Commit Graph

3033 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Dunstan 0ad1a81632 Do not escape a unicode sequence when escaping JSON text.
Previously, any backslash in text being escaped for JSON was doubled so
that the result was still valid JSON. However, this led to some perverse
results in the case of Unicode sequences, These are now detected and the
initial backslash is no longer escaped. All other backslashes are
still escaped. No validity check is performed, all that is looked for is
\uXXXX where X is a hexidecimal digit.

This is a change from the 9.2 and 9.3 behaviour as noted in the Release
notes.

Per complaint from Teodor Sigaev.
2014-06-03 16:11:31 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan f30015b6d7 Output timestamps in ISO 8601 format when rendering JSON.
Many JSON processors require timestamp strings in ISO 8601 format in
order to convert the strings. When converting a timestamp, with or
without timezone, to a JSON datum we therefore now use such a format
rather than the type's default text output, in functions such as
to_json().

This is a change in behaviour from 9.2 and 9.3, as noted in the release
notes.
2014-06-03 13:56:53 -04:00
Andres Freund 5eebb8d954 Use unaligned output in another regression test query to reduce diff noise.
Use the unaligned/no rowcount output mode in a regression tests that
shows all built-in leakproof functions. Currently a new leakproof
function will often change the alignment of all existing functions,
making it hard to see the actual difference and creating unnecessary
patch conflicts.

Noticed while looking over a patch introducing new leakproof functions.
2014-06-03 12:19:18 +02:00
Tom Lane 71ed8b3ca7 Revert "Fix bogus %name-prefix option syntax in all our Bison files."
This reverts commit 45b7abe59e.

It turns out that the %name-prefix syntax without "=" does not work
at all in pre-2.4 Bison.  We are not prepared to make such a large
jump in minimum required Bison version just to suppress a warning
message in a version hardly any developers are using yet.
When 3.0 gets more popular, we'll figure out a way to deal with this.
In the meantime, BISONFLAGS=-Wno-deprecated is recommendable for
anyone using 3.0 who doesn't want to see the warning.
2014-05-28 19:21:01 -04:00
Tom Lane 45b7abe59e Fix bogus %name-prefix option syntax in all our Bison files.
%name-prefix doesn't use an "=" sign according to the Bison docs, but it
silently accepted one anyway, until Bison 3.0.  This was originally a
typo of mine in commit 012abebab1, and we
seem to have slavishly copied the error into all the other grammar files.

Per report from Vik Fearing; analysis by Peter Eisentraut.

Back-patch to all active branches, since somebody might try to build
a back branch with up-to-date tools.
2014-05-28 15:41:53 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 8f9b9590d7 Handle duplicate XIDs in txid_snapshot.
The proc array can contain duplicate XIDs, when a transaction is just being
prepared for two-phase commit. To cope, remove any duplicates in
txid_current_snapshot(). Also ignore duplicates in the input functions, so
that if e.g. you have an old pg_dump file that already contains duplicates,
it will be accepted.

Report and fix by Jan Wieck. Backpatch to all supported versions.
2014-05-15 18:29:20 +03:00
Tom Lane 66b737cd9a Be more wary in choice of timezone names to test make_timestamptz with.
America/Metlakatla hasn't been in the IANA database all that long, so
some installations might not have it.  It does seem worthwhile to test
with a fractional-minute GMT offset, but we can get that from almost
any pre-1900 date; I chose Europe/Paris, whose LMT offset from Greenwich
should be pretty darn well established.

Also, assuming that Mars/Mons_Olympus will never be in the IANA database
seems less than future-proof, so let's use a more fanciful location for
the bad-zone-name check.

Per complaint from Christoph Berg.
2014-05-12 20:21:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 12e611d43e Rename jsonb_hash_ops to jsonb_path_ops.
There's no longer much pressure to switch the default GIN opclass for
jsonb, but there was still some unhappiness with the name "jsonb_hash_ops",
since hashing is no longer a distinguishing property of that opclass,
and anyway it seems like a relatively minor detail.  At the suggestion of
Heikki Linnakangas, we'll use "jsonb_path_ops" instead; that captures the
important characteristic that each index entry depends on the entire path
from the document root to the indexed value.

Also add a user-facing explanation of the implementation properties of
these two opclasses.
2014-05-11 12:06:04 -04:00
Tom Lane 46dddf7673 Improve key representation for GIN jsonb_ops, and fix existence-search bug.
Change the key representation so that values that would exceed 127 bytes
are hashed into short strings, and so that the original JSON datatype of
each value is recorded in the index.  The hashing rule eliminates the major
objection to having this opclass be the default for jsonb, namely that it
could fail for plausible input data (due to GIN's restrictions on maximum
key length).  Preserving datatype information doesn't really buy us much
right now, but it requires no extra space compared to the previous way,
and it might be useful later.

Also, change the consistency-checking functions to request recheck for
exists (jsonb ? text) and related operators.  The original analysis that
this is an exactly checkable query was incorrect, since the index does
not preserve information about whether a key appears at top level in
the indexed JSON object.  Add a test case demonstrating the problem.

Make some other, mostly cosmetic improvements to the code in jsonb_gin.c
as well.

catversion bump due to on-disk data format change in jsonb_ops indexes.
2014-05-09 08:41:26 -04:00
Tom Lane a16d421ca4 Revert "Auto-tune effective_cache size to be 4x shared buffers"
This reverts commit ee1e5662d8, as well as
a remarkably large number of followup commits, which were mostly concerned
with the fact that the implementation didn't work terribly well.  It still
doesn't: we probably need some rather basic work in the GUC infrastructure
if we want to fully support GUCs whose default varies depending on the
value of another GUC.  Meanwhile, it also emerged that there wasn't really
consensus in favor of the definition the patch tried to implement (ie,
effective_cache_size should default to 4 times shared_buffers).  So whack
it all back to where it was.  In a followup commit, I'll do what was
recently agreed to, which is to simply change the default to a higher
value.
2014-05-08 20:49:38 -04:00
Tom Lane 04e5025be8 Fix failure to set ActiveSnapshot while rewinding a cursor.
ActiveSnapshot needs to be set when we call ExecutorRewind because some
plan node types may execute user-defined functions during their ReScan
calls (nodeLimit.c does so, at least).  The wisdom of that is somewhat
debatable, perhaps, but for now the simplest fix is to make sure the
required context is valid.  Failure to do this typically led to a
null-pointer-dereference core dump, though it's possible that in more
complex cases a function could be executed with the wrong snapshot
leading to very subtle misbehavior.

Per report from Leif Jensen.  It's been broken for a long time, so
back-patch to all active branches.
2014-05-07 14:25:11 -04:00
Jeff Davis 348aa75a67 Fix interval test, which was broken for floating-point timestamps.
Commit 4318daecc9 introduced a test that
couldn't be made consistent between integer and floating-point
timestamps.

It was designed to test the longest possible interval output length,
so removing four zeros from the number of hours, as this patch does,
is not ideal. But the test still has some utility for its original
purpose, and there aren't a lot of other good options.

Noah Misch suggested a different approach where we test that the
output either matches what we expect from integer timestamps or what
we expect from floating-point timestamps. That seemed to obscure an
otherwise simple test, however.

Reviewed by Tom Lane and Noah Misch.
2014-05-06 19:53:59 -07:00
Bruce Momjian 0a78320057 pgindent run for 9.4
This includes removing tabs after periods in C comments, which was
applied to back branches, so this change should not effect backpatching.
2014-05-06 12:12:18 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas a692ee5870 Replace SYSTEMQUOTEs with Windows-specific wrapper functions.
It's easy to forget using SYSTEMQUOTEs when constructing command strings
for system() or popen(). Even if we fix all the places missing it now, it is
bound to be forgotten again in the future. Introduce wrapper functions that
do the the extra quoting for you, and get rid of SYSTEMQUOTEs in all the
callers.

We previosly used SYSTEMQUOTEs in all the hard-coded command strings, and
this doesn't change the behavior of those. But user-supplied commands, like
archive_command, restore_command, COPY TO/FROM PROGRAM calls, as well as
pgbench's \shell, will now gain an extra pair of quotes. That is desirable,
but if you have existing scripts or config files that include an extra
pair of quotes, those might need to be adjusted.

Reviewed by Amit Kapila and Tom Lane
2014-05-05 16:07:40 +03:00
Tom Lane 91e16b9806 Fix yet another corner case in dumping rules/views with USING clauses.
ruleutils.c tries to cope with additions/deletions/renamings of columns in
tables referenced by views, by means of adding machine-generated aliases to
the printed form of a view when needed to preserve the original semantics.
A recent blog post by Marko Tiikkaja pointed out a case I'd missed though:
if one input of a join with USING is itself a join, there is nothing to
stop the user from adding a column of the same name as the USING column to
whichever side of the sub-join didn't provide the USING column.  And then
there'll be an error when the view is re-parsed, since now the sub-join
exposes two columns matching the USING specification.  We were catching a
lot of related cases, but not this one, so add some logic to cope with it.

Back-patch to 9.3, which is the first release that makes any serious
attempt to cope with such cases (cf commit 2ffa740be and follow-ons).
2014-05-01 20:22:37 -04:00
Tom Lane 3f8c8e3c61 Fix failure to detoast fields in composite elements of structured types.
If we have an array of records stored on disk, the individual record fields
cannot contain out-of-line TOAST pointers: the tuptoaster.c mechanisms are
only prepared to deal with TOAST pointers appearing in top-level fields of
a stored row.  The same applies for ranges over composite types, nested
composites, etc.  However, the existing code only took care of expanding
sub-field TOAST pointers for the case of nested composites, not for other
structured types containing composites.  For example, given a command such
as

UPDATE tab SET arraycol = ARRAY[(ROW(x,42)::mycompositetype] ...

where x is a direct reference to a field of an on-disk tuple, if that field
is long enough to be toasted out-of-line then the TOAST pointer would be
inserted as-is into the array column.  If the source record for x is later
deleted, the array field value would become a dangling pointer, leading
to errors along the line of "missing chunk number 0 for toast value ..."
when the value is referenced.  A reproducible test case for this was
provided by Jan Pecek, but it seems likely that some of the "missing chunk
number" reports we've heard in the past were caused by similar issues.

Code-wise, the problem is that PG_DETOAST_DATUM() is not adequate to
produce a self-contained Datum value if the Datum is of composite type.
Seen in this light, the problem is not just confined to arrays and ranges,
but could also affect some other places where detoasting is done in that
way, for example form_index_tuple().

I tried teaching the array code to apply toast_flatten_tuple_attribute()
along with PG_DETOAST_DATUM() when the array element type is composite,
but this was messy and imposed extra cache lookup costs whether or not any
TOAST pointers were present, indeed sometimes when the array element type
isn't even composite (since sometimes it takes a typcache lookup to find
that out).  The idea of extending that approach to all the places that
currently use PG_DETOAST_DATUM() wasn't attractive at all.

This patch instead solves the problem by decreeing that composite Datum
values must not contain any out-of-line TOAST pointers in the first place;
that is, we expand out-of-line fields at the point of constructing a
composite Datum, not at the point where we're about to insert it into a
larger tuple.  This rule is applied only to true composite Datums, not
to tuples that are being passed around the system as tuples, so it's not
as invasive as it might sound at first.  With this approach, the amount
of code that has to be touched for a full solution is greatly reduced,
and added cache lookup costs are avoided except when there actually is
a TOAST pointer that needs to be inlined.

The main drawback of this approach is that we might sometimes dereference
a TOAST pointer that will never actually be used by the query, imposing a
rather large cost that wasn't there before.  On the other side of the coin,
if the field value is used multiple times then we'll come out ahead by
avoiding repeat detoastings.  Experimentation suggests that common SQL
coding patterns are unaffected either way, though.  Applications that are
very negatively affected could be advised to modify their code to not fetch
columns they won't be using.

In future, we might consider reverting this solution in favor of detoasting
only at the point where data is about to be stored to disk, using some
method that can drill down into multiple levels of nested structured types.
That will require defining new APIs for structured types, though, so it
doesn't seem feasible as a back-patchable fix.

Note that this patch changes HeapTupleGetDatum() from a macro to a function
call; this means that any third-party code using that macro will not get
protection against creating TOAST-pointer-containing Datums until it's
recompiled.  The same applies to any uses of PG_RETURN_HEAPTUPLEHEADER().
It seems likely that this is not a big problem in practice: most of the
tuple-returning functions in core and contrib produce outputs that could
not possibly be toasted anyway, and the same probably holds for third-party
extensions.

This bug has existed since TOAST was invented, so back-patch to all
supported branches.
2014-05-01 15:19:06 -04:00
Tom Lane 41de93c53a Reduce indentation/parenthesization of set operations in rule/view dumps.
A query such as "SELECT x UNION SELECT y UNION SELECT z UNION ..."
produces a left-deep nested parse tree, which we formerly showed in its
full nested glory and with all the possible parentheses.  This does little
for readability, though, and long UNION lists resulting in excessive
indentation are common.  Instead, let's omit parentheses and indent all
the subqueries at the same level in such cases.

This patch skips indentation/parenthesization whenever the lefthand input
of a SetOperationStmt is another SetOperationStmt of the same kind and
ALL/DISTINCT property.  We could teach the code the exact syntactic
precedence of set operations and thereby avoid parenthesization in some
more cases, but it's not clear that that'd be a readability win: it seems
better to parenthesize if the set operation changes.  (As an example,
if there's one UNION in a long list of UNION ALL, it now stands out like
a sore thumb, which seems like a good thing.)

Back-patch to 9.3.  This completes our response to a complaint from Greg
Stark that since commit 62e666400d there's a performance problem in pg_dump
for views containing long UNION sequences (or other types of deeply nested
constructs).  The previous commit 0601cb54da
handles the general problem, but this one makes the specific case of UNION
lists look a lot nicer.
2014-04-30 13:26:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 0601cb54da Limit overall indentation in rule/view dumps.
Continuing to indent no matter how deeply nested we get doesn't really
do anything for readability; what's worse, it results in O(N^2) total
whitespace, which can become a performance and memory-consumption issue.

To address this, once we get past 40 characters of indentation, reduce
the indentation step distance 4x, and also limit the maximum indentation
by reducing it modulo 40.  This latter choice is a bit weird at first
glance, but it seems to preserve readability better than a simple cap
would do.

Back-patch to 9.3, because since commit 62e666400d the performance issue
is a hazard for pg_dump.

Greg Stark and Tom Lane
2014-04-30 12:48:12 -04:00
Tom Lane d166eed302 Fix indentation of JOIN clauses in rule/view dumps.
The code attempted to outdent JOIN clauses further left than the parent
FROM keyword, which was odd in any case, and led to inconsistent formatting
since in simple cases the clauses couldn't be moved any further left than
that.  And it left a permanent decrement of the indentation level, causing
subsequent lines to be much further left than they should be (again, this
couldn't be seen in simple cases for lack of indentation to give up).

After a little experimentation I chose to make it indent JOIN keywords
two spaces from the parent FROM, which is one space more than the join's
lefthand input in cases where that appears on a different line from FROM.

Back-patch to 9.3.  This is a purely cosmetic change, and the bug is quite
old, so that may seem arbitrary; but we are going to be making some other
changes to the indentation behavior in both HEAD and 9.3, so it seems
reasonable to include this in 9.3 too.  I committed this one first because
its effects are more visible in the regression test results as they
currently stand than they will be later.
2014-04-30 12:01:19 -04:00
Tom Lane 95811032d7 Improve planner to drop constant-NULL inputs of AND/OR where it's legal.
In general we can't discard constant-NULL inputs, since they could change
the result of the AND/OR to be NULL.  But at top level of WHERE, we do not
need to distinguish a NULL result from a FALSE result, so it's okay to
treat NULL as FALSE and then simplify AND/OR accordingly.

This is a very ancient oversight, but in 9.2 and later it can lead to
failure to optimize queries that previous releases did optimize, as a
result of more aggressive parameter substitution rules making it possible
to reduce more subexpressions to NULL constants.  This is the root cause of
bug #10171 from Arnold Scheffler.  We could alternatively have fixed that
by teaching orclauses.c to ignore constant-NULL OR arms, but it seems
better to get rid of them globally.

I resisted the temptation to back-patch this change into all active
branches, but it seems appropriate to back-patch as far as 9.2 so that
there will not be performance regressions of the kind shown in this bug.
2014-04-29 13:12:46 -04:00
Greg Stark 6513633b94 Add support for wrapping to psql's "extended" mode. This makes it very
feasible to display tables that have both many columns and some large
data in some columns (such as pg_stats).

Emre Hasegeli with review and rewriting from Sergey Muraviov and
reviewed by Greg Stark
2014-04-28 18:41:36 +01:00
Tom Lane a0f9358149 Fix incorrect pg_proc.proallargtypes entries for two built-in functions.
pg_sequence_parameters() and pg_identify_object() have had incorrect
proallargtypes entries since 9.1 and 9.3 respectively.  This was mostly
masked by the correct information in proargtypes, but a few operations
such as pg_get_function_arguments() (and thus psql's \df display) would
show the wrong data types for these functions' input parameters.

In HEAD, fix the wrong info, bump catversion, and add an opr_sanity
regression test to catch future mistakes of this sort.

In the back branches, just fix the wrong info so that installations
initdb'd with future minor releases will have the right data.  We
can't force an initdb, and it doesn't seem like a good idea to add
a regression test that will fail on existing installations.

Andres Freund
2014-04-23 21:21:05 -04:00
Tom Lane f0fedfe82c Allow polymorphic aggregates to have non-polymorphic state data types.
Before 9.4, such an aggregate couldn't be declared, because its final
function would have to have polymorphic result type but no polymorphic
argument, which CREATE FUNCTION would quite properly reject.  The
ordered-set-aggregate patch found a workaround: allow the final function
to be declared as accepting additional dummy arguments that have types
matching the aggregate's regular input arguments.  However, we failed
to notice that this problem applies just as much to regular aggregates,
despite the fact that we had a built-in regular aggregate array_agg()
that was known to be undeclarable in SQL because its final function
had an illegal signature.  So what we should have done, and what this
patch does, is to decouple the extra-dummy-arguments behavior from
ordered-set aggregates and make it generally available for all aggregate
declarations.  We have to put this into 9.4 rather than waiting till
later because it slightly alters the rules for declaring ordered-set
aggregates.

The patch turned out a bit bigger than I'd hoped because it proved
necessary to record the extra-arguments option in a new pg_aggregate
column.  I'd thought we could just look at the final function's pronargs
at runtime, but that didn't work well for variadic final functions.
It's probably just as well though, because it simplifies life for pg_dump
to record the option explicitly.

While at it, fix array_agg() to have a valid final-function signature,
and add an opr_sanity test to notice future deviations from polymorphic
consistency.  I also marked the percentile_cont() aggregates as not
needing extra arguments, since they don't.
2014-04-23 19:17:41 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 2985e16031 regression test: fix hot standby tests by using repeatable read
Serializable transactions won't work on a Hot Standby.  Also fix
VACUUM/ANALYZE label mixup.

Patch by Martín Marqués
2014-04-22 17:23:58 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 7ec73783d8 copy: update docs for FORCE_NULL and FORCE_NOT_NULL combination
Also update regression tests

Patch by Michael Paquier
2014-04-22 16:06:37 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e7128e8dbb Create function prototype as part of PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1 macro
Because of gcc -Wmissing-prototypes, all functions in dynamically
loadable modules must have a separate prototype declaration.  This is
meant to detect global functions that are not declared in header files,
but in cases where the function is called via dfmgr, this is redundant.
Besides filling up space with boilerplate, this is a frequent source of
compiler warnings in extension modules.

We can fix that by creating the function prototype as part of the
PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1 macro, which such modules have to use anyway.  That
makes the code of modules cleaner, because there is one less place where
the entry points have to be listed, and creates an additional check that
functions have the right prototype.

