Commit Graph

12944 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Heikki Linnakangas 20ba5ca64c Move WAL continuation record information to WAL page header.
The continuation record only contained one field, xl_rem_len, so it makes
things simpler to just include it in the WAL page header. This wastes four
bytes on pages that don't begin with a continuation from previos page, plus
four bytes on every page, because of padding.

The motivation of this is to make it easier to calculate how much space a
WAL record needs. Before this patch, it depended on how many page boundaries
the record crosses. The motivation of that, in turn, is to separate the
allocation of space in the WAL from the copying of the record data to the
allocated space. Keeping the calculation of space required simple helps to
keep the critical section of allocating the space from WAL short. But that's
not included in this patch yet.

Bump WAL version number again, as this is an incompatible change.
2012-06-24 18:35:30 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas dfda6ebaec Don't waste the last segment of each 4GB logical log file.
The comments claimed that wasting the last segment made it easier to do
calculations with XLogRecPtrs, because you don't have problems representing
last-byte-position-plus-1 that way. In my experience, however, it only made
things more complicated, because the there was two ways to represent the
boundary at the beginning of a logical log file: logid = n+1 and xrecoff = 0,
or as xlogid = n and xrecoff = 4GB - XLOG_SEG_SIZE. Some functions were
picky about which representation was used.

Also, use a 64-bit segment number instead of the log/seg combination, to
point to a certain WAL segment. We assume that all platforms have a working
64-bit integer type nowadays.

This is an incompatible change in WAL format, so bumping WAL version number.
2012-06-24 18:35:29 +03:00
Tom Lane d14241c2cf Fix memory leak in ARRAY(SELECT ...) subqueries.
Repeated execution of an uncorrelated ARRAY_SUBLINK sub-select (which
I think can only happen if the sub-select is embedded in a larger,
correlated subquery) would leak memory for the duration of the query,
due to not reclaiming the array generated in the previous execution.
Per bug #6698 from Armando Miraglia.  Diagnosis and fix idea by Heikki,
patch itself by me.

This has been like this all along, so back-patch to all supported versions.
2012-06-21 17:27:19 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 68d0e3cbf9 Repair comment mangled by a pgindent run long ago 2012-06-21 15:37:05 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas eeb6f37d89 Add a small cache of locks owned by a resource owner in ResourceOwner.
This speeds up reassigning locks to the parent owner, when the transaction
holds a lot of locks, but only a few of them belong to the current resource
owner. This is particularly helps pg_dump when dumping a large number of
objects.

The cache can hold up to 15 locks in each resource owner. After that, the
cache is marked as overflowed, and we fall back to the old method of
scanning the whole local lock table. The tradeoff here is that the cache has
to be scanned whenever a lock is released, so if the cache is too large,
lock release becomes more expensive. 15 seems enough to cover pg_dump, and
doesn't have much impact on lock release.

Jeff Janes, reviewed by Amit Kapila and Heikki Linnakangas.
2012-06-21 15:30:26 +03:00
Tom Lane dfd9c116cc Remove incomplete/incorrect support for zero-column foreign keys.
The original coding in ri_triggers.c had partial support for the concept of
zero-column foreign key constraints.  But this is not defined in the SQL
standard, nor was it ever allowed by any other part of Postgres, nor was it
very fully implemented even here (eg there was no support for preventing
PK-table deletions that would violate the constraint).  Doesn't seem very
useful to carry 100-plus lines of code for a corner case that no one is
interested in making work.  Instead, just add a check that the column list
read from pg_constraint is non-empty.
2012-06-20 20:15:02 -04:00
Tom Lane 0ce4459a36 Increase MAX_SYSCACHE_CALLBACKS from 20 to 32.
By my count there are 18 callers of CacheRegisterSyscacheCallback in the
core code in HEAD, so we are potentially leaving as few as 2 slots for any
add-on code to use (though possibly not all these callers would actually
activate in any particular session).  That doesn't seem like a lot of
headroom, so let's pump it up a little.
2012-06-20 19:47:37 -04:00
Tom Lane 45ba424f33 Cache the results of ri_FetchConstraintInfo in a backend-local cache.
Extracting data from pg_constraint turned out to take as much as 10% of the
runtime in a bulk-update case where the foreign key column wasn't changing,
because we did it over again for each tuple.  Fix that by maintaining a
backend-local cache of the results.  This is really a pretty small patch,
but converting the trigger functions to work with pointers rather than
local struct variables requires a lot of mechanical changes.
2012-06-20 17:24:14 -04:00
Tom Lane cfa0f4255b Improve tests for whether we can skip queueing RI enforcement triggers.
During an update of a PK row, we can skip firing the RI trigger if any old
key value is NULL, because then the row could not have had any matching
rows in the FK table.  Conversely, during an update of an FK row, the
outcome is determined if any new key value is NULL.  In either case it
becomes unnecessary to compare individual key values.

This patch was inspired by discussion of Vik Reykja's patch to use IS NOT
DISTINCT semantics for the key comparisons.  In the event there is no need
for that and so this patch looks nothing like his, but he should still get
credit for having re-opened consideration of the trigger skip logic.
2012-06-19 20:07:33 -04:00
Tom Lane fe3db74002 Share RI trigger code between NO ACTION and RESTRICT cases.
These triggers are identical except for whether ri_Check_Pk_Match is to be
called, so factor out the common code to save a couple hundred lines.

Also, eliminate null-column checks in ri_Check_Pk_Match, since they're
duplicate with the calling functions and require unnecessary complication
in its API statement.

Simplify the way code is shared between RI_FKey_check_ins and
RI_FKey_check_upd, too.
2012-06-19 14:31:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 48756be9cf Improve comments about why SET DEFAULT triggers must recheck for matches.
I was confused about this, so try to make it clearer for the next person.

(This seems like a fairly inefficient way of dealing with a corner case,
but I don't have a better idea offhand.  Maybe if there were a way to turn
off the RI_FKey_keyequal_upd_fk event filter temporarily?)
2012-06-18 22:45:07 -04:00
Tom Lane e8c9fd5fdf Allow ON UPDATE/DELETE SET DEFAULT plans to be cached.
Once upon a time, somebody was worried that cached RI plans wouldn't get
remade with new default values after ALTER TABLE ... SET DEFAULT, so they
didn't allow caching of plans for ON UPDATE/DELETE SET DEFAULT actions.
That time is long gone, though (and even at the time I doubt this was the
greatest hazard posed by ALTER TABLE...).  So allow these triggers to cache
their plans just like the others.

The cache_plan argument to ri_PlanCheck is now vestigial, since there
are no callers that don't pass "true"; but I left it alone in case there
is any future need for it.
2012-06-18 19:37:23 -04:00
Tom Lane 03a5ba24b0 Remove derived fields from RI_QueryKey, and do a bit of other cleanup.
We really only need the foreign key constraint's OID and the query type
code to uniquely identify each plan we are caching for FK checks.  The
other stuff that was in the struct had no business being used as part of
a hash key, and was all just being copied from struct RI_ConstraintInfo
anyway.  Get rid of the unnecessary fields, and readjust various function
APIs to make them use RI_ConstraintInfo not RI_QueryKey as info source.

I'd be surprised if this makes any measurable performance difference,
but it certainly feels cleaner.
2012-06-18 18:50:29 -04:00
Tom Lane f9429746c9 Update SQL spec references in ri_triggers code to match SQL:2008.
Now that what we're implementing isn't SQL92, we probably shouldn't cite
chapter and verse in that spec anymore.  Also fix some comments that
talked about MATCH FULL but in fact were in code that's also used for
MATCH SIMPLE.

No code changes in this commit, just comments.
2012-06-18 12:19:38 -04:00
Tom Lane c75be2ad60 Change ON UPDATE SET NULL/SET DEFAULT referential actions to meet SQL spec.
Previously, when executing an ON UPDATE SET NULL or SET DEFAULT action for
a multicolumn MATCH SIMPLE foreign key constraint, we would set only those
referencing columns corresponding to referenced columns that were changed.
This is what the SQL92 standard said to do --- but more recent versions
of the standard say that all referencing columns should be set to null or
their default values, no matter exactly which referenced columns changed.
At least for SET DEFAULT, that is clearly saner behavior.  It's somewhat
debatable whether it's an improvement for SET NULL, but it appears that
other RDBMS systems read the spec this way.  So let's do it like that.

This is a release-notable behavioral change, although considering that
our documentation already implied it was done this way, the lack of
complaints suggests few people use such cases.
2012-06-18 12:12:52 -04:00
Tom Lane f5297bdfe4 Refer to the default foreign key match style as MATCH SIMPLE internally.
Previously we followed the SQL92 wording, "MATCH <unspecified>", but since
SQL99 there's been a less awkward way to refer to the default style.

In addition to the code changes, pg_constraint.confmatchtype now stores
this match style as 's' (SIMPLE) rather than 'u' (UNSPECIFIED).  This
doesn't affect pg_dump or psql because they use pg_get_constraintdef()
to reconstruct foreign key definitions.  But other client-side code might
examine that column directly, so this change will have to be marked as
an incompatibility in the 9.3 release notes.
2012-06-17 20:16:44 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut bb7520cc26 Make documentation of --help and --version options more consistent
Before, some places didn't document the short options (-? and -V),
some documented both, some documented nothing, and they were listed in
various orders.  Now this is hopefully more consistent and complete.
2012-06-18 02:46:59 +03:00
Tom Lane 9e18eacbdf Fix stats collector to recover nicely when system clock goes backwards.
Formerly, if the system clock went backwards, the stats collector would
fail to update the stats file any more until the clock reading again
exceeds whatever timestamp was last written into the stats file.  Such
glitches in the clock's behavior are not terribly unlikely on machines
not using NTP.  Such a scenario has been observed to cause regression test
failures in the buildfarm, and it could have bad effects on the behavior
of autovacuum, so it seems prudent to install some defenses.

We could directly detect the clock going backwards by adding
GetCurrentTimestamp calls in the stats collector's main loop, but that
would hurt performance on platforms where GetCurrentTimestamp is expensive.
To minimize the performance hit in normal cases, adopt a more complicated
scheme wherein backends check for clock skew when reading the stats file,
and if they see it, signal the stats collector by sending an extra stats
inquiry message.  The stats collector does an extra GetCurrentTimestamp
only when it receives an inquiry with an apparently out-of-order
timestamp.

To avoid unnecessary GetCurrentTimestamp calls, expand the inquiry messages
to carry the backend's current clock reading as well as its stats cutoff
time.  The latter, being intentionally slightly in-the-past, would trigger
more clock rechecks than we need if it were used for this purpose.

We might want to backpatch this change at some point, but let's let it
shake out in the buildfarm for awhile first.
2012-06-17 17:11:49 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 15b1918e7d Improve reporting of permission errors for array types
Because permissions are assigned to element types, not array types,
complaining about permission denied on an array type would be
misleading to users.  So adjust the reporting to refer to the element
type instead.

In order not to duplicate the required logic in two dozen places,
refactor the permission denied reporting for types a bit.

pointed out by Yeb Havinga during the review of the type privilege
feature
2012-06-15 22:55:03 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut d933092e0a Add more message pluralization
Even though we can't do much about the case with multiple plurals in
one sentence, we can fix the other cases.
2012-06-15 02:02:02 +03:00
Robert Haas 8507c2f856 Improve readability and error messages in pg_backup_start_time.
Gurjeet Singh, with corrections by me.
2012-06-14 15:20:08 -04:00
Robert Haas 68de499bda New SQL functons pg_backup_in_progress() and pg_backup_start_time()
Darold Gilles, reviewed by Gabriele Bartolini and others, rebased by
Marco Nenciarini.  Stylistic cleanup and OID fixes by me.
2012-06-14 13:25:43 -04:00
Robert Haas cd80073445 During transaction cleanup, release locks before deleting files.
There's no need to hold onto the locks until the files are needed,
and by doing it this way, we reduce the impact on other backends who
may be awaiting locks we hold.

Noah Misch
2012-06-14 10:19:33 -04:00
Robert Haas 6cd015bea3 Add new function log_newpage_buffer.
When I implemented the ginbuildempty() function as part of
implementing unlogged tables, I falsified the note in the header
comment for log_newpage.  Although we could fix that up by changing
the comment, it seems cleaner to add a new function which is
specifically intended to handle this case.  So do that.
2012-06-14 10:11:16 -04:00
Robert Haas a475c60367 Remove misplaced sanity check from heap_create().
Even when allow_system_table_mods is not set, we allow creation of any
type of SQL object in pg_catalog, except for relations.  And you can
get relations into pg_catalog, too, by initially creating them in some
other schema and then moving them with ALTER .. SET SCHEMA.  So this
restriction, which prevents relations (only) from being created in
pg_catalog directly, is fairly pointless.  If we need a safety mechanism
for this, it should be placed further upstream, so that it affects all
SQL objects uniformly, and picks up both CREATE and SET SCHEMA.

For now, just rip it out, per discussion with Tom Lane.
2012-06-14 09:58:53 -04:00
Robert Haas d2c86a1ccd Remove RELKIND_UNCATALOGED.
This may have been important at some point in the past, but it no
longer does anything useful.

Review by Tom Lane.
2012-06-14 09:47:30 -04:00
Tom Lane 80edfd7659 Revisit error message details for JSON input parsing.
Instead of identifying error locations only by line number (which could
be entirely unhelpful with long input lines), provide a fragment of the
input text too, placing this info in a new CONTEXT entry.  Make the
error detail messages conform more closely to style guidelines, fix
failure to expose some of them for translation, ensure compiler can
check formats against supplied parameters.
2012-06-13 19:43:35 -04:00
Tom Lane b8b69d8990 Revert "Reduce checkpoints and WAL traffic on low activity database server"
This reverts commit 18fb9d8d21.  Per
discussion, it does not seem like a good idea to allow committed changes to
go un-checkpointed indefinitely, as could happen in a low-traffic server;
that makes us entirely reliant on the WAL stream with no redundancy that
might aid data recovery in case of disk failure.

