 20:46:11 +00:00
Tom Lane db16e77349 Remove our inadequate kluge that tried to get AIX's various broken versions
of getaddrinfo() to work.  Instead, recommend updating the OS to get a working
version of getaddrinfo.  Per recent discussions.
2009-06-11 19:00:15 +00:00
Tom Lane 0c19f05803 Fix things so that you can still do "select foo()" where foo is a SQL
function returning setof record.  This used to work, more or less
accidentally, but I had broken it while extending the code to allow
materialize-mode functions to be called in select lists.  Add a regression
test case so it doesn't get broken again.  Per gripe from Greg Davidson.
2009-06-11 17:25:39 +00:00
Tom Lane 772a074d4a Somebody seems to have thought they could get away without checking for
rsinfo->expectedDesc == NULL in deflist_to_tuplestore(), but that doesn't
look very safe to me.  Noted in passing while studying problem report
from Greg Davidson.
2009-06-11 16:14:18 +00:00
Bruce Momjian d747140279 8.4 pgindent run, with new combined Linux/FreeBSD/MinGW typedef list
provided by Andrew.
2009-06-11 14:49:15 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 0b7b908882 Translation updates 2009-06-10 23:42:44 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 746c28a8e4 Improve capitalization and punctuation in recently added GiST message. 2009-06-10 20:02:15 +00:00
Tom Lane 61dd4185ff Keep rs_startblock the same during heap_rescan, so that a rescan of a SeqScan
node starts from the same place as the first scan did.  This avoids surprising
behavior of scrollable and WITH HOLD cursors, as seen in Mark Kirkwood's bug
report of yesterday.

It's not entirely clear whether a rescan should be forced to drop out of the
syncscan mode, but for the moment I left the code behaving the same on that
point.  Any change there would only be a performance and not a correctness
issue, anyway.

Back-patch to 8.3, since the unstable behavior was created by the syncscan
patch.
2009-06-10 18:54:16 +00:00
Tom Lane 2ef8c1acfd Fix cash_in() to behave properly in locales where frac_digits is zero,
eg Japan.  Report and fix by Itagaki Takahiro.  Also fix CASHDEBUG printout
format for branches with 64-bit money type, and some minor comment cleanup.

Back-patch to 7.4, because it's broken all the way back.
2009-06-10 16:31:32 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 208d3a7555 Correct/improve the datetime_precision field in the information schema.
In particular, always show 0 for the date type instead of null, and show
6 (the default) for time, timestamp, and interval without a declared
precision.  This is now in fuller conformance with the SQL standard.

Also clarify the documentation about this.

discovered and analyzed by Konstantin Izmailov and Tom Lane
2009-06-10 07:03:34 +00:00
Tom Lane 5cca35a68b Make handling of INTERVAL DAY TO MINUTE and INTERVAL DAY TO SECOND input
more consistent with other cases, by having an unlabeled integer field
be treated as a number of minutes or seconds respectively.  These cases
are outside the spec (which insists on full "dd hh:mm" or "dd hh:mm:ss"
input respectively), so it's not much help to us in deciding what to do.
But with this change, it's uniformly the case that an unlabeled integer
will be considered as being a number of the interval's rightmost field.
The change also takes us back to the 8.3 behavior of throwing error
for certain ambiguous inputs such as INTERVAL '1 2' DAY TO MINUTE.
Per recent discussion.
2009-06-10 05:05:03 +00:00
Tom Lane 0dcc73fea4 Ensure xmlFree(NULL) is a no-op instead of a core dump. Per report from
Sergey Burladyan, there are at least some dank corners of libxml2 that
assume this behavior, even though their published documentation suggests
they shouldn't.

This is only really a live problem in 8.3, but the code is still there
for possible debugging use in HEAD, so patch both branches.
2009-06-10 03:44:35 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 9b7304bc25 Fix xmlattribute escaping XML special characters twice (bug #4822).
Author: Itagaki Takahiro <itagaki.takahiro@oss.ntt.co.jp>
2009-06-09 22:00:57 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera e66576e58c Fix typo, per Tom 2009-06-09 19:36:28 +00:00
Tom Lane 59fb29cac6 Switch order of tests to avoid possible Assert failure for
"array_agg_finalfn(null)".  We should modify pg_proc entries to prevent this
query from being accepted, but let's just make the function itself secure too.
Per my note of today.
2009-06-09 18:15:04 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera e8f28cb25d Dynamically set a lower bound on autovacuum nap time so that we don't rebuild
the database list too often.