Remove now redundant prototypes from contrib and other modules.
2014-04-18 00:03:19 -04:00
Tom Lane cbb5e23bfa Update oidjoins regression test for 9.4.
Now that we're pretty much feature-frozen, it's time to update the checks
on system catalog foreign-key references.

(It looks like we missed doing this altogether for 9.3.  Sigh.)
2014-04-16 14:28:59 -04:00
Robert Haas dfc0219f64 Add to_regprocedure() and to_regoperator().
These are natural complements to the functions added by commit
0886fc6a5c, but they weren't included
in the original patch for some reason.  Add them.

Patch by me, per a complaint by Tom Lane.  Review by Tatsuo
Ishii.
2014-04-16 12:21:43 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 4168c00a5d psql: conditionally display oids and replication identity
In psql \d+, display oids only when they exist, and display replication
identity only when it is non-default.  Also document the defaults for
replication identity for system and non-system tables.  Update
regression output.
2014-04-15 13:28:54 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 7d0f493f19 Add TAP tests for client programs
Reviewed-by: Pavel Stěhule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Erik Rijkers <er@xs4all.nl>
2014-04-14 21:33:46 -04:00
Stephen Frost b3e6593716 Add ANALYZE into regression tests
Looks like we can end up with different plans happening on the
buildfarm, which breaks the regression tests when we include
EXPLAIN output (which is done in the regression tests for
updatable security views, to ensure that the user-defined
function isn't pushed down to a level where it could view the
rows before the security quals are applied).

This adds in ANALYZE to hopefully make the plans consistent.
The ANALYZE ends up changing the original plan too, so the
update looks bigger than it really is.  The new plan looks
perfectly valid, of course.
2014-04-13 00:41:33 -04:00
Tom Lane d95425c8b9 Provide moving-aggregate support for boolean aggregates.
David Rowley and Florian Pflug, reviewed by Dean Rasheed
2014-04-13 00:01:46 -04:00
Stephen Frost 842faa714c Make security barrier views automatically updatable
Views which are marked as security_barrier must have their quals
applied before any user-defined quals are called, to prevent
user-defined functions from being able to see rows which the
security barrier view is intended to prevent them from seeing.

Remove the restriction on security barrier views being automatically
updatable by adding a new securityQuals list to the RTE structure
which keeps track of the quals from security barrier views at each
level, independently of the user-supplied quals.  When RTEs are
later discovered which have securityQuals populated, they are turned
into subquery RTEs which are marked as security_barrier to prevent
any user-supplied quals being pushed down (modulo LEAKPROOF quals).

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Craig Ringer, Simon Riggs, KaiGai Kohei
2014-04-12 21:04:58 -04:00
Tom Lane 9d229f399e Provide moving-aggregate support for a bunch of numerical aggregates.
First installment of the promised moving-aggregate support in built-in
aggregates: count(), sum(), avg(), stddev() and variance() for
assorted datatypes, though not for float4/float8.

In passing, remove a 2001-vintage kluge in interval_accum(): interval
array elements have been properly aligned since around 2003, but
nobody remembered to take out this workaround.  Also, fix a thinko
in the opr_sanity tests for moving-aggregate catalog entries.

David Rowley and Florian Pflug, reviewed by Dean Rasheed
2014-04-12 20:33:09 -04:00
Tom Lane a9d9acbf21 Create infrastructure for moving-aggregate optimization.
Until now, when executing an aggregate function as a window function
within a window with moving frame start (that is, any frame start mode
except UNBOUNDED PRECEDING), we had to recalculate the aggregate from
scratch each time the frame head moved.  This patch allows an aggregate
definition to include an alternate "moving aggregate" implementation
that includes an inverse transition function for removing rows from
the aggregate's running state.  As long as this can be done successfully,
runtime is proportional to the total number of input rows, rather than
to the number of input rows times the average frame length.

This commit includes the core infrastructure, documentation, and regression
tests using user-defined aggregates.  Follow-on commits will update some
of the built-in aggregates to use this feature.

David Rowley and Florian Pflug, reviewed by Dean Rasheed; additional
hacking by me
2014-04-12 12:03:30 -04:00
Tom Lane f23a5630eb Add an in-core GiST index opclass for inet/cidr types.
This operator class can accelerate subnet/supernet tests as well as
btree-equivalent ordered comparisons.  It also handles a new network
operator inet && inet (overlaps, a/k/a "is supernet or subnet of"),
which is expected to be useful in exclusion constraints.

Ideally this opclass would be the default for GiST with inet/cidr data,
but we can't mark it that way until we figure out how to do a more or
less graceful transition from the current situation, in which the
really-completely-bogus inet/cidr opclasses in contrib/btree_gist are
marked as default.  Having the opclass in core and not default is better
than not having it at all, though.

While at it, add new documentation sections to allow us to officially
document GiST/GIN/SP-GiST opclasses, something there was never a clear
place to do before.  I filled these in with some simple tables listing
the existing opclasses and the operators they support, but there's
certainly scope to put more information there.

Emre Hasegeli, reviewed by Andreas Karlsson, further hacking by me
2014-04-08 15:46:43 -04:00
Robert Haas 0886fc6a5c Add new to_reg* functions for error-free OID lookups.
These functions won't throw an error if the object doesn't exist,
or if (for functions and operators) there's more than one matching
object.

Yugo Nagata and Nozomi Anzai, reviewed by Amit Khandekar, Marti
Raudsepp, Amit Kapila, and me.
2014-04-08 10:27:56 -04:00
Simon Riggs 7d8f1de1bc Extra warnings and errors for PL/pgSQL
Infrastructure to allow
 plpgsql.extra_warnings
 plpgsql.extra_errors

Initial extra checks only for shadowed_variables

Marko Tiikkaja and Petr Jelinek
Reviewed by Simon Riggs and Pavel Stěhule
2014-04-06 12:21:51 -04:00
Simon Riggs f14a6bbedb Isolation test files for ALTER TABLE patch 2014-04-06 11:44:24 -04:00
Simon Riggs e5550d5fec Reduce lock levels of some ALTER TABLE cmds
VALIDATE CONSTRAINT

CLUSTER ON
SET WITHOUT CLUSTER

ALTER COLUMN SET STATISTICS
ALTER COLUMN SET ()
ALTER COLUMN RESET ()

All other sub-commands use AccessExclusiveLock

Simon Riggs and Noah Misch

Reviews by Robert Haas and Andres Freund
2014-04-06 11:13:43 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas ffbba6ee12 Fix another palloc in critical section.
Also add a regression test for a GIN index with enough items with the same
key, so that a GIN posting tree gets created. Apparently none of the
existing GIN tests were large enough for that.

This code is new, no backpatching required.
2014-04-05 22:15:58 +03:00
Tom Lane 9aca512506 Make sure -D is an absolute path when starting server on Windows.
This is needed because Windows services may get started with a different
current directory than where pg_ctl is executed.  We want relative -D
paths to be interpreted relative to pg_ctl's CWD, similarly to what
happens on other platforms.

In support of this, move the backend's make_absolute_path() function
into src/port/path.c (where it probably should have been long since)
and get rid of the rather inferior version in pg_regress.

Kumar Rajeev Rastogi, reviewed by MauMau
2014-04-04 18:42:13 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 9d66116444 psql: display "Replica Identity" only for FULL and NOTHING
INDEX is already displayed on the index, and we now exclude pg_catalog.
DEFAULT is not displayed.
2014-03-29 19:00:11 -04:00
Noah Misch 8f5578d0f9 Revert "Secure Unix-domain sockets of "make check" temporary clusters."
About half of the buildfarm members use too-long directory names,
strongly suggesting that this approach is a dead end.
2014-03-29 03:12:00 -04:00
Noah Misch 31c6e54ec9 Secure Unix-domain sockets of "make check" temporary clusters.
Any OS user able to access the socket can connect as the bootstrap
superuser and in turn execute arbitrary code as the OS user running the
test.  Protect against that by placing the socket in the temporary data
directory, which has mode 0700 thanks to initdb.  Back-patch to 8.4 (all
supported versions).  The hazard remains wherever the temporary cluster
accepts TCP connections, notably on Windows.

Attempts to run "make check" from a directory with a long name will now
fail.  An alternative not sharing that problem was to place the socket
in a subdirectory of /tmp, but that is only secure if /tmp is sticky.
The PG_REGRESS_SOCK_DIR environment variable is available as a
workaround when testing from long directory paths.

As a convenient side effect, this lets testing proceed smoothly in
builds that override DEFAULT_PGSOCKET_DIR.  Popular non-default values
like /var/run/postgresql are often unwritable to the build user.

Security: CVE-2014-0067
2014-03-29 00:52:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 9613a1d98e Improve regression test for pg_filenode_relation().
Make it print the details in case there's a failure.

Andres Freund, slightly modified by me
2014-03-28 16:58:29 -04:00
Tom Lane a87c729153 Fix EquivalenceClass processing for nested append relations.
The original coding of EquivalenceClasses didn't foresee that appendrel
child relations might themselves be appendrels; but this is possible for
example when a UNION ALL subquery scans a table with inheritance children.
The oversight led to failure to optimize ordering-related issues very well
for the grandchild tables.  After some false starts involving explicitly
flattening the appendrel representation, we found that this could be fixed
easily by removing a few implicit assumptions about appendrel parent rels
not being children themselves.

Kyotaro Horiguchi and Tom Lane, reviewed by Noah Misch
2014-03-28 11:50:01 -04:00
Bruce Momjian b69c4e65be psql: update "replica identity" display for \d+
Display "replica identity" only for \d plus mode, exclude system schema
objects, and display all possible values, not just non-default,
non-index ones.
2014-03-26 11:13:17 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan f9c6d72cbf Cleanup around json_to_record/json_to_recordset
Set function parameter names and defaults. Add jsonb versions (which the
code already provided for so the actual new code is trivial). Add jsonb
regression tests and docs.

Bump catalog version (which I apparently forgot to do when jsonb was
committed).
2014-03-26 10:18:24 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 1420f3a982 Fix ts_rank_cd() to ignore stripped lexemes
Previously, stripped lexemes got a default location and could be
considered if mixed with non-stripped lexemes.

BACKWARD INCOMPATIBILITY CHANGE
2014-03-24 14:37:16 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan ab22b149c6 Do jsonb regression test input in the conventional way.
This should make the buildfarm happier.
2014-03-23 20:18:06 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan d9134d0a35 Introduce jsonb, a structured format for storing json.
The new format accepts exactly the same data as the json type. However, it is
stored in a format that does not require reparsing the orgiginal text in order
to process it, making it much more suitable for indexing and other operations.
Insignificant whitespace is discarded, and the order of object keys is not
preserved. Neither are duplicate object keys kept - the later value for a given
key is the only one stored.

The new type has all the functions and operators that the json type has,
with the exception of the json generation functions (to_json, json_agg etc.)
and with identical semantics. In addition, there are operator classes for
hash and btree indexing, and two classes for GIN indexing, that have no
equivalent in the json type.

This feature grew out of previous work by Oleg Bartunov and Teodor Sigaev, which
was intended to provide similar facilities to a nested hstore type, but which
in the end proved to have some significant compatibility issues.

Authors: Oleg Bartunov,  Teodor Sigaev, Peter Geoghegan and Andrew Dunstan.
Review: Andres Freund
2014-03-23 16:40:19 -04:00
Noah Misch 7cbe57c34d Offer triggers on foreign tables.
This covers all the SQL-standard trigger types supported for regular
tables; it does not cover constraint triggers.  The approach for
acquiring the old row mirrors that for view INSTEAD OF triggers.  For
AFTER ROW triggers, we spool the foreign tuples to a tuplestore.

This changes the FDW API contract; when deciding which columns to
populate in the slot returned from data modification callbacks, writable
FDWs will need to check for AFTER ROW triggers in addition to checking
for a RETURNING clause.

In support of the feature addition, refactor the TriggerFlags bits and
the assembly of old tuples in ModifyTable.

Ronan Dunklau, reviewed by KaiGai Kohei; some additional hacking by me.
2014-03-23 02:16:34 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 1d3b258cbe Fix misc typos in comments. 2014-03-18 21:05:18 +02:00
Bruce Momjian 886c0be3f6 C comments: remove odd blank lines after #ifdef WIN32 lines 2014-03-13 01:34:42 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas c5608ea26a Allow opclasses to provide tri-valued GIN consistent functions.
With the GIN "fast scan" feature, GIN can skip items without fetching all
the keys for them, if it can prove that they don't match regardless of
those keys. So far, it has done the proving by calling the boolean
consistent function with all combinations of TRUE/FALSE for the unfetched
keys, but since that's O(n^2), it becomes unfeasible with more than a few
keys. We can avoid calling consistent with all the combinations, if we can
tell the operator class implementation directly which keys are unknown.

This commit includes a triConsistent function for the built-in array and
tsvector opclasses.

Alexander Korotkov, with some changes by me.
2014-03-12 17:51:30 +02:00
Tom Lane bf4052faa1 Don't reject ROW_MARK_REFERENCE rowmarks for materialized views.
We should allow this so that matviews can be referenced in UPDATE/DELETE
statements in READ COMMITTED isolation level.  The requirement for that
is that a re-fetch by TID will see the same row version the query saw
earlier, which is true of matviews, so there's no reason for the
restriction.  Per bug #9398.

Michael Paquier, after a suggestion by me
2014-03-06 11:37:02 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 3b5e03dca2 Provide a FORCE NULL option to COPY in CSV mode.
This forces an input field containing the quoted null string to be
returned as a NULL. Without this option, only unquoted null strings
behave this way. This helps where some CSV producers insist on quoting
every field, whether or not it is needed. The option takes a list of
fields, and only applies to those columns. There is an equivalent
column-level option added to file_fdw.

Ian Barwick, with some tweaking by Andrew Dunstan, reviewed by Payal
Singh.
2014-03-04 17:31:59 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 84df54b22e Constructors for interval, timestamp, timestamptz
Author: Pavel Stěhule, editorialized somewhat by Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Tomáš Vondra, Marko Tiikkaja
With input from Fabrízio de Royes Mello, Jim Nasby
2014-03-04 15:09:43 -03:00
Robert Haas b89e151054 Introduce logical decoding.
This feature, building on previous commits, allows the write-ahead log
stream to be decoded into a series of logical changes; that is,
inserts, updates, and deletes and the transactions which contain them.
It is capable of handling decoding even across changes to the schema
of the effected tables.  The output format is controlled by a
so-called "output plugin"; an example is included.  To make use of
this in a real replication system, the output plugin will need to be
modified to produce output in the format appropriate to that system,
and to perform filtering.

Currently, information can be extracted from the logical decoding
system only via SQL; future commits will add the ability to stream
changes via walsender.

Andres Freund, with review and other contributions from many other
people, including Álvaro Herrera, Abhijit Menon-Sen, Peter Gheogegan,
Kevin Grittner, Robert Haas, Heikki Linnakangas, Fujii Masao, Abhijit
Menon-Sen, Michael Paquier, Simon Riggs, Craig Ringer, and Steve
Singer.
2014-03-03 16:32:18 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut de94b47c0a Fix whitespace 2014-03-03 14:05:33 -05:00
Stephen Frost 5592ebac55 Another round of Coverity fixes
Additional non-security issues/improvements spotted by Coverity.

In backend/libpq, no sense trying to protect against port->hba being
NULL after we've already dereferenced it in the switch() statement.

Prevent against possible overflow due to 32bit arithmitic in
basebackup throttling (not yet released, so no security concern).

Remove nonsensical check of array pointer against NULL in procarray.c,
looks to be a holdover from 9.1 and earlier when there were pointers
being used but now it's just an array.

Remove pointer check-against-NULL in tsearch/spell.c as we had already
dereferenced it above (in the strcmp()).

Remove dead code from adt/orderedsetaggs.c, isnull is checked
immediately after each tuplesort_getdatum() call and if true we return,
so no point checking it again down at the bottom.

Remove recently added minor error-condition memory leak in pg_regress.
2014-03-03 03:18:51 -05:00
Stephen Frost b1aebbb6a8 Various Coverity-spotted fixes
A number of issues were identified by the Coverity scanner and are
addressed in this patch.  None of these appear to be security issues
and many are mostly cosmetic changes.

Short comments for each of the changes follows.

Correct the semi-colon placement in be-secure.c regarding SSL retries.
Remove a useless comparison-to-NULL in proc.c (value is dereferenced
  prior to this check and therefore can't be NULL).
Add checking of chmod() return values to initdb.
Fix a couple minor memory leaks in initdb.
Fix memory leak in pg_ctl- involves free'ing the config file contents.
Use an int to capture fgetc() return instead of an enum in pg_dump.
Fix minor memory leaks in pg_dump.
  (note minor change to convertOperatorReference()'s API)
Check fclose()/remove() return codes in psql.
Check fstat(), find_my_exec() return codes in psql.
Various ECPG memory leak fixes.
Check find_my_exec() return in ECPG.
Explicitly ignore pqFlush return in libpq error-path.
Change PQfnumber() to avoid doing an strdup() when no changes required.
Remove a few useless check-against-NULL's (value deref'd beforehand).
Check rmtree(), malloc() results in pg_regress.
Also check get_alternative_expectfile() return in pg_regress.
2014-03-01 22:14:14 -05:00
Robert Haas dd1a3bccca Show xid and xmin in pg_stat_activity and pg_stat_replication.
Christian Kruse, reviewed by Andres Freund and myself, with further
minor adjustments by me.
2014-02-25 12:34:04 -05:00
Robert Haas bb818b53d4 Remove a couple of comments from the pg_lsn regression test.
Previously, one of these was a negative test case, but that got
changed along the way and the comments didn't get the memo.

Michael Paquier
2014-02-24 09:32:21 -05:00
Robert Haas 694e3d139a Further code review for pg_lsn data type.
Change input function error messages to be more consistent with what is
done elsewhere.  Remove a bunch of redundant type casts, so that the
compiler will warn us if we screw up.  Don't pass LSNs by value on
platforms where a Datum is only 32 bytes, per buildfarm.  Move macros
for packing and unpacking LSNs to pg_lsn.h so that we can include
access/xlogdefs.h, to avoid an unsatisfied dependency on XLogRecPtr.
2014-02-19 10:06:59 -05:00
Robert Haas 844a28a9dd pg_lsn macro naming and type behavior revisions.
Change pg_lsn_mi so that it can return negative values when subtracting
LSNs, and clean up some perhaps ill-considered macro names.
2014-02-19 09:34:15 -05:00
Robert Haas 7d03a83f4d Add a pg_lsn data type, to represent an LSN.
Robert Haas and Michael Paquier
2014-02-19 08:35:23 -05:00
Tom Lane 01824385ae Prevent potential overruns of fixed-size buffers.
Coverity identified a number of places in which it couldn't prove that a
string being copied into a fixed-size buffer would fit.  We believe that
most, perhaps all of these are in fact safe, or are copying data that is
coming from a trusted source so that any overrun is not really a security
issue.  Nonetheless it seems prudent to forestall any risk by using
strlcpy() and similar functions.

Fixes by Peter Eisentraut and Jozef Mlich based on Coverity reports.

In addition, fix a potential null-pointer-dereference crash in
contrib/chkpass.  The crypt(3) function is defined to return NULL on
failure, but chkpass.c didn't check for that before using the result.
The main practical case in which this could be an issue is if libc is
configured to refuse to execute unapproved hashing algorithms (e.g.,
"FIPS mode").  This ideally should've been a separate commit, but
since it touches code adjacent to one of the buffer overrun changes,
I included it in this commit to avoid last-minute merge issues.
This issue was reported by Honza Horak.