This re-introduces the original problem of hot-standby setups generating a
small continuing stream of WAL traffic even when idle, but there are other
ways to address that without compromising crash recovery, so we'll revisit
that issue in a future release cycle.
2012-06-13 18:48:44 -04:00
Tom Lane c3bc76bdb0 Deprecate use of GLOBAL and LOCAL in temp table creation.
Aside from adjusting the documentation to say that these are deprecated,
we now report a warning (not an error) for use of GLOBAL, since it seems
fairly likely that we might change that to request SQL-spec-compliant temp
table behavior in the foreseeable future.  Although our handling of LOCAL
is equally nonstandard, there is no evident interest in ever implementing
SQL modules, and furthermore some other products interpret LOCAL as
behaving the same way we do.  So no expectation of change and no warning
for LOCAL; but it still seems a good idea to deprecate writing it.

Noah Misch
2012-06-13 17:48:42 -04:00
Tom Lane 93f4d7f806 Support Linux's oom_score_adj API as well as the older oom_adj API.
The simplest way to handle this is just to copy-and-paste the relevant
code block in fork_process.c, so that's what I did. (It's possible that
something more complicated would be useful to packagers who want to work
with either the old or the new API; but at this point the number of such
people is rapidly approaching zero, so let's just get the minimal thing
done.)  Update relevant documentation as well.
2012-06-13 15:35:52 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c0a6f9c84b Improve documentation of postgres -C option
Clarify help (s/return/print/), and explain that this option is for
use by other programs, not for user-facing use (it does not print
units).
2012-06-13 13:41:25 +03:00
Tom Lane f871ef74a5 Minor code review for json.c.
Improve commenting, conform to project style for use of ++ etc.
No functional changes.
2012-06-12 16:23:45 -04:00
Robert Haas 36b7e3da17 Mark JSON error detail messages for translation.
Per gripe from Tom Lane.
2012-06-12 10:41:38 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 3595a71e9c Prevent non-streaming replication connections from being selected sync slave
This prevents a pg_basebackup backup session that just does a base
backup (no xlog involved at all) from becoming the synchronous slave
and thus blocking all access while it runs.

Also fixes the problem when a higher priority slave shows up it would
become the sync standby before it has reached the STREAMING state, by
making sure we can only switch to a walsender that's actually STREAMING.

Fujii Masao
2012-06-11 15:17:38 +02:00
Bruce Momjian 927d61eeff Run pgindent on 9.2 source tree in preparation for first 9.3
commit-fest.
2012-06-10 15:20:04 -04:00
Simon Riggs 28ac797287 Revert error message on GLOBAL/LOCAL pending further discussion 2012-06-10 08:41:01 +01:00
Simon Riggs 72335a2015 Add ERROR msg for GLOBAL/LOCAL TEMP is not yet implemented 2012-06-09 16:35:26 +01:00
Simon Riggs 3725570539 Fix bug in early startup of Hot Standby with subtransactions.
When HS startup is deferred because of overflowed subtransactions, ensure
that we re-initialize KnownAssignedXids for when both existing and incoming
snapshots have non-zero qualifying xids.

Fixes bug #6661 reported by Valentine Gogichashvili.

Analysis and fix by Andres Freund
2012-06-08 17:34:04 +01:00
Tom Lane ece01aae47 Scan the buffer pool just once, not once per fork, during relation drop.
This provides a speedup of about 4X when NBuffers is large enough.
There is also a useful reduction in sinval traffic, since we
only do CacheInvalidateSmgr() once not once per fork.

Simon Riggs, reviewed and somewhat revised by Tom Lane
2012-06-07 17:43:11 -04:00
Tom Lane e8d029a30b Do unlocked prechecks in bufmgr.c loops that scan the whole buffer pool.
DropRelFileNodeBuffers, DropDatabaseBuffers, FlushRelationBuffers, and
FlushDatabaseBuffers have to scan the whole shared_buffers pool because
we have no index structure that would find the target buffers any more
efficiently than that.  This gets expensive with large NBuffers.  We can
shave some cycles from these loops by prechecking to see if the current
buffer is interesting before we acquire the buffer header lock.
Ordinarily such a test would be unsafe, but in these cases it should be
safe because we are already assuming that the caller holds a lock that
prevents any new target pages from being loaded into the buffer pool
concurrently.  Therefore, no buffer tag should be changing to a value of
interest, only away from a value of interest.  So a false negative match
is impossible, while a false positive is safe because we'll recheck after
acquiring the buffer lock.  Initial testing says that this speeds these
loops by a factor of 2X to 3X on common Intel hardware.

Patch for DropRelFileNodeBuffers by Jeff Janes (based on an idea of
Heikki's); extended to the remaining sequential scans by Tom Lane
2012-06-07 16:46:26 -04:00
Simon Riggs 2c8a4e9be2 Wake WALSender to reduce data loss at failover for async commit.
WALSender now woken up after each background flush by WALwriter, avoiding
multi-second replication delay for an all-async commit workload.
Replication delay reduced from 7s with default settings to 200ms and often
much less, allowing significantly reduced data loss at failover.

Andres Freund and Simon Riggs
2012-06-07 19:22:47 +01:00
Robert Haas b50991eedb Fix more crash-safe visibility map bugs, and improve comments.
In lazy_scan_heap, we could issue bogus warnings about incorrect
information in the visibility map, because we checked the visibility
map bit before locking the heap page, creating a race condition.  Fix
by rechecking the visibility map bit before we complain.  Rejigger
some related logic so that we rely on the possibly-outdated
all_visible_according_to_vm value as little as possible.

In heap_multi_insert, it's not safe to clear the visibility map bit
before beginning the critical section.  The visibility map is not
crash-safe unless we treat clearing the bit as a critical operation.
Specifically, if the transaction were to error out after we set the
bit and before entering the critical section, we could end up writing
the heap page to disk (with the bit cleared) and crashing before the
visibility map page made it to disk.  That would be bad.  heap_insert
has this correct, but somehow the order of operations got rearranged
when heap_multi_insert was added.

Also, add some more comments to visibilitymap_test, lazy_scan_heap,
and IndexOnlyNext, expounding on concurrency issues.

Per extensive code review by Andres Freund, and further review by Tom
Lane, who also made the original report about the bogus warnings.
2012-06-07 12:48:13 -04:00
Tom Lane 3dd8e59681 Fix bogus handling of control characters in json_lex_string().
The original coding misbehaved if "char" is signed, and also made the
extremely poor decision to print control characters literally when trying
to complain about them.  Report and patch by Shigeru Hanada.

In passing, also fix core dump risk in report_parse_error() should the
parse state be something other than what it expects.
2012-06-04 20:43:57 -04:00
Simon Riggs d3abbbebe5 Avoid early reuse of btree pages, causing incorrect query results.
When we allowed read-only transactions to skip assigning XIDs
we introduced the possibility that a fully deleted btree page
could be reused. This broke the index link sequence which could
then lead to indexscans silently returning fewer rows than would
have been correct. The actual incidence of silent errors from
this is thought to be very low because of the exact workload
required and locking pre-conditions. Fix is to remove pages only
if index page opaque->btpo.xact precedes RecentGlobalXmin.

Noah Misch, reviewed by Simon Riggs
2012-06-01 12:21:45 +01:00
Simon Riggs 055c352abb After any checkpoint, close all smgr files handles in bgwriter 2012-06-01 09:24:53 +01:00
Simon Riggs a297d64d92 Checkpointer starts before bgwriter to avoid missing fsync requests.
Noted while testing Hot Standby startup.
2012-06-01 08:25:17 +01:00
Simon Riggs 1ec6a2bbc9 Provide interim statistics while in mid-checkpoint.
Re-implements similar functionality in 9.1 and previously which
was removed during split of checkpointer and bgwriter.

Requested/spotted by Magnus Hagander
2012-06-01 08:19:06 +01:00
Tom Lane a04dc87db1 Improve comment for GetStableLatestTransactionId(). 2012-05-31 11:20:02 -04:00
Simon Riggs a2b516dab9 Only throw recovery conflicts when InHotStandby. Bug fix to recent
patch to allow Index Only Scans on Hot Standby.

Bug report from Jaime Casanova
2012-05-31 13:11:47 +01:00
Tom Lane ad0009e7be Force PL and range-type support functions to be owned by a superuser.
We allow non-superusers to create procedural languages (with restrictions)
and range datatypes.  Previously, the automatically-created support
functions for these objects ended up owned by the creating user.  This
represents a rather considerable security hazard, because the owning user
might be able to alter a support function's definition in such a way as to
crash the server, inject trojan-horse SQL code, or even execute arbitrary
C code directly.  It appears that right now the only actually exploitable
problem is the infinite-recursion bug fixed in the previous patch for
CVE-2012-2655.  However, it's not hard to imagine that future additions of
more ALTER FUNCTION capability might unintentionally open up new hazards.
To forestall future problems, cause these support functions to be owned by
the bootstrap superuser, not the user creating the parent object.
2012-05-30 23:47:57 -04:00
Tom Lane 33c6eaf78e Ignore SECURITY DEFINER and SET attributes for a PL's call handler.
It's not very sensible to set such attributes on a handler function;
but if one were to do so, fmgr.c went into infinite recursion because
it would call fmgr_security_definer instead of the handler function proper.
There is no way for fmgr_security_definer to know that it ought to call the
handler and not the original function referenced by the FmgrInfo's fn_oid,
so it tries to do the latter, causing the whole process to start over
again.

Ordinarily such misconfiguration of a procedural language's handler could
be written off as superuser error.  However, because we allow non-superuser
database owners to create procedural languages and the handler for such a
language becomes owned by the database owner, it is possible for a database
owner to crash the backend, which ideally shouldn't be possible without
superuser privileges.  In 9.2 and up we will adjust things so that the
handler functions are always owned by superusers, but in existing branches
this is a minor security fix.

Problem noted by Noah Misch (after several of us had failed to detect
it :-().  This is CVE-2012-2655.
2012-05-30 23:27:57 -04:00
Tom Lane cd0ff9c0f4 Expand the allowed range of timezone offsets to +/-15:59:59 from Greenwich.
We used to only allow offsets less than +/-13 hours, then it was +/14,
then it was +/-15.  That's still not good enough though, as per today's bug
report from Patric Bechtel.  This time I actually looked through the Olson
timezone database to find the largest offsets used anywhere.  The winners
are Asia/Manila, at -15:56:00 until 1844, and America/Metlakatla, at
+15:13:42 until 1867.  So we'd better allow offsets less than +/-16 hours.

Given the history, we are way overdue to have some greppable #define
symbols controlling this, so make some ... and also remove an obsolete
comment that didn't get fixed the last time.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2012-05-30 19:58:35 -04:00
Robert Haas 07ab1383e3 Fix two more bugs in fast-path relation locking.
First, the previous code failed to account for the fact that, during Hot
Standby operation, the startup process takes AccessExclusiveLocks on
relations without setting MyDatabaseId.  This resulted in fast path
strong lock counts failing to be incremented with the startup process
took locks, which in turn allowed conflicting lock requests to succeed
when they should not have.  Report by Erik Rijkers, diagnosis by Heikki
Linnakangas.

Second, LockReleaseAll() failed to honor the allLocks and lockmethodid
restrictions with respect to fast-path locks.  It's not clear to me
whether this produces any user-visible breakage at the moment, but it's
certainly wrong.  Rearrange order of operations in LockReleaseAll to fix.
Noted by Tom Lane.
2012-05-30 16:17:46 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas d1996ed5e8 Change the way parent pages are tracked during buffered GiST build.
We used to mimic the way a stack is constructed when descending the tree
during normal GiST inserts, but that was quite complicated during a buffered
build. It was also wrong: in GiST, the left-to-right relationships on
different levels might not match each other, so that when you know the
parent of a child page, you won't necessarily find the parent of the page to
the right of the child page by following the rightlinks at the parent level.
This sometimes led to "could not re-find parent" errors while building a
GiST index.

We now use a simple hash table to track the parent of every internal page.
Whenever a page is split, and downlinks are moved from one page to another,
we update the hash table accordingly. This is also better for performance
than the old method, as we never need to move right to re-find the parent
page, which could take a significant amount of time for buffers that were
created much earlier in the index build.
2012-05-30 12:05:57 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas be02b16826 Delete the temporary file used in buffered GiST build, after the build.
There were two bugs here: We forgot to call gistFreeBuildBuffers() function
at the end of build, and we passed interXact == true to BufFileCreateTemp,
so the file wasn't automatically cleaned up at end-of-transaction either.
2012-05-30 12:05:57 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4bc6fb57f7 Fix integer overflow bug in GiST buffering build calculations.
The result of (maintenance_work_mem * 1024) / BLCKSZ doesn't fit in a signed
32-bit integer, if maintenance_work_mem >= 2GB. Use double instead. And
while we're at it, write the calculations in an easier to understand form,
with the intermediary steps written out and commented.
2012-05-29 22:27:42 +03:00
Tom Lane 2755abf386 Teach AbortOutOfAnyTransaction to clean up partially-started transactions.
AbortOutOfAnyTransaction failed to do anything if the state it saw on
entry corresponded to failing partway through StartTransaction.  I fixed
AbortCurrentTransaction to cope with that case way back in commit
60b2444cc3, but evidently overlooked that
AbortOutOfAnyTransaction should do likewise.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  It's not clear that this omission
has any more-than-cosmetic consequences, but it's also not clear that it
doesn't, so back-patching seems the least risky choice.
2012-05-28 23:57:06 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 388d251679 Update SQL features list
Set E081 Basic Privileges to supported, since by the letter of it, we
support it, even though not all possible forms of USAGE privileges are
implemented.
2012-05-27 23:34:16 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 27314d32a8 Suppress -Wunused-result warning about write()
This is related to aa90e148ca, but this
code is only used under -DLINUX_OOM_ADJ, so it was apparently
overlooked then.
2012-05-27 22:35:01 +03:00
Tom Lane 532fe28dad Prevent synchronized scanning when systable_beginscan chooses a heapscan.
The only interesting-for-performance case wherein we force heapscan here
is when we're rebuilding the relcache init file, and the only such case
that is likely to be examining a catalog big enough to be syncscanned is
RelationBuildTupleDesc.  But the early-exit optimization in that code gets
broken if we start the scan at a random place within the catalog, so that
allowing syncscan is actually a big deoptimization if pg_attribute is large
(at least for the normal case where the rows for core system catalogs have
never been changed since initdb).  Hence, prevent syncscan here.  Per my
testing pursuant to complaints from Jeff Frost and Greg Sabino Mullane,
though neither of them seem to have actually hit this specific problem.

Back-patch to 8.3, where syncscan was introduced.
2012-05-26 19:09:52 -04:00
Tom Lane d3b97d1488 Fix string truncation to be multibyte-aware in text_name and bpchar_name.
Previously, casts to name could generate invalidly-encoded results.