Per bug report from Łukasz Jagiełło and ensuing discussion on
pgsql-performance.
2009-06-09 16:41:02 +00:00
Tom Lane adaf60131f Fix failure to double-quote function argument names when needed, in
pg_get_function_arguments() and related functions.  Per report from
Andreas Nolte.
2009-06-09 14:36:06 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut c773ec6b15 Fix map_sql_table_to_xmlschema() with dropped attributes.
also backpatched to 8.3
2009-06-08 21:32:33 +00:00
Tom Lane 32ea236361 Improve the IndexVacuumInfo/IndexBulkDeleteResult API to allow somewhat sane
behavior in cases where we don't know the heap tuple count accurately; in
particular partial vacuum, but this also makes the API a bit more useful
for ANALYZE.  This patch adds "estimated_count" flags to both structs so
that an approximate count can be flagged as such, and adjusts the logic
so that approximate counts are not used for updating pg_class.reltuples.

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

The whole thing is a bit messy and should be redesigned in future, because
reltuples now has the potential to drift quite far away from reality when
a long period elapses with no non-partial vacuums.  But this is as good as
it's going to get for 8.4.
2009-06-06 22:13:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 356eea24ce Fix a serious bug introduced into GIN in 8.4: now that MergeItemPointers()
is supposed to remove duplicate heap TIDs, we have to be sure to reduce the
tuple size and posting-item count accordingly in addItemPointersToTuple().
Failing to do so resulted in the effective injection of garbage TIDs into the
index contents, ie, whatever happened to be in the memory palloc'd for the
new tuple.  I'm not sure that this fully explains the index corruption
reported by Tatsuo Ishii, but the test case I'm using no longer fails.
2009-06-06 02:39:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 76d4abf2d9 Improve the recently-added support for properly pluralized error messages
by extending the ereport() API to cater for pluralization directly.  This
is better than the original method of calling ngettext outside the elog.c
code because (1) it avoids double translation, which wastes cycles and in
the worst case could give a wrong result; and (2) it avoids having to use
a different coding method in PL code than in the core backend.  The
client-side uses of ngettext are not touched since neither of these concerns
is very pressing in the client environment.  Per my proposal of yesterday.
2009-06-04 18:33:08 +00:00
Tom Lane a734979e0a Fix tsquerysel() to not fail on an empty TSQuery. Per report from
Tatsuo Ishii.
2009-06-03 18:42:13 +00:00
Tom Lane e550763121 Improve comment about 'if (1)' hack in copy.c macros. 2009-06-03 15:06:48 +00:00
Bruce Momjian 1a0ebe6152 Add comment about why "((void) 0)" is used in copy macros. 2009-06-03 14:48:33 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7c8d7a2eec Only recycle normal files in pg_xlog as WAL segments. pg_standby creates
symbolic links with the -l option, and as Fujii Masao pointed out we ended up
overwriting files in the archive directory before this patch. Patch by
Aidan Van Dyk, Fujii Masao and me.

Backpatch to 8.3, where pg_standby was introduced.
2009-06-02 06:18:06 +00:00
Tom Lane bac2ad38ea Change AdjustIntervalForTypmod to not discard higher-order field values on the
grounds that they don't fit into the specified interval qualifier (typmod).
This behavior, while of long standing, is clearly wrong per spec --- for
example the value INTERVAL '999' SECOND means 999 seconds and should not be
reduced to less than 60 seconds.

In some cases there could be grounds to raise an error if higher-order field
values are not given as zero; for example '1 year 1 month'::INTERVAL MONTH
should arguably be taken as an error rather than equivalent to 13 months.
However our internal representation doesn't allow us to do that in a fashion
that would consistently reject all and only the cases that a strict reading
of the spec would suggest.  Also, seeing that for example INTERVAL '13' MONTH
will print out as '1 year 1 mon', we have to be careful not to create a
situation where valid data will fail to dump and reload.  The present patch
therefore takes the attitude of not throwing an error in any such case.
We might want to revisit that in future but it would take more redesign
than seems prudent in late beta.

