(table or index) before trying to open its relcache entry. This fixes
race conditions in which someone else commits a change to the relation's
catalog entries while we are in process of doing relcache load. Problems
of that ilk have been reported sporadically for years, but it was not
really practical to fix until recently --- for instance, the recent
addition of WAL-log support for in-place updates helped.
Along the way, remove pg_am.amconcurrent: all AMs are now expected to support
concurrent update.
created in the bootstrap phase proper, rather than added after-the-fact
by initdb. This is cleaner than before because it allows us to retire the
undocumented ALTER TABLE ... CREATE TOAST TABLE command, but the real reason
I'm doing it is so that toast tables of shared catalogs will now have
predetermined OIDs. This will allow a reasonably clean solution to the
problem of locking tables before we load their relcache entries, to appear
in a forthcoming patch.
vacuums. This allows a OLTP-like system with big tables to continue
regular vacuuming on small-but-frequently-updated tables while the
big tables are being vacuumed.
Original patch from Hannu Krossing, rewritten by Tom Lane and updated
by me.
because they are used for testing the return value from system().
(WIN32 doesn't overlay the return code with other failure conditions
like Unix does, so they are just simple macros.)
Fix regression checks to properly handle diff failures on Win32 using
the new macros.
it's handled just about like timezone; in particular, don't try
to read anything during InitializeGUCOptions. Should solve current
startup failure on Windows, and avoid wasted cycles if a nondefault
setting is specified in postgresql.conf too. Possibly we need to
think about a more general solution for handling 'expensive to set'
GUC options.
the float8 versions of the aggregates, which is all that the standard requires.
Sergey's original patch also provided versions using numeric arithmetic,
but given the size and slowness of the code, I doubt we ought to include
those in core.
the opportunity to treat COUNT(*) as a zero-argument aggregate instead
of the old hack that equated it to COUNT(1); this is materially cleaner
(no more weird ANYOID cases) and ought to be at least a tiny bit faster.
Original patch by Sergey Koposov; review, documentation, simple regression
tests, pg_dump and psql support by moi.
eliminate unnecessary code, force initdb because stored rules change
(limit nodes are now supposed to be int8 not int4 expressions).
Update comments and error messages, which still all said 'integer'.
not "unset". An "unset" state doesn't really exist; all variables behave
like an empty string value if the string being pointed to has not been
initialized.
When we are about to split an index page to do an insertion, first look
to see if any entries marked LP_DELETE exist on the page, and if so remove
them to try to make enough space for the desired insert. This should reduce
index bloat in heavily-updated tables, although of course you still need
VACUUM eventually to clean up the heap.
Junji Teramoto
configuration files that can be altered by a DBA. The australian_timezones
GUC setting disappears, replaced by a timezone_abbreviations setting (set this
to 'Australia' to get the effect of australian_timezones). The list of zone
names defined by default has undergone a bit of cleanup, too. Documentation
still needs some work --- in particular, should we fix Table B-4, or just get
rid of it? Joachim Wieland, with some editorializing by moi.
thinking that indexes of different sizes are equally attractive. Per
gripe from Jim Nasby. (I remain unconvinced that there's such a problem
in existing releases, but CVS HEAD definitely has got a problem because
of its new count-only-leaf-pages approach to indexscan costing.)
BufferAlloc tries to insert a new mapping entry before deleting the old one
for a buffer, we have a transient need for more than NBuffers entries ---
one more in 8.1, and as many as NUM_BUFFER_PARTITIONS more in CVS HEAD.
In theory this could lead to an "out of shared memory" failure if shmem
had already been completely claimed by the time the extra entries were
needed.
to the low-order bits of the entry hash value. Also make some incidental
cleanups in the dynahash API, such as not exporting the hash header
structs to the world.
effects in a nestloop inner indexscan, I had only dealt with plain index
scans and the index portion of bitmap scans. But there will be cache
benefits for the heap accesses of bitmap scans too, so fix
cost_bitmap_heap_scan() to account for that.
-built-in mechanism through the -MP flag. Adjust the file extensions to
look more like Automake practice. This frees up the .d suffix for use by
DTrace.