Commit Graph

31592 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Robert Haas
4e5fe9ad19 Centralize executor-related partitioning code.
Some code is moved from partition.c, which has grown very quickly lately;
splitting the executor parts out might help to keep it from getting
totally out of control.  Other code is moved from execMain.c.  All is
moved to a new file execPartition.c.  get_partition_for_tuple now has
a new interface that more clearly separates executor concerns from
generic concerns.

Amit Langote.  A slight comment tweak by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/1f0985f8-3b61-8bc4-4350-baa6d804cb6d@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-11-15 10:26:25 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
cd8ce3a22c Add hooks for session start and session end
These hooks can be used in loadable modules. A simple test module is
included.

Discussion:  https://postgr.es/m/20170720204733.40f2b7eb.nagata@sraoss.co.jp

Fabrízio de Royes Mello  and Yugo Nagata
Reviewed by Michael Paquier and Aleksandr Parfenov
2017-11-15 10:16:34 -05:00
Robert Haas
ebc189e122 Fix typo.
Jesper Pedersen

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/000f92d6-f623-95a5-b341-46e2c0495cea@redhat.com
2017-11-15 08:37:41 -05:00
Robert Haas
e5253fdc4f Add parallel_leader_participation GUC.
Sometimes, for testing, it's useful to have the leader do nothing but
read tuples from workers; and it's possible that could work out better
even in production.

Thomas Munro, reviewed by Amit Kapila and by me.  A few final tweaks
by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2U++Lp3bNTv2Bv_kkr5NE2pOyHhxU=G0YTa4ZhSYhHiw@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-15 08:23:18 -05:00
Tom Lane
7518049980 Prevent int128 from requiring more than MAXALIGN alignment.
Our initial work with int128 neglected alignment considerations, an
oversight that came back to bite us in bug #14897 from Vincent Lachenal.
It is unsurprising that int128 might have a 16-byte alignment requirement;
what's slightly more surprising is that even notoriously lax Intel chips
sometimes enforce that.

Raising MAXALIGN seems out of the question: the costs in wasted disk and
memory space would be significant, and there would also be an on-disk
compatibility break.  Nor does it seem very practical to try to allow some
data structures to have more-than-MAXALIGN alignment requirement, as we'd
have to push knowledge of that throughout various code that copies data
structures around.

The only way out of the box is to make type int128 conform to the system's
alignment assumptions.  Fortunately, gcc supports that via its
__attribute__(aligned()) pragma; and since we don't currently support
int128 on non-gcc-workalike compilers, we shouldn't be losing any platform
support this way.

Although we could have just done pg_attribute_aligned(MAXIMUM_ALIGNOF) and
called it a day, I did a little bit of extra work to make the code more
portable than that: it will also support int128 on compilers without
__attribute__(aligned()), if the native alignment of their 128-bit-int
type is no more than that of int64.

Add a regression test case that exercises the one known instance of the
problem, in parallel aggregation over a bigint column.

This will need to be back-patched, along with the preparatory commit
91aec93e6.  But let's see what the buildfarm makes of it first.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171110185747.31519.28038@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-11-14 15:03:55 -05:00
Tom Lane
91aec93e60 Rearrange c.h to create a "compiler characteristics" section.
Generalize section 1 to handle stuff that is principally about the
compiler (not libraries), such as attributes, and collect stuff there
that had been dropped into various other parts of c.h.  Also, push
all the gettext macros into section 8, so that section 0 is really
just inclusions rather than inclusions and random other stuff.

The primary goal here is to get pg_attribute_aligned() defined before
section 3, so that we can use it with int128.  But this seems like good
cleanup anyway.

This patch just moves macro definitions around, and shouldn't result
in any changes in generated code.  But I'll push it out separately
to see if the buildfarm agrees.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171110185747.31519.28038@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-11-14 13:46:54 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
a61f5ab986 Simplify index_[constraint_]create API
Instead of passing large swaths of boolean arguments, define some flags
that can be used in a bitmask.  This makes it easier not only to figure
out what each call site is doing, but also to add some new flags.

The flags are split in two -- one set for index_create directly and
another for constraints.  index_create() itself receives both, and then
passes down the latter to index_constraint_create(), which can also be
called standalone.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171023151251.j75uoe27gajdjmlm@alvherre.pgsql
Reviewed-by: Simon Riggs
2017-11-14 15:19:05 +01:00
Tom Lane
591c504fad Allow running just selected steps of pgbench's initialization sequence.
This feature caters to specialized use-cases such as running the normal
pgbench scenario with nonstandard indexes, or inserting other actions
between steps of the initialization sequence.  The normal sequence of
initialization actions is broken down into half a dozen steps which can
be executed in a user-specified order, to the extent to which that's
sensible.  The actions themselves aren't changed, except to make them
more robust against nonstandard uses:

* all four tables are now dropped in one DROP command, to reduce
assumptions about what foreign key relationships exist;

* all four tables are now truncated at the start of the data load
step, for consistency;

* the foreign key creation commands now specify constraint names, to
prevent accidentally creating duplicate constraints by executing the
'f' step twice.

Make some cosmetic adjustments in the messages emitted by pgbench
so that it's clear which steps are getting run, and so that the
messages agree with the documented names of the steps.

In passing, fix failure to enforce that the -v option is used only
in benchmarking mode.

Masahiko Sawada, reviewed by Fabien Coelho, editorialized a bit by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoCsz0ZzfCFcxYZ+PUdpkDd5VsCSG0Pre_-K1EgokCDFYA@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-13 16:40:09 -05:00
Robert Haas
44ae64c388 Push target list evaluation through Gather Merge.
We already do this for Gather, but it got overlooked for Gather Merge.

Amit Kapila, with review and minor revisions by Rushabh Lathia
and by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1KUC5Uyu7qaifxrjpHxbSeoQh3yzwN3bThnJsmJcZ-qtA@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-13 16:37:42 -05:00
Robert Haas
e64861c79b Track in the plan the types associated with PARAM_EXEC parameters.
Up until now, we only tracked the number of parameters, which was
sufficient to allocate an array of Datums of the appropriate size,
but not sufficient to, for example, know how to serialize a Datum
stored in one of those slots.  An upcoming patch wants to do that,
so add this tracking to make it possible.

Patch by me, reviewed by Tom Lane and Amit Kapila.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYqpxDKn8koHdW8BEKk8FMUL0=e8m2Qe=M+r0UBjr3tuQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-13 15:24:12 -05:00
Stephen Frost
cfd8c87e16 Fix typo
Determinisitcally -> Deterministically

Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqSauJ9gUMzj1aiXQVxqEkyko+WZ+wUac8_hB_M_bO6U_A@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-13 09:40:30 -05:00
Noah Misch
9363b8b79b MSVC: Rebuild spiexceptions.h when out of date.
Also, add a warning to catch future instances of naming a nonexistent
file as a prerequisite.  Back-patch to 9.3 (all supported versions).
2017-11-12 18:43:32 -08:00
Noah Misch
cbfffee41c Install Windows crash dump handler before all else.
Apart from calling write_stderr() on failure, the handler depends on no
PostgreSQL facilities.  We have experienced crashes before reaching the
former call site.  Given such an early crash, this change cannot hurt
and may produce a helpful dump.  Absent an early crash, this change has
no effect.  Back-patch to 9.3 (all supported versions).

Takayuki Tsunakawa

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0A3221C70F24FB45833433255569204D1F80CD13@G01JPEXMBYT05
2017-11-12 14:31:00 -08:00
Noah Misch
e02571b73f Don't call pgwin32_message_to_UTF16() without CurrentMemoryContext.
PostgreSQL running as a Windows service crashed upon calling
write_stderr() before MemoryContextInit().  This fix completes work
started in 5735efee15.  Messages this
early contain only ASCII bytes; if we removed the CurrentMemoryContext
requirement, the ensuing conversions would have no effect.  Back-patch
to 9.3 (all supported versions).

Takayuki Tsunakawa, reviewed by Michael Paquier.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0A3221C70F24FB45833433255569204D1F80CC73@G01JPEXMBYT05
2017-11-12 13:03:15 -08:00
Noah Misch
0b7e76eb2b Add post-2010 ecpg tests to checktcp.
This suite had been a proper superset of the regular ecpg test suite,
but the three newest tests didn't reach it.  To make this less likely to
recur, delete the extra schedule file and pass the TCP-specific test on
the command line.  Back-patch to 9.3 (all supported versions).
2017-11-11 14:35:22 -08:00
Noah Misch
34baf8a00b Make connect/test1 independent of localhost IPv6.
Since commit 868898739a, it has assumed
"localhost" resolves to both ::1 and 127.0.0.1.  We gain nothing from
that assumption, and it does not hold in a default installation of Red
Hat Enterprise Linux 5.  Back-patch to 9.3 (all supported versions).
2017-11-11 14:33:02 -08:00
Noah Misch
4b865aee25 Fix previous commit's test, for non-UTF8 databases with non-XML builds.
To ensure stable output, catch one more configuration-specific error.
Back-patch to 9.3, like the commit that added the test.
2017-11-11 13:07:46 -08:00
Noah Misch
2918fcedbf Ignore XML declaration in xpath_internal(), for UTF8 databases.
When a value contained an XML declaration naming some other encoding,
this function interpreted UTF8 bytes as the named encoding, yielding
mojibake.  xml_parse() already has similar logic.  This would be
necessary but not sufficient for non-UTF8 databases, so preserve
behavior there until the xpath facility can support such databases
comprehensively.  Back-patch to 9.3 (all supported versions).

Pavel Stehule and Noah Misch

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRC-dM=tT=QkGi+Achkm+gwPmjyOayGuUfXVumCxkDgYWg@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-11 11:10:53 -08:00
Robert Haas
5edc63bda6 Account for the effect of lossy pages when costing bitmap scans.
Dilip Kumar, reviewed by Alexander Kumenkov, Amul Sul, and me.
Some final adjustments by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFiTN-sYtqUOXQ4SpuhTv0Z9gD0si3YxZGv_PQAAMX8qbOotcg@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-10 16:50:50 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
0c98d0dd5c Fix some null pointer dereferences in LDAP auth code
An LDAP URL without a host name such as "ldap://" or without a base DN
such as "ldap://localhost" would cause a crash when reading pg_hba.conf.

If no binddn is configured, an error message might end up trying to print a
null pointer, which could crash on some platforms.

Author: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-11-10 14:21:32 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
0e1539ba0d Add some const decorations to prototypes
Reviewed-by: Fabien COELHO <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
2017-11-10 13:38:57 -05:00
Robert Haas
b9941d3468 Fix incorrect comment.
Etsuro Fujita

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/5A05728E.4050009@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-11-10 10:55:09 -05:00
Robert Haas
1aba8e651a Add hash partitioning.
Hash partitioning is useful when you want to partition a growing data
set evenly.  This can be useful to keep table sizes reasonable, which
makes maintenance operations such as VACUUM faster, or to enable
partition-wise join.

At present, we still depend on constraint exclusion for partitioning
pruning, and the shape of the partition constraints for hash
partitioning is such that that doesn't work.  Work is underway to fix
that, which should both improve performance and make partitioning
pruning work with hash partitioning.

Amul Sul, reviewed and tested by Dilip Kumar, Ashutosh Bapat, Yugo
Nagata, Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, Jesper Pedersen, and by me.  A few
final tweaks also by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b96fhpJAP=ALbETmeLk1Uni_GFZD938zgenhF49qgDTjaQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-09 18:07:44 -05:00
Tom Lane
ae20b23a9e Refactor permissions checks for large objects.
Up to now, ACL checks for large objects happened at the level of
the SQL-callable functions, which led to CVE-2017-7548 because of a
missing check.  Push them down to be enforced in inv_api.c as much
as possible, in hopes of preventing future bugs.  This does have the
effect of moving read and write permission errors to happen at lo_open
time not loread or lowrite time, but that seems acceptable.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqRHmNOYbETnc_2EjsuzSM00Z+BWKv9sy6tnvSd5gWT_JA@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-09 12:56:07 -05:00
Tom Lane
5ecc0d738e Restrict lo_import()/lo_export() via SQL permissions not hard-wired checks.
While it's generally unwise to give permissions on these functions to
anyone but a superuser, we've been moving away from hard-wired permission
checks inside functions in favor of using the SQL permission system to
control access.  Bring lo_import() and lo_export() into compliance with
that approach.

In particular, this removes the manual configuration option
ALLOW_DANGEROUS_LO_FUNCTIONS.  That dates back to 1999 (commit 4cd4a54c8);
it's unlikely anyone has used it in many years.  Moreover, if you really
want such behavior, now you can get it with GRANT ... TO PUBLIC instead.

Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqRHmNOYbETnc_2EjsuzSM00Z+BWKv9sy6tnvSd5gWT_JA@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-09 12:36:58 -05:00
Tom Lane
6c3a7ba5bb Fix typo in ALTER SYSTEM output.
The header comment written into postgresql.auto.conf by ALTER SYSTEM
should match what initdb put there originally.

Feike Steenbergen

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAK_s-G0KcKdO=0hqZkwb3s+tqZuuHwWqmF5BDsmoO9FtX75r0g@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-09 11:57:20 -05:00
Tom Lane
9be95ef156 Fix bogus logic for checking executables' versions within pg_upgrade.
Somebody messed up a refactoring here.  As it stood, we'd check pg_ctl's
--version output twice for each cluster.  Worse, the first check for the
new cluster's version happened before we'd done any validate_exec checks
there, breaking the check ordering the code intended.

A. Akenteva

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f9266a85d918a3cf3a386b5148aee666@postgrespro.ru
2017-11-09 11:30:30 -05:00
Tom Lane
c5269472ea Fix two violations of the ResourceOwnerEnlarge/Remember protocol.
The point of having separate ResourceOwnerEnlargeFoo and
ResourceOwnerRememberFoo functions is so that resource allocation
can happen in between.  Doing it in some other order is just wrong.

OpenTemporaryFile() did open(), enlarge, remember, which would leak the
open file if the enlarge step ran out of memory.  Because fd.c has its own
layer of resource-remembering, the consequences look like they'd be limited
to an intratransaction FD leak, but it's still not good.

IncrBufferRefCount() did enlarge, remember, incr-refcount, which would blow
up if the incr-refcount step ever failed.  It was safe enough when written,
but since the introduction of PrivateRefCountHash, I think the assumption
that no error could happen there is pretty shaky.

The odds of real problems from either bug are probably small, but still,
back-patch to supported branches.

Thomas Munro and Tom Lane, per a comment from Andres Freund
2017-11-08 16:50:12 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
2eb4a831e5 Change TRUE/FALSE to true/false
The lower case spellings are C and C++ standard and are used in most
parts of the PostgreSQL sources.  The upper case spellings are only used
in some files/modules.  So standardize on the standard spellings.

The APIs for ICU, Perl, and Windows define their own TRUE and FALSE, so
those are left as is when using those APIs.

In code comments, we use the lower-case spelling for the C concepts and
keep the upper-case spelling for the SQL concepts.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-11-08 11:37:28 -05:00
Robert Haas
698e525437 Fix typo in comment.
Masahiko Sawada

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoDrf5AOpZ-mX-j6O=zFNFfKaTdHkv3o1X2eSs2nBXALug@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-07 16:34:48 -05:00
Tom Lane
92a1834dd8 Fix unportable spelling of int64 constant.
Per buildfarm member pademelon.
2017-11-07 13:54:36 -05:00
Tom Lane
d1f9ac5b10 Fix unportable usage of <ctype.h> functions.
isdigit(), isspace(), etc are likely to give surprising results if passed a
signed char.  We should always cast the argument to unsigned char to avoid
that.  Error in commit 63d6b97fd, found by buildfarm member gaur.
Back-patch to 9.3, like that commit.
2017-11-07 13:49:36 -05:00
Simon Riggs
4b0d28de06 Remove secondary checkpoint
Previously server reserved WAL for last two checkpoints,
which used too much disk space for small servers.

Bumps PG_CONTROL_VERSION

Author: Simon Riggs <simon@2ndQuadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-11-07 12:56:30 -05:00
Simon Riggs
98267ee83e Exclude pg_internal.init from BASE_BACKUP
Add docs to explain this for other backup mechanisms

Author: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
Reviewed-by: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndQuadrant.com> et al
2017-11-07 12:28:35 -05:00
Tom Lane
d0c80c17f1 Fix version numbering foulups exposed by 10.1.
configure computed PG_VERSION_NUM incorrectly.  (Coulda sworn I tested
that logic back when, but it had an obvious thinko.)

pg_upgrade had not been taught about the new dispensation with just
one part in the major version number.

Both things accidentally failed to fail with 10.0, but with 10.1 we
got the wrong results.

Per buildfarm.
2017-11-06 19:46:52 -05:00
Tom Lane
b574228715 Add tests for json{b}_populate_recordset() crash case.
The problem reported as CVE-2017-15098 was already resolved in HEAD by
commit 37a795a60, but let's add the relevant test cases anyway.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane, per a report from David Rowley.

Security: CVE-2017-15098
2017-11-06 10:29:37 -05:00
Dean Rasheed
87b2ebd352 Always require SELECT permission for ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE.
The update path of an INSERT ... ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE requires SELECT
permission on the columns of the arbiter index, but it failed to check
for that in the case of an arbiter specified by constraint name.

In addition, for a table with row level security enabled, it failed to
check updated rows against the table's SELECT policies when the update
path was taken (regardless of how the arbiter index was specified).

Backpatch to 9.5 where ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE and RLS were introduced.

Security: CVE-2017-15099
2017-11-06 09:19:22 +00:00
Noah Misch
c66b438db6 Add a temp-install prerequisite to "check"-like targets not having one.
Makefile.global assigns this prerequisite to every target named "check",
but similar targets must mention it explicitly.  Affected targets
failed, tested $PATH binaries, or tested a stale temporary installation.
The src/test/modules examples worked properly when called as "make -C
src/test/modules/$FOO check", but "make -j" allowed the test to start
before the temporary installation was in place.  Back-patch to 9.5,
where commit dcae5facca introduced the
shared temp-install.
2017-11-05 18:51:08 -08:00
Noah Misch
bab3a714b6 Ignore CatalogSnapshot when checking COPY FREEZE prerequisites.
This restores the ability, essentially lost in commit
ffaa44cb55, to use COPY FREEZE under
REPEATABLE READ isolation.  Back-patch to 9.4, like that commit.

Reviewed by Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoahWDm-7fperBxzU9uZ99LPMUmEpSXLTw9TmrOgzwnORw@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-05 09:25:52 -08:00
Magnus Hagander
86bc521811 Fix comment
Author: Bernd Helmle <mailings@oopsware.de>
2017-11-05 11:48:20 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
4703a480a9 ecpg: Use bool instead of int
Use "bool" for Boolean variables, rather than "int", matching backend
change f505edace1.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-11-04 12:01:12 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
d6148e7d44 ecpg: Remove useless return values
Remove useless or inconsistently used return values from functions,
matching backend changes 99bf328237 and
791359fe0e.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-11-04 12:01:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
cb29ff8315 Fix incorrect use of bool
NSUnLinkModule() doesn't take a bool as second argument but one of set
of specific constants.  The numeric values are the same in this case,
but clean it up while we're cleaning up bool use elsewhere.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-11-04 12:00:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
a9169f0200 Avoid looping through line pointers twice in PageRepairFragmentation().
There doesn't seem to be any good reason to do the filling of the
itemidbase[] array separately from the first traversal of the pointers.
It's certainly not a win if there are any line pointers with storage,
and even if there aren't, this change doesn't insert code into the part
of the first loop that will be traversed in that case.  So let's just
merge the two loops.

Yura Sokolov, reviewed by Claudio Freire

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/e49befcc6f1d7099834c6fdf5c675a60@postgrespro.ru
2017-11-03 17:21:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
4c11d2c559 Flag index metapages as standard-format in xlog.c calls.
btree, hash, and bloom indexes all set up their metapages in standard
format (that is, with pd_lower and pd_upper correctly delimiting the
unused area); but they mostly didn't inform the xlog routines of this.
When calling log_newpage[_buffer], this is bad because it loses the
opportunity to compress unused data out of the WAL record.  When
calling XLogRegisterBuffer, it's not such a performance problem because
all of these call sites also use REGBUF_WILL_INIT, preventing an FPI
image from being written.  But it's still a good idea to provide the
flag when relevant, because that aids WAL consistency checking.

This completes the project of getting all the in-core index AMs to
handle their metapage WAL operations similarly.

Amit Kapila, reviewed by Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0d273805-0e9e-ec1a-cb84-d4da400b8f85@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-11-03 16:31:32 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
1b890562b8 Fix thinkos in BRIN summarization
The previous commit contained a thinko that made a single-range
summarization request process from there to end of table.  Fix by
setting the correct end range point.  Per buildfarm.
2017-11-03 20:45:36 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
a9fce66729 Don't reset additional columns on subscriber to NULL on UPDATE
When a publisher table has fewer columns than a subscriber, the update
of a row on the publisher should result in updating of only the columns
in common.  The previous coding mistakenly reset the values of
additional columns on the subscriber to NULL because it failed to skip
updates of columns not found in the attribute map.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-11-03 12:27:59 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
ec42a1dcb3 Fix BRIN summarization concurrent with extension
If a process is extending a table concurrently with some BRIN
summarization process, it is possible for the latter to miss pages added
by the former because the number of pages is computed ahead of time.

Fix by determining a fresh relation size after inserting the placeholder
tuple: any process that further extends the table concurrently will
update the placeholder tuple, while previous pages will be processed by
the heap scan.

Reported-by: Tomas Vondra
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Author: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/083d996a-4a8a-0e13-800a-851dd09ad8cc@2ndquadrant.com
Backpatch-to: 9.5
2017-11-03 17:23:13 +01:00
Michael Meskes
7164991caf Improve error message for incorrect number inputs in libecpg. 2017-11-03 11:15:14 +01:00
Tom Lane
f987f83de2 pgbench: replace run-time string comparisons with an enum identifier.
Minor refactoring that should yield some performance benefit.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Aleksandr Parfenov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1709230538130.4999@lancre
2017-11-02 18:32:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
81e334ce4e Set the metapage's pd_lower correctly in brin, gin, and spgist indexes.
Previously, these index types left the pd_lower field set to the default
SizeOfPageHeaderData, which is really a lie because it ought to point past
whatever space is being used for metadata.  The coding accidentally failed
to fail because we never told xlog.c that the metapage is of standard
format --- but that's not very good, because it impedes WAL consistency
checking, and in some cases prevents compression of full-page images.

To fix, ensure that we set pd_lower correctly, not only when creating a
metapage but whenever we write it out (these apparently redundant steps are
needed to cope with pg_upgrade'd indexes that don't yet contain the right
value).  This allows telling xlog.c that the page is of standard format.

The WAL consistency check mask functions are made to mask only if pd_lower
appears valid, which I think is likely unnecessary complication, since
any metapage appearing in a v11 WAL stream should contain valid pd_lower.
But it doesn't cost much to be paranoid.

Amit Langote, reviewed by Michael Paquier and Amit Kapila

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0d273805-0e9e-ec1a-cb84-d4da400b8f85@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-11-02 17:22:08 -04:00
Michael Meskes
6976a4f05f Fix float parsing in ecpg INFORMIX mode. 2017-11-02 20:49:47 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut
4b0fbfdf81 pg_ctl: Improve message
Change message for restarting a server from a directory without a PID
file.  This accounts for the case where a restart happens after an
initdb.  The new message indicates that the start has not completed yet
and might fail.

Author: Jesper Pedersen <jesper.pedersen@redhat.com>
2017-11-02 13:27:42 -04:00
Tom Lane
62a16572d5 Fix corner-case errors in brin_doupdate().
In some cases the BRIN code releases lock on an index page, and later
re-acquires lock and tries to check that the tuple it was working on is
still there.  That check was a couple bricks shy of a load.  It didn't
consider that the page might have turned into a "revmap" page.  (The
samepage code path doesn't call brin_getinsertbuffer(), so it isn't
protected by the checks for revmap status there.)  It also didn't check
whether the tuple offset was now off the end of the linepointer array.
Since commit 24992c6db the latter case is pretty common, but at least
in principle it could have occurred before that.  The net result is
that concurrent updates of a BRIN index could fail with errors like
"invalid index offnum" or "inconsistent range map".

Per report from Tomas Vondra.  Back-patch to 9.5, since this code is
substantially the same in all versions containing BRIN.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10d2b9f9-f427-03b8-8ad9-6af4ecacbee9@2ndquadrant.com
2017-11-02 12:54:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
5eb8bf2d42 Remove wal_keep_segments from default configuration in PostgresNode.pm
This is only used in the pg_rewind tests, so only set it there.  It's
better if other tests run closer to a default configuration.

Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-11-02 12:38:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
7b6c075471 Teach planner to account for HAVING quals in aggregation plan nodes.
For some reason, we have never accounted for either the evaluation cost
or the selectivity of filter conditions attached to Agg and Group nodes
(which, in practice, are always conditions from a HAVING clause).

Applying our regular selectivity logic to post-grouping conditions is a
bit bogus, but it's surely better than taking the selectivity as 1.0.
Perhaps someday the extended-statistics mechanism can be taught to provide
statistics that would help us in getting non-default estimates here.

Per a gripe from Benjamin Coutu.  This is surely a bug fix, but I'm
hesitant to back-patch because of the prospect of destabilizing existing
plan choices.  Given that it took us this long to notice the bug, it's
probably not hurting too many people in the field.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20968.1509486337@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-11-02 11:24:12 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
c6764eb3ae Revert bogus fixes of HOT-freezing bug
It turns out we misdiagnosed what the real problem was.  Revert the
previous changes, because they may have worse consequences going
forward.  A better fix is forthcoming.

The simplistic test case is kept, though disabled.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171102112019.33wb7g5wp4zpjelu@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-11-02 15:51:41 +01:00
Noah Misch
51f4d3ed7e In client support of v10 features, use standard schema handling.
Back-patch to v10.  This continues the work of commit
080351466c.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKOSWN=ds66zLw2SqkLTM8wbXFgDbc_OdkmT3dJfPT2mE5kipA@mail.gmail.com
2017-11-01 19:16:14 -07:00
Tom Lane
7c70996ebf Allow bitmap scans to operate as index-only scans when possible.
If we don't have to return any columns from heap tuples, and there's
no need to recheck qual conditions, and the heap page is all-visible,
then we can skip fetching the heap page altogether.

Skip prefetching pages too, when possible, on the assumption that the
recheck flag will remain the same from one page to the next.  While that
assumption is hardly bulletproof, it seems like a good bet most of the
time, and better than prefetching pages we don't need.

This commit installs the executor infrastructure, but doesn't change
any planner cost estimates, thus possibly causing bitmap scans to
not be chosen in cases where this change renders them the best choice.
I (tgl) am not entirely convinced that we need to account for this
behavior in the planner, because I think typically the bitmap scan would
get chosen anyway if it's the best bet.  In any case the submitted patch
took way too many shortcuts, resulting in too many clearly-bad choices,
to be committable.

Alexander Kuzmenkov, reviewed by Alexey Chernyshov, and whacked around
rather heavily by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/239a8955-c0fc-f506-026d-c837e86c827b@postgrespro.ru
2017-11-01 17:38:20 -04:00
Tom Lane
af20e2d728 Fix ALTER TABLE code to update domain constraints when needed.
It's possible for dropping a column, or altering its type, to require
changes in domain CHECK constraint expressions; but the code was
previously only expecting to find dependent table CHECK constraints.
Make the necessary adjustments.

This is a fairly old oversight, but it's a lot easier to encounter
the problem in the context of domains over composite types than it
was before.  Given the lack of field complaints, I'm not going to
bother with a back-patch, though I'd be willing to reconsider that
decision if someone does complain.

Patch by me, reviewed by Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/30656.1509128130@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-11-01 13:32:23 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
067a2259fd pg_basebackup: Fix comparison handling of tablespace mappings on Windows
A candidate path needs to be canonicalized before being checked against
the mappings, because the mappings are also canonicalized.  This is
especially relevant on Windows

Reported-by: nb <nbedxp@gmail.com>
Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Sharma <ashu.coek88@gmail.com>
2017-11-01 10:20:05 -04:00
Michael Meskes
63d6b97fd9 Make sure ecpglib does accepts digits behind decimal point even for integers in
Informix mode.

Spotted and fixed by 高增琦 <pgf00a@gmail.com>
2017-11-01 13:32:18 +01:00
Tom Lane
080351466c Fix underqualified cast-target type names in pg_dump and psql queries.
Queries running with some non-pg_catalog schema frontmost in their search
path need to be careful to schema-qualify type names that should be sought
in pg_catalog.  Vitaly Burovoy reported an oversight of this sort in
pg_dump's dumpSequence, and grepping detected another one in psql's
describeOneTableDetails, both introduced by sequence-related changes in
v10.  In pg_dump, we can fix things by removing the cast altogether, since
it doesn't really matter what data types are reported for these query
result columns.  Likewise in psql, the query seemed to be working unduly
hard to get a result that's guaranteed to be exactly 'bigint'.

I also changed a couple of occurrences of "::char" similarly.  These are
not bugs, since "char" is a typename keyword and not subject to search_path
rules, but it seems better to use uniform style.

Vitaly Burovoy and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKOSWN=ds66zLw2SqkLTM8wbXFgDbc_OdkmT3dJfPT2mE5kipA@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-31 13:40:23 -04:00
Robert Haas
ee4673ac07 Don't exaggerate the number of temporary blocks read.
A read that returns zero bytes (or an error) should not increment
the number of temporary blocks read.

Thomas Munro

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=21xgihg=WaG+O5MFotEZfN6kFETpfw+RkSnEqNQqGn2Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-31 14:56:09 +05:30
Robert Haas
cf7ab13bfb Fix code related to partitioning schemes for dropped columns.
The entry in appinfo->translated_vars can be NULL; if so, we must avoid
dereferencing it.

Ashutosh Bapat

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpReL7+1ien=-21rhjpO3bV7aAm1rQ8XgLVk2csFagSzpZQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-31 14:43:05 +05:30
Robert Haas
35f059e9bd Add sanity check for pg_proc.provariadic
Check that the values from pg_proc.h match what ProcedureCreate would
have done.

Robert Haas and Amul Sul

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoZ_UGXfq5ygeDDMdUSJ4J_VX7nFnjC6mfY6BgOJ3qZCmw@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-31 09:52:39 +05:30
Alvaro Herrera
be72b9c378 Fix autovacuum work item error handling
In autovacuum's "work item" processing, a few strings were allocated in
the current transaction's memory context, which goes away during error
handling; if an error happened during execution of the work item, the
pfree() calls to clean up afterwards would try to release already-released
memory, possibly leading to a crash.  In branch master, this was already
fixed by commit 335f3d04e4, so backpatch that to REL_10_STABLE to fix
the problem there too.

As a secondary problem, verify that the autovacuum worker is connected
to the right database for each work item; otherwise some items would be
discarded by workers in other databases.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171014035732.GB31726@telsasoft.com
2017-10-30 15:52:02 +01:00
Magnus Hagander
854b643c8e Fix typo in comment
Etsuro Fujita
2017-10-30 14:37:00 +01:00
Robert Haas
846fcc8516 Fix problems with the "role" GUC and parallel query.
Without this fix, dropping a role can sometimes result in parallel
query failures in sessions that have used "SET ROLE" to assume the
dropped role, even if that setting isn't active any more.

Report by Pavan Deolasee.  Patch by Amit Kapila, reviewed by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CABOikdOomRcZsLsLK+Z+qENM1zxyaWnAvFh3MJZzZnnKiF+REg@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-29 12:58:40 +05:30
Robert Haas
5f3971291f pg_receivewal: Add --no-sync option.
Michael Paquier, reviewed by Kuntal Ghosh and by me.  I did a little
wordsmithing on the documentation, too.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqTuXuyEoVKcWcExh_b0uAjgWd_14KfGLrCTccBZ=VA0KA@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-29 12:46:55 +05:30
Robert Haas
b7f3eb3140 Add hash_combine64.
Extracted from a larger patch by Amul Sul, with some comment additions
by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/20171024113004.hn5qajypin4dy5sw@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-29 12:41:43 +05:30
Tom Lane
60651e4cdd Support domains over composite types in PL/Perl.
In passing, don't insist on rsi->expectedDesc being set unless we
actually need it; this allows succeeding in a couple of cases where
PL/Perl functions returning setof composite would have failed before,
and makes the error message more apropos in other cases.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4206.1499798337@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-28 14:02:21 -04:00
Robert Haas
11c1d555ce Improve comments for parallel executor estimation functions.
The previous comment (which was copied as boilerplate from one file
to the next) implied that it was the executor node itself which was
being serialized, but that's not right.  We're not serializing
the executor nodes; we're just allowing them to store some
additional information in DSM.  Adjusts the comment to reflect this.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoaHVinxG=3h6qBAsyV8xaDyQwbzK7YZnYfE8nJFMK1=FA@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-28 11:50:22 +02:00
Robert Haas
24fd674a1a Fix grammar.
Etsuro Fujita

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/cc7767b6-6a1b-74a2-8b3c-48b8e64c12ed@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-10-28 11:14:23 +02:00
Robert Haas
1310ac258c Fix misplaced ReleaseSysCache call in get_default_partition_oid.
Julien Rouhaud

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAOBaU_Y4omLA+VbsVdA-JwBLoJWiPxfdKCkMjrZM7NMZxa1fKw@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-28 11:10:21 +02:00
Tom Lane
d76886c2d3 Dept of second thoughts: keep aliasp_item in sync with tlistitem.
Commit d5b760ecb wasn't quite right, on second thought: if the
caller didn't ask for column names then it would happily emit
more Vars than if the caller did ask for column names.  This
is surely not a good idea.  Advance the aliasp_item whether or
not we're preparing a colnames list.
2017-10-27 18:16:24 -04:00
Tom Lane
d5b760ecb5 Fix crash when columns have been added to the end of a view.
expandRTE() supposed that an RTE_SUBQUERY subquery must have exactly
as many non-junk tlist items as the RTE has column aliases for it.
This was true at the time the code was written, and is still true so
far as parse analysis is concerned --- but when the function is used
during planning, the subquery might have appeared through insertion
of a view that now has more columns than it did when the outer query
was parsed.  This results in a core dump if, for instance, we have
to expand a whole-row Var that references the subquery.

To avoid crashing, we can either stop expanding the RTE when we run
out of aliases, or invent new aliases for the added columns.  While
the latter might be more useful, the former is consistent with what
expandRTE() does for composite-returning functions in the RTE_FUNCTION
case, so it seems like we'd better do it that way.

Per bug #14876 from Samuel Horwitz.  This has been busted since commit
ff1ea2173 allowed views to acquire more columns, so back-patch to all
supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171026184035.1471.82810@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-10-27 17:28:54 -04:00
Robert Haas
682ce911f8 Allow parallel query for prepared statements with generic plans.
This was always intended to work, but due to an oversight in
max_parallel_hazard_walker, it didn't.  In testing, we missed the
fact that it was only working for custom plans, where the parameter
value has been substituted for the parameter itself early enough
that everything worked.  In a generic plan, the Param node survives
and must be treated as parallel-safe.  SerializeParamList provides
for the transmission of parameter values to workers.

Amit Kapila with help from Kuntal Ghosh.  Some changes by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1+_BuZrmVCeua5Eqnm4Co9DAXdM5HPAOE2J19ePbR912Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-27 22:22:39 +02:00
Tom Lane
6784d7a1dc Rethink the dependencies recorded for FieldSelect/FieldStore nodes.
On closer investigation, commits f3ea3e3e8 et al were a few bricks
shy of a load.  What we need is not so much to lock down the result
type of a FieldSelect, as to lock down the existence of the column
it's trying to extract.  Otherwise, we can break it by dropping that
column.  The dependency on the result type is then held indirectly
through the column, and doesn't need to be recorded explicitly.

Out of paranoia, I left in the code to record a dependency on the
result type, but it's used only if we can't identify the pg_class OID
for the column.  That shouldn't ever happen right now, AFAICS, but
it seems possible that in future the input node could be marked as
being of type RECORD rather than some specific composite type.

Likewise for FieldStore.

Like the previous patch, back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/22571.1509064146@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-27 12:19:09 -04:00
Robert Haas
f0392e677e Revert "Move new structure member to the end."
This reverts commit 94d622f27b.  That
commit was supposed to get pushed to REL_10_STABLE, but I messed
up.
2017-10-27 17:29:20 +02:00
Robert Haas
94d622f27b Move new structure member to the end.
Reduces ABI breakage.  Per Tom Lane.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/4035.1509113974@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-27 16:40:06 +02:00
Robert Haas
639c1a6bb9 Fix mistaken failure to allow parallelism in corner case.
If we try to run a parallel plan in serial mode because, for example,
it's going to be scanned via a cursor, but for some reason we're
already in parallel mode (for example because an outer query is
running in parallel), we'd incorrectly try to launch workers.
Fix by adding a flag to the EState, so that we can be certain that
ExecutePlan() and ExecGather()/ExecGatherMerge() will have the same
idea about whether we are executing serially or in parallel.

