Commit Graph

5938 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Heikki Linnakangas
c9d44a75d4 Silence "expression result unused" warnings in AssertVariableIsOfTypeMacro
At least clang 3.1 generates those warnings. Prepend (void) to avoid them,
like we have in AssertMacro.
2012-11-12 15:02:40 +02:00
Tom Lane
3e7fdcffd6 Fix WaitLatch() to return promptly when the requested timeout expires.
If the sleep is interrupted by a signal, we must recompute the remaining
time to wait; otherwise, a steady stream of non-wait-terminating interrupts
could delay return from WaitLatch indefinitely.  This has been shown to be
a problem for the autovacuum launcher, and there may well be other places
now or in the future with similar issues.  So we'd better make the function
robust, even though this'll add at least one gettimeofday call per wait.

Back-patch to 9.2.  We might eventually need to fix 9.1 as well, but the
code is quite different there, and the usage of WaitLatch in 9.1 is so
limited that it's not clearly important to do so.

Reported and diagnosed by Jeff Janes, though I rewrote his patch rather
heavily.
2012-11-08 20:04:48 -05:00
Tom Lane
dcc55dd21a Rename ResolveNew() to ReplaceVarsFromTargetList(), and tweak its API.
This function currently lacks the option to throw error if the provided
targetlist doesn't have any matching entry for a Var to be replaced.
Two of the four existing call sites would be better off with an error,
as would the usage in the pending auto-updatable-views patch, so it seems
past time to extend the API to support that.  To do so, replace the "event"
parameter (historically of type CmdType, though it was declared plain int)
with a special-purpose enum type.

It's unclear whether this function might be called by third-party code.
Since many C compilers wouldn't warn about a call site continuing to use
the old calling convention, rename the function to forcibly break any
such code that hasn't been updated.  The old name was none too well chosen
anyhow.
2012-11-08 16:52:49 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
aa69670e42 Add URLs to document why DLLIMPORT is needed on Windows.
Per email from Craig Ringer
2012-11-07 15:01:25 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
add6c3179a Make the streaming replication protocol messages architecture-independent.
We used to send structs wrapped in CopyData messages, which works as long as
the client and server agree on things like endianess, timestamp format and
alignment. That's good enough for running a standby server, which has to run
on the same platform anyway, but it's useful for tools like pg_receivexlog
to work across platforms.

This breaks protocol compatibility of streaming replication, but we never
promised that to be compatible across versions, anyway.
2012-11-07 19:09:13 +02:00
Tom Lane
5ed6546cf7 Fix handling of inherited check constraints in ALTER COLUMN TYPE.
This case got broken in 8.4 by the addition of an error check that
complains if ALTER TABLE ONLY is used on a table that has children.
We do use ONLY for this situation, but it's okay because the necessary
recursion occurs at a higher level.  So we need to have a separate
flag to suppress recursion without making the error check.

Reported and patched by Pavan Deolasee, with some editorial adjustments by
me.  Back-patch to 8.4, since this is a regression of functionality that
worked in earlier branches.
2012-11-05 13:36:16 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
04f28bdb84 Fix ALTER EXTENSION / SET SCHEMA
In its original conception, it was leaving some objects into the old
schema, but without their proper pg_depend entries; this meant that the
old schema could be dropped, causing future pg_dump calls to fail on the
affected database.  This was originally reported by Jeff Frost as #6704;
there have been other complaints elsewhere that can probably be traced
to this bug.

To fix, be more consistent about altering a table's subsidiary objects
along the table itself; this requires some restructuring in how tables
are relocated when altering an extension -- hence the new
AlterTableNamespaceInternal routine which encapsulates it for both the
ALTER TABLE and the ALTER EXTENSION cases.

There was another bug lurking here, which was unmasked after fixing the
previous one: certain objects would be reached twice via the dependency
graph, and the second attempt to move them would cause the entire
operation to fail.  Per discussion, it seems the best fix for this is to
do more careful tracking of objects already moved: we now maintain a
list of moved objects, to avoid attempting to do it twice for the same
object.