Per a complaint from Sebastien Flaesch and subsequent discussion.  While
at other times we might have just postponed such an issue to the next
development cycle, 8.4 already has changed the parsing of interval literals
quite a bit in an effort to accept all spec-compliant cases correctly.
This seems like a change that should be part of that rather than coming
along later.
2009-06-01 23:55:15 +00:00
Tom Lane b3b89fd1f1 Fix DecodeInterval to report an error for multiple occurrences of DAY, WEEK,
YEAR, DECADE, CENTURY, or MILLENIUM fields, just as it always has done for
other types of fields.  The previous behavior seems to have been a hack to
avoid defining bit-positions for all these field types in DTK_M() masks,
rather than something that was really considered to be desired behavior.
But there is room in the masks for these, and we really need to tighten up
at least the behavior of DAY and YEAR fields to avoid unexpected behavior
associated with the 8.4 changes to interpret ambiguous fields based on the
interval qualifier (typmod) value.  Per my example and proposed patch.
2009-06-01 16:55:11 +00:00
Tom Lane 5377ccbe24 Update obsolete comment in index_drop(). When the comment was written,
queries frequently took no lock at all on individual indexes.  That's not
true any more, but we still need lock on the parent table to make it safe
to use cached lists of index OIDs.
2009-05-31 20:55:37 +00:00
Michael Meskes fa88e92a1d Change macros to make gcc quiet when parsing. 2009-05-29 13:54:52 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2e6107cb62 When archiving is enabled, rotate the last WAL segment at shutdown so that
all transactions are archived.

Original patch by Guillaume Smet.
2009-05-28 11:02:16 +00:00
Magnus Hagander b1c2781951 Properly return the usermap result when doing gssapi authentication. Without
this, the username was in practice never matched against the kerberos principal
used to log in.
2009-05-27 21:08:22 +00:00
Tom Lane 6ec0753146 Ignore RECHECK in CREATE OPERATOR CLASS, just throwing a NOTICE, instead of
throwing an error as 8.4 had been doing.  The error interfered with porting
old database definitions (particularly for pg_migrator) without really buying
any safety.  Per bug #4817 and subsequent discussion.
2009-05-27 20:42:29 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 9873db6646 Fix compiler warnings on Sun Studio of the sort
"tsquery_op.c", line 193: warning: syntax error:  empty declaration

Zdenek Kotala
2009-05-27 19:41:58 +00:00
Tom Lane 48938ab506 Allow the second argument of pg_get_expr() to be just zero when deparsing
an expression that's not supposed to contain variables.  Per discussion
with Gevik Babakhani, this eliminates the need for an ugly kluge (namely,
specifying some unrelated relation name).  Remove one such kluge from
pg_dump.
2009-05-26 17:36:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 99bf328237 Remove the useless and rather inconsistent return values of EncodeDateOnly,
EncodeTimeOnly, EncodeDateTime, EncodeInterval.  These don't have any good
reason to fail, and their callers were mostly not checking anyway.
2009-05-26 02:17:50 +00:00
Tom Lane dd96d13a77 Add range checks to time_recv() and timetz_recv(), to prevent binary input
of time values that would not be accepted via textual input.
Per gripe from Andrew McNamara.

This is potentially a back-patchable bug fix, but for the moment it doesn't
seem sufficiently high impact to justify doing that.
2009-05-26 01:29:09 +00:00
Tom Lane c3707a4fcd Use more-portable coding for the check on handing out the last available
relopt_kind value in add_reloption_kind().  Per Zdenek Kotala.
2009-05-24 22:22:44 +00:00
Tom Lane fc2660fc25 Fix LIKE's special-case code for % followed by _. I'm not entirely sure that
this case is worth a special code path, but a special code path that gets
the boundary condition wrong is definitely no good.  Per bug #4821 from
Andrew Gierth.

In passing, clean up some minor code formatting issues (excess parentheses
and blank lines in odd places).

Back-patch to 8.3, where the bug was introduced.
2009-05-24 18:10:38 +00:00
Teodor Sigaev c6c458e24d Resort tsvector's lexemes in tsvectorrecv instead of emmiting an error.
Basically, it's needed to support binary dump from 8.3 because ordering rule
was changed.

