Commit Graph

4377 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane 0662eb6219 Fix SIGSEGV in pruning for ScalarArrayOp with constant-null array.
Not much to be said here: commit 9fdb675fc should have checked
constisnull, didn't.

Per report from Piotr Włodarczyk.  Back-patch to v11 where
bug was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAP-dhMr+vRpwizEYjUjsiZ1vwqpohTm+3Pbdt6Pr7FEgPq9R0Q@mail.gmail.com
2019-08-09 13:20:28 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 4e85642d93 Apply constraint exclusion more generally in partitioning
We were applying constraint exclusion on the partition constraint when
generating pruning steps for a clause, but only for the rather
restricted situation of them being boolean OR operators; however it is
possible to have differently shaped clauses that also benefit from
constraint exclusion.  This applies particularly to the default
partition since their constraints are in essence a long list of OR'ed
subclauses ... but it applies to other cases too.  So in certain cases
we're scanning partitions that we don't need to.

Remove the specialized code in OR clauses, and add a generally
applicable test of the clause refuting the partition constraint; mark
the whole pruning operation as contradictory if it hits.

This has the unwanted side-effect of testing some (most? all?)
constraints more than once if constraint_exclusion=on.  That seems
unavoidable as far as I can tell without some additional work, but
that's not the recommended setting for that parameter anyway.
However, because this imposes additional processing cost for all
queries using partitioned tables, I decided not to backpatch this
change.

Author: Amit Langote, Yuzuko Hosoya, Álvaro Herrera
Reviewers: Shawn Wang, Thibaut Madeleine, Yoshikazu Imai, Kyotaro
Horiguchi; they were also uncredited reviewers for commit 489247b0e6.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9bb31dfe-b0d0-53f3-3ea6-e64b811424cf@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-08-07 12:21:54 -04:00
Michael Paquier 64579be64a Fix some incorrect parsing of time with time zone strings
When parsing a timetz string with a dynamic timezone abbreviation or a
timezone not specified, it was possible to generate incorrect timestamps
based on a date which uses some non-initialized variables if the input
string did not specify fully a date to parse.  This is already checked
when a full timezone spec is included in the input string, but the two
other cases mentioned above missed the same checks.

This gets fixed by generating an error as this input is invalid, or in
short when a date is not fully specified.

Valgrind was complaining about this problem.

Bug: #15910
Author: Alexander Lakhin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15910-2eba5106b9aa0c61@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2019-08-07 18:16:31 +09:00
Tom Lane 4766dce0dd Fix choice of comparison operators for cross-type hashed subplans.
Commit bf6c614a2 rearranged the lookup of the comparison operators
needed in a hashed subplan, and in so doing, broke the cross-type
case: it caused the original LHS-vs-RHS operator to be used to compare
hash table entries too (which of course are all of the RHS type).
This leads to C functions being passed a Datum that is not of the
type they expect, with the usual hazards of crashes and unauthorized
server memory disclosure.

For the set of hashable cross-type operators present in v11 core
Postgres, this bug is nearly harmless on 64-bit machines, which
may explain why it escaped earlier detection.  But it is a live
security hazard on 32-bit machines; and of course there may be
extensions that add more hashable cross-type operators, which
would increase the risk.

Reported by Andreas Seltenreich.  Back-patch to v11 where the
problem came in.

Security: CVE-2019-10209
2019-08-05 11:20:31 -04:00
Noah Misch ffa2d37e5f Require the schema qualification in pg_temp.type_name(arg).
Commit aa27977fe2 introduced this
restriction for pg_temp.function_name(arg); do likewise for types
created in temporary schemas.  Programs that this breaks should add
"pg_temp." schema qualification or switch to arg::type_name syntax.
Back-patch to 9.4 (all supported versions).

Reviewed by Tom Lane.  Reported by Tom Lane.

Security: CVE-2019-10208
2019-08-05 07:48:41 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera 489247b0e6 Improve pruning of a default partition
When querying a partitioned table containing a default partition, we
were wrongly deciding to include it in the scan too early in the
process, failing to exclude it in some cases.  If we reinterpret the
PruneStepResult.scan_default flag slightly, we can do a better job at
detecting that it can be excluded.  The change is that we avoid setting
the flag for that pruning step unless the step absolutely requires the
default partition to be scanned (in contrast with the previous
arrangement, which was to set it unless the step was able to prune it).
So get_matching_partitions() must explicitly check the partition that
each returned bound value corresponds to in order to determine whether
the default one needs to be included, rather than relying on the flag
from the final step result.

Author: Yuzuko Hosoya <hosoya.yuzuko@lab.ntt.co.jp>
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote <Langote_Amit_f8@lab.ntt.co.jp>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/00e601d4ca86$932b8bc0$b982a340$@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-08-04 11:18:45 -04:00
Andres Freund 2abd7ae9b2 Fix representation of hash keys in Hash/HashJoin nodes.
In 5f32b29c18 I changed the creation of HashState.hashkeys to
actually use HashState as the parent (instead of HashJoinState, which
was incorrect, as they were executed below HashState), to fix the
problem of hashkeys expressions otherwise relying on slot types
appropriate for HashJoinState, rather than HashState as would be
correct. That reliance was only introduced in 12, which is why it
previously worked to use HashJoinState as the parent (although I'd be
unsurprised if there were problematic cases).

Unfortunately that's not a sufficient solution, because before this
commit, the to-be-hashed expressions referenced inner/outer as
appropriate for the HashJoin, not Hash. That didn't have obvious bad
consequences, because the slots containing the tuples were put into
ecxt_innertuple when hashing a tuple for HashState (even though Hash
doesn't have an inner plan).

There are less common cases where this can cause visible problems
however (rather than just confusion when inspecting such executor
trees). E.g. "ERROR: bogus varno: 65000", when explaining queries
containing a HashJoin where the subsidiary Hash node's hash keys
reference a subplan. While normally hashkeys aren't displayed by
EXPLAIN, if one of those expressions references a subplan, that
subplan may be printed as part of the Hash node - which then failed
because an inner plan was referenced, and Hash doesn't have that.

It seems quite possible that there's other broken cases, too.

Fix the problem by properly splitting the expression for the HashJoin
and Hash nodes at plan time, and have them reference the proper
subsidiary node. While other workarounds are possible, fixing this
correctly seems easy enough. It was a pretty ugly hack to have
ExecInitHashJoin put the expression into the already initialized
HashState, in the first place.

I decided to not just split inner/outer hashkeys inside
make_hashjoin(), but also to separate out hashoperators and
hashcollations at plan time. Otherwise we would have ended up having
two very similar loops, one at plan time and the other during executor
startup. The work seems to more appropriately belong to plan time,
anyway.

Reported-By: Nikita Glukhov, Alexander Korotkov
Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Tom Lane, in an earlier version
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPpHfdvGVegF_TKKRiBrSmatJL2dR9uwFCuR+teQ_8tEXU8mxg@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 12-
2019-08-02 00:02:46 -07:00
Tom Lane 7266d0997d Allow functions-in-FROM to be pulled up if they reduce to constants.
This allows simplification of the plan tree in some common usage
patterns: we can get rid of a join to the function RTE.

In principle we could pull up any immutable expression, but restricting
it to Consts avoids the risk that multiple evaluations of the expression
might cost more than we can save.  (Possibly this could be improved in
future --- but we've more or less promised people that putting a function
in FROM guarantees single evaluation, so we'd have to tread carefully.)

To do this, we need to rearrange when eval_const_expressions()
happens for expressions in function RTEs.  I moved it to
inline_set_returning_functions(), which already has to iterate over
every function RTE, and in consequence renamed that function to
preprocess_function_rtes().  A useful consequence is that
inline_set_returning_function() no longer has to do this for itself,
simplifying that code.

In passing, break out pull_up_simple_subquery's code that knows where
everything that needs pullup_replace_vars() processing is, so that
the new pull_up_constant_function() routine can share it.  We'd
gotten away with one-and-a-half copies of that code so far, since
pull_up_simple_values() could assume that a lot of cases didn't apply
to it --- but I don't think pull_up_constant_function() can make any
simplifying assumptions.  Might as well make pull_up_simple_values()
use it too.

(Possibly this refactoring should go further: maybe we could share
some of the code to fill in the pullup_replace_vars_context struct?
For now, I left it that the callers fill that completely.)

Note: the one existing test case that this patch changes has to be
changed because inlining its function RTEs would destroy the point
of the test, namely to check join order.

Alexander Kuzmenkov and Aleksandr Parfenov, reviewed by
Antonin Houska and Anastasia Lubennikova, and whacked around
some more by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/402356c32eeb93d4fed01f66d6c7fe2d@postgrespro.ru
2019-08-01 18:50:22 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan 71dcd74386 Add sort support routine for the inet data type.
Add sort support for inet, including support for abbreviated keys.
Testing has shown that this reduces the time taken to sort medium to
large inet/cidr inputs by ~50-60% in realistic cases.

Author: Brandur Leach
Reviewed-By: Peter Geoghegan, Edmund Horner
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABR_9B-PQ8o2MZNJ88wo6r-NxW2EFG70M96Wmcgf99G6HUQ3sw@mail.gmail.com
2019-08-01 09:34:14 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut f140007050 Run UTF8-requiring collation tests by default
The tests collate.icu.utf8 and collate.linux.utf8 were previously only
run when explicitly selected via EXTRA_TESTS.  They require a UTF8
database, because the error messages in the expected files refer to
that, and they use some non-ASCII characters in the tests.  Since
users can select any locale and encoding for the regression test run,
it was not possible to include these tests automatically.

To fix, use psql's \if facility to check various prerequisites such as
platform and the server encoding and quit the tests at the very
beginning if the configuration is not adequate.  We then need to
maintain alternative expected files for these tests, but they are very
tiny and never need to change after this.

These two tests are now run automatically as part of the regression
tests.

Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/052295c2-a2e1-9a21-bd36-8fbff8686cf3%402ndquadrant.com
2019-07-31 09:46:51 +02:00
Tomas Vondra 14ef15a222 Don't build extended statistics on inheritance trees
When performing ANALYZE on inheritance trees, we collect two samples for
each relation - one for the relation alone, and one for the inheritance
subtree (relation and its child relations). And then we build statistics
on each sample, so for each relation we get two sets of statistics.

For regular (per-column) statistics this works fine, because the catalog
includes a flag differentiating statistics built from those two samples.
But we don't have such flag in the extended statistics catalogs, and we
ended up updating the same row twice, triggering this error:

  ERROR:  tuple already updated by self

The simplest solution is to disable extended statistics on inheritance
trees, which is what this commit is doing. In the future we may need to
do something similar to per-column statistics, but that requires adding a
flag to the catalog - and that's not backpatchable. Moreover, the current
selectivity estimation code only works with individual relations, so
building statistics on inheritance trees would be pointless anyway.

Author: Tomas Vondra
Backpatch-to: 10-
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190618231233.GA27470@telsasoft.com
Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
2019-07-30 19:47:33 +02:00
Michael Paquier 7cce159349 Fix handling of expressions and predicates in REINDEX CONCURRENTLY
When copying the definition of an index rebuilt concurrently for the new
entry, the index information was taken directly from the old index using
the relation cache.  In this case, predicates and expressions have
some post-processing to prepare things for the planner, which loses some
information including the collations added in any of them.

This inconsistency can cause issues when attempting for example a table
rewrite, and makes the new indexes rebuilt concurrently inconsistent
with the old entries.

In order to fix the problem, fetch expressions and predicates directly
from the catalog of the old entry, and fill in IndexInfo for the new
index with that.  This makes the process more consistent with
DefineIndex(), and the code is refactored with the addition of a routine
to create an IndexInfo node.

Reported-by: Manuel Rigger
Author: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+u7OA5Hp0ra235F3czPom_FyAd-3+XwSJmX95r1+sRPOJc9VQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 12
2019-07-29 09:58:49 +09:00
Tom Lane b9d2c5c7ac Fix loss of fractional digits for large values in cash_numeric().
Money values exceeding about 18 digits (depending on lc_monetary)
could be inaccurately converted to numeric, due to select_div_scale()
deciding it didn't need to compute any fractional digits.  Force
its hand by setting the dscale of one division input to equal the
number of fractional digits we need.

In passing, rearrange the logic to not do useless work in locales
where money values are considered integral.

Per bug #15925 from Slawomir Chodnicki.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15925-da9953e2674bb5c8@postgresql.org
2019-07-26 11:59:00 -04:00
Andres Freund f63d9e68d4 Add missing (COSTS OFF) to EXPLAIN added in previous commit.
Backpatch: 12-, like the previous commit
2019-07-25 14:52:36 -07:00
Andres Freund af3deff3f2 Fix slot type handling for Agg nodes performing internal sorts.
Since 15d8f8312 we assert that - and since 7ef04e4d2c, 4da597edf1
rely on - the slot type for an expression's
ecxt_{outer,inner,scan}tuple not changing, unless explicitly flagged
as such. That allows to either skip deforming (for a virtual tuple
slot) or optimize the code for JIT accelerated deforming
appropriately (for other known slot types).

This assumption was sometimes violated for grouping sets, when
nodeAgg.c internally uses tuplesorts, and the child node doesn't
return a TTSOpsMinimalTuple type slot. Detect that case, and flag that
the outer slot might not be "fixed".

It's probably worthwhile to optimize this further in the future, and
more granularly determine whether the slot is fixed. As we already
instantiate per-phase transition and equal expressions, we could
cheaply set the slot type appropriately for each phase.  But that's a
separate change from this bugfix.

This commit does include a very minor optimization by avoiding to
create a slot for handling tuplesorts, if no such sorts are
performed. Previously we created that slot unnecessarily in the common
case of computing all grouping sets via hashing. The code looked too
confusing without that, as the conditions for needing a sort slot and
flagging that the slot type isn't fixed, are the same.

Reported-By: Ashutosh Sharma
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAE9k0PmNaMD2oHTEAhRyxnxpaDaYkuBYkLa1dpOpn=RS0iS2AQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 12-, where the bug was introduced in 15d8f8312
2019-07-25 14:28:55 -07:00
Andres Freund ecbdd00934 Fix system column accesses in ON CONFLICT ... RETURNING.
After 277cb78983 ON CONFLICT ... SET ... RETURNING failed with
ERROR:  virtual tuple table slot does not have system attributes
when taking the update path, as the slot used to insert into the
table (and then process RETURNING) was defined to be a virtual slot in
that commit. Virtual slots don't support system columns except for
tableoid and ctid, as the other system columns are AM dependent.

Fix that by using a slot of the table's type. Add tests for system
column accesses in ON CONFLICT ...  RETURNING.

Reported-By: Roby, bisected to the relevant commit by Jeff Janes
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/73436355-6432-49B1-92ED-1FE4F7E7E100@finefun.com.au
Backpatch: 12-, where the bug was introduced in 277cb78983
2019-07-24 18:45:58 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera 5562272a42 Check that partitions are not in use when dropping constraints
If the user creates a deferred constraint in a partition, and in a
transaction they cause the constraint's trigger execution to be deferred
until commit time *and* drop the constraint, then when commit time comes
the queued trigger will fail to run because the trigger object will have
been dropped.