Report and fix by Amit Kapila with help from Kuntal Ghosh.  A few
tweaks by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1+_BuZrmVCeua5Eqnm4Co9DAXdM5HPAOE2J19ePbR912Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-27 16:04:01 +02:00
Tom Lane
820c0305f6 Support domains over composite types in PL/Tcl.
Since PL/Tcl does little with SQL types internally, this is just a
matter of making it work with composite-domain function arguments
and results.

In passing, make it allow RECORD-type arguments --- that's a trivial
change that nobody had bothered with up to now.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4206.1499798337@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-26 16:00:17 -04:00
Tom Lane
37a795a60b Support domains over composite types.
This is the last major omission in our domains feature: you can now
make a domain over anything that's not a pseudotype.

The major complication from an implementation standpoint is that places
that might be creating tuples of a domain type now need to be prepared
to apply domain_check().  It seems better that unprepared code fail
with an error like "<type> is not composite" than that it silently fail
to apply domain constraints.  Therefore, relevant infrastructure like
get_func_result_type() and lookup_rowtype_tupdesc() has been adjusted
to treat domain-over-composite as a distinct case that unprepared code
won't recognize, rather than just transparently treating it the same
as plain composite.  This isn't a 100% solution to the possibility of
overlooked domain checks, but it catches most places.

In passing, improve typcache.c's support for domains (it can now cache
the identity of a domain's base type), and rewrite the argument handling
logic in jsonfuncs.c's populate_record[set]_worker to reduce duplicative
per-call lookups.

I believe this is code-complete so far as the core and contrib code go.
The PLs need varying amounts of work, which will be tackled in followup
patches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4206.1499798337@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-26 13:47:45 -04:00
Tom Lane
08f1e1f0a4 Make setrefs.c match by ressortgroupref even for plain Vars.
Previously, we skipped using search_indexed_tlist_for_sortgroupref()
if the tlist expression being sought in the child plan node was merely
a Var.  This is purely an optimization, based on the theory that
search_indexed_tlist_for_var() is faster, and one copy of a Var should
be as good as another.  However, the GROUPING SETS patch broke the
latter assumption: grouping columns containing the "same" Var can
sometimes have different outputs, as shown in the test case added here.
So do it the hard way whenever a ressortgroupref marking exists.

(If this seems like a bottleneck, we could imagine building a tlist index
data structure for ressortgroupref values, as we do for Vars.  But I'll
let that idea go until there's some evidence it's worthwhile.)

Back-patch to 9.6.  The problem also exists in 9.5 where GROUPING SETS
came in, but this patch is insufficient to resolve the problem in 9.5:
there is some obscure dependency on the upper-planner-pathification
work that happened in 9.6.  Given that this is such a weird corner case,
and no end users have complained about it, it doesn't seem worth the work
to develop a fix for 9.5.

Patch by me, per a report from Heikki Linnakangas.  (This does not fix
Heikki's original complaint, just the follow-on one.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/aefc657e-edb2-64d5-6df1-a0828f6e9104@iki.fi
2017-10-26 12:17:40 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
74d2c0dbfd Improve gendef.pl diagnostic on failure to open sym file
There have been numerous buildfarm failures but the diagnostic is
currently silent about the reason for failure to open the file. Let's
see if we can get to the bottom of it.

Backpatch to all live branches.
2017-10-26 10:01:02 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
adee9e4e31 Undo inadvertent change in capitalization in commit 18fc4ec. 2017-10-26 08:20:00 -04:00
Robert Haas
b55509332f In relevant log messages, indicate whether vacuums are aggressive.
Kyotaro Horiguchi, reviewed Masahiko Sawada, David G. Johnston, Álvaro
Herrera, and me.  Grammar correction to the final posted patch by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/20170329.124649.193656100.horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-10-26 12:38:10 +02:00
Michael Meskes
0af98a95cf Fixed handling of escape character in libecpg.
Patch by Tsunakawa Takayuki <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com>
2017-10-26 10:16:04 +02:00
Tom Lane
db6986f47c Fix libpq to not require user's home directory to exist.
Some people like to run libpq-using applications in environments where
there's no home directory.  We've broken that scenario before (cf commits
5b4067798 and bd58d9d88), and commit ba005f193 broke it again, by making
it a hard error if we fail to get the home directory name while looking
for ~/.pgpass.  The previous precedent is that if we can't get the home
directory name, we should just silently act as though the file we hoped
to find there doesn't exist.  Rearrange the new code to honor that.

Looking around, the service-file code added by commit 41a4e4595 had the
same disease.  Apparently, that escaped notice because it only runs when
a service name has been specified, which I guess the people who use this
scenario don't do.  Nonetheless, it's wrong too, so fix that case as well.

Add a comment about this policy to pqGetHomeDirectory, in the probably
vain hope of forestalling the same error in future.  And upgrade the
rather miserable commenting in parseServiceInfo, too.

In passing, also back off parseServiceInfo's assumption that only ENOENT
is an ignorable error from stat() when checking a service file.  We would
need to ignore at least ENOTDIR as well (cf 5b4067798), and seeing that
the far-better-tested code for ~/.pgpass treats all stat() failures alike,
I think this code ought to as well.

Per bug #14872 from Dan Watson.  Back-patch the .pgpass change to v10
where ba005f193 came in.  The service-file bugs are far older, so
back-patch the other changes to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171025200457.1471.34504@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-10-25 19:32:24 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
18fc4ecf4a Process variadic arguments consistently in json functions
json_build_object and json_build_array and the jsonb equivalents did not
correctly process explicit VARIADIC arguments. They are modified to use
the new extract_variadic_args() utility function which abstracts away
the details of the call method.

Michael Paquier, reviewed by Tom Lane and Dmitry Dolgov.

Backpatch to 9.5 for the jsonb fixes and 9.4 for the json fixes, as
that's where they originated.
2017-10-25 07:34:00 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
f3c6e8a27a Add a utility function to extract variadic function arguments
This is epecially useful in the case or "VARIADIC ANY" functions. The
caller can get the artguments and types regardless of whether or not and
explicit VARIADIC array argument has been used. The function also
provides an option to convert arguments on type "unknown" to to "text".

Michael Paquier and me, reviewed by Tom Lane.

Backpatch to 9.4 in order to support the following json bug fix.
2017-10-25 07:13:11 -04:00
Tom Lane
896eb5efbd In the planner, delete joinaliasvars lists after we're done with them.
Although joinaliasvars lists coming out of the parser are quite simple,
those lists can contain arbitrarily complex expressions after subquery
pullup.  We do not perform expression preprocessing on them, meaning that
expressions in those lists will not meet the expectations of later phases
of the planner (for example, that they do not contain SubLinks).  This had
been thought pretty harmless, since we don't intentionally touch those
lists in later phases --- but Andreas Seltenreich found a case in which
adjust_appendrel_attrs() could recurse into a joinaliasvars list and then
die on its assertion that it never sees a SubLink.  We considered a couple
of localized fixes to prevent that specific case from looking at the
joinaliasvars lists, but really this seems like a generic hazard for all
expression processing in the planner.  Therefore, probably the best answer
is to delete the joinaliasvars lists from the parsetree at the end of
expression preprocessing, so that there are no reachable expressions that
haven't been through preprocessing.

The case Andreas found seems to be harmless in non-Assert builds, and so
far there are no field reports suggesting that there are user-visible
effects in other cases.  I considered back-patching this anyway, but
it turns out that Andreas' test doesn't fail at all in 9.4-9.6, because
in those versions adjust_appendrel_attrs contains code (added in commit
842faa714 and removed again in commit 215b43cdc) to process SubLinks
rather than complain about them.  Barring discovery of another path by
which unprocessed joinaliasvars lists can cause trouble, the most
prudent compromise seems to be to patch this into v10 but not further.

Patch by me, with thanks to Amit Langote for initial investigation
and review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87r2tvt9f1.fsf@ansel.ydns.eu
2017-10-24 18:42:47 -04:00
Tom Lane
8df4ce1eac Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2017c.
DST law changes in Fiji, Namibia, Northern Cyprus, Sudan, Tonga,
and Turks & Caicos Islands.  Historical corrections for Alaska, Apia,
Burma, Calcutta, Detroit, Ireland, Namibia, and Pago Pago.
2017-10-23 18:15:36 -04:00
Tom Lane
24a1897ab9 Sync our copy of the timezone library with IANA release tzcode2017c.
This is a trivial update containing only cosmetic changes.  The point
is just to get back to being synced with an official release of tzcode,
rather than some ad-hoc point in their commit history, which is where
commit 47f849a3c left it.
2017-10-23 17:54:09 -04:00
Tom Lane
f3ea3e3e82 Fix some oversights in expression dependency recording.
find_expr_references() neglected to record a dependency on the result type
of a FieldSelect node, allowing a DROP TYPE to break a view or rule that
contains such an expression.  I think we'd omitted this case intentionally,
reasoning that there would always be a related dependency ensuring that the
DROP would cascade to the view.  But at least with nested field selection
expressions, that's not true, as shown in bug #14867 from Mansur Galiev.
Add the dependency, and for good measure a dependency on the node's exposed
collation.

Likewise add a dependency on the result type of a FieldStore.  I think here
the reasoning was that it'd only appear within an assignment to a field,
and the dependency on the field's column would be enough ... but having
seen this example, I think that's wrong for nested-composites cases.

Looking at nearby code, I notice we're not recording a dependency on the
exposed collation of CoerceViaIO, which seems inconsistent with our choices
for related node types.  Maybe that's OK but I'm feeling suspicious of this
code today, so let's add that; it certainly can't hurt.

This patch does not do anything to protect already-existing views, only
views created after it's installed.  But seeing that the issue has been
there a very long time and nobody noticed till now, that's probably good
enough.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171023150118.1477.19174@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-10-23 13:57:45 -04:00
Tom Lane
471d55859c Adjust psql \d query to avoid use of @> operator.
It seems that the parray_gin extension has seen fit to introduce a
"text[] @> text[]" operator, which conflicts with the core
"anyarray @> anyarray" operator, causing ambiguous-operator failures
if the input arguments are coercible to text[] without being exactly
that type.  This strikes me as a bad idea, but it's out there and
people use it.  As of v10, that breaks psql's query that tries to
test "pg_statistic_ext.stxkind @> '{d}'", since stxkind is char[].
The best workaround seems to be to avoid use of that operator.
We can use a scalar-vs-array test "'d' = any(stxkind)" instead;
that's arguably more readable anyway.

Per report from Justin Pryzby.  Backpatch to v10 where this
query was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171022181525.GA21884@telsasoft.com
2017-10-22 16:45:16 -04:00
Tom Lane
36ea99c84d Fix typcache's failure to treat ranges as container types.
Like the similar logic for arrays and records, it's necessary to examine
the range's subtype to decide whether the range type can support hashing.
We can omit checking the subtype for btree-defined operations, though,
since range subtypes are required to have those operations.  (Possibly
that simplification for btree cases led us to overlook that it does
not apply for hash cases.)

This is only an issue if the subtype lacks hash support, which is not
true of any built-in range type, but it's easy to demonstrate a problem
with a range type over, eg, money: you can get a "could not identify
a hash function" failure when the planner is misled into thinking that
hash join or aggregation would work.

This was born broken, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2017-10-20 17:12:27 -04:00
Tom Lane
a8f1efc8ac Fix misimplementation of typcache logic for extended hashing.
The previous coding would report that an array type supports extended
hashing if its element type supports regular hashing.  This bug is
only latent at the moment, since AFAICS there is not yet any code
that depends on checking presence of extended-hashing support to make
any decisions.  (And in any case it wouldn't matter unless the element
type has only regular hashing, which isn't true of any core data type.)
But that doesn't make it less broken.  Extend the
cache_array_element_properties infrastructure to check this properly.
2017-10-20 16:08:17 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
4b95cc1dc3 Add more tests for reloptions
This is preparation for a future patch to extensively change how
reloptions work.

Author: Nikolay Shaplov
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2615372.orqtEn8VGB@x200m
2017-10-19 14:22:05 +02:00
Magnus Hagander
752871b6de Fix typos
David Rowley
2017-10-19 13:58:30 +02:00
Magnus Hagander
275c4be19d Fix typo
Masahiko Sawada
2017-10-19 13:57:20 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
927e1ee2cb UCS_to_most.pl: Process encodings in sorted order
Otherwise the order depends on the Perl hash implementation, making it
cumbersome to scan the output when debugging.
2017-10-19 05:58:39 -04:00
Tom Lane
7421f4b89a Fix incorrect handling of CTEs and ENRs as DML target relations.
setTargetTable threw an error if the proposed target RangeVar's relname
matched any visible CTE or ENR.  This breaks backwards compatibility in
the CTE case, since pre-v10 we never looked for a CTE here at all, so that
CTE names did not mask regular tables.  It does seem like a good idea to
throw an error for the ENR case, though, thus causing ENRs to mask tables
for this purpose; ENRs are new in v10 so we're not breaking existing code,
and we may someday want to allow them to be the targets of DML.

To fix that, replace use of getRTEForSpecialRelationTypes, which was
overkill anyway, with use of scanNameSpaceForENR.

A second problem was that the check neglected to verify null schemaname,
so that a CTE or ENR could incorrectly be thought to match a qualified
RangeVar.  That happened because getRTEForSpecialRelationTypes relied
on its caller to have checked for null schemaname.  Even though the one
remaining caller got it right, this is obviously bug-prone, so move
the check inside getRTEForSpecialRelationTypes.

Also, revert commit 18ce3a4ab's extremely poorly thought out decision to
add a NULL return case to parserOpenTable --- without either documenting
that or adjusting any of the callers to check for it.  The current bug
seems to have arisen in part due to working around that bad idea.

In passing, remove the one-line shim functions transformCTEReference and
transformENRReference --- they don't seem to be adding any clarity or
functionality.

Per report from Hugo Mercier (via Julien Rouhaud).  Back-patch to v10
where the bug was introduced.

Thomas Munro, with minor editing by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOBaU_YdPVH+PTtiKSSLOiiW3mVDYsnNUekK+XPbHXiP=wrFLA@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-16 17:56:54 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
4211673622 Exclude flex-generated code from coverage testing
Flex generates a lot of functions that are not actually used.  In order
to avoid coverage figures being ruined by that, mark up the part of the
.l files where the generated code appears by lcov exclusion markers.
That way, lcov will typically only reported on coverage for the .l file,
which is under our control, but not for the .c file.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-10-16 16:28:11 -04:00
Tom Lane
cf5ba7c30c Treat aggregate direct arguments as per-agg data not per-trans data.
There is no reason to insist that direct arguments must match before
we can merge transition states of two aggregate calls.  They're only
used during the finalfn call, so we can treat them as like the finalfn
itself.  This allows, eg, merging of

select
  percentile_cont(0.25) within group (order by a),
  percentile_disc(0.5) within group (order by a)
from ...

This didn't matter (and could not have been tested) before we allowed
state merging of OSAs otherwise.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB4ELO5RZhOamuT9Xsf72ozbenDLLXZKSk07FiSVsuJNZB861A@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-16 16:02:51 -04:00
Tom Lane
be0ebb65f5 Allow the built-in ordered-set aggregates to share transition state.
The built-in OSAs all share the same transition function, so they can
share transition state as long as the final functions cooperate to not
do the sort step more than once.  To avoid running the tuplesort object
in randomAccess mode unnecessarily, add a bit of infrastructure to
nodeAgg.c to let the aggregate functions find out whether the transition
state is actually being shared or not.

This doesn't work for the hypothetical aggregates, since those inject
a hypothetical row that isn't traceable to the shared input state.
So they remain marked aggfinalmodify = 'w'.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB4ELO5RZhOamuT9Xsf72ozbenDLLXZKSk07FiSVsuJNZB861A@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-16 15:51:23 -04:00
Tom Lane
c3dfe0fec0 Repair breakage of aggregate FILTER option.
An aggregate's input expression(s) are not supposed to be evaluated
at all for a row where its FILTER test fails ... but commit 8ed3f11bb
overlooked that requirement.  Reshuffle so that aggregates having a
filter clause evaluate their arguments separately from those without.
This still gets the benefit of doing only one ExecProject in the
common case of multiple Aggrefs, none of which have filters.

While at it, arrange for filter clauses to be included in the common
ExecProject evaluation, thus perhaps buying a little bit even when
there are filters.

Back-patch to v10 where the bug was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/30065.1508161354@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-16 15:24:36 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
60a1d96ed7 Rework DefineIndex relkind check
Simplify coding using a switch rather than nested if tests.

Author: Álvaro
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas, Amit Langote, Michaël Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171013163820.pai7djcaxrntaxtn@alvherre.pgsql
2017-10-16 12:22:18 +02:00
Tom Lane
5fc438fb25 Restore nodeAgg.c's ability to check for improperly-nested aggregates.
While poking around in the aggregate logic, I noticed that commit
8ed3f11bb broke the logic in nodeAgg.c that purports to detect nested
aggregates, by moving initialization of regular aggregate argument
expressions out of the code segment that checks for that.

You could argue that this check is unnecessary, but it's not much code
so I'm inclined to keep it as a backstop against parser and planner
bugs.  However, there's certainly zero value in checking only some of
the subexpressions.

We can make the check complete again, and as a bonus make it a good
deal more bulletproof against future mistakes of the same ilk, by
moving it out to the outermost level of ExecInitAgg.  This means we
need to check only once per Agg node not once per aggregate, which
also seems like a good thing --- if the check does find something
wrong, it's not urgent that we report it before the plan node
initialization finishes.

Since this requires remembering the original length of the aggs list,
I deleted a long-obsolete stanza that changed numaggs from 0 to 1.
That's so old it predates our decision that palloc(0) is a valid
operation, in (digs...) 2004, see commit 24a1e20f1.

In passing improve a few comments.

Back-patch to v10, just in case.
2017-10-15 19:19:18 -04:00
Tom Lane
82aff8d336 gcc's support for __attribute__((noinline)) hasn't been around forever.
Buildfarm member gaur says it wasn't there in 2.95.3.  Guess that 3.0
and later have it.
2017-10-14 15:52:00 -04:00
Tom Lane
4de2d4fba3 Explicitly track whether aggregate final functions modify transition state.
Up to now, there's been hard-wired assumptions that normal aggregates'
final functions never modify their transition states, while ordered-set
aggregates' final functions always do.  This has always been a bit
limiting, and in particular it's getting in the way of improving the
built-in ordered-set aggregates to allow merging of transition states.
Therefore, let's introduce catalog and CREATE AGGREGATE infrastructure
that lets the finalfn's behavior be declared explicitly.

There are now three possibilities for the finalfn behavior: it's purely
read-only, it trashes the transition state irrecoverably, or it changes
the state in such a way that no more transfn calls are possible but the
state can still be passed to other, compatible finalfns.  There are no
examples of this third case today, but we'll shortly make the built-in
OSAs act like that.

This change allows user-defined aggregates to explicitly disclaim support
for use as window functions, and/or to prevent transition state merging,
if their implementations cannot handle that.  While it was previously
possible to handle the window case with a run-time error check, there was
not any way to prevent transition state merging, which in retrospect is
something commit 804163bc2 should have provided for.  But better late
than never.

In passing, split out pg_aggregate.c's extern function declarations into
a new header file pg_aggregate_fn.h, similarly to what we've done for
some other catalog headers, so that pg_aggregate.h itself can be safe
for frontend files to include.  This lets pg_dump use the symbolic
names for relevant constants.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4834.1507849699@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-14 15:21:39 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
5f340cb30c Reinstate genhtml --prefix option for non-vpath builds
In c3d9a66024, the genhtml --prefix option
was removed to get slightly better behavior for vpath builds.  genhtml
would then automatically pick a suitable prefix.  However, for non-vpath
builds, this makes the coverage output dependent on the length of the
path where the source code happens to be, leading to confusingly
arbitrary results.  So put the --prefix option back for non-vpath
builds.
2017-10-14 11:44:45 -04:00
Joe Conway
b81eba6a65 Add missing options to pg_regress help() output
A few command line options accepted by pg_regress were not being output
by help(), including --help itself. Add that one, as well as --version
and --bindir, and the corresponding short options for the first two.

We could consider this for backpatching, but it did not seem worthwhile
and no one else advocated for it, so apply only to master for now.

Author: Joe Conway
Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/dd519469-06d7-2662-83ef-c926f6c4f0f1%40joeconway.com
2017-10-13 16:06:41 -07:00
Andres Freund
141fd1b66c Improve sys/catcache performance.
The following are the individual improvements:
1) Avoidance of FunctionCallInfo based function calls, replaced by
   more efficient functions with a native C argument interface.
2) Don't extract columns from a cache entry's tuple whenever matching
   entries - instead store them as a Datum array. This also allows to
   get rid of having to build dummy tuples for negative & list
   entries, and of a hack for dealing with cstring vs. text weirdness.
3) Reorder members of catcache.h struct, so imortant entries are more
   likely to be on one cacheline.
4) Allowing the compiler to specialize critical SearchCatCache for a
   specific number of attributes allows to unroll loops and avoid
   other nkeys dependant initialization.
5) Only initializing the ScanKey when necessary, i.e. catcache misses,
   greatly reduces cache unnecessary cpu cache misses.
6) Split of the cache-miss case from the hash lookup, reducing stack
   allocations etc in the common case.
7) CatCTup and their corresponding heaptuple are allocated in one
   piece.

This results in making cache lookups themselves roughly three times as
fast - full-system benchmarks obviously improve less than that.

I've also evaluated further techniques:
- replace open coded hash with simplehash - the list walk right now
  shows up in profiles. Unfortunately it's not easy to do so safely as
  an entry's memory location can change at various times, which
  doesn't work well with the refcounting and cache invalidation.
- Cacheline-aligning CatCTup entries - helps some with performance,
  but the win isn't big and the code for it is ugly, because the
  tuples have to be freed as well.
- add more proper functions, rather than macros for
  SearchSysCacheCopyN etc., but right now they don't show up in
  profiles.

The reason the macro wrapper for syscache.c/h have to be changed,
rather than just catcache, is that doing otherwise would require
exposing the SysCache array to the outside.  That might be a good idea
anyway, but it's for another day.

Author: Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914061207.zxotvyopetm7lrrp@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-13 14:22:41 -07:00
Andres Freund
a0247e7a11 Add pg_noinline macro to c.h.
Forcing a function not to be inlined can be useful if it's the
slow-path of a performance critical function, or should be visible in
profiles to allow for proper cost attribution.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914061207.zxotvyopetm7lrrp@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-13 12:16:06 -07:00
Andres Freund
d133982d59 Force "restrict" not to be used when compiling with xlc.
Per buildfarm animal Hornet and followup manual testing by Noah Misch,
it appears xlc miscompiles code using "restrict" in at least some
cases. Allow disabling restrict usage with FORCE_DISABLE_RESTRICT=yes
in template files, and do so for aix/xlc.

Author: Andres Freund and Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1820.1507918762@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-13 12:15:06 -07:00
Robert Haas
6393613b6a Fix possible crash with Parallel Bitmap Heap Scan.
If a Parallel Bitmap Heap scan's chain of leftmost descendents
includes a BitmapOr whose first child is a BitmapAnd, the prior coding
would mistakenly create a non-shared TIDBitmap and then try to perform
shared iteration.

Report by Tomas Vondra.  Patch by Dilip Kumar.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/50e89684-8ad9-dead-8767-c9545bafd3b6@2ndquadrant.com
2017-10-13 15:02:45 -04:00
Tom Lane
73937119bf Improve implementation of CRE-stack-flattening in map_variable_attnos().
I (tgl) objected to the obscure implementation introduced in commit
1c497fa72.  This one seems a bit less action-at-a-distance-y, at the
price of repeating a few lines of code.

Improve the comments about what the function is doing, too.

Amit Khandekar, whacked around a bit more by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9egYTyHUH0nTMxm8-1m3RvdqEbaTyGC-CUNtYf7tKNDaQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-13 13:43:55 -04:00
Tom Lane
5229db6c6f Rely on sizeof(typename) rather than sizeof(variable) in pqformat.h.
In each of the pq_writeintN functions, the three uses of sizeof() should
surely all be consistent.  I started out to make them all sizeof(ni),
but on reflection let's make them sizeof(typename) instead.  That's more
like our usual style elsewhere, and it's just barely possible that the
failures buildfarm member hornet has shown since 4c119fbcd went in are
caused by the compiler getting confused about sizeof() a parameter that
it's optimizing away.

In passing, improve a couple of comments.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1e2RML-0002do-Lc@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-10-13 11:46:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
7d1b8e7591 Attempt to fix LDAP build
Apparently, an older spelling of LDAP_OPT_DIAGNOSTIC_MESSAGE is
LDAP_OPT_ERROR_STRING, so fall back to that one.
2017-10-12 23:47:48 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
cf1238cd97 Log diagnostic messages if errors occur during LDAP auth.
Diagnostic messages seem likely to help users diagnose root
causes more easily, so let's report them as errdetail.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: Ashutosh Bapat, Christoph Berg, Alvaro Herrera, Peter Eisentraut
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2_dA-SYpFdmNVwvKsEBXOUj=K4ooKovHmvj6jnMdt8dw@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-12 22:37:14 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
1feff99fe4 Improve LDAP cleanup code in error paths.
After calling ldap_unbind_s() we probably shouldn't try to use the LDAP
connection again to call ldap_get_option(), even if it failed.  The OpenLDAP
man page for ldap_unbind[_s] says "Once it is called, the connection to the
LDAP server is closed, and the ld structure is invalid."  Otherwise, as a
general rule we should probably call ldap_unbind() before returning in all
paths to avoid leaking resources.  It is unlikely there is any practical
leak problem since failure to authenticate currently results in the backend
exiting soon afterwards.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: Alvaro Herrera, Peter Eisentraut
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914141205.eup4kxzlkagtmfac%40alvherre.pgsql
2017-10-12 22:37:14 -04:00
Andres Freund
91d5f1a4a3 Use C99 restrict via pg_restrict, rather than restrict directly.
Unfortunately using 'restrict' plainly causes problems with MSVC,
which supports restrict only as '__restrict'. Defining 'restrict' to
'__restrict' unfortunately causes a conflict with MSVC's usage of
__declspec(restrict) in headers.

Therefore define pg_restrict to the appropriate keyword instead, and
replace existing usages.

This replaces the temporary workaround introduced in 36b4b91ba0.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2656.1507830907@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-12 16:17:35 -07:00
Robert Haas
1c497fa72d Avoid coercing a whole-row variable that is already coerced.
Marginal efficiency and beautification hack.  I'm not sure whether
this case ever arises currently, but the pending patch for update
tuple routing will cause it to arise.

Amit Khandekar

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9cazfppe7-wwUbabPcQ4_0SubkiPFD1+0r5_DkVNWo5yg@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-12 17:10:48 -04:00
Robert Haas
60f7c0abef Use ResultRelInfo ** rather than ResultRelInfo * for tuple routing.
The previous convention doesn't lend itself to creating ResultRelInfos
lazily, as we already do in ExecGetTriggerResultRel.  This patch
doesn't make anything lazier than before, but the pending patch for
UPDATE tuple routing proposes to do so (and there might be other
opportunities as well).

Amit Khandekar with some adjustments by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYPVP9Lyf6vUFA5DwxS4c--x6LOj2y36BsJaYtp62eXPQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-12 16:50:53 -04:00
Tom Lane
305cf1fd72 Fix AggGetAggref() so it won't lie to aggregate final functions.
If we merge the transition calculations for two different aggregates,
it's reasonable to assume that the transition function should not care
which of those Aggref structs it gets from AggGetAggref().  It is not
reasonable to make the same assumption about an aggregate final function,
however.  Commit 804163bc2 broke this, as it will pass whichever Aggref
was first associated with the transition state in both cases.

This doesn't create an observable bug so far as the core system is
concerned, because the only existing uses of AggGetAggref() are in
ordered-set aggregates that happen to not pay attention to anything
but the input properties of the Aggref; and besides that, we disabled
sharing of transition calculations for OSAs yesterday.  Nonetheless,
if some third-party code were using AggGetAggref() in a normal aggregate,
they would be entitled to call this a bug.  Hence, back-patch the fix
to 9.6 where the problem was introduced.

In passing, improve some of the comments about transition state sharing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB4ELO5RZhOamuT9Xsf72ozbenDLLXZKSk07FiSVsuJNZB861A@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-12 15:20:16 -04:00
Robert Haas
ad4a7ed099 Synchronize error messages.
Commits 6476b26115
and 14f67a8ee2 didn't use quite the
same error message for what is basically the same situation.

Amit Langote, pared back a bit by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/54dc76d0-3b5b-ba5a-27dc-fb31a3975b61@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-10-12 15:14:22 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
e9ef11ac8b Infer functional dependency past RelabelType
Vars hidden within a RelabelType would not be detected as compatible
with some functional dependency.  Repair by properly ignoring the
RelabelType.

Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-y-UEy=rsBXynBOgiW1fKMr_LVoYSGL9QOc36mLEC-ww@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-12 17:23:47 +02:00
Robert Haas
360fd1a7b2 Fix logical replication to fire BEFORE ROW DELETE triggers.
Before, that would fail to happen unless a BEFORE ROW UPDATE trigger
was also present.

Noted by me while reviewing a patch from Masahiko Sawada, who also
wrote this patch.  Reviewed by Petr Jelinek.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobAZvCxduG8y_mQKBK7nz-vhbdLvjM354KEFozpuzMN5A@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-12 10:26:55 -04:00
Andres Freund
31079a4a8e Replace remaining uses of pq_sendint with pq_sendint{8,16,32}.
pq_sendint() remains, so extension code doesn't unnecessarily break.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914063418.sckdzgjfrsbekae4@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-11 21:00:46 -07:00
Tom Lane
52328727be Prevent sharing transition states between ordered-set aggregates.
This ought to work, but the built-in OSAs are not capable of coping,
because their final-functions destructively modify their transition
state (specifically, the contained tuplesort object).  That was fine
when those functions were written, but commit 804163bc2 moved the
goalposts without telling orderedsetaggs.c.

We should fix the built-in OSAs to support this, but it will take
a little work, especially if we don't want to sacrifice performance
in the normal non-shared-state case.  Given that it took a year after
9.6 release for anyone to notice this bug, we should not prioritize
sharable-state over nonsharable-state performance.  And a proper fix
is likely to be more complicated than we'd want to back-patch, too.

Therefore, let's just put in this stop-gap patch to prevent nodeAgg.c
from choosing to use shared state for OSAs.  We can revert it in HEAD
when we get a better fix.

Report from Lukas Eder, diagnosis by me, patch by David Rowley.
Back-patch to 9.6 where the problem was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB4ELO5RZhOamuT9Xsf72ozbenDLLXZKSk07FiSVsuJNZB861A@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-11 22:18:10 -04:00
Andres Freund
36b4b91ba0 Temporary attempt at a workaround for further MSVC restrict build failures.
It appears some versions of msvc use __declspec(restrict) in stdlib.h
and subsidiary headers. Including those after defining 'restrict' to
'__restrict' doesn't work.  Try to get the buildfarm green to see
whether there's further problems, by including stdlib.h just before
said define.
2017-10-11 19:06:29 -07:00
Andres Freund
060b069984 Work around overly strict restrict checks by MSVC.
Apparently MSVC requires a * before a restrict in a variable
declaration, even if the adorned type already is a pointer, just via
typedef.

As reported by buildfarm animal woodlouse.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171012001320.4putagiruuehtvb6@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-11 17:23:23 -07:00
Andres Freund
4c119fbcd4 Improve performance of SendRowDescriptionMessage.
There's three categories of changes leading to better performance:
- Splitting the per-attribute part of SendRowDescriptionMessage into a
  v2 and a v3 version allows avoiding branches for every attribute.
- Preallocating the size of the buffer to be big enough for all
  attributes and then using pq_write* avoids unnecessary buffer
  size checks & resizing.
- Reusing a persistently allocated StringInfo for all
  SendRowDescriptionMessage() invocations avoids repeated allocations
  & reallocations.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914063418.sckdzgjfrsbekae4@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-11 17:23:23 -07:00
Robert Haas
cff440d368 pg_stat_statements: Widen query IDs from 32 bits to 64 bits.
This takes advantage of the infrastructure introduced by commit
81c5e46c49 to greatly reduce the
likelihood that two different queries will end up with the same query
ID.  It's still possible, of course, but whereas before it the chances
of a collision reached 25% around 50,000 queries, it will now take
more than 3 billion queries.

Backward incompatibility: Because the type exposed at the SQL level is
int8, users may now see negative query IDs in the pg_stat_statements
view (and also, query IDs more than 4 billion, which was the old
limit).

Patch by me, reviewed by Michael Paquier and Peter Geoghegan.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobG_Kp4cBKFmsznUAaM1GWW6hhRNiZC0KjRMOOeYnz5Yw@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-11 19:52:46 -04:00
Andres Freund
f2dec34e19 Use one stringbuffer for all rows printed in printtup.c.
This avoids newly allocating, and then possibly growing, the
stringbuffer for every row. For wide rows this can substantially
reduce memory allocator overhead, at the price of not immediately
reducing memory usage after outputting an especially wide row.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914063418.sckdzgjfrsbekae4@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-11 16:26:35 -07:00
Andres Freund
1de09ad8eb Add more efficient functions to pqformat API.
There's three prongs to achieve greater efficiency here:

1) Allow reusing a stringbuffer across pq_beginmessage/endmessage,
   with the new pq_beginmessage_reuse/endmessage_reuse. This can be
   beneficial both because it avoids allocating the initial buffer,
   and because it's more likely to already have an correctly sized
   buffer.

2) Replacing pq_sendint() with pq_sendint$width() inline
   functions. Previously unnecessary and unpredictable branches in
   pq_sendint() were needed. Additionally the replacement functions
   are implemented more efficiently.  pq_sendint is now deprecated, a
   separate commit will convert all in-tree callers.

3) Add pq_writeint$width(), pq_writestring(). These rely on sufficient
   space in the StringInfo's buffer, avoiding individual space checks
   & potential individual resizing.  To allow this to be used for
   strings, expose mbutil.c's MAX_CONVERSION_GROWTH.

Followup commits will make use of these facilities.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914063418.sckdzgjfrsbekae4@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-11 16:01:52 -07:00
Andres Freund
70c2d1be2b Allow to avoid NUL-byte management for stringinfos and use in format.c.
In a lot of the places having appendBinaryStringInfo() maintain a
trailing NUL byte wasn't actually meaningful, e.g. when appending an
integer which can contain 0 in one of its bytes.

Removing this yields some small speedup, but more importantly will be
more consistent when providing faster variants of pq_sendint etc.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914063418.sckdzgjfrsbekae4@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-11 16:01:52 -07:00
Andres Freund
0b974dba2d Add configure infrastructure to detect support for C99's restrict.
Will be used in later commits improving performance for a few key
routines where information about aliasing allows for significantly
better code generation.

This allows to use the C99 'restrict' keyword without breaking C89, or
for that matter C++, compilers. If not supported it's defined to be
empty.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914063418.sckdzgjfrsbekae4@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-11 16:01:52 -07:00
Tom Lane
5fa6b0d102 Remove unnecessary PG_TRY overhead for CurrentResourceOwner changes.
resowner/README contained advice to use a PG_TRY block to restore the
old CurrentResourceOwner value anywhere that that variable is transiently
changed.  That advice was only inconsistently followed, however, and
on reflection it seems like unnecessary overhead.  We don't bother
with such a convention for transient CurrentMemoryContext changes,
on the grounds that any (sub)transaction abort will start out by
resetting CurrentMemoryContext to what it wants.  But the same is
true of CurrentResourceOwner, so there seems no need to treat it
differently.

Hence, remove PG_TRY blocks that exist only to restore CurrentResourceOwner
before re-throwing the error.  There are a couple of places that restore
it along with some other actions, and I left those alone; the restore is
probably unnecessary but no noticeable gain will result from removing it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5236.1507583529@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-11 17:44:09 -04:00
Andres Freund
f676616651 Prevent idle in transaction session timeout from sometimes being ignored.
The previous coding in ProcessInterrupts() could lead to
idle_in_transaction_session_timeout being ignored, when
statement_timeout occurred earlier.

The problem was that ProcessInterrupts() would return before
processing the transaction timeout if QueryCancelPending was set while
QueryCancelHoldoffCount != 0 - which is the case when reading new
commands from the client. Ergo when the idle transaction timeout would
hit.

Fix that by removing the early return. Alternatively the transaction
timeout code could have been moved up, but that early return seems
like an issue that could hit other cases too.

Author: Lukas Fittl
Bug: #14821
Discussion:
    https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20170921010956.17345.61461%40wrigleys.postgresql.org
    https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAP53PkxQnv3OWJpyNPGJYT62uY=n1=2CF_Lpc6gVOFnc0-gazw@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 9.6-, where idle_in_transaction_session_timeout was introduced.
2017-10-11 14:02:41 -07:00
Tom Lane
2860596832 Doc: fix missing explanation of default object privileges.
The GRANT reference page, which lists the default privileges for new
objects, failed to mention that USAGE is granted by default for data
types and domains.  As a lesser sin, it also did not specify anything
about the initial privileges for sequences, FDWs, foreign servers,
or large objects.  Fix that, and add a comment to acldefault() in the
probably vain hope of getting people to maintain this list in future.