Security: CVE-2014-0065 for buffer overruns, CVE-2014-0066 for crypt()
2014-02-17 11:20:21 -05:00
Noah Misch 4318daecc9 Fix handling of wide datetime input/output.
Many server functions use the MAXDATELEN constant to size a buffer for
parsing or displaying a datetime value.  It was much too small for the
longest possible interval output and slightly too small for certain
valid timestamp input, particularly input with a long timezone name.
The long input was rejected needlessly; the long output caused
interval_out() to overrun its buffer.  ECPG's pgtypes library has a copy
of the vulnerable functions, which bore the same vulnerabilities along
with some of its own.  In contrast to the server, certain long inputs
caused stack overflow rather than failing cleanly.  Back-patch to 8.4
(all supported versions).

Reported by Daniel Schüssler, reviewed by Tom Lane.

Security: CVE-2014-0063
2014-02-17 09:33:31 -05:00
Noah Misch fea164a72a Shore up ADMIN OPTION restrictions.
Granting a role without ADMIN OPTION is supposed to prevent the grantee
from adding or removing members from the granted role.  Issuing SET ROLE
before the GRANT bypassed that, because the role itself had an implicit
right to add or remove members.  Plug that hole by recognizing that
implicit right only when the session user matches the current role.
Additionally, do not recognize it during a security-restricted operation
or during execution of a SECURITY DEFINER function.  The restriction on
SECURITY DEFINER is not security-critical.  However, it seems best for a
user testing his own SECURITY DEFINER function to see the same behavior
others will see.  Back-patch to 8.4 (all supported versions).

The SQL standards do not conflate roles and users as PostgreSQL does;
only SQL roles have members, and only SQL users initiate sessions.  An
application using PostgreSQL users and roles as SQL users and roles will
never attempt to grant membership in the role that is the session user,
so the implicit right to add or remove members will never arise.

The security impact was mostly that a role member could revoke access
from others, contrary to the wishes of his own grantor.  Unapproved role
member additions are less notable, because the member can still largely
achieve that by creating a view or a SECURITY DEFINER function.

Reviewed by Andres Freund and Tom Lane.  Reported, independently, by
Jonas Sundman and Noah Misch.

Security: CVE-2014-0060
2014-02-17 09:33:31 -05:00
Tom Lane 60ff2fdd99 Centralize getopt-related declarations in a new header file pg_getopt.h.
We used to have externs for getopt() and its API variables scattered
all over the place.  Now that we find we're going to need to tweak the
variable declarations for Cygwin, it seems like a good idea to have
just one place to tweak.

In this commit, the variables are declared "#ifndef HAVE_GETOPT_H".
That may or may not work everywhere, but we'll soon find out.

Andres Freund
2014-02-15 14:31:30 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 2fc80e8e83 Rename 'gmake' to 'make' in docs and recommended commands
This simplifies the docs and makes it easier to cut/paste command lines.
2014-02-12 17:29:19 -05:00
Tom Lane 2895415205 Don't generate plain-text HISTORY and src/test/regress/README anymore.
Providing this information as plain text was doubtless worth the trouble
ten years ago, but it seems likely that hardly anyone reads it in this
format anymore.  And the effort required to maintain these files (in the
form of extra-complex markup rules in the relevant parts of the SGML
documentation) is significant.  So, let's stop doing that and rely solely
on the other documentation formats.

Per discussion, the plain-text INSTALL instructions might still be worth
their keep, so we continue to generate that file.

Rather than remove HISTORY and src/test/regress/README from distribution
tarballs entirely, replace them with simple stub files that tell the reader
where to find the relevant documentation.  This is mainly to avoid possibly
breaking packaging recipes that expect these files to exist.

Back-patch to all supported branches, because simplifying the markup
requirements for release notes won't help much unless we do it in all
branches.
2014-02-10 20:48:04 -05:00
Tom Lane 8de3e410fa In RelationClearRelation, postpone cache reload if !IsTransactionState().
We may process relcache flush requests during transaction startup or
shutdown.  In general it's not terribly safe to do catalog access at those
times, so the code's habit of trying to immediately revalidate unflushable
relcache entries is risky.  Although there are no field trouble reports
that are positively traceable to this, we have been able to demonstrate
failure of the assertions recently added in RelationIdGetRelation() and
SearchCatCache().  On the other hand, it seems safe to just postpone
revalidation of the cache entry until we're inside a valid transaction.
The one case where this is questionable is where we're exiting a
subtransaction and the outer transaction is holding the relcache entry open
--- but if we made any significant changes to the rel inside such a
subtransaction, we've got problems anyway.  There are mechanisms in place
to prevent that (to wit, locks for cross-session cases and
CheckTableNotInUse() for intra-session cases), so let's trust to those
mechanisms to keep us out of trouble.
2014-02-06 19:38:06 -05:00
Tom Lane 0def2573c5 Fix *-qualification of named parameters in SQL-language functions.
Given a composite-type parameter named x, "$1.*" worked fine, but "x.*"
not so much.  This has been broken since named parameter references were
added in commit 9bff0780cf, so patch back
to 9.2.  Per bug #9085 from Hardy Falk.
2014-02-03 14:47:17 -05:00
Bruce Momjian d0ee93797d arrays: tighten checks for multi-dimensional input
Previously an input array string that started with a single-element
array dimension would then later accept a multi-dimensional segment.

BACKWARD INCOMPATIBILITY
2014-02-01 10:49:17 -05:00
Robert Haas 858ec11858 Introduce replication slots.
Replication slots are a crash-safe data structure which can be created
on either a master or a standby to prevent premature removal of
write-ahead log segments needed by a standby, as well as (with
hot_standby_feedback=on) pruning of tuples whose removal would cause
replication conflicts.  Slots have some advantages over existing
techniques, as explained in the documentation.

In a few places, we refer to the type of replication slots introduced
by this patch as "physical" slots, because forthcoming patches for
logical decoding will also have slots, but with somewhat different
properties.

Andres Freund and Robert Haas
2014-01-31 22:45:36 -05:00
Robert Haas 760c770ff6 Add convenience functions pg_sleep_for and pg_sleep_until.
Vik Fearing, reviewed by Pavel Stehule and myself
2014-01-30 15:47:56 -05:00
Tom Lane 043f6ff05d Fix bogus handling of "postponed" lateral quals.
When pulling a "postponed" qual from a LATERAL subquery up into the quals
of an outer join, we must make sure that the postponed qual is included
in those seen by make_outerjoininfo().  Otherwise we might compute a
too-small min_lefthand or min_righthand for the outer join, leading to
"JOIN qualification cannot refer to other relations" failures from
distribute_qual_to_rels.  Subtler errors in the created plan seem possible,
too, if the extra qual would only affect join ordering constraints.

Per bug #9041 from David Leverton.  Back-patch to 9.3.
2014-01-30 14:51:16 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 5264d91541 Add json_array_elements_text function.
This was a notable omission from the json functions added in 9.3 and
there have been numerous complaints about its absence.

Laurence Rowe.
2014-01-29 15:39:01 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 7043ac7100 Add new make targets check-tests and installcheck-tests.
These do not run any specific schedule of tests, but only those
specified as part of the invocation, e.g.:

    make check-tests TESTS="json jsonb"
2014-01-28 18:10:00 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 105639900b New json functions.
json_build_array() and json_build_object allow for the construction of
arbitrarily complex json trees. json_object() turns a one or two
dimensional array, or two separate arrays, into a json_object of
name/value pairs, similarly to the hstore() function.
json_object_agg() aggregates its two arguments into a single json object
as name value pairs.

Catalog version bumped.

Andrew Dunstan, reviewed by Marko Tiikkaja.
2014-01-28 17:48:21 -05:00
Fujii Masao 9132b189bf Add pg_stat_archiver statistics view.
This view shows the statistics about the WAL archiver process's activity.

Gabriele Bartolini, reviewed by Michael Paquier, refactored a bit by me.
2014-01-29 02:58:22 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera b152c6cd0d Make DROP IF EXISTS more consistently not fail
Some cases were still reporting errors and aborting, instead of a NOTICE
that the object was being skipped.  This makes it more difficult to
cleanly handle pg_dump --clean, so change that to instead skip missing
objects properly.

Per bug #7873 reported by Dave Rolsky; apparently this affects a large
number of users.

Authors: Pavel Stehule and Dean Rasheed.  Some tweaks by Álvaro Herrera
2014-01-23 14:40:29 -03:00
Robert Haas 01f7808b3e Add a cardinality function for arrays.
Unlike our other array functions, this considers the total number of
elements across all dimensions, and returns 0 rather than NULL when the
array has no elements.  But it seems that both of those behaviors are
almost universally disliked, so hopefully that's OK.

Marko Tiikkaja, reviewed by Dean Rasheed and Pavel Stehule
2014-01-21 12:38:53 -05:00
Tom Lane 9a8f5729b4 Fix to_timestamp/to_date's handling of consecutive spaces in format string.
When there are consecutive spaces (or other non-format-code characters) in
the format, we should advance over exactly that many characters of input.
The previous coding mistakenly did a "skip whitespace" action between such
characters, possibly allowing more input to be skipped than the user
intended.  We only need to skip whitespace just before an actual field.

This is really a bug fix, but given the minimal number of field complaints
and the risk of breaking applications coded to expect the old behavior,
let's not back-patch it.

Jeevan Chalke
2014-01-20 13:45:51 -05:00
Stephen Frost 5254958e92 Add CREATE TABLESPACE ... WITH ... Options
Tablespaces have a few options which can be set on them to give PG hints
as to how the tablespace behaves (perhaps it's faster for sequential
scans, or better able to handle random access, etc).  These options were
only available through the ALTER TABLESPACE command.

This adds the ability to set these options at CREATE TABLESPACE time,
removing the need to do both a CREATE TABLESPACE and ALTER TABLESPACE to
get the correct options set on the tablespace.

Vik Fearing, reviewed by Michael Paquier.
2014-01-18 20:59:31 -05:00
Stephen Frost 76e91b38ba Add ALTER TABLESPACE ... MOVE command
This adds a 'MOVE' sub-command to ALTER TABLESPACE which allows moving sets of
objects from one tablespace to another.  This can be extremely handy and avoids
a lot of error-prone scripting.  ALTER TABLESPACE ... MOVE will only move
objects the user owns, will notify the user if no objects were found, and can
be used to move ALL objects or specific types of objects (TABLES, INDEXES, or
MATERIALIZED VIEWS).
2014-01-18 18:56:40 -05:00
Tom Lane 158b7fa6a3 Disallow LATERAL references to the target table of an UPDATE/DELETE.
On second thought, commit 0c051c9008 was
over-hasty: rather than allowing this case, we ought to reject it for now.
That leaves the field clear for a future feature that allows the target
table to be re-specified in the FROM (or USING) clause, which will enable
left-joining the target table to something else.  We can then also allow
LATERAL references to such an explicitly re-specified target table.
But allowing them right now will create ambiguities or worse for such a
feature, and it isn't something we documented 9.3 as supporting.

While at it, add a convenience subroutine to avoid having several copies
of the ereport for disalllowed-LATERAL-reference cases.
2014-01-11 19:03:12 -05:00
Tom Lane 28233ffaa4 Add another regression test cross-checking operator and function comments.
Add a query that lists all the functions that are operator implementation
functions and have a SQL comment that doesn't just say "implementation of
XYZ operator".  (Note that the preceding test checks that such functions'
comments exactly match the corresponding operators' comments.)

While it's not forbidden to add more functions to this list, that should
only be done when we're encouraging users to use either the function or
operator syntax for the functionality, which is a fairly rare situation.
2014-01-11 00:16:08 -05:00
Tom Lane 080b7db72e Fix "cannot accept a set" error when only some arms of a CASE return a set.
In commit c1352052ef, I implemented an
optimization that assumed that a function's argument expressions would
either always return a set (ie multiple rows), or always not.  This is
wrong however: we allow CASE expressions in which some arms return a set
of some type and others just return a scalar of that type.  There may be
other examples as well.  To fix, replace the run-time test of whether an
argument returned a set with a static precheck (expression_returns_set).
This adds a little bit of query startup overhead, but it seems barely
measurable.

Per bug #8228 from David Johnston.  This has been broken since 8.0,
so patch all supported branches.
2014-01-08 20:18:58 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 7e04792a1c Update copyright for 2014
Update all files in head, and files COPYRIGHT and legal.sgml in all back
branches.
2014-01-07 16:05:30 -05:00
Tom Lane 0c051c9008 Fix LATERAL references to target table of UPDATE/DELETE.
I failed to think much about UPDATE/DELETE when implementing LATERAL :-(.
The implemented behavior ended up being that subqueries in the FROM or
USING clause (respectively) could access the update/delete target table as
though it were a lateral reference; which seems fine if they said LATERAL,
but certainly ought to draw an error if they didn't.  Fix it so you get a
suitable error when you omit LATERAL.  Per report from Emre Hasegeli.
2014-01-07 15:25:27 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut edc43458d7 Add more use of psprintf() 2014-01-06 21:30:26 -05:00
Tom Lane f343a880d5 Extract restriction OR clauses whether or not they are indexable.
It's possible to extract a restriction OR clause from a join clause that
has the form of an OR-of-ANDs, if each sub-AND includes a clause that
mentions only one specific relation.  While PG has been aware of that idea
for many years, the code previously only did it if it could extract an
indexable OR clause.  On reflection, though, that seems a silly limitation:
adding a restriction clause can be a win by reducing the number of rows
that have to be filtered at the join step, even if we have to test the
clause as a plain filter clause during the scan.  This should be especially
useful for foreign tables, where the change can cut the number of rows that
have to be retrieved from the foreign server; but testing shows it can win
even on local tables.  Per a suggestion from Robert Haas.

As a heuristic, I made the code accept an extracted restriction clause
if its estimated selectivity is less than 0.9, which will probably result
in accepting extracted clauses just about always.  We might need to tweak
that later based on experience.

Since the code no longer has even a weak connection to Path creation,
remove orindxpath.c and create a new file optimizer/util/orclauses.c.

There's some additional janitorial cleanup of now-dead code that needs
to happen, but it seems like that's a fit subject for a separate commit.
2013-12-30 12:24:37 -05:00
Tom Lane 8d65da1f01 Support ordered-set (WITHIN GROUP) aggregates.
This patch introduces generic support for ordered-set and hypothetical-set
aggregate functions, as well as implementations of the instances defined in
SQL:2008 (percentile_cont(), percentile_disc(), rank(), dense_rank(),
percent_rank(), cume_dist()).  We also added mode() though it is not in the
spec, as well as versions of percentile_cont() and percentile_disc() that
can compute multiple percentile values in one pass over the data.

Unlike the original submission, this patch puts full control of the sorting
process in the hands of the aggregate's support functions.  To allow the
support functions to find out how they're supposed to sort, a new API
function AggGetAggref() is added to nodeAgg.c.  This allows retrieval of
the aggregate call's Aggref node, which may have other uses beyond the
immediate need.  There is also support for ordered-set aggregates to
install cleanup callback functions, so that they can be sure that
infrastructure such as tuplesort objects gets cleaned up.

In passing, make some fixes in the recently-added support for variadic
aggregates, and make some editorial adjustments in the recent FILTER
additions for aggregates.  Also, simplify use of IsBinaryCoercible() by
allowing it to succeed whenever the target type is ANY or ANYELEMENT.
It was inconsistent that it dealt with other polymorphic target types
but not these.

Atri Sharma and Andrew Gierth; reviewed by Pavel Stehule and Vik Fearing,
and rather heavily editorialized upon by Tom Lane
2013-12-23 16:11:35 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 6eda3e9c27 isolationtester: Ensure stderr is unbuffered, too 2013-12-19 22:09:30 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 73bcb76b77 Make stdout unbuffered
This ensures that all stdout output is flushed immediately, to match
stderr.  This eliminates the need for fflush(stdout) calls sprinkled all
over the place.

Per Daniel Wood in message 519A79C6.90308@salesforce.com
2013-12-19 17:26:27 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 11ac4c73cb Don't ignore tuple locks propagated by our updates
If a tuple was locked by transaction A, and transaction B updated it,
the new version of the tuple created by B would be locked by A, yet
visible only to B; due to an oversight in HeapTupleSatisfiesUpdate, the
lock held by A wouldn't get checked if transaction B later deleted (or
key-updated) the new version of the tuple.  This might cause referential
integrity checks to give false positives (that is, allow deletes that
should have been rejected).

This is an easy oversight to have made, because prior to improved tuple
locks in commit 0ac5ad5134 it wasn't possible to have tuples created by
our own transaction that were also locked by remote transactions, and so
locks weren't even considered in that code path.

It is recommended that foreign keys be rechecked manually in bulk after
installing this update, in case some referenced rows are missing with
some referencing row remaining.

Per bug reported by Daniel Wood in
CAPweHKe5QQ1747X2c0tA=5zf4YnS2xcvGf13Opd-1Mq24rF1cQ@mail.gmail.com
2013-12-18 13:45:51 -03:00
Tom Lane 1b4f7f93b4 Allow empty target list in SELECT.
This fixes a problem noted as a followup to bug #8648: if a query has a
semantically-empty target list, e.g. SELECT * FROM zero_column_table,
ruleutils.c will dump it as a syntactically-empty target list, which was
not allowed.  There doesn't seem to be any reliable way to fix this by
hacking ruleutils (note in particular that the originally zero-column table
might since have had columns added to it); and even if we had such a fix,
it would do nothing for existing dump files that might contain bad syntax.
The best bet seems to be to relax the syntactic restriction.

Also, add parse-analysis errors for SELECT DISTINCT with no columns (after
*-expansion) and RETURNING with no columns.  These cases previously
produced unexpected behavior because the parsed Query looked like it had
no DISTINCT or RETURNING clause, respectively.  If anyone ever offers
a plausible use-case for this, we could work a bit harder on making the
situation distinguishable.

Arguably this is a bug fix that should be back-patched, but I'm worried
that there may be client apps or PLs that expect "SELECT ;" to throw a
syntax error.  The issue doesn't seem important enough to risk changing
behavior in minor releases.
2013-12-14 20:23:26 -05:00
Tom Lane c03ad5602f Fix inherited UPDATE/DELETE with UNION ALL subqueries.
Fix an oversight in commit b3aaf9081a1a95c245fd605dcf02c91b3a5c3a29: we do
indeed need to process the planner's append_rel_list when copying RTE
subqueries, because if any of them were flattenable UNION ALL subqueries,
the append_rel_list shows which subquery RTEs were pulled up out of which
other ones.  Without this, UNION ALL subqueries aren't correctly inserted
into the update plans for inheritance child tables after the first one,
typically resulting in no update happening for those child table(s).
Per report from Victor Yegorov.

Experimentation with this case also exposed a fault in commit
a7b965382cf0cb30aeacb112572718045e6d4be7: if an inherited UPDATE/DELETE
was proven totally dummy by constraint exclusion, we might arrive at
add_rtes_to_flat_rtable with root->simple_rel_array being NULL.  This
should be interpreted as not having any RelOptInfos.  I chose to code
the guard as a check against simple_rel_array_size, so as to also
provide some protection against indexing off the end of the array.

Back-patch to 9.2 where the faulty code was added.
2013-12-14 17:33:53 -05:00
Tom Lane f26099057a Improve EXPLAIN to print the grouping columns in Agg and Group nodes.
Per request from Kevin Grittner.
2013-12-12 11:24:38 -05:00
Simon Riggs cf589c9c1f Regression tests for SCHEMA commands
Hari Babu Kommi reviewed by David Rowley
2013-12-11 20:45:15 +00:00
Simon Riggs b921a26fb8 Regression tests for ALTER TABLESPACE RENAME,OWNER
Hari Babu Kommi reviewed by David Rowley
2013-12-11 20:42:58 +00:00
Tom Lane b5e0a2a384 Tweak placement of explicit ANALYZE commands in the regression tests.
Make the COPY test, which loads most of the large static tables used in
the tests, also explicitly ANALYZE those tables.  This allows us to get
rid of various ad-hoc, and rather redundant, ANALYZE commands that had
gotten stuck into various test scripts over time to ensure we got
consistent plan choices.  (We could have done a database-wide ANALYZE,
but that would cause stats to get attached to the small static tables
too, which results in plan changes compared to the historical behavior.
I'm not sure that's a good idea, so not going that far for now.)