This is explained because when a constraint gets dropped in a
partitioned table, the recursion to drop the ones in partitions is done
by the dependency mechanism, not by ALTER TABLE traversing the recursion
tree as in all other cases.  In the non-partitioned case, this problem
is avoided by checking that the table is not "in use" by alter-table;
other alter-table subcommands that recurse to partitions do that check
for each partition.  But the dependency mechanism doesn't have a way to
do that.  Fix the problem by applying the same check to all partitions
during ALTER TABLE's "prep" phase, which correctly raises the necessary
error.

Reported-by: Rajkumar Raghuwanshi <rajkumar.raghuwanshi@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6nZiO9-eEpr1ZD84bT1mBoVmeZkfont8iSpcmYrjhGWgA@mail.gmail.com
2019-07-23 17:22:15 -04:00
Tom Lane 24f62e93f3 Improve psql's \d output for partitioned indexes.
Include partitioning information much as we do for partitioned tables.
(However, \d+ doesn't show the partition bounds, because those are
not stored for indexes.)

In passing, fix a couple of queries to look less messy in -E output.

Also, add some tests for \d on tables with nondefault tablespaces.
(Somebody previously added a rather silly number of tests for \d
on partitioned indexes, yet completely neglected other cases.)

Justin Pryzby, reviewed by Fabien Coelho

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190422154902.GH14223@telsasoft.com
2019-07-23 17:04:21 -04:00
Tom Lane eb5472da9f Improve psql's \d output for TOAST tables.
Add the name of the owning table to the footers for a TOAST table.
Also, show all the same footers as for a regular table (in practice,
this adds the index and perhaps the tablespace and access method).

Justin Pryzby, reviewed by Fabien Coelho

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190422154902.GH14223@telsasoft.com
2019-07-23 15:25:56 -04:00
Tom Lane a0555ddab9 Install dependencies to prevent dropping partition key columns.
The logic in ATExecDropColumn that rejects dropping partition key
columns is quite an inadequate defense, because it doesn't execute
in cases where a column needs to be dropped due to cascade from
something that only the column, not the whole partitioned table,
depends on.  That leaves us with a badly broken partitioned table;
even an attempt to load its relcache entry will fail.

We really need to have explicit pg_depend entries that show that the
column can't be dropped without dropping the whole table.  Hence,
add those entries.  In v12 and HEAD, bump catversion to ensure that
partitioned tables will have such entries.  We can't do that in
released branches of course, so in v10 and v11 this patch affords
protection only to partitioned tables created after the patch is
installed.  Given the lack of field complaints (this bug was found
by fuzz-testing not by end users), that's probably good enough.

In passing, fix ATExecDropColumn and ATPrepAlterColumnType
messages to be more specific about which partition key column
they're complaining about.

Per report from Manuel Rigger.  Back-patch to v10 where partitioned
tables were added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+u7OA4JKCPFrdrAbOs7XBiCyD61XJxeNav4LefkSmBLQ-Vobg@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/31920.1562526703@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-07-22 14:55:40 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 7961886580 Revert "initdb: Change authentication defaults"
This reverts commit 09f08930f0.

The buildfarm client needs some adjustments first.
2019-07-22 19:28:25 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 09f08930f0 initdb: Change authentication defaults
Change the defaults for the pg_hba.conf generated by initdb to "peer"
for local (if supported, else "md5") and "md5" for host.

(Changing from "md5" to SCRAM is left as a separate exercise.)

"peer" is currently not supported on AIX, HP-UX, and Windows.  Users
on those operating systems will now either have to provide a password
to initdb or choose a different authentication method when running
initdb.

Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/bec17f0a-ddb1-8b95-5e69-368d9d0a3390%40postgresql.org
2019-07-22 15:14:27 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 19781729f7 Make identity sequence management more robust
Some code could get confused when certain catalog state involving both
identity and serial sequences was present, perhaps during an attempt
to upgrade the latter to the former.  Specifically, dropping the
default of a serial column maintains the ownership of the sequence by
the column, and so it would then be possible to afterwards make the
column an identity column that would now own two sequences.  This
causes the code that looks up the identity sequence to error out,
making the new identity column inoperable until the ownership of the
previous sequence is released.

To fix this, make the identity sequence lookup only consider sequences
with the appropriate dependency type for an identity sequence, so it
only ever finds one (unless something else is broken).  In the above
example, the old serial sequence would then be ignored.  Reorganize
the various owned-sequence-lookup functions a bit to make this
clearer.

Reported-by: Laurenz Albe <laurenz.albe@cybertec.at>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/470c54fc8590be4de0f41b0d295fd6390d5e8a6c.camel@cybertec.at
2019-07-22 12:07:10 +02:00
Jeff Davis e6feef571a Fix daterange canonicalization for +/- infinity.
The values 'infinity' and '-infinity' are a part of the DATE type
itself, so a bound of the date 'infinity' is not the same as an
unbounded/infinite range. However, it is still wrong to try to
canonicalize such values, because adding or subtracting one has no
effect. Fix by treating 'infinity' and '-infinity' the same as
unbounded ranges for the purposes of canonicalization (but not other
purposes).

Backpatch to all versions because it is inconsistent with the
documented behavior. Note that this could be an incompatibility for
applications relying on the behavior contrary to the documentation.

Author: Laurenz Albe
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/77f24ea19ab802bc9bc60ddbb8977ee2d646aec1.camel%40cybertec.at
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2019-07-18 13:41:10 -07:00
Tomas Vondra e4deae7396 Fix handling of NULLs in MCV items and constants
There were two issues in how the extended statistics handled NULL values
in opclauses. Firstly, the code was oblivious to the possibility that
Const may be NULL (constisnull=true) in which case the constvalue is
undefined. We need to treat this as a mismatch, and not call the proc.

Secondly, the MCV item itself may contain NULL values too - the code
already did check that, and updated the match bitmap accordingly, but
failed to ensure we won't call the operator procedure anyway. It did
work for AND-clauses, because in that case false in the bitmap stops
evaluation of further clauses. But for OR-clauses ir was not easy to
get incorrect estimates or even trigger a crash.

This fixes both issues by extending the existing check so that it looks
at constisnull too, and making sure it skips calling the procedure.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8736jdhbhc.fsf%40ansel.ydns.eu
2019-07-18 11:29:38 +02:00
Tom Lane d97b714a21 Avoid using lcons and list_delete_first where it's easy to do so.
Formerly, lcons was about the same speed as lappend, but with the new
List implementation, that's not so; with a long List, data movement
imposes an O(N) cost on lcons and list_delete_first, but not lappend.

Hence, invent list_delete_last with semantics parallel to
list_delete_first (but O(1) cost), and change various places to use
lappend and list_delete_last where this can be done without much
violence to the code logic.

There are quite a few places that construct result lists using lcons not
lappend.  Some have semantic rationales for that; I added comments about
it to a couple that didn't have them already.  In many such places though,
I think the coding is that way only because back in the dark ages lcons
was faster than lappend.  Hence, switch to lappend where this can be done
without causing semantic changes.

In ExecInitExprRec(), this results in aggregates and window functions that
are in the same plan node being executed in a different order than before.
Generally, the executions of such functions ought to be independent of
each other, so this shouldn't result in visibly different query results.
But if you push it, as one regression test case does, you can show that
the order is different.  The new order seems saner; it's closer to
the order of the functions in the query text.  And we never documented
or promised anything about this, anyway.

Also, in gistfinishsplit(), don't bother building a reverse-order list;
it's easy now to iterate backwards through the original list.

It'd be possible to go further towards removing uses of lcons and
list_delete_first, but it'd require more extensive logic changes,
and I'm not convinced it's worth it.  Most of the remaining uses
deal with queues that probably never get long enough to be worth
sweating over.  (Actually, I doubt that any of the changes in this
patch will have measurable performance effects either.  But better
to have good examples than bad ones in the code base.)

Patch by me, thanks to David Rowley and Daniel Gustafsson for review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/21272.1563318411@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-07-17 11:15:34 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5925e55498 Add gen_random_uuid function
This adds a built-in function to generate UUIDs.

PostgreSQL hasn't had a built-in function to generate a UUID yet,
relying on external modules such as uuid-ossp and pgcrypto to provide
one.  Now that we have a strong random number generator built-in, we
can easily provide a version 4 (random) UUID generation function.

This patch takes the existing function gen_random_uuid() from pgcrypto
and makes it a built-in function.  The pgcrypto implementation now
internally redirects to the built-in one.

Reviewed-by: Fabien COELHO <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/6a65610c-46fc-2323-6b78-e8086340a325@2ndquadrant.com
2019-07-14 14:30:27 +02:00
Alexander Korotkov 075f0a880f Add support for <-> (box, point) operator to SP-GiST box_ops
Opclass support functions already can handle this operator, just catalog
adjustment appears to be required.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f71ba19d-d989-63b6-f04a-abf02ad9345d%40postgrespro.ru
Author: Nikita Glukhov
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Alexander Korotkov
2019-07-14 15:09:23 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov c085e1c1cb Add support for <-> (box, point) operator to GiST box_ops
Index-based calculation of this operator is exact.  So, signature of
gist_bbox_distance() function is changes so that caller is responsible for
setting *recheck flag.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f71ba19d-d989-63b6-f04a-abf02ad9345d%40postgrespro.ru
Author: Nikita Glukhov
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Alexander Korotkov
2019-07-14 15:09:15 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 6254c55f81 Add missing commutators for distance operators
Some of <-> operators between geometric types have their commutators missed.
This commit adds them.  The motivation is upcoming kNN support for some of those
operators.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f71ba19d-d989-63b6-f04a-abf02ad9345d%40postgrespro.ru
Author: Nikita Glukhov
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Alexander Korotkov
2019-07-14 14:55:01 +03:00
Thomas Munro b31fbe852c Warn if wal_level is too low when creating a publication.
Provide a hint to users that they need to increase wal_level before
subscriptions can work.

Author: Lucas Viecelli, with some adjustments by Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPjy-57rn5Y9g4e5u--eSOP-7P4QrE9uOZmT2ZcUebF8qxsYhg%40mail.gmail.com
2019-07-13 10:35:34 +12:00
David Rowley cfde234939 Fix RANGE partition pruning with multiple boolean partition keys
match_clause_to_partition_key incorrectly would return
PARTCLAUSE_UNSUPPORTED if a bool qual could not be matched to the current
partition key.  This was a problem, as it causes the calling function to
discard the qual and not try to match it to any other partition key.  If
there was another partition key which did match this qual, then the qual
would not be checked again and we could fail to prune some partitions.

The worst this could do was to cause partitions not to be pruned when they
could have been, so there was no danger of incorrect query results here.

Fix this by changing match_boolean_partition_clause to have it return a
PartClauseMatchStatus rather than a boolean value.  This allows it to
communicate if the qual is unsupported or if it just does not match this
particular partition key, previously these two cases were treated the
same.  Now, if match_clause_to_partition_key is unable to match the qual
to any other qual type then we can simply return the value from the
match_boolean_partition_clause call so that the calling function properly
treats the qual as either unmatched or unsupported.

Reported-by: Rares Salcudean
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Backpatch-through: 11 where partition pruning was introduced
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHp_FN2xwEznH6oyS0hNTuUUZKp5PvegcVv=Co6nBXJ+mC7Y5w@mail.gmail.com
2019-07-12 19:12:38 +12:00
Alvaro Herrera 2c84ea6cf9 Propagate trigger arguments to partitions
We were creating the cloned triggers with an empty list of arguments,
losing the ones that had been specified by the user when creating the
trigger in the partitioned table.  Repair.

This was forgotten in commit 86f575948c.

Author: Patrick McHardy
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190709130027.amr2cavjvo7rdvac@access1.trash.net
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15752-123bc90287986de4@postgresql.org
2019-07-09 17:16:36 -04:00
Thomas Munro cba0fe024e Force hash joins to be enabled in the hash join regression tests.
Otherwise the regressplans.sh tests generate extremely slow nested
loop joins.  Back-patch to 11 where the hash join tests came in.

Reported-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190708055256.GB2709%40paquier.xyz
2019-07-09 18:33:44 +12:00
Michael Paquier 6b8548964b Fix inconsistencies in the code
This addresses a couple of issues in the code:
- Typos and inconsistencies in comments and function declarations.
- Removal of unreferenced function declarations.
- Removal of unnecessary compile flags.
- A cleanup error in regressplans.sh.

Author: Alexander Lakhin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0c991fdf-2670-1997-c027-772a420c4604@gmail.com
2019-07-08 13:15:09 +09:00
Tom Lane cf20cc00a9 Add some test cases to improve test coverage of parse_expr.c.
I chanced to notice while thumbing through lcov reports that we had
exactly no coverage of BETWEEN SYMMETRIC, nor of current_time(N) and
localtime(N).  Improve that.

parse_expr.c still has a pretty awful coverage number, but a large part
of that is due to lack of coverage of the operator_precedence_warning
logic.  I have zero desire to write tests for that; I think ripping it
out would be more sensible at this point.
2019-07-05 23:56:34 -04:00
Tom Lane 0ab1a2e39b Remove dead encoding-conversion functions.
The code for conversions SQL_ASCII <-> MULE_INTERNAL and
SQL_ASCII <-> UTF8 was unreachable, because we long ago changed
the wrapper functions pg_do_encoding_conversion() et al so that
they have hard-wired behaviors for conversions involving SQL_ASCII.
(At least some of those fast paths date back to 2002, though it
looks like we may not have been totally consistent about this until
later.)  Given the lack of complaints, nobody is dissatisfied with
this state of affairs.  Hence, let's just remove the unreachable code.

Also, change CREATE CONVERSION so that it rejects attempts to
define such conversions.  Since we consider that SQL_ASCII represents
lack of knowledge about the encoding in use, such a conversion would
be semantically dubious even if it were reachable.

Adjust a couple of regression test cases that had randomly decided
to rely on these conversion functions rather than any other ones.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/41163.1559156593@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-07-05 14:17:27 -04:00
Tom Lane 02e95a5049 Add \warn command to psql.
This is like \echo except that the text is sent to stderr not stdout.

In passing, fix a pre-existing bug in \echo and \qecho: per documentation
the -n switch should only be recognized when it is the first argument,
but actually any argument matching "-n" was treated as a switch.
(Should we back-patch that?)

David Fetter (bug fix by me), reviewed by Fabien Coelho

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190421183115.GA4311@fetter.org
2019-07-05 12:32:36 -04:00
Michael Paquier 313f87a171 Add min() and max() aggregates for pg_lsn
This is useful for monitoring, when it comes for example to calculations
of WAL retention with replication slots and delays with a set of
standbys.

Bump catalog version.