Noted by Laurenz Albe, though I editorialized on the wording a bit.
Back-patch to all supported branches, since they all have this behavior.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1507620895.4152.1.camel@cybertec.at
2017-10-11 16:57:14 -04:00
Robert Haas
20d210bf5b Fix mistakes in comments.
Masahiko Sawada

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoBsfYsMHD6_SL9iN3n_Foaa+oPbL5jG55DxU1ChaujqwQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-11 15:55:10 -04:00
Tom Lane
118e99c3d7 Fix low-probability loss of NOTIFY messages due to XID wraparound.
Up to now async.c has used TransactionIdIsInProgress() to detect whether
a notify message's source transaction is still running.  However, that
function has a quick-exit path that reports that XIDs before RecentXmin
are no longer running.  If a listening backend is doing nothing but
listening, and not running any queries, there is nothing that will advance
its value of RecentXmin.  Once 2 billion transactions elapse, the
RecentXmin check causes active transactions to be reported as not running.
If they aren't committed yet according to CLOG, async.c decides they
aborted and discards their messages.  The timing for that is a bit tight
but it can happen when multiple backends are sending notifies concurrently.
The net symptom therefore is that a sufficiently-long-surviving
listen-only backend starts to miss some fraction of NOTIFY traffic,
but only under heavy load.

The only function that updates RecentXmin is GetSnapshotData().
A brute-force fix would therefore be to take a snapshot before
processing incoming notify messages.  But that would add cycles,
as well as contention for the ProcArrayLock.  We can be smarter:
having taken the snapshot, let's use that to check for running
XIDs, and not call TransactionIdIsInProgress() at all.  In this
way we reduce the number of ProcArrayLock acquisitions from one
per message to one per notify interrupt; that's the same under
light load but should be a benefit under heavy load.  Light testing
says that this change is a wash performance-wise for normal loads.

I looked around for other callers of TransactionIdIsInProgress()
that might be at similar risk, and didn't find any; all of them
are inside transactions that presumably have already taken a
snapshot.

Problem report and diagnosis by Marko Tiikkaja, patch by me.
Back-patch to all supported branches, since it's been like this
since 9.0.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170926182935.14128.65278@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-10-11 14:28:33 -04:00
Tom Lane
46912d9b15 Add port/strnlen support to libpq and ecpg Makefiles.
In the wake of fffd651e8, any makefile that pulls in snprintf.c
from src/port/ needs to be prepared to pull in strnlen.c as well.
Per buildfarm.
2017-10-11 11:28:04 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
e9e0f78bde Fix whitespace 2017-10-11 09:15:20 -04:00
Andres Freund
fffd651e83 Rewrite strnlen replacement implementation from 8a241792f9.
The previous placement of the fallback implementation in libpgcommon
was problematic, because libpqport functions need strnlen
functionality.

Move replacement into libpgport. Provide strnlen() under its posix
name, instead of pg_strnlen(). Fix stupid configure bug, executing the
test only when compiled with threading support.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1e1gR2-0005fB-SI@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-10-10 14:50:30 -07:00
Tom Lane
fa5e119dc7 Add missing clean step to src/test/modules/brin/Makefile.
I noticed the tmp_check subdirectory wasn't getting cleaned up
after a check-world run.  Apparently pgxs.mk will only do this
for you if you've defined REGRESS.  The only other src/test/modules
Makefile that does not set that is snapshot_too_old, and it
does it like this.
2017-10-10 12:51:09 -04:00
Andres Freund
82c117cb90 Fix pnstrdup() to not memcpy() the maximum allowed length.
The previous behaviour was dangerous if the length passed wasn't the
size of the underlying buffer, but the maximum size of the underlying
buffer.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20161003215524.mwz5p45pcverrkyk@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-09 15:20:42 -07:00
Andres Freund
8a241792f9 Add pg_strnlen() a portable implementation of strlen.
As the OS version is likely going to be more optimized, fall back to
it if available, as detected by configure.
2017-10-09 15:20:42 -07:00
Andres Freund
84ad4b036d Reduce memory usage of targetlist SRFs.
Previously nodeProjectSet only released memory once per input tuple,
rather than once per returned tuple. If the computation of an
individual returned tuple requires a lot of memory, that can lead to
problems.

Instead change things so that the expression context can be reset once
per output tuple, which requires a new memory context to store SRF
arguments in.

This is a longstanding issue, but was hard to fix before 9.6, due to
the way tSRFs where evaluated. But it's fairly easy to fix now. We
could backpatch this into 10, but given there've been fewc omplaints
that doesn't seem worth the risk so far.

Reported-By: Lucas Fairchild
Author: Andres Freund, per discussion with Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4514.1507318623@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-08 15:08:25 -07:00
Tom Lane
643c27e36f Increase distance between flush requests during bulk file copies.
copy_file() reads and writes data 64KB at a time (with default BLCKSZ),
and historically has issued a pg_flush_data request after each write.
This turns out to interact really badly with macOS's new APFS file
system: a large file copy takes over 100X longer than it ought to on
APFS, as reported by Brent Dearth.  While that's arguably a macOS bug,
it's not clear whether Apple will do anything about it in the near
future, and in any case experimentation suggests that issuing flushes
a bit less often can be helpful on other platforms too.

Hence, rearrange the logic in copy_file() so that flush requests are
issued once per N writes rather than every time through the loop.
I set the FLUSH_DISTANCE to 32MB on macOS (any less than that still
results in a noticeable speed degradation on APFS), but 1MB elsewhere.
In limited testing on Linux and FreeBSD, this seems slightly faster
than the previous code, and certainly no worse.  It helps noticeably
on macOS even with the older HFS filesystem.

A simpler change would have been to just increase the size of the
copy buffer without changing the loop logic, but that seems likely
to trash the processor cache without really helping much.

Back-patch to 9.6 where we introduced msync() as an implementation
option for pg_flush_data().  The problem seems specific to APFS's
mmap/msync support, so I don't think we need to go further back.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADkxhTNv-j2jw2g8H57deMeAbfRgYBoLmVuXkC=YCFBXRuCOww@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-08 15:25:26 -04:00
Tom Lane
8ec5429e2f Reduce "X = X" to "X IS NOT NULL", if it's easy to do so.
If the operator is a strict btree equality operator, and X isn't volatile,
then the clause must yield true for any non-null value of X, or null if X
is null.  At top level of a WHERE clause, we can ignore the distinction
between false and null results, so it's valid to simplify the clause to
"X IS NOT NULL".  This is a useful improvement mainly because we'll get
a far better selectivity estimate in most cases.

Because such cases seldom arise in well-written queries, it is unappetizing
to expend a lot of planner cycles looking for them ... but it turns out
that there's a place we can shoehorn this in practically for free, because
equivclass.c already has to detect and reject candidate equivalences of the
form X = X.  That doesn't catch every place that it would be valid to
simplify to X IS NOT NULL, but it catches the typical case.  Working harder
doesn't seem justified.

Patch by me, reviewed by Petr Jelinek

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMjNa7cC4X9YR-vAJS-jSYCajhRDvJQnN7m2sLH1wLh-_Z2bsw@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-08 12:23:32 -04:00
Tom Lane
b11f0d36b2 Improve pg_regress's error reporting for schedule-file problems.
The previous coding here trashed the line buffer as it scanned it,
making it impossible to print the source line in subsequent error
messages.  With a few save/restore/strdup pushups we can improve
that situation.

In passing, move the free'ing of the various strings that are collected
while processing one set of tests down to the bottom of the loop.
That's simpler, less surprising, and should make valgrind less unhappy
about the strings that were previously leaked by the last iteration.
2017-10-07 18:04:25 -04:00
Tom Lane
ef73a8162a Enforce our convention about max number of parallel regression tests.
We have a very old rule that parallel_schedule should have no more
than twenty tests in any one parallel group, so as to provide a
bound on the number of concurrently running processes needed to
pass the tests.  But people keep forgetting the rule, so let's add
a few lines of code to check it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a37e9c57-22d4-1b82-1270-4501cd2e984e@2ndquadrant.com
2017-10-07 17:20:09 -04:00
Tom Lane
1fdab4d5aa Clean up sloppy maintenance of regression test schedule files.
The partition_join test was added to a parallel group that was already
at the maximum of 20 concurrent tests.  The hash_func test wasn't
added to serial_schedule at all.  The identity and partition_join tests
were added to serial_schedule with the aid of a dartboard, rather than
maintaining consistency with parallel_schedule.

There are proposals afoot to make these sorts of errors harder to make,
but in the meantime let's fix the ones already in place.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a37e9c57-22d4-1b82-1270-4501cd2e984e@2ndquadrant.com
2017-10-07 13:19:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
1518d07842 Fix crash when logical decoding is invoked from a PL function.
The logical decoding functions do BeginInternalSubTransaction and
RollbackAndReleaseCurrentSubTransaction to clean up after themselves.
It turns out that AtEOSubXact_SPI has an unrecognized assumption that
we always need to cancel the active SPI operation in the SPI context
that surrounds the subtransaction (if there is one).  That's true
when the RollbackAndReleaseCurrentSubTransaction call is coming from
the SPI-using function itself, but not when it's happening inside
some unrelated function invoked by a SPI query.  In practice the
affected callers are the various PLs.

To fix, record the current subtransaction ID when we begin a SPI
operation, and clean up only if that ID is the subtransaction being
canceled.

Also, remove AtEOSubXact_SPI's assertion that it must have cleaned
up the surrounding SPI context's active tuptable.  That's proven
wrong by the same test case.

Also clarify (or, if you prefer, reinterpret) the calling conventions
for _SPI_begin_call and _SPI_end_call.  The memory context cleanup
in the latter means that these have always had the flavor of a matched
resource-management pair, but they weren't documented that way before.

Per report from Ben Chobot.

Back-patch to 9.4 where logical decoding came in.  In principle,
the SPI changes should go all the way back, since the problem dates
back to commit 7ec1c5a86.  But given the lack of field complaints
it seems few people are using internal subtransactions in this way.
So I don't feel a need to take any risks in 9.2/9.3.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/73FBA179-C68C-4540-9473-71E865408B15@silentmedia.com
2017-10-06 19:18:58 -04:00
Robert Haas
45866c7550 Copy information from the relcache instead of pointing to it.
We have the relations continuously locked, but not open, so relcache
pointers are not guaranteed to be stable.  Per buildfarm member
prion.

Ashutosh Bapat.  I fixed a typo.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRcRBqoKLZSNmRsjKr81uEP=ennvqSQaXVCCBTXvJ2rW+Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-06 15:28:07 -04:00
Tom Lane
a1c2c430d3 Fix intra-query memory leakage in nodeProjectSet.c.
Both ExecMakeFunctionResultSet() and evaluation of simple expressions
need to be done in the per-tuple memory context, not per-query, else
we leak data until end of query.  This is a consideration that was
missed while refactoring code in the ProjectSet patch (note that in
pre-v10, ExecMakeFunctionResult is called in the per-tuple context).

Per bug #14843 from Ben M.  Diagnosed independently by Andres and myself.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20171005230321.28561.15927@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-10-06 14:28:42 -04:00
Tom Lane
6b87416c9a Fix access-off-end-of-array in clog.c.
Sloppy loop coding in set_status_by_pages() resulted in fetching one array
element more than it should from the subxids[] array.  The odds of this
resulting in SIGSEGV are pretty small, but we've certainly seen that happen
with similar mistakes elsewhere.  While at it, we can get rid of an extra
TransactionIdToPage() calculation per loop.

Per report from David Binderman.  Back-patch to all supported branches,
since this code is quite old.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/HE1PR0802MB2331CBA919CBFFF0C465EB429C710@HE1PR0802MB2331.eurprd08.prod.outlook.com
2017-10-06 12:20:23 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
c3d9a66024 Support coverage on vpath builds
A few paths needed to be tweaked so everything looks into the
appropriate directories.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-10-06 11:39:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
52e1b1b042 Run coverage commands quietly
They are very chatty by default, but the output doesn't seem all that
useful for normal operation.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-10-06 11:39:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
c01123630d Remove coverage details view
This is only useful if we name the different tests, which we don't do at
the moment.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-10-06 11:39:46 -04:00
Tom Lane
3620569fec #ifdef out some dead code in psql/mainloop.c.
This pg_send_history() call is unreachable, since the block it's in
is currently only entered in !cur_cmd_interactive mode.  But rather
than just delete it, make it #ifdef NOT_USED, in hopes that we'll
remember to enable it if we ever change that decision.

Per report from David Binderman.  Since this is basically cosmetic,
I see no great need to back-patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/HE1PR0802MB233122B61F00A15E035C83BE9C710@HE1PR0802MB2331.eurprd08.prod.outlook.com
2017-10-06 11:35:55 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
a5736bf754 Fix traversal of half-frozen update chains
When some tuple versions in an update chain are frozen due to them being
older than freeze_min_age, the xmax/xmin trail can become broken.  This
breaks HOT (and probably other things).  A subsequent VACUUM can break
things in more serious ways, such as leaving orphan heap-only tuples
whose root HOT redirect items were removed.  This can be seen because
index creation (or REINDEX) complain like
  ERROR:  XX000: failed to find parent tuple for heap-only tuple at (0,7) in table "t"

Because of relfrozenxid contraints, we cannot avoid the freezing of the
early tuples, so we must cope with the results: whenever we see an Xmin
of FrozenTransactionId, consider it a match for whatever the previous
Xmax value was.

This problem seems to have appeared in 9.3 with multixact changes,
though strictly speaking it seems unrelated.

Since 9.4 we have commit 37484ad2a "Change the way we mark tuples as
frozen", so the fix is simple: just compare the raw Xmin (still stored
in the tuple header, since freezing merely set an infomask bit) to the
Xmax.  But in 9.3 we rewrite the Xmin value to FrozenTransactionId, so
the original value is lost and we have nothing to compare the Xmax with.
To cope with that case we need to compare the Xmin with FrozenXid,
assume it's a match, and hope for the best.  Sadly, since you can
pg_upgrade a 9.3 instance containing half-frozen pages to newer
releases, we need to keep the old check in newer versions too, which
seems a bit brittle; I hope we can somehow get rid of that.

I didn't optimize the new function for performance.  The new coding is
probably a bit slower than before, since there is a function call rather
than a straight comparison, but I'd rather have it work correctly than
be fast but wrong.

This is a followup after 20b6552242 fixed a few related problems.
Apparently, in 9.6 and up there are more ways to get into trouble, but
in 9.3 - 9.5 I cannot reproduce a problem anymore with this patch, so
there must be a separate bug.

Reported-by: Peter Geoghegan
Diagnosed-by: Peter Geoghegan, Michael Paquier, Daniel Wood,
	Yi Wen Wong, Álvaro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-Wznm4rCrhFAiwKPWTpEw2bXDtgROZK7jWWGucXeH3D1fmA@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-06 17:20:01 +02:00
Robert Haas
f49842d1ee Basic partition-wise join functionality.
Instead of joining two partitioned tables in their entirety we can, if
it is an equi-join on the partition keys, join the matching partitions
individually.  This involves teaching the planner about "other join"
rels, which are related to regular join rels in the same way that
other member rels are related to baserels.  This can use significantly
more CPU time and memory than regular join planning, because there may
now be a set of "other" rels not only for every base relation but also
for every join relation.  In most practical cases, this probably
shouldn't be a problem, because (1) it's probably unusual to join many
tables each with many partitions using the partition keys for all
joins and (2) if you do that scenario then you probably have a big
enough machine to handle the increased memory cost of planning and (3)
the resulting plan is highly likely to be better, so what you spend in
planning you'll make up on the execution side.  All the same, for now,
turn this feature off by default.

Currently, we can only perform joins between two tables whose
partitioning schemes are absolutely identical.  It would be nice to
cope with other scenarios, such as extra partitions on one side or the
other with no match on the other side, but that will have to wait for
a future patch.

Ashutosh Bapat, reviewed and tested by Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, Amit
Langote, Rafia Sabih, Thomas Munro, Dilip Kumar, Antonin Houska, Amit
Khandekar, and by me.  A few final adjustments by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRfQ8GrQvzp3jA2wnLqrHmaXna-urjm_UY9BqXj=EaDTSA@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRcitjfrULr5jfuKWRPsGUX0LQ0k8-yG0Qw2+1LBGNpMdw@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-06 11:11:10 -04:00
Tom Lane
fe9ba28ee8 Fix typo in README.
s/BeginInternalSubtransaction/BeginInternalSubTransaction/
2017-10-05 15:06:01 -04:00
Robert Haas
6476b26115 On CREATE TABLE, consider skipping validation of subpartitions.
This is just like commit 14f67a8ee2, but
for CREATE PARTITION rather than ATTACH PARTITION.

Jeevan Ladhe, with test case changes by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAOgcT0MWwG8WBw8frFMtRYHAgDD=tpt6U7WcsO_L2k0KYpm4Jg@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-05 13:23:28 -04:00
Robert Haas
14f67a8ee2 On attach, consider skipping validation of subpartitions individually.
If the table attached as a partition is itself partitioned, individual
partitions might have constraints strong enough to skip scanning the
table even if the table actually attached does not.  This is pretty
cheap to check, and possibly a big win if it works out.

Amit Langote, with test case changes by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/1f08b844-0078-aa8d-452e-7af3bf77d05f@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-10-05 13:06:46 -04:00
Robert Haas
c31e9d4baf Improve error message when skipping scan of default partition.
It seems like a good idea to clearly distinguish between skipping the
scan of the new partition itself and skipping the scan of the default
partition.

Amit Langote

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/1f08b844-0078-aa8d-452e-7af3bf77d05f@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-10-05 12:19:40 -04:00
Robert Haas
e9baa5e9fa Allow DML commands that create tables to use parallel query.
Haribabu Kommi, reviewed by Dilip Kumar and Rafia Sabih.  Various
cosmetic changes by me to explain why this appears to be safe but
allowing inserts in parallel mode in general wouldn't be.  Also, I
removed the REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW case from Haribabu's patch,
since I'm not convinced that case is OK, and hacked on the
documentation somewhat.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAJrrPGdo5bak6qnPWe8Kpi8g_jfQEs-G4SYmG9y+OFaw2-dPvA@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-05 11:40:48 -04:00
Tom Lane
4d85c2900b Improve comments in vacuum_rel() and analyze_rel().
Remove obsolete references to get_rel_oids().  Avoid listing specific
relkinds in the comments, since we seem unable to keep such things
in sync with the code, and it's not all that helpful anyhow.

Noted by Michael Paquier, though I rewrote the comments a bit more.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqTWiN9zwKTaOrsnKiGDChqRt7C1+CiiDk4N4OMn92rs6A@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-05 10:47:47 -04:00
Robert Haas
4b2ba1fe02 Fix typo.
Etsuro Fujita

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/1b2e9ac7-b99a-2769-5e42-afdf62bfa7fa@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-10-05 08:45:24 -04:00
Robert Haas
c097b271e8 Fix more user-visible elog() calls.
Michael Paquier discovered that this could be triggered via SQL;
give a nicer message instead.

Patch by Michael Paquier, reviewed by Masahiko Sawada.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqQtPg+LKKtzdKN26judHcvPZ0s1gNigzOT4j8CYuuuBYg@mail.gmail.com
2017-10-05 07:58:02 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
036166f26e Document and use SPI_result_code_string()
A lot of semi-internal code just prints out numeric SPI error codes,
which is not very helpful.  We already have an API function to convert
the codes to a string, so let's make more use of that.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-10-04 22:14:21 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
582bbcf37f Move SPI error reporting out of ri_ReportViolation()
These are two completely unrelated code paths, so it doesn't make sense
to pack them into one function.

Add attribute noreturn to ri_ReportViolation().

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-10-04 22:14:21 -04:00
Andres Freund
9eafa2b5b0 Msvc doesn't know UINT16_MAX, replace with PG_UINT16_MAX.
UINT16_MAX usage is originating from commit 212e6f34d5.

Per buildfarm animal currawong.
2017-10-04 10:01:02 -07:00
Andres Freund
15334ad19a Attempt to adapt windows build for 212e6f34d5.
Per buildfarm animal baiji.
2017-10-04 09:32:02 -07:00
Andres Freund
212e6f34d5 Replace binary search in fmgr_isbuiltin with a lookup array.
Turns out we have enough functions that the binary search is quite
noticeable in profiles.

Thus have Gen_fmgrtab.pl build a new mapping from a builtin function's
oid to an index in the existing fmgr_builtins array. That keeps the
additional memory usage at a reasonable amount.

Author: Andres Freund, with input from Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914065128.a5sk7z4xde5uy3ei@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-04 00:22:38 -07:00
Andres Freund
18f791ab2b Move genbki.pl's find_defined_symbol to Catalog.pm.
Will be used in Gen_fmgrtab.pl in a followup commit.
2017-10-04 00:11:36 -07:00
Tom Lane
4736d74479 Adjust git_changelog for new-style release tags.
It wasn't on board with REL_n_n format.
2017-10-04 00:45:15 -04:00
Tom Lane
11d8d72c27 Allow multiple tables to be specified in one VACUUM or ANALYZE command.
Not much to say about this; does what it says on the tin.

However, formerly, if there was a column list then the ANALYZE action was
implied; now it must be specified, or you get an error.  This is because
it would otherwise be a bit unclear what the user meant if some tables
have column lists and some don't.

Nathan Bossart, reviewed by Michael Paquier and Masahiko Sawada, with some
editorialization by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E061A8E3-5E3D-494D-94F0-E8A9B312BBFC@amazon.com
2017-10-03 18:53:44 -04:00
Tom Lane
45f9d08684 Fix race condition with unprotected use of a latch pointer variable.
Commit 597a87ccc introduced a latch pointer variable to replace use
of a long-lived shared latch in the shared WalRcvData structure.
This was not well thought out, because there are now hazards of the
pointer variable changing while it's being inspected by another
process.  This could obviously lead to a core dump in code like

	if (WalRcv->latch)
		SetLatch(WalRcv->latch);

and there's a more remote risk of a torn read, if we have any
platforms where reading/writing a pointer is not atomic.

An actual problem would occur only if the walreceiver process
exits (gracefully) while the startup process is trying to
signal it, but that seems well within the realm of possibility.

To fix, treat the pointer variable (not the referenced latch)
as being protected by the WalRcv->mutex spinlock.  There
remains a race condition that we could apply SetLatch to a
process latch that no longer belongs to the walreceiver, but
I believe that's harmless: at worst it'd cause an extra wakeup
of the next process to use that PGPROC structure.

Back-patch to v10 where the faulty code was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/22735.1507048202@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-03 14:00:56 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
89e434b59c Fix coding rules violations in walreceiver.c
1. Since commit b1a9bad9e7 we had pstrdup() inside a
spinlock-protected critical section; reported by Andreas Seltenreich.
Turn those into strlcpy() to stack-allocated variables instead.
Backpatch to 9.6.

2. Since commit 9ed551e0a4 we had a pfree() uselessly inside a
spinlock-protected critical section.  Tom Lane noticed in code review.
Move down.  Backpatch to 9.6.

3. Since commit 64233902d2 we had GetCurrentTimestamp() (a kernel
call) inside a spinlock-protected critical section.  Tom Lane noticed in
code review.  Move it up.  Backpatch to 9.2.

4. Since commit 1bb2558046 we did elog(PANIC) while holding spinlock.
Tom Lane noticed in code review.  Release spinlock before dying.
Backpatch to 9.2.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87h8vhtgj2.fsf@ansel.ydns.eu
2017-10-03 14:58:25 +02:00
Andres Freund
0c8b3ee944 Yet another pg_bswap typo in a windows only file.
Per buildfarm animal frogmouth.

Brown-Paper-Bagged-By: Andres Freund
2017-10-01 20:05:27 -07:00
Andres Freund
859759b62f Correct include file name in inet_aton fallback.
Per buildfarm animal frogmouth.

Author: Andres Freund
2017-10-01 17:41:00 -07:00
Andres Freund
0ba99c84e8 Replace most usages of ntoh[ls] and hton[sl] with pg_bswap.h.
All postgres internal usages are replaced, it's just libpq example
usages that haven't been converted. External users of libpq can't
generally rely on including postgres internal headers.

Note that this includes replacing open-coded byte swapping of 64bit
integers (using two 32 bit swaps) with a single 64bit swap.

Where it looked applicable, I have removed netinet/in.h and
arpa/inet.h usage, which previously provided the relevant
functionality. It's perfectly possible that I missed other reasons for
including those, the buildfarm will tell.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170927172019.gheidqy6xvlxb325@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-01 15:36:14 -07:00
Andres Freund
1f2830f9df Remove redundant stdint.h include.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/31674.1506788226@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-10-01 15:24:58 -07:00
Andres Freund
784905795f Try to make crash restart test work on windows.
Author: Andres Freund
Tested-By: Andrew Dunstan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170930224424.ud5ilchmclbl5y5n@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-10-01 15:24:58 -07:00
Andres Freund
2e83db3ad2 Allow pg_ctl kill to send SIGKILL.
Previously that was disallowed out of an abundance of
caution. Providing KILL support however is helpful to make the
013_crash_restart.pl test portable, and there's no actual issue with
allowing it.  SIGABRT, which has similar consequences except it also
dumps core, was already allowed.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/45d42d41-6145-9be1-7261-84acf6d9e344@2ndQuadrant.com
2017-10-01 15:24:58 -07:00
Tom Lane
4a1c0f3dde Use a longer connection timeout in pg_isready test.
Buildfarm members skink and sungazer have both recently failed this
test, with symptoms indicating that the default 3-second timeout
isn't quite enough for those very slow systems.  There's no reason
to be miserly with this timeout, so boost it to 60 seconds.

Back-patch to all versions containing this test.  That may be overkill,
because the failure has only been observed in the v10 branch, but
I don't feel like having to revisit this later.
2017-10-01 12:43:46 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
396ef15618 Fix busy-wait in pgbench, with --rate.
If --rate was used to throttle pgbench, it failed to sleep when it had
nothing to do, leading to a busy-wait with 100% CPU usage. This bug was
introduced in the refactoring in v10. Before that, sleep() was called with
a timeout, even when there were no file descriptors to wait for.

Reported by Jeff Janes, patch by Fabien COELHO. Backpatch to v10.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAMkU%3D1x5hoX0pLLKPRnXCy0T8uHoDvXdq%2B7kAM9eoC9_z72ucw%40mail.gmail.com
2017-10-01 09:29:27 +03:00
Tom Lane
2632bcce5e Fix pg_dump to assign domain array type OIDs during pg_upgrade.
During a binary upgrade, all type OIDs are supposed to be assigned by
pg_dump based on their values in the old cluster.  But now that domains
have arrays, there's nothing to base the arrays' type OIDs on, if we're
upgrading from a pre-v11 cluster.  Make pg_dump search for an unused type
OID to use for this purpose.  Per buildfarm.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1dyLlE-0002gT-H5@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-09-30 17:05:07 -04:00
Tom Lane
c12d570fa1 Support arrays over domains.
Allowing arrays with a domain type as their element type was left un-done
in the original domain patch, but not for any very good reason.  This
omission leads to such surprising results as array_agg() not working on
a domain column, because the parser can't identify a suitable output type
for the polymorphic aggregate.

In order to fix this, first clean up the APIs of coerce_to_domain() and
some internal functions in parse_coerce.c so that we consistently pass
around a CoercionContext along with CoercionForm.  Previously, we sometimes
passed an "isExplicit" boolean flag instead, which is strictly less
information; and coerce_to_domain() didn't even get that, but instead had
to reverse-engineer isExplicit from CoercionForm.  That's contrary to the
documentation in primnodes.h that says that CoercionForm only affects
display and not semantics.  I don't think this change fixes any live bugs,
but it makes things more consistent.  The main reason for doing it though
is that now build_coercion_expression() receives ccontext, which it needs
in order to be able to recursively invoke coerce_to_target_type().

Next, reimplement ArrayCoerceExpr so that the node does not directly know
any details of what has to be done to the individual array elements while
performing the array coercion.  Instead, the per-element processing is
represented by a sub-expression whose input is a source array element and
whose output is a target array element.  This simplifies life in
parse_coerce.c, because it can build that sub-expression by a recursive
invocation of coerce_to_target_type().  The executor now handles the
per-element processing as a compiled expression instead of hard-wired code.
The main advantage of this is that we can use a single ArrayCoerceExpr to
handle as many as three successive steps per element: base type conversion,
typmod coercion, and domain constraint checking.  The old code used two
stacked ArrayCoerceExprs to handle type + typmod coercion, which was pretty
inefficient, and adding yet another array deconstruction to do domain
constraint checking seemed very unappetizing.

In the case where we just need a single, very simple coercion function,
doing this straightforwardly leads to a noticeable increase in the
per-array-element runtime cost.  Hence, add an additional shortcut evalfunc
in execExprInterp.c that skips unnecessary overhead for that specific form
of expression.  The runtime speed of simple cases is within 1% or so of
where it was before, while cases that previously required two levels of
array processing are significantly faster.

Finally, create an implicit array type for every domain type, as we do for
base types, enums, etc.  Everything except the array-coercion case seems
to just work without further effort.

Tom Lane, reviewed by Andrew Dunstan

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9852.1499791473@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-30 13:40:56 -04:00
Andres Freund
248e33756b Fix copy & pasto in 510b8cbff1.
Reported-By: Peter Geoghegan
2017-09-29 17:41:20 -07:00
Andres Freund
f14241236e Fix typo.
Reported-By: Thomas Munro and Jesper Pedersen
2017-09-29 17:24:39 -07:00
Andres Freund
510b8cbff1 Extend & revamp pg_bswap.h infrastructure.
Upcoming patches are going to address performance issues that involve
slow system provided ntohs/htons etc. To address that expand
pg_bswap.h to provide pg_ntoh{16,32,64}, pg_hton{16,32,64} and
optimize their respective implementations by using compiler intrinsics
for gcc compatible compilers and msvc. Fall back to manual
implementations using shifts etc otherwise.

Additionally remove multiple evaluation hazards from the existing
BSWAP32/64 macros, by replacing them with inline functions when
necessary. In the course of that the naming scheme is changed to
pg_bswap16/32/64.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170927172019.gheidqy6xvlxb325@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-09-29 17:24:39 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut
0008a106d4 Use Py_RETURN_NONE where suitable
This is more idiomatic style and available as of Python 2.4, which is
our minimum.
2017-09-29 16:51:39 -04:00
Tom Lane
19de0ab23c Fix inadequate locking during get_rel_oids().
get_rel_oids used to not take any relation locks at all, but that stopped
being a good idea with commit 3c3bb9933, which inserted a syscache lookup
into the function.  A concurrent DROP TABLE could now produce "cache lookup
failed", which we don't want to have happen in normal operation.  The best
solution seems to be to transiently take a lock on the relation named by
the RangeVar (which also makes the result of RangeVarGetRelid a lot less
spongy).  But we shouldn't hold the lock beyond this function, because we
don't want VACUUM to lock more than one table at a time.  (That would not
be a big problem right now, but it will become one after the pending
feature patch to allow multiple tables to be named in VACUUM.)

In passing, adjust vacuum_rel and analyze_rel to document that we don't
trust the passed RangeVar to be accurate, and allow the RangeVar to
possibly be NULL --- which it is anyway for a whole-database VACUUM,
though we accidentally didn't crash for that case.

The passed RangeVar is in fact inaccurate when dealing with a child
partition, as of v10, and it has been wrong for a whole long time in the
case of vacuum_rel() recursing to a TOAST table.  None of these things
present visible bugs up to now, because the passed RangeVar is in fact
only consulted for autovacuum logging, and in that particular context it's
always accurate because autovacuum doesn't let vacuum.c expand partitions
nor recurse to toast tables.  Still, this seems like trouble waiting to
happen, so let's nail the door at least partly shut.  (Further cleanup
is planned, in HEAD only, as part of the pending feature patch.)

Fix some sadly inaccurate/obsolete comments too.  Back-patch to v10.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25023.1506107590@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-29 16:26:31 -04:00
Robert Haas
69c16983e1 psql: Don't try to print a partition constraint we didn't fetch.
If \d rather than \d+ is used, then verbose is false and we don't ask
the server for the partition constraint; so we shouldn't print it in
that case either.

Maksim Milyutin, per a report from Jesper Pedersen.  Reviewed by
Jesper Pedersen and Amit Langote.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/2af5fc4d-7bcc-daa8-4fe6-86274bea363c@redhat.com
2017-09-29 15:59:11 -04:00
Robert Haas
e55d9643ec pgbench: If we fail to send a command to the server, fail.
This beats the old behavior of busy-waiting hands down.

Oversight in commit 12788ae49e.

Report by Pavan Deolasee. Patch by Fabien Coelho.  Reviewed by
Pavan Deolasee.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CABOikdPhfXTypckMC1Ux6Ko+hKBWwUBA=EXsvamXYSg8M9J94w@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-29 13:55:38 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
2a14b9609d psql: Update \d sequence display
For \d sequencename, the psql code just did SELECT * FROM sequencename
to get the information to display, but this does not contain much
interesting information anymore in PostgreSQL 10, because the metadata
has been moved to a separate system catalog.

This patch creates a newly designed sequence display that is not merely
an extension of the general relation/table display as it was previously.

Example:

PostgreSQL 9.6:

=> \d foobar
           Sequence "public.foobar"
    Column     |  Type   |        Value
---------------+---------+---------------------
 sequence_name | name    | foobar
 last_value    | bigint  | 1
 start_value   | bigint  | 1
 increment_by  | bigint  | 1
 max_value     | bigint  | 9223372036854775807
 min_value     | bigint  | 1
 cache_value   | bigint  | 1
 log_cnt       | bigint  | 0
 is_cycled     | boolean | f
 is_called     | boolean | f

PostgreSQL 10 before this change:

=> \d foobar
   Sequence "public.foobar"
   Column   |  Type   | Value
------------+---------+-------
 last_value | bigint  | 1
 log_cnt    | bigint  | 0
 is_called  | boolean | f

New:

=> \d foobar
                           Sequence "public.foobar"
  Type  | Start | Minimum |       Maximum       | Increment | Cycles? | Cache
--------+-------+---------+---------------------+-----------+---------+-------
 bigint |     1 |       1 | 9223372036854775807 |         1 | no      |     1

Reviewed-by: Fabien COELHO <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
2017-09-29 13:37:30 -04:00
Tom Lane
136ab7c5a5 Marginal improvement for generated code in execExprInterp.c.
Avoid the coding pattern "*op->resvalue = f();", as some compilers think
that requires them to evaluate "op->resvalue" before the function call.
Unless there are lots of free registers, this can lead to a useless
register spill and reload across the call.

I changed all the cases like this in ExecInterpExpr(), but didn't bother
in the out-of-line opcode eval subroutines, since those are presumably
not as performance-critical.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2508.1506630094@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-29 11:32:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
5373bc2a08 Add background worker type
Add bgw_type field to background worker structure.  It is intended to be
set to the same value for all workers of the same type, so they can be
grouped in pg_stat_activity, for example.

The backend_type column in pg_stat_activity now shows bgw_type for a
background worker.  The ps listing also no longer calls out that a
process is a background worker but just show the bgw_type.  That way,
being a background worker is more of an implementation detail now that
is not shown to the user.  However, most log messages still refer to
'background worker "%s"'; otherwise constructing sensible and
translatable log messages would become tricky.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2017-09-29 11:08:24 -04:00
Robert Haas
8b304b8b72 Remove replacement selection sort.
At the time replacement_sort_tuples was introduced, there were still
cases where replacement selection sort noticeably outperformed using
quicksort even for the first run.  However, those cases seem to have
evaporated as a result of further improvements made since that time
(and perhaps also advances in CPU technology).  So remove replacement
selection and the controlling GUC entirely.  This makes tuplesort.c
noticeably simpler and probably paves the way for further
optimizations someone might want to do later.

Peter Geoghegan, with review and testing by Tomas Vondra and me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzmmNjG_K0R9nqYwMq3zjyJJK+hCbiZYNGhAy-Zyjs64GQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-29 10:25:44 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
d2773f9bcd Add PostgreSQL version to coverage output
Also make overriding the title easier.  That helps telling where the
report came from and labeling different variants of a report.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-09-29 08:54:47 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
4bb5a2536b Add lcov --initial
By just running lcov on the produced .gcda data files, we don't account
for source files that are not touched by tests at all.  To fix that, run
lcov --initial to create a base line info file with all zero counters,
and merge that with the actual counters when creating the final report.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-09-29 08:54:34 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
20b6552242 Fix freezing of a dead HOT-updated tuple
Vacuum calls page-level HOT prune to remove dead HOT tuples before doing
liveness checks (HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum) on the remaining tuples.  But
concurrent transaction commit/abort may turn DEAD some of the HOT tuples
that survived the prune, before HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum tests them.
This happens to activate the code that decides to freeze the tuple ...
which resuscitates it, duplicating data.

(This is especially bad if there's any unique constraints, because those
are now internally violated due to the duplicate entries, though you
won't know until you try to REINDEX or dump/restore the table.)

One possible fix would be to simply skip doing anything to the tuple,
and hope that the next HOT prune would remove it.  But there is a
problem: if the tuple is older than freeze horizon, this would leave an
unfrozen XID behind, and if no HOT prune happens to clean it up before
the containing pg_clog segment is truncated away, it'd later cause an
error when the XID is looked up.