Authors: Alvaro Herrera, Dimitri Fontaine
Reviewed by Tom Lane
2012-10-31 10:52:55 -03:00
Kevin Grittner
6868ed7491 Throw error if expiring tuple is again updated or deleted.
This prevents surprising behavior when a FOR EACH ROW trigger
BEFORE UPDATE or BEFORE DELETE directly or indirectly updates or
deletes the the old row.  Prior to this patch the requested action
on the row could be silently ignored while all triggered actions
based on the occurence of the requested action could be committed.
One example of how this could happen is if the BEFORE DELETE
trigger for a "parent" row deleted "children" which had trigger
functions to update summary or status data on the parent.

This also prevents similar surprising problems if the query has a
volatile function which updates a target row while it is already
being updated.

There are related issues present in FOR UPDATE cursors and READ
COMMITTED queries which are not handled by this patch.  These
issues need further evalution to determine what change, if any, is
needed.

Where the new error messages are generated, in most cases the best
fix will be to move code from the BEFORE trigger to an AFTER
trigger.  Where this is not feasible, the trigger can avoid the
error by re-issuing the triggering statement and returning NULL.

Documentation changes will be submitted in a separate patch.

Kevin Grittner and Tom Lane with input from Florian Pflug and
Robert Haas, based on problems encountered during conversion of
Wisconsin Circuit Court trigger logic to plpgsql triggers.
2012-10-26 14:55:36 -05:00
Tom Lane
a4e8680a6c When converting a table to a view, remove its system columns.
Views should not have any pg_attribute entries for system columns.
However, we forgot to remove such entries when converting a table to a
view.  This could lead to crashes later on, if someone attempted to
reference such a column, as reported by Kohei KaiGai.

Patch in HEAD only.  This bug has been there forever, but in the back
branches we will have to defend against existing mis-converted views,
so it doesn't seem worthwhile to change the conversion code too.
2012-10-24 13:39:37 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
f4c4335a4a Add context info to OAT_POST_CREATE security hook
... and have sepgsql use it to determine whether to check permissions
during certain operations.  Indexes that are being created as a result
of REINDEX, for instance, do not need to have their permissions checked;
they were already checked when the index was created.

Author: KaiGai Kohei, slightly revised by me
2012-10-23 18:24:24 -03:00
Tom Lane
dc5aeca168 Remove unnecessary "head" arguments from some dlist/slist functions.
dlist_delete, dlist_insert_after, dlist_insert_before, slist_insert_after
do not need access to the list header, and indeed insisting on that negates
one of the main advantages of a doubly-linked list.

In consequence, revert addition of "cache_bucket" field to CatCTup.
2012-10-18 19:04:20 -04:00
Tom Lane
8f8d746478 Code review for inline-list patch.
Make foreach macros less syntactically dangerous, and fix some typos in
evidently-never-tested ones.  Add missing slist_next_node and
slist_head_node functions.  Fix broken dlist_check code.  Assorted comment
improvements.
2012-10-18 16:47:07 -04:00
Tom Lane
72a4231f0c Fix planning of non-strict equivalence clauses above outer joins.
If a potential equivalence clause references a variable from the nullable
side of an outer join, the planner needs to take care that derived clauses
are not pushed to below the outer join; else they may use the wrong value
for the variable.  (The problem arises only with non-strict clauses, since
if an upper clause can be proven strict then the outer join will get
simplified to a plain join.)  The planner attempted to prevent this type
of error by checking that potential equivalence clauses aren't
outerjoin-delayed as a whole, but actually we have to check each side
separately, since the two sides of the clause will get moved around
separately if it's treated as an equivalence.  Bugs of this type can be
demonstrated as far back as 7.4, even though releases before 8.3 had only
a very ad-hoc notion of equivalence clauses.

In addition, we neglected to account for the possibility that such clauses
might have nonempty nullable_relids even when not outerjoin-delayed; so the
equivalence-class machinery lacked logic to compute correct nullable_relids
values for clauses it constructs.  This oversight was harmless before 9.2
because we were only using RestrictInfo.nullable_relids for OR clauses;
but as of 9.2 it could result in pushing constructed equivalence clauses
to incorrect places.  (This accounts for bug #7604 from Bill MacArthur.)