Author: Fabrízio de Royes Mello
Reviewed-by: Surafel Temesgen
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFcNs+oc8ZoHhowA4rR1GGCgG8QNgK_TOwPRVYQo5rYy8_PXzA@mail.gmail.com
2019-07-05 12:21:11 +09:00
Tomas Vondra 4d66285adc Fix pg_mcv_list_items() to produce text[]
The function pg_mcv_list_items() returns values stored in MCV items. The
items may contain columns with different data types, so the function was
generating text array-like representation, but in an ad-hoc way without
properly escaping various characters etc.

Fixed by simply building a text[] array, which also makes it easier to
use from queries etc.

Requires changes to pg_proc entry, so bump catversion.

Backpatch to 12, where multi-column MCV lists were introduced.

Author: Tomas Vondra
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190618205920.qtlzcu73whfpfqne@development
2019-07-05 01:32:46 +02:00
David Rowley a5be4062f7 Don't remove surplus columns from GROUP BY for inheritance parents
d4c3a156c added code to remove columns that were not part of a table's
PRIMARY KEY constraint from the GROUP BY clause when all the primary key
columns were present in the group by.  This is fine to do since we know
that there will only be one row per group coming from this relation.
However, the logic failed to consider inheritance parent relations.  These
can have child relations without a primary key, but even if they did, they
could duplicate one of the parent's rows or one from another child
relation.  In this case, those additional GROUP BY columns are required.

Fix this by disabling the optimization for inheritance parent tables.
In v11 and beyond, partitioned tables are fine since partitions cannot
overlap and before v11 partitioned tables could not have a primary key.

Reported-by: Manuel Rigger
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+u7OA7VLKf_vEr6kLF3MnWSA9LToJYncgpNX2tQ-oWzYCBQAw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 9.6
2019-07-03 23:44:54 +12:00
Tom Lane 4d6603f28d Simplify psql \d's rule for ordering the indexes of a table.
The previous rule was "primary key (if any) first, then other unique
indexes in name order, then all other indexes in name order".
But the preference for unique indexes seems a bit obsolete since the
introduction of exclusion constraints.   It's no longer the case
that unique indexes are the only ones that constrain what data can
be in the table, and it's hard to see what other rationale there is
for separating out unique indexes.  Other new features like the
possibility for some indexes to be INVALID (hence, not constraining
anything) make this even shakier.

Hence, simplify the sort order to be "primary key (if any) first,
then all other indexes in name order".

No documentation change, since this was never documented anyway.
A couple of existing regression test cases change output, though.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/14422.1561474929@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-07-02 12:32:49 -04:00
Andrew Gierth da53be23d1 Repair logic for reordering grouping sets optimization.
The logic in reorder_grouping_sets to order grouping set elements to
match a pre-specified sort ordering was defective, resulting in
unnecessary sort nodes (though the query output would still be
correct). Repair, simplifying the code a little, and add a test.

Per report from Richard Guo, though I didn't use their patch. Original
bug seems to have been my fault.

Backpatch back to 9.5 where grouping sets were introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAN_9JTzyjGcUjiBHxLsgqfk7PkdLGXiM=pwM+=ph2LsWw0WO1A@mail.gmail.com
2019-06-30 23:49:13 +01:00
Tom Lane 681cca86f5 Blind attempt to fix SSPI-auth case in 010_dump_connstr.pl.
Up to now, pg_regress --config-auth had a hard-wired assumption
that the target cluster uses the default bootstrap superuser name.
pg_dump's 010_dump_connstr.pl TAP test uses non-default superuser
names, and was klugily getting around the restriction by listing
the desired superuser name as a role to "create".  This is pretty
confusing (or at least, it confused me).  Let's make it clearer by
allowing --config-auth mode to be told the bootstrap superuser name.
Repurpose the existing --user switch for that, since it has no
other function in --config-auth mode.

Per buildfarm.  I don't have an environment at hand in which I can
test this fix, but the buildfarm should soon show if it works.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3142.1561840611@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-06-30 13:34:45 -04:00
Tom Lane c91504b958 Move rolenames test out of the core regression tests.
This test script is unsafe to run in "make installcheck" mode for
(at least) two reasons: it creates and destroys some role names
that don't follow the "regress_xxx" naming convention, and it
sets and then resets the application_name GUC attached to every
existing role.  While we've not had complaints, these surely are
not good things to do within a production installation, and
regress.sgml pretty clearly implies that we won't do them.

Rather than lose test coverage altogether, let's just move this
script somewhere where it will get run by "make check" but not
"make installcheck".  src/test/modules/ already has that property.

Since it seems likely that we'll want other regression tests in
future that also exceed the constraints of "make installcheck",
create a generically-named src/test/modules/unsafe_tests/
directory to hold them.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16638.1468620817@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-06-30 12:51:12 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 666cbae16d Remove explicit error handling for obsolete date/time values
The date/time values 'current', 'invalid', and 'undefined' were
removed a long time ago, but the code still contains explicit error
handling for the transition.  To simplify the code and avoid having to
handle these values everywhere, just remove the recognition of these
tokens altogether now.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
2019-06-30 10:27:35 +02:00
Tom Lane ca129e58c0 Fix regression tests to use only global names beginning with "regress_".
In commit 18555b132 we tentatively established a rule that regression
tests should use names containing "regression" for databases, and names
starting with "regress_" for all other globally-visible object names, so
as to circumscribe the side-effects that "make installcheck" could have on
an existing installation.  However, no enforcement mechanism was created,
so it's unsurprising that some new violations have crept in since then.

In fact, a whole new *category* of violations has crept in, to wit we now
also have globally-visible subscription and replication origin names, and
"make installcheck" could very easily clobber user-created objects of
those types.  So it's past time to do something about this.

This commit sanitizes the tests enough that they will pass (i.e. not
generate any visible warnings) with the enforcement mechanism I'll add
in the next commit.  There are some TAP tests that still trigger the
warnings, but the warnings do not cause test failure.  Since these tests
do not actually run against a pre-existing installation, there's no need
to worry whether they could conflict with user-created objects.

The problem with rolenames.sql testing special role names like "user"
is still there, and is dealt with only very cosmetically in this patch
(by hiding the warnings :-().  What we actually need to do to be safe is
to take that test script out of "make installcheck" altogether, but that
seems like material for a separate patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16638.1468620817@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-06-29 11:09:03 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 23cccb17fe Fix for dropped columns in a partitioned table's default partition
We forgot to map column numbers to/from the default partition for
various operations, leading to valid cases failing with spurious
errors, such as
ERROR:  attribute N of type some_partition has been dropped

It was also possible that the search for conflicting rows in the default
partition when attaching another partition would fail to detect some.
Secondarily, it was also possible that such a search should be skipped
(because the constraint was implied) but wasn't.

Fix all this by mapping column numbers when necessary.

Reported by: Daniel Wilches
Author: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15873-8c61945d6b3ef87c@postgresql.org
2019-06-28 14:51:08 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 55ed3defc9 Fix partitioned index creation with foreign partitions
When a partitioned tables contains foreign tables as partitions, it is
not possible to implement unique or primary key indexes -- but when
regular indexes are created, there is no reason to do anything other
than ignoring such partitions.  We were raising errors upon encountering
the foreign partitions, which is unfriendly and doesn't protect against
any actual problems.

Relax this restriction so that index creation is allowed on partitioned
tables containing foreign partitions, becoming a no-op on them.  (We may
later want to redefine this so that the FDW is told to create the
indexes on the foreign side.)  This applies to CREATE INDEX, as well as
ALTER TABLE / ATTACH PARTITION and CREATE TABLE / PARTITION OF.

Backpatch to 11, where indexes on partitioned tables were introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15724-d5a58fa9472eef4f@postgresql.org
Author: Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
2019-06-26 18:38:51 -04:00
Tom Lane c360477d2e Follow the rule that regression-test-created roles are named "regress_xxx".
Commit 1c5d9270e had not gotten the word about this.  (For previous
context, see 18555b132.)
2019-06-25 22:53:42 -04:00
Michael Paquier ce59b75d44 Add toast-level reloption for vacuum_index_cleanup
a96c41f has introduced the option for heap, but it still lacked the
variant to control the behavior for toast relations.

While on it, refactor the tests so as they stress more scenarios with
the various values that vacuum_index_cleanup can use.  It would be
useful to couple those tests with pageinspect to check that pages are
actually cleaned up, but this is left for later.

Author: Masahiko Sawada, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoCqs8iN04RX=i1KtLSaX5RrTEM04b7NHYps4+rqtpWNEg@mail.gmail.com
2019-06-25 09:09:27 +09:00
Tom Lane f946a40914 Further fix ALTER COLUMN TYPE's handling of indexes and index constraints.
This patch reverts all the code changes of commit e76de8861, which turns
out to have been seriously misguided.  We can't wait till later to compute
the definition string for an index; we must capture that before applying
the data type change for any column it depends on, else ruleutils.c will
deliverr wrong/misleading results.  (This fine point was documented
nowhere, of course.)

I'd also managed to forget that ATExecAlterColumnType executes once per
ALTER COLUMN TYPE clause, not once per statement; which resulted in the
code being basically completely broken for any case in which multiple ALTER
COLUMN TYPE clauses are applied to a table having non-constraint indexes
that must be rebuilt.  Through very bad luck, none of the existing test
cases nor the ones added by e76de8861 caught that, but of course it was
soon found in the field.

The previous patch also had an implicit assumption that if a constraint's
index had a dependency on a table column, so would the constraint --- but
that isn't actually true, so it didn't fix such cases.

Instead of trying to delete unneeded index dependencies later, do the
is-there-a-constraint lookup immediately on seeing an index dependency,
and switch to remembering the constraint if so.  In the unusual case of
multiple column dependencies for a constraint index, this will result in
duplicate constraint lookups, but that's not that horrible compared to all
the other work that happens here.  Besides, such cases did not work at all
before, so it's hard to argue that they're performance-critical for anyone.

Per bug #15865 from Keith Fiske.  As before, back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15865-17940eacc8f8b081@postgresql.org
2019-06-24 16:43:21 -04:00
Tom Lane f31111bbe8 Drop test user when done with it.
Commit d7f8d26d9 added a test case that created a user, but forgot
to drop it again.  This is no good; for one thing, it causes repeated
"make installcheck" runs to fail.
2019-06-24 12:36:51 -04:00
Dean Rasheed d7f8d26d9f Add security checks to the multivariate MCV estimation code.
The multivariate MCV estimation code may run user-defined operators on
the values in the MCV list, which means that those operators may
potentially leak the values from the MCV list. Guard against leaking
data to unprivileged users by checking that the user has SELECT
privileges on the table or all of the columns referred to by the
statistics.

Additionally, if there are any securityQuals on the RTE (either due to
RLS policies on the table, or accessing the table via a security
barrier view), not all rows may be visible to the current user, even
if they have table or column privileges. Thus we further insist that
the operator be leakproof in this case.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Tomas Vondra.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEZATCUhT9rt7Ui=Vdx4N==VV5XOK5dsXfnGgVOz_JhAicB=ZA@mail.gmail.com
2019-06-23 18:50:08 +01:00
Michael Paquier 20e1cc898d Rework some error strings for REINDEX CONCURRENTLY with system catalogs
This makes the whole user experience more consistent when bumping into
failures, and more in line with the rewording done via 508300e.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190514153252.GA22168@alvherre.pgsql
2019-06-20 13:28:12 +09:00
Alexander Korotkov 261a5c1928 Support 'q' flag in jsonpath 'like_regex' predicate
SQL/JSON standard defines that jsonpath 'like_regex' predicate should support
the same set of flags as XQuery/XPath.  It appears that implementation of 'q'
flag was missed.  This commit fixes that.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAPpHfdtyfPsxLYiTjp5Ov8T5xGsB5t3CwE5%2B3PS%3DLLwA%2BxTJog%40mail.gmail.com
Author: Nikita Glukhov, Alexander Korotkov
2019-06-19 22:41:57 +03:00
Andres Freund 23224563d9 Fix memory corruption/crash in ANALYZE.
This fixes an embarrassing oversight I (Andres) made in 737a292b,
namely missing two place where liverows/deadrows were used when
converting those variables to pointers, leading to incrementing the
pointer, rather than the value.

It's not that actually that easy to trigger a crash: One needs tuples
deleted by the current transaction, followed by a tuple deleted in
another session, all in one page. Which is presumably why this hasn't
been noticed before.

Reported-By: Steve Singer
Author: Steve Singer
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c7988239-d42c-ddc4-41db-171b23b35e4f@ssinger.info
2019-06-18 15:51:04 -07:00
Michael Paquier 09ec55b933 Fix buffer overflow when parsing SCRAM verifiers in backend
Any authenticated user can overflow a stack-based buffer by changing the
user's own password to a purpose-crafted value.  This often suffices to
execute arbitrary code as the PostgreSQL operating system account.

This fix is contributed by multiple folks, based on an initial analysis
from Tom Lane.  This issue has been introduced by 68e61ee, so it was
possible to make use of it at authentication time.  It became more
easily to trigger after ccae190 which has made the SCRAM parsing more
strict when changing a password, in the case where the client passes
down a verifier already hashed using SCRAM.  Back-patch to v10 where
SCRAM has been introduced.

Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Author: Jonathan Katz, Heikki Linnakangas, Michael Paquier
Security: CVE-2019-10164
Backpatch-through: 10
2019-06-17 21:48:17 +09:00
Tomas Vondra aa087ec64f Add pg_stats_ext view for extended statistics
Regular per-column statistics are stored in pg_statistics catalog, which
is however rather difficult to read, so we also have pg_stats view with
a human-reablable version of the data.

For extended statistic the catalog was fairly easy to read, so we did
not have such human-readable view so far.  Commit 9b6babfa2d however did
split the catalog into two, which makes querying harder.  Furthermore,
we want to show the multi-column MCV list in a way similar to per-column
stats (and not as a bytea value).

This commit introduces pg_stats_ext view, joining the two catalogs and
massaging the data to produce human-readable output similar to pg_stats.
It also considers RLS and access privileges - the data is shown only when
the user has access to all columns the extended statistic is defined on.

Bumped CATVERSION due to adding new system view.

Author: Dean Rasheed, with improvements by me
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed, John Naylor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEZATCUhT9rt7Ui%3DVdx4N%3D%3DVV5XOK5dsXfnGgVOz_JhAicB%3DZA%40mail.gmail.com
2019-06-16 01:20:39 +02:00
Tomas Vondra 6cbfb784c3 Rework the pg_statistic_ext catalog
Since extended statistic got introduced in PostgreSQL 10, there was a
single catalog pg_statistic_ext storing both the definitions and built
statistic.  That's however problematic when a user is supposed to have
access only to the definitions, but not to user data.

Consider for example pg_dump on a database with RLS enabled - if the
pg_statistic_ext catalog respects RLS (which it should, if it contains
user data), pg_dump would not see any records and the result would not
define any extended statistics.  That would be a surprising behavior.

Until now this was not a pressing issue, because the existing types of
extended statistic (functional dependencies and ndistinct coefficients)
do not include any user data directly.  This changed with introduction
of MCV lists, which do include most common combinations of values.