Fix the problem by having the tuple freezing routines cope with the
situation: don't freeze the tuple (and keep it dead).  In the cases that
the XID is older than the freeze age, set the HEAP_XMAX_COMMITTED flag
so that there is no need to look up the XID in pg_clog later on.

An isolation test is included, authored by Michael Paquier, loosely
based on Daniel Wood's original reproducer.  It only tests one
particular scenario, though, not all the possible ways for this problem
to surface; it be good to have a more reliable way to test this more
fully, but it'd require more work.
In message https://postgr.es/m/20170911140103.5akxptyrwgpc25bw@alvherre.pgsql
I outlined another test case (more closely matching Dan Wood's) that
exposed a few more ways for the problem to occur.

Backpatch all the way back to 9.3, where this problem was introduced by
multixact juggling.  In branches 9.3 and 9.4, this includes a backpatch
of commit e5ff9fefcd50 (of 9.5 era), since the original is not
correctable without matching the coding pattern in 9.5 up.

Reported-by: Daniel Wood
Diagnosed-by: Daniel Wood
Reviewed-by: Yi Wen Wong, Michaël Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E5711E62-8FDF-4DCA-A888-C200BF6B5742@amazon.com
2017-09-28 16:44:01 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
66fd86a6a3 Have lcov exclude external files
Call lcov with --no-external option to exclude external files (for
example, system headers with inline functions) from output.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-09-28 08:50:11 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
504923a0ed Run only top-level recursive lcov
This is the way lcov was intended to be used.  It is much faster and
more robust and makes the makefiles simpler than running it in each
subdirectory.

The previous coding ran gcov before lcov, but that is useless because
lcov/geninfo call gcov internally and use that information.  Moreover,
this led to complications and failures during parallel make.  This
separates the two targets:  You either use "make coverage" to get
textual output from gcov or "make coverage-html" to get an HTML report
via lcov.  (Using both is still problematic because they write the same
output files.)

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-09-28 08:50:02 -04:00
Tom Lane
7769fc000a Fix behavior when converting a float infinity to numeric.
float8_numeric() and float4_numeric() failed to consider the possibility
that the input is an IEEE infinity.  The results depended on the
platform-specific behavior of sprintf(): on most platforms you'd get
something like

ERROR:  invalid input syntax for type numeric: "inf"

but at least on Windows it's possible for the conversion to succeed and
deliver a finite value (typically 1), due to a nonstandard output format
from sprintf and lack of syntax error checking in these functions.

Since our numeric type lacks the concept of infinity, a suitable conversion
is impossible; the best thing to do is throw an explicit error before
letting sprintf do its thing.

While at it, let's use snprintf not sprintf.  Overrunning the buffer
should be impossible if sprintf does what it's supposed to, but this
is cheap insurance against a stack smash if it doesn't.

Problem reported by Taiki Kondo.  Patch by me based on fix suggestion
from KaiGai Kohei.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12A9442FBAE80D4E8953883E0B84E088C8C7A2@BPXM01GP.gisp.nec.co.jp
2017-09-27 17:05:53 -04:00
Tom Lane
28e0727076 Revert to 9.6 treatment of ALTER TYPE enumtype ADD VALUE.
This reverts commit 15bc038f9, along with the followon commits 1635e80d3
and 984c92074 that tried to clean up the problems exposed by bug #14825.
The result was incomplete because it failed to address parallel-query
requirements.  With 10.0 release so close upon us, now does not seem like
the time to be adding more code to fix that.  I hope we can un-revert this
code and add the missing parallel query support during the v11 cycle.

Back-patch to v10.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170922185904.1448.16585@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-09-27 16:14:43 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
65c8656202 Fix plperl build
The changes in 639928c988 turned out to
require Perl 5.9.3, which is newer than our minimum required version.
So revert back to the old code for the normal case and only use the new
variant when both coverage and vpath are used.  As the minimum Perl
version moves forward, we can drop the old code sometime.
2017-09-27 15:51:04 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
639928c988 Improve vpath support in plperl build
Run xsubpp with the -output option instead of redirecting stdout.  That
ensures that the #line directives in the output file point to the right
place in a vpath build.  This in turn fixes an error in coverage builds
that it can't find the source files.

Refactor the makefile rules while we're here.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-09-27 11:51:21 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
3709ca1cf0 pg_basebackup: Add option to create replication slot
When requesting a particular replication slot, the new pg_basebackup
option -C/--create-slot creates it before starting to replicate from it.

Further refactor the slot creation logic to include the temporary slot
creation logic into the same function.  Add new arguments is_temporary
and preserve_wal to CreateReplicationSlot().  Print in --verbose mode
that a slot has been created.

Author: Michael Banck <michael.banck@credativ.de>
2017-09-27 08:49:47 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
fa41461205 Add some more pg_receivewal tests
Add some more tests for the --create-slot and --drop-slot options,
verifying that the right kind of slot was created and that the slot was
dropped.  While working on an unrelated patch for pg_basebackup, some of
this was temporarily broken without any tests noticing.
2017-09-26 16:41:20 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
43588f58aa Turn on log_replication_commands in PostgresNode
This is useful for example for the pg_basebackup and related tests.
2017-09-26 16:05:25 -04:00
Tom Lane
9a50a93c7b Improve wording of error message added in commit 714805010.
Per suggestions from Peter Eisentraut and David Johnston.
Back-patch, like the previous commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1dv9jI-0006oT-Fn@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-09-26 15:25:56 -04:00
Tom Lane
5ea96efaa0 Fix failure-to-read-man-page in commit 899bd785c.
posix_fallocate() is not quite a drop-in replacement for fallocate(),
because it is defined to return the error code as its function result,
not in "errno".  I (tgl) missed this because RHEL6's version seems
to set errno as well.  That is not the case on more modern Linuxen,
though, as per buildfarm results.

Aside from fixing the return-convention confusion, remove the test
for ENOSYS; we expect that glibc will mask that for posix_fallocate,
though it does not for fallocate.  Keep the test for EINTR, because
POSIX specifies that as a possible result, and buildfarm results
suggest that it can happen in practice.

Back-patch to 9.4, like the previous commit.

Thomas Munro

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1002664500.12301802.1471008223422.JavaMail.yahoo@mail.yahoo.com
2017-09-26 13:42:53 -04:00
Tom Lane
984c92074d Remove heuristic same-transaction test from check_safe_enum_use().
The blacklist mechanism added by the preceding commit directly fixes
most of the practical cases that the same-transaction test was meant
to cover.  What remains is use-cases like

	begin;
	create type e as enum('x');
	alter type e add value 'y';
	-- use 'y' somehow
	commit;

However, because the same-transaction test is heuristic, it fails on
small variants of that, such as renaming the type or changing its
owner.  Rather than try to explain the behavior to users, let's
remove it and just have a rule that the newly added value can't be
used before being committed, full stop.  Perhaps later it will be
worth the implementation effort and overhead to have a more accurate
test for type-was-created-in-this-transaction.  We'll wait for some
field experience with v10 before deciding to do that.

Back-patch to v10.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170922185904.1448.16585@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-09-26 13:14:46 -04:00
Tom Lane
1635e80d30 Use a blacklist to distinguish original from add-on enum values.
Commit 15bc038f9 allowed ALTER TYPE ADD VALUE to be executed inside
transaction blocks, by disallowing the use of the added value later
in the same transaction, except under limited circumstances.  However,
the test for "limited circumstances" was heuristic and could reject
references to enum values that were created during CREATE TYPE AS ENUM,
not just later.  This breaks the use-case of restoring pg_dump scripts
in a single transaction, as reported in bug #14825 from Balazs Szilfai.

We can improve this by keeping a "blacklist" table of enum value OIDs
created by ALTER TYPE ADD VALUE during the current transaction.  Any
visible-but-uncommitted value whose OID is not in the blacklist must
have been created by CREATE TYPE AS ENUM, and can be used safely
because it could not have a lifespan shorter than its parent enum type.

This change also removes the restriction that a renamed enum value
can't be used before being committed (unless it was on the blacklist).

Andrew Dunstan, with cosmetic improvements by me.
Back-patch to v10.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170922185904.1448.16585@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-09-26 13:14:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
15a8010ed6 Sort pg_basebackup options better
The --slot option somehow ended up under options controlling the output,
and some other options were in a nonsensical place or were not moved
after recent renamings, so tidy all that up a bit.
2017-09-26 11:58:22 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
ab28feae2b Handle heap rewrites better in logical replication
A FOR ALL TABLES publication naturally considers all base tables to be a
candidate for replication.  This includes transient heaps that are
created during a table rewrite during DDL.  This causes failures on the
subscriber side because it will not have a table like pg_temp_16386 to
receive data (and if it did, it would be the wrong table).

The prevent this problem, we filter out any tables that match this
naming pattern and match an actual table from FOR ALL TABLES
publications.  This is only a heuristic, meaning that user tables that
match that naming could accidentally be omitted.  A more robust solution
might require an explicit marking of such tables in pg_class somehow.

Reported-by: yxq <yxq@o2.pl>
Bug: #14785
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-09-26 10:13:43 -04:00
Robert Haas
22c5e73562 Remove lsn from HashScanPosData.
This was intended as infrastructure for weakening VACUUM's locking
requirements, similar to what was done for btree indexes in commit
2ed5b87f96.  However, for hash indexes,
it seems that the improvements which are possible are actually
extremely marginal.  Furthermore, performing the LSN cross-check will
end up skipping cleanup far more often than is necessary; we only care
about page modifications due to a VACUUM, but the LSN check will fail
if ANY modification has occurred.  So, rather than pressing forward
with that "optimization", just rip the LSN field out.

Patch by me, reviewed by Ashutosh Sharma and Amit Kapila

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1JxqqcuC5Un7YLQVhOYSZBS+t=3xqZuEkt5RyquyuxpwQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-26 09:16:45 -04:00
Robert Haas
79a4a665c0 Fix trivial mistake in README.
You might think I (Robert) could manage to count to five without
messing it up, but if you did, you would be wrong.

Amit Kapila

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1JxqqcuC5Un7YLQVhOYSZBS+t=3xqZuEkt5RyquyuxpwQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-26 09:01:43 -04:00
Tom Lane
899bd785c0 Avoid SIGBUS on Linux when a DSM memory request overruns tmpfs.
On Linux, shared memory segments created with shm_open() are backed by
swap files created in tmpfs.  If the swap file needs to be extended,
but there's no tmpfs space left, you get a very unfriendly SIGBUS trap.
To avoid this, force allocation of the full request size when we create
the segment.  This adds a few cycles, but none that we wouldn't expend
later anyway, assuming the request isn't hugely bigger than the actual
need.

Make this code #ifdef __linux__, because (a) there's not currently a
reason to think the same problem exists on other platforms, and (b)
applying posix_fallocate() to an FD created by shm_open() isn't very
portable anyway.

Back-patch to 9.4 where the DSM code came in.

Thomas Munro, per a bug report from Amul Sul

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1002664500.12301802.1471008223422.JavaMail.yahoo@mail.yahoo.com
2017-09-25 16:09:19 -04:00
Tom Lane
716ea626a8 Make construct_[md_]array return a valid empty array for zero-size input.
If construct_array() or construct_md_array() were given a dimension of
zero, they'd produce an array that contains no elements but has positive
dimension.  This violates a general expectation that empty arrays should
have ndims = 0; in particular, while arrays like this print as empty,
they don't compare equal to other empty arrays.

Up to now we've expected callers to avoid making such calls and instead
be careful to call construct_empty_array() if there would be no elements.
But this has always been an easily missed case, and we've repeatedly had to
fix callers to do it right.  In bug #14826, Erwin Brandstetter pointed out
yet another such oversight, in ts_lexize(); and a bit of examination of
other call sites found at least two more with similar issues.  So let's
fix the problem centrally and permanently by changing these two functions
to construct a proper zero-D empty array whenever the array would be empty.

This renders a few explicit calls of construct_empty_array() redundant,
but the only such place I found that really seemed worth changing was in
ExecEvalArrayExpr().

Although this fixes some very old bugs, no back-patch: the problem is
pretty minor and the risk of changing behavior seems to outweigh the
benefit in stable branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170923125723.1448.39412@wrigleys.postgresql.org
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20570.1506198383@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-25 11:55:24 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
f2ab3898f3 Support building with Visual Studio 2017
Haribabu Kommi, reviewed by Takeshi Ideriha and Christian Ullrich

Backpatch to 9.6
2017-09-25 08:03:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
6dda0998af Allow ICU to use SortSupport on Windows with UTF-8
There is no reason to ever prevent the use of SortSupport on Windows
when ICU locales are used.  We previously avoided SortSupport on Windows
with UTF-8 server encoding and a non C-locale due to restrictions in
Windows' libc functionality.

This is now considered to be a restriction in one platform's libc
collation provider, and not a more general platform restriction.

Reported-by: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
2017-09-24 07:55:24 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
74ca8f9b90 Fix pg_basebackup test to original intent
One test case was meant to check that pg_basebackup does not succeed
when a slot is specified with -S but WAL streaming is not selected,
which used to require specifying -X stream.  Since -X stream is the
default in PostgreSQL 10, this test case no longer covers that meaning,
but the pg_basebackup invocation happened to fail anyway for the
unrelated reason that the specified replication slot does not exist.  To
fix, move the test case to later in the file where the slot does exist,
and add -X none to the invocation so that it covers the originally meant
behavior.

extracted from a patch by Michael Banck <michael.banck@credativ.de>
2017-09-23 22:59:26 -04:00
Tom Lane
24541ffd78 ... and the very same bug in publicationListToArray().
Sigh.
2017-09-23 15:16:48 -04:00
Tom Lane
737639017c Fix bogus size calculation in strlist_to_textarray().
It's making an array of Datum, not an array of text *.  The mistake
is harmless since those are currently the same size, but it's still
wrong.
2017-09-23 15:01:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
335f3d04e4 Improve memory management in autovacuum.c.
Invoke vacuum(), as well as "work item" processing, in the PortalContext
that do_autovacuum() has manufactured, which will be reset before each
such invocation.  This ensures cleanup of any memory leaked by these
operations.  It also avoids the rather dangerous practice of calling
vacuum() in a context that vacuum() itself will destroy while it runs.
There's no known live bug there, but it's not hard to imagine introducing
one if we leave it like this.

Tom Lane, reviewed by Michael Paquier and Alvaro Herrera

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/13849.1506114543@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-23 13:28:16 -04:00
Tom Lane
ad51c6fb57 Remove pgbench "progress" test pending solution of its timing issues.
Buildfarm member skink shows that this is even more flaky than
I thought.  There are probably some actual pgbench bugs here
as well as a timing dependency.  But we can't have stuff this
unstable in the buildfarm, it obscures other issues.
2017-09-23 13:02:30 -04:00
Tom Lane
01c7d3ef85 Ten-second timeout in 013_crash_restart.pl is not enough, let's try 60.
Per buildfarm member topminnow.
2017-09-23 12:56:31 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
0c5803b450 Refactor new file permission handling
The file handling functions from fd.c were called with a diverse mix of
notations for the file permissions when they were opening new files.
Almost all files created by the server should have the same permissions
set.  So change the API so that e.g. OpenTransientFile() automatically
uses the standard permissions set, and OpenTransientFilePerm() is a new
function that takes an explicit permissions set for the few cases where
it is needed.  This also saves an unnecessary argument for call sites
that are just opening an existing file.

While we're reviewing these APIs, get rid of the FileName typedef and
use the standard const char * for the file name and mode_t for the file
mode.  This makes these functions match other file handling functions
and removes an unnecessary layer of mysteriousness.  We can also get rid
of a few casts that way.

Author: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
2017-09-23 10:16:18 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
404ba54e8f Test BRIN autosummarization
There was no coverage for this code.

Reported-by: Nikolay Shaplov, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2700647.XEouBYNZic@x200m
	https://postgr.es/m/13849.1506114543@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-23 14:15:06 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
aa6b7b72d9 Fix saving and restoring umask
In two cases, we set a different umask for some piece of code and
restore it afterwards.  But if the contained code errors out, the umask
is not restored.  So add TRY/CATCH blocks to fix that.
2017-09-22 17:10:36 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
58ffe141eb Revert "Add basic TAP test setup for pg_upgrade"
This reverts commit f41e56c76e.

The build farm client would run the pg_upgrade tests twice, once as part
of the existing pg_upgrade check run and once as part of picking up all
TAP tests by looking for "t" directories.  Since the pg_upgrade tests
are pretty slow, we will need a better solution or possibly a build farm
client change before we can proceed with this.
2017-09-22 16:46:56 -04:00
Andres Freund
791961f59b Add inline murmurhash32(uint32) function.
The function already existed in tidbitmap.c but more users requiring
fast hashing of 32bit ints are coming up.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170914061207.zxotvyopetm7lrrp@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-09-22 13:38:42 -07:00
Andres Freund
8d926029e8 Expand expected output for recovery test even further.
I'd assumed that the backend being killed should be able to get out an
error message - but it turns out it's not guaranteed that it's not
still sending a ready-for-query.  Really need to do something about
getting these error message to the client.

Reported-By: Thomas Munro, Tom Lane
Discussion:
	https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0TE90nded+bNthP45_PEvGAAr=3gxhHJObL4xmOLtX0w@mail.gmail.com
	https://postgr.es/m/14968.1506101414@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-22 11:35:26 -07:00
Andres Freund
f9583e86b4 Fix s/intidb/initdb/ typo.
Reported-By: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqTfaKAYZ4wuUM-W8kc4VnXrxX1=5-a9i==VoUPTMFpsgg@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-22 11:35:26 -07:00
Robert Haas
6a2fa09c0c For wal_consistency_checking, mask page checksum as well as page LSN.
If the LSN is different, the checksum will be different, too.

Ashwin Agrawal, reviewed by Michael Paquier and Kuntal Ghosh

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CALfoeis5iqrAU-+JAN+ZzXkpPr7+-0OAGv7QUHwFn=-wDy4o4Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-22 14:28:22 -04:00
Robert Haas
7c75ef5715 hash: Implement page-at-a-time scan.
Commit 09cb5c0e7d added a similar
optimization to btree back in 2006, but nobody bothered to implement
the same thing for hash indexes, probably because they weren't
WAL-logged and had lots of other performance problems as well.  As
with the corresponding btree case, this eliminates the problem of
potentially needing to refind our position within the page, and cuts
down on pin/unpin traffic as well.

Ashutosh Sharma, reviewed by Alexander Korotkov, Jesper Pedersen,
Amit Kapila, and me.  Some final edits to comments and README by
me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAE9k0Pm3KTx93K8_5j6VMzG4h5F+SyknxUwXrN-zqSZ9X8ZS3w@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-22 13:56:27 -04:00
Tom Lane
0f574a7afb Allow up to 3 "-P 1" reports per thread in pgbench run of 2 seconds.
There seems to be some considerable imprecision in the timing of -P
progress reports.  Nominally each thread ought to produce 2 reports
in this test, but about 10% of the time we only get one, and 1% of
the time we get three, as per buildfarm results so far.  Pending
further investigation, treat the last case as a "pass".  (I, tgl,
am suspicious that this still might not be lax enough, now that it's
obvious that the behavior is load-dependent; but there's not yet
buildfarm evidence to confirm that suspicion.)

Fabien Coelho

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/26654.1505232433@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-22 12:59:44 -04:00
Tom Lane
ed87e19807 Mop-up for commit 85feb77aa0.
Adjust commentary in regc_pg_locale.c to remove mention of the possibility
of not having <wctype.h> functions, since we no longer consider that.

Eliminate duplicate code in wparser_def.c by generalizing the p_iswhat
macro to take a parameter saying what to return for non-ASCII chars
in C locale.  (That's not really a consequence of the
USE_WIDE_UPPER_LOWER-ectomy, but I noticed it while doing that.)
2017-09-22 11:35:12 -04:00
Tom Lane
85feb77aa0 Assume wcstombs(), towlower(), and sibling functions are always present.
These functions are required by SUS v2, which is our minimum baseline
for Unix platforms, and are present on all interesting Windows versions
as well.  Even our oldest buildfarm members have them.  Thus, we were not
testing the "!USE_WIDE_UPPER_LOWER" code paths, which explains why the bug
fixed in commit e6023ee7f escaped detection.  Per discussion, there seems
to be no more real-world value in maintaining this option.  Hence, remove
the configure-time tests for wcstombs() and towlower(), remove the
USE_WIDE_UPPER_LOWER symbol, and remove all the !USE_WIDE_UPPER_LOWER code.
There's not actually all that much of the latter, but simplifying the #if
nests is a win in itself.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170921052928.GA188913@rfd.leadboat.com
2017-09-22 11:00:58 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
e6023ee7fa Fix build with !USE_WIDE_UPPER_LOWER
The placement of the ifdef blocks in formatting.c was pretty bogus, so
the code failed to compile if USE_WIDE_UPPER_LOWER was not defined.

Reported-by: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Reported-by: Noah Misch <noah@leadboat.com>
2017-09-22 09:26:38 -04:00
Tom Lane
47f849a3c9 Sync our copy of the timezone library with IANA tzcode master.
This patch absorbs a few unreleased fixes in the IANA code.
It corresponds to commit 2d8b944c1cec0808ac4f7a9ee1a463c28f9cd00a
in https://github.com/eggert/tz.  Non-cosmetic changes include:

TZDEFRULESTRING is updated to match current US DST practice,
rather than what it was over ten years ago.  This only matters
for interpretation of POSIX-style zone names (e.g., "EST5EDT"),
and only if the timezone database doesn't include either an exact
match for the zone name or a "posixrules" entry.  The latter
should not be true in any current Postgres installation, but
this could possibly matter when using --with-system-tzdata.

Get rid of a nonportable use of "++var" on a bool var.
This is part of a larger fix that eliminates some vestigial
support for consecutive leap seconds, and adds checks to
the "zic" compiler that the data files do not specify that.

Remove a couple of ancient compatibility hacks.  The IANA
crew think these are obsolete, and I tend to agree.  But
perhaps our buildfarm will think different.

Back-patch to all supported branches, in line with our policy
that all branches should be using current IANA code.  Before v10,
this includes application of current pgindent rules, to avoid
whitespace problems in future back-patches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1dsWhf-0000pT-F9@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-09-22 00:04:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
a890432a87 Revert "Fix bool/int type confusion"
This reverts commit 0ec2e908ba.
We'll use the upstream (IANA) fix instead.
2017-09-22 00:04:29 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
d57c7a7c50 Provide a test for variable existence in psql
"\if :{?variable_name}" will be translated to "\if TRUE" if the variable
exists and "\if FALSE" otherwise. Thus it will be possible to execute code
conditionally on the existence of the variable, regardless of its value.

Fabien Coelho, with some review by Robins Tharakan and some light text
editing by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1708260835520.3627@lancre
2017-09-21 19:02:23 -04:00
Tom Lane
7148050105 Give a better error for duplicate entries in VACUUM/ANALYZE column list.
Previously, the code didn't think about this case and would just try to
analyze such a column twice.  That would fail at the point of inserting
the second version of the pg_statistic row, with obscure error messsages
like "duplicate key value violates unique constraint" or "tuple already
updated by self", depending on context and PG version.  We could allow
the case by ignoring duplicate column specifications, but it seems better
to reject it explicitly.

The bogus error messages seem like arguably a bug, so back-patch to
all supported versions.

Nathan Bossart, per a report from Michael Paquier, and whacked
around a bit by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E061A8E3-5E3D-494D-94F0-E8A9B312BBFC@amazon.com
2017-09-21 18:13:11 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
28ae524bbf Quieten warnings about unused variables
These variables are only ever written to in assertion-enabled builds,
and the latest Microsoft compilers complain about such variables in
non-assertion-enabled builds.

Apparently they don't worry so much about variables that are written to
but not read from, so most of our PG_USED_FOR_ASSERTS_ONLY variables
don't cause the problem.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7800.1505950322@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-21 08:41:14 -04:00
Robert Haas
9140cf8269 Associate partitioning information with each RelOptInfo.
This is not used for anything yet, but it is necessary infrastructure
for partition-wise join and for partition pruning without constraint
exclusion.

Ashutosh Bapat, reviewed by Amit Langote and with quite a few changes,
mostly cosmetic, by me.  Additional review and testing of this patch
series by Antonin Houska, Amit Khandekar, Rafia Sabih, Rajkumar
Raghuwanshi, Thomas Munro, and Dilip Kumar.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRfneFG3H+F6BaiXemMrKF+FY-POpx3Ocy+RiH3yBmXSNw@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-20 23:39:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
7b86c2ac95 Improve dubious memory management in pg_newlocale_from_collation().
pg_newlocale_from_collation() used malloc() and strdup() directly,
which is generally not per backend coding style, and it didn't bother
to check for failure results, but would just SIGSEGV instead.  Also,
if one of the numerous error checks in the middle of the function
failed, the already-allocated memory would be leaked permanently.
Admittedly, it's not a lot of memory, but it could build up if this
function were called repeatedly for a bad collation.

The first two problems are easily cured by palloc'ing in TopMemoryContext
instead of calling libc directly.  We can fairly easily dodge the leakage
problem for the struct pg_locale_struct by filling in a temporary variable
and allocating permanent storage only once we reach the bottom of the
function.  It's harder to get rid of the potential leakage for ICU's copy
of the collcollate string, but at least that's only allocated after most
of the error checks; so live with that aspect.

Back-patch to v10 where this code came in, with one or another of the
ICU patches.
2017-09-20 13:52:36 -04:00
Tom Lane
4939488af9 Fix instability in subscription regression test.
005_encoding.pl neglected to wait for the subscriber's initial
synchronization to happen.  While we have not seen this fail in
the buildfarm, it's pretty easy to demonstrate there's an issue
by hacking logicalrep_worker_launch() to fail most of the time.

Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/27032.1505749806@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-20 11:28:34 -04:00
Robert Haas
57eebca03a Fix create_lateral_join_info to handle dead relations properly.
Commit 0a480502b0 broke it.

Report by Andreas Seltenreich.  Fix by Ashutosh Bapat.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/874ls2vrnx.fsf@ansel.ydns.eu
2017-09-20 10:20:10 -04:00
Robert Haas
7f3a3312ab Fix typo.
Thomas Munro

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2j-HAgnBUrAazwS0ry7Z_ihk+d7g+Ye3u99+6WbiGt_Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-20 10:07:53 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
d42294fc00 Fix compiler warning
from gcc-7 -Wformat-truncation (via -Wall)
2017-09-20 09:03:04 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
be87b70b61 Sync process names between ps and pg_stat_activity
Remove gratuitous differences in the process names shown in
pg_stat_activity.backend_type and the ps output.

Reviewed-by: Takayuki Tsunakawa <tsunakawa.takay@jp.fujitsu.com>
2017-09-20 08:59:03 -04:00
Andres Freund
fc49e24fa6 Make WAL segment size configurable at initdb time.
For performance reasons a larger segment size than the default 16MB
can be useful. A larger segment size has two main benefits: Firstly,
in setups using archiving, it makes it easier to write scripts that
can keep up with higher amounts of WAL, secondly, the WAL has to be
written and synced to disk less frequently.

But at the same time large segment size are disadvantageous for
smaller databases. So far the segment size had to be configured at
compile time, often making it unrealistic to choose one fitting to a
particularly load. Therefore change it to a initdb time setting.

This includes a breaking changes to the xlogreader.h API, which now
requires the current segment size to be configured.  For that and
similar reasons a number of binaries had to be taught how to recognize
the current segment size.

Author: Beena Emerson, editorialized by Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund, David Steele, Kuntal Ghosh, Michael
    Paquier, Peter Eisentraut, Robert Hass, Tushar Ahuja
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOG9ApEAcQ--1ieKbhFzXSQPw_YLmepaa4hNdnY5+ZULpt81Mw@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-19 22:03:48 -07:00
Andres Freund
5ada1fcd0c Accept that server might not be able to send error in crash recovery test.
As it turns out we can't rely that the script's monitoring session is
terminated with a proper error by the server, because the session
might be terminated while already trying to send data.

Also improve robustness and error reporting facilities of the test,
developed while debugging this issue.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170920020038.kllxgilo7xzwmtto@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-09-19 21:37:24 -07:00
Tom Lane
2d484f9b05 Remove no-op GiST support functions in the core GiST opclasses.
The preceding patch allowed us to remove useless GiST support functions.
This patch actually does that for all the no-op cases in the core GiST
code.  This buys us whatever performance gain is to be had, and more
importantly exercises the preceding patch.

There remain no-op functions in the contrib GiST opclasses, but those
will take more work to remove.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJEAwVELVx9gYscpE=Be6iJxvdW5unZ_LkcAaVNSeOwvdwtD=A@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-19 23:32:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
d3a4f89d8a Allow no-op GiST support functions to be omitted.
There are common use-cases in which the compress and/or decompress
functions can be omitted, with the result being that we make no
data transformation when storing or retrieving index values.
Previously, you had to provide a no-op function anyway, but this
patch allows such opclass support functions to be omitted.

Furthermore, if the compress function is omitted, then the core code
knows that the stored representation is the same as the original data.
This means we can allow index-only scans without requiring a fetch
function to be provided either.  Previously you had to provide a
no-op fetch function if you wanted IOS to work.

This reportedly provides a small performance benefit in such cases,
but IMO the real reason for doing it is just to reduce the amount of
useless boilerplate code that has to be written for GiST opclasses.

Andrey Borodin, reviewed by Dmitriy Sarafannikov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJEAwVELVx9gYscpE=Be6iJxvdW5unZ_LkcAaVNSeOwvdwtD=A@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-19 23:32:59 -04:00
Andres Freund
896537f078 s/NULL byte/NUL byte/ in comment refering to C string terminator.
Reported-By: Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmoa+YBvWgFST2NVoeXjVSohEpK=vqnVCsoCkhTVVxfLcVQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-19 16:41:07 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut
f41e56c76e Add basic TAP test setup for pg_upgrade
The plan is to convert the current pg_upgrade test to the TAP
framework.  This commit just puts a basic TAP test in place so that we
can see how the build farm behaves, since the build farm client has some
special knowledge of the pg_upgrade tests.

Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-09-19 18:51:25 -04:00
Andres Freund
71edbb6f66 Avoid use of non-portable strnlen() in pgstat_clip_activity().
The use of strnlen rather than strlen was just paranoia. Instead of
giving up on the paranoia, just implement the safeguard
differently. And add a comment explaining why we're careful.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1duOkJ-0001Mc-U5@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-09-19 14:25:47 -07:00
Andres Freund
54b6cd589a Speedup pgstat_report_activity by moving mb-aware truncation to read side.
Previously multi-byte aware truncation was done on every
pgstat_report_activity() call - proving to be a bottleneck for
workloads with long query strings that execute quickly.

Instead move the truncation to the read side, which commonly is
executed far less frequently. That's possible because all server
encodings allow to determine the length of a multi-byte string from
the first byte.

Rename PgBackendStatus.st_activity to st_activity_raw so existing
extension users of the field break - their code has to be adjusted to
use pgstat_clip_activity().

Author: Andres Freund
Tested-By: Khuntal Ghosh
Reviewed-By: Robert Haas, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170912071948.pa7igbpkkkviecpz@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-09-19 12:51:14 -07:00
Tom Lane
ed22fb8b00 Cache datatype-output-function lookup info across calls of concat().
Testing indicates this can save a third to a half of the runtime
of the function.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Alexander Kuzmenkov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRAT62pRgjoHbgTfJUc2uLmeQ4saUj+yVJAEZUiMwNCmdg@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-19 15:09:38 -04:00
Andres Freund
1910353675 Make new crash restart test a bit more robust.
Add timeouts in case psql doesn't deliver the expected output, and try
to cause the monitoring psql to be fully connected to a backend.  This
isn't necessarily everything needed, but at least the timeouts should
reduce the pain for buildfarm owners.

Author: Andres Freund
Reported-By: Tom Lane, BF animals prairiedog and calliphoridae
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1du6ZT-00043I-91@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-09-19 10:39:52 -07:00
Andres Freund
f8e5f156b3 Rearm statement_timeout after each executed query.
Previously statement_timeout, in the extended protocol, affected all
messages till a Sync message.  For clients that pipeline/batch query
execution that's problematic.

Instead disable timeout after each Execute message, and enable, if
necessary, the timer in start_xact_command(). As that's done only for
Execute and not Parse / Bind, pipelining the latter two could still
cause undesirable timeouts. But a survey of protocol implementations
shows that all drivers issue Sync messages when preparing, and adding
timeout rearming to both is fairly expensive for the common parse /
bind / execute sequence.

Author: Tatsuo Ishii, editorialized by Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Takayuki Tsunakawa, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170222.115044.1665674502985097185.t-ishii@sraoss.co.jp
2017-09-18 19:36:44 -07:00
Andres Freund
0fb9e4ace5 Fix uninitialized variable in dshash.c.
A bugfix for commit 8c0d7bafad.  The code
would have crashed if hashtable->size_log2 ever had the same value as
hashtable->control->size_log2 by coincidence.

Per Valgrind.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-By: Tomas Vondra
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/e72fb33c-4f31-f276-e972-263d9b59554d%402ndquadrant.com
2017-09-18 17:43:37 -07:00
Andres Freund
a1924a4ea2 Add test for postmaster crash restarts.
Given that I managed to break this...  We probably should extend the
tests to also cover other sub-processes dying, but that's something
for later.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170917080752.rcmihzfmgbeuqjk2@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-09-18 17:25:53 -07:00
Andres Freund
ec9e05b3c3 Fix crash restart bug introduced in 8356753c21.
The bug was caused by not re-reading the control file during crash
recovery restarts, which lead to an attempt to pfree() shared memory
contents. The fix is to re-read the control file, which seems good
anyway.

It's unclear as of this moment, whether we want to keep the
refactoring introduced in the commit referenced above, or come up with
an alternative approach. But fixing the bug in the mean time seems
like a good idea regardless.

A followup commit will introduce regression test coverage for crash
restarts.

Reported-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/14134.1505572349@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-18 17:25:49 -07:00
Tom Lane
eb5c404b17 Minor code-cleanliness improvements for btree.
Make the btree page-flags test macros (P_ISLEAF and friends) return clean
boolean values, rather than values that might not fit in a bool.  Use them
in a few places that were randomly referencing the flag bits directly.

In passing, change access/nbtree/'s only direct use of BUFFER_LOCK_SHARE to
BT_READ.  (Some think we should go the other way, but as long as we have
BT_READ/BT_WRITE, let's use them consistently.)

Masahiko Sawada, reviewed by Doug Doole

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoBmWPeN=WBB5Jvyz_Nt3rmW1ebUyAnk3ZbJP3RMXALJog@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-18 16:36:28 -04:00
Tom Lane
66917bfaa7 Make ExplainOpenGroup and ExplainCloseGroup public.
Extensions with custom plan nodes might like to use these in their
EXPLAIN output.

Hadi Moshayedi

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+_kT_dU-rHCN0u6pjA6bN5CZniMfD=-wVqPY4QLrKUY_uJq5w@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-18 16:01:16 -04:00
Tom Lane
4bd1994650 Make DatumGetFoo/PG_GETARG_FOO/PG_RETURN_FOO macro names more consistent.
By project convention, these names should include "P" when dealing with a
pointer type; that is, if the result of a GETARG macro is of type FOO *,
it should be called PG_GETARG_FOO_P not just PG_GETARG_FOO.  Some newer
types such as JSONB and ranges had not followed the convention, and a
number of contrib modules hadn't gotten that memo either.  Rename the
offending macros to improve consistency.

In passing, fix a few places that thought PG_DETOAST_DATUM() returns
a Datum; it does not, it returns "struct varlena *".  Applying
DatumGetPointer to that happens not to cause any bad effects today,
but it's formally wrong.  Also, adjust an ltree macro that was designed
without any thought for what pgindent would do with it.

This is all cosmetic and shouldn't have any impact on generated code.

Mark Dilger, some further tweaks by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/EA5676F4-766F-4F38-8348-ECC7DB427C6A@gmail.com
2017-09-18 15:21:23 -04:00
Tom Lane
3e1683d37e Fix, or at least ameliorate, bugs in logicalrep_worker_launch().
If we failed to get a background worker slot, the code just walked
away from the logicalrep-worker slot it already had, leaving that
looking like the worker is still starting up.  This led to an indefinite
hang in subscription startup, as reported by Thomas Munro.  We must
release the slot on failure.

Also fix a thinko: we must capture the worker slot's generation before
releasing LogicalRepWorkerLock the first time, else testing to see if
it's changed is pretty meaningless.

BTW, the CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() in WaitForReplicationWorkerAttach is a
ticking time bomb, even without considering the possibility of elog(ERROR)
in one of the other functions it calls.  Really, this entire business needs
a redesign with some actual thought about error recovery.  But for now
I'm just band-aiding the case observed in testing.

Back-patch to v10 where this code was added.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2bP3TBMFBArP6o20AZaRduWjMnjCjt22hSdnA-EvrtCw@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-18 11:39:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
8edacab209 Fix DROP SUBSCRIPTION hang
When ALTER SUBSCRIPTION DISABLE is run in the same transaction before
DROP SUBSCRIPTION, the latter will hang because workers will still be
running, not having seen the DISABLE committed, and DROP SUBSCRIPTION
will wait until the workers have vacated the replication origin slots.