Also, make these functions match namein() more exactly, by consistently
using palloc0() instead of ad-hoc zeroing code.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Karl Schnaitter and Tom Lane
2012-05-25 17:34:51 -04:00
Tom Lane 2a4c46e0ba Fix array overrun in regex code.
zaptreesubs() was coded to unconditionally reset a capture subre's
corresponding pmatch[] entry.  However, in regexes without backrefs, that
array is caller-supplied and might not have as many entries as the regex
has capturing parens.  So check the array length and do nothing if there
is no corresponding entry, much as subset() does.  Failure to check this
resulted in a stack clobber in the case reported by Marko Kreen.

This bug appears to have been latent in the regex library from the
beginning.  It was not exposed because find() called dissect() not
cdissect(), and the dissect() code path didn't ever call zaptreesubs()
(formerly zapmem()).  When I unified dissect() and cdissect() in commit
4dd78bf37a, the problem was exposed.

Now that I've seen this, I'm rather suspicious that we might need to
back-patch it; but will refrain for now, for lack of evidence that
the case can be hit in the previous coding.
2012-05-24 13:56:16 -04:00
Tom Lane ed962fd712 Ensure that seqscans check for interrupts at least once per page.
If a seqscan encounters many consecutive pages containing only dead tuples,
it can remain in the loop in heapgettup for a long time, and there was no
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS anywhere in that loop.  This meant there were
real-world situations where a query would be effectively uncancelable for
long stretches.  Add a check placed to occur once per page, which should be
enough to provide reasonable response time without adding any measurable
overhead.

Report and patch by Merlin Moncure (though I tweaked it a bit).
Back-patch to all supported branches.
2012-05-22 19:42:05 -04:00
Robert Haas 8fbe5a317d Fix error message for COMMENT/SECURITY LABEL ON COLUMN xxx IS 'yyy'
When the column name is an unqualified name, rather than table.column,
the error message complains about too many dotted names, which is
wrong.  Report by Peter Eisentraut based on examination of the
sepgsql regression test output, but the problem also affects COMMENT.
New wording as suggested by Tom Lane.
2012-05-22 11:23:36 -04:00
Robert Haas 219c024c64 Repair out-of-date information in src/backend/storage/buffer/README.
In commit d526575f89, we changed things so
that buffer usage counts are incremented when the buffer is pinned, rather
than when it is unpinned, but the README file didn't get the memo.

Report by Amit Kapila.
2012-05-22 09:32:09 -04:00
Tom Lane b94ce6e807 Move postmaster's RemovePgTempFiles call to a less randomly chosen place.
There is no reason to do this as early as possible in postmaster startup,
and good reason not to do it until we have completely created the
postmaster's lock file, namely that it might contribute to pg_ctl thinking
that postmaster startup has timed out.  (This would require a rather
unusual amount of time to be spent scanning temp file directories, but we
have at least one field report of it happening reproducibly.)

Back-patch to 9.1.  Before that, pg_ctl didn't wait for additional info to
be added to the lock file, so it wasn't a problem.

Note that this is not a complete fix to the slow-start issue in 9.1,
because we still had identify_system_timezone being run during postmaster
start in 9.1.  But that's at least a reasonably well-defined delay, with
an easy workaround if needed, whereas the temp-files scan is not so
predictable and cannot be avoided.
2012-05-21 22:50:30 -04:00
Tom Lane efae4653c9 Update woefully-obsolete comment.
The accurate info about what's in a lock file has been in miscadmin.h
for some time, so let's just make this comment point there instead of
maintaining a duplicative copy.
2012-05-21 22:11:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut f1f6737e15 Fix incorrect logic in JSON number lexer
Detectable by gcc -Wlogical-op.

Add two regression test cases that would previously allow incorrect
values to pass.
2012-05-20 02:24:46 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 2273a50364 Realign some --help output to have better spacing between columns 2012-05-18 20:34:14 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 1d27dcf578 Fix bug in gistRelocateBuildBuffersOnSplit().
When we create a temporary copy of the old node buffer, in stack, we mustn't
leak that into any of the long-lived data structures. Before this patch,
when we called gistPopItupFromNodeBuffer(), it got added to the array of
"loaded buffers". After gistRelocateBuildBuffersOnSplit() exits, the
pointer added to the loaded buffers array points to garbage. Often that goes
unnotied, because when we go through the array of loaded buffers to unload
them, buffers with a NULL pageBuffer are ignored, which can often happen by
accident even if the pointer points to garbage.

This patch fixes that by marking the temporary copy in stack explicitly as
temporary, and refrain from adding buffers marked as temporary to the array
of loaded buffers.

While we're at it, initialize nodeBuffer->pageBlocknum to InvalidBlockNumber
and improve comments a bit. This isn't strictly necessary, but makes
debugging easier.
2012-05-18 19:38:32 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 939ec9b8a4 Update SQL features/conformance information to SQL:2011 2012-05-17 09:50:04 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut be6d1c88a4 Change COLLATION keyword category
It was changed from unreserved to reserved as part of the COLLATION
FOR syntax, but it turns out that type_func_name_keyword is
sufficient.
2012-05-16 20:19:44 +03:00
Tom Lane 488c6dd170 Improve error message for ALTER COLUMN TYPE coercion failure.
Per recent discussion, the error message for this was actually a trifle
inaccurate, since it said "cannot be cast" which might be incorrect.
Adjust that wording, and add a HINT suggesting that a USING clause might
be needed.
2012-05-16 07:28:25 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 6593c5b5dc Fix bug in freespace calculation in heap_multi_insert().
If the amount of freespace on page was less than the amount reserved by
fillfactor, the calculation would underflow.

This fixes bug #6643 reported by Tomonari Katsumata.
2012-05-16 14:13:06 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut c8e086795a Remove whitespace from end of lines
pgindent and perltidy should clean up the rest.
2012-05-15 22:19:41 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 8afb026e57 Remove stray nbsp character 2012-05-15 21:38:59 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas d2495f272c Fix bug in to_tsquery().
We were using memcpy() to copy to a possibly overlapping memory region,
which is a no-no. Use memmove() instead.
2012-05-15 19:27:34 +03:00
Tom Lane 9b63e9869f In pgstat.c, use a timeout in WaitLatchOrSocket only on Windows.
We have no need for a timeout here really, but some broken products from
Redmond seem to lose FD_READ events occasionally, and waking up and
retrying the recv() is the only known way to work around that.  Perhaps
somebody will be motivated to figure out a better answer here; but not I.
2012-05-14 23:51:34 -04:00
Tom Lane 5a2bb06012 Revert "Add some temporary instrumentation to pgstat.c."
This reverts commit 7d88bb73f7.
That instrumentation has served its purpose.
2012-05-14 23:08:10 -04:00
Tom Lane e42a21b9e6 Assert that WaitLatchOrSocket callers cannot wait only for writability.
Since we have chosen to report socket EOF and error conditions via the
WL_SOCKET_READABLE flag bit, it's unsafe to wait only for
WL_SOCKET_WRITEABLE; the caller would never be notified of the socket
condition, and in some of these implementations WaitLatchOrSocket would
busy-wait until something else happens.  Add this restriction to the API
specification, and add Asserts to check that callers don't try to do that.

At some point we might want to consider adjusting the API to relax this
restriction, but until we have an actual use case for waiting on a
write-only socket, it seems premature to design a solution.
2012-05-14 16:12:28 -04:00
Tom Lane d461d0502b For testing purposes, reinsert a timeout in pgstat.c's wait call.
Test results from buildfarm members mastodon/narwhal (Windows Server 2003)
make it look like that platform just plain loses FD_READ events
occasionally, and the only reason our previous coding seemed to work was
that it timed out every couple of seconds and retried the whole operation.
Try to verify this by reinserting a finite timeout into the pgstat loop.
This isn't meant to be a permanent patch either, just to confirm or
disprove a theory.
2012-05-14 15:03:14 -04:00
Tom Lane f1ca51549e Force pgwin32_recv into nonblock mode when called from pgstat.c.
This should get rid of the usage of pgwin32_waitforsinglesocket entirely,
and perhaps thereby remove the race condition that's evidently still
present on some versions of Windows.  The previous arrangement was a bit
unsafe anyway, since waiting at the recv() would not allow pgstat to notice
postmaster death.
2012-05-14 10:57:07 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas f15c2eae9c Remove unnecessary pg_verifymbstr() calls from tsvector/query in functions.
The input should've been validated well before it hits the input function.
Doing so again is a waste of cycles.
2012-05-14 14:30:32 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9e4637bf89 Update comments that became out-of-date with the PGXACT struct.
When the "hot" members of PGPROC were split off to separate PGXACT structs,
many PGPROC fields referred to in comments were moved to PGXACT, but the
comments were neglected in the commit. Mostly this is just a search/replace
of PGPROC with PGXACT, but the way the dummy PGPROC entries are created for
prepared transactions changed more, making some of the comments totally
bogus.

Noah Misch
2012-05-14 10:28:55 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 64f09ca386 Remove leftovers of BeOS port
These should have been removed when the BeOS port was removed in
44f9021223.
2012-05-14 04:50:39 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 6bf1e7668d Small punctuation editing of postgresql.conf.sample 2012-05-14 04:50:39 +03:00
Tom Lane 7d88bb73f7 Add some temporary instrumentation to pgstat.c.
Log main-loop blocking events and the results of inquiry messages.
This is to get some clarity as to what's happening on those Windows
buildfarm members that still don't like the latch-ified stats collector.
This bulks up the postmaster log a tad, so I won't leave it in place for
long.
2012-05-13 21:11:31 -04:00
Tom Lane b8347138e9 Fix DROP TABLESPACE to unlink symlink when directory is not there.
If the tablespace directory is missing entirely, we allow DROP TABLESPACE
to go through, on the grounds that it should be possible to clean up the
catalog entry in such a situation.  However, we forgot that the pg_tblspc
symlink might still be there.  We should try to remove the symlink too
(but not fail if it's no longer there), since not doing so can lead to
weird behavior subsequently, as per report from Michael Nolan.

There was some discussion of adding dependency links to prevent DROP
TABLESPACE when the catalogs still contain references to the tablespace.
That might be worth doing too, but it's an orthogonal question, and in
any case wouldn't be back-patchable.

Back-patch to 9.0, which is as far back as the logic looks like this.
We could possibly do something similar in 8.x, but given the lack of
reports I'm not sure it's worth the trouble, and anyway the case could
not arise in the form the logic is meant to cover (namely, a post-DROP
transaction rollback having resurrected the pg_tablespace entry after
some or all of the filesystem infrastructure is gone).
2012-05-13 18:06:52 -04:00
Tom Lane 966970ed63 Re-revert stats collector latch changes.
This reverts commit cb2f2873d6, restoring
the latch-ified stats collector logic.  We'll soon see if this works any
better on the Windows buildfarm machines.
2012-05-13 14:44:39 -04:00
Tom Lane b85427f227 Attempt to fix some issues in our Windows socket code.
Make sure WaitLatchOrSocket regards FD_CLOSE as a read-ready condition.
We might want to tweak this further, but it was surely wrong as-is.

Make pgwin32_waitforsinglesocket detach its private event object from the
passed socket before returning.  I suspect that failure to do so leads
to race conditions when other code (such as WaitLatchOrSocket) attaches
a different event object to the same socket.  Moreover, the existing
coding meant that repeated calls to pgwin32_waitforsinglesocket would
perform ResetEvent on an event actively connected to a socket, which
is rumored to be an unsafe practice; the WSAEventSelect documentation
appears to recommend against this, though it does not say not to do it
in so many words.

Also, uniformly use the coding pattern "WSAEventSelect(s, NULL, 0)" to
detach events from sockets, rather than passing the event in the second
parameter.  The WSAEventSelect documentation says that the second parameter
is ignored if the third is 0, so theoretically this should make no
difference.  However, elsewhere on the same reference page the use of NULL
in this context is recommended, and I have found suggestions on the net
that some versions of Windows have bugs with a non-NULL second parameter
in this usage.

Some other mostly-cosmetic cleanup, such as using the right one of
WSAGetLastError and GetLastError for reporting errors from these functions.
2012-05-13 14:35:40 -04:00
Tom Lane fd350ef395 Fix bogus declaration of local variable.
rc should be an int here, not a pgsocket.  Fairly harmless as long as
pgsocket is an integer type, but nonetheless wrong.  Error introduced
in commit 87091cb1f1.
2012-05-13 00:30:32 -04:00
Tom Lane 398b240151 Avoid unnecessary process wakeups in the log collector.
syslogger was coded to wake up once per second whether there was anything
useful to do or not.  As part of our campaign to reduce the server's idle
power consumption, change it to use a latch for waiting.  Now, in the
absence of any data to log or any signals to service, it will only wake up
at the programmed logfile rotation times (if any).
2012-05-12 19:21:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 31ad655364 Fix WaitLatchOrSocket to handle EOF on socket correctly.
When using poll(), EOF on a socket is reported with the POLLHUP not
POLLIN flag (at least on Linux).  WaitLatchOrSocket failed to check
this bit, causing it to go into a busy-wait loop if EOF occurs.
We earlier fixed the same mistake in the test for the state of the
postmaster_alive socket, but missed it for the caller-supplied socket.
Fortunately, this error is new in 9.2, since 9.1 only had a select()
based code path not a poll() based one.
2012-05-12 16:36:47 -04:00
Simon Riggs 867540b49c Ensure backwards compatibility for GetStableLatestTransactionId() 2012-05-12 13:26:10 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut afe86a9e73 Fix obsolescent C declaration syntax
gcc -Wextra/-Wold-style-declaration thinks that "inline" should go
before the function return type.
2012-05-12 12:52:02 +03:00
Tom Lane d0c231d132 Cosmetic adjustments for postmaster's handling of checkpointer.
Correct some comments, order some operations a bit more consistently.
No functional changes.
2012-05-11 17:46:37 -04:00
Robert Haas 1331cc6c1a Prevent loss of init fork when truncating an unlogged table.
Fixes bug #6635, reported by Akira Kurosawa.
2012-05-11 09:48:56 -04:00
Simon Riggs b762e8f50b Remove extraneous #include "storage/proc.h" 2012-05-11 14:46:46 +01:00
Simon Riggs b06679e012 Ensure age() returns a stable value rather than the latest value 2012-05-11 14:36:24 +01:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3652d72dd4 On GiST page split, release the locks on child pages before recursing up.
When inserting the downlinks for a split gist page, we used hold the locks
on the child pages until the insertion into the parent - and recursively its
parent if it had to be split too - were all completed. Change that so that
the locks on child pages are released after the insertion in the immediate
parent is done, before recursing further up the tree.