Per discussion with Bruce.
2009-05-21 20:09:36 +00:00
Michael Meskes ab9981ccc6 Removed comparison of unsigned expression < 0. 2009-05-21 12:54:27 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7340793f31 Silence a gcc compiler warning about non-literal format string with no args
when compiling with -Wformat-security. Fujii Masao.
2009-05-20 08:48:10 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9ca99cda21 Update relpages and reltuples estimates in stand-alone ANALYZE, even if
there's no analyzable attributes or indexes. We also used to report 0 live
and dead tuples for such tables, which messed with autovacuum threshold
calculations.

This fixes bug #4812 reported by George Su. Backpatch back to 8.1.
2009-05-19 08:30:00 +00:00
Tom Lane 7280fab717 Fix bug #4814 (wrong subscript in consistent-function call), and add some
minimal regression test coverage for matchPartialInPendingList().
2009-05-19 02:48:26 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 5581f226c8 Update SQL conformance entries for window functions functionality 2009-05-18 12:04:59 +00:00
Tom Lane 3626043229 Improve comments in pg_ident.conf.sample. 2009-05-16 20:43:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 4616d57dad Fix all the server-side SIGQUIT handlers (grumble ... why so many identical
copies?) to ensure they really don't run proc_exit/shmem_exit callbacks,
as was intended.  I broke this behavior recently by installing atexit
callbacks without thinking about the one case where we truly don't want
to run those callback functions.  Noted in an example from Dave Page.
2009-05-15 15:56:39 +00:00
Tom Lane bfab3f19e3 Include recovery_end_command in recovery.conf.sample.
Per suggestion of Jaime Casanova.
2009-05-14 22:22:01 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera f97017068f Translation updates 2009-05-14 21:41:53 +00:00
Tom Lane 284e12c398 Improve a couple of comments. 2009-05-14 21:28:35 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9e403c2587 Add recovery_end_command option to recovery.conf. recovery_end_command
is run at the end of archive recovery, providing a chance to do external
cleanup. Modify pg_standby so that it no longer removes the trigger file,
that is to be done using the recovery_end_command now.

Provide a "smart" failover mode in pg_standby, where we don't fail over
immediately, but only after recovering all unapplied WAL from the archive.
That gives you zero data loss assuming all WAL was archived before
failover, which is what most users of pg_standby actually want.

recovery_end_command by Simon Riggs, pg_standby changes by Fujii Masao and
myself.
2009-05-14 20:31:09 +00:00
Tom Lane a710713644 Add checks to DefineQueryRewrite() to prohibit attaching rules to relations
that aren't RELKIND_RELATION or RELKIND_VIEW, and to disallow attaching rules
to system relations unless allowSystemTableMods is on.  This is to make the
behavior of CREATE RULE more like CREATE TRIGGER, which disallows the
comparable cases.  Per discussion of bug #4808.
2009-05-13 22:32:55 +00:00
Tom Lane 23543c732b Rewrite xml.c's memory management (yet again). Give up on the idea of
redirecting libxml's allocations into a Postgres context.  Instead, just let
it use malloc directly, and add PG_TRY blocks as needed to be sure we release
libxml data structures in error recovery code paths.  This is ugly but seems
much more likely to play nicely with third-party uses of libxml, as seen in
recent trouble reports about using Perl XML facilities in pl/perl and bug
#4774 about contrib/xml2.

I left the code for allocation redirection in place, but it's only
built/used if you #define USE_LIBXMLCONTEXT.  This is because I found it
useful to corral libxml's allocations in a palloc context when hunting
for libxml memory leaks, and we're surely going to have more of those
in the future with this type of approach.  But we don't want it turned on
in a normal build because it breaks exactly what we need to fix.

I have not re-indented most of the code sections that are now wrapped
by PG_TRY(); that's for ease of review.  pg_indent will fix it.