Previously, DROP SUBSCRIPTION killed the logical replication workers
immediately only if it was going to drop the replication slot, otherwise
it scheduled the worker killing for the end of the transaction, as a
result of 7e174fa793.  This, however,
causes the present problem.  To fix, kill the workers immediately in all
cases.  This covers all cases: A subscription that doesn't have a
replication slot must be disabled.  It was either disabled in the same
transaction, or it was already disabled before the current transaction,
but then there shouldn't be any workers left and this won't make a
difference.

Reported-by: Arseny Sher <a.sher@postgrespro.ru>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/87mv6av84w.fsf%40ars-thinkpad
2017-09-17 22:00:23 -04:00
Tom Lane
6f44fe7f12 Allow rel_is_distinct_for() to look through RelabelType below OpExpr.
This lets it do the right thing for, eg, varchar columns.
Back-patch to 9.5 where this logic appeared.

David Rowley, per report from Kim Rose Carlsen

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/VI1PR05MB17091F9A9876528055D6A827C76D0@VI1PR05MB1709.eurprd05.prod.outlook.com
2017-09-17 15:28:51 -04:00
Tom Lane
27c6619e9c Fix possible dangling pointer dereference in trigger.c.
AfterTriggerEndQuery correctly notes that the query_stack could get
repalloc'd during a trigger firing, but it nonetheless passes the address
of a query_stack entry to afterTriggerInvokeEvents, so that if such a
repalloc occurs, afterTriggerInvokeEvents is already working with an
obsolete dangling pointer while it scans the rest of the events.  Oops.
The only code at risk is its "delete_ok" cleanup code, so we can
prevent unsafe behavior by passing delete_ok = false instead of true.

However, that could have a significant performance penalty, because the
point of passing delete_ok = true is to not have to re-scan possibly
a large number of dead trigger events on the next time through the loop.
There's more than one way to skin that cat, though.  What we can do is
delete all the "chunks" in the event list except the last one, since
we know all events in them must be dead.  Deleting the chunks is work
we'd have had to do later in AfterTriggerEndQuery anyway, and it ends
up saving rescanning of just about the same events we'd have gotten
rid of with delete_ok = true.

In v10 and HEAD, we also have to be careful to mop up any per-table
after_trig_events pointers that would become dangling.  This is slightly
annoying, but I don't think that normal use-cases will traverse this code
path often enough for it to be a performance problem.

It's pretty hard to hit this in practice because of the unlikelihood
of the query_stack getting resized at just the wrong time.  Nonetheless,
it's definitely a live bug of ancient standing, so back-patch to all
supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2891.1505419542@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-17 14:50:01 -04:00
Tom Lane
fd31f9f033 Ensure that BEFORE STATEMENT triggers fire the right number of times.
Commit 0f79440fb introduced mechanism to keep AFTER STATEMENT triggers
from firing more than once per statement, which was formerly possible
if more than one FK enforcement action had to be applied to a given
table.  Add a similar mechanism for BEFORE STATEMENT triggers, so that
we don't have the unexpected situation of firing BEFORE STATEMENT
triggers more often than AFTER STATEMENT.

As with the previous patch, back-patch to v10.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/22315.1505584992@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-17 12:16:38 -04:00
Tom Lane
cad22075bc Fix bogus size calculation introduced by commit cc5f81366.
The elements of RecordCacheArray are TupleDesc, not TupleDesc *.
Those are actually the same size, so that this error is harmless,
but it's still wrong --- and it might bite us someday, if TupleDesc
ever became a struct, say.

Per Coverity.
2017-09-17 11:35:27 -04:00
Tom Lane
0f79440fb0 Fix SQL-spec incompatibilities in new transition table feature.
The standard says that all changes of the same kind (insert, update, or
delete) caused in one table by a single SQL statement should be reported
in a single transition table; and by that, they mean to include foreign key
enforcement actions cascading from the statement's direct effects.  It's
also reasonable to conclude that if the standard had wCTEs, they would say
that effects of wCTEs applying to the same table as each other or the outer
statement should be merged into one transition table.  We weren't doing it
like that.

Hence, arrange to merge tuples from multiple update actions into a single
transition table as much as we can.  There is a problem, which is that if
the firing of FK enforcement triggers and after-row triggers with
transition tables is interspersed, we might need to report more tuples
after some triggers have already seen the transition table.  It seems like
a bad idea for the transition table to be mutable between trigger calls.
There's no good way around this without a major redesign of the FK logic,
so for now, resolve it by opening a new transition table each time this
happens.

Also, ensure that AFTER STATEMENT triggers fire just once per statement,
or once per transition table when we're forced to make more than one.
Previous versions of Postgres have allowed each FK enforcement query
to cause an additional firing of the AFTER STATEMENT triggers for the
referencing table, but that's certainly not per spec.  (We're still
doing multiple firings of BEFORE STATEMENT triggers, though; is that
something worth changing?)

Also, forbid using transition tables with column-specific UPDATE triggers.
The spec requires such transition tables to show only the tuples for which
the UPDATE trigger would have fired, which means maintaining multiple
transition tables or else somehow filtering the contents at readout.
Maybe someday we'll bother to support that option, but it looks like a
lot of trouble for a marginal feature.

The transition tables are now managed by the AfterTriggers data structures,
rather than being directly the responsibility of ModifyTable nodes.  This
removes a subtransaction-lifespan memory leak introduced by my previous
band-aid patch 3c4359521.

In passing, refactor the AfterTriggers data structures to reduce the
management overhead for them, by using arrays of structs rather than
several parallel arrays for per-query-level and per-subtransaction state.

I failed to resist the temptation to do some copy-editing on the SGML
docs about triggers, above and beyond merely documenting the effects
of this patch.

Back-patch to v10, because we don't want the semantics of transition
tables to change post-release.

Patch by me, with help and review from Thomas Munro.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170909064853.25630.12825@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-09-16 13:20:36 -04:00
Robert Haas
9361f6f54e After a MINVALUE/MAXVALUE bound, allow only more of the same.
In the old syntax, which used UNBOUNDED, we had a similar restriction,
but commit d363d42bb9, which changed the
syntax, eliminated it.  Put it back.

Patch by me, reviewed by Dean Rasheed.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmobs+pLPC27tS3gOpEAxAffHrq5w509cvkwTf9pF6cWYbg@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-15 21:15:55 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
c29145f00d src/test/ldap: Fix test function in Linux port 2017-09-16 00:39:37 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
3012061b86 Apply pg_get_serial_sequence() to identity column sequences as well
Bug: #14813
2017-09-15 14:21:20 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
f0e60ee4bc Add LDAP authentication test suite
Like the SSL test suite, this will not be run by default.

Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
2017-09-15 11:44:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
71aa4801a8 Get rid of shared_record_typmod_registry_worker_detach; it doesn't work.
This code is unsafe, as proven by buildfarm failures, because it tries
to access shared memory that might already be gone.  It's also unnecessary,
because we're about to exit the process anyway and so the record type cache
should never be accessed again.  The idea was to lay some foundations for
someday recycling workers --- which would require attaching to a different
shared tupdesc registry --- but that will require considerably more
thought.  In the meantime let's save some bytes by just removing the
nonfunctional code.

Problem identification, and proposal to fix by removing functionality
from the detach function, by Thomas Munro.  I went a bit further by
removing the function altogether.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1dsguX-00056N-9x@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-09-15 10:52:30 -04:00
Robert Haas
60cd2f8a2d Test coverage for CREATE/ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER .. HANDLER.
Amit Langote, per a suggestion from Mark Dilger.  Reviewed by
Marc Dilger and Ashutosh Bapat.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpReL0oeN7SCpnsEPbqJhB2Bp1wnH1uvbOF_w6KEuv6ZXvg@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-15 08:07:22 -04:00
Tom Lane
eaa4070543 Don't use anonymous unions.
Commit cc5f81366c introduced a language
feature that is not acceptable to strict C89 compilers.

Thomas Munro

Per buildfarm.
2017-09-15 00:57:38 -04:00
Tom Lane
fba3665556 Avoid duplicate typedef for SharedRecordTypmodRegistry.
This isn't our usual solution for such problems, and older compilers
(not terribly old, either) don't like it.

Per buildfarm and local testing.
2017-09-15 00:25:33 -04:00
Andres Freund
6b65a7fe62 Remove TupleDesc remapping logic from tqueue.c.
With the introduction of a shared memory record typmod registry, it is no
longer necessary to remap record typmods when sending tuples between backends
so most of tqueue.c can be removed.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0ZtQ-SpsgCyzzYpsXS6e=kZWqk3g5Ygn3MDV7A8dabUA@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-14 19:59:29 -07:00
Andres Freund
cc5f81366c Add support for coordinating record typmods among parallel workers.
Tuples can have type RECORDOID and a typmod number that identifies a blessed
TupleDesc in a backend-private cache.  To support the sharing of such tuples
through shared memory and temporary files, provide a typmod registry in
shared memory.

To achieve that, introduce per-session DSM segments, created on demand when a
backend first runs a parallel query.  The per-session DSM segment has a
table-of-contents just like the per-query DSM segment, and initially the
contents are a shared record typmod registry and a DSA area to provide the
space it needs to grow.

State relating to the current session is accessed via a Session object
reached through global variable CurrentSession that may require significant
redesign further down the road as we figure out what else needs to be shared
or remodelled.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0ZtQ-SpsgCyzzYpsXS6e=kZWqk3g5Ygn3MDV7A8dabUA@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-14 19:59:21 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut
98470fdfa7 pg_archivecleanup: Add test suite
Reviewed-by: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
2017-09-14 22:23:00 -04:00
Robert Haas
81276fdd39 Add missing tags to GetCommandLogLevel.
Otherwise, log_statement = 'ddl' causes errors if those statement
types are used.

Michael Paquier, reviewed by Ashutosh Sharma

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqStC3HkE76Q1MnHsVd1vF1Td9zXApzYadzDMyLMRkkGrw@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-14 17:19:04 -04:00
Andres Freund
8356753c21 Perform only one ReadControlFile() during startup.
Previously we read the control file in multiple places. But soon the
segment size will be configurable and stored in the control file, and
that needs to be available earlier than it currently is needed.

Instead of adding yet another place where it's read, refactor things
so there's a single processing of the control file during startup (in
EXEC_BACKEND that's every individual backend's startup).

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/20170913092828.aozd3gvvmw67gmyc@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-09-14 14:14:34 -07:00
Robert Haas
0a480502b0 Expand partitioned table RTEs level by level, without flattening.
Flattening the partitioning hierarchy at this stage makes various
desirable optimizations difficult.  The original use case for this
patch was partition-wise join, which wants to match up the partitions
in one partitioning hierarchy with those in another such hierarchy.
However, it now seems that it will also be useful in making partition
pruning work using the PartitionDesc rather than constraint exclusion,
because with a flattened expansion, we have no easy way to figure out
which PartitionDescs apply to which leaf tables in a multi-level
partition hierarchy.

As it turns out, we end up creating both rte->inh and !rte->inh RTEs
for each intermediate partitioned table, just as we previously did for
the root table.  This seems unnecessary since the partitioned tables
have no storage and are not scanned.  We might want to go back and
rejigger things so that no partitioned tables (including the parent)
need !rte->inh RTEs, but that seems to require some adjustments not
related to the core purpose of this patch.

Ashutosh Bapat, reviewed by me and by Amit Langote.  Some final
adjustments by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRd=1venqLL7oGU=C1dEkuvk2DJgvF+7uKbnPHaum1mvHQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-14 15:41:08 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
0c4b879b74 Avoid use of bool in thread_test.c
It's not necessary for such a small program, and it causes unnecessary
extra work to get the correct definition of bool, more so if we are
going to introduce stdbool.h later.

Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
2017-09-14 13:27:54 -04:00
Robert Haas
77b6b5e9ce Make RelationGetPartitionDispatchInfo expand depth-first.
With this change, the order of leaf partitions as returned by
RelationGetPartitionDispatchInfo should now be the same as the
order used by expand_inherited_rtentry.  This will make it simpler
for future patches to match up the partition dispatch information
with the planner data structures.  The new code is also, in my
opinion anyway, simpler and easier to understand.

Amit Langote, reviewed by Amit Khandekar.  I also reviewed and
made a few cosmetic revisions.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/d98d4761-5071-1762-501e-0e15047c714b@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-09-14 12:28:50 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
8951c65df2 Remove BoolPtr type
Not used and doesn't seem useful.

Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
2017-09-14 11:45:30 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
0ec2e908ba Fix bool/int type confusion
Using ++ on a bool variable doesn't work well when stdbool.h is in use.
The original BSD code appears to use int here, so use that instead.

Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
2017-09-14 11:45:11 -04:00
Robert Haas
42651bdd68 Fix inconsistent capitalization.
Amit Langote

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/a83a0899-19f5-594c-9aac-3ba0f16989a1@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-09-14 11:11:12 -04:00
Robert Haas
1555566d9e Set partitioned_rels appropriately when UNION ALL is used.
In most cases, this omission won't matter, because the appropriate
locks will have been acquired during parse/plan or by AcquireExecutorLocks.
But it's a bug all the same.

Report by Ashutosh Bapat.  Patch by me, reviewed by Amit Langote.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRdHb_ZnoDTuBXqrudWXh3H1ibLkr6nHsCFT96fSK4DXtA@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-14 11:00:39 -04:00
Andres Freund
1ab973ab60 Properly check interrupts in execScan.c.
During the development of d47cfef711 the CFI()s in ExecScan() were
moved back and forth, ending up in the wrong place. Thus queries that
largely spend their time in ExecScan(), and have neither projection
nor a qual, can't be cancelled in a timely manner.

Reported-By: Jeff Janes
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU=1weDXp8eLLPt9SO1LEUsJYYK9cScaGhLKpuN+WbYo9b5g@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 10, as d47cfef711
2017-09-14 02:00:14 -07:00
Stephen Frost
d2e40b310a Fix ordering in pg_dump of GRANTs
The order in which GRANTs are output is important as GRANTs which have
been GRANT'd by individuals via WITH GRANT OPTION GRANTs have to come
after the GRANT which included the WITH GRANT OPTION.  This happens
naturally in the backend during normal operation as we only change
existing ACLs in-place, only add new ACLs to the end, and when removing
an ACL we remove any which depend on it also.

Also, adjust the comments in acl.h to make this clear.

Unfortunately, the updates to pg_dump to handle initial privileges
involved pulling apart ACLs and then combining them back together and
could end up putting them back together in an invalid order, leading to
dumps which wouldn't restore.

Fix this by adjusting the queries used by pg_dump to ensure that the
ACLs are rebuilt in the same order in which they were originally.

Back-patch to 9.6 where the changes for initial privileges were done.
2017-09-13 20:02:09 -04:00
Tom Lane
76e134fefd Adjust unstable regression test case.
Test queries added by commit 69835bc89 are giving unexpected results
on some smaller buildfarm critters.  I think probably the seqscan
logic is kicking in to cause the scans to not start at the beginning
of the table.  Add ORDER BY to make them be indexscans instead.

Per buildfarm member chipmunk.
2017-09-13 12:27:01 -04:00
Tom Lane
7d08ce286c Distinguish selectivity of < from <= and > from >=.
Historically, the selectivity functions have simply not distinguished
< from <=, or > from >=, arguing that the fraction of the population that
satisfies the "=" aspect can be considered to be vanishingly small, if the
comparison value isn't any of the most-common-values for the variable.
(If it is, the code path that executes the operator against each MCV will
take care of things properly.)  But that isn't really true unless we're
dealing with a continuum of variable values, and in practice we seldom are.
If "x = const" would estimate a nonzero number of rows for a given const
value, then it follows that we ought to estimate different numbers of rows
for "x < const" and "x <= const", even if the const is not one of the MCVs.
Handling this more honestly makes a significant difference in edge cases,
such as the estimate for a tight range (x BETWEEN y AND z where y and z
are close together).

Hence, split scalarltsel into scalarltsel/scalarlesel, and similarly
split scalargtsel into scalargtsel/scalargesel.  Adjust <= and >=
operator definitions to reference the new selectivity functions.
Improve the core ineq_histogram_selectivity() function to make a
correction for equality.  (Along the way, I learned quite a bit about
exactly why that function gives good answers, which I tried to memorialize
in improved comments.)

The corresponding join selectivity functions were, and remain, just stubs.
But I chose to split them similarly, to avoid confusion and to prevent the
need for doing this exercise again if someone ever makes them less stubby.

In passing, change ineq_histogram_selectivity's clamp for extreme
probability estimates so that it varies depending on the histogram
size, instead of being hardwired at 0.0001.  With the default histogram
size of 100 entries, you still get the old clamp value, but bigger
histograms should allow us to put more faith in edge values.

Tom Lane, reviewed by Aleksander Alekseev and Kuntal Ghosh

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12232.1499140410@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-13 11:12:39 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
61975d6c2c Improve error message in WAL sender
The previous error message when attempting to run a general SQL command
in a physical replication WAL sender was a bit sloppy.

Reported-by: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com>
2017-09-13 08:31:03 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
1a2fdc99a4 Define LDAP_NO_ATTRS if necessary.
Commit 83aaac41c6 introduced the use of
LDAP_NO_ATTRS to avoid requesting a dummy attribute when doing search+bind
LDAP authentication.  It turns out that not all LDAP implementations define
that macro, but its value is fixed by the protocol so we can define it
ourselves if it's missing.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-By: Ashutosh Sharma
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAE9k0Pm6FKCfPCiAr26-L_SMGOA7dT_k0%2B3pEbB8%2B-oT39xRpw%40mail.gmail.com
2017-09-13 08:22:42 -04:00
Tom Lane
69835bc898 Add psql variables to track success/failure of SQL queries.
This patch adds ERROR, SQLSTATE, and ROW_COUNT, which are updated after
every query, as well as LAST_ERROR_MESSAGE and LAST_ERROR_SQLSTATE,
which are updated only when a query fails.  The expected usage of these
is for scripting.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Pavel Stehule

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1704042158020.12290@lancre
2017-09-12 19:27:48 -04:00
Andres Freund
6e7baa3227 Introduce BYTES unit for GUCs.
This is already useful for track_activity_query_size, and will further
be used in a later commit making the WAL segment size configurable.

Author: Beena Emerson
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOG9ApEu8bXVwBxkOO9J7ZpM76TASK_vFMEEiCEjwhMmSLiaqQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-12 12:13:12 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut
83aaac41c6 Allow custom search filters to be configured for LDAP auth
Before, only filters of the form "(<ldapsearchattribute>=<user>)"
could be used to search an LDAP server.  Introduce ldapsearchfilter
so that more general filters can be configured using patterns, like
"(|(uid=$username)(mail=$username))" and "(&(uid=$username)
(objectClass=posixAccount))".  Also allow search filters to be included
in an LDAP URL.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: Peter Eisentraut, Mark Cave-Ayland, Magnus Hagander
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0XTkYvMci0WRubZcf_1am8=gP=7oJErpsUfRYcKF2gwg@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-12 09:49:04 -04:00
Michael Meskes
35e1568826 Fixed ECPG to correctly handle out-of-scope cursor declarations with pointers
or array variables.
2017-09-12 04:53:36 +02:00
Tom Lane
e183530550 Fix RecursiveCopy.pm to cope with disappearing files.
When copying from an active database tree, it's possible for files to be
deleted after we see them in a readdir() scan but before we can open them.
(Once we've got a file open, we don't expect any further errors from it
getting unlinked, though.)  Tweak RecursiveCopy so it can cope with this
case, so as to avoid irreproducible test failures.

Back-patch to 9.6 where this code was added.  In v10 and HEAD, also
remove unused "use RecursiveCopy" in one recovery test script.

Michael Paquier and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/24621.1504924323@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-11 22:02:58 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
6d9fa52645 pg_receivewal: Add --endpos option
This is primarily useful for making tests of this utility more
deterministic, to avoid the complexity of starting pg_receivewal as a
deamon in TAP tests.

While this is less useful than the equivalent pg_recvlogical option,
users can as well use it for example to enforce WAL streaming up to a
end-of-backup position, to save only a minimal amount of WAL.

Use this new option to stream WAL data in a deterministic way within a
new set of TAP tests.

Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
2017-09-11 16:48:30 -04:00
Andres Freund
c1898c3e1e Constify numeric.c.
This allows the compiler/linker to move the static variables to a
read-only segment.  Not all the signature changes are necessary, but
it seems better to apply const in a consistent manner.

Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170910232154.asgml44ji2b7lv3d@alap3.anarazel.de
2017-09-11 13:44:37 -07:00
Tom Lane
b8060e41b5 Prefer argument name over "$n" for the refname of a plpgsql argument.
If a function argument has a name, use that as the "refname" of the
PLpgSQL_datum representing the argument, instead of $n as before.
This allows better error messages in some cases.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Jeevan Chalke

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRB9GyU2U1Sb2ssgP26DZ_yq-FYDfpvUvGQ=k4R=yOPVjg@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-11 16:24:43 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
821fb8cdbf Message style fixes 2017-09-11 11:21:27 -04:00
Tom Lane
3c43595217 Quick-hack fix for foreign key cascade vs triggers with transition tables.
AFTER triggers using transition tables crashed if they were fired due
to a foreign key ON CASCADE update.  This is because ExecEndModifyTable
flushes the transition tables, on the assumption that any trigger that
could need them was already fired during ExecutorFinish.  Normally
that's true, because we don't allow transition-table-using triggers
to be deferred.  However, foreign key CASCADE updates force any
triggers on the referencing table to be deferred to the outer query
level, by means of the EXEC_FLAG_SKIP_TRIGGERS flag.  I don't recall
all the details of why it's like that and am pretty loath to redesign
it right now.  Instead, just teach ExecEndModifyTable to skip destroying
the TransitionCaptureState when that flag is set.  This will allow the
transition table data to survive until end of the current subtransaction.

This isn't a terribly satisfactory solution, because (1) we might be
leaking the transition tables for much longer than really necessary,
and (2) as things stand, an AFTER STATEMENT trigger will fire once per
RI updating query, ie once per row updated or deleted in the referenced
table.  I suspect that is not per SQL spec.  But redesigning this is a
research project that we're certainly not going to get done for v10.
So let's go with this hackish answer for now.

In passing, tweak AfterTriggerSaveEvent to not save the transition_capture
pointer into the event record for a deferrable trigger.  This is not
necessary to fix the current bug, but it avoids letting dangling pointers
to long-gone transition tables persist in the trigger event queue.  That's
at least a safety feature.  It might also allow merging shared trigger
states in more cases than before.

I added a regression test that demonstrates the crash on unpatched code,
and also exposes the behavior of firing the AFTER STATEMENT triggers
once per row update.

Per bug #14808 from Philippe Beaudoin.  Back-patch to v10.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170909064853.25630.12825@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-09-10 14:59:56 -04:00
Tom Lane
610bbdd8ac Add a test harness for the red-black tree code.
This improves the regression tests' coverage of rbtree.c from pretty
awful (because some of the functions aren't used yet) to basically 100%.

Victor Drobny, reviewed by Aleksander Alekseev and myself

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c9d61310e16e75f8acaf6cb1c48b7b77@postgrespro.ru
2017-09-10 13:26:46 -04:00
Tom Lane
f80e782a6b Remove pre-order and post-order traversal logic for red-black trees.
This code isn't used, and there's no clear reason why anybody would ever
want to use it.  These traversal mechanisms don't yield a visitation order
that is semantically meaningful for any external purpose, nor are they
any faster or simpler than the left-to-right or right-to-left traversals.
(In fact, some rough testing suggests they are slower :-(.)  Moreover,
these mechanisms are impossible to test in any arm's-length fashion; doing
so requires knowledge of the red-black tree's internal implementation.
Hence, let's just jettison them.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17735.1505003111@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-10 13:19:11 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
c824c7e29f pg_upgrade: Message style fixes 2017-09-09 17:32:10 -04:00
Tom Lane
fdf87ed451 Fix failure-to-copy bug in commit 6f6b99d13.
The previous coding of get_qual_for_list() was careful to copy everything
it was using from the input data structure.  The new version missed
making a copy of pass-by-ref datum values that it's inserting into Consts.
This is not optional, however, as revealed by buildfarm failures on
machines running -DRELCACHE_FORCE_RELEASE: we're copying from a relcache
entry that could go away before the required lifespan of our output
expression.  I'm pretty sure -DCLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS machines won't like
this either, but none of them have reported in yet.
2017-09-08 20:45:31 -04:00
Tom Lane
e56dd7cf50 Fix uninitialized-variable bug.
map_partition_varattnos() failed to set its found_whole_row output
parameter if the given expression list was NIL.  This seems to be
a pre-existing bug that chanced to be exposed by commit 6f6b99d13.
It might be unreachable in v10, but I have little faith in that
proposition, so back-patch.

Per buildfarm.
2017-09-08 19:04:32 -04:00
Tom Lane
f25000c832 Fix more portability issues in new pgbench TAP tests.
Not completely sure, but I think bowerbird is spitting up on attempting
to include ">" in a temporary file name.  (Why in the world are we
writing this stuff into files at all?  A hash would be a better answer.)
2017-09-08 17:37:59 -04:00
Robert Haas
6f6b99d133 Allow a partitioned table to have a default partition.
Any tuples that don't route to any other partition will route to the
default partition.

Jeevan Ladhe, Beena Emerson, Ashutosh Bapat, Rahila Syed, and Robert
Haas, with review and testing at various stages by (at least) Rushabh
Lathia, Keith Fiske, Amit Langote, Amul Sul, Rajkumar Raghuanshi, Sven
Kunze, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Thom Brown, Rafia Sabih, and Dilip Kumar.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAH2L28tbN4SYyhS7YV1YBWcitkqbhSWfQCy0G=apRcC_PEO-bg@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAOG9ApEYj34fWMcvBMBQ-YtqR9fTdXhdN82QEKG0SVZ6zeL1xg@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-08 17:28:04 -04:00
Tom Lane
2cf15ec8b1 Fix pgbench TAP tests to work with --disable-thread-safety.
Probably matters to nobody but me; but I'd like to still be able to get
through the TAP tests on gaur/pademelon, from time to time.
2017-09-08 17:25:11 -04:00
Tom Lane
3cf17c9d47 Remove mention of password_encryption = plain in postgresql.conf.sample.
Evidently missed in commit eb61136dc.

Spotted by Oleg Bartunov.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAF4Au4wz_iK5r4fnTnnd8XqioAZQs-P7-VsEAfivW34zMVpAmw@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-08 14:38:54 -04:00
Tom Lane
933851033b Fix more portability issues in new pgbench TAP tests.
Strike two on the --bad-option test.
Three strikes and it's out.

Fabien Coelho, per buildfarm
2017-09-08 14:01:51 -04:00
Tom Lane
77d63b7eaf Fix more portability issues in new pgbench TAP tests.
* Remove no-such-user test case, output isn't stable, and we really
don't need to be testing such cases here anyway.

* Fix the process exit code test logic to match PostgresNode::psql
(but I didn't bother with looking at the "core" flag).

* Give up on inf/nan tests.

Per buildfarm.
2017-09-08 13:36:13 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
ee24d2b5cf Clean up excessive code
The encoding ID was converted between string and number too many times,
probably a remnant from the shell script days.

Reviewed-by: Aleksandr Parfenov <a.parfenov@postgrespro.ru>
2017-09-08 12:37:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
8e67380126 Remove useless empty string initializations
This coding style probably stems from the days of shell scripts.

Reviewed-by: Aleksandr Parfenov <a.parfenov@postgrespro.ru>
2017-09-08 12:37:05 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
9361bc347c Remove useless dead code
Reviewed-by: Aleksandr Parfenov <a.parfenov@postgrespro.ru>
2017-09-08 12:37:05 -04:00
Tom Lane
869aa40a27 Fix assorted portability issues in new pgbench TAP tests.
* Our own version of getopt_long doesn't support abbreviation of
long options.

* It doesn't do automatic rearrangement of non-option arguments to the end,
either.

* Test was way too optimistic about the platform independence of
NaN and Infinity outputs.  I rather imagine we might have to lose
those tests altogether, but for the moment just allow case variation
and fully spelled out Infinity.

Per buildfarm.
2017-09-08 11:28:02 -04:00
Tom Lane
ed8a7c6fcf Add much-more-extensive TAP tests for pgbench.
Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Nikolay Shaplov and myself

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1704171422500.4025@lancre
2017-09-08 09:32:50 -04:00
Robert Haas
f0a0c17c1b Refactor get_partition_for_tuple a bit.
Pending patches for both default partitioning and hash partitioning
find the current coding pattern to be inconvenient.  Change it so that
we switch on the partitioning method first and then do whatever is
needed.

Amul Sul, reviewed by Jeevan Ladhe, with a few adjustments by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b97mTb=dG2pv6+1ougxEVZFVnZJajW+0QHj46mEE7WsoOQ@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAOgcT0M37CAztEinpvjJc18EdHfm23fw0EG9-36Ya=+rEFUqaQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-07 21:13:42 -04:00
Tom Lane
3ca930fc39 Improve performance of get_actual_variable_range with recently-dead tuples.
In commit fccebe421, we hacked get_actual_variable_range() to scan the
index with SnapshotDirty, so that if there are many uncommitted tuples
at the end of the index range, it wouldn't laboriously scan through all
of them looking for a live value to return.  However, that didn't fix it
for the case of many recently-dead tuples at the end of the index;
SnapshotDirty recognizes those as committed dead and so we're back to
the same problem.

To improve the situation, invent a "SnapshotNonVacuumable" snapshot type
and use that instead.  The reason this helps is that, if the snapshot
rejects a given index entry, we know that the indexscan will mark that
index entry as killed.  This means the next get_actual_variable_range()
scan will proceed past that entry without visiting the heap, making the
scan a lot faster.  We may end up accepting a recently-dead tuple as
being the estimated extremal value, but that doesn't seem much worse than
the compromise we made before to accept not-yet-committed extremal values.

The cost of the scan is still proportional to the number of dead index
entries at the end of the range, so in the interval after a mass delete
but before VACUUM's cleaned up the mess, it's still possible for
get_actual_variable_range() to take a noticeable amount of time, if you've
got enough such dead entries.  But the constant factor is much much better
than before, since all we need to do with each index entry is test its
"killed" bit.

We chose to back-patch commit fccebe421 at the time, but I'm hesitant to
do so here, because this form of the problem seems to affect many fewer
people.  Also, even when it happens, it's less bad than the case fixed
by commit fccebe421 because we don't get the contention effects from
expensive TransactionIdIsInProgress tests.

Dmitriy Sarafannikov, reviewed by Andrey Borodin

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/05C72CF7-B5F6-4DB9-8A09-5AC897653113@yandex.ru
2017-09-07 19:41:51 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
1356f78ea9 Reduce excessive dereferencing of function pointers
It is equivalent in ANSI C to write (*funcptr) () and funcptr().  These
two styles have been applied inconsistently.  After discussion, we'll
use the more verbose style for plain function pointer variables, to make
it clear that it's a variable, and the shorter style when the function
pointer is in a struct (s.func() or s->func()), because then it's clear
that it's not a plain function name, and otherwise the excessive
punctuation makes some of those invocations hard to read.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/f52c16db-14ed-757d-4b48-7ef360b1631d@2ndquadrant.com
2017-09-07 13:56:09 -04:00
Robert Haas
9d71323dac Even if some partitions are foreign, allow tuple routing.
This doesn't allow routing tuple to the foreign partitions themselves,
but it permits tuples to be routed to regular partitions despite the
presence of foreign partitions in the same inheritance hierarchy.

Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Amit Langote and by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/bc3db4c1-1693-3b8a-559f-33ad2b50b7ad@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-09-07 10:58:21 -04:00
Tom Lane
6eb52da394 Fix handling of savepoint commands within multi-statement Query strings.
Issuing a savepoint-related command in a Query message that contains
multiple SQL statements led to a FATAL exit with a complaint about
"unexpected state STARTED".  This is a shortcoming of commit 4f896dac1,
which attempted to prevent such misbehaviors in multi-statement strings;
its quick hack of marking the individual statements as "not top-level"
does the wrong thing in this case, and isn't a very accurate description
of the situation anyway.

To fix, let's introduce into xact.c an explicit model of what happens for
multi-statement Query strings.  This is an "implicit transaction block
in progress" state, which for many purposes works like the normal
TBLOCK_INPROGRESS state --- in particular, IsTransactionBlock returns true,
causing the desired result that PreventTransactionChain will throw error.
But in case of error abort it works like TBLOCK_STARTED, allowing the
transaction to be cancelled without need for an explicit ROLLBACK command.

Commit 4f896dac1 is reverted in toto, so that we go back to treating the
individual statements as "top level".  We could have left it as-is, but
this allows sharpening the error message for PreventTransactionChain
calls inside functions.

Except for getting a normal error instead of a FATAL exit for savepoint
commands, this patch should result in no user-visible behavioral change
(other than that one error message rewording).  There are some things
we might want to do in the line of changing the appearance or wording of
error and warning messages around this behavior, which would be much
simpler to do now that it's an explicitly modeled state.  But I haven't
done them here.

Although this fixes a long-standing bug, no backpatch.  The consequences
of the bug don't seem severe enough to justify the risk that this commit
itself creates some new issue.

Patch by me, but it owes something to previous investigation by
Takayuki Tsunakawa, who also reported the bug in the first place.
Also thanks to Michael Paquier for reviewing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0A3221C70F24FB45833433255569204D1F6BE40D@G01JPEXMBYT05
2017-09-07 09:49:55 -04:00
Tom Lane
bfea92563c Further marginal hacking on generic atomic ops.
In the generic atomic ops that rely on a loop around a CAS primitive,
there's no need to force the initial read of the "old" value to be atomic.
In the typically-rare case that we get a torn value, that simply means
that the first CAS attempt will fail; but it will update "old" to the
atomically-read value, so the next attempt has a chance of succeeding.
It was already being done that way in pg_atomic_exchange_u64_impl(),
but let's duplicate the approach in the rest.

(Given the current coding of the pg_atomic_read functions, this change
is a no-op anyway on popular platforms; it only makes a difference where
pg_atomic_read_u64_impl() is implemented as a CAS.)

In passing, also remove unnecessary take-a-pointer-and-dereference-it
coding in the pg_atomic_read functions.  That seems to have been based
on a misunderstanding of what the C standard requires.  What actually
matters is that the pointer be declared as pointing to volatile, which
it is.

I don't believe this will change the assembly code at all on x86
platforms (even ignoring the likelihood that these implementations
get overridden by others); but it may help on less-mainstream CPUs.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/13707.1504718238@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-07 08:50:01 -04:00
Simon Riggs
f06588a8e6 Exclude special values in recovery_target_time
recovery_target_time accepts timestamp input, though
does not allow use of special values, e.g. “today”.
Report a useful error message for these cases.

Reported-by: Piotr Stefaniak
Author: Simon Riggs
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANP8+jJdKA+BkkYLWz9zAm16Y0s2ExBv0WfpAwXdTpPfWnA9Bg@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-07 04:56:34 -07:00
Tom Lane
ca4e20fde8 Merge duplicative code for \sf/\sv, \ef/\ev in psql/command.c.
Saves ~150 lines, costs little.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Victor Drobny

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1703311958001.14355@lancre
2017-09-06 17:32:40 -04:00
Simon Riggs
5b6d13eec7 Allow SET STATISTICS on expression indexes
Index columns are referenced by ordinal number rather than name, e.g.
CREATE INDEX coord_idx ON measured (x, y, (z + t));
ALTER INDEX coord_idx ALTER COLUMN 3 SET STATISTICS 1000;

Incompatibility note for release notes:
\d+ for indexes now also displays Stats Target

Authors: Alexander Korotkov, with contribution by Adrien NAYRAT
Review: Adrien NAYRAT, Simon Riggs
Wordsmith: Simon Riggs
2017-09-06 13:46:01 -07:00
Tom Lane
e09db94c0a Use more of gcc's __sync_fetch_and_xxx builtin functions for atomic ops.
In addition to __sync_fetch_and_add, gcc offers __sync_fetch_and_sub,
__sync_fetch_and_and, and __sync_fetch_and_or, which correspond directly
to primitive atomic ops that we want.  Testing shows that in some cases
they generate better code than our generic implementations, so use them.

We've assumed that configure's test for __sync_val_compare_and_swap is
sufficient to allow assuming that __sync_fetch_and_add is available, so
make the same assumption for these functions.  Should that prove to be
wrong, we can add more configure tests.

Yura Sokolov, reviewed by Jesper Pedersen and myself

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7f65886daca545067f82bf2b463b218d@postgrespro.ru
2017-09-06 14:21:39 -04:00
Tom Lane
e530be9685 Remove duplicate reads from the inner loops in generic atomic ops.
The pg_atomic_compare_exchange_xxx functions are defined to update
*expected to whatever they read from the target variable.  Therefore,
there's no need to do additional explicit reads after we've initialized
the "old" variable.  The actual benefit of this is somewhat debatable,
but it seems fairly unlikely to hurt anything, especially since we
will override the generic implementations in most performance-sensitive
cases.