This reduces the number of lwlocks that are held simultaneously. Holding
many locks is bad for concurrency, and in extreme cases you can even hit
the limit of 100 simultaneously held lwlocks in a backend. If you're really
unlucky, you can hit the limit while in a critical section, which brings
down the whole system.

This fixes bug #6629 reported by Tom Forbes. Backpatch to 9.1. The page
splitting code was rewritten in 9.1, and the old code did not have this
problem.
2012-05-11 12:35:28 +03:00
Tom Lane cb2f2873d6 Temporarily revert stats collector latch changes so we can ship beta1.
This patch reverts commit 49340037ee and some
follow-on tweaking in pgstat.c.  While the basic scheme of latch-ifying the
stats collector seems sound enough, it's failing on most Windows buildfarm
members for unknown reasons, and there's no time left to debug that before
9.2beta1.  Better to ship a beta version without this improvement.  I hope
to re-revert this once beta1 is out, though.
2012-05-10 17:26:33 -04:00
Tom Lane f40022f1ad Make WaitLatch's WL_POSTMASTER_DEATH result trustworthy; simplify callers.
Per a suggestion from Peter Geoghegan, make WaitLatch responsible for
verifying that the WL_POSTMASTER_DEATH bit it returns is truthful (by
testing PostmasterIsAlive).  Then simplify its callers, who no longer
need to do that for themselves.  Remove weasel wording about falsely-set
result bits from WaitLatch's API contract.
2012-05-10 14:34:53 -04:00
Tom Lane ada8fa08fc Fix Windows implementation of PGSemaphoreLock.
The original coding failed to reset ImmediateInterruptOK before returning,
which would potentially allow a subsequent query-cancel interrupt to be
accepted at an unsafe point.  This is a really nasty bug since it's so hard
to predict the consequences, but they could be unpleasant.

Also, ensure that signal handlers are serviced before this function
returns, even if the semaphore is already set.  This should make the
behavior more like Unix.

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2012-05-10 13:36:14 -04:00
Tom Lane 8ebc908c57 Improve Windows implementation of WaitLatch/WaitLatchOrSocket.
Ensure that signal handlers are serviced before this function returns.
This should make the behavior more like Unix.  Also, add some more
error checking, and make some other cosmetic improvements.

No back-patch since it's not clear whether this is fixing any live bug
that would affect 9.1.  I'm more concerned about 9.2 anyway given our
considerable recent expansions in the usage of WaitLatch.
2012-05-10 13:26:47 -04:00
Tom Lane fd71421b01 Improve tests for postmaster death in auxiliary processes.
In checkpointer and walwriter, avoid calling PostmasterIsAlive unless
WaitLatch has reported WL_POSTMASTER_DEATH.  This saves a kernel call per
iteration of the process's outer loop, which is not all that much, but a
cycle shaved is a cycle earned.  I had already removed the unconditional
PostmasterIsAlive calls in bgwriter and pgstat in previous patches, but
forgot that WL_POSTMASTER_DEATH is supposed to be treated as untrustworthy
(per comment in unix_latch.c); so adjust those two cases to match.

There are a few other places where the same idea might be applied, but only
after substantial code rearrangement, so I didn't bother.
2012-05-10 00:54:56 -04:00
Tom Lane d3ae406f54 Further tweaking of nomenclature in checkpointer.c.
Get rid of some more naming choices that only make sense if you know that
this code used to be in the bgwriter, as well as some stray comments
referencing the bgwriter.
2012-05-10 00:01:10 -04:00
Tom Lane 6308ba05a7 Improve control logic for bgwriter hibernation mode.
Commit 6d90eaaa89 added a hibernation mode
to the bgwriter to reduce the server's idle-power consumption.  However,
its interaction with the detailed behavior of BgBufferSync's feedback
control loop wasn't very well thought out.  That control loop depends
primarily on the rate of buffer allocation, not the rate of buffer
dirtying, so the hibernation mode has to be designed to operate only when
no new buffer allocations are happening.  Also, the check for whether the
system is effectively idle was not quite right and would fail to detect
a constant low level of activity, thus allowing the bgwriter to go into
hibernation mode in a way that would let the cycle time vary quite a bit,
possibly further confusing the feedback loop.  To fix, move the wakeup
support from MarkBufferDirty and SetBufferCommitInfoNeedsSave into
StrategyGetBuffer, and prevent the bgwriter from entering hibernation mode
unless no buffer allocations have happened recently.

In addition, fix the delaying logic to remove the problem of possibly not
responding to signals promptly, which was basically caused by trying to use
the process latch's is_set flag for multiple purposes.  I can't prove it
but I'm suspicious that that hack was responsible for the intermittent
"postmaster does not shut down" failures we've been seeing in the buildfarm
lately.  In any case it did nothing to improve the readability or
robustness of the code.

In passing, express the hibernation sleep time as a multiplier on
BgWriterDelay, not a constant.  I'm not sure whether there's any value in
exposing the longer sleep time as an independently configurable setting,
but we can at least make it act like this for little extra code.
2012-05-09 23:37:10 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5d39807a00 Add make dependency so that postgres.bki is rebuilt in major version change
Every time since the current rule for postgres.bki was put in place
when we change the major version, people complain that their tests
fail in strange ways.  This is because the version number in
postgres.bki is not updated, because it has no dependency for that.
And you can't even force the rebuild manually if you don't happen to
know which file has the problem.  Fix that now before it will happen
again.

The only remaining problem with switching major versions, as far as
the regression tests are concerned, is that contrib needs to be
rebuilt.  But that's easily invoked, and in any case the failure modes
are more friendly if you forget that.
2012-05-09 20:45:56 +03:00
Simon Riggs 8f28789bff Rename BgWriterShmem/Request to CheckpointerShmem/Request 2012-05-09 14:23:45 +01:00
Simon Riggs bbd3ec9dce Rename BgWriterCommLock to CheckpointerCommLock 2012-05-09 14:11:48 +01:00
Simon Riggs 5829387381 Avoid xid error from age() function when run on Hot Standby 2012-05-09 13:56:24 +01:00
Tom Lane acd4c7d58b Fix an issue in recent walwriter hibernation patch.
Users of asynchronous-commit mode expect there to be a guaranteed maximum
delay before an async commit's WAL records get flushed to disk.  The
original version of the walwriter hibernation patch broke that.  Add an
extra shared-memory flag to allow async commits to kick the walwriter out
of hibernation mode, without adding any noticeable overhead in cases where
no action is needed.
2012-05-08 23:06:40 -04:00
Tom Lane 49340037ee Reduce idle power consumption of stats collector process.
Latch-ify the stats collector, so that it does not need an arbitrary wakeup
cycle to check for postmaster death.  The incremental savings in idle power
is pretty marginal, since we only had it waking every two seconds; but I
believe that this patch may also improve the collector's performance under
load, by reducing the number of kernel calls made per message when messages
are arriving constantly (we now avoid a select/poll call except when we
need to sleep).  The change also reduces the time needed for a normal
database shutdown on platforms where signals don't interrupt select().
2012-05-08 21:26:46 -04:00
Tom Lane 5461564a9d Reduce idle power consumption of walwriter and checkpointer processes.
This patch modifies the walwriter process so that, when it has not found
anything useful to do for many consecutive wakeup cycles, it extends its
sleep time to reduce the server's idle power consumption.  It reverts to
normal as soon as it's done any successful flushes.  It's still true that
during any async commit, backends check for completed, unflushed pages of
WAL and signal the walwriter if there are any; so that in practice the
walwriter can get awakened and returned to normal operation sooner than the
sleep time might suggest.

Also, improve the checkpointer so that it uses a latch and a computed delay
time to not wake up at all except when it has something to do, replacing a
previous hardcoded 0.5 sec wakeup cycle.  This also is primarily useful for
reducing the server's power consumption when idle.

In passing, get rid of the dedicated latch for signaling the walwriter in
favor of using its procLatch, since that comports better with possible
generic signal handlers using that latch.  Also, fix a pre-existing bug
with failure to save/restore errno in walwriter's signal handlers.

Peter Geoghegan, somewhat simplified by Tom
2012-05-08 20:03:26 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 916d589a10 Make "unexpected EOF" messages DEBUG1 unless in an open transaction
"Unexpected EOF on client connection" without an open transaction
is mostly noise, so turn it into DEBUG1. With an open transaction it's
still indicating a problem, so keep those as ERROR, and change the message
to indicate that it happened in a transaction.
2012-05-07 18:50:44 +02:00
Tom Lane 71b9549d05 Overdue code review for transaction-level advisory locks patch.
Commit 62c7bd31c8 had assorted problems, most
visibly that it broke PREPARE TRANSACTION in the presence of session-level
advisory locks (which should be ignored by PREPARE), as per a recent
complaint from Stephen Rees.  More abstractly, the patch made the
LockMethodData.transactional flag not merely useless but outright
dangerous, because in point of fact that flag no longer tells you anything
at all about whether a lock is held transactionally.  This fix therefore
removes that flag altogether.  We now rely entirely on the convention
already in use in lock.c that transactional lock holds must be owned by
some ResourceOwner, while session holds are never so owned.  Setting the
locallock struct's owner link to NULL thus denotes a session hold, and
there is no redundant marker for that.

PREPARE TRANSACTION now works again when there are session-level advisory
locks, and it is also able to transfer transactional advisory locks to the
prepared transaction, but for implementation reasons it throws an error if
we hold both types of lock on a single lockable object.  Perhaps it will be
worth improving that someday.

Assorted other minor cleanup and documentation editing, as well.

Back-patch to 9.1, except that in the 9.1 branch I did not remove the
LockMethodData.transactional flag for fear of causing an ABI break for
any external code that might be examining those structs.
2012-05-04 17:44:31 -04:00
Bruce Momjian ebcaa5fcde Remove BSD/OS (BSDi) port. There are no known users upgrading to
Postgres 9.2, and perhaps no existing users either.
2012-05-03 10:58:44 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e9605a039b Even more duplicate word removal, in the spirit of the season 2012-05-02 20:56:03 +03:00
Robert Haas 0038110421 Avoid repeated CLOG access from heap_hot_search_buffer.
At the time we check whether the tuple is dead to all running
transactions, we've already verified that it isn't visible to our
scan, setting hint bits if appropriate.  So there's no need to
recheck CLOG for the all-dead test we do just a moment later.
So, add HeapTupleIsSurelyDead() to test the appropriate condition
under the assumption that all relevant hit bits are already set.

Review by Tom Lane.
2012-05-02 12:40:07 -04:00
Robert Haas 1b4998fd44 Further corrections from the department of redundancy department.
Thom Brown
2012-05-02 11:11:25 -04:00
Robert Haas e01e66f808 More duplicate word removal. 2012-05-02 09:28:16 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas f291ccd43e Remove duplicate words in comments.
Found these with grep -r "for for ".
2012-05-02 10:20:27 +03:00
Tom Lane 50c2d6a1a6 Kill some remaining references to SVR4 and univel.
Both terms still appear in a few places, but I thought it best to leave
those alone in context.
2012-05-02 00:29:17 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut f2f9439fbf Remove dead ports
Remove the following ports:

- dgux
- nextstep
- sunos4
- svr4
- ultrix4
- univel

These are obsolete and not worth rescuing.  In most cases, there is
circumstantial evidence that they wouldn't work anymore anyway.
2012-05-01 22:11:12 +03:00
Tom Lane 809e7e21af Converge all SQL-level statistics timing values to float8 milliseconds.
This patch adjusts the core statistics views to match the decision already
taken for pg_stat_statements, that values representing elapsed time should
be represented as float8 and measured in milliseconds.  By using float8,
we are no longer tied to a specific maximum precision of timing data.
(Internally, it's still microseconds, but we could now change that without
needing changes at the SQL level.)

The columns affected are
pg_stat_bgwriter.checkpoint_write_time
pg_stat_bgwriter.checkpoint_sync_time
pg_stat_database.blk_read_time
pg_stat_database.blk_write_time
pg_stat_user_functions.total_time
pg_stat_user_functions.self_time
pg_stat_xact_user_functions.total_time
pg_stat_xact_user_functions.self_time

The first four of these are new in 9.2, so there is no compatibility issue
from changing them.  The others require a release note comment that they
are now double precision (and can show a fractional part) rather than
bigint as before; also their underlying statistics functions now match
the column definitions, instead of returning bigint microseconds.
2012-04-30 14:03:33 -04:00
Robert Haas 0d2235a25b Remove duplicate word in comment.
Noted by Peter Geoghegan.
2012-04-30 13:14:46 -04:00
Tom Lane 1dd89eadcd Rename I/O timing statistics columns to blk_read_time and blk_write_time.
This seems more consistent with the pre-existing choices for names of
other statistics columns.  Rename assorted internal identifiers to match.
2012-04-29 18:13:33 -04:00
Tom Lane 309c64745e Rename track_iotiming GUC to track_io_timing.
This spelling seems significantly more readable to me.
2012-04-29 16:23:54 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 81107282a5 Change return type of ExceptionalCondition to void and mark it noreturn
In ancient times, it was thought that this wouldn't work because of
TrapMacro/AssertMacro, but changing those to use a comma operator
appears to work without compiler warnings.
2012-04-29 21:20:14 +03:00
Tom Lane cdbad241f4 Clear I/O timing counters after sending them to the stats collector.
This oversight caused the reported times to accumulate in an O(N^2)
fashion the longer a backend runs.
2012-04-28 15:11:13 -04:00
Tom Lane d6f7d4fdc5 Fix printing of whole-row Vars at top level of a SELECT targetlist.
Normally whole-row Vars are printed as "tabname.*".  However, that does not
work at top level of a targetlist, because per SQL standard the parser will
think that the "*" should result in column-by-column expansion; which is
not at all what a whole-row Var implies.  We used to just print the table
name in such cases, which works most of the time; but it fails if the table
name matches a column name available anywhere in the FROM clause.  This
could lead for instance to a view being interpreted differently after dump
and reload.  Adding parentheses doesn't fix it, but there is a reasonably
simple kluge we can use instead: attach a no-op cast, so that the "*" isn't
syntactically at top level anymore.  This makes the printing of such
whole-row Vars a lot more consistent with other Vars, and may indeed fix
more cases than just the reported one; I'm suspicious that cases involving
schema qualification probably didn't work properly before, either.