This is a pre-existing bug in 8.3, but I don't dare back-patch this change
until it's gotten a reasonable amount of field testing.
2009-05-13 20:27:17 +00:00
Tom Lane 546454f8a3 Fix intratransaction memory leaks in xml_recv, xmlconcat, xmlroot, and
xml_parse, all arising from the same sloppy usage of parse_xml_decl.
The original coding had that function returning its output string
parameters in the libxml context, which is long-lived, and all but one
of its callers neglected to free the strings afterwards.  The easiest
and most bulletproof fix is to return the strings in the local palloc
context instead, since that's short-lived.  This was only costing a
dozen or two bytes per function call, but that adds up fast if the
function is called repeatedly ...

Noted while poking at the more general problem of what to do with our
libxml memory allocation hooks.  Back-patch to 8.3, which has the
identical coding.
2009-05-12 20:17:40 +00:00
Tom Lane f23bdda324 Fix LOCK TABLE to eliminate the race condition that could make it give weird
errors when tables are concurrently dropped.  To do this we must take lock
on each relation before we check its privileges.  The old code was trying
to do that the other way around, which is a bit pointless when there are lots
of other commands that lock relations before checking privileges.  I did keep
it checking each relation's privilege before locking the next relation, which
is a detail that ALTER TABLE isn't too picky about.
2009-05-12 16:43:32 +00:00
Tom Lane d4a363cdf2 Modify find_inheritance_children() and find_all_inheritors() to add the
ability to lock relations as they scan pg_inherits, and to ignore any
relations that have disappeared by the time we get lock on them.  This
makes uses of these functions safe against concurrent DROP operations
on child tables: we will effectively ignore any just-dropped child,
rather than possibly throwing an error as in recent bug report from
Thomas Johansson (and similar past complaints).  The behavior should
not change otherwise, since the code was acquiring those same locks
anyway, just a little bit later.

An exception is LockTableCommand(), which is still behaving unsafely;
but that seems to require some more discussion before we change it.
2009-05-12 03:11:02 +00:00
Tom Lane 0ada559187 Do some minor code refactoring in preparation for changing the APIs of
find_inheritance_children() and find_all_inheritors().  I got annoyed that
these are buried inside the planner but mostly used elsewhere.  So, create
a new file catalog/pg_inherits.c and put them there, along with a couple
of other functions that search pg_inherits.

The code that modifies pg_inherits is (still) in tablecmds.c --- it's
kind of entangled with unrelated code that modifies pg_depend and other
stuff, so pulling it out seemed like a bigger change than I wanted to make
right now.  But this file provides a natural home for it if anyone ever
gets around to that.

This commit just moves code around; it doesn't change anything, except
I succumbed to the temptation to make a couple of trivial optimizations
in typeInheritsFrom().
2009-05-12 00:56:05 +00:00
Tom Lane 6480c143ee Partially revert my patch of 2008-11-12 that installed a limit on the number
of AND/OR clause branches that predtest.c would attempt to deal with.  As
noted in bug #4721, that change disabled proof attempts for sizes of problems
that people are actually expecting it to work for.  The original complaint
it was trying to solve was O(N^2) behavior for long IN-lists, so let's try
applying the limit to just ScalarArrayOpExprs rather than everything.
Another case of "foolish consistency" I fear.