Fix the first problem by adding a new test check_equivalence_delay() in
distribute_qual_to_rels, and fix the second one by adding code in
equivclass.c and called functions to set correct nullable_relids for
generated clauses.  Although I believe the second part of this is not
currently necessary before 9.2, I chose to back-patch it anyway, partly to
keep the logic similar across branches and partly because it seems possible
we might find other reasons why we need valid values of nullable_relids in
the older branches.

Add regression tests illustrating these problems.  In 9.0 and up, also
add test cases checking that we can push constants through outer joins,
since we've broken that optimization before and I nearly broke it again
with an overly simplistic patch for this problem.
2012-10-18 12:30:10 -04:00
Tom Lane
ff3f9c8de5 Close un-owned SMgrRelations at transaction end.
If an SMgrRelation is not "owned" by a relcache entry, don't allow it to
live past transaction end.  This design allows the same SMgrRelation to be
used for blind writes of multiple blocks during a transaction, but ensures
that we don't hold onto such an SMgrRelation indefinitely.  Because an
SMgrRelation typically corresponds to open file descriptors at the fd.c
level, leaving it open when there's no corresponding relcache entry can
mean that we prevent the kernel from reclaiming deleted disk space.
(While CacheInvalidateSmgr messages usually fix that, there are cases
where they're not issued, such as DROP DATABASE.  We might want to add
some more sinval messaging for that, but I'd be inclined to keep this
type of logic anyway, since allowing VFDs to accumulate indefinitely
for blind-written relations doesn't seem like a good idea.)

This code replaces a previous attempt towards the same goal that proved
to be unreliable.  Back-patch to 9.1 where the previous patch was added.
2012-10-17 12:38:21 -04:00
Tom Lane
9bacf0e373 Revert "Use "transient" files for blind writes, take 2".
This reverts commit fba105b109.
That approach had problems with the smgr-level state not tracking what
we really want to happen, and with the VFD-level state not tracking the
smgr-level state very well either.  In consequence, it was still possible
to hold kernel file descriptors open for long-gone tables (as in recent
report from Tore Halset), and yet there were also cases of FDs being closed
undesirably soon.  A replacement implementation will follow.
2012-10-17 12:37:08 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
a66ee69add Embedded list interface
Provide a common implementation of embedded singly-linked and
doubly-linked lists.  "Embedded" in the sense that the nodes'
next/previous pointers exist within some larger struct; this design
choice reduces memory allocation overhead.

Most of the implementation uses inlineable functions (where supported),
for performance.

Some existing uses of both types of lists have been converted to the new
code, for demonstration purposes.  Other uses can (and probably will) be
converted in the future.  Since dllist.c is unused after this conversion,
it has been removed.

Author: Andres Freund
Some tweaks by me
Reviewed by Tom Lane, Peter Geoghegan
2012-10-17 11:31:20 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
ff6c78c480 Remove comment that is no longer true.
AddToDataDirLockFile() supports out-of-order updates of the lockfile
nowadays.
2012-10-15 11:03:39 +03:00
Tom Lane
e81e8f9342 Split up process latch initialization for more-fail-soft behavior.
In the previous coding, new backend processes would attempt to create their
self-pipe during the OwnLatch call in InitProcess.  However, pipe creation
could fail if the kernel is short of resources; and the system does not
recover gracefully from a FATAL error right there, since we have armed the
dead-man switch for this process and not yet set up the on_shmem_exit
callback that would disarm it.  The postmaster then forces an unnecessary
database-wide crash and restart, as reported by Sean Chittenden.

There are various ways we could rearrange the code to fix this, but the
simplest and sanest seems to be to split out creation of the self-pipe into
a new function InitializeLatchSupport, which must be called from a place
where failure is allowed.  For most processes that gets called in
InitProcess or InitAuxiliaryProcess, but processes that don't call either
but still use latches need their own calls.