Per bug report and fix proposal from Abbas Butt, though this patch is quite
different in detail from his.

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2012-04-27 19:49:18 -04:00
Tom Lane 537b266953 Fix syslogger's rotation disable/re-enable logic.
If it fails to open a new log file, the syslogger assumes there's something
wrong with its parameters (such as log_directory), and stops attempting
automatic time-based or size-based log file rotations.  Sending it SIGHUP
is supposed to start that up again.  However, the original coding for that
was really bogus, involving clobbering a couple of GUC variables and hoping
that SIGHUP processing would restore them.  Get rid of that technique in
favor of maintaining a separate flag showing we've turned rotation off.
Per report from Mark Kirkwood.

Also, the syslogger will automatically attempt to create the log_directory
directory if it doesn't exist, but that was only happening at startup.
For consistency and ease of use, it should do the same whenever the value
of log_directory is changed by SIGHUP.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2012-04-27 00:12:42 -04:00
Robert Haas 3424bff90f Prevent index-only scans from returning wrong answers under Hot Standby.
The alternative of disallowing index-only scans in HS operation was
discussed, but the consensus was that it was better to treat marking
a page all-visible as a recovery conflict for snapshots that could still
fail to see XIDs on that page.  We may in the future try to soften this,
so that we simply force index scans to do heap fetches in cases where
this may be an issue, rather than throwing a hard conflict.
2012-04-26 20:00:21 -04:00
Tom Lane 7c85aa39fc Fix oversight in recent parameterized-path patch.
bitmap_scan_cost_est() has to be able to cope with a BitmapOrPath, but
I'd taken a shortcut that didn't work for that case.  Noted by Heikki.
Add some regression tests since this area is evidently under-covered.
2012-04-26 14:17:44 -04:00
Tom Lane 9fa82c9809 Fix planner's handling of RETURNING lists in writable CTEs.
setrefs.c failed to do "rtoffset" adjustment of Vars in RETURNING lists,
which meant they were left with the wrong varnos when the RETURNING list
was in a subquery.  That was never possible before writable CTEs, of
course, but now it's broken.  The executor fails to notice any problem
because ExecEvalVar just references the ecxt_scantuple for any normal
varno; but EXPLAIN breaks when the varno is wrong, as illustrated in a
recent complaint from Bartosz Dmytrak.

Since the eventual rtoffset of the subquery is not known at the time
we are preparing its plan node, the previous scheme of executing
set_returning_clause_references() at that time cannot handle this
adjustment.  Fortunately, it turns out that we don't really need to do it
that way, because all the needed information is available during normal
setrefs.c execution; we just have to dig it out of the ModifyTable node.
So, do that, and get rid of the kluge of early setrefs processing of
RETURNING lists.  (This is a little bit of a cheat in the case of inherited
UPDATE/DELETE, because we are not passing a "root" struct that corresponds
exactly to what the subplan was built with.  But that doesn't matter, and
anyway this is less ugly than early setrefs processing was.)

Back-patch to 9.1, where the problem became possible to hit.
2012-04-25 20:20:33 -04:00
Tom Lane 9873001e6d Another trivial comment-typo fix. 2012-04-25 14:28:58 -04:00
Robert Haas 3ce7f18e92 Casts to or from a domain type are ignored; warn and document.
Prohibiting this outright would break dumps taken from older versions
that contain such casts, which would create far more pain than is
justified here.

Per report by Jaime Casanova and subsequent discussion.
2012-04-24 09:20:53 -04:00
Robert Haas 5d4b60f2f2 Lots of doc corrections.
Josh Kupershmidt
2012-04-23 22:43:09 -04:00
Robert Haas 7ab9b2f3b7 Rearrange lazy_scan_heap to avoid visibility map race conditions.
We must set the visibility map bit before releasing our exclusive lock
on the heap page; otherwise, someone might clear the heap page bit
before we set the visibility map bit, leading to a situation where the
visibility map thinks the page is all-visible but it's really not.

This problem has existed since 8.4, but it wasn't critical before we
had index-only scans, since the worst case scenario was that the page
wouldn't get vacuumed until the next scan_all vacuum.

Along the way, a couple of minor, related improvements: (1) if we
pause the heap scan to do an index vac cycle, release any visibility
map page we're holding, since really long-running pins are not good
for a variety of reasons; and (2) warn if we see a page that's marked
all-visible in the visibility map but not on the page level, since
that should never happen any more (it was allowed in previous
releases, but not in 9.2).
2012-04-23 22:08:06 -04:00
Robert Haas 85efd5f065 Reduce hash size for compute_array_stats, compute_tsvector_stats.
The size is only a hint, but a big hint chews up a lot of memory without
apparently improving performance much.

Analysis and patch by Noah Misch.
2012-04-23 22:05:41 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 48658a1b81 Fix some typos
Josh Kupershmidt
2012-04-22 19:23:47 +03:00
Tom Lane 33e99153e9 Use fuzzy not exact cost comparison for the final tie-breaker in add_path.
Instead of an exact cost comparison, use a fuzzy comparison with 1e-10
delta after all other path metrics have proved equal.  This is to avoid
having platform-specific roundoff behaviors determine the choice when
two paths are really the same to our cost estimators.  Adjust the
recently-added test case that made it obvious we had a problem here.
2012-04-21 00:51:14 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 09ff76fcdb Recast "ONLY" column CHECK constraints as NO INHERIT
The original syntax wasn't universally loved, and it didn't allow its
usage in CREATE TABLE, only ALTER TABLE.  It now works everywhere, and
it also allows using ALTER TABLE ONLY to add an uninherited CHECK
constraint, per discussion.

The pg_constraint column has accordingly been renamed connoinherit.

This commit partly reverts some of the changes in
61d81bd28d, particularly some pg_dump and
psql bits, because now pg_get_constraintdef includes the necessary NO
INHERIT within the constraint definition.

Author: Nikhil Sontakke
Some tweaks by me
2012-04-20 23:56:57 -03:00
Tom Lane 1f03630011 Adjust join_search_one_level's handling of clauseless joins.
For an initial relation that lacks any join clauses (that is, it has to be
cartesian-product-joined to the rest of the query), we considered only
cartesian joins with initial rels appearing later in the initial-relations
list.  This creates an undesirable dependency on FROM-list order.  We would
never fail to find a plan, but perhaps we might not find the best available
plan.  Noted while discussing the logic with Amit Kapila.

Improve the comments a bit in this area, too.

Arguably this is a bug fix, but given the lack of complaints from the
field I'll refrain from back-patching.
2012-04-20 20:10:46 -04:00
Tom Lane 5b7b5518d0 Revise parameterized-path mechanism to fix assorted issues.
This patch adjusts the treatment of parameterized paths so that all paths
with the same parameterization (same set of required outer rels) for the
same relation will have the same rowcount estimate.  We cache the rowcount
estimates to ensure that property, and hopefully save a few cycles too.
Doing this makes it practical for add_path_precheck to operate without
a rowcount estimate: it need only assume that paths with different
parameterizations never dominate each other, which is close enough to
true anyway for coarse filtering, because normally a more-parameterized
path should yield fewer rows thanks to having more join clauses to apply.

In add_path, we do the full nine yards of comparing rowcount estimates
along with everything else, so that we can discard parameterized paths that
don't actually have an advantage.  This fixes some issues I'd found with
add_path rejecting parameterized paths on the grounds that they were more
expensive than not-parameterized ones, even though they yielded many fewer
rows and hence would be cheaper once subsequent joining was considered.

To make the same-rowcounts assumption valid, we have to require that any
parameterized path enforce *all* join clauses that could be obtained from
the particular set of outer rels, even if not all of them are useful for
indexing.  This is required at both base scans and joins.  It's a good
thing anyway since the net impact is that join quals are checked at the
lowest practical level in the join tree.  Hence, discard the original
rather ad-hoc mechanism for choosing parameterization joinquals, and build
a better one that has a more principled rule for when clauses can be moved.
The original rule was actually buggy anyway for lack of knowledge about
which relations are part of an outer join's outer side; getting this right
requires adding an outer_relids field to RestrictInfo.
2012-04-19 15:53:47 -04:00
Robert Haas 293ec33c32 Remove bogus comment from HeapTupleSatisfiesNow.
This has been wrong for a really long time.  We don't use two-phase
locking to protect against serialization anomalies.

Per discussion on pgsql-hackers about 2011-03-07; original report
by Dan Ports.
2012-04-18 11:50:45 -04:00
Robert Haas 4a6fab03f2 Finish rename of FastPathStrongLocks to FastPathStrongRelationLocks.
Commit 8e5ac74c12 tried to do this renaming,
but I relied on gcc to tell me where I needed to make changes, instead of
grep.

Noted by Jeff Davis.
2012-04-18 11:29:34 -04:00
Robert Haas 53c5b869b4 Tighten up error recovery for fast-path locking.
The previous code could cause a backend crash after BEGIN; SAVEPOINT a;
LOCK TABLE foo (interrupted by ^C or statement timeout); ROLLBACK TO
SAVEPOINT a; LOCK TABLE foo, and might have leaked strong-lock counts
in other situations.

Report by Zoltán Böszörményi; patch review by Jeff Davis.
2012-04-18 11:17:30 -04:00
Robert Haas ab77b2da8b Fix incorrect comment in SetBufferCommitInfoNeedsSave().
Noah Misch spotted the fact that the old comment is in fact incorrect, due
to memory ordering hazards.
2012-04-18 10:55:40 -04:00
Robert Haas e93c0b820f After PageSetAllVisible, use MarkBufferDirty.
Previously, we used SetBufferCommitInfoNeedsSave, but that's really
intended for dirty-marks we can theoretically afford to lose, such as
hint bits.  As for 9.2, the PD_ALL_VISIBLE mustn't be lost in this
way, since we could then end up with a heap page that isn't
all-visible and a visibility map page that is all visible, causing
index-only scans to return wrong answers.
2012-04-18 10:49:37 -04:00
Robert Haas b5eccaef2c Fix copyfuncs/equalfuncs support for ReassignOwnedStmt.
Noah Misch
2012-04-18 10:45:18 -04:00
Robert Haas 53bbc681ca Fix various infelicities in node functions.
Mostly, this consists of adding support for fields which exist in the
structure but aren't handled by copy/equal/outfuncs; but the create
foreign table case can actually produce garbage output.

Noah Misch
2012-04-18 10:43:16 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas fe546f3da6 Don't wait for the commit record to be replicated if we wrote no WAL.
When using synchronous replication, we waited for the commit record to be
replicated, but if we our transaction didn't write any other WAL records,
that's not required because we don't even flush the WAL locally to disk in
that case. This lead to long waits when committing a transaction that only
modified a temporary table. Bug spotted by Thom Brown.
2012-04-17 16:28:31 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut a33fcd7e79 Fix typo
Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
2012-04-16 15:36:40 +03:00
Robert Haas ea6a2d8d47 Rename synchronous_commit='write' to 'remote_write'.
Fujii Masao, per discussion on pgsql-hackers
2012-04-14 10:53:22 -04:00
Robert Haas 4a2d7ad76f pg_size_pretty(numeric)
The output of the new pg_xlog_location_diff function is of type numeric,
since it could theoretically overflow an int8 due to signedness; this
provides a convenient way to format such values.

Fujii Masao, with some beautification by me.
2012-04-14 08:07:25 -04:00
Tom Lane e54b10a62d Remove the "last ditch" code path in join_search_one_level().
So far as I can tell, it is no longer possible for this heuristic to do
anything useful, because the new weaker definition of
have_relevant_joinclause means that any relation with a joinclause must be
considered joinable to at least one other relation.  It would still be
possible for the code block to be entered, for example if there are join
order restrictions that prevent any join of the current level from being
formed; but in that case it's just a waste of cycles to attempt to form
cartesian joins, since the restrictions will still apply.

Furthermore, IMO the existence of this code path can mask bugs elsewhere;
we would have noticed the problem with cartesian joins a lot sooner if
this code hadn't compensated for it in the simplest case.

Accordingly, let's remove it and see what happens.  I'm committing this
separately from the prerequisite changes in have_relevant_joinclause,
just to make the question easier to revisit if there is some fault in
my logic.
2012-04-13 16:07:18 -04:00
Tom Lane e3ffd05b02 Weaken the planner's tests for relevant joinclauses.
We should be willing to cross-join two small relations if that allows us
to use an inner indexscan on a large relation (that is, the potential
indexqual for the large table requires both smaller relations).  This
worked in simple cases but fell apart as soon as there was a join clause
to a fourth relation, because the existence of any two-relation join clause
caused the planner to not consider clauseless joins between other base
relations.  The added regression test shows an example case adapted from
a recent complaint from Benoit Delbosc.

Adjust have_relevant_joinclause, have_relevant_eclass_joinclause, and
has_relevant_eclass_joinclause to consider that a join clause mentioning
three or more relations is sufficient grounds for joining any subset of
those relations, even if we have to do so via a cartesian join.  Since such
clauses are relatively uncommon, this shouldn't affect planning speed on
typical queries; in fact it should help a bit, because the latter two
functions in particular get significantly simpler.

Although this is arguably a bug fix, I'm not going to risk back-patching
it, since it might have currently-unforeseen consequences.
2012-04-13 16:07:17 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut c0cc526e8b Rename bytea_agg to string_agg and add delimiter argument
Per mailing list discussion, we would like to keep the bytea functions
parallel to the text functions, so rename bytea_agg to string_agg,
which already exists for text.

Also, to satisfy the rule that we don't want aggregate functions of
the same name with a different number of arguments, add a delimiter
argument, just like string_agg for text already has.
2012-04-13 21:36:59 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 64e1309c76 Consistently quote encoding and locale names in messages 2012-04-13 20:37:07 +03:00
Robert Haas 61167bfaf2 Fix typo in comment. 2012-04-13 08:54:13 -04:00
Robert Haas 5630eddf1e Update lazy_scan_heap header comment.
The previous comment described how things worked in PostgreSQL 8.2
and prior.
2012-04-13 08:51:19 -04:00
Tom Lane 732bfa2448 Fix cost estimation for indexscan filter conditions.
cost_index's method for estimating per-tuple costs of evaluating filter
conditions (a/k/a qpquals) was completely wrong in the presence of derived
indexable conditions, such as range conditions derived from a LIKE clause.
This was largely masked in common cases as a result of all simple operator
clauses having about the same costs, but it could show up in a big way when
dealing with functional indexes containing expensive functions, as seen for
example in bug #6579 from Istvan Endredy.  Rejigger the calculation to give
sane answers when the indexquals aren't a subset of the baserestrictinfo
list.  As a side benefit, we now do the calculation properly for cases
involving join clauses (ie, parameterized indexscans), which we always
overestimated before.