Back-patch to 8.2, same as the previous patch was.
2009-05-11 17:56:08 +00:00
Magnus Hagander d9ebc8822b Support SSL certificate chains in the server certificate file.
Andrew Gierth
2009-05-11 08:06:21 +00:00
Tom Lane 723476c72e Make a marginal performance improvement in predicate_implied_by and
predicate_refuted_by: if either top-level input is a single-element list,
reduce it to its lone member before proceeding.  This avoids
a useless level of AND-recursion within the recursive proof routines.
It's worth doing because, for example, if the clause is a 100-element
list and the predicate is a 1-element list then we'd otherwise strip
the predicate's list structure 100 times as we iterate through the clause.
It's only needed at top level because there won't be any trivial ANDs below
that --- this situation is an artifact of the decision to represent even
single-item conditions as Lists in the "implicit AND" format, and that format
is only used at the top level of any predicate or restriction condition.
2009-05-10 22:45:28 +00:00
Tom Lane 8dcf18414b Fix cost_nestloop and cost_hashjoin to model the behavior of semi and anti
joins a bit better, ie, understand the differing cost functions for matched
and unmatched outer tuples.  There is more that could be done in cost_hashjoin
but this already helps a great deal.  Per discussions with Robert Haas.
2009-05-09 22:51:41 +00:00
Tom Lane 1e06ed1abe Add an option to AlterTableCreateToastTable() to allow its caller to force
a toast table to be built, even if the sum-of-column-widths calculation
indicates one isn't needed.  This is needed by pg_migrator because if the
old table has a toast table, we have to migrate over the toast table since
it might contain some live data, even though subsequent column drops could
mean that no recently-added rows could require toasting.
2009-05-07 22:58:28 +00:00
Tom Lane fdd48b1852 Ooops ... make_outerjoininfo wasn't actually enforcing the join order
restrictions specified for semijoins in optimizer/README, to wit that
you can't reassociate outer joins into or out of the RHS of a semijoin.
Per report from Heikki.
2009-05-07 20:13:09 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 223431cba1 Request XLOG switch before writing checkpoint in pg_start_backup(). Otherwise
you can end up with an unrecoverable backup if you start a new base backup
right after finishing archive recovery. In that scenario, the redo pointer of
the checkpoint that pg_start_backup() writes points to the XLOG segment where
the timeline-changing end-of-archive-recovery checkpoint is. The beginning
of that segment contains pages with the old timeline ID, and we don't accept
that in recovery unless we find a history file covering the old timeline ID.
If you omit pg_xlog from the base backup and clear the archive directory
before starting the backup, there will be no such history file available.

The bug is present in all versions since PITR was introduced in 8.0, but I'm
back-patching only back to 8.2. Earlier versions didn't have XLOG switch
records, making this fix unfeasible. Given the lack of reports until now,
it doesn't seem worthwhile to spend more effort to fix 8.0 and 8.1.

Per report and suggestion by Mikael Krantz
2009-05-07 11:25:25 +00:00
Tom Lane 1f36feceb0 Tweak distribute_qual_to_rels so that when we decide a pseudoconstant qual
can be pushed to the top of the join tree, we update both the relids and
qualscope variables to keep them in sync.  This prevents a possible later
failure of an Assert clause, and affects nothing else since qualscope isn't
used later except for that Assert.  At the moment the Assert shouldn't be
reachable when we've pushed the qual up; but this is cheap insurance, and
it's more sensible anyway in terms of the overall logic of the routine.
Per analysis of a bug report from Stefan Huehner.

I'm not back-patching this since it's just future-proofing; but if anyone
gets tempted to change check_outerjoin_delay again in the back branches,
this might be needed.
2009-05-06 20:31:18 +00:00
Tom Lane 421c66b76c Modify CREATE DATABASE to enforce that the source database's encoding setting
must be used for the new database, except when copying from template0.
This is the same rule that we now enforce for locale settings, and it has
the same motivation: databases other than template0 might contain data that
would be invalid according to a different setting.  This represents another
step in a continuing process of locking down ways in which encoding violations
could occur inside the backend.  Per discussion of a few days ago.

In passing, fix pre-existing breakage of mbregress.sh, and fix up a couple
of ereport() calls in dbcommands.c that failed to specify sqlstate codes.
2009-05-06 16:15:21 +00:00
Tom Lane d7ee335520 Tweak a comment to agree a bit better with the new dispensation that
locales are database-wide, not server-wide.
2009-05-05 23:39:55 +00:00
Tom Lane 2fe0f2962c Minor improvement: avoid assuming that GetLastError value cannot be
affected by CloseHandle() or Sleep().
2009-05-05 21:51:46 +00:00
Tom Lane 1bbbcb04f0 Make new complaint about unsafe Unicode literals include an error location.
Every other ereport in scan.l has one, this should too.
2009-05-05 21:09:23 +00:00
Tom Lane 249a899f73 Install an atexit(2) callback that ensures that proc_exit's cleanup processing
will still be performed if something in a backend process calls exit()
directly, instead of going through proc_exit() as we prefer.  This is a second
response to the issue that we might load third-party code that doesn't know it
should not call exit().  Such a call will now cause a reasonably graceful
backend shutdown, if possible.  (Of course, if the reason for the exit() call
is out-of-memory or some such, we might not be able to recover, but at least
we will try.)
2009-05-05 20:06:07 +00:00
Tom Lane 969d7cd431 Install a "dead man switch" to allow the postmaster to detect cases where
a backend has done exit(0) or exit(1) without having disengaged itself
from shared memory.  We are at risk for this whenever third-party code is
loaded into a backend, since such code might not know it's supposed to go
through proc_exit() instead.  Also, it is reported that under Windows
there are ways to externally kill a process that cause the status code
returned to the postmaster to be indistinguishable from a voluntary exit
(thank you, Microsoft).  If this does happen then the system is probably
hosed --- for instance, the dead session might still be holding locks.
So the best recovery method is to treat this like a backend crash.