The easiest way to fix this is to split the pg_statistic_ext catalog
into two - one for definitions, one for the built statistic values.
The new catalog is called pg_statistic_ext_data, and we're maintaining
a 1:1 relationship with the old catalog - either there are matching
records in both catalogs, or neither of them.

Bumped CATVERSION due to changing system catalog definitions.

Author: Dean Rasheed, with improvements by me
Reviewed-by: Dean Rasheed, John Naylor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEZATCUhT9rt7Ui%3DVdx4N%3D%3DVV5XOK5dsXfnGgVOz_JhAicB%3DZA%40mail.gmail.com
2019-06-16 01:20:31 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera b976845815 Fix double-word typos
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190612184527.GA24266@alvherre.pgsql
Reviewed-by: Michaël Paquier
2019-06-13 10:03:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 3d99a81397 Fix incorrect printing of queries with duplicated join names.
Given a query in which multiple JOIN nodes used the same alias
(which'd necessarily be in different sub-SELECTs), ruleutils.c
would assign the JOIN nodes distinct aliases for clarity ...
but then it forgot to print the modified aliases when dumping
the JOIN nodes themselves.  This results in a dump/reload hazard
for views, because the emitted query is flat-out incorrect:
Vars will be printed with table names that have no referent.

This has been wrong for a long time, so back-patch to all supported
branches.

Philip Dubé

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CY4PR2101MB080246F2955FF58A6ED1FEAC98140@CY4PR2101MB0802.namprd21.prod.outlook.com
2019-06-12 19:43:08 -04:00
Tom Lane e76de88615 Fix ALTER COLUMN TYPE failure with a partial exclusion constraint.
ATExecAlterColumnType failed to consider the possibility that an index
that needs to be rebuilt might be a child of a constraint that needs to be
rebuilt.  We missed this so far because usually a constraint index doesn't
have a direct dependency on its table, just on the constraint object.
But if there's a WHERE clause, then dependency analysis of the WHERE
clause results in direct dependencies on the column(s) mentioned in WHERE.
This led to trying to drop and rebuild both the constraint and its
underlying index.

In v11/HEAD, we successfully drop both the index and the constraint,
and then try to rebuild both, and of course the second rebuild hits a
duplicate-index-name problem.  Before v11, it fails with obscure messages
about a missing relation OID, due to trying to drop the index twice.

This is essentially the same kind of problem noted in commit
20bef2c31: the possible dependency linkages are broader than what
ATExecAlterColumnType was designed for.  It was probably OK when
written, but it's certainly been broken since the introduction of
partial exclusion constraints.  Fix by adding an explicit check
for whether any of the indexes-to-be-rebuilt belong to any of the
constraints-to-be-rebuilt, and ignoring any that do.

In passing, fix a latent bug introduced by commit 8b08f7d48: in
get_constraint_index() we must "continue" not "break" when rejecting
a relation of a wrong relkind.  This is harmless today because we don't
expect that code path to be taken anyway; but if there ever were any
relations to be ignored, the existing coding would have an extremely
undesirable dependency on the order of pg_depend entries.

Also adjust a couple of obsolete comments.

Per bug #15835 from Yaroslav Schekin.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15835-32d9b7a76c06a7a9@postgresql.org
2019-06-12 12:29:39 -04:00
Michael Paquier ceac4505d3 Fix handling of COMMENT for domain constraints
For a non-superuser, changing a comment on a domain constraint was
leading to a cache lookup failure as the code tried to perform the
ownership lookup on the constraint OID itself, thinking that it was a
type, but this check needs to happen on the type the domain constraint
relies on.  As the type a domain constraint relies on can be guessed
directly based on the constraint OID, first fetch its type OID and
perform the ownership on it.

This is broken since 7eca575, which has split the handling of comments
for table constraints and domain constraints, so back-patch down to
9.5.

Reported-by: Clemens Ladisch
Author: Daniel Gustafsson, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15833-808e11904835d26f@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 9.5
2019-06-12 11:30:11 +09:00
Tom Lane 6f34fcbbd5 Fix conversion of JSON strings to JSON output columns in json_to_record().
json_to_record(), when an output column is declared as type json or jsonb,
should emit the corresponding field of the input JSON object.  But it got
this slightly wrong when the field is just a string literal: it failed to
escape the contents of the string.  That typically resulted in syntax
errors if the string contained any double quotes or backslashes.

jsonb_to_record() handles such cases correctly, but I added corresponding
test cases for it too, to prevent future backsliding.

Improve the documentation, as it provided only a very hand-wavy
description of the conversion rules used by these functions.

Per bug report from Robert Vollmert.  Back-patch to v10 where the
error was introduced (by commit cf35346e8).

Note that PG 9.4 - 9.6 also get this case wrong, but differently so:
they feed the de-escaped contents of the string literal to json[b]_in.
That behavior is less obviously wrong, so possibly it's being depended on
in the field, so I won't risk trying to make the older branches behave
like the newer ones.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/D6921B37-BD8E-4664-8D5F-DB3525765DCD@vllmrt.net
2019-06-11 13:33:22 -04:00
Noah Misch f2c71cb71f Stop using spelling "nonexistant".
The documentation used "nonexistent" exclusively, and the source tree
used it three times as often as "nonexistant".
2019-06-08 10:12:26 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera a36c84c3e4 Fix default_tablespace usage for partitioned tables
In commit 87259588d0 I (Álvaro) tried to rationalize the determination
of tablespace to use for partitioned tables, but failed to handle the
default_tablespace case.  Repair and add proper tests.

Author: Amit Langote, Rushabh Lathia
Reported-by: Rushabh Lathia
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGPqQf0cYjm1=rjxk_6gU0SjUS70=yFUAdCJLwWzh9bhNJnyVg@mail.gmail.com
2019-06-07 00:44:17 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera e8bdea58f9 Fix message style
Mark one message not for translation, and prefer "cannot" over "may
not", per commentary from Robert Haas.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190430145813.GA29872@alvherre.pgsql
2019-06-06 12:57:57 -04:00
David Rowley e24a815c1c Fix confusing NOTICE text in REINDEX CONCURRENTLY
When performing REINDEX TABLE CONCURRENTLY, if all of the table's indexes
could not be reindexed, a NOTICE message claimed that the table had no
indexes.  This was confusing, so let's change the NOTICE text to something
less confusing.

In passing, also mention in the comment before ReindexRelationConcurrently
that materialized views are supported too and also explain what the return
value of the function means.

Author: Ashwin Agrawal
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALfoeithHvi13p_VyR8kt9o6Pa7Z=Smi6Nfc2anHnQx5Lj8bTQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-06-05 21:05:41 +12:00
David Rowley 56b3b38382 Fix incorrect index behavior in COPY FROM with partitioned tables
86b85044e rewrote how COPY FROM works to allow multiple tuple buffers to
exist to once thus allowing multi-inserts to be used in more cases with
partitioned tables.  That commit neglected to update the estate's
es_result_relation_info when flushing the insert buffer to the partition
making it possible for the index tuples to be added into an index on the
wrong partition.

Fix this and also add an Assert in ExecInsertIndexTuples to help ensure
that we never make this mistake again.

Reported-by: Haruka Takatsuka
Author: Ashutosh Sharma
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15832-b1bf336a4ee246b5@postgresql.org
2019-06-05 18:28:38 +12:00
Peter Eisentraut c880096dc1 Add command column to pg_stat_progress_create_index
This allows determining which command is running, similar to
pg_stat_progress_cluster.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/f0e56b3b-74b7-6cbc-e207-a5ed6bee18dc%402ndquadrant.com
2019-06-04 09:29:02 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera a100974751 Fix typo in message
I introduced the typo in source code in the course of 75445c1515.
Repair.
2019-05-28 17:36:14 -04:00
Noah Misch 40b132c1af In the pg_upgrade test suite, don't write to src/test/regress.
When this suite runs installcheck, redirect file creations from
src/test/regress to src/bin/pg_upgrade/tmp_check/regress.  This closes a
race condition in "make -j check-world".  If the pg_upgrade suite wrote
to a given src/test/regress/results file in parallel with the regular
src/test/regress invocation writing it, a test failed spuriously.  Even
without parallelism, in "make -k check-world", the suite finishing
second overwrote the other's regression.diffs.  This revealed test
"largeobject" assuming @abs_builddir@ is getcwd(), so fix that, too.

Buildfarm client REL_10, released fifty-four days ago, supports saving
regression.diffs from its new location.  When an older client reports a
pg_upgradeCheck failure, it will no longer include regression.diffs.
Back-patch to 9.5, where pg_upgrade moved to src/bin.

Reviewed (in earlier versions) by Andrew Dunstan.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181224034411.GA3224776@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-05-28 12:59:00 -07:00
Andrew Gierth 44e95b5728 Fix array size allocation for HashAggregate hash keys.
When there were duplicate columns in the hash key list, the array
sizes could be miscomputed, resulting in access off the end of the
array. Adjust the computation to ensure the array is always large
enough.

(I considered whether the duplicates could be removed in planning, but
I can't rule out the possibility that duplicate columns might have
different hash functions assigned. Simpler to just make sure it works
at execution time regardless.)

Bug apparently introduced in fc4b3dea2 as part of narrowing down the
tuples stored in the hashtable. Reported by Colm McHugh of Salesforce,
though I didn't use their patch. Backpatch back to version 10 where
the bug was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFeeJoKKu0u+A_A9R9316djW-YW3-+Gtgvy3ju655qRHR3jtdA@mail.gmail.com
2019-05-23 15:26:01 +01:00
Tom Lane 8255c7a5ee Phase 2 pgindent run for v12.
Switch to 2.1 version of pg_bsd_indent.  This formats
multiline function declarations "correctly", that is with
additional lines of parameter declarations indented to match
where the first line's left parenthesis is.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0P3FeTXRcU5B2W3jv3PgRVZ-kGUXLGfd42FFhUROO3ug@mail.gmail.com
2019-05-22 13:04:48 -04:00
Tom Lane be76af171c Initial pgindent run for v12.
This is still using the 2.0 version of pg_bsd_indent.
I thought it would be good to commit this separately,
so as to document the differences between 2.0 and 2.1 behavior.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16296.1558103386@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-05-22 12:55:34 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 66a4bad83a Convert ExecComputeStoredGenerated to use tuple slots
This code was still using the old style of forming a heap tuple rather
than using tuple slots.  This would be less efficient if a non-heap
access method was used.  And using tuple slots is actually quite a bit
faster when using heap as well.

Also add some test cases for generated columns with null values and
with varlena values.  This lack of coverage was discovered while
working on this patch.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20190331025744.ugbsyks7czfcoksd%40alap3.anarazel.de
2019-05-22 18:41:53 +02:00
Tom Lane 166f69f769 Fix O(N^2) performance issue in pg_publication_tables view.
The original coding of this view relied on a correlated IN sub-query.
Our planner is not very bright about correlated sub-queries, and even
if it were, there's no way for it to know that the output of
pg_get_publication_tables() is duplicate-free, making the de-duplicating
semantics of IN unnecessary.  Hence, rewrite as a LATERAL sub-query.
This provides circa 100X speedup for me with a few hundred published
tables (the whole regression database), and things would degrade as
roughly O(published_relations * all_relations) beyond that.

Because the rules.out expected output changes, force a catversion bump.
Ordinarily we might not want to do that post-beta1; but we already know
we'll be doing a catversion bump before beta2 to fix pg_statistic_ext
issues, so it's pretty much free to fix it now instead of waiting for v13.

Per report and fix suggestion from PegoraroF10.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1551385426763-0.post@n3.nabble.com
2019-05-22 11:47:02 -04:00
Tom Lane f03a9ca436 Insert temporary debugging output in regression tests.
We're seeing occasional instability in the plans generated for
parallel queries on the "a_star" table hierarchy.  This suggests
that something is changing the planner's stats for those tables,
but that should not be happening within a regression test run.
To try to gather some information about what's happening, insert
additional queries to check the basic page/tuple counts for these
tables, as well as whether any vacuums or analyzes have happened
on them.  (We expect that only the database-wide VACUUM in
sanity_check.sql will have touched them.)

I added the probes not only in select_parallel.sql itself, but
also in stats.sql, bearing in mind that the stats collector's
lag may prevent the initial query from reporting current truth.
If any extra vacuum/analyze has happened, the recheck in stats.sql
definitely ought to see it.

This commit can be reverted once we figure out what's going on.

Per suggestion from David Rowley, though I changed the queries around.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+hUKG+0CxrKRWRMf5ymN3gm+BECHna2B-q1w8onKBep4HasUw@mail.gmail.com
2019-05-21 12:23:21 -04:00
Andres Freund 47a14c99e4 Fix regression tests broken in fc7c281f87.
This shouldn't have been committed without even running the tests (nor
were the tests added that were suggested). I'm fixing up the results
to get the buildfarm back to green, it's quite possible we'll want to
revert this later.
2019-05-20 09:36:06 -07:00
Andres Freund 2657283256 Minimally fix partial aggregation for aggregates that don't have one argument.
For partial aggregation combine steps,
AggStatePerTrans->numTransInputs was set to the transition function's
number of inputs, rather than the combine function's number of
inputs (always 1).

That lead to partial aggregates with strict combine functions to
wrongly check for NOT NULL input as required by strictness. When the
aggregate wasn't exactly passed one argument, the strictness check was
either omitted (in the 0 args case) or too many arguments were
checked. In the latter case we'd read beyond the end of
FunctionCallInfoData->args (only in master).

AggStatePerTrans->numTransInputs actually has been wrong since since
9.6, where partial aggregates were added. But it turns out to not be
an active problem in 9.6 and 10, because numTransInputs wasn't used at
all for combine functions: Before c253b722f6 there simply was no NULL
check for the input to strict trans functions, and after that the
check was simply hardcoded for the right offset in fcinfo, as it's
done by code specific to combine functions.

In bf6c614a2f (11) the strictness check was generalized, with common
code doing the strictness checks for both plain and combine transition
functions, based on numTransInputs. For combine functions this lead to
not emitting an expression step to check for strict input in the 0
arguments case, and in the > 1 arguments case, we'd check too many
arguments.Due to the fact that the relevant fcinfo->isnull[2..] was
always zero-initialized (more or less by accident, by being part of
the AggStatePerTrans struct, which is palloc0'ed), there was no
observable damage in the latter case before a9c35cf85c, we just
checked too many array elements.

Due to the changes in a9c35cf85c, > 1 argument bug became visible,
because these days fcinfo is a) dynamically allocated without being
zeroed b) exactly the length required for the number of specified
arguments (hardcoded to 2 in this case).

This commit only contains a fairly minimal fix, setting numTransInputs
to a hardcoded 1 when building a pertrans for a combine function. It
seems likely that we'll want to clean this up further (e.g. the
arguments build_pertrans_for_aggref() aren't particularly meaningful
for combine functions). But the wrap date for 12 beta1 is coming up
fast, so it seems good to have a minimal fix in place.

Backpatch to 11. While AggStatePerTrans->numTransInputs was set
wrongly before that, the value was not used for combine functions.