Back-patch to 9.0, since 9.0 and 9.1 are currently sometimes failing
regression tests for lack of an "ANALYZE tenk1" in the subselect test.
There's no need for this in 8.4 since we didn't print any plans back
then.
2013-12-11 15:09:15 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 09df854b8a Add table name to VACUUM statement in matview.c.
The test only needs the one table to be vacuumed.  Vacuuming the
database may affect other tests.

Per gripe from Tom Lane.  Back-patch to 9.3, where the test was
was added.
2013-12-11 08:53:03 -06:00
Tom Lane 9ec6199d18 Fix possible crash with nested SubLinks.
An expression such as WHERE (... x IN (SELECT ...) ...) IN (SELECT ...)
could produce an invalid plan that results in a crash at execution time,
if the planner attempts to flatten the outer IN into a semi-join.
This happens because convert_testexpr() was not expecting any nested
SubLinks and would wrongly replace any PARAM_SUBLINK Params belonging
to the inner SubLink.  (I think the comment denying that this case could
happen was wrong when written; it's certainly been wrong for quite a long
time, since very early versions of the semijoin flattening logic.)

Per report from Teodor Sigaev.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-12-10 16:10:17 -05:00
Noah Misch 53685d7981 Rename TABLE() to ROWS FROM().
SQL-standard TABLE() is a subset of UNNEST(); they deal with arrays and
other collection types.  This feature, however, deals with set-returning
functions.  Use a different syntax for this feature to keep open the
possibility of implementing the standard TABLE().
2013-12-10 09:34:37 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 312bde3d40 Fix improper abort during update chain locking
In 247c76a989, I added some code to do fine-grained checking of
MultiXact status of locking/updating transactions when traversing an
update chain.  There was a thinko in that patch which would have the
traversing abort, that is return HeapTupleUpdated, when the other
transaction is a committed lock-only.  In this case we should ignore it
and return success instead.  Of course, in the case where there is a
committed update, HeapTupleUpdated is the correct return value.

A user-visible symptom of this bug is that in REPEATABLE READ and
SERIALIZABLE transaction isolation modes spurious serializability errors
can occur:
  ERROR:  could not serialize access due to concurrent update

In order for this to happen, there needs to be a tuple that's key-share-
locked and also updated, and the update must abort; a subsequent
transaction trying to acquire a new lock on that tuple would abort with
the above error.  The reason is that the initial FOR KEY SHARE is seen
as committed by the new locking transaction, which triggers this bug.
(If the UPDATE commits, then the serialization error is correctly
reported.)

When running a query in READ COMMITTED mode, what happens is that the
locking is aborted by the HeapTupleUpdated return value, then
EvalPlanQual fetches the newest version of the tuple, which is then the
only version that gets locked.  (The second time the tuple is checked
there is no misbehavior on the committed lock-only, because it's not
checked by the code that traverses update chains; so no bug.) Only the
newest version of the tuple is locked, not older ones, but this is
harmless.

The isolation test added by this commit illustrates the desired
behavior, including the proper serialization errors that get thrown.

Backpatch to 9.3.
2013-12-05 17:47:51 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 07aeb1fec5 Avoid resetting Xmax when it's a multi with an aborted update
HeapTupleSatisfiesUpdate can very easily "forget" tuple locks while
checking the contents of a multixact and finding it contains an aborted
update, by setting the HEAP_XMAX_INVALID bit.  This would lead to
concurrent transactions not noticing any previous locks held by
transactions that might still be running, and thus being able to acquire
subsequent locks they wouldn't be normally able to acquire.

This bug was introduced in commit 1ce150b7bb; backpatch this fix to 9.3,
like that commit.

This change reverts the change to the delete-abort-savept isolation test
in 1ce150b7bb, because that behavior change was caused by this bug.

Noticed by Andres Freund while investigating a different issue reported
by Noah Misch.
2013-12-05 12:21:55 -03:00
Bruce Momjian 86ef4796f5 build: pass EXTRA_REGRESS_OPTS to secondary regression tests
Christoph Berg
2013-12-04 10:14:45 -05:00
Tom Lane 7ab321404c Fix crash in assign_collations_walker for EXISTS with empty SELECT list.
We (I think I, actually) forgot about this corner case while coding
collation resolution.  Per bug #8648 from Arjen Nienhuis.
2013-12-02 20:28:45 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 1ce150b7bb Don't TransactionIdDidAbort in HeapTupleGetUpdateXid
It is dangerous to do so, because some code expects to be able to see what's
the true Xmax even if it is aborted (particularly while traversing HOT
chains).  So don't do it, and instead rely on the callers to verify for
abortedness, if necessary.

Several race conditions and bugs fixed in the process.  One isolation test
changes the expected output due to these.

This also reverts commit c235a6a589, which is no longer necessary.

Backpatch to 9.3, where this function was introduced.

Andres Freund
2013-11-29 21:47:21 -03:00
Robert Haas 8e18d04d4d Refine our definition of what constitutes a system relation.
Although user-defined relations can't be directly created in
pg_catalog, it's possible for them to end up there, because you can
create them in some other schema and then use ALTER TABLE .. SET SCHEMA
to move them there.  Previously, such relations couldn't afterwards
be manipulated, because IsSystemRelation()/IsSystemClass() rejected
all attempts to modify objects in the pg_catalog schema, regardless
of their origin.  With this patch, they now reject only those
objects in pg_catalog which were created at initdb-time, allowing
most operations on user-created tables in pg_catalog to proceed
normally.

This patch also adds new functions IsCatalogRelation() and
IsCatalogClass(), which is similar to IsSystemRelation() and
IsSystemClass() but with a slightly narrower definition: only TOAST
tables of system catalogs are included, rather than *all* TOAST tables.
This is currently used only for making decisions about when
invalidation messages need to be sent, but upcoming logical decoding
patches will find other uses for this information.

Andres Freund, with some modifications by me.
2013-11-28 20:57:20 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 85ed91ee7d Implement information_schema.parameters.parameter_default column
Reviewed-by: Ali Dar <ali.munir.dar@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Khandekar <amit.khandekar@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Rodolfo Campero <rodolfo.campero@anachronics.com>
2013-11-26 23:21:35 -05:00
Bruce Momjian a6542a4b68 Change SET LOCAL/CONSTRAINTS/TRANSACTION and ABORT behavior
Change SET LOCAL/CONSTRAINTS/TRANSACTION behavior outside of a
transaction block from error (post-9.3) to warning.  (Was nothing in <=
9.3.)  Also change ABORT outside of a transaction block from notice to
warning.
2013-11-25 19:19:40 -05:00
Tom Lane f19e92ed04 Flatten join alias Vars before pulling up targetlist items from a subquery.
pullup_replace_vars()'s decisions about whether a pulled-up replacement
expression needs to be wrapped in a PlaceHolderVar depend on the assumption
that what looks like a Var behaves like a Var.  However, if the Var is a
join alias reference, later flattening of join aliases might replace the
Var with something that's not a Var at all, and should have been wrapped.

To fix, do a forcible pass of flatten_join_alias_vars() on the subquery
targetlist before we start to copy items out of it.  We'll re-run that
processing on the pulled-up expressions later, but that's harmless.

Per report from Ken Tanzer; the added regression test case is based on his
example.  This bug has been there since the PlaceHolderVar mechanism was
invented, but has escaped detection because the circumstances that trigger
it are fairly narrow.  You need a flattenable query underneath an outer
join, which contains another flattenable query inside a join of its own,
with a dangerous expression (a constant or something else non-strict)
in that one's targetlist.

Having seen this, I'm wondering if it wouldn't be prudent to do all
alias-variable flattening earlier, perhaps even in the rewriter.
But that would probably not be a back-patchable change.
2013-11-22 14:37:21 -05:00
Tom Lane 784e762e88 Support multi-argument UNNEST(), and TABLE() syntax for multiple functions.
This patch adds the ability to write TABLE( function1(), function2(), ...)
as a single FROM-clause entry.  The result is the concatenation of the
first row from each function, followed by the second row from each
function, etc; with NULLs inserted if any function produces fewer rows than
others.  This is believed to be a much more useful behavior than what
Postgres currently does with multiple SRFs in a SELECT list.

This syntax also provides a reasonable way to combine use of column
definition lists with WITH ORDINALITY: put the column definition list
inside TABLE(), where it's clear that it doesn't control the ordinality
column as well.

Also implement SQL-compliant multiple-argument UNNEST(), by turning
UNNEST(a,b,c) into TABLE(unnest(a), unnest(b), unnest(c)).

The SQL standard specifies TABLE() with only a single function, not
multiple functions, and it seems to require an implicit UNNEST() which is
not what this patch does.  There may be something wrong with that reading
of the spec, though, because if it's right then the spec's TABLE() is just
a pointless alternative spelling of UNNEST().  After further review of
that, we might choose to adopt a different syntax for what this patch does,
but in any case this functionality seems clearly worthwhile.

Andrew Gierth, reviewed by Zoltán Böszörményi and Heikki Linnakangas, and
significantly revised by me
2013-11-21 19:37:20 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 32ceba3ea7 Replace appendPQExpBuffer(..., <constant>) with appendPQExpBufferStr
Arguably makes the code a bit more readable, and might give a small
performance gain.

David Rowley
2013-11-18 18:34:51 +02:00
Tom Lane f901bb50e3 Add make_date() and make_time() functions.
Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Jeevan Chalke and Atri Sharma
2013-11-17 15:06:50 -05:00
Tom Lane 69c8fbac20 Improve performance of numeric sum(), avg(), stddev(), variance(), etc.
This patch improves performance of most built-in aggregates that formerly
used a NUMERIC or NUMERIC array as their transition type; this includes
not only aggregates on numeric inputs, but some aggregates on integer
inputs where overflow of an int8 value is a possibility.  The code now
uses a special-purpose data structure to avoid array construction and
deconstruction overhead, as well as packing and unpacking overhead for
numeric values.

These aggregates' transition type is now declared as INTERNAL, since
it doesn't correspond to any SQL data type.  To keep the planner from
thinking that that means a lot of storage will be used, we make use
of the just-added pg_aggregate.aggtransspace feature.  The space estimate
is set to 128 bytes, which is at least in the right ballpark.

Hadi Moshayedi, reviewed by Pavel Stehule and Tomas Vondra
2013-11-16 18:46:34 -05:00
Tom Lane 6cb86143e8 Allow aggregates to provide estimates of their transition state data size.
Formerly the planner had a hard-wired rule of thumb for guessing the amount
of space consumed by an aggregate function's transition state data.  This
estimate is critical to deciding whether it's OK to use hash aggregation,
and in many situations the built-in estimate isn't very good.  This patch
adds a column to pg_aggregate wherein a per-aggregate estimate can be
provided, overriding the planner's default, and infrastructure for setting
the column via CREATE AGGREGATE.

It may be that additional smarts will be required in future, perhaps even
a per-aggregate estimation function.  But this is already a step forward.

This is extracted from a larger patch to improve the performance of numeric
and int8 aggregates.  I (tgl) thought it was worth reviewing and committing
this infrastructure separately.  In this commit, all built-in aggregates
are given aggtransspace = 0, so no behavior should change.

Hadi Moshayedi, reviewed by Pavel Stehule and Tomas Vondra
2013-11-16 16:03:40 -05:00
Tom Lane f3b3b8d5be Compute correct em_nullable_relids in get_eclass_for_sort_expr().
Bug #8591 from Claudio Freire demonstrates that get_eclass_for_sort_expr
must be able to compute valid em_nullable_relids for any new equivalence
class members it creates.  I'd worried about this in the commit message
for db9f0e1d9a, but claimed that it wasn't a
problem because multi-member ECs should already exist when it runs.  That
is transparently wrong, though, because this function is also called by
initialize_mergeclause_eclasses, which runs during deconstruct_jointree.
The example given in the bug report (which the new regression test item
is based upon) fails because the COALESCE() expression is first seen by
initialize_mergeclause_eclasses rather than process_equivalence.

Fixing this requires passing the appropriate nullable_relids set to
get_eclass_for_sort_expr, and it requires new code to compute that set
for top-level expressions such as ORDER BY, GROUP BY, etc.  We store
the top-level nullable_relids in a new field in PlannerInfo to avoid
computing it many times.  In the back branches, I've added the new
field at the end of the struct to minimize ABI breakage for planner
plugins.  There doesn't seem to be a good alternative to changing
get_eclass_for_sort_expr's API signature, though.  There probably aren't
any third-party extensions calling that function directly; moreover,
if there are, they probably need to think about what to pass for
nullable_relids anyway.

Back-patch to 9.2, like the previous patch in this area.
2013-11-15 16:46:18 -05:00
Tom Lane c7b849a896 Prevent leakage of cached plans and execution trees in plpgsql DO blocks.
plpgsql likes to cache query plans and simple-expression execution state
trees across calls.  This is a considerable win for multiple executions
of the same function.  However, it's useless for DO blocks, since by
definition those are executed only once and discarded.  Nonetheless,
we were allowing a DO block's expression execution trees to survive
until end of transaction, resulting in a significant intra-transaction
memory leak, as reported by Yeb Havinga.  Worse, if the DO block exited
with an error, the compiled form of the block's code was leaked till
end of session --- along with subsidiary plancache entries.

To fix, make DO blocks keep their expression execution trees in a private
EState that's deleted at exit from the block, and add a PG_TRY block
to plpgsql_inline_handler to make sure that memory cleanup happens
even on error exits.  Also add a regression test covering error handling
in a DO block, because my first try at this broke that.  (The test is
not meant to prove that we don't leak memory anymore, though it could
be used for that with a much larger loop count.)

Ideally we'd back-patch this into all versions supporting DO blocks;
but the patch needs to add a field to struct PLpgSQL_execstate, and that
would break ABI compatibility for third-party plugins such as the plpgsql
debugger.  Given the small number of complaints so far, fixing this in
HEAD only seems like an acceptable choice.
2013-11-15 13:52:03 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 7cb964acb7 Fix buffer overrun in isolation test program.
Commit 061b88c732 saved argv0 to a
global buffer without ensuring that it was zero terminated,
allowing references to it to overrun the buffer and access other
memory.  This probably would not have presented any security risk,
but could have resulted in very confusing failures if the path to
the executable was very long.

Reported by David Rowley
2013-11-15 08:27:42 -06:00
Tom Lane 982b82d6b1 Add a regression test case for \d on an index.
Previous commit shows the need for this.  The coverage isn't really
thorough, but it's better than nothing.
2013-11-14 10:35:15 -05:00
Kevin Grittner fe67d25233 Free ignorelist after each regression test schedule.
It's a trivial amount of RAM held until the end of the regression
test run; but it's probably worth fixing to silence future warnings
from code analyzers.

This was the only memory leak pointed out by clang's static code
analysis tool.
2013-11-13 09:01:06 -06:00
Robert Haas 061b88c732 Try again to make pg_isolation_regress work its build directory.
We can't search for the isolationtester binary until after we've set
up the environment, because otherwise when find_other_exec() tries
to invoke it with the -V option, it might fail for inability to
locate a working libpq.  So postpone that step.

Andres Freund
2013-11-12 11:23:47 -05:00
Tom Lane 0b7e660d6c Fix ruleutils pretty-printing to not generate trailing whitespace.
The pretty-printing logic in ruleutils.c operates by inserting a newline
and some indentation whitespace into strings that are already valid SQL.
This naturally results in leaving some trailing whitespace before the
newline in many cases; which can be annoying when processing the output
with other tools, as complained of by Joe Abbate.  We can fix that in
a pretty localized fashion by deleting any trailing whitespace before
we append a pretty-printing newline.  In addition, we have to modify the
code inserted by commit 2f582f76b1 so that
we also delete trailing whitespace when transposing items from temporary
buffers into the main result string, when a temporary item starts with a
newline.

This results in rather voluminous changes to the regression test results,
but it's easily verified that they are only removal of trailing whitespace.

Back-patch to 9.3, because the aforementioned commit resulted in many
more cases of trailing whitespace than had occurred in earlier branches.
2013-11-11 13:36:38 -05:00
Tom Lane 648bd05b13 Re-allow duplicate aliases within aliased JOINs.
Although the SQL spec forbids duplicate table aliases, historically
we've allowed queries like
    SELECT ... FROM tab1 x CROSS JOIN (tab2 x CROSS JOIN tab3 y) z
on the grounds that the aliased join (z) hides the aliases within it,
therefore there is no conflict between the two RTEs named "x".  The
LATERAL patch broke this, on the misguided basis that "x" could be
ambiguous if tab3 were a LATERAL subquery.  To avoid breaking existing
queries, it's better to allow this situation and complain only if
tab3 actually does contain an ambiguous reference.  We need only remove
the check that was throwing an error, because the column lookup code
is already prepared to handle ambiguous references.  Per bug #8444.
2013-11-11 10:42:57 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 001e114b8d Fix whitespace issues found by git diff --check, add gitattributes
Set per file type attributes in .gitattributes to fine-tune whitespace
checks.  With the associated cleanups, the tree is now clean for git
2013-11-10 14:48:29 -05:00
Robert Haas 9b4d52f209 Fix pg_isolation_regress to work outside its build directory.
This makes it possible to, for example, use the isolation tester to
test a contrib module.

Andres Freund
2013-11-08 14:40:41 -05:00
Robert Haas 07cacba983 Add the notion of REPLICA IDENTITY for a table.
Pending patches for logical replication will use this to determine
which columns of a tuple ought to be considered as its candidate key.

Andres Freund, with minor, mostly cosmetic adjustments by me
2013-11-08 12:30:43 -05:00
Tom Lane b97ee66cc1 Make contain_volatile_functions/contain_mutable_functions look into SubLinks.
This change prevents us from doing inappropriate subquery flattening in
cases such as dangerous functions hidden inside a sub-SELECT in the
targetlist of another sub-SELECT.  That could result in unexpected behavior
due to multiple evaluations of a volatile function, as in a recent
complaint from Etienne Dube.  It's been questionable from the very
beginning whether these functions should look into subqueries (as noted in
their comments), and this case seems to provide proof that they should.

Because the new code only descends into SubLinks, not SubPlans or
InitPlans, the change only affects the planner's behavior during
prepjointree processing and not later on --- for example, you can still get
it to use a volatile function in an indexqual if you wrap the function in
(SELECT ...).  That's a historical behavior, for sure, but it's reasonable
given that the executor's evaluation rules for subplans don't depend on
whether there are volatile functions inside them.  In any case, we need to
constrain the behavioral change as narrowly as we can to make this
reasonable to back-patch.
2013-11-08 11:36:57 -05:00
Tom Lane c28b289bf3 Prevent display of dropped columns in row constraint violation messages.
ExecBuildSlotValueDescription() printed "null" for each dropped column in
a row being complained of by ExecConstraints().  This has some sanity in
terms of the underlying implementation, but is of course pretty surprising
to users.  To fix, we must pass the target relation's descriptor to
ExecBuildSlotValueDescription(), because the slot descriptor it had been
using doesn't get labeled with attisdropped markers.

Per bug #8408 from Maxim Boguk.  Back-patch to 9.2 where the feature of
printing row values in NOT NULL and CHECK constraint violation messages
was introduced.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane
2013-11-07 14:41:36 -05:00
Tom Lane 5e900bc00f Fix generation of MergeAppend plans for optimized min/max on expressions.
Before jamming a desired targetlist into a plan node, one really ought to
make sure the plan node can handle projections, and insert a buffering
Result plan node if not.  planagg.c forgot to do this, which is a hangover
from the days when it only dealt with IndexScan plan types.  MergeAppend
doesn't project though, not to mention that it gets unhappy if you remove
its possibly-resjunk sort columns.  The code accidentally failed to fail
for cases in which the min/max argument was a simple Var, because the new
targetlist would be equivalent to the original "flat" tlist anyway.
For any more complex case, it's been broken since 9.1 where we introduced
the ability to optimize min/max using MergeAppend, as reported by Raphael
Bauduin.  Fix by duplicating the logic from grouping_planner that decides
whether we need a Result node.