Back-patch to 9.1, which has only a part of the latch logic that 9.2 and
HEAD have, but nonetheless includes this bug.
2012-10-14 22:59:56 -04:00
Tom Lane
a29f7ed554 Get rid of COERCE_DONTCARE.
We don't need this hack any more.
2012-10-12 13:35:00 -04:00
Tom Lane
71e58dcfb9 Make equal() ignore CoercionForm fields for better planning with casts.
This change ensures that the planner will see implicit and explicit casts
as equivalent for all purposes, except in the minority of cases where
there's actually a semantic difference (as reflected by having a 3-argument
cast function).  In particular, this fixes cases where the EquivalenceClass
machinery failed to consider two references to a varchar column as
equivalent if one was implicitly cast to text but the other was explicitly
cast to text, as seen in bug #7598 from Vaclav Juza.  We have had similar
bugs before in other parts of the planner, so I think it's time to fix this
problem at the core instead of continuing to band-aid around it.

Remove set_coercionform_dontcare(), which represents the band-aid
previously in use for allowing matching of index and constraint expressions
with inconsistent cast labeling.  (We can probably get rid of
COERCE_DONTCARE altogether, but I don't think removing that enum value in
back branches would be wise; it's possible there's third party code
referring to it.)

Back-patch to 9.2.  We could go back further, and might want to once this
has been tested more; but for the moment I won't risk destabilizing plan
choices in long-since-stable branches.
2012-10-12 12:11:22 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
6f60fdd701 Improve replication connection timeouts.
Rename replication_timeout to wal_sender_timeout, and add a new setting
called wal_receiver_timeout that does the same at the walreceiver side.
There was previously no timeout in walreceiver, so if the network went down,
for example, the walreceiver could take a long time to notice that the
connection was lost. Now with the two settings, both sides of a replication
connection will detect a broken connection similarly.

It is no longer necessary to manually set wal_receiver_status_interval to
a value smaller than the timeout. Both wal sender and receiver now
automatically send a "ping" message if more than 1/2 of the configured
timeout has elapsed, and it hasn't received any messages from the other end.

Amit Kapila, heavily edited by me.
2012-10-11 17:48:08 +03:00
Tom Lane
a80889a735 Set procost to 10 for each of the pg_foo_is_visible() functions.
The idea here is to make sure the planner will evaluate these functions
last not first among the filter conditions in psql pattern search and
tab-completion queries.  We've discussed this several times, and there
was consensus to do it back in August, but we didn't want to do it just
before a release.  Now seems like a safer time.

No catversion bump, since this catalog change doesn't create a backend
incompatibility nor any regression test result changes.
2012-10-10 12:19:25 -04:00
Tom Lane
7e0cce0265 Remove unnecessary overhead in backend's large-object operations.
Do read/write permissions checks at most once per large object descriptor,
not once per lo_read or lo_write call as before.  The repeated tests were
quite useless in the read case since the snapshot-based tests were
guaranteed to produce the same answer every time.  In the write case,
the extra tests could in principle detect revocation of write privileges
after a series of writes has started --- but there's a race condition there
anyway, since we'd check privileges before performing and certainly before
committing the write.  So there's no real advantage to checking every
single time, and we might as well redefine it as "only check the first
time".

On the same reasoning, remove the LargeObjectExists checks in inv_write
and inv_truncate.  We already checked existence when the descriptor was
opened, and checking again doesn't provide any real increment of safety
that would justify the cost.
2012-10-09 16:38:00 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
f46baf601d Rename USE_INLINE to PG_USE_INLINE
The former name was too likely to conflict with symbols from external
headers; and, as seen in recent buildfarm failures in member spoonbill,
it has now happened at least in plpython.
2012-10-09 11:17:33 -03:00
Tom Lane
26fe56481c Code review for 64-bit-large-object patch.
Fix broken-on-bigendian-machines byte-swapping functions, add missed update
of alternate regression expected file, improve error reporting, remove some
unnecessary code, sync testlo64.c with current testlo.c (it seems to have
been cloned from a very old copy of that), assorted cosmetic improvements.
2012-10-08 18:24:32 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
976fa10d20 Add support for easily declaring static inline functions
We already had those, but they forced modules to spell out the function
bodies twice.  Eliminate some duplicates we had already grown.