The dead man switch is armed for a particular child process when it
acquires a regular PGPROC, and disarmed when the PGPROC is released;
these should be the first and last touches of shared memory resources
in a backend, or close enough anyway.  This choice means there is no
coverage for auxiliary processes, but I doubt we need that, since they
shouldn't be executing any user-provided code anyway.

This patch also improves the management of the EXEC_BACKEND
ShmemBackendArray array a bit, by reducing search costs.

Although this problem is of long standing, the lack of field complaints
seems to mean it's not critical enough to risk back-patching; at least
not till we get some more testing of this mechanism.
2009-05-05 19:59:00 +00:00
Tom Lane 8f348112f3 Insert CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() calls into btree and hash index scans at the
points where we step right or left to the next page.  This should ensure
reasonable response time to a query cancel request during an unsuccessful
index scan, as seen in recent gripe from Marc Cousin.  It's a bit trickier
than it might seem at first glance, because CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() is a no-op
if executed while holding a buffer lock.  So we have to do it just at the
point where we've dropped one page lock and not yet acquired the next.

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

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

This is a pre-existing issue, but in view of the lack of prior complaints
I'm not going to risk back-patching.
2009-05-05 19:36:32 +00:00
Tom Lane 2aa5ca952f Update comment for _bt_relandgetbuf. 2009-05-05 19:02:22 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 40bc4c2605 Disable the use of Unicode escapes in string constants (U&'') when
standard_conforming_strings is not on, for security reasons.
2009-05-05 18:32:17 +00:00
Tom Lane 616bceb8cb Avoid integer overflow in the loop that extracts histogram entries from
ANALYZE's total sample.  The original coding is at risk of overflow for
statistics targets exceeding about 2675; this was not a problem before
8.4 but it is now.  Per bug #4793 from Dennis Noordsij.
2009-05-05 18:02:11 +00:00
Magnus Hagander 5d540add34 Make the win32 shared memory code try 10 times instead of one if
it fails because the shared memory segment already exists. This
means it can take up to 10 seconds before it reports the error
if it *does* exist, but hopefully it will make the system capable
of restarting even when the server is under high load.
2009-05-05 09:48:51 +00:00
Magnus Hagander ca6c0ac4d3 Call SetLastError(0) before calling the file mapping functions
to make sure that the error code is reset, as a precaution in
case the API doesn't properly reset it on success. This could
be necessary, since we check the error value even if the function
doesn't fail for specific success cases.
2009-05-04 08:36:40 +00:00
Tom Lane 4071e0c242 Fix missed usage of DLNewElem() 2009-05-04 02:46:36 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera a1e1ef4f77 Avoid a memory allocation in the backend startup code, to avoid having to check
whether it failed.  Modelled after catcache.c's usage of DlList, per suggestion
from Tom.
2009-05-04 02:24:17 +00:00
Tom Lane 04f2403820 Fix assign_pgstat_temp_directory() to ensure the directory path is
canonicalized.  Avoid the need to elog(FATAL) on out-of-memory.
2009-05-03 20:09:54 +00:00
Tatsuo Ishii 5c7f55342b Update UTF-8 <--> EUC_KR, JOHAB, UHC mappings.
Patch contributed by Chuck McDevitt
2009-05-03 01:17:41 +00:00
Tom Lane d90984f4f6 Install some simple defenses in postmaster startup to help ensure a useful
error message if the installation directory layout is messed up (or at least,
something more useful than the behavior exhibited in bug #4787).  During
postmaster startup, check that get_pkglib_path resolves as a readable
directory; and if ParseTzFile() fails to open the expected timezone
abbreviation file, check the possibility that the directory is missing rather
than just the specified file.  In case of either failure, issue a hint
suggesting that the installation is broken.  These two checks cover the lib/
and share/ trees of a full installation, which should take care of most
scenarios where a sysadmin decides to get cute.
2009-05-02 22:02:37 +00:00
Tom Lane fe1b07a6f9 When checking for datetime field overflow, we should allow a fractional-second
part that rounds up to exactly 1.0 second.  The previous coding rejected input
like "00:12:57.9999999999999999999999999999", with the exact number of nines
needed to cause failure varying depending on float-timestamp option and
possibly on platform.  Obviously this should round up to the next integral
second, if we don't have enough precision to distinguish the value from that.
Per bug #4789 from Robert Kruus.