Reported-By: Rajkumar Raghuwanshi
Diagnosed-By: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Jeevan Chalke, Andres Freund, David Rowley
Author: David Rowley, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6=uZEyWyLw0N7HtR9OBc-sWEFeByEZC7t-KDf15FKxVew@mail.gmail.com
2019-05-19 18:01:06 -07:00
Noah Misch ae35e1c9d7 Revert "In the pg_upgrade test suite, don't write to src/test/regress."
This reverts commit bd1592e857.  It had
multiple defects.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12717.1558304356@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-05-19 15:24:42 -07:00
Andres Freund c3b23ae457 Don't to predicate lock for analyze scans, refactor scan option passing.
Before this commit, when ANALYZE was run on a table and serializable
was used (either by virtue of an explicit BEGIN TRANSACTION ISOLATION
LEVEL SERIALIZABLE, or default_transaction_isolation being set to
serializable) a null pointer dereference lead to a crash.

The analyze scan doesn't need a snapshot (nor predicate locking), but
before this commit a scan only contained information about being a
bitmap or sample scan.

Refactor the option passing to the scan_begin callback to use a
bitmask instead. Alternatively we could have added a new boolean
parameter, but that seems harder to read. Even before this issue
various people (Heikki, Tom, Robert) suggested doing so.

These changes don't change the scan APIs outside of tableam. The flags
argument could be exposed, it's not necessary to fix this
problem. Also the wrapper table_beginscan* functions encapsulate most
of that complexity.

After these changes fixing the bug is trivial, just don't acquire
predicate lock for analyze style scans. That was already done for
bitmap heap scans.  Add an assert that a snapshot is passed when
acquiring the predicate lock, so this kind of bug doesn't require
running with serializable.

Also add a comment about sample scans currently requiring predicate
locking the entire relation, that previously wasn't remarked upon.

Reported-By: Joe Wildish
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/4EA80A20-E9BF-49F1-9F01-5B66CAB21453@elusive.cx
    https://postgr.es/m/20190411164947.nkii4gaeilt4bui7@alap3.anarazel.de
    https://postgr.es/m/20190518203102.g7peu2fianukjuxm@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-05-19 15:10:28 -07:00
Noah Misch bd1592e857 In the pg_upgrade test suite, don't write to src/test/regress.
When this suite runs installcheck, redirect file creations from
src/test/regress to src/bin/pg_upgrade/tmp_check/regress.  This closes a
race condition in "make -j check-world".  If the pg_upgrade suite wrote
to a given src/test/regress/results file in parallel with the regular
src/test/regress invocation writing it, a test failed spuriously.  Even
without parallelism, in "make -k check-world", the suite finishing
second overwrote the other's regression.diffs.  This revealed test
"largeobject" assuming @abs_builddir@ is getcwd(), so fix that, too.

Buildfarm client REL_10, released forty-five days ago, supports saving
regression.diffs from its new location.  When an older client reports a
pg_upgradeCheck failure, it will no longer include regression.diffs.
Back-patch to 9.5, where pg_upgrade moved to src/bin.

Reviewed by Andrew Dunstan.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181224034411.GA3224776@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-05-19 14:36:44 -07:00
Tom Lane 6630ccad7a Restructure creation of run-time pruning steps.
Previously, gen_partprune_steps() always built executor pruning steps
using all suitable clauses, including those containing PARAM_EXEC
Params.  This meant that the pruning steps were only completely safe
for executor run-time (scan start) pruning.  To prune at executor
startup, we had to ignore the steps involving exec Params.  But this
doesn't really work in general, since there may be logic changes
needed as well --- for example, pruning according to the last operator's
btree strategy is the wrong thing if we're not applying that operator.
The rules embodied in gen_partprune_steps() and its minions are
sufficiently complicated that tracking their incremental effects in
other logic seems quite impractical.

Short of a complete redesign, the only safe fix seems to be to run
gen_partprune_steps() twice, once to create executor startup pruning
steps and then again for run-time pruning steps.  We can save a few
cycles however by noting during the first scan whether we rejected
any clauses because they involved exec Params --- if not, we don't
need to do the second scan.

In support of this, refactor the internal APIs in partprune.c to make
more use of passing information in the GeneratePruningStepsContext
struct, rather than as separate arguments.

This is, I hope, the last piece of our response to a bug report from
Alan Jackson.  Back-patch to v11 where this code came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/FAD28A83-AC73-489E-A058-2681FA31D648@tvsquared.com
2019-05-17 19:44:34 -04:00
Michael Paquier 6ba500cae6 Fix regression test outputs
75445c1 has caused various failures in tests across the tree after
updating some error messages, so fix the newly-expected output.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8332.1558048838@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-05-17 09:40:02 +09:00
Tom Lane 3922f10646 Fix bogus logic for combining range-partitioned columns during pruning.
gen_prune_steps_from_opexps's notion of how to do this was overly
complicated and underly correct.

Per discussion of a report from Alan Jackson (though this fixes only one
aspect of that problem).  Back-patch to v11 where this code came in.

Amit Langote

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/FAD28A83-AC73-489E-A058-2681FA31D648@tvsquared.com
2019-05-16 16:25:43 -04:00
Tom Lane 4b1fcb43d0 Fix partition pruning to treat stable comparison operators properly.
Cross-type comparison operators in a btree or hash opclass might be
only stable not immutable (this is true of timestamp vs. timestamptz
for example).  partprune.c ignored this possibility and would perform
plan-time pruning with them anyway, possibly leading to wrong answers
if the environment changed between planning and execution.

To fix, teach gen_partprune_steps() to do things differently when
creating plan-time pruning steps vs. run-time pruning steps.
analyze_partkey_exprs() also needs an extra check, which is rather
annoying but now is not the time to restructure things enough to
avoid that.

While at it, simplify the logic for the plan-time case a little
by insisting that the comparison value be a Const and nothing else.
This relies on the assumption that eval_const_expressions will have
reduced any immutable expression to a Const; which is not quite
100% true, but certainly any case that comes up often enough to be
interesting should have simplification logic there.

Also improve a bunch of inadequate/obsolete/wrong comments.

Per discussion of a report from Alan Jackson (though this fixes only one
aspect of that problem).  Back-patch to v11 where this code came in.

David Rowley, with some further hacking by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/FAD28A83-AC73-489E-A058-2681FA31D648@tvsquared.com
2019-05-16 11:58:21 -04:00
Tom Lane fc9a62af3f Move logging.h and logging.c from src/fe_utils/ to src/common/.
The original placement of this module in src/fe_utils/ is ill-considered,
because several src/common/ modules have dependencies on it, meaning that
libpgcommon and libpgfeutils now have mutual dependencies.  That makes it
pointless to have distinct libraries at all.  The intended design is that
libpgcommon is lower-level than libpgfeutils, so only dependencies from
the latter to the former are acceptable.

We already have the precedent that fe_memutils and a couple of other
modules in src/common/ are frontend-only, so it's not stretching anything
out of whack to treat logging.c as a frontend-only module in src/common/.
To the extent that such modules help provide a common frontend/backend
environment for the rest of common/ to use, it's a reasonable design.
(logging.c does not yet provide an ereport() emulation, but one can
dream.)

Hence, move these files over, and revert basically all of the build-system
changes made by commit cc8d41511.  There are no places that need to grow
new dependencies on libpgcommon, further reinforcing the idea that this
is the right solution.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a912ffff-f6e4-778a-c86a-cf5c47a12933@2ndquadrant.com
2019-05-14 14:20:10 -04:00
Tom Lane 7c850320d8 Fix SQL-style substring() to have spec-compliant greediness behavior.
SQL's regular-expression substring() function is defined to have a
pattern argument that's separated into three subpatterns by escape-
double-quote markers; the function result is the part of the input
matching the second subpattern.  The standard makes it clear that
if there is ambiguity about how to match the input to the subpatterns,
the first and third subpatterns should be taken to match the smallest
possible amount of text (i.e., they're "non greedy", in the terms of
our regex code).  We were not doing it that way: the first subpattern
would eat the largest possible amount of text, causing the function
result to be shorter than what the spec requires.

Fix that by attaching explicit greediness quantifiers to the
subpatterns.  (This depends on the regex fix in commit 8a29ed053;
before that, this didn't reliably change the regex engine's behavior.)

Also, by adding parentheses around each subpattern, we ensure that
"|" (OR) in the subpatterns behave sanely.  Previously, "|" in the
first or third subpatterns didn't work.

This patch also makes the function throw error if you write more than
two escape-double-quote markers, and do something sane if you write
just one, and document that behavior.  Previously, an odd number of
markers led to a confusing complaint about unbalanced parentheses,
while extra pairs of markers were just ignored.  (Note that the spec
requires exactly two markers, but we've historically allowed there
to be none, and this patch preserves the old behavior for that case.)

In passing, adjust some substring() test cases that didn't really
prove what they said they were testing for: they used patterns
that didn't match the data string, so that the output would be
NULL whether or not the function was really strict.

Although this is certainly a bug fix, changing the behavior in back
branches seems undesirable: applications could perhaps be depending on
the old behavior, since it's not obviously wrong unless you read the
spec very closely.  Hence, no back-patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5bb27a41-350d-37bf-901e-9d26f5592dd0@charter.net
2019-05-14 11:27:31 -04:00
Tom Lane 8a29ed0530 Fix misoptimization of "{1,1}" quantifiers in regular expressions.
A bounded quantifier with m = n = 1 might be thought a no-op.  But
according to our documentation (which traces back to Henry Spencer's
original man page) it still imposes greediness, or non-greediness in the
case of the non-greedy variant "{1,1}?", on whatever it's attached to.

This turns out not to work though, because parseqatom() optimizes away
the m = n = 1 case without regard for whether it's supposed to change
the greediness of the argument RE.

We can fix this by just not applying the optimization when the greediness
needs to change; the subsequent general cases handle it fine.

The three cases in which we can still apply the optimization are
(a) no quantifier, or quantifier does not impose a preference;
(b) atom has no greediness property, implying it cannot match a
variable amount of text anyway; or
(c) quantifier's greediness is same as atom's.
Note that in most cases where one of these applies, we'd have exited
earlier in the "not a messy case" fast path.  I think it's now only
possible to get to the optimization when the atom involves capturing
parentheses or a non-top-level backref.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  I'd ordinarily be hesitant to
put a subtle behavioral change into back branches, but in this case
it's very hard to see a reason why somebody would write "{1,1}?" unless
they're trying to get the documented change-of-greediness behavior.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5bb27a41-350d-37bf-901e-9d26f5592dd0@charter.net
2019-05-12 18:53:38 -04:00
Andres Freund 5997a8f4d7 Remove reindex_catalog test from test schedules.
As none of the approaches for avoiding the deadlock issues seem
promising enough, and all the expected reindex related changes have
been made, apply 60c2951e1b to master as well.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4622.1556982247@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-05-10 12:44:31 -07:00
Michael Paquier 508300e2e1 Improve and fix some error handling for REINDEX INDEX/TABLE CONCURRENTLY
This improves the user experience when it comes to restrict several
flavors of REINDEX CONCURRENTLY.  First, for INDEX, remove a restriction
on shared relations as we already check after catalog relations.  Then,
for TABLE, add a proper error message when attempting to run the command
on system catalogs.  The code path of CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY already
complains about that, but if a REINDEX is issued then then the error
generated is confusing.

While on it, add more tests to check restrictions on catalog indexes and
on toast table/index for catalogs.  Some error messages are improved,
with wording suggestion coming from Tom Lane.

Reported-by: Tom Lane
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/23694.1556806002@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-05-10 08:18:46 +09:00
Tom Lane 24c19e9f66 Repair issues with faulty generation of merge-append plans.
create_merge_append_plan failed to honor the CP_EXACT_TLIST flag:
it would generate the expected targetlist but then it felt free to
add resjunk sort targets to it.  This demonstrably leads to assertion
failures in v11 and HEAD, and it's probably just accidental that we
don't see the same in older branches.  I've not looked into whether
there would be any real-world consequences in non-assert builds.
In HEAD, create_append_plan has sprouted the same problem, so fix
that too (although we do not have any test cases that seem able to
reach that bug).  This is an oversight in commit 3fc6e2d7f which
invented the CP_EXACT_TLIST flag, so back-patch to 9.6 where that
came in.

convert_subquery_pathkeys would create pathkeys for subquery output
values if they match any EquivalenceClass known in the outer query
and are available in the subquery's syntactic targetlist.  However,
the second part of that condition is wrong, because such values might
not appear in the subquery relation's reltarget list, which would
mean that they couldn't be accessed above the level of the subquery
scan.  We must check that they appear in the reltarget list, instead.
This can lead to dropping knowledge about the subquery's sort
ordering, but I believe it's okay, because any sort key that the
outer query actually has any interest in would appear in the
reltarget list.

This second issue is of very long standing, but right now there's no
evidence that it causes observable problems before 9.6, so I refrained
from back-patching further than that.  We can revisit that choice if
somebody finds a way to make it cause problems in older branches.
(Developing useful test cases for these issues is really problematic;
fixing convert_subquery_pathkeys removes the only known way to exhibit
the create_merge_append_plan bug, and neither of the test cases added
by this patch causes a problem in all branches, even when considering
the issues separately.)

The second issue explains bug #15795 from Suresh Kumar R ("could not
find pathkey item to sort" with nested DISTINCT queries).  I stumbled
across the first issue while investigating that.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15795-fadb56c8e44ee73c@postgresql.org
2019-05-09 16:53:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 02daece4ab Fix grammar in error message 2019-05-09 09:16:59 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera 61639816b8 Fix error messages
Some messages related to foreign servers were reporting the server name
without quotes, or not at all; our style is to have all names be quoted,
and the server name already appears quoted in a few other messages, so
just add quotes and make them all consistent.

Remove an extra "s" in other messages (typos introduced by myself in
f56f8f8da6).
2019-05-08 13:20:16 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov e5f9786317 Add jsonpath_encoding_1.out changes missed in 29ceacc3f9
Reported-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/14305.1557268259%40sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-05-08 01:55:31 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 29ceacc3f9 Improve error reporting in jsonpath
This commit contains multiple improvements to error reporting in jsonpath
including but not limited to getting rid of following things:

 * definition of error messages in macros,
 * errdetail() when valueable information could fit to errmsg(),
 * word "singleton" which is not properly explained anywhere,
 * line breaks in error messages.

Reported-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/14890.1555523005%40sss.pgh.pa.us
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
2019-05-08 01:02:59 +03:00
Fujii Masao b84dbc8eb8 Add TRUNCATE parameter to VACUUM.
This commit adds new parameter to VACUUM command, TRUNCATE,
which specifies that VACUUM should attempt to truncate off
any empty pages at the end of the table and allow the disk space
for the truncated pages to be returned to the operating system.

This parameter, if specified, overrides the vacuum_truncate
reloption. If neither the reloption nor the VACUUM option is
used, the default is true, as before.

Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud, Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoD+qtrSDL=GSma4Wd3kLYLeRC0hPna-YAdkDeV4z156vg@mail.gmail.com
2019-05-08 02:10:33 +09:00
Amit Kapila 7db0cde6b5 Revert "Avoid the creation of the free space map for small heap relations".
This feature was using a process local map to track the first few blocks
in the relation.  The map was reset each time we get the block with enough
freespace.  It was discussed that it would be better to track this map on
a per-relation basis in relcache and then invalidate the same whenever
vacuum frees up some space in the page or when FSM is created.  The new
design would be better both in terms of API design and performance.

List of commits reverted, in reverse chronological order:

06c8a5090e  Improve code comments in b0eaa4c51b.
13e8643bfc  During pg_upgrade, conditionally skip transfer of FSMs.
6f918159a9  Add more tests for FSM.
9c32e4c350  Clear the local map when not used.
29d108cdec  Update the documentation for FSM behavior..
08ecdfe7e5  Make FSM test portable.
b0eaa4c51b  Avoid creation of the free space map for small heap relations.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190416180452.3pm6uegx54iitbt5@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-05-07 09:30:24 +05:30
Michael Paquier 91248608a6 Add tests for error message generation in partition tuple routing
This adds extra tests for the error message generated for partition
tuple routing in the executor, using more than three levels of
partitioning including partitioned tables with no partitions.  These
tests have been added to fix CVE-2019-10129 on REL_11_STABLE.  HEAD has
no active bugs in this area, but it lacked coverage.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Noah Misch
Security: CVE-2019-10129
2019-05-06 21:44:24 +09:00
Dean Rasheed a0905056fd Use checkAsUser for selectivity estimator checks, if it's set.
In examine_variable() and examine_simple_variable(), when checking the
user's table and column privileges to determine whether to grant
access to the pg_statistic data, use checkAsUser for the privilege
checks, if it's set. This will be the case if we're accessing the
table via a view, to indicate that we should perform privilege checks
as the view owner rather than the current user.

This change makes this planner check consistent with the check in the
executor, so the planner will be able to make use of statistics if the
table is accessible via the view. This fixes a performance regression
introduced by commit e2d4ef8de8, which affects queries against
non-security barrier views in the case where the user doesn't have
privileges on the underlying table, but the view owner does.

Note that it continues to provide the same safeguards controlling
access to pg_statistic for direct table access (in which case
checkAsUser won't be set) and for security barrier views, because of
the nearby checks on rte->security_barrier and rte->securityQuals.

Back-patch to all supported branches because e2d4ef8de8 was.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Jonathan Katz and Stephen Frost.
2019-05-06 11:54:32 +01:00
Dean Rasheed 1aebfbea83 Fix security checks for selectivity estimation functions with RLS.
In commit e2d4ef8de8, security checks were added to prevent
user-supplied operators from running over data from pg_statistic
unless the user has table or column privileges on the table, or the
operator is leakproof. For a table with RLS, however, checking for
table or column privileges is insufficient, since that does not
guarantee that the user has permission to view all of the column's
data.

Fix this by also checking for securityQuals on the RTE, and insisting
that the operator be leakproof if there are any. Thus the
leakproofness check will only be skipped if there are no securityQuals
and the user has table or column privileges on the table -- i.e., only
if we know that the user has access to all the data in the column.

Back-patch to 9.5 where RLS was added.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Jonathan Katz and Stephen Frost.

Security: CVE-2019-10130
2019-05-06 11:38:43 +01:00
Andres Freund 809c9b48f4 Run catalog reindexing test from 3dbb317d32 serially, to avoid deadlocks.
The tests turn out to cause deadlocks in some circumstances. Fairly
reproducibly so with -DRELCACHE_FORCE_RELEASE
-DCATCACHE_FORCE_RELEASE.  Some of the deadlocks may be hard to fix
without disproportionate measures, but others probably should be fixed
- but not in 12.

We discussed removing the new tests until we can fix the issues
underlying the deadlocks, but results from buildfarm animal
markhor (which runs with CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS) indicates that there
might be a more severe, as of yet undiagnosed, issue (including on
stable branches) with reindexing catalogs. The failure is:
ERROR: could not read block 0 in file "base/16384/28025": read only 0 of 8192 bytes
Therefore it seems advisable to keep the tests.

It's not certain that running the tests in isolation removes the risk
of deadlocks. It's possible that additional locks are needed to
protect against a concurrent auto-analyze or such.

Per discussion with Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/28926.1556664156@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch: 9.4-, like 3dbb317d3
2019-04-30 17:45:32 -07:00
Tom Lane e03ff73969 Clean up handling of constraint_exclusion and enable_partition_pruning.
The interaction of these parameters was a bit confused/confusing,
and in fact v11 entirely misses the opportunity to apply partition
constraints when a partition is accessed directly (rather than
indirectly from its parent).

In HEAD, establish the principle that enable_partition_pruning controls
partition pruning and nothing else.  When accessing a partition via its
parent, we do partition pruning (if enabled by enable_partition_pruning)
and then there is no need to consider partition constraints in the
constraint_exclusion logic.  When accessing a partition directly, its
partition constraints are applied by the constraint_exclusion logic,
only if constraint_exclusion = on.

In v11, we can't have such a clean division of these GUCs' effects,
partly because we don't want to break compatibility too much in a
released branch, and partly because the clean coding requires
inheritance_planner to have applied partition pruning to a partitioned
target table, which it doesn't in v11.  However, we can tweak things
enough to cover the missed case, which seems like a good idea since
it's potentially a performance regression from v10.  This patch keeps
v11's previous behavior in which enable_partition_pruning overrides
constraint_exclusion for an inherited target table, though.

In HEAD, also teach relation_excluded_by_constraints that it's okay to use
inheritable constraints when trying to prune a traditional inheritance
tree.  This might not be thought worthy of effort given that that feature
is semi-deprecated now, but we have enough infrastructure that it only
takes a couple more lines of code to do it correctly.

Amit Langote and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9813f079-f16b-61c8-9ab7-4363cab28d80@lab.ntt.co.jp
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/29069.1555970894@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-30 15:03:50 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 9f8b717a80 Message style fixes 2019-04-30 10:33:37 -04:00
Andres Freund 3dbb317d32 Fix potential assertion failure when reindexing a pg_class index.
When reindexing individual indexes on pg_class it was possible to
either trigger an assertion failure:
TRAP: FailedAssertion("!(!ReindexIsProcessingIndex(((index)->rd_id)))

That's because reindex_index() called SetReindexProcessing() - which
enables an asserts ensuring no index insertions happen into the index
- before calling RelationSetNewRelfilenode(). That not correct for
indexes on pg_class, because RelationSetNewRelfilenode() updates the
relevant pg_class row, which needs to update the indexes.

The are two reasons this wasn't noticed earlier. Firstly the bug
doesn't trigger when reindexing all of pg_class, as reindex_relation
has code "hiding" all yet-to-be-reindexed indexes. Secondly, the bug
only triggers when the the update to pg_class doesn't turn out to be a
HOT update - otherwise there's no index insertion to trigger the
bug. Most of the time there's enough space, making this bug hard to
trigger.

To fix, move RelationSetNewRelfilenode() to before the
SetReindexProcessing() (and, together with some other code, to outside
of the PG_TRY()).

To make sure the error checking intended by SetReindexProcessing() is
more robust, modify CatalogIndexInsert() to check
ReindexIsProcessingIndex() even when the update is a HOT update.

Also add a few regression tests for REINDEXing of system catalogs.

The last two improvements would have prevented some of the issues
fixed in 5c1560606d from being introduced in the first place.

Reported-By: Michael Paquier
Diagnosed-By: Tom Lane and Andres Freund
Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190418011430.GA19133@paquier.xyz
Backpatch: 9.4-, the bug is present in all branches
2019-04-29 19:42:08 -07:00
Tom Lane e481d26285 Clean up minor warnings from buildfarm.
Be more consistent about use of XXXGetDatum macros in new jsonpath
code.  This is mostly to avoid having code that looks randomly
different from everyplace else that's doing the exact same thing.

In pg_regress.c, avoid an unreferenced-function warning from
compilers that don't understand pg_attribute_unused().  Putting
the function inside the same #ifdef as its only caller is more
straightforward coding anyway.

In be-secure-openssl.c, avoid use of pg_attribute_unused() on a label.
That's pretty creative, but there's no good reason to suppose that
it's portable, and there's absolutely no need to use goto's here in the
first place.  (This wasn't actually causing any buildfarm complaints,
but it's new code in v12 so it has no portability track record.)
2019-04-28 12:45:55 -04:00
Tom Lane c01eb619a8 Apply stopgap fix for bug #15672.
Fix DefineIndex so that it doesn't attempt to pass down a to-be-reused
index relfilenode to a child index creation, and fix TryReuseIndex
to not think that reuse is sensible for a partitioned index.

In v11, this fixes a problem where ALTER TABLE on a partitioned table
could assign the same relfilenode to several different child indexes,
causing very nasty catalog corruption --- in fact, attempting to DROP
the partitioned table then leads not only to a database crash, but to
inability to restart because the same crash will recur during WAL replay.

Either of these two changes would be enough to prevent the failure, but
since neither action could possibly be sane, let's put in both changes
for future-proofing.

In HEAD, no such bug manifests, but that's just an accidental consequence
of having changed the pg_class representation of partitioned indexes to
have relfilenode = 0.  Both of these changes still seem like smart
future-proofing.

This is only a stop-gap because the code for ALTER TABLE on a partitioned
table with a no-op type change still leaves a great deal to be desired.
As the added regression tests show, it gets things wrong for comments on
child indexes/constraints, and it is regenerating child indexes it doesn't
have to.  However, fixing those problems will take more work which may not
get back-patched into v11.  We need a fix for the corruption problem now.

Per bug #15672 from Jianing Yang.

Patch by me, regression test cases based on work by Amit Langote,
who also did a lot of the investigative work.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15672-b9fa7db32698269f@postgresql.org
2019-04-26 17:18:07 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 05b38c7e63 Fix partitioned index attachment
When an existing index in a partition is attached to a new index on
its parent, we forgot to set the "relispartition" flag correctly, which
meant that it was not possible to find the index in various operations,
such as adding a foreign key constraint that references that partitioned
table.  One of four places that was assigning the parent index was
forgetting to do that, so fix by shifting responsibility of updating the
flag to the routine that changes the parent.

Author: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera
Reported-by: Hubert "depesz" Lubaczewski
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqHMsRtRYRWYTWavKJ8x14AFsv7bmAV46mYwnfD3vy8goQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-25 11:22:29 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 87259588d0 Fix tablespace inheritance for partitioned rels
Commit ca4103025d left a few loose ends.  The most important one
(broken pg_dump output) is already fixed by virtue of commit
3b23552ad8, but some things remained:

* When ALTER TABLE rewrites tables, the indexes must remain in the
  tablespace they were originally in.  This didn't work because
  index recreation during ALTER TABLE runs manufactured SQL (yuck),
  which runs afoul of default_tablespace in competition with the parent
  relation tablespace.  To fix, reset default_tablespace to the empty
  string temporarily, and add the TABLESPACE clause as appropriate.

* Setting a partitioned rel's tablespace to the database default is
  confusing; if it worked, it would direct the partitions to that
  tablespace regardless of default_tablespace.  But in reality it does
  not work, and making it work is a larger project.  Therefore, throw
  an error when this condition is detected, to alert the unwary.

Add some docs and tests, too.

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_1c260nOt_vBJ067AZ3JXptXVRohDVMLEBmudX1YEx-A@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-25 10:31:32 -04:00
Tom Lane 7ad1cd31bf Repair assorted issues in locale data extraction.
cache_locale_time (extraction of LC_TIME-related info) had never been
taught the lessons we previously learned about extraction of info related
to LC_MONETARY and LC_NUMERIC.  Specifically, commit 95a777c61 taught
PGLC_localeconv() that data coming out of localeconv() was in an encoding
determined by the relevant locale, but we didn't realize that there's a
similar issue with strftime().  And commit a4930e7ca hardened
PGLC_localeconv() against errors occurring partway through, but failed
to do likewise for cache_locale_time().  So, rearrange the latter
function to perform encoding conversion and not risk failure while
it's got the locales set to temporary values.

This time around I also changed PGLC_localeconv() to treat it as FATAL
if it can't restore the previous settings of the locale values.  There
is no reason (except possibly OOM) for that to fail, and proceeding with
the wrong locale values seems like a seriously bad idea --- especially
on Windows where we have to also temporarily change LC_CTYPE.  Also,
protect against the possibility that we can't identify the codeset
reported for LC_MONETARY or LC_NUMERIC; rather than just failing,
try to validate the data without conversion.

The user-visible symptom this fixes is that if LC_TIME is set to a locale
name that implies an encoding different from the database encoding,
non-ASCII localized day and month names would be retrieved in the wrong
encoding, leading to either unexpected encoding-conversion error reports
or wrong output from to_char().  The other possible failure modes are
unlikely enough that we've not seen reports of them, AFAIK.

The encoding conversion problems do not manifest on Windows, since
we'd already created special-case code to handle that issue there.

Per report from Juan José Santamaría Flecha.  Back-patch to all
supported versions.

Juan José Santamaría Flecha and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAC+AXB22So5aZm2vZe+MChYXec7gWfr-n-SK-iO091R0P_1Tew@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-23 18:51:30 -04:00
Tom Lane f4a3fdfbdc Avoid order-of-execution problems with ALTER TABLE ADD PRIMARY KEY.
Up to now, DefineIndex() was responsible for adding attnotnull constraints
to the columns of a primary key, in any case where it hadn't been
convenient for transformIndexConstraint() to mark those columns as
is_not_null.  It (or rather its minion index_check_primary_key) did this
by executing an ALTER TABLE SET NOT NULL command for the target table.

The trouble with this solution is that if we're creating the index due
to ALTER TABLE ADD PRIMARY KEY, and the outer ALTER TABLE has additional
sub-commands, the inner ALTER TABLE's operations executed at the wrong
time with respect to the outer ALTER TABLE's operations.  In particular,
the inner ALTER would perform a validation scan at a point where the
table's storage might be inconsistent with its catalog entries.  (This is
on the hairy edge of being a security problem, but AFAICS it isn't one
because the inner scan would only be interested in the tuples' null
bitmaps.)  This can result in unexpected failures, such as the one seen
in bug #15580 from Allison Kaptur.

To fix, let's remove the attempt to do SET NOT NULL from DefineIndex(),
reducing index_check_primary_key's role to verifying that the columns are
already not null.  (It shouldn't ever see such a case, but it seems wise
to keep the check for safety.)  Instead, make transformIndexConstraint()
generate ALTER TABLE SET NOT NULL subcommands to be executed ahead of
the ADD PRIMARY KEY operation in every case where it can't force the
column to be created already-not-null.  This requires only minor surgery
in parse_utilcmd.c, and it makes for a much more satisfying spec for
transformIndexConstraint(): it's no longer having to take it on faith
that someone else will handle addition of NOT NULL constraints.