In 9.2 and 9.1, this requires back-porting the tlist_same_exprs() function
introduced in commit 4387cf956b, else we'd
uselessly add a Result node in cases that worked before.  It's rather
tempting to back-patch that whole commit so that we can avoid extra Result
nodes in mainline cases too; but I'll refrain, since that code hasn't
really seen all that much field testing yet.
2013-11-07 13:14:14 -05:00
Tom Lane bb45c64041 Support default arguments and named-argument notation for window functions.
These things didn't work because the planner omitted to do the necessary
preprocessing of a WindowFunc's argument list.  Add the few dozen lines
of code needed to handle that.

Although this sounds like a feature addition, it's really a bug fix because
the default-argument case was likely to crash previously, due to lack of
checking of the number of supplied arguments in the built-in window
functions.  It's not a security issue because there's no way for a
non-superuser to create a window function definition with defaults that
refers to a built-in C function, but nonetheless people might be annoyed
that it crashes rather than producing a useful error message.  So
back-patch as far as the patch applies easily, which turns out to be 9.2.
I'll put a band-aid in earlier versions as a separate patch.

(Note that these features still don't work for aggregates, and fixing that
case will be harder since we represent aggregate arg lists as target lists
not bare expression lists.  There's no crash risk though because CREATE
AGGREGATE doesn't accept defaults, and we reject named-argument notation
when parsing an aggregate call.)
2013-11-06 13:33:09 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 732758db4c Fix breakage of MV column name list usage.
Per bug report from Tomonari Katsumata.

Back-patch to 9.3.
2013-11-04 14:31:07 -06:00
Kevin Grittner be420fa02e Fix subquery reference to non-populated MV in CMV.
A subquery reference to a matview should be allowed by CREATE
MATERIALIZED VIEW WITH NO DATA, just like a direct reference is.

Per bug report from Laurent Sartran.

Backpatch to 9.3.
2013-11-02 18:38:17 -05:00
Tom Lane 45f64f1bbf Remove CTimeZone/HasCTZSet, root and branch.
These variables no longer have any useful purpose, since there's no reason
to special-case brute force timezones now that we have a valid
session_timezone setting for them.  Remove the variables, and remove the
SET/SHOW TIME ZONE code that deals with them.

The user-visible impact of this is that SHOW TIME ZONE will now show a
POSIX-style zone specification, in the form "<+-offset>-+offset", rather
than an interval value when a brute-force zone has been set.  While perhaps
less intuitive, this is a better definition than before because it's
actually possible to give that string back to SET TIME ZONE and get the
same behavior, unlike what used to happen.

We did not previously mention the angle-bracket syntax when describing
POSIX timezone specifications; add some documentation so that people
can figure out what these strings do.  (There's still quite a lot of
undocumented functionality there, but anybody who really cares can
go read the POSIX spec to find out about it.  In practice most people
seem to prefer Olsen-style city names anyway.)
2013-11-01 13:57:31 -04:00
Tom Lane 1c8a7f617f Remove internal uses of CTimeZone/HasCTZSet.
The only remaining places where we actually look at CTimeZone/HasCTZSet
are abstime2tm() and timestamp2tm().  Now that session_timezone is always
valid, we can remove these special cases.  The caller-visible impact of
this is that these functions now always return a valid zone abbreviation
if requested, whereas before they'd return a NULL pointer if a brute-force
timezone was in use.  In the existing code, the only place I can find that
changes behavior is to_char(), whose TZ format code will now print
something useful rather than nothing for such zones.  (In the places where
the returned zone abbreviation is passed to EncodeDateTime, the lack of
visible change is because we've chosen the abbreviation used for these
zones to match what EncodeTimezone would have printed.)

It's likely that there is now a fair amount of removable dead code around
the call sites, namely anything that's meant to cope with getting a NULL
timezone abbreviation, but I've not made an effort to root that out.

This could be back-patched if we decide we'd like to fix to_char()'s
behavior in the back branches, but there doesn't seem to be much
enthusiasm for that at present.
2013-11-01 12:51:27 -04:00
Tom Lane 631dc390f4 Fix some odd behaviors when using a SQL-style simple GMT offset timezone.
Formerly, when using a SQL-spec timezone setting with a fixed GMT offset
(called a "brute force" timezone in the code), the session_timezone
variable was not updated to match the nominal timezone; rather, all code
was expected to ignore session_timezone if HasCTZSet was true.  This is
of course obviously fragile, though a search of the code finds only
timeofday() failing to honor the rule.  A bigger problem was that
DetermineTimeZoneOffset() supposed that if its pg_tz parameter was
pointer-equal to session_timezone, then HasCTZSet should override the
parameter.  This would cause datetime input containing an explicit zone
name to be treated as referencing the brute-force zone instead, if the
zone name happened to match the session timezone that had prevailed
before installing the brute-force zone setting (as reported in bug #8572).
The same malady could affect AT TIME ZONE operators.

To fix, set up session_timezone so that it matches the brute-force zone
specification, which we can do using the POSIX timezone definition syntax
"<abbrev>offset", and get rid of the bogus lookaside check in
DetermineTimeZoneOffset().  Aside from fixing the erroneous behavior in
datetime parsing and AT TIME ZONE, this will cause the timeofday() function
to print its result in the user-requested time zone rather than some
previously-set zone.  It might also affect results in third-party
extensions, if there are any that make use of session_timezone without
considering HasCTZSet, but in all cases the new behavior should be saner
than before.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-11-01 12:13:18 -04:00
Noah Misch c50b7c09d8 Add large object functions catering to SQL callers.
With these, one need no longer manipulate large object descriptors and
extract numeric constants from header files in order to read and write
large object contents from SQL.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Rushabh Lathia.
2013-10-27 22:56:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 9c339eb4f8 Use unaligned output in selected regression queries to reduce diff noise.
The rules regression test prints all known views and rules, which is a set
that changes regularly.  Previously, a change in one rule would frequently
lead to whitespace changes across the entire output of this query, which is
painful to verify and causes undesirable conflicts between unrelated patch
sets.  Use \a mode to improve matters.  Also use \t mode to suppress the
total-rows count, which was also a source of unnecessary patch conflicts.

Likewise modify the output mode for the list of indexed tables generated
in sanity_check.sql.  There might be other places where we should use this
idea, but these are the ones that have caused the most problems.

Andres Freund
2013-10-26 11:24:04 -04:00
Tom Lane 1f7a47912a Revert "Tweak "line" test to avoid negative zeros on some platforms"
This reverts commit a0a546f0d9.
It seems better to tweak the code to suppress -0 results during
line_construct_pts(), which I'll do in the next commit.
2013-10-25 15:50:31 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a0a546f0d9 Tweak "line" test to avoid negative zeros on some platforms 2013-10-25 07:08:40 -04:00
Tom Lane 2c66f9924c Replace pg_asprintf() with psprintf().
This eliminates an awkward coding pattern that's also unnecessarily
inconsistent with backend coding.  psprintf() is now the thing to
use everywhere.
2013-10-22 19:40:26 -04:00
Robert Haas cab5dc5daf Allow only some columns of a view to be auto-updateable.
Previously, unless all columns were auto-updateable, we wouldn't
inserts, updates, or deletes, or at least not without a rule or trigger;
now, we'll allow inserts and updates that target only the auto-updateable
columns, and deletes even if there are no auto-updateable columns at
all provided the view definition is otherwise suitable.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Marko Tiikkaja
2013-10-18 10:35:36 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 7778ddc7a2 Allow 5+ digit years for non-ISO timestamp/date strings, where appropriate
Report from Haribabu Kommi
2013-10-16 13:22:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5b6d08cd29 Add use of asprintf()
Add asprintf(), pg_asprintf(), and psprintf() to simplify string
allocation and composition.  Replacement implementations taken from
NetBSD.

Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Asif Naeem <anaeem.it@gmail.com>
2013-10-13 00:09:18 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a53dee43fe Tweak "line" test to avoid platform-specific floating-point output 2013-10-12 21:17:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 083b86e71b Update regression tests for line type patch
Erroneously omitted in 261c7d4b65
2013-10-10 19:59:15 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 4d212bac17 json_typeof function.
Andrew Tipton.
2013-10-10 12:21:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 261c7d4b65 Revive line type
Change the input/output format to {A,B,C}, to match the internal
representation.

Complete the implementations of line_in, line_out, line_recv, line_send.
Remove comments and error messages about the line type not being
implemented.  Add regression tests for existing line operators and
functions.

Reviewed-by: rui hua <365507506hua@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeevan Chalke <jeevan.chalke@enterprisedb.com>
2013-10-09 22:34:38 -04:00
Kevin Grittner f566515192 Add record_image_ops opclass for matview concurrent refresh.
REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW CONCURRENTLY was broken for any matview
containing a column of a type without a default btree operator
class.  It also did not produce results consistent with a non-
concurrent REFRESH or a normal view if any column was of a type
which allowed user-visible differences between values which
compared as equal according to the type's default btree opclass.
Concurrent matview refresh was modified to use the new operators
to solve these problems.

Documentation was added for record comparison, both for the
default btree operator class for record, and the newly added
operators.  Regression tests now check for proper behavior both
for a matview with a box column and a matview containing a citext
column.

Reviewed by Steve Singer, who suggested some of the doc language.
2013-10-09 14:26:09 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 31a877f18b Allow drop-index-concurrently-1 test to run at any isolation level.
It previously reported failure at REPEATABLE READ and SERIALIZABLE
transaction isolation levels for make installcheck.
2013-10-08 16:55:12 -05:00
Bruce Momjian ee1e5662d8 Auto-tune effective_cache size to be 4x shared buffers 2013-10-08 12:12:24 -04:00
Robert Haas 16a906f535 Make DISCARD SEQUENCES also discard the last used sequence.
Otherwise, we access already-freed memory.  Oops.

Report by Michael Paquier.  Fix by me.
2013-10-07 15:55:56 -04:00
Robert Haas 689746c045 plpgsql: Add new option print_strict_params.
This option provides more detailed error messages when STRICT is used
and the number of rows returned is not one.

Marko Tiikkaja, reviewed by Ian Lawrence Barwick
2013-10-07 15:38:49 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 1310d4cab2 add multixact-no-deadlock to schedule 2013-10-04 15:52:58 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 46d8954654 Make some isolationtester specs more complete
Also, make sure they pass on all transaction isolation levels.
2013-10-04 15:52:58 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 4f0777ba0f isolationtester: Allow tuples to be returned in more places
Previously, isolationtester would forbid returning tuples in
session-specific teardown (but not global teardown), as well as in
global setup.  Allow these places to return tuples, too.
2013-10-04 14:54:55 -03:00
Bruce Momjian a54141aebc Issue error on SET outside transaction block in some cases
Issue error for SET LOCAL/CONSTRAINTS/TRANSACTION outside a transaction
block, as they have no effect.

Per suggestion from Morten Hustveit
2013-10-04 13:50:28 -04:00
Robert Haas d90ced8bb2 Add DISCARD SEQUENCES command.
DISCARD ALL will now discard cached sequence information, as well.

Fabrízio de Royes Mello, reviewed by Zoltán Böszörményi, with some
further tweaks by me.
2013-10-03 16:23:31 -04:00
Robert Haas c64e68fd9f psql: Make \pset without arguments show all settings.
Gilles Darold, reviewed by Pavel Stehule
2013-10-03 15:18:02 -04:00
Noah Misch b43b64caea Use @libdir@ in both of regress/{input,output}/security_label.source
Though @libdir@ almost always matches @abs_builddir@ in this context,
the test could only fail if they differed.  Back-patch to 9.1, where the
test was introduced.

Hamid Quddus Akhtar
2013-09-23 16:00:13 -04:00
Robert Haas ba3d39c969 Don't allow system columns in CHECK constraints, except tableoid.
Previously, arbitray system columns could be mentioned in table
constraints, but they were not correctly checked at runtime, because
the values weren't actually set correctly in the tuple.  Since it
seems easy enough to initialize the table OID properly, do that,
and continue allowing that column, but disallow the rest unless and
until someone figures out a way to make them work properly.

No back-patch, because this doesn't seem important enough to take the
risk of destabilizing the back branches.  In fact, this will pose a
dump-and-reload hazard for those upgrading from previous versions:
constraints that were accepted before but were not correctly enforced
will now either be enforced correctly or not accepted at all.  Either
could result in restore failures, but in practice I think very few
users will notice the difference, since the use case is pretty
marginal anyway and few users will be relying on features that have
not historically worked.

Amit Kapila, reviewed by Rushabh Lathia, with doc changes by me.
2013-09-23 13:31:22 -04:00
Tom Lane 546f7c2e38 Don't fail for bad GUCs in CREATE FUNCTION with check_function_bodies off.
The previous coding attempted to activate all the GUC settings specified
in SET clauses, so that the function validator could operate in the GUC
environment expected by the function body.  However, this is problematic
when restoring a dump, since the SET clauses might refer to database
objects that don't exist yet.  We already have the parameter
check_function_bodies that's meant to prevent forward references in
function definitions from breaking dumps, so let's change CREATE FUNCTION
to not install the SET values if check_function_bodies is off.

Authors of function validators were already advised not to make any
"context sensitive" checks when check_function_bodies is off, if indeed
they're checking anything at all in that mode.  But extend the
documentation to point out the GUC issue in particular.

(Note that we still check the SET clauses to some extent; the behavior
with !check_function_bodies is now approximately equivalent to what ALTER
DATABASE/ROLE have been doing for awhile with context-dependent GUCs.)

This problem can be demonstrated in all active branches, so back-patch
all the way.
2013-09-03 18:32:20 -04:00
Tom Lane 0d3f4406df Allow aggregate functions to be VARIADIC.
There's no inherent reason why an aggregate function can't be variadic
(even VARIADIC ANY) if its transition function can handle the case.
Indeed, this patch to add the feature touches none of the planner or
executor, and little of the parser; the main missing stuff was DDL and
pg_dump support.

It is true that variadic aggregates can create the same sort of ambiguity
about parameters versus ORDER BY keys that was complained of when we
(briefly) had both one- and two-argument forms of string_agg().  However,
the policy formed in response to that discussion only said that we'd not
create any built-in aggregates with varying numbers of arguments, not that
we shouldn't allow users to do it.  So the logical extension of that is
we can allow users to make variadic aggregates as long as we're wary about
shipping any such in core.

In passing, this patch allows aggregate function arguments to be named, to
the extent of remembering the names in pg_proc and dumping them in pg_dump.
You can't yet call an aggregate using named-parameter notation.  That seems
like a likely future extension, but it'll take some work, and it's not what
this patch is really about.  Likewise, there's still some work needed to
make window functions handle VARIADIC fully, but I left that for another
day.

initdb forced because of new aggvariadic field in Aggref parse nodes.
2013-09-03 17:08:46 -04:00
Tom Lane abd3f8ca4b Improve regression test for #8410.
The previous version of the query disregarded the result of the MergeAppend
instead of checking its results.

Andres Freund
2013-08-30 21:40:21 -04:00
Tom Lane ac2d0e464a Add test case for bug #8410.
Per Andres Freund.
2013-08-30 19:27:40 -04:00
Tom Lane fcf9ecad57 In locate_grouping_columns(), don't expect an exact match of Var typmods.
It's possible that inlining of SQL functions (or perhaps other changes?)
has exposed typmod information not known at parse time.  In such cases,
Vars generated by query_planner might have valid typmod values while the
original grouping columns only have typmod -1.  This isn't a semantic
problem since the behavior of grouping only depends on type not typmod,
but it breaks locate_grouping_columns' use of tlist_member to locate the
matching entry in query_planner's result tlist.

We can fix this without an excessive amount of new code or complexity by
relying on the fact that locate_grouping_columns only gets called when
make_subplanTargetList has set need_tlist_eval == false, and that can only
happen if all the grouping columns are simple Vars.  Therefore we only need
to search the sub_tlist for a matching Var, and we can reasonably define a
"match" as being a match of the Var identity fields
varno/varattno/varlevelsup.  The code still Asserts that vartype matches,
but ignores vartypmod.

Per bug #8393 from Evan Martin.  The added regression test case is
basically the same as his example.  This has been broken for a very long
time, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-08-23 17:30:53 -04:00
Tom Lane c64de21e96 Fix qual-clause-misplacement issues with pulled-up LATERAL subqueries.
In an example such as
SELECT * FROM
  i LEFT JOIN LATERAL (SELECT * FROM j WHERE i.n = j.n) j ON true;
it is safe to pull up the LATERAL subquery into its parent, but we must
then treat the "i.n = j.n" clause as a qual clause of the LEFT JOIN.  The
previous coding in deconstruct_recurse mistakenly labeled the clause as
"is_pushed_down", resulting in wrong semantics if the clause were applied
at the join node, as per an example submitted awhile ago by Jeremy Evans.
To fix, postpone processing of such clauses until we return back up to
the appropriate recursion depth in deconstruct_recurse.

In addition, tighten the is-safe-to-pull-up checks in is_simple_subquery;
we previously missed the possibility that the LATERAL subquery might itself
contain an outer join that makes lateral references in lower quals unsafe.

A regression test case equivalent to Jeremy's example was already in my
commit of yesterday, but was giving the wrong results because of this
bug.  This patch fixes the expected output for that, and also adds a
test case for the second problem.
2013-08-19 13:19:41 -04:00
Tom Lane 9e7e29c75a Fix planner problems with LATERAL references in PlaceHolderVars.
The planner largely failed to consider the possibility that a
PlaceHolderVar's expression might contain a lateral reference to a Var
coming from somewhere outside the PHV's syntactic scope.  We had a previous
report of a problem in this area, which I tried to fix in a quick-hack way
in commit 4da6439bd8, but Antonin Houska
pointed out that there were still some problems, and investigation turned
up other issues.  This patch largely reverts that commit in favor of a more
thoroughly thought-through solution.  The new theory is that a PHV's
ph_eval_at level cannot be higher than its original syntactic level.  If it
contains lateral references, those don't change the ph_eval_at level, but
rather they create a lateral-reference requirement for the ph_eval_at join
relation.  The code in joinpath.c needs to handle that.

Another issue is that createplan.c wasn't handling nested PlaceHolderVars
properly.

In passing, push knowledge of lateral-reference checks for join clauses
into join_clause_is_movable_to.  This is mainly so that FDWs don't need
to deal with it.

This patch doesn't fix the original join-qual-placement problem reported by
Jeremy Evans (and indeed, one of the new regression test cases shows the
wrong answer because of that).  But the PlaceHolderVar problems need to be
fixed before that issue can be addressed, so committing this separately
seems reasonable.
2013-08-17 20:22:37 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 32f7c0ae17 Improve error message when view is not updatable
Avoid using the term "updatable" in confusing ways.  Suggest a trigger
first, before a rule.
2013-08-14 23:02:59 -04:00
Tom Lane 1b1d3d92c3 Remove ph_may_need from PlaceHolderInfo, with attendant simplifications.
The planner logic that attempted to make a preliminary estimate of the
ph_needed levels for PlaceHolderVars seems to be completely broken by
lateral references.  Fortunately, the potential join order optimization
that this code supported seems to be of relatively little value in
practice; so let's just get rid of it rather than trying to fix it.

Getting rid of this allows fairly substantial simplifications in
placeholder.c, too, so planning in such cases should be a bit faster.

Issue noted while pursuing bugs reported by Jeremy Evans and Antonin
Houska, though this doesn't in itself fix either of their reported cases.
What this does do is prevent an Assert crash in the kind of query
illustrated by the added regression test.  (I'm not sure that the plan for
that query is stable enough across platforms to be usable as a regression
test output ... but we'll soon find out from the buildfarm.)