Yura Sokolov, reviewed by Jesper Pedersen and myself

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7f65886daca545067f82bf2b463b218d@postgrespro.ru
2017-09-06 14:06:09 -04:00
Tom Lane
8689e38263 Clean up handling of dropped columns in NAMEDTUPLESTORE RTEs.
The NAMEDTUPLESTORE patch piggybacked on the infrastructure for
TABLEFUNC/VALUES/CTE RTEs, none of which can ever have dropped columns,
so the possibility was ignored most places.  Fix that, including adding a
specification to parsenodes.h about what it's supposed to look like.

In passing, clean up assorted comments that hadn't been maintained
properly by said patch.

Per bug #14799 from Philippe Beaudoin.  Back-patch to v10.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170906120005.25630.84360@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-09-06 10:41:05 -04:00
Tom Lane
49ca462eb1 Add \gdesc psql command.
This command acts somewhat like \g, but instead of executing the query
buffer, it merely prints a description of the columns that the query
result would have.  (Of course, this still requires parsing the query;
if parse analysis fails, you get an error anyway.)  We accomplish this
using an unnamed prepared statement, which should be invisible to psql
users.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Fabien Coelho

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRBhYVvO34FU=EKb=nAF5t3b++krKt1FneCmR0kuF5m-QA@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-05 18:17:47 -04:00
Tom Lane
6e427aa4e5 Use lfirst_node() and linitial_node() where appropriate in planner.c.
There's no particular reason to target this module for the first
wholesale application of these macros; but we gotta start somewhere.

Ashutosh Bapat and Jeevan Chalke

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRcNr3r=u0ni=7A4GD9NnHQVq+dkFafzqo2rS6zy=dt1eg@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-05 15:57:48 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
153a49bb33 Remove endof macro
It has not been used in a long time, and it doesn't seem safe anyway, so
drop it.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Murphy <ryanfmurphy@gmail.com>
2017-09-05 14:52:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
17273d059c Remove unnecessary parentheses in return statements
The parenthesized style has only been used in a few modules.  Change
that to use the style that is predominant across the whole tree.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Murphy <ryanfmurphy@gmail.com>
2017-09-05 14:52:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
ba26f5cf76 Remove our own definition of NULL
Surely everyone has that by now.

Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Murphy <ryanfmurphy@gmail.com>
2017-09-05 14:52:54 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
90627cf98a Support retaining data dirs on successful TAP tests
This moves the data directories from using temporary directories with
randomness in the directory name to a static name, to make it easier to
debug.  The data directory will be retained if tests fail or the test
code dies/exits with failure, and is automatically removed on the next
make check.

If the environment variable PG_TEST_NOCLEAN is defined, the data
directories will be retained regardless of test or exit status.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2017-09-05 12:24:06 -04:00
Tom Lane
5e8304fdce In psql, use PSQL_PAGER in preference to PAGER, if it's set.
This allows the user's environment to set up a psql-specific choice
of pager, in much the same way that we provide PSQL_EDITOR to allow
a psql-specific override of the more widely known EDITOR variable.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Thomas Munro

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRD3RRk9S1eRbnGm_T6brc3Ss5mohraNzTSJquzx+pmtKA@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-05 12:02:13 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
ebd346caf4 Correct base backup throttling
Throttling for sending a base backup in walsender is broken for the case
where there is a lot of WAL traffic, because the latch used to put the
walsender to sleep is also signalled by regular WAL traffic (and each
signal causes an additional batch of data to be sent); the net effect is
that there is no or little actual throttling.  This is undesirable, so
rewrite the sleep into a loop to achieve the desired effeect.

Author: Jeff Janes, small tweaks by me
Reviewed-by: Antonin Houska
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU=1xH6mde-yL-Eo1TKBGNd0PB1-TMxvrNvqcAkN-qr2E9mw@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-05 17:27:30 +02:00
Tom Lane
9ae9d8c154 Add psql variables showing server version and psql version.
We already had a psql variable VERSION that shows the verbose form of
psql's own version.  Add VERSION_NAME to show the short form (e.g.,
"11devel") and VERSION_NUM to show the numeric form (e.g., 110000).
Also add SERVER_VERSION_NAME and SERVER_VERSION_NUM to show the short and
numeric forms of the server's version.  (We'd probably add SERVER_VERSION
with the verbose string if it were readily available; but adding another
network round trip to get it seems too expensive.)

The numeric forms, in particular, are expected to be useful for scripting
purposes, now that psql can do conditional tests.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Pavel Stehule

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1704020917220.4632@lancre
2017-09-05 10:51:36 -04:00
Tom Lane
3955c8c4ed Reformat psql's --help=variables output.
The previous format with variable names and descriptions in separate
columns was extremely constraining about the length of the descriptions.
We'd dealt with that in several inconsistent ways over the years,
including letting the lines run over 80 characters, breaking descriptions
into multiple lines, or shoving the description onto a separate line.
But it's been a long time since the output could realistically fit onto
a single screen vertically, so let's just rely even more heavily on the
pager to deal with the vertical distance, and split each entry into two
(or more) lines, in the format

  variable-name
    variable description goes here

Each variable name + description remains a single translatable string,
in hopes of reducing translator confusion; we're just changing the
embedded whitespace.

I failed to resist the temptation to copy-edit one or two of the
descriptions while at it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2947.1504542679@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-05 10:17:10 -04:00
Tom Lane
0b707d6ea7 Be more careful about newline-chomping in pgbench.
process_backslash_command would drop the last character of the input
command on the assumption that it was a newline.  Given a non newline
terminated input file, this could result in dropping the last character
of the command.  Fix that by doing an actual test that we're removing
a newline.

While at it, allow for Windows newlines (\r\n), and suppress multiple
newlines if any.  I do not think either of those cases really occur,
since (a) we read script files in text mode and (b) the lexer stops
when it hits a newline.  But it's cheap enough and it provides a
stronger guarantee about what the result string looks like.

This is just cosmetic, I think, since the possibly-overly-chomped
line was only used for display not for further processing.  So
it doesn't seem necessary to back-patch.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Nikolay Shaplov, whacked around a bit by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1704171422500.4025@lancre
2017-09-04 17:25:31 -04:00
Tom Lane
c23bb6badf Fix some subtle problems in pgbench transaction stats counting.
With --latency-limit, transactions might get skipped even beyond the
transaction count limit specified by -t, throwing off the expected
number of transactions and thus the denominator for later stats.
Be sure to stop skipping transactions once -t is reached.

Also, include skipped transactions in the "cnt" fields; this requires
discounting them again in a couple of places, but most places are
better off with this definition.  In particular this is needed to
get correct overall stats for the combination of -R/-L/-t options.
Merge some more processing into processXactStats() to simplify this.

In passing, add a check that --progress-timestamp is specified only
when --progress is.

We might consider back-patching this, but given that it only matters
for a combination of options, and given the lack of field complaints,
consensus seems to be not to bother.

Fabien Coelho, reviewed by Nikolay Shaplov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/alpine.DEB.2.20.1704171422500.4025@lancre
2017-09-04 16:24:08 -04:00
Tom Lane
9d36a38660 Adjust pgbench to allow non-ASCII characters in variable names.
This puts it in sync with psql's notion of what is a valid variable name.
Like psql, we document that "non-Latin letters" are allowed, but actually
any non-ASCII character is accepted.

Fabien Coelho

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170405.094548.1184280384967203518.t-ishii@sraoss.co.jp
2017-09-04 13:45:20 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
863d75439e Fix translatable string
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170828130545.sdajqlpr37hmmd6a@alvherre.pgsql
2017-09-04 11:08:52 +02:00
Tom Lane
4faa1dc2eb Suppress compiler warnings in dshash.c.
Some compilers complain, not unreasonably, about left-shifting an
int32 "1" and then assigning the result to an int64.  In practice
I sure hope that this data structure never gets large enough that
an overflow would actually occur; but let's cast the constant to
the right type to avoid the hazard.

In passing, fix a typo in dshash.h.

Amit Kapila, adjusted as per comment from Thomas Munro.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1+5vfVMYtjK_NX8O3-42yM3o80qdqWnQzGquPrbq6mb+A@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-03 11:12:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
e451901804 Fix macro-redefinition warning on MSVC.
In commit 9d6b160d7, I tweaked pg_config.h.win32 to use
"#define HAVE_LONG_LONG_INT_64 1" rather than defining it as empty,
for consistency with what happens in an autoconf'd build.
But Solution.pm injects another definition of that macro into
ecpg_config.h, leading to justifiable (though harmless) compiler whining.
Make that one consistent too.  Back-patch, like the previous patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=1dWsXROuSbRg8PbKLh0S=8Ou-V8sr05DxmJOF5chBxqQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-03 11:01:08 -04:00
Tom Lane
51daa7bdb3 Improve division of labor between execParallel.c and nodeGather[Merge].c.
Move the responsibility for creating/destroying TupleQueueReaders into
execParallel.c, to avoid duplicative coding in nodeGather.c and
nodeGatherMerge.c.  Also, instead of having DestroyTupleQueueReader do
shm_mq_detach, do it in the caller (which is now only ExecParallelFinish).
This means execParallel.c does both the attaching and detaching of the
tuple-queue-reader shm_mqs, which seems less weird than the previous
arrangement.

These changes also eliminate a vestigial memory leak (of the pei->tqueue
array).  It's now demonstrable that rescans of Gather or GatherMerge don't
leak memory.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8670.1504192177@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-01 17:39:01 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
c039ba0716 Add memory info to getrusage output
Add the maxrss field to the getrusage output (log_*_stats).  This was
previously omitted because of portability concerns, but we feel this
might not be a concern anymore.

based on patch by Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>
2017-09-01 15:36:33 -04:00
Robert Haas
0cb8b7531d Tighten up some code in RelationBuildPartitionDesc.
This probably doesn't save anything meaningful in terms of
performance, but making the code simpler is a good idea anyway.

Code by Beena Emerson, extracted from a larger patch by Jeevan
Ladhe, slightly adjusted by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAOgcT0ONgwajdtkoq+AuYkdTPY9cLWWLjxt_k4SXue3eieAr+g@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-01 15:16:44 -04:00
Tom Lane
9d6b160d7d Make [U]INT64CONST safe for use in #if conditions.
Instead of using a cast to force the constant to be the right width,
assume we can plaster on an L, UL, LL, or ULL suffix as appropriate.
The old approach to this is very hoary, dating from before we were
willing to require compilers to have working int64 types.

This fix makes the PG_INT64_MIN, PG_INT64_MAX, and PG_UINT64_MAX
constants safe to use in preprocessor conditions, where a cast
doesn't work.  Other symbolic constants that might be defined using
[U]INT64CONST are likewise safer than before.

Also fix the SIZE_MAX macro to be similarly safe, if we are forced
to provide a definition for that.  The test added in commit 2e70d6b5e
happens to do what we want even with the hack "(size_t) -1" definition,
but we could easily get burnt on other tests in future.

Back-patch to all supported branches, like the previous commits.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15883.1504278595@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-01 15:14:46 -04:00
Tom Lane
b79d69b087 Ensure SIZE_MAX can be used throughout our code.
Pre-C99 platforms may lack <stdint.h> and thereby SIZE_MAX.  We have
a couple of places using the hack "(size_t) -1" as a fallback, but
it wasn't universally available; which means the code added in commit
2e70d6b5e fails to compile everywhere.  Move that hack to c.h so that
we can rely on having SIZE_MAX everywhere.

Per discussion, it'd be a good idea to make the macro's value safe
for use in #if-tests, but that will take a bit more work.  This is
just a quick expedient to get the buildfarm green again.

Back-patch to all supported branches, like the previous commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15883.1504278595@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-09-01 13:52:53 -04:00
Robert Haas
84be67181a pg_dumpall: Add a -E flag to set the encoding, like pg_dump has.
Michael Paquier, reviewed by Fabien Coelho

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqQcYWmrm2n-dVaMUhYPKFU_DxQwPuUGuC4ZF+8B=dS5xQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-01 12:24:20 -04:00
Robert Haas
baaf272ac9 Use group updates when setting transaction status in clog.
Commit 0e141c0fbb introduced a mechanism
to reduce contention on ProcArrayLock by having a single process clear
XIDs in the procArray on behalf of multiple processes, reducing the
need to hand the lock around.  A previous attempt to introduce a similar
mechanism for CLogControlLock in ccce90b398
crashed and burned, but the design problem which resulted in those
failures is believed to have been corrected in this version.

Amit Kapila, with some cosmetic changes by me.  See the previous commit
message for additional credits.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1KudxzgWhuywY_X=yeSAhJMT4DwCjroV5Ay60xaeB2Eew@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-01 11:45:40 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
89c59b742a Fix two-phase commit test for recovery mode
The original code had a race condition because it never ensured the
standby was caught up before proceeding; add a wait similar to every
other place that does this.

Author: Michaël Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqTm9p+LCm1mVJYvgpwagRK+uibT-pKq0O2-paOWxT62jw@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-01 16:51:55 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera
a6979c3a68 Restore behavior for replication origin drop
Do for replication origins what the previous commit did for replication
slots: restore the original behavior of replication origin drop to raise
an error rather than blocking, because users might be depending on the
original behavior.  Maintain the blocking behavior when invoked
internally from logical replication subscription handling.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170830133922.tlpo3lgfejm4n2cs@alvherre.pgsql
2017-09-01 16:30:02 +02:00
Simon Riggs
4f27c674fd Avoid race condition in logical replication test
Wait for slot to become inactive before continuing.

Author: Petr Jelinek
2017-09-01 14:55:44 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera
be7161566d Add a WAIT option to DROP_REPLICATION_SLOT
Commit 9915de6c1c changed the default behavior of
DROP_REPLICATION_SLOT so that it would wait until any session holding
the slot active would release it, instead of raising an error.  But
users are already depending on the original behavior, so revert to it by
default and add a WAIT option to invoke the new behavior.

Per complaint from Simone Gotti, in
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEvsy6Wgdf90O6pUvg2wSVXL2omH5OPC-38OD4Zzgk-FXavj3Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-09-01 13:44:14 +02:00
Robert Haas
7b69b6ceb8 Fix assorted carelessness about Datum vs. int64 vs. uint64
Bugs introduced by commit 81c5e46c49
2017-09-01 00:14:54 -04:00
Robert Haas
0d9506d125 Try to repair poorly-considered code in previous commit. 2017-08-31 23:09:00 -04:00
Robert Haas
81c5e46c49 Introduce 64-bit hash functions with a 64-bit seed.
This will be useful for hash partitioning, which needs a way to seed
the hash functions to avoid problems such as a hash index on a hash
partitioned table clumping all values into a small portion of the
bucket space; it's also useful for anything that wants a 64-bit hash
value rather than a 32-bit hash value.

Just in case somebody wants a 64-bit hash value that is compatible
with the existing 32-bit hash values, make the low 32-bits of the
64-bit hash value match the 32-bit hash value when the seed is 0.

Robert Haas and Amul Sul

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmoafx2yoJuhCQQOL5CocEi-w_uG4S2xT0EtgiJnPGcHW3g@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-31 22:21:21 -04:00
Tom Lane
2d44c58c79 Avoid memory leaks when a GatherMerge node is rescanned.
Rescanning a GatherMerge led to leaking some memory in the executor's
query-lifespan context, because most of the node's working data structures
were simply abandoned and rebuilt from scratch.  In practice, this might
never amount to much, given the cost of relaunching worker processes ---
but it's still pretty messy, so let's fix it.

We can rearrange things so that the tuple arrays are simply cleared and
reused, and we don't need to rebuild the TupleTableSlots either, just
clear them.  One small complication is that because we might get a
different number of workers on each iteration, we can't keep the old
convention that the leader's gm_slots[] entry is the last one; the leader
might clobber a TupleTableSlot that we need for a worker in a future
iteration.  Hence, adjust the logic so that the leader has slot 0 always,
while the active workers have slots 1..n.

Back-patch to v10 to keep all the existing versions of nodeGatherMerge.c
in sync --- because of the renumbering of the slots, there would otherwise
be a very large risk that any future backpatches in this module would
introduce bugs.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8670.1504192177@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-08-31 16:21:05 -04:00
Robert Haas
30833ba154 Expand partitioned tables in PartDesc order.
Previously, we expanded the inheritance hierarchy in the order in
which find_all_inheritors had locked the tables, but that turns out
to block quite a bit of useful optimization.  For example, a
partition-wise join can't count on two tables with matching bounds
to get expanded in the same order.

Where possible, this change results in expanding partitioned tables in
*bound* order.  Bound order isn't well-defined for a list-partitioned
table with a null-accepting partition or for a list-partitioned table
where the bounds for a single partition are interleaved with other
partitions.  However, when expansion in bound order is possible, it
opens up further opportunities for optimization, such as
strength-reducing MergeAppend to Append when the expansion order
matches the desired sort order.

Patch by me, with cosmetic revisions by Ashutosh Bapat.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoZrKj7kEzcMSum3aXV4eyvvbh9WD=c6m=002WMheDyE3A@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-31 15:50:18 -04:00
Tom Lane
6708e447ef Clean up shm_mq cleanup.
The logic around shm_mq_detach was a few bricks shy of a load, because
(contrary to the comments for shm_mq_attach) all it did was update the
shared shm_mq state.  That left us leaking a bit of process-local
memory, but much worse, the on_dsm_detach callback for shm_mq_detach
was still armed.  That means that whenever we ultimately detach from
the DSM segment, we'd run shm_mq_detach again for already-detached,
possibly long-dead queues.  This accidentally fails to fail today,
because we only ever re-use a shm_mq's memory for another shm_mq, and
multiple detach attempts on the last such shm_mq are fairly harmless.
But it's gonna bite us someday, so let's clean it up.

To do that, change shm_mq_detach's API so it takes a shm_mq_handle
not the underlying shm_mq.  This makes the callers simpler in most
cases anyway.  Also fix a few places in parallel.c that were just
pfree'ing the handle structs rather than doing proper cleanup.

Back-patch to v10 because of the risk that the revenant shm_mq_detach
callbacks would cause a live bug sometime.  Since this is an API
change, it's too late to do it in 9.6.  (We could make a variant
patch that preserves API, but I'm not excited enough to do that.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8670.1504192177@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-08-31 15:10:24 -04:00
Tom Lane
4b1dd62a25 Improve code coverage of select_parallel test.
Make sure that rescans of parallel indexscans are tested.
Per code coverage report.
2017-08-31 13:15:54 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
b5c75feca7 Remove to pre-8.2 coding convention for PG_MODULE_MAGIC
PG_MODULE_MAGIC has been around since 8.2, with 8.1 long since in EOL,
so remove the mention of #ifdef guards for compiling against pre-8.2
sources from the documentation.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2017-08-30 22:40:24 -04:00
Tom Lane
04e9678614 Code review for nodeGatherMerge.c.
Comment the fields of GatherMergeState, and organize them a bit more
sensibly.  Comment GMReaderTupleBuffer more usefully too.  Improve
assorted other comments that were obsolete or just not very good English.

Get rid of the use of a GMReaderTupleBuffer for the leader process;
that was confusing, since only the "done" field was used, and that
in a way redundant with need_to_scan_locally.

In gather_merge_init, avoid calling load_tuple_array for
already-known-exhausted workers.  I'm not sure if there's a live bug there,
but the case is unlikely to be well tested due to timing considerations.

Remove some useless code, such as duplicating the tts_isempty test done by
TupIsNull.

Remove useless initialization of ps.qual, replacing that with an assertion
that we have no qual to check.  (If we did, the code would fail to check
it.)

Avoid applying heap_copytuple to a null tuple.  While that fails to crash,
it's confusing and it makes the code less legible not more so IMO.

Propagate a couple of these changes into nodeGather.c, as well.

Back-patch to v10, partly because of the possibility that the
gather_merge_init change is fixing a live bug, but mostly to keep
the branches in sync to ease future bug fixes.
2017-08-30 17:21:08 -04:00
Tom Lane
41b0dd987d Separate reinitialization of shared parallel-scan state from ExecReScan.
Previously, the parallel executor logic did reinitialization of shared
state within the ExecReScan code for parallel-aware scan nodes.  This is
problematic, because it means that the ExecReScan call has to occur
synchronously (ie, during the parent Gather node's ReScan call).  That is
swimming very much against the tide so far as the ExecReScan machinery is
concerned; the fact that it works at all today depends on a lot of fragile
assumptions, such as that no plan node between Gather and a parallel-aware
scan node is parameterized.  Another objection is that because ExecReScan
might be called in workers as well as the leader, hacky extra tests are
needed in some places to prevent unwanted shared-state resets.

Hence, let's separate this code into two functions, a ReInitializeDSM
call and the ReScan call proper.  ReInitializeDSM is called only in
the leader and is guaranteed to run before we start new workers.
ReScan is returned to its traditional function of resetting only local
state, which means that ExecReScan's usual habits of delaying or
eliminating child rescan calls are safe again.

As with the preceding commit 7df2c1f8d, it doesn't seem to be necessary
to make these changes in 9.6, which is a good thing because the FDW and
CustomScan APIs are impacted.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1JkByysFJNh9M349u_nNjqETuEnY_y1VUc_kJiU0bxtaQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-30 13:18:16 -04:00
Tom Lane
6c2c5bea3c Restore test case from a2b70c89ca.
Revert the reversion commits a20aac890 and 9b644745c.  In the wake of
commit 7df2c1f8d, we should get stable buildfarm results from this test;
if not, I'd like to know sooner not later.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1JkByysFJNh9M349u_nNjqETuEnY_y1VUc_kJiU0bxtaQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-30 09:59:23 -04:00
Tom Lane
7df2c1f8da Force rescanning of parallel-aware scan nodes below a Gather[Merge].
The ExecReScan machinery contains various optimizations for postponing
or skipping rescans of plan subtrees; for example a HashAgg node may
conclude that it can re-use the table it built before, instead of
re-reading its input subtree.  But that is wrong if the input contains
a parallel-aware table scan node, since the portion of the table scanned
by the leader process is likely to vary from one rescan to the next.
This explains the timing-dependent buildfarm failures we saw after
commit a2b70c89c.

The established mechanism for showing that a plan node's output is
potentially variable is to mark it as depending on some runtime Param.
Hence, to fix this, invent a dummy Param (one that has a PARAM_EXEC
parameter number, but carries no actual value) associated with each Gather
or GatherMerge node, mark parallel-aware nodes below that node as dependent
on that Param, and arrange for ExecReScanGather[Merge] to flag that Param
as changed whenever the Gather[Merge] node is rescanned.

This solution breaks an undocumented assumption made by the parallel
executor logic, namely that all rescans of nodes below a Gather[Merge]
will happen synchronously during the ReScan of the top node itself.
But that's fundamentally contrary to the design of the ExecReScan code,
and so was doomed to fail someday anyway (even if you want to argue
that the bug being fixed here wasn't a failure of that assumption).
A follow-on patch will address that issue.  In the meantime, the worst
that's expected to happen is that given very bad timing luck, the leader
might have to do all the work during a rescan, because workers think
they have nothing to do, if they are able to start up before the eventual
ReScan of the leader's parallel-aware table scan node has reset the
shared scan state.

Although this problem exists in 9.6, there does not seem to be any way
for it to manifest there.  Without GatherMerge, it seems that a plan tree
that has a rescan-short-circuiting node below Gather will always also
have one above it that will short-circuit in the same cases, preventing
the Gather from being rescanned.  Hence we won't take the risk of
back-patching this change into 9.6.  But v10 needs it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1JkByysFJNh9M349u_nNjqETuEnY_y1VUc_kJiU0bxtaQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-30 09:29:55 -04:00
Tom Lane
2e70d6b5e9 Teach libpq to detect integer overflow in the row count of a PGresult.
Adding more than 1 billion rows to a PGresult would overflow its ntups and
tupArrSize fields, leading to client crashes.  It'd be desirable to use
wider fields on 64-bit machines, but because all of libpq's external APIs
use plain "int" for row counters, that's going to be hard to accomplish
without an ABI break.  Given the lack of complaints so far, and the general
pain that would be involved in using such huge PGresults, let's settle for
just preventing the overflow and reporting a useful error message if it
does happen.  Also, for a couple more lines of code we can increase the
threshold of trouble from INT_MAX/2 to INT_MAX rows.

To do that, refactor pqAddTuple() to allow returning an error message that
replaces the default assumption that it failed because of out-of-memory.

Along the way, fix PQsetvalue() so that it reports all failures via
pqInternalNotice().  It already did so in the case of bad field number,
but neglected to report anything for other error causes.

Because of the potential for crashes, this seems like a back-patchable
bug fix, despite the lack of field reports.

Michael Paquier, per a complaint from Igor Korot.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+FnnTxyLWyjY1goewmJNxC==HQCCF4fKkoCTa9qR36oRAHDPw@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-29 15:18:01 -04:00
Robert Haas
bf11e7ee2e Propagate sort instrumentation from workers back to leader.
Up until now, when parallel query was used, no details about the
sort method or space used by the workers were available; details
were shown only for any sorting done by the leader.  Fix that.

Commit 1177ab1dab forced the test case
added by commit 1f6d515a67 to run
without parallelism; now that we have this infrastructure, allow
that again, with a little tweaking to make it pass with and without
force_parallel_mode.

Robert Haas and Tom Lane

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmoa2VBZW6S8AAXfhpHczb=Rf6RqQ2br+zJvEgwJ0uoD_tQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-29 13:26:33 -04:00
Robert Haas
3452dc5240 Push tuple limits through Gather and Gather Merge.
If we only need, say, 10 tuples in total, then we certainly don't need
more than 10 tuples from any single process.  Pushing down the limit
lets workers exit early when possible.  For Gather Merge, there is
an additional benefit: a Sort immediately below the Gather Merge can
be done as a bounded sort if there is an applicable limit.

Robert Haas and Tom Lane

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYa3QKKrLj5rX7UvGqhH73G1Li4B-EKxrmASaca2tFu9Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-29 13:16:55 -04:00
Tom Lane
95e28b7f0c Fix over-aggressive sanity check in misc_sanity.sql.
Fix thinko in commit 8be8510cf: it's okay to have dbid == 0 in normal
(non-pin) entries in pg_shdepend, because global objects such as
databases are entered that way.  The test would pass so long as it
was run in a cluster containing no databases/tablespaces owned by,
or granted to, roles other than the bootstrap superuser.  That's the
expected situation for "make check", but for "make installcheck", not
so much.

Reported by Ryan Murphy.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHeEsBc6EQe0mxGBKDXAwJbntgfvoAd5MQC-5362SmC3Tng_6g@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-28 10:14:46 -04:00
Michael Meskes
04fbe0e451 Changed order of statements and added an additiona MSVC safeguard to make ecpg
thread test cases work on Windows.
2017-08-26 19:11:58 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
2073c641b4 pg_test_timing: Some NLS fixes
The string "% of total" was marked by xgettext to be a c-format, but it
is actually not, so mark up the source to prevent that.

Compute the column widths of the final display dynamically based on the
translated strings, so that translations don't mess up the display
accidentally.
2017-08-26 09:25:19 -04:00
Michael Meskes
a772624b1d Make setlocale in ECPG test cases thread aware on Windows.
Fix threaded test cases on Windows not to crash in setlocale() which can be
global or local to a thread on Windows.

Author: Christian Ullrich
2017-08-26 12:57:21 +02:00
Tom Lane
aae62278e1 Fix locale dependency in new ecpg test case.
Force sorting in "C" locale so that the output ordering doesn't vary,
per buildfarm.

In passing, add missing .gitignore entries.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0975f4bb-5dee-c33c-b719-3ce44026d397@chrullrich.net
2017-08-25 14:17:33 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
99ce446ada pg_upgrade: Remove more dead code
related to 6ce6a61840

Reported-by: Christoph Berg <myon@debian.org>
2017-08-25 12:02:29 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
e86ac70d6e Message translatability fixes 2017-08-25 11:52:31 -04:00
Michael Meskes
d22e9d5305 Implement DO CONTINUE action for ECPG WHENEVER statement.
Author: Vinayak Pokale
Reviewed-By: Masahiko Sawada
2017-08-25 15:17:29 +02:00
Tom Lane
3f4c7917b3 Code review for pushing LIMIT through subqueries.
Minor improvements for commit 1f6d515a6.  We do not need the (rather
expensive) test for SRFs in the targetlist, because since v10 any
such SRFs would appear in separate ProjectSet nodes.  Also, make the
code look more like the existing cases by turning it into a simple
recursion --- the argument that there might be some performance
benefit to contorting the code seems unfounded to me, especially since
any good compiler should turn the tail-recursion into iteration anyway.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CADE5jYLuugnEEUsyW6Q_4mZFYTxHxaVCQmGAsF0yiY8ZDggi-w@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-25 09:05:17 -04:00
Andres Freund
d36f7efb39 Add minimal regression test for blessed record type transfer.
Test that blessed records can be transferred through a TupleQueue and
correctly decoded by another backend.  While touching the file, make
sure that force_parallel_mode settings only cover relevant tests.

Author: Thomas Munro, editorialized by Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170823054644.efuzftxjpfi6wwqs%40alap3.anarazel.de
2017-08-24 17:42:49 -07:00
Andres Freund
d7694fc148 Consolidate the function pointer types used by dshash.c.
Commit 8c0d7bafad introduced dshash with hash
and compare functions like DynaHash's, and also variants that take a user
data pointer instead of size.  Simplify the interface by merging them into
a single pair of function pointer types that take both size and a user data
pointer.

Since it is anticipated that memcmp and tag_hash behavior will be a common
requirement, provide wrapper functions dshash_memcmp and dshash_memhash that
conform to the new function types.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170823054644.efuzftxjpfi6wwqs%40alap3.anarazel.de
2017-08-24 17:01:36 -07:00
Andres Freund
4569715bd6 Fix unlikely shared memory leak after failure in dshash_create().
Tidy-up for commit 8c0d7bafad, based on a
complaint from Andres Freund.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170823054644.efuzftxjpfi6wwqs%40alap3.anarazel.de
2017-08-24 16:58:30 -07:00
Andres Freund
20fbf25533 Fix harmless thinko in dsa.c.
Commit 16be2fd100 added DSA_ALLOC_HUGE,
DSA_ALLOC_ZERO and DSA_ALLOC_NO_OOM which have the same numerical
values and meanings as the similarly named MCXT_... macros.  In one
place we accidentally used MCXT_ALLOC_NO_OOM when DSA_ALLOC_NO_OOM is
wanted, so tidy that up.

Author: Thomas Munro
Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2AimHxVkkxnMfQvbZMkXy0uKbVa0-D38c5-qwrCm4CMQ@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 10, where dsa was introduced.
2017-08-24 15:07:40 -07:00
Stephen Frost
0cdc3e47be psql: Fix \gx when FETCH_COUNT is used
Set expanded output when requested through \gx in ExecQueryUsingCursor()
(used when FETCH_COUNT is set).

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CB7A53AA-5645-4BDD-AB07-4D22CD9D8FF1%40gmx.net
Author: Tobias Bussmann
2017-08-24 16:20:50 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
6ce6a61840 pg_upgrade: Remove dead code
Remove code meant for upgrading to a particular version of PostgreSQL
9.0.  Since pg_upgrade only supports upgrading to the current major
version, this code is no longer useful.
2017-08-24 15:29:35 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
fe7774144d Increase SCRAM salt length
The original value 12 was set based on RFC 5802 for SCRAM-SHA-1, but RFC
7677 for SCRAM-SHA-256 uses 16, so use that.  (This does not affect the
validity of already stored verifiers.)

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/12cc9297-7e05-932f-d863-765e5626ead4%402ndquadrant.com
2017-08-24 14:04:28 -04:00
Tom Lane
1177ab1dab Make new regression test case parallel-safe, and improve its output.
The test case added by commit 1f6d515a6 fails on buildfarm members that
have force_parallel_mode turned on, because we currently don't report sort
performance details from worker processes back to the master.  To fix that,
just make the test table be temp rather than regular; that's a good idea
anyway to forestall any possible interference from auto-analyze.
(The restriction that workers can't access temp tables might go away
someday, but almost certainly not before the other thing gets fixed.)

Also, improve the test so that we retain as much as possible of the
EXPLAIN ANALYZE output.  This aids debugging failures, and might also
expose problems that the preceding version masked.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CADE5jYLuugnEEUsyW6Q_4mZFYTxHxaVCQmGAsF0yiY8ZDggi-w@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-24 13:39:58 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
27b89876c0 Fix up secondary expected files
for commit 237a0b87b1
2017-08-24 11:13:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
6d242ee980 Update code comment for temporary replication slots
Reported-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-08-23 14:59:25 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
1e1b01cd16 Fix outdated comment
Author: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
2017-08-23 14:19:35 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
237a0b87b1 Improve plural handling in error message
This does not use the normal plural handling, because no numbers appear
in the actual message.
2017-08-23 13:56:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
85f4d6393d Tweak some SCRAM error messages and code comments
Clarify/correct some error messages, fix up some code comments that
confused SASL and SCRAM, and other minor fixes.  No changes in
functionality.
2017-08-23 12:29:38 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
580ddcec39 Fix translation marker
This was erroneously removed in
55a70a023c.
2017-08-23 09:56:38 -04:00
Andres Freund
8c0d7bafad Hash tables backed by DSA shared memory.
Add general purpose chaining hash tables for DSA memory.  Unlike
DynaHash in shared memory mode, these hash tables can grow as
required, and cope with being mapped into different addresses in
different backends.

There is a wide range of potential users for such a hash table, though
it's very likely the interface will need to evolve as we come to
understand the needs of different kinds of users.  E.g support for
iterators and incremental resizing is planned for later commits and
the details of the callback signatures are likely to change.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: John Gorman, Andres Freund, Dilip Kumar, Robert Haas
Discussion:
	https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=3d8o8XdVwYT6O=bHKsKAM2pu2D6sV1S_=4d+jStVCE7w@mail.gmail.com
	https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0ZtQ-SpsgCyzzYpsXS6e=kZWqk3g5Ygn3MDV7A8dabUA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-22 22:43:07 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut
7e046e6e8a pg_upgrade: Message translatability and style fixes 2017-08-22 20:32:17 -04:00
Andres Freund
35ea75632a Refactor typcache.c's record typmod hash table.
Previously, tuple descriptors were stored in chains keyed by a fixed size
array of OIDs.  That meant there were effectively two levels of collision
chain -- one inside and one outside the hash table.  Instead, let dynahash.c
look after conflicts for us by supplying a proper hash and equal function
pair.

This is a nice cleanup on its own, but also simplifies followup
changes allowing blessed TupleDescs to be shared between backends
participating in parallel query.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm%3D34GVhOL%2BarUx56yx7OPk7%3DqpGsv3CpO54feqjAwQKm5g%40mail.gmail.com
2017-08-22 16:11:54 -07:00
Andres Freund
0052a0243d Add a hash_combine function for mixing hash values.
This hash function is derived from Boost's function of the same name.

Author: Andres Freund, Thomas Munro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm%3D3rdgjfxW4cKvJ0OEmya2-34B0qHNG1xV0vK7TGPJGMUQ%40mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170731210844.3cwrkmsmbbpt4rjc%40alap3.anarazel.de
2017-08-22 15:36:49 -07:00
Peter Eisentraut
2bfd1b1ee5 Don't install ICU collation keyword variants
Users can still create them themselves.  Instead, document Unicode TR 35
collation options for ICU, so users can create all this themselves.

Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
2017-08-21 19:21:07 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
51e225da30 Expand set of predefined ICU locales
Install language+region combinations even if they are not distinct from
the language's base locale.  This gives better long-term stability of
the set of predefined locales and makes the predefined locales less
implementation-dependent and more practical for users.

Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
2017-08-21 19:21:07 -04:00
Robert Haas
1f6d515a67 Push limit through subqueries to underlying sort, where possible.
Douglas Doole, reviewed by Ashutosh Bapat and by me.  Minor formatting
change by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CADE5jYLuugnEEUsyW6Q_4mZFYTxHxaVCQmGAsF0yiY8ZDggi-w@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-21 14:19:44 -04:00
Robert Haas
79ccd7cbd5 pg_prewarm: Add automatic prewarm feature.
Periodically while the server is running, and at shutdown, write out a
list of blocks in shared buffers.  When the server reaches consistency
-- unfortunatey, we can't do it before that point without breaking
things -- reload those blocks into any still-unused shared buffers.

Mithun Cy and Robert Haas, reviewed and tested by Beena Emerson,
Amit Kapila, Jim Nasby, and Rafia Sabih.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAD__OugubOs1Vy7kgF6xTjmEqTR4CrGAv8w+ZbaY_+MZeitukw@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-21 14:17:39 -04:00
Noah Misch
66ed3829df Inject $(ICU_LIBS) regardless of platform.
It appeared in a conditional that excludes AIX, Cygwin and MinGW.  Give
ICU support a chance to work on those platforms.  Back-patch to v10,
where ICU support was introduced.
2017-08-20 21:22:18 -07:00
Andres Freund
c6293249dc Partially flatten struct tupleDesc so that it can be used in DSM.
TupleDesc's attributes were already stored in contiguous memory after the
struct.  Go one step further and get rid of the array of pointers to
attributes so that they can be stored in shared memory mapped at different
addresses in each backend.  This won't work for TupleDescs with contraints
and defaults, since those point to other objects, but for many purposes
only attributes are needed.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0ZtQ-SpsgCyzzYpsXS6e=kZWqk3g5Ygn3MDV7A8dabUA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-20 11:19:12 -07:00
Andres Freund
2cd7084524 Change tupledesc->attrs[n] to TupleDescAttr(tupledesc, n).
This is a mechanical change in preparation for a later commit that
will change the layout of TupleDesc.  Introducing a macro to abstract
the details of where attributes are stored will allow us to change
that in separate step and revise it in future.