Extracted from a somewhat larger patch from Andres Freund.
2012-10-08 16:28:01 -03:00
Robert Haas
08c8058ce9 Add #define for UUIDOID.
Phil Sorber and Thom Brown. Reviewed by Albe Laurenz.
2012-10-08 10:15:15 -04:00
Tom Lane
95d035e66d Autoconfiscate selection of 64-bit int type for 64-bit large object API.
Get rid of the fundamentally indefensible assumption that "long long int"
exists and is exactly 64 bits wide on every platform Postgres runs on.
Instead let the configure script select the type to use for "pg_int64".

This is a bit of a pain in the rear since we do not want to pollute client
namespace with all the random symbols that pg_config.h defines; instead
we have to create a separate generated header file, "pg_config_ext.h".
But now that the infrastructure is there, we might have the ability to
add some other stuff that's long been wanting in this area.
2012-10-07 21:52:43 -04:00
Tatsuo Ishii
7e2f8ed2b0 Fix compiling errors on Windows platform. Fix wrong usage of
INT64CONST macro. Fix lo_hton64 and lo_ntoh64 not to use int32_t and
uint32_t.
2012-10-07 23:30:31 +09:00
Tatsuo Ishii
b51a65f5bf Bump up catalog vesion due to 64-bit large object API functions
addition.
2012-10-07 09:36:20 +09:00
Tatsuo Ishii
461ef73f09 Add API for 64-bit large object access. Now users can access up to
4TB large objects (standard 8KB BLCKSZ case).  For this purpose new
libpq API lo_lseek64, lo_tell64 and lo_truncate64 are added.  Also
corresponding new backend functions lo_lseek64, lo_tell64 and
lo_truncate64 are added. inv_api.c is changed to handle 64-bit
offsets.

Patch contributed by Nozomi Anzai (backend side) and Yugo Nagata
(frontend side, docs, regression tests and example program). Reviewed
by Kohei Kaigai. Committed by Tatsuo Ishii with minor editings.
2012-10-07 08:36:48 +09:00
Heikki Linnakangas
fd5942c18f Use the regular main processing loop also in walsenders.
The regular backend's main loop handles signal handling and error recovery
better than the current WAL sender command loop does. For example, if the
client hangs and a SIGTERM is received before starting streaming, the
walsender will now terminate immediately, rather than hang until the
connection times out.
2012-10-05 17:21:12 +03:00
Tom Lane
fb34e94d21 Support CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS.
Per discussion, schema-element subcommands are not allowed together with
this option, since it's not very obvious what should happen to the element
objects.

Fabrízio de Royes Mello
2012-10-03 19:47:11 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
994c36e01d refactor ALTER some-obj SET OWNER implementation
Remove duplicate implementation of catalog munging and miscellaneous
privilege and consistency checks.  Instead rely on already existing data
in objectaddress.c to do the work.

Author: KaiGai Kohei
Tweaked by me
Reviewed by Robert Haas
2012-10-03 18:07:46 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
2164f9a125 Refactor "ALTER some-obj SET SCHEMA" implementation
Instead of having each object type implement the catalog munging
independently, centralize knowledge about how to do it and expand the
existing table in objectaddress.c with enough data about each object
type to support this operation.

Author: KaiGai Kohei
Tweaks by me
Reviewed by Robert Haas
2012-10-02 18:13:54 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
d5497b95f3 Split off functions related to timeline history files and XLOG archiving.
This is just refactoring, to make the functions accessible outside xlog.c.
A followup patch will make use of that, to allow fetching timeline history
files over streaming replication.
2012-10-02 13:37:19 +03:00
Tom Lane
0d0aa5d291 Provide some static-assertion functionality on all compilers.
On reflection (especially after noticing how many buildfarm critters have
__builtin_types_compatible_p but not _Static_assert), it seems like we
ought to try a bit harder to make these macros do something everywhere.
The initial cut at it would have been no help to code that is compiled only
on platforms without _Static_assert, for instance; and in any case not all
our contributors do their initial coding on the latest gcc version.

Some googling about static assertions turns up quite a bit of prior art
for making it work in compilers that lack _Static_assert.  The method
that seems closest to our needs involves defining a struct with a bit-field
that has negative width if the assertion condition fails.  There seems no
reliable way to get the error message string to be output, but throwing a
compile error with a confusing message is better than missing the problem
altogether.