Back-patch to 9.3.  The problem case can't arise without LATERAL, so
no need to touch older branches.
2013-08-14 18:38:47 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 072457b360 Message punctuation and pluralization fixes 2013-08-09 08:02:44 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 88c556680c Fix crash in error report of invalid tuple lock
My tweak of these error messages in commit c359a1b082 contained the
thinko that a query would always have rowMarks set for a query
containing a locking clause.  Not so: when declaring a cursor, for
instance, rowMarks isn't set at the point we're checking, so we'd be
dereferencing a NULL pointer.

The fix is to pass the lock strength to the function raising the error,
instead of trying to reverse-engineer it.  The result not only is more
robust, but it also seems cleaner overall.

Per report from Robert Haas.
2013-08-02 13:18:37 -04:00
Stephen Frost ddef1a39c6 Allow a context to be passed in for error handling
As pointed out by Tom Lane, we can allow other users of the error
handler callbacks to provide their own memory context by adding
the context to use to ErrorData and using that instead of explicitly
using ErrorContext.

This then allows GetErrorContextStack() to be called from inside
exception handlers, so modify plpgsql to take advantage of that and
add an associated regression test for it.
2013-08-01 01:07:20 -04:00
Tom Lane d074b4e50d Fix regexp_matches() handling of zero-length matches.
We'd find the same match twice if it was of zero length and not immediately
adjacent to the previous match.  replace_text_regexp() got similar cases
right, so adjust this search logic to match that.  Note that even though
the regexp_split_to_xxx() functions share this code, they did not display
equivalent misbehavior, because the second match would be considered
degenerate and ignored.

Jeevan Chalke, with some cosmetic changes by me.
2013-07-31 11:31:22 -04:00
Noah Misch 16f38f72ab Restore REINDEX constraint validation.
Refactoring as part of commit 8ceb245680
had the unintended effect of making REINDEX TABLE and REINDEX DATABASE
no longer validate constraints enforced by the indexes in question;
REINDEX INDEX still did so.  Indexes marked invalid remained so, and
constraint violations arising from data corruption went undetected.
Back-patch to 9.0, like the causative commit.
2013-07-30 18:36:52 -04:00
Greg Stark c62736cc37 Add SQL Standard WITH ORDINALITY support for UNNEST (and any other SRF)
Author: Andrew Gierth, David Fetter
Reviewers: Dean Rasheed, Jeevan Chalke, Stephen Frost
2013-07-29 16:38:01 +01:00
Stephen Frost 9bd0feeba8 Improvements to GetErrorContextStack()
As GetErrorContextStack() borrowed setup and tear-down code from other
places, it was less than clear that it must only be called as a
top-level entry point into the error system and can't be called by an
exception handler (unlike the rest of the error system, which is set up
to be reentrant-safe).

Being called from an exception handler is outside the charter of
GetErrorContextStack(), so add a bit more protection against it,
improve the comments addressing why we have to set up an errordata
stack for this function at all, and add a few more regression tests.

Lack of clarity pointed out by Tom Lane; all bugs are mine.
2013-07-25 09:41:55 -04:00
Stephen Frost 8312832567 Add GET DIAGNOSTICS ... PG_CONTEXT in PL/PgSQL
This adds the ability to get the call stack as a string from within a
PL/PgSQL function, which can be handy for logging to a table, or to
include in a useful message to an end-user.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Rushabh Lathia and rather heavily whacked
around by Stephen Frost.
2013-07-24 18:53:27 -04:00
Tom Lane ef655663c5 Further hacking on ruleutils' new column-alias-assignment code.
After further thought about implicit coercions appearing in a joinaliasvars
list, I realized that they represent an additional reason why we might need
to reference the join output column directly instead of referencing an
underlying column.  Consider SELECT x FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 USING (x) where
t1.x is of type date while t2.x is of type timestamptz.  The merged output
variable is of type timestamptz, but it won't go to null when t2 does,
therefore neither t1.x nor t2.x is a valid substitute reference.

The code in get_variable() actually gets this case right, since it knows
it shouldn't look through a coercion, but we failed to ensure that the
unqualified output column name would be globally unique.  To fix, modify
the code that trawls for a dangerous situation so that it actually scans
through an unnamed join's joinaliasvars list to see if there are any
non-simple-Var entries.
2013-07-23 17:55:04 -04:00
Tom Lane a7cd853b75 Change post-rewriter representation of dropped columns in joinaliasvars.
It's possible to drop a column from an input table of a JOIN clause in a
view, if that column is nowhere actually referenced in the view.  But it
will still be there in the JOIN clause's joinaliasvars list.  We used to
replace such entries with NULL Const nodes, which is handy for generation
of RowExpr expansion of a whole-row reference to the view.  The trouble
with that is that it can't be distinguished from the situation after
subquery pull-up of a constant subquery output expression below the JOIN.
Instead, replace such joinaliasvars with null pointers (empty expression
trees), which can't be confused with pulled-up expressions.  expandRTE()
still emits the old convention, though, for convenience of RowExpr
generation and to reduce the risk of breaking extension code.

In HEAD and 9.3, this patch also fixes a problem with some new code in
ruleutils.c that was failing to cope with implicitly-casted joinaliasvars
entries, as per recent report from Feike Steenbergen.  That oversight was
because of an inadequate description of the data structure in parsenodes.h,
which I've now corrected.  There were some pre-existing oversights of the
same ilk elsewhere, which I believe are now all fixed.
2013-07-23 16:23:45 -04:00
Robert Haas e6055061c5 Additional regression tests for ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY.
Robins Tharakan, reviewed by Szymon Guz
2013-07-23 08:54:51 -04:00
Robert Haas f01d1ae3a1 Add infrastructure for mapping relfilenodes to relation OIDs.
Future patches are expected to introduce logical replication that
works by decoding WAL.  WAL contains relfilenodes rather than relation
OIDs, so this infrastructure will be needed to find the relation OID
based on WAL contents.

If logical replication does not make it into this release, we probably
should consider reverting this, since it will add some overhead to DDL
operations that create new relations.  One additional index insert per
pg_class row is not a large overhead, but it's more than zero.
Another way of meeting the needs of logical replication would be to
the relation OID to WAL, but that would burden DML operations, not
only DDL.

Andres Freund, with some changes by me.  Design review, in earlier
versions, by Álvaro Herrera.
2013-07-22 11:09:10 -04:00
Tom Lane e2bd904955 Fix regex match failures for backrefs combined with non-greedy quantifiers.
An ancient logic error in cfindloop() could cause the regex engine to fail
to find matches that begin later than the start of the string.  This
function is only used when the regex pattern contains a back reference,
and so far as we can tell the error is only reachable if the pattern is
non-greedy (i.e. its first quantifier uses the ? modifier).  Furthermore,
the actual match must begin after some potential match that satisfies the
DFA but then fails the back-reference's match test.

Reported and fixed by Jeevan Chalke, with cosmetic adjustments by me.
2013-07-18 21:22:37 -04:00
Stephen Frost 4cbe3ac3e8 WITH CHECK OPTION support for auto-updatable VIEWs
For simple views which are automatically updatable, this patch allows
the user to specify what level of checking should be done on records
being inserted or updated.  For 'LOCAL CHECK', new tuples are validated
against the conditionals of the view they are being inserted into, while
for 'CASCADED CHECK' the new tuples are validated against the
conditionals for all views involved (from the top down).

This option is part of the SQL specification.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Pavel Stehule
2013-07-18 17:10:16 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan d26888bc4d Move checking an explicit VARIADIC "any" argument into the parser.
This is more efficient and simpler . It does mean that an untyped NULL
can no longer be used in such cases, which should be mentioned in
Release Notes, but doesn't seem a terrible loss. The workaround is to
cast the NULL to some array type.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Jeevan Chalke.
2013-07-18 11:52:12 -04:00
Noah Misch b560ec1b0d Implement the FILTER clause for aggregate function calls.
This is SQL-standard with a few extensions, namely support for
subqueries and outer references in clause expressions.

catversion bump due to change in Aggref and WindowFunc.

David Fetter, reviewed by Dean Rasheed.
2013-07-16 20:15:36 -04:00
Kevin Grittner cc1965a99b Add support for REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW CONCURRENTLY.
This allows reads to continue without any blocking while a REFRESH
runs.  The new data appears atomically as part of transaction
commit.

Review questioned the Assert that a matview was not a system
relation.  This will be addressed separately.

Reviewed by Hitoshi Harada, Robert Haas, Andres Freund.
Merged after review with security patch f3ab5d4.
2013-07-16 12:55:44 -05:00
Robert Haas ac33c7e2c1 Regression tests for LOCK TABLE.
Robins Tharakan, reviewed by Szymon Guz, substantially revised by me.
2013-07-15 12:30:41 -04:00
Tom Lane 5372275b4b Fix planning of parameterized appendrel paths with expensive join quals.
The code in set_append_rel_pathlist() for building parameterized paths
for append relations (inheritance and UNION ALL combinations) supposed
that the cheapest regular path for a child relation would still be cheapest
when reparameterized.  Which might not be the case, particularly if the
added join conditions are expensive to compute, as in a recent example from
Jeff Janes.  Fix it to compare child path costs *after* reparameterizing.
We can short-circuit that if the cheapest pre-existing path is already
parameterized correctly, which seems likely to be true often enough to be
worth checking for.

Back-patch to 9.2 where parameterized paths were introduced.
2013-07-07 22:37:24 -04:00
Tom Lane 0cd787802f Rename a function to avoid naming conflict in parallel regression tests.
Commit 31a891857a added some tests in
plpgsql.sql that used a function rather unthinkingly named "foo()".
However, rangefuncs.sql has some much older tests that create a function
of that name, and since these test scripts run in parallel, there is a
chance of failures if the timing is just right.  Use another name to
avoid that.  Per buildfarm (failure seen today on "hamerkop", but
probably it's happened before and not been noticed).
2013-07-06 11:16:50 -04:00
Noah Misch 02d2b694ee Update messages, comments and documentation for materialized views.
All instances of the verbiage lagging the code.  Back-patch to 9.3,
where materialized views were introduced.
2013-07-05 15:37:51 -04:00
Magnus Hagander c87ff71f37 Expose the estimation of number of changed tuples since last analyze
This value, now pg_stat_all_tables.n_mod_since_analyze, was already
tracked and used by autovacuum, but not exposed to the user.

Mark Kirkwood, review by Laurenz Albe
2013-07-05 15:10:15 +02:00
Fujii Masao 2ef085d0e6 Get rid of pg_class.reltoastidxid.
Treat TOAST index just the same as normal one and get the OID
of TOAST index from pg_index but not pg_class.reltoastidxid.
This change allows us to handle multiple TOAST indexes, and
which is required infrastructure for upcoming
REINDEX CONCURRENTLY feature.

Patch by Michael Paquier, reviewed by Andres Freund and me.
2013-07-04 03:24:09 +09:00
Robert Haas f33c53ec5b Revert "Hopefully-portable regression tests for CREATE/ALTER/DROP COLLATION."
This reverts commit 263645305b.

The buildfarm is sad.
2013-07-03 13:27:50 -04:00
Robert Haas 263645305b Hopefully-portable regression tests for CREATE/ALTER/DROP COLLATION.
The collate.linux.utf8 test covers some of the same territory, but
isn't portable and so probably does not get run often, or on
non-Linux platforms.  If this approach turns out to be sufficiently
portable, we may want to look at trimming the redundant tests out
of that file to avoid duplication.

Robins Tharakan, reviewed by Michael Paquier and Fabien Coelho,
with further changes and cleanup by me.
2013-07-03 12:31:27 -04:00
Tom Lane 5530a82643 Fix handling of auto-updatable views on inherited tables.
An INSERT into such a view should work just like an INSERT into its base
table, ie the insertion should go directly into that table ... not be
duplicated into each child table, as was happening before, per bug #8275
from Rushabh Lathia.  On the other hand, the current behavior for
UPDATE/DELETE seems reasonable: the update/delete traverses the child
tables, or not, depending on whether the view specifies ONLY or not.
Add some regression tests covering this area.

Dean Rasheed
2013-07-03 12:26:52 -04:00
Robert Haas 00a7767fcc Regression tests for LISTEN/NOTIFY/UNLISTEN/pg_notify.
Robins Tharakan, reviewed by Szymon Guz
2013-07-03 11:07:08 -04:00
Robert Haas ada3e776c2 Additional regression tests for CREATE OPERATOR.
Robins Tharakan, reviewed by Szymon Guz
2013-07-03 10:48:26 -04:00
Noah Misch 7cd9b1371d Expose object name error fields in PL/pgSQL.
Specifically, permit attaching them to the error in RAISE and retrieving
them from a caught error in GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS.  RAISE enforces
nothing about the content of the fields; for its purposes, they are just
additional string fields.  Consequently, clarify in the protocol and
libpq documentation that the usual relationships between error fields,
like a schema name appearing wherever a table name appears, are not
universal.  This freedom has other applications; consider a FDW
propagating an error from an RDBMS having no schema support.

Back-patch to 9.3, where core support for the error fields was
introduced.  This prevents the confusion of having a release where libpq
exposes the fields and PL/pgSQL does not.

Pavel Stehule, lexical revisions by Noah Misch.
2013-07-03 07:29:56 -04:00
Robert Haas 3682025015 Add support for multiple kinds of external toast datums.
To that end, support tags rather than lengths for external datums.
As an example of how this can be used, add support or "indirect"
tuples which point to some externally allocated memory containing
a toast tuple.  Similar infrastructure could be used for other
purposes, including, perhaps, support for alternative compression
algorithms.

Andres Freund, reviewed by Hitoshi Harada and myself
2013-07-02 13:38:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 384f933046 Fix regression test make dependencies
The dependencies on the spi and dummy_seclabel contrib modules were
incomplete, because they did not pick up automatically generated
dependencies on header files.  This will manifest itself especially when
switching major versions, where the contrib modules would not be
recompiled to contain the new version number, leading to regression test
failures.

To fix this, use the submake approach already in use elsewhere, so that
the contrib modules are built using their full rules.
2013-07-01 21:10:36 -04:00
Simon Riggs f177cbfe67 ALTER TABLE ... ALTER CONSTRAINT for FKs
Allow constraint attributes to be altered,
so the default setting of NOT DEFERRABLE
can be altered to DEFERRABLE and back.

Review by Abhijit Menon-Sen
2013-06-29 00:27:30 +01:00
Robert Haas 5893ffa79c Make the OVER keyword unreserved.
This results in a slightly less specific error message when OVER
is used in a context where we don't accept window functions, but
per discussion, it's worth it to get the benefit of not needing
to reserve this keyword any more.  This same refactoring will
also let us avoid reserving some other keywords that we expect
to add in upcoming patches (specifically, IGNORE, RESPECT, and
FILTER).

Troels Nielsen, with minor changes by me
2013-06-28 11:11:00 -04:00
Simon Riggs 4f14c86d74 Reverting previous commit, pending investigation
of sporadic seg faults from various build farm members.
2013-06-24 21:21:18 +01:00
Simon Riggs b577a57d41 ALTER TABLE ... ALTER CONSTRAINT for FKs
Allow constraint attributes to be altered,
so the default setting of NOT DEFERRABLE
can be altered to DEFERRABLE and back.

Review by Abhijit Menon-Sen
2013-06-24 20:07:41 +01:00
Kevin Grittner 8791627b8f Fix the create_index regression test for Danish collation.
In Danish collations, there are letter combinations which sort
higher than 'Z'.  A test for values > 'WA' was picking up rows
where the value started with 'AA', causing the test to fail.

Backpatch to 9.2, where the failing test was added.

Per report from Svenne Krap and analysis by Jeff Janes
2013-06-19 10:36:45 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 78ed8e03c6 Fix unescaping of JSON Unicode escapes, especially for non-UTF8.
Per discussion  on -hackers. We treat Unicode escapes when unescaping
them similarly to the way we treat them in PostgreSQL string literals.
Escapes in the ASCII range are always accepted, no matter what the
database encoding. Escapes for higher code points are only processed in
UTF8 databases, and attempts to process them in other databases will
result in an error. \u0000 is never unescaped, since it would result in
an impermissible null byte.
2013-06-12 13:35:24 -04:00
Tom Lane a4424c57c3 Remove unnecessary restrictions about RowExprs in transformAExprIn().
When the existing code here was written, it made sense to special-case
RowExprs because that was the only way that we could handle row comparisons
at all.  Now that we have record_eq() and arrays of composites, the generic
logic for "scalar" types will in fact work on RowExprs too, so there's no
reason to throw error for combinations of RowExprs and other ways of
forming composite values, nor to ignore the possibility of using a
ScalarArrayOpExpr.  But keep using the old logic when comparing two
RowExprs, for consistency with the main transformAExprOp() logic.  (This
allows some cases with not-quite-identical rowtypes to succeed, so we might
get push-back if we removed it.)  Per bug #8198 from Rafal Rzepecki.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since this works fine as far back as
8.4.

Rafal Rzepecki and Tom Lane
2013-06-09 18:39:20 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 94e3311b97 Handle Unicode surrogate pairs correctly when processing JSON.
In 9.2, Unicode escape sequences are not analysed at all other than
to make sure that they are in the form \uXXXX. But in 9.3 many of the
new operators and functions try to turn JSON text values into text in
the server encoding, and this includes de-escaping Unicode escape
sequences. This processing had not taken into account the possibility
that this might contain a surrogate pair to designate a character
outside the BMP. That is now handled correctly.

This also enforces correct use of surrogate pairs, something that is not
done by the type's input routines. This fact is noted in the docs.
2013-06-08 09:12:48 -04:00
Tom Lane 964c0d0f80 Prevent pushing down WHERE clauses into unsafe UNION/INTERSECT nests.
The planner is aware that it mustn't push down upper-level quals into
subqueries if the quals reference subquery output columns that contain
set-returning functions or volatile functions, or are non-DISTINCT outputs
of a DISTINCT ON subquery.  However, it missed making this check when
there were one or more levels of UNION or INTERSECT above the dangerous
expression.  This could lead to "set-valued function called in context that
cannot accept a set" errors, as seen in bug #8213 from Eric Soroos, or to
silently wrong answers in the other cases.

To fix, refactor the checks so that we make the column-is-unsafe checks
during subquery_is_pushdown_safe(), which already has to recursively
inspect all arms of a set-operation tree.  This makes
qual_is_pushdown_safe() considerably simpler, at the cost that we will
spend some cycles checking output columns that possibly aren't referenced
in any upper qual.  But the cases where this code gets executed at all
are already nontrivial queries, so it's unlikely anybody will notice any
slowdown of planning.

This has been broken since commit 05f916e6ad,
which makes the bug over ten years old.  A bit surprising nobody noticed it
before now.
2013-06-05 23:45:11 -04:00
Noah Misch 97c4d9b7c7 Don't emit non-canonical empty arrays in array_remove().
Dean Rasheed
2013-05-31 21:50:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 8b5a3998a1 Remove whitespace from end of lines 2013-05-30 21:05:07 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 9af4159fce pgindent run for release 9.3
This is the first run of the Perl-based pgindent script.  Also update
pgindent instructions.
2013-05-29 16:58:43 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas d0cab7903b Remove unused regression test files.
euc_* and mule_internal test cases were identical to the ones in
src/test/mb. sql_ascii didn't exist elsewhere, but has been broken since
2001, and doesn't seem very interesting anyway. drop.sql hasn't been used
since 2000, when regress.sh was removed.
2013-05-18 22:35:37 +03:00
Tom Lane 403bd6a18b Fix crash when trying to display a NOTIFY rule action.
Fixes oversight in commit 2ffa740be9.
Per report from Josh Kupershmidt.