Author: Thomas Munro, editorialized by Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0ZtQ-SpsgCyzzYpsXS6e=kZWqk3g5Ygn3MDV7A8dabUA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-20 11:19:07 -07:00
Tom Lane
b1c2d76a2f Fix possible core dump in parallel restore when using a TOC list.
Commit 3eb9a5e7c unintentionally introduced an ordering dependency
into restore_toc_entries_prefork().  The existing coding of
reduce_dependencies() contains a check to skip moving a TOC entry
to the ready_list if it wasn't initially in the pending_list.
This used to suffice to prevent reduce_dependencies() from trying to
move anything into the ready_list during restore_toc_entries_prefork(),
because the pending_list stayed empty throughout that phase; but it no
longer does.  The problem doesn't manifest unless the TOC has been
reordered by SortTocFromFile, which is how I missed it in testing.

To fix, just add a test for ready_list == NULL, converting the call
with NULL from a poor man's sanity check into an explicit command
not to touch TOC items' list membership.  Clarify some of the comments
around this; in particular, note the primary purpose of the check for
pending_list membership, which is to ensure that we can't try to restore
the same item twice, in case a TOC list forces it to be restored before
its dependency count goes to zero.

Per report from Fabrízio de Royes Mello.  Back-patch to 9.3, like the
previous commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFcNs+pjuv0JL_x4+=71TPUPjdLHOXA4YfT32myj_OrrZb4ohA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-19 13:39:51 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
24620fc52b Fix creation of ICU comments for keyword variants
It would create the comment referring to the keyword-less parent
locale.  This was broken in ddb5fdc068.
2017-08-18 23:02:28 -04:00
Robert Haas
c4b841ba6a Fix interaction of triggers, partitioning, and EXPLAIN ANALYZE.
Add a new EState member es_leaf_result_relations, so that the trigger
code knows about ResultRelInfos created by tuple routing.  Also make
sure ExplainPrintTriggers knows about partition-related
ResultRelInfos.

Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Amit Langote

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/57163e18-8e56-da83-337a-22f2c0008051@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-08-18 13:01:05 -04:00
Tom Lane
a20aac890a Temporarily revert test case from a2b70c89ca.
That code patch was good as far as it went, but the associated test case
has exposed fundamental brain damage in the parallel scan mechanism,
which is going to take nontrivial work to correct.  In the interests of
getting the buildfarm back to green so that unrelated work can proceed,
let's temporarily remove the test case.
2017-08-17 18:35:14 -04:00
Robert Haas
54cde0c4c0 Don't lock tables in RelationGetPartitionDispatchInfo.
Instead, lock them in the caller using find_all_inheritors so that
they get locked in the standard order, minimizing deadlock risks.

Also in RelationGetPartitionDispatchInfo, avoid opening tables which
are not partitioned; there's no need.

Amit Langote, reviewed by Ashutosh Bapat and Amit Khandekar

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/91b36fa1-c197-b72f-ca6e-56c593bae68c@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-08-17 15:43:09 -04:00
Robert Haas
ecfe59e50f Refactor validation of new partitions a little bit.
Move some logic that is currently in ATExecAttachPartition to
separate functions to facilitate future code reuse.

Ashutosh Bapat and Jeevan Ladhe

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmobbnamyvii0pRdg9pp_jLHSUvq7u5SiRrVV0tEFFU58Tg@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-17 14:49:45 -04:00
Robert Haas
1e56883a52 Attempt to clarify comments related to force_parallel_mode.
Per discussion with Tom Lane.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/28589.1502902172@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-08-17 14:09:14 -04:00
Tom Lane
a2b70c89ca Fix ExecReScanGatherMerge.
Not surprisingly, since it'd never ever been tested, ExecReScanGatherMerge
didn't work.  Fix it, and add a regression test case to exercise it.

Amit Kapila

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1JkByysFJNh9M349u_nNjqETuEnY_y1VUc_kJiU0bxtaQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-17 13:49:22 -04:00
Tom Lane
b5178c5d08 Further tweaks to compiler flags for PL/Perl on Windows.
It now emerges that we can only rely on Perl to tell us we must use
-D_USE_32BIT_TIME_T if it's Perl 5.13.4 or later.  For older versions,
revert to our previous practice of assuming we need that symbol in
all 32-bit Windows builds.  This is not ideal, but inquiring into
which compiler version Perl was built with seems far too fragile.
In any case, we had not previously had complaints about these old
Perl versions, so let's assume this is Good Enough.  (It's still
better than the situation ante commit 5a5c2feca, in that at least
the effects are confined to PL/Perl rather than the whole PG build.)

Back-patch to all supported versions, like 5a5c2feca and predecessors.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANFyU97OVQ3+Mzfmt3MhuUm5NwPU=-FtbNH5Eb7nZL9ua8=rcA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-17 13:13:47 -04:00
Tom Lane
963af96920 Add missing "static" marker.
Per pademelon.
2017-08-17 11:17:39 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
cf851519d4 pg_dump: Support using synchronized snapshots on standbys
This became possible by commit
6c2003f8a1.  This just makes pg_dump aware
of it and updates the documentation.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-08-16 19:46:50 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
dcd052c8d2 Fix pg_atomic_u64 initialization.
As Andres pointed out, pg_atomic_init_u64 must be used to initialize an
atomic variable, before it can be accessed with the actual atomic ops.
Trying to use pg_atomic_write_u64 on an uninitialized variable leads to a
failure with the fallback implementation that uses a spinlock.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20170816191346.d3ke5tpshhco4bnd%40alap3.anarazel.de
2017-08-17 00:48:44 +03:00
Tom Lane
2b74303637 Make the planner assume that the entries in a VALUES list are distinct.
Previously, if we had to estimate the number of distinct values in a
VALUES column, we fell back on the default behavior used whenever we lack
statistics, which effectively is that there are Min(# of entries, 200)
distinct values.  This can be very badly off with a large VALUES list,
as noted by Jeff Janes.

We could consider actually running an ANALYZE-like scan on the VALUES,
but that seems unduly expensive, and anyway it could not deliver reliable
info if the entries are not all constants.  What seems like a better choice
is to assume that the values are all distinct.  This will sometimes be just
as wrong as the old code, but it seems more likely to be more nearly right
in many common cases.  Also, it is more consistent with what happens in
some related cases, for example WHERE x = ANY(ARRAY[1,2,3,...,n]) and
WHERE x = ANY(VALUES (1),(2),(3),...,(n)) now are estimated similarly.

This was discussed some time ago, but consensus was it'd be better
to slip it in at the start of a development cycle not near the end.
(It should've gone into v10, really, but I forgot about it.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU=1xHkyPa8VQgGcCNg3RMFFvVxUdOpus1gKcFuvVi0w6Acg@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-16 15:37:20 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
ac883ac453 Fix shm_toc.c to always return buffer-aligned memory.
Previously, if you passed a non-aligned size to shm_toc_create(), the
memory returned by shm_toc_allocate() would be similarly non-aligned.
This was exposed by commit 3cda10f41b, which allocated structs containing
a pg_atomic_uint64 field with shm_toc_allocate(). On systems with
MAXIMUM_ALIGNOF = 4, such structs still need to be 8-bytes aligned, but
the memory returned by shm_toc_allocate() was only 4-bytes aligned.

It's quite bogus that we abuse BUFFERALIGN to align the structs for
pg_atomic_uint64. It doesn't really have anything to do with buffers. But
that's a separate issue.

This ought to fix the buildfarm failures on 32-bit x86 systems.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/7e0a73a5-0df9-1859-b8ae-9acf122dc38d@iki.fi
2017-08-16 21:52:38 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut
9b5140fb50 Correct representation of foreign tables in information schema
tables.table_type is supposed to be 'FOREIGN' rather than 'FOREIGN
TABLE' according to the SQL standard.
2017-08-16 11:03:33 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
3cda10f41b Use atomic ops to hand out pages to scan in parallel scan.
With a lot of CPUs, the spinlock that protects the current scan location
in a parallel scan can become a bottleneck. Use an atomic fetch-and-add
instruction instead.

David Rowley

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAKJS1f9tgsPhqBcoPjv9_KUPZvTLCZ4jy%3DB%3DbhqgaKn7cYzm-w@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-16 16:18:41 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
0c504a80cf Remove dedicated B-tree root-split record types.
Since commit 40dae7ec53, which changed the way b-tree page splitting
works, there has been no difference in the handling of root, and non-root
split WAL records. We don't need to distinguish them anymore

If you're worried about the loss of debugging information, note that
usually a root split record will normally be followed by a WAL record to
create the new root page. The root page will also have the BTP_ROOT flag
set on the page itself, and there is a pointer to it from the metapage.

Author: Aleksander Alekseev
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20170406122116.GA11081@e733.localdomain
2017-08-16 12:24:40 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut
77d05706be Fix up some misusage of appendStringInfo() and friends
Change to appendStringInfoChar() or appendStringInfoString() where those
can be used.

Author: David Rowley <david.rowley@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat <ashutosh.bapat@enterprisedb.com>
2017-08-15 23:34:39 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
4d4c891715 Initialize replication_slot_catalog_xmin in procarray
Although not confirmed and probably rare, if the newly allocated memory
is not already zero, this could possibly have caused some problems.

Also reorder the initializations slightly so they match the order of the
struct definition.

Author: Wong, Yi Wen <yiwong@amazon.com>
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
2017-08-15 21:05:21 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
514731af58 pg_receivewal: Improve verbose mode
Some informational messages showed up even if verbose mode was not
used.  Move them to verbose mode.

Author: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
2017-08-15 20:25:37 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
0659465caa Include foreign tables in information_schema.table_privileges
This appears to have been an omission in the original commit
0d692a0dc9.  All related information_schema views already include
foreign tables.

Reported-by: Nicolas Thauvin <nicolas.thauvin@dalibo.com>
2017-08-15 19:27:22 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
0f0ee68e94 psql: Add tab completion for \pset pager
Author: Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
2017-08-15 19:12:29 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
31ae1638ce Simplify autovacuum work-item implementation
The initial implementation of autovacuum work-items used a dynamic
shared memory area (DSA).  However, it's argued that dynamic shared
memory is not portable enough, so we cannot rely on it being supported
everywhere; at the same time, autovacuum work-items are now a critical
part of the server, so it's not acceptable that they don't work in the
cases where dynamic shared memory is disabled.  Therefore, let's fall
back to a simpler implementation of work-items that just uses
autovacuum's main shared memory segment for storage.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobQVbz4K_+RSmiM9HeRKpy3vS5xnbkL95gSEnWijzprKQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-15 18:14:07 -03:00
Tom Lane
b73f1b5c29 Make simpler-simple-expressions code cope with a Gather plan.
Commit 00418c612 expected that the plan generated for a simple-expression
query would always be a plain Result node.  However, if force_parallel_mode
is on, the planner might stick a Gather atop that.  Cope by looking through
the Gather.  For safety, assert that the Gather's tlist is trivial.

Per buildfarm.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/23425.1502822098@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-08-15 16:49:52 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
70b573b267 Fix logical replication protocol comparison logic
Since we currently only have one protocol, this doesn't make much of a
difference other than the error message.

Author: Yugo Nagata <nagata@sraoss.co.jp>
2017-08-15 16:21:19 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
e42351ae07 Simplify some code in logical replication launcher
Avoid unnecessary locking calls when a subscription is disabled.

Author: Yugo Nagata <nagata@sraoss.co.jp>
2017-08-15 15:13:06 -04:00
Tom Lane
4867d7f62f Avoid out-of-memory in a hash join with many duplicate inner keys.
The executor is capable of splitting buckets during a hash join if
too much memory is being used by a small number of buckets.  However,
this only helps if a bucket's population is actually divisible; if
all the hash keys are alike, the tuples still end up in the same
new bucket.  This can result in an OOM failure if there are enough
inner keys with identical hash values.  The planner's cost estimates
will bias it against choosing a hash join in such situations, but not
by so much that it will never do so.  To mitigate the OOM hazard,
explicitly estimate the hash bucket space needed by just the inner
side's most common value, and if that would exceed work_mem then
add disable_cost to the hash cost estimate.

This approach doesn't account for the possibility that two or more
common values would share the same hash value.  On the other hand,
work_mem is normally a fairly conservative bound, so that eating
two or more times that much space is probably not going to kill us.

If we have no stats about the inner side, ignore this consideration.
There was some discussion of making a conservative assumption, but that
would effectively result in disabling hash join whenever we lack stats,
which seems like an overreaction given how seldom the problem manifests
in the field.

Per a complaint from David Hinkle.  Although this could be viewed
as a bug fix, the lack of similar complaints weighs against back-
patching; indeed we waited for v11 because it seemed already rather
late in the v10 cycle to be making plan choice changes like this one.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/32013.1487271761@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-08-15 14:05:53 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
d9a622cee1 Fix error handling path in autovacuum launcher
The original code (since 00e6a16d01) was assuming aborting the
transaction in autovacuum launcher was sufficient to release all
resources, but in reality the launcher runs quite a lot of code out of
any transactions.  Re-introduce individual cleanup calls to make abort
more robust.

Reported-by: Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobQVbz4K_+RSmiM9HeRKpy3vS5xnbkL95gSEnWijzprKQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-15 13:35:12 -03:00
Robert Haas
e139f1953f Assorted preparatory refactoring for partition-wise join.
Instead of duplicating the logic to search for a matching
ParamPathInfo in multiple places, factor it out into a separate
function.

Pass only the relevant bits of the PartitionKey to
partition_bounds_equal instead of the whole thing, because
partition-wise join will want to call this without having a
PartitionKey available.

Adjust allow_star_schema_join and calc_nestloop_required_outer
to take relevant Relids rather than the entire Path, because
partition-wise join will want to call it with the top-parent
relids to determine whether a child join is allowable.

Ashutosh Bapat.  Review and testing of the larger patch set of which
this is a part by Amit Langote, Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, Rafia Sabih,
Thomas Munro, Dilip Kumar, and me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobQK80vtXjAsPZWWXd7c8u13G86gmuLupN+uUJjA+i4nA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-15 12:30:38 -04:00
Tom Lane
00418c6124 Simplify plpgsql's check for simple expressions.
plpgsql wants to recognize expressions that it can execute directly
via ExecEvalExpr() instead of going through the full SPI machinery.
Originally the test for this consisted of recursively groveling through
the post-planning expression tree to see if it contained only nodes that
plpgsql recognized as safe.  That was a major maintenance headache, since
it required updating plpgsql every time we added any kind of expression
node.  It was also kind of expensive, so over time we added various
pre-planning checks to try to short-circuit having to do that.
Robert Haas pointed out that as of the SRF-processing changes in v10,
particularly the addition of Query.hasTargetSRFs, there really isn't
any reason to make the recursive scan at all: the initial checks cover
everything we really care about.  We do have to make sure that those
checks agree with what inline_function() considers, so that inlining
of a function that formerly wasn't inlined can't cause an expression
considered simple to become non-simple.

Hence, delete the recursive function exec_simple_check_node(), and tweak
those other tests to more exactly agree with inline_function().  Adjust
some comments and function naming to match.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoZGZpwdEV2FQWaVxA_qZXsQE1DAS5Fu8fwxXDNvfndiUQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-15 12:28:39 -04:00
Michael Meskes
a4619b26a6 Allow continuation lines in ecpg cppline parsing. 2017-08-15 17:14:52 +02:00
Tom Lane
f3a4d7e7c2 Distinguish wait-for-connection from wait-for-write-ready on Windows.
The API for WaitLatch and friends followed the Unix convention in which
waiting for a socket connection to complete is identical to waiting for
the socket to accept a write.  While Windows provides a select(2)
emulation that agrees with that, the native WaitForMultipleObjects API
treats them as quite different --- and for some bizarre reason, it will
report a not-yet-connected socket as write-ready.  libpq itself has so
far escaped dealing with this because it waits with select(), but in
libpqwalreceiver.c we want to wait using WaitLatchOrSocket.  The semantics
mismatch resulted in replication connection failures on Windows, but only
for remote connections (apparently, localhost connections complete
immediately, or at least too fast for anyone to have noticed the problem
in single-machine testing).

To fix, introduce an additional WL_SOCKET_CONNECTED wait flag for
WaitLatchOrSocket, which is identical to WL_SOCKET_WRITEABLE on
non-Windows, but results in waiting for FD_CONNECT events on Windows.

Ideally, we would also distinguish the two conditions in the API for
PQconnectPoll(), but changing that API at this point seems infeasible.
Instead, cheat by checking for PQstatus() == CONNECTION_STARTED to
determine that we're still waiting for the connection to complete.
(This is a cheat mainly because CONNECTION_STARTED is documented as an
internal state rather than something callers should rely on.  Perhaps
we ought to change the documentation ... but this patch doesn't.)

Per reports from Jobin Augustine and Igor Neyman.  Back-patch to v10
where commit 1e8a85009 exposed this longstanding shortcoming.

Andres Freund, minor fix and some code review/beautification by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHBggj8g2T+ZDcACZ2FmzX9CTxkWjKBsHd6NkYB4i9Ojf6K1Fw@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-15 11:07:57 -04:00
Robert Haas
480f1f4329 Teach adjust_appendrel_attrs(_multilevel) to do multiple translations.
Currently, child relations are always base relations, so when we
translate parent relids to child relids, we only need to translate
a singler relid.  However, the proposed partition-wise join feature
will create child joins, which will mean we need to translate a set
of parent relids to the corresponding child relids.  This is
preliminary refactoring to make that possible.

Ashutosh Bapat.  Review and testing of the larger patch set of which
this is a part by Amit Langote, Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, Rafia Sabih,
Thomas Munro, Dilip Kumar, and me.  Some adjustments, mostly
cosmetic, by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobQK80vtXjAsPZWWXd7c8u13G86gmuLupN+uUJjA+i4nA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-15 10:49:06 -04:00
Robert Haas
d57929afc7 Avoid unnecessary single-child Append nodes.
Before commit d3cc37f1d8, an inheritance parent
whose only children were temp tables of other sessions would end up
as a simple scan of the parent; but with that commit, we end up with
an Append node, per a report from Ashutosh Bapat.  Tweak the logic
so that we go back to the old way, and update the function header
comment for partitioning while we're at it.

Ashutosh Bapat, reviewed by Amit Langote and adjusted by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpReWJr1yTkHU=OqiMBmcYCMoSW3VPR39RBuQ_ovwDFBT5Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-15 09:16:33 -04:00
Robert Haas
1295a77788 Add missing call to ExecReScanGatherMerge.
Amit Kapila

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1KeQWZOoDmDmGMwuqzPW9JhRS+ditQVFdAfGjNmMZzqMQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-15 08:06:36 -04:00
Robert Haas
23d7680d04 pg_dump: Add a --load-via-partition-root option.
Rushabh Lathia, reviewed and somewhat revised by me.  Testing by
Rajkumar Raghuwanshi.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAGPqQf0C1he087bz9xRBOGZBuESYz9X=Fp8Ca_g+TfHgAff75g@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-14 22:54:41 -04:00
Andres Freund
d2bc501573 Expand coverage of parallel gather merge a bit.
Previously paths reaching heap_compare_slots weren't covered.

Author: Rushabh Lathia
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion:
	https://postgr.es/m/CAGPqQf3C+3PBujb+7m=ceWeii4-vBY=XS99LjzrpkpefvzJbFg@mail.gmail.com
	https://postgr.es/m/27200.1502482851@sss.pgh.pa.us
Backpatch: 10, where gather merge was introduced
2017-08-14 15:27:47 -07:00
Tom Lane
9f14dc393b Stamp HEAD as 11devel.
Note that we no longer require any manual adjustments to shared-library
minor version numbers, cf commit a3bce17ef.  So this should be everything.
2017-08-14 18:08:30 -04:00
Tom Lane
21d304dfed Final pgindent + perltidy run for v10. 2017-08-14 17:29:33 -04:00
Tom Lane
5b6289c1e0 Handle elog(FATAL) during ROLLBACK more robustly.
Stress testing by Andreas Seltenreich disclosed longstanding problems that
occur if a FATAL exit (e.g. due to receipt of SIGTERM) occurs while we are
trying to execute a ROLLBACK of an already-failed transaction.  In such a
case, xact.c is in TBLOCK_ABORT state, so that AbortOutOfAnyTransaction
would skip AbortTransaction and go straight to CleanupTransaction.  This
led to an assert failure in an assert-enabled build (due to the ROLLBACK's
portal still having a cleanup hook) or without assertions, to a FATAL exit
complaining about "cannot drop active portal".  The latter's not
disastrous, perhaps, but it's messy enough to want to improve it.

We don't really want to run all of AbortTransaction in this code path.
The minimum required to clean up the open portal safely is to do
AtAbort_Memory and AtAbort_Portals.  It seems like a good idea to
do AtAbort_Memory unconditionally, to be entirely sure that we are
starting with a safe CurrentMemoryContext.  That means that if the
main loop in AbortOutOfAnyTransaction does nothing, we need an extra
step at the bottom to restore CurrentMemoryContext = TopMemoryContext,
which I chose to do by invoking AtCleanup_Memory.  This'll result in
calling AtCleanup_Memory twice in many of the paths through this function,
but that seems harmless and reasonably inexpensive.

The original motivation for the assertion in AtCleanup_Portals was that
we wanted to be sure that any user-defined code executed as a consequence
of the cleanup hook runs during AbortTransaction not CleanupTransaction.
That still seems like a valid concern, and now that we've seen one case
of the assertion firing --- which means that exactly that would have
happened in a production build --- let's replace the Assert with a runtime
check.  If we see the cleanup hook still set, we'll emit a WARNING and
just drop the hook unexecuted.

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

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/877ey7bmun.fsf@ansel.ydns.eu
2017-08-14 15:43:20 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
7f1bb1d734 Fix typo
Author: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
2017-08-14 13:53:05 -04:00
Tom Lane
5a5c2feca3 Absorb -D_USE_32BIT_TIME_T switch from Perl, if relevant.
Commit 3c163a7fc's original choice to ignore all #define symbols whose
names begin with underscore turns out to be too simplistic.  On Windows,
some Perl installations are built with -D_USE_32BIT_TIME_T, and we must
absorb that or we get the wrong result for sizeof(PerlInterpreter).

This effectively re-reverts commit ef58b87df, which injected that symbol
in a hacky way, making it apply to all of Postgres not just PL/Perl.
More significantly, it did so on *all* 32-bit Windows builds, even when
the Perl build to be used did not select this option; so that it fails
to work properly with some newer Perl builds.

By making this change, we would be introducing an ABI break in 32-bit
Windows builds; but fortunately we have not used type time_t in any
exported Postgres APIs in a long time.  So it should be OK, both for
PL/Perl itself and for third-party extensions, if an extension library
is built with a different _USE_32BIT_TIME_T setting than the core code.

Patch by me, based on research by Ashutosh Sharma and Robert Haas.
Back-patch to all supported branches, as commit 3c163a7fc was.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANFyU97OVQ3+Mzfmt3MhuUm5NwPU=-FtbNH5Eb7nZL9ua8=rcA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-14 11:48:59 -04:00
Michael Meskes
ea0ca75d5d Changed ecpg parser to allow RETURNING clauses without attached C variables. 2017-08-14 11:29:34 +02:00
Tom Lane
004a9702e0 Remove AtEOXact_CatCache().
The sole useful effect of this function, to check that no catcache
entries have positive refcounts at transaction end, has really been
obsolete since we introduced ResourceOwners in PG 8.1.  We reduced the
checks to assertions years ago, so that the function was a complete
no-op in production builds.  There have been previous discussions about
removing it entirely, but consensus up to now was that it had some small
value as a cross-check for bugs in the ResourceOwner logic.

However, it now emerges that it's possible to trigger these assertions
if you hit an assert-enabled backend with SIGTERM during a call to
SearchCatCacheList, because that function temporarily increases the
refcounts of entries it's intending to add to a catcache list construct.
In a normal ERROR scenario, the extra refcounts are cleaned up by
SearchCatCacheList's PG_CATCH block; but in a FATAL exit we do a
transaction abort and exit without ever executing PG_CATCH handlers.

There's a case to be made that this is a generic hazard and we should
consider restructuring elog(FATAL) handling so that pending PG_CATCH
handlers do get run.  That's pretty scary though: it could easily create
more problems than it solves.  Preliminary stress testing by Andreas
Seltenreich suggests that there are not many live problems of this ilk,
so we rejected that idea.

There are more-localized ways to fix the problem; the most principled
one would be to use PG_ENSURE_ERROR_CLEANUP instead of plain PG_TRY.
But adding cycles to SearchCatCacheList isn't very appealing.  We could
also weaken the assertions in AtEOXact_CatCache in some more or less
ad-hoc way, but that just makes its raison d'etre even less compelling.
In the end, the most reasonable solution seems to be to just remove
AtEOXact_CatCache altogether, on the grounds that it's not worth trying
to fix it.  It hasn't found any bugs for us in many years.

Per report from Jeevan Chalke.  Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAM2+6=VEE30YtRQCZX7_sCFsEpoUkFBV1gZazL70fqLn8rcvBA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-13 16:15:14 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
2336f84284 Reword comment for clarity
Reported by Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoB+ycZ2z-4Ye=6MfQ_r0aV5r6cvVPw4kOyPdp6bHqQoBQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-12 23:26:35 -04:00
Tom Lane
3043c1ddd1 Simplify fetch-slot-xmins logic in recovery TAP tests.
Merge wait_slot_xmins() into get_slot_xmins().  At this point the only
place that wasn't doing a wait was the initial-state test, and a wait
there seems pretty harmless.

Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAB7nPqSp_SLQb2uU7am+sn4V3g1UKv8j3yZU385oAG1cG_BN9Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-12 12:08:54 -04:00
Tom Lane
d6ecad812f Be more thorough about cleaning out gcov litter.
At least on my machine, a run with code coverage enabled produces some
".gcov" files whose names begin with ".".  "rm -f *.gcov" fails to match
those, so they don't get cleaned up by "make clean".  Fix it.
2017-08-11 17:39:27 -04:00
Tom Lane
3c8de95979 Add regression tests exercising more code paths in nodeLimit.c.
Perusal of the code coverage report shows that the existing regression
test cases for LIMIT/OFFSET don't exercise the nodeLimit code paths
involving backwards scan, empty results, or null values of LIMIT/OFFSET.
Improve the coverage.
2017-08-11 17:28:01 -04:00
Tom Lane
6efca23cc0 Add regression tests exercising the non-hashed code paths in nodeSetop.c.
Perusal of the code coverage report shows that the existing regression
test cases for INTERSECT and EXCEPT seemingly all prefer the SETOP_HASHED
implementation.  Add some test cases in which we force use of the
SETOP_SORTED mode.
2017-08-11 17:28:01 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
d4ede668d6 pg_upgrade: Clarify one message
Reported-by: Dennis Björklund <db@zigo.dhs.org>
2017-08-11 15:44:10 -04:00
Tom Lane
7968184429 Remove pgbench's restriction on placement of -M switch.
Previously the -M switch had to appear before any switch that directly
or indirectly specified a benchmarking script.  This was both confusing
and inadequately documented, as per gripe from Tatsuo Ishii.  We can
remove the restriction at the cost of making an extra pass over the
lists of SQL commands, which seems like a cheap price (the string scans
themselves likely cost much more).  The change is just to not extract
parameters from the SQL commands until we have finished parsing the
switches and know the final value of -M.

Per discussion, we'll treat this as a low-grade bug fix and sneak it
into v10, rather than holding it for v11.

Tom Lane, reviewed by Tatsuo Ishii and Fabien Coelho

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170802.110328.1963639094551443169.t-ishii@sraoss.co.jp
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10208.1502465077@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-08-11 15:19:40 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
a1ef920e27 Remove uses of "slave" in replication contexts
This affects mostly code comments, some documentation, and tests.
Official APIs already used "standby".
2017-08-10 22:55:41 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
d6391b03b3 Reject use of ucol_strcollUTF8() before ICU 53
Various bugs can cause crashes, so don't use that function before ICU
53.  It will fall back to the code path used for other encodings.

Since we now tie the function availability to an ICU version, we don't
need the configure test anymore.  That also resolves the issue that the
test result was previously hardcoded for Windows.

researched by Daniel Verite <daniel@manitou-mail.org>, Peter Geoghegan
<pg@bowt.ie>, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/f1438ec6-22aa-4029-9a3b-26f79d330e72%40manitou-mail.org
2017-08-10 22:14:00 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
b83e54564a Fix order of ICU_CFLAGS
It must be before CPPFLAGS so that an ICU installation in a nonstandard
path can take precedence over one in the system path.
2017-08-10 22:14:00 -04:00
Robert Haas
bb5d6e80b1 Improve the error message when creating an empty range partition.
The previous message didn't mention the name of the table or the
bounds.  Put the table name in the primary error message and the
bounds in the detail message.

Amit Langote, changed slightly by me.  Suggestions on the exac
phrasing from Tom Lane, David G. Johnston, and Dean Rasheed.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmoae6bpwVa-1BMaVcwvCCeOoJ5B9Q9-RHWo-1gJxfPBZ5Q@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-10 13:46:56 -04:00
Robert Haas
e694010758 Fix typo in comment.
Etsuro Fujita

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/5f794b91-67df-1ac6-8a4f-069f8e8e169d@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-08-10 13:14:47 -04:00
Robert Haas
ec99dd5aee Remove incorrect assertion in clog.c
We must advance the oldest XID that can be safely looked up in clog
*before* truncating CLOG, and the oldest XID that can't be reused
*after* truncating CLOG.  This assertion, and the accompanying
comment, are confused; remove them.

Reported by Neha Sharma.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CANiYTQumC3T=UMBMd1Hor=5XWZYuCEQBioL3ug0YtNQCMMT5wQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-10 11:20:57 -04:00
Tom Lane
749c7c4170 Fix handling of container types in find_composite_type_dependencies.
find_composite_type_dependencies correctly found columns that are of
the specified type, and columns that are of arrays of that type, but
not columns that are domains or ranges over the given type, its array
type, etc.  The most general way to handle this seems to be to assume
that any type that is directly dependent on the specified type can be
treated as a container type, and processed recursively (allowing us
to handle nested cases such as ranges over domains over arrays ...).
Since a type's array type already has such a dependency, we can drop
the existing special case for the array type.

The very similar logic in get_rels_with_domain was likewise a few
bricks shy of a load, as it supposed that a directly dependent type
could *only* be a sub-domain.  This is already wrong for ranges over
domains, and it'll someday be wrong for arrays over domains.

Add test cases illustrating the problems, and back-patch to all
supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15268.1502309024@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-08-09 17:03:09 -04:00
Tom Lane
9bf4068cc3 Fix datumSerialize infrastructure to not crash on non-varlena data.
Commit 1efc7e538 did a poor job of emulating existing logic for touching
Datums that might be expanded-object pointers.  It didn't check for typlen
being -1 first, which meant it could crash on fixed-length pass-by-ref
values, and probably on cstring values as well.  It also didn't use
DatumGetPointer before VARATT_IS_EXTERNAL_EXPANDED, which while currently
harmless is not according to documentation nor prevailing style.

I also think the lack of any explanation as to why datumSerialize makes
these particular nonobvious choices is pretty awful, so fix that.

Per report from Jarred Ward.  Back-patch to 9.6 where this code came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6F61E6D2-2F5E-4794-9479-A429BE1CEA4B@simple.com
2017-08-08 19:18:22 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
77d2c00af7 Reword some unclear comments 2017-08-08 18:48:01 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
f5d54ef97a Fix typo in comment 2017-08-08 18:34:25 -04:00
Tom Lane
4576a69354 Fix yet another race condition in recovery/t/001_stream_rep.pl.
In commit 5c77690f6, we added polling in front of most of the
get_slot_xmins calls in 001_stream_rep.pl, but today's results from
buildfarm member nightjar show that at least one more poll loop
is needed.

Proactively add a poll loop before the next-to-last get_slot_xmins call
as well.  It may be that there is no race condition there because the
standby_2 server is shut down at that point, but I'm quite tired of
fighting with this test script.  The empirical evidence that it's safe,
from the buildfarm, is no stronger than the evidence for the other
call that nightjar just proved unsafe.

The only remaining get_slot_xmins calls without wait_slot_xmins
protection are the first two, which should be OK since nothing has
happened at that point.  It's tempting to ignore that special case
and merge get_slot_xmins and wait_slot_xmins into a single function.
I didn't go that far though.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18436.1502228036@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-08-08 18:03:30 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
b2c95a3798 Fix replication origin-related race conditions
Similar to what was fixed in commit 9915de6c1c for replication slots,
but this time it's related to replication origins: DROP SUBSCRIPTION
attempts to drop the replication origin, but that fails if the
replication worker process hasn't yet marked it unused.  This causes
failures in the buildfarm:
ERROR:  could not drop replication origin with OID 1, in use by PID 34069

Like the aforementioned commit, fix by having the process running DROP
SUBSCRIPTION sleep until the worker marks the the replication origin
struct as free.  This uses a condition variable on each replication
origin shmem state struct, so that the session trying to drop can sleep
and expect to be awakened by the process keeping the origin open.

Also fix a SGML markup in the previous commit.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170808001433.rozlseaf4m2wkw3n@alvherre.pgsql
2017-08-08 16:07:46 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
030273b7ea Fix inadequacies in recently added wait events
In commit 9915de6c1c, we introduced a new wait point for replication
slots and incorrectly labelled it as wait event PG_WAIT_LOCK.  That's
wrong, so invent an appropriate new wait event instead, and document it
properly.

While at it, fix numerous other problems in the vicinity:
- two different walreceiver wait events were being mixed up in a single
  wait event (which wasn't documented either); split it out so that they
  can be distinguished, and document the new events properly.

- ParallelBitmapPopulate was documented but didn't exist.

- ParallelBitmapScan was not documented (I think this should be called
  "ParallelBitmapScanInit" instead.)

- Logical replication wait events weren't documented

- various symbols had been added in dartboard order in various places.
  Put them in alphabetical order instead, as was originally intended.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170808181131.mu4fjepuh5m75cyq@alvherre.pgsql
2017-08-08 15:37:44 -04:00
Tom Lane
8d6442377d Stamp 10beta3. 2017-08-07 17:08:19 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
cdc47d1f39 Update SQL features list 2017-08-07 14:30:24 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
f7668b2b35 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 1a0b5e655d7871506c2b1c7ba562c2de6b6a55de
2017-08-07 13:55:34 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
fca17a933b Fix local/remote attribute mix-up in logical replication
This would lead to failures if local and remote tables have a different
column order.  The tests previously didn't catch that because they only
tested the initial data copy.  So add another test that exercises the
apply worker.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-08-07 10:49:08 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
0e58455dd4 Fix handling of dropped columns in logical replication
The relation attribute map was not initialized for dropped columns,
leading to errors later on.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
Reported-by: Scott Milliken <scott@deltaex.com>
Bug: #14769
2017-08-07 10:28:35 -04:00
Tom Lane
8d9881911f Require update permission for the large object written by lo_put().
lo_put() surely should require UPDATE permission, the same as lowrite(),
but it failed to check for that, as reported by Chapman Flack.  Oversight
in commit c50b7c09d; backpatch to 9.4 where that was introduced.

Tom Lane and Michael Paquier

Security: CVE-2017-7548
2017-08-07 10:19:19 -04:00
Noah Misch
e568e1eee4 Again match pg_user_mappings to information_schema.user_mapping_options.
Commit 3eefc51053 claimed to make
pg_user_mappings enforce the qualifications user_mapping_options had
been enforcing, but its removal of a longstanding restriction left them
distinct when the current user is the subject of a mapping yet has no
server privileges.  user_mapping_options emits no rows for such a
mapping, but pg_user_mappings includes full umoptions.  Change
pg_user_mappings to show null for umoptions.  Back-patch to 9.2, like
the above commit.

Reviewed by Tom Lane.  Reported by Jeff Janes.

Security: CVE-2017-7547
2017-08-07 07:09:28 -07:00
Heikki Linnakangas
bf6b9e9444 Don't allow logging in with empty password.
Some authentication methods allowed it, others did not. In the client-side,
libpq does not even try to authenticate with an empty password, which makes
using empty passwords hazardous: an administrator might think that an
account with an empty password cannot be used to log in, because psql
doesn't allow it, and not realize that a different client would in fact
allow it. To clear that confusion and to be be consistent, disallow empty
passwords in all authentication methods.

All the authentication methods that used plaintext authentication over the
wire, except for BSD authentication, already checked that the password
received from the user was not empty. To avoid forgetting it in the future
again, move the check to the recv_password_packet function. That only
forbids using an empty password with plaintext authentication, however.
MD5 and SCRAM need a different fix:

* In stable branches, check that the MD5 hash stored for the user does not
not correspond to an empty string. This adds some overhead to MD5
authentication, because the server needs to compute an extra MD5 hash, but
it is not noticeable in practice.