To make that work, we have to move the execution of AT_SetNotNull into
an ALTER pass that executes ahead of AT_PASS_ADD_INDEX.  I moved it to
AT_PASS_COL_ATTRS, and put that after AT_PASS_ADD_COL to avoid failure
when the column is being added in the same command.  This incidentally
fixes a bug in the only previous usage of AT_PASS_COL_ATTRS, for
AT_SetIdentity: it didn't work either for a newly-added column.

Playing around with this exposed a separate bug in ALTER TABLE ONLY ...
ADD PRIMARY KEY for partitioned tables.  The intent of the ONLY modifier
in that context is to prevent doing anything that would require holding
lock for a long time --- but the implied SET NOT NULL would recurse to
the child partitions, and do an expensive validation scan for any child
where the column(s) were not already NOT NULL.  To fix that, invent a
new ALTER subcommand AT_CheckNotNull that just insists that a child
column be already NOT NULL, and apply that, not AT_SetNotNull, when
recursing to children in this scenario.  This results in a slightly laxer
definition of ALTER TABLE ONLY ... SET NOT NULL for partitioned tables,
too: that command will now work as long as all children are already NOT
NULL, whereas before it just threw up its hands if there were any
partitions.

In passing, clean up the API of generateClonedIndexStmt(): remove a
useless argument, ensure that the output argument is not left undefined,
update the header comment.

A small side effect of this change is that no-such-column errors in ALTER
TABLE ADD PRIMARY KEY now produce a different message that includes the
table name, because they are now detected by the SET NOT NULL step which
has historically worded its error that way.  That seems fine to me, so
I didn't make any effort to avoid the wording change.

The basic bug #15580 is of very long standing, and these other bugs
aren't new in v12 either.  However, this is a pretty significant change
in the way ALTER TABLE ADD PRIMARY KEY works.  On balance it seems best
not to back-patch, at least not till we get some more confidence that
this patch has no new bugs.

Patch by me, but thanks to Jie Zhang for a preliminary version.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15580-d1a6de5a3d65da51@postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1396E95157071C4EBBA51892C5368521017F2E6E63@G08CNEXMBPEKD02.g08.fujitsu.local
2019-04-23 12:25:27 -04:00
Tom Lane c06e3550dc Don't request pretty-printed output from xmlNodeDump().
xml.c passed format = 1 to xmlNodeDump(), resulting in sometimes getting
extra whitespace (newlines + spaces) in the output.  We don't really want
that, first because whitespace might be semantically significant in some
XML uses, and second because it happens only very inconsistently.  Only
one case in our regression tests is affected.

This potentially affects the results of xpath() and the XMLTABLE construct,
when emitting nodeset values.

Note that the older code in contrib/xml2 doesn't do this; it seems
to have been an aboriginal bad decision in commit ea3b212fe.

While this definitely seems like a bug to me, the small number of
complaints to date argues against back-patching a behavioral change.
Hence, fix in HEAD only, at least for now.

Per report from Jean-Marc Voillequin.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1EC8157EB499BF459A516ADCF135ADCE3A23A9CA@LON-WGMSX712.ad.moodys.net
2019-04-23 10:51:07 -04:00
Michael Paquier ccae190b91 Fix detection of passwords hashed with MD5 or SCRAM-SHA-256
This commit fixes a couple of issues related to the way password
verifiers hashed with MD5 or SCRAM-SHA-256 are detected, leading to
being able to store in catalogs passwords which do not follow the
supported hash formats:
- A MD5-hashed entry was checked based on if its header uses "md5" and
if the string length matches what is expected.  Unfortunately the code
never checked if the hash only used hexadecimal characters, as reported
by Tom Lane.
- A SCRAM-hashed entry was checked based on only its header, which
should be "SCRAM-SHA-256$", but it never checked for any fields
afterwards, as reported by Jonathan Katz.

Backpatch down to v10, which is where SCRAM has been introduced, and
where password verifiers in plain format have been removed.

Author: Jonathan Katz
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/016deb6b-1f0a-8e9f-1833-a8675b170aa9@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 10
2019-04-23 15:43:21 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 421a2c4832 Tie loose ends in psql's new \dP command
* Remove one unnecessary pg_class join in SQL command.  Not needed,
  because we use a regclass cast instead.

* Doc: refer to "partitioned relations" rather than specifically tables,
  since indexes are also displayed.

* Rename "On table" column to "Table", for consistency with \di.

Author: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190407212525.GB10080@telsasoft.com
2019-04-17 18:38:49 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera b036982db7 psql: display tablespace for partitioned indexes
Nothing was shown previously.
2019-04-17 18:17:43 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 252b707bc4 Return NULL for checksum failures if checksums are not enabled
Returning 0 could falsely indicate that there is no problem. NULL
correctly indicates that there is no information about potential
problems.

Also return 0 as numbackends instead of NULL for shared objects (as no
connection can be made to a shared object only).

Author: Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Treat <rob@xzilla.net>
2019-04-17 13:51:48 +02:00
Michael Paquier a6dcf9df4d Rework handling of invalid indexes with REINDEX CONCURRENTLY
Per discussion with others, allowing REINDEX INDEX CONCURRENTLY to work
for invalid indexes when working directly on them can have a lot of
value to unlock situations with invalid indexes without having to use a
dance involving DROP INDEX followed by an extra CREATE INDEX
CONCURRENTLY (which would not work for indexes with constraint
dependency anyway).  This also does not create extra bloat on the
relation involved as this works on individual indexes, so let's enable
it.

Note that REINDEX TABLE CONCURRENTLY still bypasses invalid indexes as
we don't want to bloat the number of indexes defined on a relation in
the event of multiple and successive failures of REINDEX CONCURRENTLY.

More regression tests are added to cover those behaviors, using an
invalid index created with CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY.

Reported-by: Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker, Álvaro Herrera
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut, Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190411134947.GA22043@alvherre.pgsql
2019-04-17 09:33:51 +09:00
Tomas Vondra dbb984128e Convert pre-existing stats_ext tests to new style
The regression tests added in commit 7300a69950 test cardinality
estimates using a function that extracts the interesting pieces
from the EXPLAIN output, instead of testing the whole plan. That
seems both easier to understand and less fragile, so this applies
the same approach to pre-existing tests of ndistinct coefficients
and functional dependencies.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/dfdac334-9cf2-2597-fb27-f0fb3753f435@2ndquadrant.com
2019-04-16 00:02:22 +02:00
Tomas Vondra 3824ca30d1 Fix pg_mcv_list deserialization
The memcpy() was copying type OIDs in the wrong direction, so the
deserialized MCV list always had them as 0. This is mostly harmless
except when printing the data in pg_mcv_list_items(), in which case
it reported

    ERROR:  cache lookup failed for type 0

Also added a simple regression test for pg_mcv_list_items() function,
printing a single-item MCV list.

Reported-By: Dean Rasheed
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEZATCX6T0iDTTZrqyec4Cd6b4yuL7euu4=rQRXaVBAVrUi1Cg@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-16 00:01:39 +02:00
Tom Lane 4b40e44f07 Fix failure with textual partition hash keys.
Commit 5e1963fb7 overlooked two places in partbounds.c that now
need to pass a collation identifier to the hash functions for
a partition key column.

Amit Langote, per report from Jesper Pedersen

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a620f85a-42ab-e0f3-3337-b04b97e2e2f5@redhat.com
2019-04-15 16:47:09 -04:00
Tom Lane 47169c2550 Avoid possible regression test instability in timestamp.sql.
Concurrent autovacuum could result in a change in the order of the
live rows in timestamp_tbl.  While this would not happen with the
default autovacuum parameters, it's fairly easy to hit if
autovacuum_vacuum_threshold is made small enough to allow autovac
to decide to process this table.  That's a stumbling block for trying
to exercise autovacuum aggressively using the core regression tests.

To fix, replace an unqualified DELETE with a TRUNCATE.  There's a
similar DELETE just above (and no order-sensitive queries between),
so this doesn't lose any test coverage and might indeed be argued
to improve it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17428.1555348950@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-15 16:20:01 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut abb9c63b2c Unbreak index optimization for LIKE on bytea
The same code is used to handle both text and bytea, but bytea is not
collation-aware, so we shouldn't call get_collation_isdeterministic()
in that case, since that will error out with an invalid collation.

Reported-by: Jeevan Chalke <jeevan.chalke@enterprisedb.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CAM2%2B6%3DWaf3qJ1%3DyVTUH8_yG-SC0xcBMY%2BSFLhvKKNnWNXSUDBw%40mail.gmail.com
2019-04-15 09:29:17 +02:00
Magnus Hagander 77bd49adba Show shared object statistics in pg_stat_database
This adds a row to the pg_stat_database view with datoid 0 and datname
NULL for those objects that are not in a database. This was added
particularly for checksums, but we were already tracking more satistics
for these objects, just not returning it.

Also add a checksum_last_failure column that holds the timestamptz of
the last checksum failure that occurred in a database (or in a
non-dataabase file), if any.

Author: Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com>
2019-04-12 14:04:50 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut ef6f30fe77 Fix REINDEX CONCURRENTLY of partitions
In case of a partition index, when swapping the old and new index, we
also need to attach the new index as a partition and detach the old
one.  Also, to handle partition indexes, we not only need to change
dependencies referencing the index, but also dependencies of the index
referencing something else.  The previous code did this only
specifically for a constraint, but we also need to do this for
partitioned indexes.  So instead write a generic function that does it
for all dependencies.

Author: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Author: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@2ndquadrant.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/DF4PR8401MB11964EDB77C860078C343BEBEE5A0%40DF4PR8401MB1196.NAMPRD84.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM#154df1fedb735190a773481765f7b874
2019-04-12 08:36:05 +02:00
Tom Lane 798070ec05 Re-order some regression test scripts for more parallelism.
Move the strings, numerology, insert, insert_conflict, select and
errors tests to be parts of nearby parallel groups, instead of
executing by themselves.  (Moving "select" required adjusting the
constraints test, which uses a table named "tmp" as select also
does.  There don't seem to be any other conflicts.)

Move psql and stats_ext to the next parallel group, where the rules
test also has a long runtime.  To make it safe to run stats_ext in
parallel with rules, I adjusted the latter to only dump views/rules
from the pg_catalog and public schemas, which was what it was doing
anyway.  stats_ext makes some views in a transient schema, which now
will not affect rules.

Reorder serial_schedule to match parallel_schedule.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/735.1554935715@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-11 18:16:50 -04:00
Tom Lane 5874c70557 Speed up sort-order-comparison tests in create_index_spgist.
This test script verifies that KNN searches of an SP-GiST index
produce the same sort order as a seqscan-and-sort.  The FULL JOINs
used for that are exceedingly slow, however.  Investigation shows
that the problem is that the initial join is on the rank() values,
and we have a lot of duplicates due to the data set containing 1000
duplicate points.  We're therefore going to produce 1000000 join
rows that have to be thrown away again by the join filter.

We can improve matters by using row_number() instead of rank(),
so that the initial join keys are unique.  The catch is that
that makes the results sensitive to the sorting of rows with
equal distances from the reference point.  That doesn't matter
for the actually-equal points, but as luck would have it, the
data set also contains two distinct points that have identical
distances to the origin.  So those two rows could legitimately
appear in either order, causing unwanted output from the check
queries.

However, it doesn't seem like it's the job of this test to
check whether the <-> operator correctly computes distances;
its charter is just to verify that SP-GiST emits the values
in distance order.  So we can dodge the indeterminacy problem
by having the check only compare row numbers and distances
not the actual point values.

This change reduces the run time of create_index_spgist by a good
three-quarters, on my machine, with ensuing beneficial effects on
the runtime of create_index (thanks to interactions with CREATE
INDEX CONCURRENTLY tests in the latter).  I see a net improvement
of more than 2X in the runtime of their parallel test group.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/735.1554935715@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-11 17:01:35 -04:00
Tom Lane 385d396b80 Split up a couple of long-running regression test scripts.
The point of this change is to increase the potential for parallelism
while running the core regression tests.  Most people these days are
using parallel testing modes on multi-core machines, so we might as
well try a bit harder to keep multiple cores busy.  Hence, a test that
runs much longer than others in its parallel group is a candidate to
be sub-divided.

In this patch, create_index.sql and join.sql are split up.
I haven't changed the content of the tests in any way, just
moved them.

I moved create_index.sql's SP-GiST-related tests into a new script
create_index_spgist, and moved its btree multilevel page deletion test
over to the existing script btree_index.  (btree_index is a more natural
home for that test, and it's shorter than others in its parallel group,
so this doesn't hurt total runtime of that group.)  There might be
room for more aggressive splitting of create_index, but this is enough
to improve matters considerably.

Likewise, I moved join.sql's "exercises for the hash join code" into
a new file join_hash.  Those exercises contributed three-quarters of
the script's runtime.  Which might well be excessive ... but for the
moment, I'm satisfied with shoving them into a different parallel
group, where they can share runtime with the roughly-equally-lengthy
gist test.

(Note for anybody following along at home: there are interesting
interactions between the runtimes of create_index and anything running
in parallel with it, because the tests of CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY
in that file will repeatedly block waiting for concurrent transactions
to commit.  As committed in this patch, create_index and
create_index_spgist have roughly equal runtimes, but that's mostly an
artifact of forced synchronization of the CONCURRENTLY tests; when run
serially, create_index is much faster.  A followup patch will reduce
the runtime of create_index_spgist and thereby also create_index.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/735.1554935715@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-11 16:15:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 6726d8d476 Move plpgsql error-trapping tests to a new module-specific test file.
The test for statement timeout has a 2-second timeout, which was only
moderately annoying when it was written, but nowadays it contributes
a pretty significant chunk of the elapsed time needed to run the core
regression tests on a fast machine.  We can improve this situation by
pushing the test into a plpgsql-specific test file instead of having
it in a core regression test.  That's a clean win when considering
just the core tests.  Even when considering check-world or a buildfarm
test run, we should come out ahead because the core tests get run
more times in those sequences.

Furthermore, since the plpgsql tests aren't currently parallelized,
it seems likely that the timing problems reflected in commit f1e671a0b
(which increased that timeout from 1 sec to 2) will be much less severe
in this context.  Hence, let's try cutting the timeout back to 1 second
in hopes of a further win for check-world.  We can undo that if
buildfarm experience proves it to be a bad idea.

To give the new test file some modicum of intellectual coherency,
I moved the surrounding tests related to error-trapping along with
the statement timeout test proper.  Those other tests don't run long
enough to have any particular bearing on test-runtime considerations.
The tests are the same as before, except with minor adjustments to
not depend on an externally-created table.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/735.1554935715@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-11 15:09:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 4aaa3b5cf1 Remove duplicative polygon SP-GiST sequencing test.
Code coverage comparisons confirm that the tests using
quad_poly_tbl_ord_seq1/quad_poly_tbl_ord_idx1 hit no code
paths not also covered by the similar tests using
quad_poly_tbl_ord_seq2/quad_poly_tbl_ord_idx2.  Since these
test cases are pretty expensive, they need to contribute more
than zero benefit.