There are still cases where this is an oversimplification, such as clauses
that can be dropped because they are implied by a partial index's
predicate.  But we've never accounted for that in cost estimates before,
and I'm not convinced it's worth the cycles to try to do so.
2012-04-11 20:24:17 -04:00
Tom Lane 880bfc3287 Silently ignore any nonexistent schemas that are listed in search_path.
Previously we attempted to throw an error or at least warning for missing
schemas, but this was done inconsistently because of implementation
restrictions (in many cases, GUC settings are applied outside transactions
so that we can't do system catalog lookups).  Furthermore, there were
exceptions to the rule even in the beginning, and we'd been poking more
and more holes in it as time went on, because it turns out that there are
lots of use-cases for having some irrelevant items in a common search_path
value.  It seems better to just adopt a philosophy similar to what's always
been done with Unix PATH settings, wherein nonexistent or unreadable
directories are silently ignored.

This commit also fixes the documentation to point out that schemas for
which the user lacks USAGE privilege are silently ignored.  That's always
been true but was previously not documented.

This is mostly in response to Robert Haas' complaint that 9.1 started to
throw errors or warnings for missing schemas in cases where prior releases
had not.  We won't adopt such a significant behavioral change in a back
branch, so something different will be needed in 9.1.
2012-04-11 12:02:50 -04:00
Tom Lane 3769fa5fc6 Make pg_tablespace_location(0) return the database's default tablespace.
This definition is convenient when applying the function to the
reltablespace column of pg_class, since that's what zero means there;
and it doesn't interfere with any other plausible use of the function.
Per gripe from Bruce Momjian.
2012-04-10 21:43:14 -04:00
Tom Lane 0d9819f7e3 Measure epoch of timestamp-without-time-zone from local not UTC midnight.
This patch reverts commit 191ef2b407
and thereby restores the pre-7.3 behavior of EXTRACT(EPOCH FROM
timestamp-without-tz).  Per discussion, the more recent behavior was
misguided on a couple of grounds: it makes it hard to get a
non-timezone-aware epoch value for a timestamp, and it makes this one
case dependent on the value of the timezone GUC, which is incompatible
with having timestamp_part() labeled as immutable.

The other behavior is still available (in all releases) by explicitly
casting the timestamp to timestamp with time zone before applying EXTRACT.

This will need to be called out as an incompatible change in the 9.2
release notes.  Although having mutable behavior in a function marked
immutable is clearly a bug, we're not going to back-patch such a change.
2012-04-10 12:04:42 -04:00
Tom Lane 65fd91333e Fix an Assert that turns out to be reachable after all.
estimate_num_groups() gets unhappy with
	create table empty();
	select * from empty except select * from empty e2;
I can't see any actual use-case for such a query (and the table is illegal
per SQL spec), but it seems like a good idea that it not cause an assert
failure.
2012-04-09 11:58:24 -04:00
Tom Lane d515365a61 Don't bother copying empty support arrays in a zero-column MergeJoin.
The case could not arise when this code was originally written, but it can
now (since we made zero-column MergeJoins work for the benefit of FULL JOIN
ON TRUE).  I don't think there is any actual bug here, but we might as well
treat it consistently with other uses of COPY_POINTER_FIELD().  Per comment
from Ashutosh Bapat.
2012-04-09 11:41:54 -04:00
Robert Haas 3ae5133b1c Teach SLRU code to avoid replacing I/O-busy pages.
Patch by me; review by Tom Lane and others.
2012-04-08 23:05:55 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 03529a3ff9 set_stack_base() no longer needs to be called in PostgresMain.
This was a thinko in previous commit. Now that stack base pointer is now set
in PostmasterMain and SubPostmasterMain, it doesn't need to be set in
PostgresMain anymore.
2012-04-08 19:39:12 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas ef3883d130 Do stack-depth checking in all postmaster children.
We used to only initialize the stack base pointer when starting up a regular
backend, not in other processes. In particular, autovacuum workers can run
arbitrary user code, and without stack-depth checking, infinite recursion
in e.g an index expression will bring down the whole cluster.

The comment about PL/Java using set_stack_base() is not yet true. As the
code stands, PL/java still modifies the stack_base_ptr variable directly.
However, it's been discussed in the PL/Java mailing list that it should be
changed to use the function, because PL/Java is currently oblivious to the
register stack used on Itanium. There's another issues with PL/Java, namely
that the stack base pointer it sets is not really the base of the stack, it
could be something close to the bottom of the stack. That's a separate issue
that might need some further changes to this code, but that's a different
story.

Backpatch to all supported releases.
2012-04-08 19:07:55 +03:00
Tom Lane 7feecedcce Fix incorrect make maintainer-clean rule. 2012-04-07 18:16:50 -04:00
Tom Lane 95b9c333b2 Further adjustment of comment about qsort_tuple. 2012-04-07 17:48:40 -04:00
Tom Lane a25ef7a5f6 Remove useless variable to suppress compiler warning. 2012-04-07 16:44:43 -04:00
Tom Lane 0ab4db52c0 Fix misleading output from gin_desc().
XLOG_GIN_UPDATE_META_PAGE and XLOG_GIN_DELETE_LISTPAGE records were printed
with a list link field labeled as "blkno", which was confusing, especially
when the link was empty (InvalidBlockNumber).  Print the metapage block
number instead, since that's what's actually being updated.  We could
include the link values too as a separate field, but not clear it's worth
the trouble.

Back-patch to 8.4 where the dubious code was added.
2012-04-06 18:10:21 -04:00
Tom Lane 17b985b1a0 Fix broken comparetup_datum code.
Commit 337b6f5ecf contained the entirely
fanciful assumption that it had made comparetup_datum unreachable.
Reported and patched by Takashi Yamamoto.

Fix up some not terribly accurate/useful comments from that commit, too.
2012-04-06 16:58:50 -04:00
Tom Lane cea49fe82f Dept of second thoughts: improve the API for AnalyzeForeignTable.
If we make the initially-called function return the table physical-size
estimate, acquire_inherited_sample_rows will be able to use that to
allocate numbers of samples among child tables, when the day comes that
we want to support foreign tables in inheritance trees.
2012-04-06 16:04:10 -04:00
Tom Lane 263d9de66b Allow statistics to be collected for foreign tables.
ANALYZE now accepts foreign tables and allows the table's FDW to control
how the sample rows are collected.  (But only manual ANALYZEs will touch
foreign tables, for the moment, since among other things it's not very
clear how to handle remote permissions checks in an auto-analyze.)

contrib/file_fdw is extended to support this.

Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Shigeru Hanada, some further tweaking by me.
2012-04-06 15:02:35 -04:00
Simon Riggs 8cb53654db Add DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY [IF EXISTS], uses ShareUpdateExclusiveLock 2012-04-06 10:21:40 +01:00
Robert Haas 21cc529698 checkopint -> checkpoint
Report by Guillaume Lelarge.
2012-04-05 21:37:33 -04:00
Robert Haas b736aef2ec Publish checkpoint timing information to pg_stat_bgwriter.
Greg Smith, Peter Geoghegan, and Robert Haas
2012-04-05 14:04:37 -04:00
Robert Haas 644828908f Expose track_iotiming data via the statistics collector.
Ants Aasma's original patch to add timing information for buffer I/O
requests exposed this data at the relation level, which was judged too
costly.  I've here exposed it at the database level instead.
2012-04-05 11:40:24 -04:00
Tom Lane c17e863bc7 Fix syslogger to not lose log coherency under high load.
The original coding of the syslogger had an arbitrary limit of 20 large
messages concurrently in progress, after which it would just punt and dump
message fragments to the output file separately.  Our ambitions are a bit
higher than that now, so allow the data structure to expand as necessary.

Reported and patched by Andrew Dunstan; some editing by Tom
2012-04-04 15:05:10 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 38b9693fd9 Add support for renaming domain constraints 2012-04-03 08:11:51 +03:00
Simon Riggs 68219aaf6b Correct epoch of txid_current() when executed on a Hot Standby server.
Initialise ckptXidEpoch from starting checkpoint and maintain the correct
value as we roll forwards. This allows GetNextXidAndEpoch() to return the
correct epoch when executed during recovery. Backpatch to 9.0 when the
problem is first observable by a user.

Bug report from Daniel Farina
2012-03-29 14:55:30 +01:00
Andrew Dunstan aeca650226 Unbreak Windows builds broken by pgpipe removal. 2012-03-29 04:11:57 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 5762a4d909 Inherit max_safe_fds to child processes in EXEC_BACKEND mode.
Postmaster sets max_safe_fds by testing how many open file descriptors it
can open, and that is normally inherited by all child processes at fork().
Not so on EXEC_BACKEND, ie. Windows, however. Because of that, we
effectively ignored max_files_per_process on Windows, and always assumed
a conservative default of 32 simultaneous open files. That could have an
impact on performance, if you need to access a lot of different files
in a query. After this patch, the value is passed to child processes by
save/restore_backend_variables() among many other global variables.

It has been like this forever, but given the lack of complaints about it,
I'm not backpatching this.
2012-03-29 08:19:11 +03:00
Andrew Dunstan d2c1740dc2 Remove now redundant pgpipe code. 2012-03-28 23:24:07 -04:00
Tom Lane 5d3fcc4c2e Bend parse location rules for the convenience of pg_stat_statements.
Generally, the parse location assigned to a multiple-token construct is
the location of its leftmost token.  This commit breaks that rule for
the syntaxes TYPENAME 'LITERAL' and CAST(CONSTANT AS TYPENAME) --- the
resulting Const will have the location of the literal string, not the
typename or CAST keyword.  The cases where this matters are pretty thin on
the ground (no error messages in the regression tests change, for example),
and it's unlikely that any user would be confused anyway by an error cursor
pointing at the literal.  But still it's less than consistent.  The reason
for changing it is that contrib/pg_stat_statements wants to know the parse
location of the original literal, and it was agreed that this is the least
unpleasant way to preserve that information through parse analysis.

Peter Geoghegan
2012-03-27 15:17:41 -04:00
Tom Lane a40fa613b5 Add some infrastructure for contrib/pg_stat_statements.
Add a queryId field to Query and PlannedStmt.  This is not used by the
core backend, except for being copied around at appropriate times.
It's meant to allow plug-ins to track a particular query forward from
parse analysis to execution.

The queryId is intentionally not dumped into stored rules (and hence this
commit doesn't bump catversion).  You could argue that choice either way,
but it seems better that stored rule strings not have any dependency
on plug-ins that might or might not be present.

Also, add a post_parse_analyze_hook that gets invoked at the end of
parse analysis (but only for top-level analysis of complete queries,
not cases such as analyzing a domain's default-value expression).
This is mainly meant to be used to compute and assign a queryId,
but it could have other applications.

Peter Geoghegan
2012-03-27 15:17:40 -04:00
Robert Haas 40b9b95769 New GUC, track_iotiming, to track I/O timings.
Currently, the only way to see the numbers this gathers is via
EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, BUFFERS), but the plan is to add visibility through
the stats collector and pg_stat_statements in subsequent patches.

Ants Aasma, reviewed by Greg Smith, with some further changes by me.
2012-03-27 14:55:02 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut dcb33b1c64 Remove dead assignment
found by Coverity
2012-03-26 21:03:10 +03:00
Robert Haas 7386089d23 Code cleanup for heap_freeze_tuple.
It used to be case that lazy vacuum could call this function with only
a shared lock on the buffer, but neither lazy vacuum nor any other
code path does that any more.  Simplify the code accordingly and clean
up some related, obsolete comments.
2012-03-26 11:03:06 -04:00
Tom Lane e8476f46fc Fix COPY FROM for null marker strings that correspond to invalid encoding.
The COPY documentation says "COPY FROM matches the input against the null
string before removing backslashes".  It is therefore reasonable to presume
that null markers like E'\\0' will work ... and they did, until someone put
the tests in the wrong order during microoptimization-driven rewrites.
Since then, we've been failing if the null marker is something that would
de-escape to an invalidly-encoded string.  Since null markers generally
need to be something that can't appear in the data, this represents a
nontrivial loss of functionality; surprising nobody noticed it earlier.

Per report from Jeff Davis.  Backpatch to 8.4 where this got broken.
2012-03-25 23:17:22 -04:00
Tom Lane c7cea267de Replace empty locale name with implied value in CREATE DATABASE and initdb.
setlocale() accepts locale name "" as meaning "the locale specified by the
process's environment variables".  Historically we've accepted that for
Postgres' locale settings, too.  However, it's fairly unsafe to store an
empty string in a new database's pg_database.datcollate or datctype fields,
because then the interpretation could vary across postmaster restarts,
possibly resulting in index corruption and other unpleasantness.

Instead, we should expand "" to whatever it means at the moment of calling
CREATE DATABASE, which we can do by saving the value returned by
setlocale().

For consistency, make initdb set up the initial lc_xxx parameter values the
same way.  initdb was already doing the right thing for empty locale names,
but it did not replace non-empty names with setlocale results.  On a
platform where setlocale chooses to canonicalize the spellings of locale
names, this would result in annoying inconsistency.  (It seems that popular
implementations of setlocale don't do such canonicalization, which is a
pity, but the POSIX spec certainly allows it to be done.)  The same risk
of inconsistency leads me to not venture back-patching this, although it
could certainly be seen as a longstanding bug.

Per report from Jeff Davis, though this is not his proposed patch.
2012-03-25 21:47:22 -04:00
Tom Lane 8279eb4191 Fix planner's handling of outer PlaceHolderVars within subqueries.
For some reason, in the original coding of the PlaceHolderVar mechanism
I had supposed that PlaceHolderVars couldn't propagate into subqueries.
That is of course entirely possible.  When it happens, we need to treat
an outer-level PlaceHolderVar much like an outer Var or Aggref, that is
SS_replace_correlation_vars() needs to replace the PlaceHolderVar with
a Param, and then when building the finished SubPlan we have to provide
the PlaceHolderVar expression as an actual parameter for the SubPlan.
The handling of the contained expression is a bit delicate but it can be
treated exactly like an Aggref's expression.