In the same spirit, if we don't have __builtin_types_compatible_p we can at
least insist that the variable have the same width as the type.  This won't
catch errors such as "wrong pointer type", but it's far better than
nothing.

In addition to changing the macro definitions, adjust a
compile-time-constant Assert in contrib/hstore to use StaticAssertStmt,
so we can get some buildfarm coverage on whether that macro behaves sanely
or not.  There's surely more places that could be converted, but this is
the first one I came across.
2012-09-30 22:46:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
ea473fb2de Add infrastructure for compile-time assertions about variable types.
Currently, the macros only work with fairly recent gcc versions, but there
is room to expand them to other compilers that have comparable features.

Heavily revised and autoconfiscated version of a patch by Andres Freund.
2012-09-30 14:38:31 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
6e9876dc32 Remove checks for now long outdated compilers. 2012-09-28 19:43:50 -04:00
Tom Lane
70bc583319 Fix btmarkpos/btrestrpos to handle array keys.
This fixes another error in commit 9e8da0f757.
I neglected to make the mark/restore functionality save and restore the
current set of array key values, which led to strange behavior if an
IndexScan with ScalarArrayOpExpr quals was used as the inner side of a
mergejoin.  Per bug #7570 from Melese Tesfaye.
2012-09-27 17:01:02 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
2a0c81a12c Add support for include_dir in config file.
This allows easily splitting configuration into many files, deployed in a
directory.

Magnus Hagander, Greg Smith, Selena Deckelmann, reviewed by Noah Misch.
2012-09-24 18:07:53 +03:00
Tom Lane
31510194cc Minor corrections for ALTER TYPE ADD VALUE IF NOT EXISTS patch.
Produce a NOTICE when the label already exists, for consistency with other
CREATE IF NOT EXISTS commands.  Also, fix the code so it produces something
more user-friendly than an index violation when the label already exists.
This not incidentally enables making a regression test that the previous
patch didn't make for fear of exposing an unpredictable OID in the results.
Also some wordsmithing on the documentation.
2012-09-22 18:35:22 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
6d12b68cd7 Allow IF NOT EXISTS when add a new enum label.
If the label is already in the enum the statement becomes a no-op.
This will reduce the pain that comes from our not allowing this
operation inside a transaction block.

Andrew Dunstan, reviewed by Tom Lane and Magnus Hagander.
2012-09-22 12:53:31 -04:00
Tom Lane
11e131854f Improve ruleutils.c's heuristics for dealing with rangetable aliases.
The previous scheme had bugs in some corner cases involving tables that had
been renamed since a view was made.  This could result in dumped views that
failed to reload or reloaded incorrectly, as seen in bug #7553 from Lloyd
Albin, as well as in some pgsql-hackers discussion back in January.  Also,
its behavior for printing EXPLAIN plans was sometimes confusing because of
willingness to use the same alias for multiple RTEs (it was Ashutosh
Bapat's complaint about that aspect that started the January thread).

To fix, ensure that each RTE in the query has a unique unqualified alias,
by modifying the alias if necessary (we add "_" and digits as needed to
create a non-conflicting name).  Then we can just print its variables with
that alias, avoiding the confusing and bug-prone scheme of sometimes
schema-qualifying variable names.  In EXPLAIN, it proves to be expedient to
take the further step of only assigning such aliases to RTEs that are
actually referenced in the query, since the planner has a habit of
generating extra RTEs with the same alias in situations such as
inheritance-tree expansion.

Although this fixes a bug of very long standing, I'm hesitant to back-patch
such a noticeable behavioral change.  My experiments while creating a
regression test convinced me that actually incorrect output (as opposed to
confusing output) occurs only in very narrow cases, which is backed up by
the lack of previous complaints from the field.  So we may be better off
living with it in released branches; and in any case it'd be smart to let
this ripen awhile in HEAD before we consider back-patching it.
2012-09-21 19:03:10 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
7c45e3a3c6 Parse pg_ident.conf when it's loaded, keeping it in memory in parsed format.
Similar changes were done to pg_hba.conf earlier already, this commit makes
pg_ident.conf to behave the same as pg_hba.conf.