I think we've broken this case before, so let's add a regression test
this time.
2013-05-16 16:47:26 -04:00
Tom Lane e7bfc7e42c Fix some uses of "the quick brown fox".
If we're going to quote a well-known pangram, we should quote it
accurately.  Per gripe from Thom Brown.
2013-05-16 12:30:41 -04:00
Tom Lane 904af8db8a Fix handling of strict non-set functions with NULLs in set-valued inputs.
In a construct like "select plain_function(set_returning_function(...))",
the plain function is applied to each output row of the SRF successively.
If some of the SRF outputs are NULL, and the plain function is strict,
you'd expect to get NULL results for such rows ... but what actually
happened was that such rows were omitted entirely from the result set.
This was due to confusion of this case with what should happen for nested
set-returning functions; a strict SRF is indeed supposed to yield an empty
set for null input.  Per bug #8150 from Erwin Brandstetter.

Although this has been broken forever, we're not back-patching because
of the possibility that some apps out there expect the incorrect behavior.
This change should be listed as a possible incompatibility in the 9.3
release notes.
2013-05-12 13:08:12 -04:00
Tom Lane 284e28f228 Update collate.linux.utf8.out for ruleutils.c line-wrapping changes.
Missed in commit 62e666400d.
2013-05-08 22:47:33 -04:00
Tom Lane a7b965382c Better fix for permissions tests in excluded subqueries.
This reverts the code changes in 50c137487c,
which turned out to induce crashes and not completely fix the problem
anyway.  That commit only considered single subqueries that were excluded
by constraint-exclusion logic, but actually the problem also exists for
subqueries that are appendrel members (ie part of a UNION ALL list).  In
such cases we can't add a dummy subpath to the appendrel's AppendPath list
without defeating the logic that recognizes when an appendrel is completely
excluded.  Instead, fix the problem by having setrefs.c scan the rangetable
an extra time looking for subqueries that didn't get into the plan tree.
(This approach depends on the 9.2 change that made set_subquery_pathlist
generate dummy paths for excluded single subqueries, so that the exclusion
behavior is the same for single subqueries and appendrel members.)

Note: it turns out that the appendrel form of the missed-permissions-checks
bug exists as far back as 8.4.  However, since the practical effect of that
bug seems pretty minimal, consensus is to not attempt to fix it in the back
branches, at least not yet.  Possibly we could back-port this patch once
it's gotten a reasonable amount of testing in HEAD.  For the moment I'm
just going to revert the previous patch in 9.2.
2013-05-08 16:59:58 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas cb953d8b1b Use the term "radix tree" instead of "suffix tree" for SP-GiST text opclass.
What we have implemented is a radix tree (or a radix trie or a patricia
trie), but the docs and code comments incorrectly called it a "suffix tree".

Alexander Korotkov
2013-05-08 14:34:26 +03:00
Tom Lane 1d6c72a55b Move materialized views' is-populated status into their pg_class entries.
Previously this state was represented by whether the view's disk file had
zero or nonzero size, which is problematic for numerous reasons, since it's
breaking a fundamental assumption about heap storage.  This was done to
allow unlogged matviews to revert to unpopulated status after a crash
despite our lack of any ability to update catalog entries post-crash.
However, this poses enough risk of future problems that it seems better to
not support unlogged matviews until we can find another way.  Accordingly,
revert that choice as well as a number of existing kluges forced by it
in favor of creating a pg_class.relispopulated flag column.
2013-05-06 13:27:22 -04:00
Tom Lane 3223b25ff7 Disallow unlogged materialized views.
The initial implementation of this feature was really unsupportable,
because it's relying on the physical size of an on-disk file to carry the
relation's populated/unpopulated state, which is at least a modularity
violation and could have serious long-term consequences.  We could say that
an unlogged matview goes to empty on crash, but not everybody likes that
definition, so let's just remove the feature for 9.3.  We can add it back
when we have a less klugy implementation.

I left the grammar and tab-completion support for CREATE UNLOGGED
MATERIALIZED VIEW in place, since it's harmless and allows delivering a
more specific error message about the unsupported feature.

I'm committing this separately to ease identification of what should be
reverted when/if we are able to re-enable the feature.
2013-05-06 12:00:06 -04:00
Kevin Grittner b69ec7cc99 Prevent (auto)vacuum from truncating first page of populated matview.
Per report from Fujii Masao, with regression test using his example.
2013-05-02 17:33:03 -05:00
Tom Lane 50c137487c Fix permission tests for views/tables proven empty by constraint exclusion.
A view defined as "select <something> where false" had the curious property
that the system wouldn't check whether users had the privileges necessary
to select from it.  More generally, permissions checks could be skipped
for tables referenced in sub-selects or views that were proven empty by
constraint exclusion (although some quick testing suggests this seldom
happens in cases of practical interest).  This happened because the planner
failed to include rangetable entries for such tables in the finished plan.

This was noticed in connection with erroneous handling of materialized
views, but actually the issue is quite unrelated to matviews.  Therefore,
revert commit 200ba1667b in favor of a more
direct test for the real problem.

Back-patch to 9.2 where the bug was introduced (by commit
7741dd6590).
2013-05-01 18:26:50 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 200ba1667b Add regression test for bug fixed by recent refactoring.
Test case by Andres Freund for bug fixed by Tom Lane's refactoring
in commit 5194024d72
2013-04-30 15:02:43 -05:00
Tom Lane db9f0e1d9a Postpone creation of pathkeys lists to fix bug #8049.
This patch gets rid of the concept of, and infrastructure for,
non-canonical PathKeys; we now only ever create canonical pathkey lists.

The need for non-canonical pathkeys came from the desire to have
grouping_planner initialize query_pathkeys and related pathkey lists before
calling query_planner.  However, since query_planner didn't actually *do*
anything with those lists before they'd been made canonical, we can get rid
of the whole mess by just not creating the lists at all until the point
where we formerly canonicalized them.

There are several ways in which we could implement that without making
query_planner itself deal with grouping/sorting features (which are
supposed to be the province of grouping_planner).  I chose to add a
callback function to query_planner's API; other alternatives would have
required adding more fields to PlannerInfo, which while not bad in itself
would create an ABI break for planner-related plugins in the 9.2 release
series.  This still breaks ABI for anything that calls query_planner
directly, but it seems somewhat unlikely that there are any such plugins.

I had originally conceived of this change as merely a step on the way to
fixing bug #8049 from Teun Hoogendoorn; but it turns out that this fixes
that bug all by itself, as per the added regression test.  The reason is
that now get_eclass_for_sort_expr is adding the ORDER BY expression at the
end of EquivalenceClass creation not the start, and so anything that is in
a multi-member EquivalenceClass has already been created with correct
em_nullable_relids.  I am suspicious that there are related scenarios in
which we still need to teach get_eclass_for_sort_expr to compute correct
nullable_relids, but am not eager to risk destabilizing either 9.2 or 9.3
to fix bugs that are only hypothetical.  So for the moment, do this and
stop here.

Back-patch to 9.2 but not to earlier branches, since they don't exhibit
this bug for lack of join-clause-movement logic that depends on
em_nullable_relids being correct.  (We might have to revisit that choice
if any related bugs turn up.)  In 9.2, don't change the signature of
make_pathkeys_for_sortclauses nor remove canonicalize_pathkeys, so as
not to risk more plugin breakage than we have to.
2013-04-29 14:50:03 -04:00
Tom Lane 41a2760f61 Fix collation assignment for aggregates with ORDER BY.
ORDER BY expressions were being treated the same as regular aggregate
arguments for purposes of collation determination, but really they should
not affect the aggregate's collation at all; only collations of the
aggregate's regular arguments should affect it.

In many cases this mistake would lead to incorrectly throwing a "collation
conflict" error; but in some cases the corrected code will silently assign
a different collation to the aggregate than before, for example
	agg(foo ORDER BY bar COLLATE "x")
which will now use foo's collation rather than "x" for the aggregate.
Given this risk and the lack of field complaints about the issue, it
doesn't seem prudent to back-patch.

In passing, rearrange code in assign_collations_walker so that we don't
need multiple copies of the standard logic for computing collation of a
node with children.  (Previously, CaseExpr duplicated the standard logic,
and we would have needed a third copy for Aggref without this change.)

Andrew Gierth and David Fetter
2013-04-26 15:48:53 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut cc26ea9fe2 Clean up references to SQL92
In most cases, these were just references to the SQL standard in
general.  In a few cases, a contrast was made between SQL92 and later
standards -- those have been kept unchanged.
2013-04-20 11:04:41 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e08fdf1310 Add serial comma 2013-04-14 11:12:30 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 6cd18a88b6 Remove quotes around SQL statement in error message 2013-04-11 12:00:09 -03:00
Tom Lane faf4726c9f In isolationtester, retry after EINTR return from select(2).
Per report from Jaime Casanova.  Very curious that no one else has seen
this failure ... but the code is clearly wrong as-is.
2013-04-06 22:28:49 -04:00
Tom Lane 845d335a90 Minor robustness improvements for isolationtester.
Notice and complain about PQcancel() failures.  Also, don't dump core if
an error PGresult doesn't contain severity and message subfields, as it
might not if it was generated by libpq itself.  (We have a longstanding
TODO item to improve that, but in the meantime isolationtester had better
cope.)

I tripped across the latter item while investigating a trouble report on
buildfarm member spoonbill.  As for the former, there's no evidence that
PQcancel failure is actually involved in spoonbill's problem, but it still
seems like a bad idea to ignore an error return code.
2013-04-02 21:15:37 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan a570c98d7f Add new JSON processing functions and parser API.
The JSON parser is converted into a recursive descent parser, and
exposed for use by other modules such as extensions. The API provides
hooks for all the significant parser event such as the beginning and end
of objects and arrays, and providing functions to handle these hooks
allows for fairly simple construction of a wide variety of JSON
processing functions. A set of new basic processing functions and
operators is also added, which use this API, including operations to
extract array elements, object fields, get the length of arrays and the
set of keys of a field, deconstruct an object into a set of key/value
pairs, and create records from JSON objects and arrays of objects.

Catalog version bumped.

Andrew Dunstan, with some documentation assistance from Merlin Moncure.
2013-03-29 14:12:13 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 473ab40c8b Add sql_drop event for event triggers
This event takes place just before ddl_command_end, and is fired if and
only if at least one object has been dropped by the command.  (For
instance, DROP TABLE IF EXISTS of a table that does not in fact exist
will not lead to such a trigger firing).  Commands that drop multiple
objects (such as DROP SCHEMA or DROP OWNED BY) will cause a single event
to fire.  Some firings might be surprising, such as
ALTER TABLE DROP COLUMN.

The trigger is fired after the drop has taken place, because that has
been deemed the safest design, to avoid exposing possibly-inconsistent
internal state (system catalogs as well as current transaction) to the
user function code.  This means that careful tracking of object
identification is required during the object removal phase.

Like other currently existing events, there is support for tag
filtering.

To support the new event, add a new pg_event_trigger_dropped_objects()
set-returning function, which returns a set of rows comprising the
objects affected by the command.  This is to be used within the user
function code, and is mostly modelled after the recently introduced
pg_identify_object() function.

Catalog version bumped due to the new function.

Dimitri Fontaine and Álvaro Herrera
Review by Robert Haas, Tom Lane
2013-03-28 13:05:48 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas f897c4744f Fix "element <@ range" cost estimation.
The statistics-based cost estimation patch for range types broke that, by
incorrectly assuming that the left operand of all range oeprators is a
range. That lead to a "type x is not a range type" error. Because it took so
long for anyone to notice, add a regression test for that case.

We still don't do proper statistics-based cost estimation for that, so you
just get a default constant estimate. We should look into implementing that,
but this patch at least fixes the regression.

Spotted by Tom Lane, when testing query from Josh Berkus.
2013-03-21 11:21:51 +02:00
Tom Lane a7921f71a3 Bump up timeout delays some more in timeouts isolation test.
The buildfarm members using -DCLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS still don't like this
test.  Some experimentation shows that on my machine, isolationtester's
query to check for "waiting" state takes 2 to 2.5 seconds to bind+execute
under -DCLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS.  Set the timeouts to 5 seconds to leave some
headroom for possibly-slower buildfarm critters.

Really we ought to fix the "waiting" query, which is not only horridly
slow but outright wrong in detail; and then maybe we can back off these
timeouts.  But right now I'm just trying to get the buildfarm green again.
2013-03-20 13:53:43 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 241139ae4b Use ORDER BY on matview definitions were needed for stable plans.
Per report from Hadi Moshayedi of matview regression test failure
with optimization of aggregates.  A few ORDER BY clauses improve
code coverage for matviews while solving that problem.
2013-03-19 10:33:37 -05:00
Tom Lane 4c855750fc Increase timeout delays in new timeouts isolation test.
Buildfarm member friarbird doesn't like this test as-committed, evidently
because it's so slow that the test framework doesn't reliably notice that
the backend is waiting before the timeout goes off.  (This is not totally
surprising, since friarbird builds with -DCLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS.)  Increase
the timeout delay from 1 second to 2 in hopes of resolving that problem.
2013-03-17 23:01:20 -04:00
Tom Lane d43837d030 Add lock_timeout configuration parameter.
This GUC allows limiting the time spent waiting to acquire any one
heavyweight lock.

In support of this, improve the recently-added timeout infrastructure
to permit efficiently enabling or disabling multiple timeouts at once.
That reduces the performance hit from turning on lock_timeout, though
it's still not zero.

Zoltán Böszörményi, reviewed by Tom Lane,
Stephen Frost, and Hari Babu
2013-03-16 23:22:57 -04:00
Tom Lane 73e7025bd8 Extend format() to handle field width and left/right alignment.
This change adds some more standard sprintf() functionality to format().

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Dean Rasheed and Kyotaro Horiguchi
2013-03-14 22:56:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 1a1832eb08 Avoid inserting no-op Limit plan nodes.
This was discussed in connection with the patch to avoid inserting no-op
Result nodes, but not actually implemented therein.
2013-03-14 15:11:05 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 8d7ff13ed5 Add regression test for MV join to view.
This would have caught a bug in the initial patch, and seems like
a good thing to test going forward.

Per bug report by Erik Rijkers and fix by Tom Lane
2013-03-14 13:34:51 -05:00
Tom Lane 4387cf956b Avoid inserting Result nodes that only compute identity projections.
The planner sometimes inserts Result nodes to perform column projections
(ie, arbitrary scalar calculations) above plan nodes that lack projection
logic of their own.  However, we did that even if the lower plan node was
in fact producing the required column set already; which is a pretty common
case given the popularity of "SELECT * FROM ...".  Measurements show that
the useless plan node adds non-negligible overhead, especially when there
are many columns in the result.  So add a check to avoid inserting a Result
node unless there's something useful for it to do.

There are a couple of remaining places where unnecessary Result nodes
could get inserted, but they are (a) much less performance-critical,
and (b) coded in such a way that it's hard to avoid inserting a Result,
because the desired tlist is changed on-the-fly in subsequent logic.
We'll leave those alone for now.

Kyotaro Horiguchi; reviewed and further hacked on by Amit Kapila and
Tom Lane.
2013-03-14 13:43:18 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 788bce13d3 Add regression tests for XML mapping of domains
Pavel Stěhule
2013-03-13 22:42:57 -04:00
Tom Lane a0c6dfeecf Allow default expressions to be attached to columns of foreign tables.
There's still some discussion about exactly how postgres_fdw ought to
handle this case, but there seems no debate that we want to allow defaults
to be used for inserts into foreign tables.  So remove the core-code
restrictions that prevented it.

While at it, get rid of the special grammar productions for CREATE FOREIGN
TABLE, and instead add explicit FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED error checks for the
disallowed cases.  This makes the grammar a shade smaller, and more
importantly results in much more intelligible error messages for
unsupported cases.  It's also one less thing to fix if we ever start
supporting constraints on foreign tables.
2013-03-12 17:37:07 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 38fb4d978c JSON generation improvements.
This adds the following:

    json_agg(anyrecord) -> json
    to_json(any) -> json
    hstore_to_json(hstore) -> json (also used as a cast)
    hstore_to_json_loose(hstore) -> json

The last provides heuristic treatment of numbers and booleans.

Also, in json generation, if any non-builtin type has a cast to json,
that function is used instead of the type's output function.

Andrew Dunstan, reviewed by Steve Singer.

Catalog version bumped.
2013-03-10 17:35:36 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 23f10b6473 SP-GiST support of the range adjacent operator -|-
Alexander Korotkov, reviewed by Jeff Davis.
2013-03-08 15:03:19 +02:00
Tom Lane a7b61d4f5a Fix infinite-loop risk in fixempties() stage of regex compilation.
The previous coding of this function could get into situations where it
would never terminate, because successive passes would re-add EMPTY arcs
that had been removed by the previous pass.  Rewrite the function
completely using a new algorithm that is guaranteed to terminate, and
also seems to be usually faster than the old one.  Per Tcl bugs 3604074
and 3606683.

Tom Lane and Don Porter
2013-03-07 11:51:03 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 3bf3ab8c56 Add a materialized view relations.
A materialized view has a rule just like a view and a heap and
other physical properties like a table.  The rule is only used to
populate the table, references in queries refer to the
materialized data.

This is a minimal implementation, but should still be useful in
many cases.  Currently data is only populated "on demand" by the
CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW and REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW statements.
It is expected that future releases will add incremental updates
with various timings, and that a more refined concept of defining
what is "fresh" data will be developed.  At some point it may even
be possible to have queries use a materialized in place of
references to underlying tables, but that requires the other
above-mentioned features to be working first.

Much of the documentation work by Robert Haas.
Review by Noah Misch, Thom Brown, Robert Haas, Marko Tiikkaja
Security review by KaiGai Kohei, with a decision on how best to
implement sepgsql still pending.
2013-03-03 18:23:31 -06:00
Tom Lane b15a6da292 Get rid of any toast table when converting a table to a view.
Also make sure other fields of the view's pg_class entry are appropriate
for a view; it shouldn't have relfrozenxid set for instance.

This ancient omission isn't believed to have any serious consequences in
versions 8.4-9.2, so no backpatch.  But let's fix it before it does bite
us in some serious way.  It's just luck that the case doesn't cause
problems for autovacuum.  (It did cause problems in 8.3, but that's out
of support.)

Andres Freund
2013-03-03 19:05:47 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 63d283ecd0 Flush stderr and stdout in isolation tester.
This is a possibly vain attempt to fix a buffering issue
observed for some MSVC builds.
2013-02-27 19:13:07 -05:00
Tom Lane 71627f3d19 Fix CVE-2013-0255 properly.
Revert commit ab0f7b6089 (in HEAD only)
in favor of the proper solution, which is to declare enum_recv() correctly
in the system catalogs.  It should be declared to take type "internal"
not "cstring".

Also improve the type_sanity regression test, which should have caught
this typo, so that it actually would.  Most of the relevant checks on
the signature of type I/O functions should not have been restricted to
basetypes/pseudotypes, as they should apply to any type's I/O functions.
2013-02-13 16:20:01 -05:00
Tom Lane c61e26ee3e Add support for ALTER RULE ... RENAME TO.
Ali Dar, reviewed by Dean Rasheed.
2013-02-08 23:58:40 -05:00
Tom Lane 3c29b196b0 Fix gist_box_same and gist_point_consistent to handle fuzziness correctly.
While there's considerable doubt that we want fuzzy behavior in the
geometric operators at all (let alone as currently implemented), nobody is
stepping forward to redesign that stuff.  In the meantime it behooves us
to make sure that index searches agree with the behavior of the underlying
operators.  This patch fixes two problems in this area.

First, gist_box_same was using fuzzy equality, but it really needs to use
exact equality to prevent not-quite-identical upper index keys from being
treated as identical, which for example would prevent an existing upper
key from being extended by an amount less than epsilon.  This would result
in inconsistent indexes.  (The next release notes will need to recommend
that users reindex GiST indexes on boxes, polygons, circles, and points,
since all four opclasses use gist_box_same.)