In addition to the missing logic in subselect.c, prepjointree.c was failing
to search subqueries for PlaceHolderVars that need their relids adjusted
during subquery pullup.  It looks like everyplace else that touches
PlaceHolderVars got it right, though.

Per report from Mark Murawski.  In 9.1 and HEAD, queries affected by this
oversight would fail with "ERROR: Upper-level PlaceHolderVar found where
not expected".  But in 9.0 and 8.4, you'd silently get possibly-wrong
answers, since the value transmitted into the subquery wouldn't go to null
when it should.
2012-03-24 16:21:39 -04:00
Tom Lane ed61127be4 Cast some printf arguments to avoid possibly-nonportable behavior.
Per compiler warnings on buildfarm member black_firefly.
2012-03-23 20:18:04 -04:00
Tom Lane 81a646febe Refactor simplify_function et al to centralize argument simplification.
We were doing the recursive simplification of function/operator arguments
in half a dozen different places, with rather baroque logic to ensure it
didn't get done multiple times on some arguments.  This patch improves that
by postponing argument simplification until after we've dealt with named
parameters and added any needed default expressions.

Marti Raudsepp, somewhat hacked on by me
2012-03-23 19:15:58 -04:00
Tom Lane 0339047bc9 Code review for protransform patches.
Fix loss of previous expression-simplification work when a transform
function fires: we must not simply revert to untransformed input tree.
Instead build a dummy FuncExpr node to pass to the transform function.
This has the additional advantage of providing a simpler, more uniform
API for transform functions.

Move documentation to a somewhat less buried spot, relocate some
poorly-placed code, be more wary of null constants and invalid typmod
values, add an opr_sanity check on protransform function signatures,
and some other minor cosmetic adjustments.

Note: although this patch touches pg_proc.h, no need for catversion
bump, because the changes are cosmetic and don't actually change the
intended catalog contents.
2012-03-23 17:29:57 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 0e85abd658 Clean up compiler warnings from unused variables with asserts disabled
For those variables only used when asserts are enabled, use a new
macro PG_USED_FOR_ASSERTS_ONLY, which expands to
__attribute__((unused)) when asserts are not enabled.
2012-03-21 23:33:10 +02:00
Tom Lane f70f095c90 Allow new relmapper entries when allow_system_table_mods is true.
This restores the pre-9.0 situation that it's possible to add new indexes
on pg_class and other mapped-but-not-shared catalogs, so long as you broke
the glass and flipped the big red Dont-Touch-Me switch.  As before, there
are a lot of gotchas, and you'd have to be pretty desperate to try this
on a production database; but there doesn't seem to be a reason for
relmapper.c to be preventing such things all by itself.  Per
experimentation with a case suggested by Cody Cutrer.
2012-03-21 14:09:39 -04:00
Robert Haas aefa6d163e Add some CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() calls to the heap-sort call path.
I broke this in commit 337b6f5ecf, which
among other things arranged for quicksorts to CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS()
slightly less frequently.  Sadly, it also arranged for heapsorts to
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() much less frequently.  Repair.
2012-03-20 21:26:39 -04:00
Tom Lane 9dbf2b7d75 Restructure SELECT INTO's parsetree representation into CreateTableAsStmt.
Making this operation look like a utility statement seems generally a good
idea, and particularly so in light of the desire to provide command
triggers for utility statements.  The original choice of representing it as
SELECT with an IntoClause appendage had metastasized into rather a lot of
places, unfortunately, so that this patch is a great deal more complicated
than one might at first expect.

In particular, keeping EXPLAIN working for SELECT INTO and CREATE TABLE AS
subcommands required restructuring some EXPLAIN-related APIs.  Add-on code
that calls ExplainOnePlan or ExplainOneUtility, or uses
ExplainOneQuery_hook, will need adjustment.

Also, the cases PREPARE ... SELECT INTO and CREATE RULE ... SELECT INTO,
which formerly were accepted though undocumented, are no longer accepted.
The PREPARE case can be replaced with use of CREATE TABLE AS EXECUTE.
The CREATE RULE case doesn't seem to have much real-world use (since the
rule would work only once before failing with "table already exists"),
so we'll not bother with that one.

Both SELECT INTO and CREATE TABLE AS still return a command tag of
"SELECT nnnn".  There was some discussion of returning "CREATE TABLE nnnn",
but for the moment backwards compatibility wins the day.

Andres Freund and Tom Lane
2012-03-19 21:38:12 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 693ff85d47 backend: Fix minor memory leak in configuration file processing
Just for consistency with the other code paths.

found by Coverity
2012-03-16 20:34:59 +02:00
Tom Lane b67ad046e6 Improve commentary in match_pathkeys_to_index().
For a little while there I thought match_pathkeys_to_index() was broken
because it wasn't trying to match index columns to pathkeys in order.
Actually that's correct, because GiST can support ordering operators
on any random collection of index columns, but it sure needs a comment.
2012-03-16 14:07:21 -04:00
Tom Lane dd4134ea56 Revisit handling of UNION ALL subqueries with non-Var output columns.
In commit 57664ed25e I tried to fix a bug
reported by Teodor Sigaev by making non-simple-Var output columns distinct
(by wrapping their expressions with dummy PlaceHolderVar nodes).  This did
not work too well.  Commit b28ffd0fcc fixed
some ensuing problems with matching to child indexes, but per a recent
report from Claus Stadler, constraint exclusion of UNION ALL subqueries was
still broken, because constant-simplification didn't handle the injected
PlaceHolderVars well either.  On reflection, the original patch was quite
misguided: there is no reason to expect that EquivalenceClass child members
will be distinct.  So instead of trying to make them so, we should ensure
that we can cope with the situation when they're not.

Accordingly, this patch reverts the code changes in the above-mentioned
commits (though the regression test cases they added stay).  Instead, I've
added assorted defenses to make sure that duplicate EC child members don't
cause any problems.  Teodor's original problem ("MergeAppend child's
targetlist doesn't match MergeAppend") is addressed more directly by
revising prepare_sort_from_pathkeys to let the parent MergeAppend's sort
list guide creation of each child's sort list.

In passing, get rid of add_sort_column; as far as I can tell, testing for
duplicate sort keys at this stage is dead code.  Certainly it doesn't
trigger often enough to be worth expending cycles on in ordinary queries.
And keeping the test would've greatly complicated the new logic in
prepare_sort_from_pathkeys, because comparing pathkey list entries against
a previous output array requires that we not skip any entries in the list.

Back-patch to 9.1, like the previous patches.  The only known issue in
this area that wasn't caused by the ill-advised previous patches was the
MergeAppend planning failure, which of course is not relevant before 9.1.
It's possible that we need some of the new defenses against duplicate child
EC entries in older branches, but until there's some clear evidence of that
I'm going to refrain from back-patching further.
2012-03-16 13:11:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut eb990a2b9e Add const qualifier to tzn returned by timestamp2tm()
The tzn value might come from tm->tm_zone, which libc declares as
const, so it's prudent that the upper layers know about this as well.
2012-03-15 21:17:19 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 531e60aec0 Remove unused tzn arguments for timestamp2tm() 2012-03-15 21:13:35 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut ad4fb0d0d2 Improve EncodeDateTime and EncodeTimeOnly APIs
Use an explicit argument to tell whether to include the time zone in
the output, rather than using some undocumented pointer magic.
2012-03-14 23:03:34 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 6f018c6dda COPY: Add an assertion
This is for tools such as Coverity that don't know that the grammar
enforces that the case of not having a relation (but instead a query)
cannot happen in the FROM case.
2012-03-14 22:44:40 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut e684ab5e1e Add additional safety check against invalid backup label file
It was already checking for invalid data after "BACKUP FROM", but
would possibly crash if "BACKUP FROM" was missing altogether.

found by Coverity
2012-03-14 22:41:50 +02:00
Tom Lane b4af1c25bb Fix SPGiST vacuum algorithm to handle concurrent tuple motion properly.
A leaf tuple that we need to delete could get moved as a consequence of an
insertion happening concurrently with the VACUUM scan.  If it moves from a
page past the current scan point to a page before, we'll miss it, which is
not acceptable.  Hence, when we see a leaf-page REDIRECT that could have
been made since our scan started, chase down the redirection pointer much
as if we were doing a normal index search, and be sure to vacuum every page
it leads to.  This fixes the issue because, if the tuple was on page N at
the instant we start our scan, we will surely find it as a consequence of
chasing the redirect from page N, no matter how much it moves around in
between.  Problem noted by Takashi Yamamoto.
2012-03-12 16:10:28 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut bad250f4f3 Use correct sizeof operand in qsort call
Probably no practical impact, since all pointers ought to have the
same size, but it was wrong nonetheless.  Found by Coverity.
2012-03-12 20:56:13 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut c9f310d377 Add comment for missing break in switch
For clarity, following other sites, and to silence Coverity.
2012-03-12 20:55:09 +02:00
Tom Lane c6be1f43ab Make INSERT/UPDATE queries depend on their specific target columns.
We have always created a whole-table dependency for the target relation,
but that's not really good enough, as it doesn't prevent scenarios such
as dropping an individual target column or altering its type.  So we
have to create an individual dependency for each target column, as well.

Per report from Bill MacArthur of a rule containing UPDATE breaking
after such an alteration.  Note that this patch doesn't try to make
such cases work, only to ensure that the attempted ALTER TABLE throws
an error telling you it can't cope with adjusting the rule.

This is a long-standing bug, but given the lack of prior reports
I'm not going to risk back-patching it.  A back-patch wouldn't do
anything to fix existing rules' dependency lists, anyway.
2012-03-11 18:14:23 -04:00
Tom Lane c6a11b89e4 Teach SPGiST to store nulls and do whole-index scans.
This patch fixes the other major compatibility-breaking limitation of
SPGiST, that it didn't store anything for null values of the indexed
column, and so could not support whole-index scans or "x IS NULL"
tests.  The approach is to create a wholly separate search tree for
the null entries, and use fixed "allTheSame" insertion and search
rules when processing this tree, instead of calling the index opclass
methods.  This way the opclass methods do not need to worry about
dealing with nulls.

Catversion bump is for pg_am updates as well as the change in on-disk
format of SPGiST indexes; there are some tweaks in SPGiST WAL records
as well.

Heavily rewritten version of a patch by Oleg Bartunov and Teodor Sigaev.
(The original also stored nulls separately, but it reused GIN code to do
so; which required undesirable compromises in the on-disk format, and
would likely lead to bugs due to the GIN code being required to work in
two very different contexts.)
2012-03-11 16:29:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 86947e666d Add more detail to error message for invalid arguments for server process
It now prints the argument that was at fault.

Also fix a small misbehavior where the error message issued by
getopt() would complain about a program named "--single", because
that's what argv[0] is in the server process.
2012-03-11 02:03:52 +02:00
Tom Lane 03e56f798e Restructure SPGiST opclass interface API to support whole-index scans.
The original API definition was incapable of supporting whole-index scans
because there was no way to invoke leaf-value reconstruction without
checking any qual conditions.  Also, it was inefficient for
multiple-qual-condition scans because value reconstruction got done over
again for each qual condition, and because other internal work in the
consistent functions likewise had to be done for each qual.  To fix these
issues, pass the whole scankey array to the opclass consistent functions,
instead of only letting them see one item at a time.  (Essentially, the
loop over scankey entries is now inside the consistent functions not
outside them.  This makes the consistent functions a bit more complicated,
but not unreasonably so.)

In itself this commit does nothing except save a few cycles in
multiple-qual-condition index scans, since we can't support whole-index
scans on SPGiST indexes until nulls are included in the index.  However,
I consider this a must-fix for 9.2 because once we release it will get
very much harder to change the opclass API definition.
2012-03-10 18:36:49 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 39d74e346c Add support for renaming constraints
reviewed by Josh Berkus and Dimitri Fontaine
2012-03-10 20:19:13 +02:00
Robert Haas 07d1edb954 Extend object access hook framework to support arguments, and DROP.
This allows loadable modules to get control at drop time, perhaps for the
purpose of performing additional security checks or to log the event.
The initial purpose of this code is to support sepgsql, but other
applications should be possible as well.

KaiGai Kohei, reviewed by me.
2012-03-09 14:34:56 -05:00
Tom Lane b14953932d Revise FDW planning API, again.
Further reflection shows that a single callback isn't very workable if we
desire to let FDWs generate multiple Paths, because that forces the FDW to
do all work necessary to generate a valid Plan node for each Path.  Instead
split the former PlanForeignScan API into three steps: GetForeignRelSize,
GetForeignPaths, GetForeignPlan.  We had already bit the bullet of breaking
the 9.1 FDW API for 9.2, so this shouldn't cause very much additional pain,
and it's substantially more flexible for complex FDWs.

Add an fdw_private field to RelOptInfo so that the new functions can save
state there rather than possibly having to recalculate information two or
three times.

In addition, we'd not thought through what would be needed to allow an FDW
to set up subexpressions of its choice for runtime execution.  We could
treat ForeignScan.fdw_private as an executable expression but that seems
likely to break existing FDWs unnecessarily (in particular, it would
restrict the set of node types allowable in fdw_private to those supported
by expression_tree_walker).  Instead, invent a separate field fdw_exprs
which will receive the postprocessing appropriate for expression trees.
(One field is enough since it can be a list of expressions; also, we assume
the corresponding expression state tree(s) will be held within fdw_state,
so we don't need to add anything to ForeignScanState.)

Per review of Hanada Shigeru's pgsql_fdw patch.  We may need to tweak this
further as we continue to work on that patch, but to me it feels a lot
closer to being right now.
2012-03-09 12:49:25 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 342baf4ce6 Update outdated comment. HeapTupleHeader.t_natts field doesn't exist anymore.
Kevin Grittner
2012-03-09 08:07:56 +02:00
Tom Lane 08dd23cec7 Fix some issues with temp/transient tables in extension scripts.
Phil Sorber reported that a rewriting ALTER TABLE within an extension
update script failed, because it creates and then drops a placeholder
table; the drop was being disallowed because the table was marked as an
extension member.  We could hack that specific case but it seems likely
that there might be related cases now or in the future, so the most
practical solution seems to be to create an exception to the general rule
that extension member objects can only be dropped by dropping the owning
extension.  To wit: if the DROP is issued within the extension's own
creation or update scripts, we'll allow it, implicitly performing an
"ALTER EXTENSION DROP object" first.  This will simplify cases such as
extension downgrade scripts anyway.