In passing, fix a missed check for fractional seconds in one copy of the
"is it greater than 24:00:00" code.

Broken all the way back, so patch all the way back.
2009-05-01 19:29:07 +00:00
Tom Lane c59d8dd44d Improve pull_up_subqueries logic so that it doesn't insert unnecessary
PlaceHolderVar nodes in join quals appearing in or below the lowest
outer join that could null the subquery being pulled up.  This improves
the planner's ability to recognize constant join quals, and probably
helps with detection of common sort keys (equivalence classes) as well.
2009-04-28 21:31:16 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas a4278fd858 Move SERVER to the right place in the alphabetically sorted keyword list. 2009-04-28 09:09:41 +00:00
Tom Lane 20a3ddbbf9 Fix the handling of sub-SELECTs appearing in the arguments of an outer-level
aggregate function.  By definition, such a sub-SELECT cannot reference any
variables of query levels between itself and the aggregate's semantic level
(else the aggregate would've been assigned to that lower level instead).
So the correct, most efficient implementation is to treat the sub-SELECT as
being a sub-select of that outer query level, not the level the aggregate
syntactically appears in.  Not doing so also confuses the heck out of our
parameter-passing logic, as illustrated in bug report from Daniel Grace.

Fortunately, we were already copying the whole Aggref expression up to the
outer query level, so all that's needed is to delay SS_process_sublinks
processing of the sub-SELECT until control returns to the outer level.

This has been broken since we introduced spec-compliant treatment of
outer aggregates in 7.4; so patch all the way back.
2009-04-25 16:44:56 +00:00
Tom Lane 096a30b538 Fix some more 'variable may be used uninitialized' warnings from gcc 4.4. 2009-04-24 16:09:50 +00:00
Magnus Hagander 420ea68817 Move gettext encoding names into encnames.c, so we only have one place to update.
Per discussion.
2009-04-24 08:43:51 +00:00
Tom Lane 9563afafeb Suppress some 'variable may be used uninitialized' warnings from gcc 4.4. 2009-04-23 23:25:13 +00:00
Tom Lane b9e9775e0c Don't use the result of strcmp as if it were a boolean.
A service of your local coding style police.
2009-04-23 17:39:21 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 283939a321 varstr_cmp and any comparison function that piggybacks on it can return
any negative or positive number, not just -1 or 1. Fix comment on
varstr_cmp and citext test case accordingly.

As pointed out by Zdenek Kotala, and buildfarm member gothic moth.
2009-04-23 07:19:09 +00:00
Tom Lane 8d4f2ecd41 Change the default value of max_prepared_transactions to zero, and add
documentation warnings against setting it nonzero unless active use of
prepared transactions is intended and a suitable transaction manager has been
installed.  This should help to prevent the type of scenario we've seen
several times now where a prepared transaction is forgotten and eventually
causes severe maintenance problems (or even anti-wraparound shutdown).

The only real reason we had the default be nonzero in the first place was to
support regression testing of the feature.  To still be able to do that,
tweak pg_regress to force a nonzero value during "make check".  Since we
cannot force a nonzero value in "make installcheck", add a variant regression
test "expected" file that shows the results that will be obtained when
max_prepared_transactions is zero.

Also, extend the HINT messages for transaction wraparound warnings to mention
the possibility that old prepared transactions are causing the problem.

All per today's discussion.
2009-04-23 00:23:46 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas bae8102f52 After archive recovery, mark the last WAL segment from the parent timeline
ready for archival. It was marked at the next checkpoint anyway, but
waiting for the next checkpoint is an unnecessary delay.

Fujii Masao
2009-04-22 19:51:12 +00:00