Second, gist_point_consistent used exact comparisons for upper-page
comparisons in ~= searches, when it needs to use fuzzy comparisons to
ensure it finds all matches; and it used fuzzy comparisons for point <@ box
searches, when it needs to use exact comparisons because that's what the
<@ operator (rather inconsistently) does.

The added regression test cases illustrate all three misbehaviors.

Back-patch to all active branches.  (8.4 did not have GiST point_ops,
but it still seems prudent to apply the gist_box_same patch to it.)

Alexander Korotkov, reviewed by Noah Misch
2013-02-08 18:03:17 -05:00
Tom Lane 62e666400d Perform line wrapping and indenting by default in ruleutils.c.
This patch changes pg_get_viewdef() and allied functions so that
PRETTY_INDENT processing is always enabled.  Per discussion, only the
PRETTY_PAREN processing (that is, stripping of "unnecessary" parentheses)
poses any real forward-compatibility risk, so we may as well make dump
output look as nice as we safely can.

Also, set the default wrap length to zero (i.e, wrap after each SELECT
or FROM list item), since there's no very principled argument for the
former default of 80-column wrapping, and most people seem to agree this
way looks better.

Marko Tiikkaja, reviewed by Jeevan Chalke, further hacking by Tom Lane
2013-02-03 15:56:45 -05:00
Tom Lane d2d153fdb0 Create a psql command \gset to store query results into psql variables.
This eases manipulation of query results in psql scripts.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Piyush Newe, Shigeru Hanada, and Tom Lane
2013-02-02 17:06:38 -05:00
Bruce Momjian e8ae019661 Adjust COPY FREEZE error message to be more accurate and consistent.
Per suggestions from Noah and Tom.
2013-02-02 12:56:52 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 5839052693 Add CREATE RECURSIVE VIEW syntax
This is specified in the SQL standard.  The CREATE RECURSIVE VIEW
specification is transformed into a normal CREATE VIEW statement with a
WITH RECURSIVE clause.

reviewed by Abhijit Menon-Sen and Stephen Frost
2013-01-31 22:31:58 -05:00
Tom Lane 0900ac2d0d Fix plpgsql's reporting of plan-time errors in possibly-simple expressions.
exec_simple_check_plan and exec_eval_simple_expr attempted to call
GetCachedPlan directly.  This meant that if an error was thrown during
planning, the resulting context traceback would not include the line
normally contributed by _SPI_error_callback.  This is already inconsistent,
but just to be really odd, a re-execution of the very same expression
*would* show the additional context line, because we'd already have cached
the plan and marked the expression as non-simple.

The problem is easy to demonstrate in 9.2 and HEAD because planning of a
cached plan doesn't occur at all until GetCachedPlan is done.  In earlier
versions, it could only be an issue if initial planning had succeeded, then
a replan was forced (already somewhat improbable for a simple expression),
and the replan attempt failed.  Since the issue is mainly cosmetic in older
branches anyway, it doesn't seem worth the risk of trying to fix it there.
It is worth fixing in 9.2 since the instability of the context printout can
affect the results of GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS, as per a recent discussion
on pgsql-novice.

To fix, introduce a SPI function that wraps GetCachedPlan while installing
the correct callback function.  Use this instead of calling GetCachedPlan
directly from plpgsql.

Also introduce a wrapper function for extracting a SPI plan's
CachedPlanSource list.  This lets us stop including spi_priv.h in
pl_exec.c, which was never a very good idea from a modularity standpoint.

In passing, fix a similar inconsistency that could occur in SPI_cursor_open,
which was also calling GetCachedPlan without setting up a context callback.
2013-01-30 20:02:23 -05:00
Tom Lane 670a6c7a22 Fix grammar for subscripting or field selection from a sub-SELECT result.
Such cases should work, but the grammar failed to accept them because of
our ancient precedence hacks to convince bison that extra parentheses
around a sub-SELECT in an expression are unambiguous.  (Formally, they
*are* ambiguous, but we don't especially care whether they're treated as
part of the sub-SELECT or part of the expression.  Bison cares, though.)
Fix by adding a redundant-looking production for this case.

This is a fine example of why fixing shift/reduce conflicts via
precedence declarations is more dangerous than it looks: you can easily
cause the parser to reject cases that should work.

This has been wrong since commit 3db4056e22
or maybe before, and apparently some people have been working around it
by inserting no-op casts.  That method introduces a dump/reload hazard,
as illustrated in bug #7838 from Jan Mate.  Hence, back-patch to all
active branches.
2013-01-30 14:17:48 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 574f764321 pg_regress: Allow overriding diff options
By setting the environment variable PG_REGRESS_DIFF_OPTS, custom diff
options can be passed.

reviewed by Jeevan Chalke
2013-01-29 22:59:45 -05:00
Tom Lane 2378d79ab2 Make LATERAL implicit for functions in FROM.
The SQL standard does not have general functions-in-FROM, but it does
allow UNNEST() there (see the <collection derived table> production),
and the semantics of that are defined to include lateral references.
So spec compliance requires allowing lateral references within UNNEST()
even without an explicit LATERAL keyword.  Rather than making UNNEST()
a special case, it seems best to extend this flexibility to any
function-in-FROM.  We'll still allow LATERAL to be written explicitly
for clarity's sake, but it's now a noise word in this context.

In theory this change could result in a change in behavior of existing
queries, by allowing what had been an outer reference in a function-in-FROM
to be captured by an earlier FROM-item at the same level.  However, all
pre-9.3 PG releases have a bug that causes them to match variable
references to earlier FROM-items in preference to outer references (and
then throw an error).  So no previously-working query could contain the
type of ambiguity that would risk a change of behavior.

Per a suggestion from Andrew Gierth, though I didn't use his patch.
2013-01-26 16:18:42 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 4deb57de7d Issue ERROR if FREEZE mode can't be honored by COPY
Previously non-honored FREEZE mode was ignored.  This also issues an
appropriate error message based on the cause of the failure, per
suggestion from Tom.  Additional regression test case added.
2013-01-26 13:33:24 -05:00
Tom Lane 0d5fbdc157 Change plan caching to honor, not resist, changes in search_path.
In the initial implementation of plan caching, we saved the active
search_path when a plan was first cached, then reinstalled that path
anytime we needed to reparse or replan.  The idea of that was to try to
reselect the same referenced objects, in somewhat the same way that views
continue to refer to the same objects in the face of schema or name
changes.  Of course, that analogy doesn't bear close inspection, since
holding the search_path fixed doesn't cope with object drops or renames.
Moreover sticking with the old path seems to create more surprises than
it avoids.  So instead of doing that, consider that the cached plan depends
on search_path, and force reparse/replan if the active search_path is
different than it was when we last saved the plan.

This gets us fairly close to having "transparency" of plan caching, in the
sense that the cached statement acts the same as if you'd just resubmitted
the original query text for another execution.  There are still some corner
cases where this fails though: a new object added in the search path
schema(s) might capture a reference in the query text, but we'd not realize
that and force a reparse.  We might try to fix that in the future, but for
the moment it looks too expensive and complicated.
2013-01-25 14:14:41 -05:00
Tom Lane 760f3c043a Fix concat() and format() to handle VARIADIC-labeled arguments correctly.
Previously, the VARIADIC labeling was effectively ignored, but now these
functions act as though the array elements had all been given as separate
arguments.

Pavel Stehule
2013-01-25 00:19:56 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera ca5db759b8 isolationtester: add a few fflush(stderr) calls
The lack of them is causing failures in some BF members.

Per Andrew Dunstan.
2013-01-23 13:30:14 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 0ac5ad5134 Improve concurrency of foreign key locking
This patch introduces two additional lock modes for tuples: "SELECT FOR
KEY SHARE" and "SELECT FOR NO KEY UPDATE".  These don't block each
other, in contrast with already existing "SELECT FOR SHARE" and "SELECT
FOR UPDATE".  UPDATE commands that do not modify the values stored in
the columns that are part of the key of the tuple now grab a SELECT FOR
NO KEY UPDATE lock on the tuple, allowing them to proceed concurrently
with tuple locks of the FOR KEY SHARE variety.

Foreign key triggers now use FOR KEY SHARE instead of FOR SHARE; this
means the concurrency improvement applies to them, which is the whole
point of this patch.

The added tuple lock semantics require some rejiggering of the multixact
module, so that the locking level that each transaction is holding can
be stored alongside its Xid.  Also, multixacts now need to persist
across server restarts and crashes, because they can now represent not
only tuple locks, but also tuple updates.  This means we need more
careful tracking of lifetime of pg_multixact SLRU files; since they now
persist longer, we require more infrastructure to figure out when they
can be removed.  pg_upgrade also needs to be careful to copy
pg_multixact files over from the old server to the new, or at least part
of multixact.c state, depending on the versions of the old and new
servers.

Tuple time qualification rules (HeapTupleSatisfies routines) need to be
careful not to consider tuples with the "is multi" infomask bit set as
being only locked; they might need to look up MultiXact values (i.e.
possibly do pg_multixact I/O) to find out the Xid that updated a tuple,
whereas they previously were assured to only use information readily
available from the tuple header.  This is considered acceptable, because
the extra I/O would involve cases that would previously cause some
commands to block waiting for concurrent transactions to finish.

Another important change is the fact that locking tuples that have
previously been updated causes the future versions to be marked as
locked, too; this is essential for correctness of foreign key checks.
This causes additional WAL-logging, also (there was previously a single
WAL record for a locked tuple; now there are as many as updated copies
of the tuple there exist.)

With all this in place, contention related to tuples being checked by
foreign key rules should be much reduced.

As a bonus, the old behavior that a subtransaction grabbing a stronger
tuple lock than the parent (sub)transaction held on a given tuple and
later aborting caused the weaker lock to be lost, has been fixed.

Many new spec files were added for isolation tester framework, to ensure
overall behavior is sane.  There's probably room for several more tests.

There were several reviewers of this patch; in particular, Noah Misch
and Andres Freund spent considerable time in it.  Original idea for the
patch came from Simon Riggs, after a problem report by Joel Jacobson.
Most code is from me, with contributions from Marti Raudsepp, Alexander
Shulgin, Noah Misch and Andres Freund.

This patch was discussed in several pgsql-hackers threads; the most
important start at the following message-ids:
	AANLkTimo9XVcEzfiBR-ut3KVNDkjm2Vxh+t8kAmWjPuv@mail.gmail.com
	1290721684-sup-3951@alvh.no-ip.org
	1294953201-sup-2099@alvh.no-ip.org
	1320343602-sup-2290@alvh.no-ip.org
	1339690386-sup-8927@alvh.no-ip.org
	4FE5FF020200002500048A3D@gw.wicourts.gov
	4FEAB90A0200002500048B7D@gw.wicourts.gov
2013-01-23 12:04:59 -03:00
Robert Haas 601e2935e2 Update comments and output for event_trigger regression test. 2013-01-23 06:49:30 -05:00
Robert Haas 841a5150c5 Add ddl_command_end support for event triggers.
Dimitri Fontaine, with slight changes by me
2013-01-21 18:00:24 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 765cbfdc92 Refactor ALTER some-obj RENAME implementation
Remove duplicate implementations of catalog munging and miscellaneous
privilege checks.  Instead rely on already existing data in
objectaddress.c to do the work.

Author: KaiGai Kohei, changes by me
Reviewed by: Robert Haas, Álvaro Herrera, Dimitri Fontaine
2013-01-21 12:06:41 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 7ac5760fa2 Rework order of checks in ALTER / SET SCHEMA
When attempting to move an object into the schema in which it already
was, for most objects classes we were correctly complaining about
exactly that ("object is already in schema"); but for some other object
classes, such as functions, we were instead complaining of a name
collision ("object already exists in schema").  The latter is wrong and
misleading, per complaint from Robert Haas in
CA+TgmoZ0+gNf7RDKRc3u5rHXffP=QjqPZKGxb4BsPz65k7qnHQ@mail.gmail.com

To fix, refactor the way these checks are done.  As a bonus, the
resulting code is smaller and can also share some code with Rename
cases.

While at it, remove use of getObjectDescriptionOids() in error messages.
These are normally disallowed because of translatability considerations,
but this one had slipped through since 9.1.  (Not sure that this is
worth backpatching, though, as it would create some untranslated
messages in back branches.)

This is loosely based on a patch by KaiGai Kohei, heavily reworked by
me.
2013-01-15 13:23:43 -03:00
Bruce Momjian bd61a623ac Update copyrights for 2013
Fully update git head, and update back branches in ./COPYRIGHT and
legal.sgml files.
2013-01-01 17:15:01 -05:00
Tom Lane 2ffa740be9 Fix ruleutils to cope with conflicts from adding/dropping/renaming columns.
In commit 11e131854f, we improved the
rule/view dumping code so that it would produce valid query representations
even if some of the tables involved in a query had been renamed since the
query was parsed.  This patch extends that idea to fix problems that occur
when individual columns are renamed, or added or dropped.  As before, the
core of the fix is to assign unique new aliases when a name conflict has
been created.  This is complicated by the JOIN USING feature, which
requires the same column alias to be used in both input relations, but we
can handle that with a sufficiently complex approach to assigning aliases.

A fortiori, this patch takes care of situations where the query didn't have
unique column names to begin with, such as in a recent complaint from Bryan
Nuse.  (Because of expansion of "SELECT *", re-parsing a dumped query can
require column name uniqueness even though the original text did not.)
2012-12-31 15:13:26 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 740ee42da5 Make some messages more consistent in style 2012-12-21 00:10:46 -05:00
Tom Lane a99c42f291 Support automatically-updatable views.
This patch makes "simple" views automatically updatable, without the need
to create either INSTEAD OF triggers or INSTEAD rules.  "Simple" views
are those classified as updatable according to SQL-92 rules.  The rewriter
transforms INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE commands on such views directly into an
equivalent command on the underlying table, which will generally have
noticeably better performance than is possible with either triggers or
user-written rules.  A view that has INSTEAD OF triggers or INSTEAD rules
continues to operate the same as before.

For the moment, security_barrier views are not considered simple.
Also, we do not support WITH CHECK OPTION.  These features may be
added in future.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Amit Kapila
2012-12-08 18:26:21 -05:00
Simon Riggs ef754fb51b Correct xmax test for COPY FREEZE 2012-12-07 14:18:47 +00:00
Simon Riggs 1f023f9297 Optimize COPY FREEZE with CREATE TABLE also.
Jeff Davis, additional test by me
2012-12-07 13:26:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 31a891857a Improve pl/pgsql to support composite-type expressions in RETURN.
For some reason lost in the mists of prehistory, RETURN was only coded to
allow a simple reference to a composite variable when the function's return
type is composite.  Allow an expression instead, while preserving the
efficiency of the original code path in the case where the expression is
indeed just a composite variable's name.  Likewise for RETURN NEXT.

As is true in various other places, the supplied expression must yield
exactly the number and data types of the required columns.  There was some
discussion of relaxing that for pl/pgsql, but no consensus yet, so this
patch doesn't address that.

Asif Rehman, reviewed by Pavel Stehule
2012-12-06 23:09:52 -05:00
Simon Riggs 5457a130d3 Reduce scope of changes for COPY FREEZE.
Allow support only for freezing tuples by explicit
command. Previous coding mistakenly extended
slightly beyond what was agreed as correct on -hackers.
So essentially a partial revoke of earlier work,
leaving just the COPY FREEZE command.
2012-12-02 20:52:52 +00:00
Tom Lane c35fea1026 Prevent passing gmake's environment variables down through pg_regress.
When we do "make install" to create a temp installation, we don't want
that instance of make to try to communicate with any instance of make
that might be calling us.  This is known to cause problems if the
upper make has a -jN flag, and in principle could cause problems even
without that.  Unset the relevant environment variables to prevent such
issues.

Andres Freund
2012-12-01 17:23:49 -05:00
Tom Lane 7b90469b71 Allow adding values to an enum type created in the current transaction.
Normally it is unsafe to allow ALTER TYPE ADD VALUE in a transaction block,
because instances of the value could be added to indexes later in the same
transaction, and then they would still be accessible even if the
transaction rolls back.  However, we can allow this if the enum type itself
was created in the current transaction, because then any such indexes would
have to go away entirely on rollback.

The reason for allowing this is to support pg_upgrade's new usage of
pg_restore --single-transaction: in --binary-upgrade mode, pg_dump emits
enum types as a succession of ALTER TYPE ADD VALUE commands so that it can
preserve the values' OIDs.  The support is a bit limited, so we'll leave
it undocumented.

Andres Freund
2012-12-01 14:27:30 -05:00
Simon Riggs 02aea36414 Second tweak of COPY FREEZE 2012-12-01 14:55:35 +00:00
Simon Riggs ddf509eb4a Tweak tests in COPY FREEZE 2012-12-01 13:46:41 +00:00
Simon Riggs 8de72b66a2 COPY FREEZE and mark committed on fresh tables.
When a relfilenode is created in this subtransaction or
a committed child transaction and it cannot otherwise
be seen by our own process, mark tuples committed ahead
of transaction commit for all COPY commands in same
transaction. If FREEZE specified on COPY
and pre-conditions met then rows will also be frozen.
Both options designed to avoid revisiting rows after commit,
increasing performance of subsequent commands after
data load and upgrade. pg_restore changes later.

Simon Riggs, review comments from Heikki Linnakangas, Noah Misch and design
input from Tom Lane, Robert Haas and Kevin Grittner
2012-12-01 12:54:20 +00:00
Bruce Momjian bd9c8e741b Move long_options structures to the top of main() functions, for
consistency.

Per suggestion from Tom.
2012-11-30 14:49:55 -05:00
Tom Lane d3237e04ca Fix SELECT DISTINCT with index-optimized MIN/MAX on inheritance trees.
In a query such as "SELECT DISTINCT min(x) FROM tab", the DISTINCT is
pretty useless (there being only one output row), but nonetheless it
shouldn't fail.  But it could fail if "tab" is an inheritance parent,
because planagg.c's code for fixing up equivalence classes after making the
index-optimized MIN/MAX transformation wasn't prepared to find child-table
versions of the aggregate expression.  The least ugly fix seems to be
to add an option to mutate_eclass_expressions() to skip child-table
equivalence class members, which aren't used anymore at this stage of
planning so it's not really necessary to fix them.  Since child members
are ignored in many cases already, it seems plausible for
mutate_eclass_expressions() to have an option to ignore them too.

Per bug #7703 from Maxim Boguk.

Back-patch to 9.1.  Although the same code exists before that, it cannot
encounter child-table aggregates AFAICS, because the index optimization
transformation cannot succeed on inheritance trees before 9.1 (for lack
of MergeAppend).
2012-11-26 12:57:58 -05:00
Tom Lane 1f7cb5c309 Improve handling of INT_MIN / -1 and related cases.
Some platforms throw an exception for this division, rather than returning
a necessarily-overflowed result.  Since we were testing for overflow after
the fact, an exception isn't nice.  We can avoid the problem by treating
division by -1 as negation.

Add some regression tests so that we'll find out if any compilers try to
optimize away the overflow check conditions.

This ought to be back-patched, but I'm going to see what the buildfarm
reports about the regression tests first.

Per discussion with Xi Wang, though this is different from the patch he
submitted.
2012-11-19 12:24:25 -05:00
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
Tom Lane ef28e05ac5 Fix bogus handling of $(X) (i.e., ".exe") in isolationtester Makefile.
I'm not sure why commit 1eb1dde049 seems
to have made this start to fail on Cygwin when it never did before ---
but nonetheless, the coding was pretty bogus, and unlike the way we
handle $(X) anywhere else.  Per buildfarm.
2012-11-01 19:48:53 -04:00
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
Simon Riggs 160984c8c8 Isolation test for DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY
for recent concurrent changes.

Abhijit Menon-Sen
2012-10-18 19:41:40 +01:00
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