No docs change since we don't seem to have documented the idea that you
would need ALTER EXTENSION DROP for such an action to begin with.

Also, arrange for explicitly temporary tables to not get linked as
extension members in the first place, and the same for the magic
pg_temp_nnn schemas that are created to hold them.  This prevents assorted
unpleasant results if an extension script creates a temp table: the forced
drop at session end would either fail or remove the entire extension, and
neither of those outcomes is desirable.  Note that this doesn't fix the
ALTER TABLE scenario, since the placeholder table is not temp (unless the
table being rewritten is).

Back-patch to 9.1.
2012-03-08 15:53:09 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas d93f209f48 Silence warning about unused variable, when building without assertions. 2012-03-08 11:10:02 +02:00
Tom Lane 66a7e6bae9 Improve estimation of IN/NOT IN by assuming array elements are distinct.
In constructs such as "x IN (1,2,3,4)" and "x <> ALL(ARRAY[1,2,3,4])",
we formerly always used a general-purpose assumption that the probability
of success is independent for each comparison of "x" to an array element.
But in real-world usage of these constructs, that's a pretty poor
assumption; it's much saner to assume that the array elements are distinct
and so the match probabilities are disjoint.  Apply that assumption if the
operator appears to behave as equality (for ANY) or inequality (for ALL).
But fall back to the normal independent-probabilities calculation if this
yields an impossible result, ie probability > 1 or < 0.  We could protect
ourselves against bad estimates even more by explicitly checking for equal
array elements, but that is expensive and doesn't seem worthwhile: doing
it would amount to optimizing for poorly-written queries at the expense
of well-written ones.

Daniele Varrazzo and Tom Lane, after a suggestion by Ants Aasma
2012-03-07 22:59:49 -05:00
Tom Lane 9088d1b965 Add GetForeignColumnOptions() to foreign.c, and add some documentation.
GetForeignColumnOptions provides some abstraction for accessing
column-specific FDW options, on a par with the access functions that were
already provided here for other FDW-related information.

Adjust file_fdw.c to use GetForeignColumnOptions instead of equivalent
hand-rolled code.

In addition, add some SGML documentation for the functions exported by
foreign.c that are meant for use by FDW authors.

(This is the fdw_helper portion of the proposed pgsql_fdw patch.)

Hanada Shigeru, reviewed by KaiGai Kohei
2012-03-07 18:20:58 -05:00
Tom Lane d4bf3c9c94 Expose an API for calculating catcache hash values.
Now that cache invalidation callbacks get only a hash value, and not a
tuple TID (per commits 632ae6829f and
b5282aa893), the only way they can restrict
what they invalidate is to know what the hash values mean.  setrefs.c was
doing this via a hard-wired assumption but that seems pretty grotty, and
it'll only get worse as more cases come up.  So let's expose a calculation
function that takes the same parameters as SearchSysCache.  Per complaint
from Marko Kreen.
2012-03-07 14:51:13 -05:00
Tom Lane 19dbc34631 Add a hook for processing messages due to be sent to the server log.
Use-cases for this include custom log filtering rules and custom log
message transmission mechanisms (for instance, lossy log message
collection, which has been discussed several times recently).

As is our common practice for hooks, there's no regression test nor
user-facing documentation for this, though the author did exhibit a
sample module using the hook.

Martin Pihlak, reviewed by Marti Raudsepp
2012-03-06 15:35:41 -05:00
Robert Haas bc97c38115 Typo fix.
Fujii Masao
2012-03-06 08:23:51 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas e587e2e3e3 Make the comments more clear on the fact that UpdateFullPageWrites() is not
safe to call concurrently from multiple processes.
2012-03-06 10:45:58 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7714c63829 Remove extra copies of LogwrtResult.
This simplifies the code a little bit. The new rule is that to update
XLogCtl->LogwrtResult, you must hold both WALWriteLock and info_lck, whereas
before we had two copies, one that was protected by WALWriteLock and another
protected by info_lck. The code that updates them was already holding both
locks, so merging the two is trivial.

The third copy, XLogCtl->Insert.LogwrtResult, was not totally redundant, it
was used in AdvanceXLInsertBuffer to update the backend-local copy, before
acquiring the info_lck to read the up-to-date value. But the value of that
seems dubious; at best it's saving one spinlock acquisition per completed
WAL page, which is not significant compared to all the other work involved.
And in practice, it's probably not saving even that much.
2012-03-06 10:18:33 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3b682df326 Simplify the way changes to full_page_writes are logged.
It's harmless to do full page writes even when not strictly necessary, so
when turning full_page_writes on, we can set the global flag first, and then
call XLogInsert. Likewise, when turning it off, we can write the WAL record
first, and then clear the flag. This way XLogInsert doesn't need any special
handling of the XLOG_FPW_CHANGE record type. XLogInsert is complicated
enough already, so anything we can keep away from there is a good thing.

Actually I don't think the atomicity of the shared memory flag matters,
anyway, because we only write the XLOG_FPW_CHANGE at the end of recovery,
when there are no concurrent WAL insertions going on. But might as well make
it safe, in case we allow changing full_page_writes on the fly in the
future.
2012-03-06 09:48:30 +02:00
Tom Lane 6b289942bf Redesign PlanForeignScan API to allow multiple paths for a foreign table.
The original API specification only allowed an FDW to create a single
access path, which doesn't seem like a terribly good idea in hindsight.
Instead, move the responsibility for building the Path node and calling
add_path() into the FDW's PlanForeignScan function.  Now, it can do that
more than once if appropriate.  There is no longer any need for the
transient FdwPlan struct, so get rid of that.

Etsuro Fujita, Shigeru Hanada, Tom Lane
2012-03-05 16:15:59 -05:00
Tom Lane 80da9e68fd Rewrite GiST support code for rangetypes.
This patch installs significantly smarter penalty and picksplit functions
for ranges, making GiST indexes for them smaller and faster to search.

There is no on-disk format change, so no catversion bump, but you'd need
to REINDEX to get the benefits for any existing index.

Alexander Korotkov, reviewed by Jeff Davis
2012-03-04 22:50:06 -05:00
Tom Lane e2eed78910 Remove useless "rough estimate" path from mcelem_array_contained_selec.
The code in this function that tried to cope with a missing count histogram
was quite ineffective for anything except a perfectly flat distribution.
Furthermore, since we were already punting for missing MCELEM slot, it's
rather useless to sweat over missing DECHIST: there are no cases where
ANALYZE will create the first but not the second.  So just simplify the
code by punting rather than pretending we can do something useful.
2012-03-04 16:03:38 -05:00
Tom Lane 4fb694aebc Improve histogram-filling loop in new compute_array_stats() code.
Do "frac" arithmetic in int64 to prevent overflow with large statistics
targets, and improve the comments so people have some chance of
understanding how it works.

Alexander Korotkov and Tom Lane
2012-03-04 15:40:16 -05:00
Magnus Hagander 141b89826d More carefully validate xlog location string inputs
Now that we have validate_xlog_location, call it from the previously
existing functions taking xlog locatoins as a string input.

Suggested by Fujii Masao
2012-03-04 12:25:47 +01:00
Magnus Hagander bc5ac36865 Add function pg_xlog_location_diff to help comparisons
Comparing two xlog locations are useful for example when calculating
replication lag.

Euler Taveira de Oliveira, reviewed by Fujii Masao, and some cleanups
from me
2012-03-04 12:22:38 +01:00
Tom Lane 0e5e167aae Collect and use element-frequency statistics for arrays.
This patch improves selectivity estimation for the array <@, &&, and @>
(containment and overlaps) operators.  It enables collection of statistics
about individual array element values by ANALYZE, and introduces
operator-specific estimators that use these stats.  In addition,
ScalarArrayOpExpr constructs of the forms "const = ANY/ALL (array_column)"
and "const <> ANY/ALL (array_column)" are estimated by treating them as
variants of the containment operators.

Since we still collect scalar-style stats about the array values as a
whole, the pg_stats view is expanded to show both these stats and the
array-style stats in separate columns.  This creates an incompatible change
in how stats for tsvector columns are displayed in pg_stats: the stats
about lexemes are now displayed in the array-related columns instead of the
original scalar-related columns.

There are a few loose ends here, notably that it'd be nice to be able to
suppress either the scalar-style stats or the array-element stats for
columns for which they're not useful.  But the patch is in good enough
shape to commit for wider testing.

Alexander Korotkov, reviewed by Noah Misch and Nathan Boley
2012-03-03 20:20:57 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut b59ca98209 Allow CREATE TABLE (LIKE ...) from composite type
The only reason this didn't work before was that parserOpenTable()
rejects composite types.  So use relation_openrv() directly and
manually do the errposition() setup that parserOpenTable() does.
2012-03-03 16:03:05 +02:00
Tom Lane 44634e474f Allow child-relation entries to be made in ec_has_const EquivalenceClasses.
This fixes an oversight in commit 11cad29c91,
which introduced MergeAppend plans.  Before that happened, we never
particularly cared about the sort ordering of scans of inheritance child
relations, since appending their outputs together would destroy any
ordering anyway.  But now it's important to be able to match child relation
sort orderings to those of the surrounding query.  The original coding of
add_child_rel_equivalences skipped ec_has_const EquivalenceClasses, on the
originally-correct grounds that adding child expressions to them was
useless.  The effect of this is that when a parent variable is equated to
a constant, we can't recognize that index columns on the equivalent child
variables are not sort-significant; that is, we can't recognize that a
child index on, say, (x, y) is able to generate output in "ORDER BY y"
order when there is a clause "WHERE x = constant".  Adding child
expressions to the (x, constant) EquivalenceClass fixes this, without any
downside that I can see other than a few more planner cycles expended on
such queries.

Per recent gripe from Robert McGehee.  Back-patch to 9.1 where MergeAppend
was introduced.
2012-03-02 14:29:07 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 6688d2878e Add COLLATION FOR expression
reviewed by Jaime Casanova
2012-03-02 21:12:16 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2502f45979 When a GiST page is split during index build, it might not have a buffer.
Previously it was thought that it's impossible as the code stands, because
insertions create buffers as tuples are cascaded downwards, and index
split also creaters buffers eagerly for all halves. But the example from
Jay Levitt demonstrates that it can happen, when the root page is split.
It's in fact OK if the buffer doesn't exist, so we just need to remove the
sanity check. In fact, we've been discussing the possibility of destroying
empty buffers to conserve memory, which would render the sanity check
completely useless anyway.

Fix by Alexander Korotkov
2012-03-02 13:16:09 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera 3433c6ba00 Remove TOAST table from pg_database
The only toastable column now is datacl, but we don't really support
long ACLs anyway.  The TOAST table should have been removed when the
pg_db_role_setting catalog was introduced in commit
2eda8dfb52, but I forgot to do that.

Per -hackers discussion on March 2011.
2012-03-01 12:50:52 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas d6a7271958 Correctly detect SSI conflicts of prepared transactions after crash.
A prepared transaction can get new conflicts in and out after preparing, so
we cannot rely on the in- and out-flags stored in the statefile at prepare-
time. As a quick fix, make the conservative assumption that after a restart,
all prepared transactions are considered to have both in- and out-conflicts.
That can lead to unnecessary rollbacks after a crash, but that shouldn't be
a big problem in practice; you don't want prepared transactions to hang
around for a long time anyway.

Dan Ports
2012-02-29 15:42:36 +02:00
Tom Lane 5c02a00d44 Move CRC tables to libpgport, and provide them in a separate include file.
This makes it much more convenient to build tools for Postgres that are
separately compiled and require a matching CRC implementation.

To prevent multiple copies of the CRC polynomial tables being introduced
into the postgres binaries, they are now included in the static library
libpgport that is mainly meant for replacement system functions.  That
seems like a bit of a kludge, but there's no better place.

This cleans up building of the tools pg_controldata and pg_resetxlog,
which previously had to build their own copies of pg_crc.o.

In the future, external programs that need access to the CRC tables can
include the tables directly from the new header file pg_crc_tables.h.

Daniel Farina, reviewed by Abhijit Menon-Sen and Tom Lane
2012-02-28 19:53:39 -05:00
Tom Lane 0140a11b9b Fix thinko in new match_join_clauses_to_index() logic.
We don't need to constrain the other side of an indexable join clause to
not be below an outer join; an example here is

SELECT FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 ON t1.a = t2.b LEFT JOIN t3 ON t2.c = t3.d;

We can consider an inner indexscan on t3.d using c = d as indexqual, even
though t2.c is potentially nulled by a previous outer join.  The comparable
logic in orindxpath.c has always worked that way, but I was being overly
cautious here.
2012-02-28 18:10:40 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 973e9fb294 Add const qualifiers where they are accidentally cast away
This only produces warnings under -Wcast-qual, but it's more correct
and consistent in any case.
2012-02-28 12:42:08 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera cb3a7c2b95 ALTER TABLE: skip FK validation when it's safe to do so
We already skip rewriting the table in these cases, but we still force a
whole table scan to validate the data.  This can be skipped, and thus
we can make the whole ALTER TABLE operation just do some catalog touches
instead of scanning the table, when these two conditions hold:

(a) Old and new pg_constraint.conpfeqop match exactly.  This is actually
stronger than needed; we could loosen things by way of operator
families, but it'd require a lot more effort.

(b) The functions, if any, implementing a cast from the foreign type to
the primary opcintype are the same.  For this purpose, we can consider a
binary coercion equivalent to an exact type match.  When the opcintype
is polymorphic, require that the old and new foreign types match
exactly.  (Since ri_triggers.c does use the executor, the stronger check
for polymorphic types is no mere future-proofing.  However, no core type
exercises its necessity.)

Author: Noah Misch

Committer's note: catalog version bumped due to change of the Constraint
node.  I can't actually find any way to have such a node in a stored
rule, but given that we have "out" support for them, better be safe.
2012-02-27 19:10:24 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut 9bf8603c7a Call check_keywords.pl in maintainer-check
For that purpose, have check_keywords.pl print errors to stderr and
return a useful exit status.
2012-02-27 13:53:12 +02:00