In passing, make quad_poly_tbl_ord_seq2 a temp table, since
there seems little reason to keep it around after the test.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/735.1554935715@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-11 14:35:47 -04:00
Tom Lane f72d9a5e7d Remove redundant and ineffective test for btree insertion fast path.
indexing.sql's test for this feature was added along with the
feature in commit 2b2727343.  However, shortly later that test was
rendered ineffective by commit 074251db6, which limited when the
optimization would be applied, so that the test didn't test it.
Since then, commit dd299df81 added new tests (in btree_index.sql)
that actually do test the feature.  Code coverage comparisons
confirm that this test sequence adds no meaningful coverage, and
it's rather expensive, accounting for nearly half of the runtime
of indexing.sql according to my measurements.  So let's remove it.

Per advice from Peter Geoghegan.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/735.1554935715@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-11 13:15:59 -04:00
Tom Lane 9476131278 Prevent inlining of multiply-referenced CTEs with outer recursive refs.
This has to be prevented because inlining would result in multiple
self-references, which we don't support (and in fact that's disallowed
by the SQL spec, see statements about linearly vs. nonlinearly
recursive queries).  Bug fix for commit 608b167f9.

Per report from Yaroslav Schekin (via Andrew Gierth)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87wolmg60q.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2019-04-09 15:47:35 -04:00
Tom Lane 45f8eaa8e3 Fix improper interaction of FULL JOINs with lateral references.
join_is_legal() needs to reject forming certain outer joins in cases
where that would lead the planner down a blind alley.  However, it
mistakenly supposed that the way to handle full joins was to treat them
as applying the same constraints as for left joins, only to both sides.
That doesn't work, as shown in bug #15741 from Anthony Skorski: given
a lateral reference out of a join that's fully enclosed by a full join,
the code would fail to believe that any join ordering is legal, resulting
in errors like "failed to build any N-way joins".

However, we don't really need to consider full joins at all for this
purpose, because we effectively force them to be evaluated in syntactic
order, and that order is always legal for lateral references.  Hence,
get rid of this broken logic for full joins and just ignore them instead.

This seems to have been an oversight in commit 7e19db0c0.
Back-patch to all supported branches, as that was.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15741-276f1f464b3f40eb@postgresql.org
2019-04-08 16:09:26 -04:00
Fujii Masao 119dcfad98 Add vacuum_truncate reloption.
vacuum_truncate controls whether vacuum tries to truncate off
any empty pages at the end of the table. Previously vacuum always
tried to do the truncation. However, the truncation could cause
some problems; for example, ACCESS EXCLUSIVE lock needs to
be taken on the table during the truncation and can cause
the query cancellation on the standby even if hot_standby_feedback
is true. Setting this reloption to false can be helpful to avoid
such problems.

Author: Tsunakawa Takayuki
Reviewed-By: Julien Rouhaud, Masahiko Sawada, Michael Paquier, Kirk Jamison and Fujii Masao
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHGQGwE5UqFqSq1=kV3QtTUtXphTdyHA-8rAj4A=Y+e4kyp3BQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-08 16:43:57 +09:00
Andres Freund 41f5e04aec Fix a number of issues around modifying a previously updated row.
This commit fixes three, unfortunately related, issues:

1) Since 5db6df0c01, the introduction of DML via tableam, it was
   possible to trigger "ERROR: unexpected table_lock_tuple status: 1"
   when updating a row that was previously updated in the same
   transaction - but only when the previously updated row was before
   updated in a concurrent transaction (and READ COMMITTED was
   used). The reason for that was that that case simply wasn't
   expected. Fixing that lead to:

2) Even before the above commit, there were error checks (introduced
   in 6868ed7491) preventing a row being updated by different
   commands within the same statement (say in a function called by an
   UPDATE) - but that check wasn't performed when the row was first
   updated in a concurrent transaction - instead the second update was
   silently skipped in that case. After this change we throw the same
   error as we'd without the concurrent transaction.

3) The error messages (introduced in 6868ed7491) preventing such
   updates emitted the same error message for both DELETE and
   UPDATE ("tuple to be updated was already modified by an operation
   triggered by the current command"). While that could be changed
   separately, it made it hard to write tests that verify the correct
   correct behavior of the code.

This commit changes heap's implementation of table_lock_tuple() to
return TM_SelfModified instead of TM_Invisible (previously loosely
modeled after EvalPlanQualFetch), and teaches nodeModifyTable.c to
handle that in response to table_lock_tuple() and not just in response
to table_(delete|update).

Additionally it fixes the wrong error message (see 3 above). The
comment for table_lock_tuple() is also adjusted to state that
TM_Deleted won't return information in TM_FailureData - it'll not
always be available.

This also adds tests to ensure that DELETE/UPDATE correctly error out
when affecting a row that concurrently was modified by another
transaction.

Author: Andres Freund
Reported-By: Tom Lane, when investigating a bug bug fix to another bug
    by Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19321.1554567786@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-07 22:14:47 -07:00
Michael Paquier 964bae4d84 Add more tests for partition tuple routing with dropped attributes
As bug #15733 has proved, we are lacking coverage for partition tuple
routing with dropped attributes when involving three levels of
partitioning or more.  There was only an active bug in this area for
v11, and HEAD is proving to handle those scenarios fine, still it lacked
some coverage for the previous problem.

Author: Amit Langote, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15733-7692379e310b80ec@postgresql.org
2019-04-08 13:44:55 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 1c5d9270e3 psql \dP: list partitioned tables and indexes
The new command lists partitioned relations (tables and/or indexes),
possibly with their sizes, possibly including partitioned partitions;
their parents (if not top-level); if indexes show the tables they belong
to; and their descriptions.

While there are various possible improvements to this, having it in this
form is already a great improvement over not having any way to obtain
this report.

Author: Pavel Stěhule, with help from Mathias Brossard, Amit Langote and
	Justin Pryzby.
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Mathias Brossard, Melanie Plageman,
	Michaël Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
2019-04-07 15:07:21 -04:00
Tom Lane 159970bcad Clean up side-effects of commits ab5fcf2b0 et al.
Before those commits, partitioning-related code in the executor could
assume that ModifyTableState.resultRelInfo[] contains only leaf partitions.
However, now a fully-pruned update results in a dummy ModifyTable that
references the root partitioned table, and that breaks some stuff.

In v11, this led to an assertion or core dump in the tuple routing code.
Fix by disabling tuple routing, since we don't need that anyway.
(I chose to do that in HEAD as well for safety, even though the problem
doesn't manifest in HEAD as it stands.)

In v10, this confused ExecInitModifyTable's decision about whether it
needed to close the root table.  But we can get rid of that altogether
by being smarter about where to find the root table.

Note that since the referenced commits haven't shipped yet, this
isn't fixing any bug the field has seen.

Amit Langote, per a report from me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20710.1554582479@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-04-07 12:54:22 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 03f9e5cba0 Report progress of REINDEX operations
This uses the same infrastructure that the CREATE INDEX progress
reporting uses.  Add a column to pg_stat_progress_create_index to
report the OID of the index being worked on.  This was not necessary
for CREATE INDEX, but it's useful for REINDEX.

Also edit the phase descriptions a bit to be more consistent with the
source code comments.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/ef6a6757-c36a-9e81-123f-13b19e36b7d7%402ndquadrant.com
2019-04-07 12:35:29 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 106f2eb664 Cast pg_stat_progress_cluster.cluster_index_relid to oid
It's tracked internally as bigint, but when presented to the user it
should be oid.
2019-04-07 10:31:32 +02:00
Tom Lane 46e3442c9e Fix failures in validateForeignKeyConstraint's slow path.
The foreign-key-checking loop in ATRewriteTables failed to ignore
relations without storage (e.g., partitioned tables), unlike the
initial loop.  This accidentally worked as long as RI_Initial_Check
succeeded, which it does in most practical cases (including all the
ones exercised in the existing regression tests :-().  However, if
that failed, as for instance when there are permissions issues,
then we entered the slow fire-the-trigger-on-each-tuple path.
And that would try to read from the referencing relation, and fail
if it lacks storage.

A second problem, recently introduced in HEAD, was that this loop
had been broken by sloppy refactoring for the tableam API changes.

Repair both issues, and add a regression test case so we have some
coverage on this code path.  Back-patch as needed to v11.

(It looks like this code could do with additional bulletproofing,
but let's get a working test case in place first.)

Hadi Moshayedi, Tom Lane, Andres Freund

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAK=1=WrnNmBbe5D9sm3t0a6dnAq3cdbF1vXY816j1wsMqzC8bw@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19030.1554574075@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190325180405.jytoehuzkeozggxx%40alap3.anarazel.de
2019-04-06 15:09:09 -04:00
Tom Lane 959d00e9db Use Append rather than MergeAppend for scanning ordered partitions.
If we need ordered output from a scan of a partitioned table, but
the ordering matches the partition ordering, then we don't need to
use a MergeAppend to combine the pre-ordered per-partition scan
results: a plain Append will produce the same results.  This
both saves useless comparison work inside the MergeAppend proper,
and allows us to start returning tuples after istarting up just
the first child node not all of them.

However, all is not peaches and cream, because if some of the
child nodes have high startup costs then there will be big
discontinuities in the tuples-returned-versus-elapsed-time curve.
The planner's cost model cannot handle that (yet, anyway).
If we model the Append's startup cost as being just the first
child's startup cost, we may drastically underestimate the cost
of fetching slightly more tuples than are available from the first
child.  Since we've had bad experiences with over-optimistic choices
of "fast start" plans for ORDER BY LIMIT queries, that seems scary.
As a klugy workaround, set the startup cost estimate for an ordered
Append to be the sum of its children's startup costs (as MergeAppend
would).  This doesn't really describe reality, but it's less likely
to cause a bad plan choice than an underestimated startup cost would.
In practice, the cases where we really care about this optimization
will have child plans that are IndexScans with zero startup cost,
so that the overly conservative estimate is still just zero.

David Rowley, reviewed by Julien Rouhaud and Antonin Houska

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-hAqhPLRk_RaSFTgYxd=Tz5hA7kQ2h4-DhJufQk8TGuw@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-05 19:20:43 -04:00
Andres Freund ea97e440b8 Harden tableam against nonexistant / wrong kind of AMs.
Previously it was allowed to set default_table_access_method to an
empty string. That makes sense for default_tablespace, where that was
copied from, as it signals falling back to the database's default
tablespace. As there is no equivalent for table AMs, forbid that.

Also make sure to throw a usable error when creating a table using an
index AM, by using get_am_type_oid() to implement get_table_am_oid()
instead of a separate copy. Previously we'd error out only later, in
GetTableAmRoutine().

Thirdly remove GetTableAmRoutineByAmId() - it was only used in an
earlier version of 8586bf7ed8.

Add tests for the above (some for index AMs as well).
2019-04-04 17:39:39 -07:00
Peter Geoghegan 344b7e11bb Add test coverage for rootdescend verification.
Commit c1afd175, which added support for rootdescend verification to
amcheck, added only minimal regression test coverage.  Address this by
making sure that rootdescend verification is run on a multi-level index.
In passing, simplify some of the regression tests that exercise
multi-level nbtree page deletion.

Both issues spotted while rereviewing coverage of the nbtree patch
series using gcov.
2019-04-04 17:25:35 -07:00
Tom Lane 7bac3acab4 Add a "SQLSTATE-only" error verbosity option to libpq and psql.
This is intended for use mostly in test scripts for external tools,
which could do without cross-PG-version variations in error message
wording.  Of course, the SQLSTATE isn't guaranteed stable either, but
it should be more so than the error message text.

Note: there's a bit of an ABI change for libpq here, but it seems
OK because if somebody compiles against a newer version of libpq-fe.h,
and then tries to pass PQERRORS_SQLSTATE to PQsetErrorVerbosity()
of an older libpq library, it will be accepted and then act like
PQERRORS_DEFAULT, thanks to the way the tests in pqBuildErrorMessage3
have historically been phrased.  That seems acceptable.

Didier Gautheron, reviewed by Dagfinn Ilmari Mannsåker

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJRYxuKyj4zA+JGVrtx8OWAuBfE-_wN4sUMK4H49EuPed=mOBw@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-04 17:22:02 -04:00
Robert Haas a96c41feec Allow VACUUM to be run with index cleanup disabled.
This commit adds a new reloption, vacuum_index_cleanup, which
controls whether index cleanup is performed for a particular
relation by default.  It also adds a new option to the VACUUM
command, INDEX_CLEANUP, which can be used to override the
reloption.  If neither the reloption nor the VACUUM option is
used, the default is true, as before.

Masahiko Sawada, reviewed and tested by Nathan Bossart, Alvaro
Herrera, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Darafei Praliaskouski, and me.
The wording of the documentation is mostly due to me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoAt5R3DNUZSjOoXDUY=naYPUOuffVsRzuTYMz29yLzQCA@mail.gmail.com
2019-04-04 15:04:43 -04:00
Michael Paquier 92c76021ae Improve readability of some tests in strings.sql
c251336 has added some tests to check if a toast relation should be
empty or not, hardcoding the toast relation name when calling
pg_relation_size().  pg_class.reltoastrelid offers the same information,
so simplify the tests to use that.

Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190403065949.GH3298@paquier.xyz
2019-04-04 10:24:56 +09:00
Stephen Frost b0b39f72b9 GSSAPI encryption support
On both the frontend and backend, prepare for GSSAPI encryption
support by moving common code for error handling into a separate file.
Fix a TODO for handling multiple status messages in the process.
Eliminate the OIDs, which have not been needed for some time.

Add frontend and backend encryption support functions.  Keep the
context initiation for authentication-only separate on both the
frontend and backend in order to avoid concerns about changing the
requested flags to include encryption support.

In postmaster, pull GSSAPI authorization checking into a shared
function.  Also share the initiator name between the encryption and
non-encryption codepaths.

For HBA, add "hostgssenc" and "hostnogssenc" entries that behave
similarly to their SSL counterparts.  "hostgssenc" requires either
"gss", "trust", or "reject" for its authentication.

Similarly, add a "gssencmode" parameter to libpq.  Supported values are
"disable", "require", and "prefer".  Notably, negotiation will only be
attempted if credentials can be acquired.  Move credential acquisition
into its own function to support this behavior.

Add a simple pg_stat_gssapi view similar to pg_stat_ssl, for monitoring
if GSSAPI authentication was used, what principal was used, and if
encryption is being used on the connection.

Finally, add documentation for everything new, and update existing
documentation on connection security.

Thanks to Michael Paquier for the Windows fixes.

Author: Robbie Harwood, with changes to the read/write functions by me.
Reviewed in various forms and at different times by: Michael Paquier,
   Andres Freund, David Steele.
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/jlg1tgq1ktm.fsf@thriss.redhat.com
2019-04-03 15:02:33 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera f56f8f8da6 Support foreign keys that reference partitioned tables
Previously, while primary keys could be made on partitioned tables, it
was not possible to define foreign keys that reference those primary
keys.  Now it is possible to do that.

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Jesper Pedersen
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181102234158.735b3fevta63msbj@alvherre.pgsql
2019-04-03 14:40:21 -03:00