This has two user-visible effects. First, if pg_ident.conf contains multiple
errors, the whole file is parsed at postmaster startup time and all the
errors are immediately reported. Before this patch, the file was parsed and
the errors were reported only when someone tries to connect using an
authentication method that uses the file, and the parsing stopped on first
error. Second, if you SIGHUP to reload the config files, and the new
pg_ident.conf file contains an error, the error is logged but the old file
stays in effect.

Also, regular expressions in pg_ident.conf are now compiled only once when
the file is loaded, rather than every time the a user is authenticated. That
should speed up authentication if you have a lot of regexps in the file.

Amit Kapila
2012-09-21 17:54:39 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera
22c734fcdb Remove execdesc.h inclusion from tcopprot.h 2012-09-20 11:07:59 -03:00
Tom Lane
9a93e71008 Fix a couple other leftover uses of 'conisonly' terminology. 2012-09-12 15:12:24 -04:00
Tom Lane
46c508fbcf Fix PARAM_EXEC assignment mechanism to be safe in the presence of WITH.
The planner previously assumed that parameter Vars having the same absolute
query level, varno, and varattno could safely be assigned the same runtime
PARAM_EXEC slot, even though they might be different Vars appearing in
different subqueries.  This was (probably) safe before the introduction of
CTEs, but the lazy-evalution mechanism used for CTEs means that a CTE can
be executed during execution of some other subquery, causing the lifespan
of Params at the same syntactic nesting level as the CTE to overlap with
use of the same slots inside the CTE.  In 9.1 we created additional hazards
by using the same parameter-assignment technology for nestloop inner scan
parameters, but it was broken before that, as illustrated by the added
regression test.

To fix, restructure the planner's management of PlannerParamItems so that
items having different semantic lifespans are kept rigorously separated.
This will probably result in complex queries using more runtime PARAM_EXEC
slots than before, but the slots are cheap enough that this hardly matters.
Also, stop generating PlannerParamItems containing Params for subquery
outputs: all we really need to do is reserve the PARAM_EXEC slot number,
and that now only takes incrementing a counter.  The planning code is
simpler and probably faster than before, as well as being more correct.

Per report from Vik Reykja.

These changes will mostly also need to be made in the back branches, but
I'm going to hold off on that until after 9.2.0 wraps.
2012-09-05 12:55:01 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
e20a90e188 Trim spgist_private.h inclusion
It doesn't really need rel.h; relcache.h is enough.
2012-09-05 11:06:51 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
c4c227477b Fix bugs in cascading replication with recovery_target_timeline='latest'
The cascading replication code assumed that the current RecoveryTargetTLI
never changes, but that's not true with recovery_target_timeline='latest'.
The obvious upshot of that is that RecoveryTargetTLI in shared memory needs
to be protected by a lock. A less obvious consequence is that when a
cascading standby is connected, and the standby switches to a new target
timeline after scanning the archive, it will continue to stream WAL to the
cascading standby, but from a wrong file, ie. the file of the previous
timeline. For example, if the standby is currently streaming from the middle
of file 000000010000000000000005, and the timeline changes, the standby
will continue to stream from that file. However, the WAL on the new
timeline is in file 000000020000000000000005, so the standby sends garbage
from 000000010000000000000005 to the cascading standby, instead of the
correct WAL from file 000000020000000000000005.

This also fixes a related bug where a partial WAL segment is restored from
the archive and streamed to a cascading standby. The code assumed that when
a WAL segment is copied from the archive, it can immediately be fully
streamed to a cascading standby. However, if the segment is only partially
filled, ie. has the right size, but only N first bytes contain valid WAL,
that's not safe. That can happen if a partial WAL segment is manually copied
to the archive, or if a partial WAL segment is archived because a server is
started up on a new timeline within that segment. The cascading standby will
get confused if the WAL it received is not valid, and will get stuck until
it's restarted. This patch fixes that problem by not allowing WAL restored
from the archive to be streamed to a cascading standby until it's been
replayed, and thus validated.
2012-09-04 19:33:21 -07:00