* In HEAD, modify CREATE and ALTER ROLE to clear the password if an empty
string, or a password hash that corresponds to an empty string, is
specified. The user-visible behavior is the same as in the stable branches,
the user cannot log in, but it seems better to stop the empty password from
entering the system in the first place. Secondly, it is fairly expensive to
check that a SCRAM hash doesn't correspond to an empty string, because
computing a SCRAM hash is much more expensive than an MD5 hash by design,
so better avoid doing that on every authentication.

We could clear the password on CREATE/ALTER ROLE also in stable branches,
but we would still need to check at authentication time, because even if we
prevent empty passwords from being stored in pg_authid, there might be
existing ones there already.

Reported by Jeroen van der Ham, Ben de Graaff and Jelte Fennema.

Security: CVE-2017-7546
2017-08-07 17:03:42 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut
86524f0387 Fix function name in code comment
Reported-by: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
2017-08-07 09:49:55 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
ad2ca3cba6 Improve wording of subscription refresh debug messages
Reported-by: Yugo Nagata <nagata@sraoss.co.jp>
2017-08-07 09:40:12 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
6f81306e4d Downgrade subscription refresh messages to DEBUG1
The NOTICE messages about tables being added or removed during
subscription refresh would be incorrect and possibly confusing if the
transaction rolls back, so silence them but keep them available for
debugging.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAD21AoAvaXizc2h7aiNyK_i0FQSa-tmhpdOGwbhh7Jy544Ad4Q%40mail.gmail.com
2017-08-07 09:16:03 -04:00
Tom Lane
655727d93b Update RELEASE_CHANGES' example of branch name format.
We're planning to put an underscore before the major version number in
branch names for v10 and later.  Make sure the recipe in RELEASE_CHANGES
reflects that.

In passing, add a reminder to consider doing pgindent right before
the branch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1dAkjZ-0003MG-0U@gemulon.postgresql.org
2017-08-06 23:26:09 -04:00
Andres Freund
5af4456a56 Fix thinko introduced in 2bef06d516 et al.
The callers for GetOldestSafeDecodingTransactionId() all inverted the
argument for the argument introduced in 2bef06d516. Luckily this
appears to be inconsequential for the moment, as we wait for
concurrent in-progress transaction when assembling a
snapshot. Additionally this could only make a difference when adding a
second logical slot, because only a pre-existing slot could cause an
issue by lowering the returned xid dangerously much.

Reported-By: Antonin Houska
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/32704.1496993134@localhost
Backport: 9.4-, where 2bef06d516 was backpatched to.
2017-08-06 14:20:55 -07:00
Tom Lane
e9f4ac1389 Suppress unused-variable warnings when building with ICU 4.2.
Tidy-up for commit eccead9ed.
2017-08-05 11:48:43 -04:00
Robert Haas
52f8a59dd9 Make pg_stop_backup's wait_for_archive flag work on standbys.
Previously, it had no effect.  Now, if archive_mode=always, it will
work, and if not, you'll get a warning.

Masahiko Sawada, Michael Paquier, and Robert Haas.  The patch as
submitted also changed the behavior so that we would write and remove
history files on standbys, but that seems like material for a separate
patch to me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoC2Xw6M=ZJyejq_9d_iDkReC_=rpvQRw5QsyzKQdfYpkw@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-05 10:49:26 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
eccead9ed4 Add support for ICU 4.2
Supporting ICU 4.2 seems useful because it ships with CentOS 6.

Versions before ICU 4.6 don't support pkg-config, so document an
installation method without using pkg-config.

In ICU 4.2, ucol_getKeywordsForLocale() sometimes returns values that
will not be accepted by uloc_toLanguageTag().  Skip loading keyword
variants in that version.

Reported-by: Victor Wagner <vitus@wagner.pp.ru>
2017-08-05 09:32:42 -04:00
Robert Haas
f85f88bcc2 Fix bug in deciding whether to scan newly-attached partition.
If the table being attached had different attribute numbers than the
parent, the old code could incorrectly decide it needed to be scanned.

Amit Langote, reviewed by Ashutosh Bapat

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmobexgbBr2+Utw-pOMw9uxaBRKRjMW_-mmzKKx9PejPLMg@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-04 22:01:37 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
7e174fa793 Only kill sync workers at commit time in subscription DDL
This allows a transaction abort to avoid killing those workers.

Author: Petr Jelinek <petr.jelinek@2ndquadrant.com>
2017-08-04 21:17:47 -04:00
Robert Haas
ff98a5e1e4 hash: Immediately after a bucket split, try to clean the old bucket.
If it works, then we won't be storing two copies of all the tuples
that were just moved.  If not, VACUUM will still take care of it
eventually.  Per a report from AP and analysis from Amit Kapila, it
seems that a bulk load can cause splits fast enough that VACUUM won't
deal with the problem in time to prevent bloat.

Amit Kapila; I rewrote the comment.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/20170704105728.mwb72jebfmok2nm2@zip.com.au
2017-08-04 19:33:01 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
26d40ada3f Message style improvements 2017-08-04 18:31:32 -04:00
Robert Haas
620b49a16d hash: Increase the number of possible overflow bitmaps by 8x.
Per a report from AP, it's not that hard to exhaust the supply of
bitmap pages if you create a table with a hash index and then insert a
few billion rows - and then you start getting errors when you try to
insert additional rows.  In the particular case reported by AP,
there's another fix that we can make to improve recycling of overflow
pages, which is another way to avoid the error, but there may be other
cases where this problem happens and that fix won't help.  So let's
buy ourselves as much headroom as we can without rearchitecting
anything.

The comments claim that the old limit was 64GB, but it was really
only 32GB, because we didn't use all the bits in the page for bitmap
bits - only the largest power of 2 that could fit after deducting
space for the page header and so forth.  Thus, we have 4kB per page
for bitmap bits, not 8kB.  The new limit is thus actually 8 times the
old *real* limit but only 4 times the old *purported* limit.

Since this breaks on-disk compatibility, bump HASH_VERSION.  We've
already done this earlier in this release cycle, so this doesn't cause
any incremental inconvenience for people using pg_upgrade from
releases prior to v10.  However, users who use pg_upgrade to reach
10beta3 or later from 10beta2 or earlier will need to REINDEX any hash
indexes again.

Amit Kapila and Robert Haas

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/20170704105728.mwb72jebfmok2nm2@zip.com.au
2017-08-04 16:30:32 -04:00
Tom Lane
c30f1770a9 Apply ALTER ... SET NOT NULL recursively in ALTER ... ADD PRIMARY KEY.
If you do ALTER COLUMN SET NOT NULL against an inheritance parent table,
it will recurse to mark all the child columns as NOT NULL as well.  This
is necessary for consistency: if the column is labeled NOT NULL then
reading it should never produce nulls.

However, that didn't happen in the case where ALTER ... ADD PRIMARY KEY
marks a target column NOT NULL that wasn't before.  That was questionable
from the beginning, and now Tushar Ahuja points out that it can lead to
dump/restore failures in some cases.  So let's make that case recurse too.

Although this is meant to fix a bug, it's enough of a behavioral change
that I'm pretty hesitant to back-patch, especially in view of the lack
of similar field complaints.  It doesn't seem to be too late to put it
into v10 though.

Michael Paquier, editorialized on slightly by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/b8794d6a-38f0-9d7c-ad4b-e85adf860fc9@enterprisedb.com
2017-08-04 11:45:18 -04:00
Tom Lane
97d3a0b090 Disallow SSL session tickets.
We don't actually support session tickets, since we do not create an SSL
session identifier.  But it seems that OpenSSL will issue a session ticket
on-demand anyway, which will then fail when used.  This results in
reconnection failures when using ticket-aware client-side SSL libraries
(such as the Npgsql .NET driver), as reported by Shay Rojansky.

To fix, just tell OpenSSL not to issue tickets.  At some point in the
far future, we might consider enabling tickets instead.  But the security
implications of that aren't entirely clear; and besides it would have
little benefit except for very short-lived database connections, which is
Something We're Bad At anyhow.  It would take a lot of other work to get
to a point where that would really be an exciting thing to do.

While at it, also tell OpenSSL not to use a session cache.  This doesn't
really do anything, since a backend would never populate the cache anyway,
but it might gain some micro-efficiencies and/or reduce security
exposures.

Patch by me, per discussion with Heikki Linnakangas and Shay Rojansky.
Back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADT4RqBU8N-csyZuzaook-c795dt22Zcwg1aHWB6tfVdAkodZA@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-04 11:07:10 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
b374481221 Further unify ROLE and USER command grammar rules
ALTER USER ... SET did not support all the syntax variants of ALTER ROLE
...  SET.  Fix that, and to avoid further deviations of this kind, unify
many the grammar rules for ROLE/USER/GROUP commands.

Reported-by: Pavel Golub <pavel@microolap.com>
2017-08-03 20:34:45 -04:00
Tom Lane
3eb9a5e7c4 Fix pg_dump/pg_restore to emit REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW commands last.
Because we push all ACL (i.e. GRANT/REVOKE) restore steps to the end,
materialized view refreshes were occurring while the permissions on
referenced objects were still at defaults.  This led to failures if,
say, an MV owned by user A reads from a table owned by user B, even
if B had granted the necessary privileges to A.  We've had multiple
complaints about that type of restore failure, most recently from
Jordan Gigov.

The ideal fix for this would be to start treating ACLs as dependency-
sortable objects, rather than hard-wiring anything about their dump order
(the existing approach is a messy kluge dating to commit dc0e76ca3).
But that's going to be a rather major change, and it certainly wouldn't
lead to a back-patchable fix.  As a short-term solution, convert the
existing two-pass hack (ie, normal objects then ACLs) to a three-pass hack,
ie, normal objects then ACLs then matview refreshes.  Because this happens
in RestoreArchive(), it will also fix the problem when restoring from an
existing archive-format dump.

(Note this means that if a matview refresh would have failed under the
permissions prevailing at dump time, it'll fail during restore as well.
We'll define that as user error rather than something we should try
to work around.)

To avoid performance loss in parallel restore, we need the matview
refreshes to still be parallelizable.  Hence, clean things up enough
so that both ACLs and matviews are handled by the parallel restore
infrastructure, instead of reverting back to serial restore for ACLs.
There is still a final serial step, but it shouldn't normally have to
do anything; it's only there to try to recover if we get stuck due to
some problem like unresolved circular dependencies.

Patch by me, but it owes something to an earlier attempt by Kevin Grittner.
Back-patch to 9.3 where materialized views were introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/28572.1500912583@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-08-03 17:36:39 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
9a3b5d3ad0 Fix build on zlib-less environments
Commit 4d57e83816 added support for getting I/O errors out of zlib,
but it introduced a portability problem for systems without zlib.
Repair by wrapping the zlib call inside #ifdef and restore the original
code in the other branch.

This serves to illustrate the inadequacy of the zlib abstraction in
pg_backup_archiver: there is no way to call gzerror() in that
abstraction.  This means that the several places that call GZREAD and
GZWRITE are currently doing error reporting wrongly, but ENOTIME to get
it fixed before next week's release set.

Backpatch to 9.4, like the commit that introduced the problem.
2017-08-03 14:54:28 -04:00
Robert Haas
972b6ec20b Fix lock upgrade hazard in ATExecAttachPartition.
Amit Langote

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpReT_kq_uwU_B8aWDxR7jNGE=P0iELycdq5oupi=xSQTOw@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-03 14:21:00 -04:00
Robert Haas
583df3b5c5 Code beautification for ATExecAttachPartition.
Amit Langote

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpReT_kq_uwU_B8aWDxR7jNGE=P0iELycdq5oupi=xSQTOw@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-03 14:19:59 -04:00
Robert Haas
86705aa8c3 Allow a foreign table CHECK constraint to be initially NOT VALID.
For a table, the constraint can be considered validated immediately,
because the table must be empty.  But for a foreign table this is
not necessarily the case.

Fixes a bug in commit f27a6b15e6.

Amit Langote, with some changes by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/d2b7419f-4a71-cf86-cc99-bfd0f359a1ea@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-08-03 13:24:48 -04:00
Robert Haas
12a34f59bf Improve ExecModifyTable comments.
Some of these comments wrongly implied that only an AFTER ROW trigger
will cause a 'wholerow' attribute to be present for a foreign table,
but a BEFORE ROW trigger can have the same effect.  Others implied
that it would always be present for a foreign table, but that's not
true either.

Etsuro Fujita and Robert Haas

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/10026bc7-1403-ef85-9e43-c6100c1cc0e3@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-08-03 12:47:00 -04:00
Robert Haas
610e8ebb0f Teach map_partition_varattnos to handle whole-row expressions.
Otherwise, partitioned tables with RETURNING expressions or subject
to a WITH CHECK OPTION do not work properly.

Amit Langote, reviewed by Amit Khandekar and Etsuro Fujita.  A few
comment changes by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/9a39df80-871e-6212-0684-f93c83be4097@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-08-03 11:21:29 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
5ff3d73813 Add new files to nls.mk and add translation markers 2017-08-02 22:45:48 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
4d57e83816 Fix pg_dump's errno checking for zlib I/O
Some error reports were reporting strerror(errno), which for some error
conditions coming from zlib are wrong, resulting in confusing reports
such as
  pg_restore: [compress_io] could not read from input file: Success
which makes no sense.  To correctly extract the error message we need to
use gzerror(), so let's do that.

This isn't as comprehensive or as neat as I would like, but at least it
should improve things in many common cases.  The zlib abstraction in
compress_io does not seem to be applied consistently enough; we could
perhaps improve that, but it seems master-only material, not a bug fix
for back-patching.

This problem goes back all the way, but I decided to apply back to 9.4
only, because older branches don't contain commit 14ea89366 which this
change depends on.

Authors: Vladimir Kunschikov, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1498120508308.9826@infotecs.ru
2017-08-02 18:26:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
9d4e566999 Remove broken and useless entry-count printing in HASH_DEBUG code.
init_htab(), with #define HASH_DEBUG, prints a bunch of hashtable
parameters.  It used to also print nentries, but commit 44ca4022f changed
that to "hash_get_num_entries(hctl)", which is wrong (the parameter should
be "hashp").

Rather than correct the coding, though, let's just remove that field from
the printout.  The table must be empty, since we just finished building
it, so expensively calculating the number of entries is rather pointless.
Moreover hash_get_num_entries makes assumptions (about not needing locks)
which we could do without in debugging code.

Noted by Choi Doo-Won in bug #14764.  Back-patch to 9.6 where the
faulty code was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170802032353.8424.12274@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-08-02 12:17:08 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
cf65201833 Get a snapshot before COPY in table sync
This fixes a crash if the local table has a function index and the
function makes non-immutable calls.

Reported-by: Scott Milliken <scott@deltaex.com>
Author: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
2017-08-02 11:34:42 -04:00
Tom Lane
f352f91cbf Remove duplicate setting of SSL_OP_SINGLE_DH_USE option.
Commit c0a15e07c moved the setting of OpenSSL's SSL_OP_SINGLE_DH_USE option
into a new subroutine initialize_dh(), but forgot to remove it from where
it was.  SSL_CTX_set_options() is a trivial function, amounting indeed to
just "ctx->options |= op", hence there's no reason to contort the code or
break separation of concerns to avoid calling it twice.  So separating the
DH setup from disabling of old protocol versions is a good change, but we
need to finish the job.

Noted while poking into the question of SSL session tickets.
2017-08-02 11:28:49 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
41cefbb6db Fix OBJECT_TYPE/OBJECT_DOMAIN confusion
This doesn't have a significant impact except that now SECURITY LABEL ON
DOMAIN rejects types that are not domains.

Reported-by: 高增琦 <pgf00a@gmail.com>
2017-08-02 10:40:32 -04:00
Tom Lane
32ca22b02d Revert test case added by commit 1e165d05fe.
The buildfarm is still showing at least three distinct behaviors for
a bad locale name in CREATE COLLATION.  Although this test was helpful
for getting the error reporting code into some usable shape, it doesn't
seem worth carrying multiple expected-files in order to support the
test in perpetuity.  So pull it back out.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKKotZS-wcDcofXDCH=sidiuajE+nqHn2CGjLLX78anyDmi3gQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-01 20:15:10 -04:00
Tom Lane
514f613293 Second try at getting useful errors out of newlocale/_create_locale.
The early buildfarm returns for commit 1e165d05f are pretty awful:
not only does Windows not return a useful error, but it looks like
a lot of Unix-ish platforms don't either.  Given the number of
different errnos seen so far, guess that what's really going on is
that some newlocale() implementations fail to set errno at all.
Hence, let's try zeroing errno just before newlocale() and then
if it's still zero report as though it's ENOENT.  That should cover
the Windows case too.

It's clear that we'll have to drop the regression test case, unless
we want to maintain a separate expected-file for platforms without
HAVE_LOCALE_T.  But I'll leave it there awhile longer to see if this
actually improves matters or not.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKKotZS-wcDcofXDCH=sidiuajE+nqHn2CGjLLX78anyDmi3gQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-01 17:17:20 -04:00
Tom Lane
8e7537261c Suppress less info in regression tests using DROP CASCADE.
DROP CASCADE doesn't currently promise to visit dependent objects in
a fixed order, so when the regression tests use it, we typically need
to suppress the details of which objects get dropped in order to have
predictable test output.  Traditionally we've done that by setting
client_min_messages higher than NOTICE, but there's a better way:
we can "\set VERBOSITY terse" in psql.  That suppresses the DETAIL
message with the object list, but we still get the basic notice telling
how many objects were dropped.  So at least the test case can verify
that the expected number of objects were dropped.

The VERBOSITY method was already in use in a few places, but run
around and use it wherever it makes sense.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10766.1501608885@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-08-01 16:49:23 -04:00
Tom Lane
1e165d05fe Try to deliver a sane message for _create_locale() failure on Windows.
We were just printing errno, which is certainly not gonna work on
Windows.  Now, it's not entirely clear from Microsoft's documentation
whether _create_locale() adheres to standard Windows error reporting
conventions, but let's assume it does and try to map the GetLastError
result to an errno.  If this turns out not to work, probably the best
thing to do will be to assume the error is always ENOENT on Windows.

This is a longstanding bug, but given the lack of previous field
complaints, I'm not excited about back-patching it.

Per report from Murtuza Zabuawala.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKKotZS-wcDcofXDCH=sidiuajE+nqHn2CGjLLX78anyDmi3gQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-01 16:11:51 -04:00
Tom Lane
f97256570f Allow creation of C/POSIX collations without depending on libc behavior.
Most of our collations code has special handling for the locale names
"C" and "POSIX", allowing those collations to be used whether or not
the system libraries think those locale names are valid, or indeed
whether said libraries even have any locale support.  But we missed
handling things that way in CREATE COLLATION.  This meant you couldn't
clone the C/POSIX collations, nor explicitly define a new collation
using those locale names, unless the libraries allow it.  That's pretty
pointless, as well as being a violation of pg_newlocale_from_collation's
API specification.

The practical effect of this change is quite limited: it allows creating
such collations even on platforms that don't HAVE_LOCALE_T, and it allows
making "POSIX" collation objects on Windows, which before this would only
let you make "C" collation objects.  Hence, even though this is a bug fix
IMO, it doesn't seem worth the trouble to back-patch.

In passing, suppress the DROP CASCADE detail messages at the end of the
collation regression test.  I'm surprised we've never been bit by
message ordering issues there.

Per report from Murtuza Zabuawala.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKKotZS-wcDcofXDCH=sidiuajE+nqHn2CGjLLX78anyDmi3gQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-08-01 13:51:05 -04:00
Dean Rasheed
4de6216877 Comment fix for partition_rbound_cmp().
This was an oversight in d363d42.

Beena Emerson
2017-08-01 09:40:45 +01:00
Tatsuo Ishii
e662ef0f2e Fix comment.
XLByteToSeg and XLByteToPrevSeg calculate only a segment number.  The
definition of these macros were modified by commit
dfda6ebaec but the comment remain
unchanged.

Patch by Yugo Nagata. Back patched to 9.3 and beyond.
2017-08-01 08:00:11 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut
0b02e3f128 Fix typo
Author: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>
2017-07-31 17:22:47 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
f40254a799 Fix typo
Author: Etsuro Fujita <fujita.etsuro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
2017-07-31 17:08:14 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
c0a15e07cd Always use 2048 bit DH parameters for OpenSSL ephemeral DH ciphers.
1024 bits is considered weak these days, but OpenSSL always passes 1024 as
the key length to the tmp_dh callback. All the code to handle other key
lengths is, in fact, dead.

To remedy those issues:

* Only include hard-coded 2048-bit parameters.
* Set the parameters directly with SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh(), without the
  callback
* The name of the file containing the DH parameters is now a GUC. This
  replaces the old hardcoded "dh1024.pem" filename. (The files for other
  key lengths, dh512.pem, dh2048.pem, etc. were never actually used.)

This is not a new problem, but it doesn't seem worth the risk and churn to
backport. If you care enough about the strength of the DH parameters on
old versions, you can create custom DH parameters, with as many bits as you
wish, and put them in the "dh1024.pem" file.

Per report by Nicolas Guini and Damian Quiroga. Reviewed by Michael Paquier.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAMxBoUyjOOautVozN6ofzym828aNrDjuCcOTcCquxjwS-L2hGQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-31 22:36:09 +03:00
Tom Lane
b4cc35fbb7 Tighten coding for non-composite case in plperl's return_next.
Coverity complained about this code's practice of using scalar variables
as single-element arrays.  While that's really just nitpicking, it probably
is more readable to declare them as arrays, so let's do that.  A more
important point is that the code was just blithely assuming that the
result tupledesc has exactly one column; if it doesn't, we'd likely get
a crash of some sort in tuplestore_putvalues.  Since the tupledesc is
manufactured outside of plperl, that seems like an uncomfortably long
chain of assumptions.  We can nail it down at little cost with a sanity
check earlier in the function.
2017-07-31 11:33:46 -04:00
Stephen Frost
d2a51e3efc Fix function comment for dumpACL()
The comment for dumpACL() got neglected when initacls and initracls were
added and the discussion of what 'racls' is wasn't very clear either.

Per complaint from Tom.
2017-07-31 10:37:08 -04:00
Tatsuo Ishii
393d47ed0f Add missing comment in postgresql.conf.
current_source requires to restart server to reflect the new
value. Per Yugo Nagata and Masahiko Sawada.

Back patched to 9.2 and beyond.
2017-07-31 11:24:51 +09:00
Tatsuo Ishii
8b015dd723 Add missing comment in postgresql.conf.
dynamic_shared_memory_type requires to restart server to reflect
the new value. Per Yugo Nagata and Masahiko Sawada.

Back pached to 9.4 and beyond.
2017-07-31 11:06:37 +09:00
Tatsuo Ishii
9fe63092b5 Add missing comment in postgresql.conf.
max_logical_replication_workers requires to restart server to reflect
the new value. Per Yugo Nagata. Minor editing by me.
2017-07-31 10:46:32 +09:00
Andres Freund
cc9f08b6b8 Move ExecProcNode from dispatch to function pointer based model.
This allows us to add stack-depth checks the first time an executor
node is called, and skip that overhead on following
calls. Additionally it yields a nice speedup.

While it'd probably have been a good idea to have that check all
along, it has become more important after the new expression
evaluation framework in b8d7f053c5 - there's no stack depth
check in common paths anymore now. We previously relied on
ExecEvalExpr() being executed somewhere.

We should move towards that model for further routines, but as this is
required for v10, it seems better to only do the necessary (which
already is quite large).

Author: Andres Freund, Tom Lane
Reported-By: Julien Rouhaud
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/22833.1490390175@sss.pgh.pa.us
    https://postgr.es/m/b0af9eaa-130c-60d0-9e4e-7a135b1e0c76@dalibo.com
2017-07-30 16:18:21 -07:00
Andres Freund
d47cfef711 Move interrupt checking from ExecProcNode() to executor nodes.
In a followup commit ExecProcNode(), and especially the large switch
it contains, will largely be replaced by a function pointer directly
to the correct node. The node functions will then get invoked by a
thin inline function wrapper. To avoid having to include miscadmin.h
in headers - CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() - move the interrupt checks into
the individual executor routines.

While looking through all executor nodes, I noticed a number of
arguably missing interrupt checks, add these too.

Author: Andres Freund, Tom Lane
Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion:
    https://postgr.es/m/22833.1490390175@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-07-30 16:06:42 -07:00
Tom Lane
9dea962b3e Include publication owner's name in the output of \dRp+.
Without this, \dRp prints information that \dRp+ does not, which
seems pretty odd.

Daniel Gustafsson

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3641F19B-336A-431A-86CE-A80562505C5E@yesql.se
2017-07-28 17:44:48 -04:00
Tom Lane
3c163a7fc7 PL/Perl portability fix: absorb relevant -D switches from Perl.
The Perl documentation is very clear that stuff calling libperl should
be built with the compiler switches shown by Perl's $Config{ccflags}.
We'd been ignoring that up to now, and mostly getting away with it,
but recent Perl versions contain ABI compatibility cross-checks that
fail on some builds because of this omission.  In particular the
sizeof(PerlInterpreter) can come out different due to some fields being
added or removed; which means we have a live ABI hazard that we'd better
fix rather than continuing to sweep it under the rug.

However, it still seems like a bad idea to just absorb $Config{ccflags}
verbatim.  In some environments Perl was built with a different compiler
that doesn't even use the same switch syntax.  -D switch syntax is pretty
universal though, and absorbing Perl's -D switches really ought to be
enough to fix the problem.

Furthermore, Perl likes to inject stuff like -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE and
-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 into $Config{ccflags}, which affect libc ABIs on
platforms where they're relevant.  Adopting those seems dangerous too.
It's unclear whether a build wherein Perl and Postgres have different ideas
of sizeof(off_t) etc would work, or whether anyone would care about making
it work.  But it's dead certain that having different stdio ABIs in
core Postgres and PL/Perl will not work; we've seen that movie before.
Therefore, let's also ignore -D switches for symbols beginning with
underscore.  The symbols that we actually need to import should be the ones
mentioned in perl.h's PL_bincompat_options stanza, and none of those start
with underscore, so this seems likely to work.  (If it turns out not to
work everywhere, we could consider intersecting the symbols mentioned in
PL_bincompat_options with the -D switches.  But that will be much more
complicated, so let's try this way first.)

This will need to be back-patched, but first let's see what the
buildfarm makes of it.

Ashutosh Sharma, some adjustments by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANFyU97OVQ3+Mzfmt3MhuUm5NwPU=-FtbNH5Eb7nZL9ua8=rcA@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-28 14:25:28 -04:00
Tom Lane
bebe174bb4 PL/Perl portability fix: avoid including XSUB.h in plperl.c.
In Perl builds that define PERL_IMPLICIT_SYS, XSUB.h defines macros
that replace a whole lot of basic libc functions with Perl functions.
We can't tolerate that in plperl.c; it breaks at least PG_TRY and
probably other stuff.  The core idea of this patch is to include XSUB.h
only in the .xs files where it's really needed, and to move any code
broken by PERL_IMPLICIT_SYS out of the .xs files and into plperl.c.

The reason this hasn't been a problem before is that our build techniques
did not result in PERL_IMPLICIT_SYS appearing as a #define in PL/Perl,
even on some platforms where Perl thinks it is defined.  That's about to
change in order to fix a nasty portability issue, so we need this work to
make the code safe for that.

Rather unaccountably, the Perl people chose XSUB.h as the place to provide
the versions of the aTHX/aTHX_ macros that are needed by code that's not
explicitly aware of the MULTIPLICITY API conventions.  Hence, just removing
XSUB.h from plperl.c fails miserably.  But we can work around that by
defining PERL_NO_GET_CONTEXT (which would make the relevant stanza of
XSUB.h a no-op anyway).  As explained in perlguts.pod, that means we need
to add a "dTHX" macro call in every C function that calls a Perl API
function.  In most of them we just add this at the top; but since the
macro fetches the current Perl interpreter pointer, more care is needed
in functions that switch the active interpreter.  Lack of the macro is
easily recognized since it results in bleats about "my_perl" not being
defined.

(A nice side benefit of this is that it significantly reduces the number
of fetches of the current interpreter pointer.  On my machine, plperl.so
gets more than 10% smaller, and there's probably some performance win too.
We could reduce the number of fetches still more by decorating the code
with pTHX_/aTHX_ macros to pass the interpreter pointer around, as
explained by perlguts.pod; but that's a task for another day.)

Formatting note: pgindent seems happy to treat "dTHX;" as a declaration
so long as it's the first thing after the left brace, as we'd already
observed with respect to the similar macro "dSP;".  If you try to put
it later in a set of declarations, pgindent puts ugly extra space
around it.

Having removed XSUB.h from plperl.c, we need only move the support
functions for spi_return_next and util_elog (both of which use PG_TRY)
out of the .xs files and into plperl.c.  This seems sufficient to
avoid the known problems caused by PERL_IMPLICIT_SYS, although we
could move more code if additional issues emerge.

This will need to be back-patched, but first let's see what the
buildfarm makes of it.

Patch by me, with some help from Ashutosh Sharma

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANFyU97OVQ3+Mzfmt3MhuUm5NwPU=-FtbNH5Eb7nZL9ua8=rcA@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-28 12:25:43 -04:00
Tom Lane
8d304072a2 Fix psql tab completion for CREATE USER MAPPING.
After typing CREATE USER M..., it would not fill in MAPPING FOR,
even though that was clearly intended behavior.

Jeff Janes

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMkU=1wo2iQ6jWnN=egqOb5NxEPn0PpANEtKHr3uPooQ+nYPtw@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-27 14:13:15 -04:00
Tom Lane
77cb4a1d67 Standardize describe.c's behavior for no-matching-objects a bit more.
Most functions in this file are content to print an empty table if there
are no matching objects.  In some, the behavior is to loop over all
matching objects and print a table for each one; therefore, without any
extra logic, nothing at all would be printed if no objects match.
We accept that outcome in QUIET mode, but in normal mode it seems better
to print a helpful message.  The new \dRp+ command had not gotten that
memo; fix it.

listDbRoleSettings() is out of step on this, but I think it's better for
it to print a custom message rather than an empty table, because of the
possibility that the user is confused about what the pattern arguments mean
or which is which.  The original message wording was entirely useless for
clarifying that, though, not to mention being unlike the wordings used
elsewhere.  Improve the text, and also print the messages with psql_error
as is the general custom here.

listTables() is also out in left field, but since it's such a heavily
used function, I'm hesitant to change its behavior so much as to print
an empty table rather than a custom message.  People are probably used
to getting a message.  But we can make the wording more standardized and
helpful, and print it with psql_error rather than printing to stdout.

In both listDbRoleSettings and listTables, we play dumb and emit an
empty table, not a custom message, in QUIET mode.  That was true before
and I see no need to change it.

Several of the places printing such messages risked dumping core if
no pattern string had been provided; make them more wary.  (This case
is presently unreachable in describeTableDetails; but it shouldn't be
assuming that command.c will never pass it a null.  The text search
functions would only reach the case if a database contained no text
search objects, which is also currently impossible since we pin the
built-in objects, but again it seems unwise to assume that here.)

Daniel Gustafsson, tweaked a bit by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3641F19B-336A-431A-86CE-A80562505C5E@yesql.se
2017-07-27 13:30:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
1e2f941db1 Avoid use of sprintf/snprintf in describe.c.
Most places were already using the PQExpBuffer library for constructing
variable-length strings; bring the two stragglers into line.
describeOneTSParser was living particularly dangerously since it wasn't
even using snprintf().

Daniel Gustafsson

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3641F19B-336A-431A-86CE-A80562505C5E@yesql.se
2017-07-27 12:12:37 -04:00
Tom Lane
b884f629dc Sync listDbRoleSettings() with the rest of the world.
listDbRoleSettings() handled its server version check randomly differently
from every other comparable function in describe.c, not only as to code
layout but also message wording.  It also leaked memory, because its
PQExpBuffer management was also unlike everyplace else (and wrong).

Also fix an error-case leak in add_tablespace_footer().

In passing, standardize the format of function header comments in
describe.c --- we usually put "/*" alone on a line.

Daniel Gustafsson, memory leak fixes by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3641F19B-336A-431A-86CE-A80562505C5E@yesql.se
2017-07-27 11:57:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
dc4da3dc84 Fix very minor memory leaks in psql's command.c.
\drds leaked its second pattern argument if any, and \connect leaked
any empty-string or "-" arguments.  These are old bugs, but it's hard
to imagine any real use-case where the leaks could amount to anything
meaningful, so not bothering with a back-patch.

Daniel Gustafsson and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3641F19B-336A-431A-86CE-A80562505C5E@yesql.se
2017-07-27 11:10:38 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
efd7f8e365 Work around Msys weakness in Testlib.pm's command_like()
When output of IPC::Run::run () is redirected to scalar references, in
certain circumstances the Msys perl does not correctly detect that the
end of file has been seen, making the test hang indefinitely. One such
circumstance is when the command is 'pg_ctl start', and such a change
was made in commit f13ea95f9e. The workaround, which only applies on
MSys, is to redirect the output to temporary files and then read them in
when the process has finished.

Patch by me, reviewed and tweaked by Tom Lane.
2017-07-26 22:46:55 -04:00
Tom Lane
50d2426f5a Clean up SQL emitted by psql/describe.c.
Fix assorted places that had not bothered with the convention of
prefixing catalog and function names with "pg_catalog.".  That
could possibly result in query failure when running with a nondefault
search_path.  Also fix two places that weren't quoting OID literals.
I think the latter hasn't mattered much since about 7.3, but it's still
a bad idea to be doing it in 99 places and not in 2 others.

Also remove a useless EXISTS sub-select that someone had stuck into
describeOneTableDetails' queries for child tables.  We just got the OID
out of pg_class, so I hardly see how checking that it exists in pg_class
was doing anything helpful.

In passing, try to improve the emitted formatting of a couple of
these queries, though I didn't work really hard on that.  And merge
unnecessarily duplicative coding in some other places.

Much of this was new in HEAD, but some was quite old; back-patch
as appropriate.
2017-07-26 19:35:57 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
5e3254f086 Update copyright in recently added files 2017-07-26 18:17:18 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
459c64d322 Fix concurrent locking of tuple update chain
If several sessions are concurrently locking a tuple update chain with
nonconflicting lock modes using an old snapshot, and they all succeed,
it may happen that some of them fail because of restarting the loop (due
to a concurrent Xmax change) and getting an error in the subsequent pass
while trying to obtain a tuple lock that they already have in some tuple
version.

This can only happen with very high concurrency (where a row is being
both updated and FK-checked by multiple transactions concurrently), but
it's been observed in the field and can have unpleasant consequences
such as an FK check failing to see a tuple that definitely exists:
    ERROR:  insert or update on table "child_table" violates foreign key constraint "fk_constraint_name"
    DETAIL:  Key (keyid)=(123456) is not present in table "parent_table".
(where the key is observably present in the table).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170714210011.r25mrff4nxjhmf3g@alvherre.pgsql
2017-07-26 17:24:16 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
c28e4f4dc6 Remove obsolete comments about functional dependencies
Initial submitted versions of the functional dependencies patch ignored
row groups that were smaller than a configured size.  However, that
consideration was removed in late stages of the patch just before
commit, but some comments referring to it remained.  Remove them to
avoid confusion.

Author: Atsushi Torikoshi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7cfb23fc-4493-9c02-5da9-e505fd0115d2@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-07-26 11:40:39 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
54dacc7466 Make PostgresNode easily subclassable
This module becomes much more useful if we allow it to be used as base
class for external projects.  To achieve this, change the exported
get_new_node function into a class method instead, and use the standard
Perl idiom of accepting the class as first argument.  This method works
as expected for subclasses.  The standalone function is kept for
backwards compatibility, though it could be removed in pg11.

Author: Chap Flackman, based on an earlier patch from Craig Ringer
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMsr+YF8kO+4+K-_U4PtN==2FndJ+5Bn6A19XHhMiBykEwv0wA@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-25 18:51:47 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
9915de6c1c Fix race conditions in replication slot operations
It is relatively easy to get a replication slot to look as still active
while one process is in the process of getting rid of it; when some
other process tries to "acquire" the slot, it would fail with an error
message of "replication slot XYZ is active for PID N".

The error message in itself is fine, except that when the intention is
to drop the slot, it is unhelpful: the useful behavior would be to wait
until the slot is no longer acquired, so that the drop can proceed.  To
implement this, we use a condition variable so that slot acquisition can
be told to wait on that condition variable if the slot is already
acquired, and we make any change in active_pid broadcast a signal on the
condition variable.  Thus, as soon as the slot is released, the drop
will proceed properly.

Reported by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11904.1499039688@sss.pgh.pa.us
Authors: Petr Jelínek, Álvaro Herrera
2017-07-25 13:26:49 -04:00
Robert Haas
4132dbec69 Fix partitioning crashes during error reporting.
In various places where we reverse-map a tuple before calling
ExecBuildSlotValueDescription, we neglected to ensure that the
slot descriptor matched the tuple stored in it.

Amit Langote and Amit Khandekar, reviewed by Etsuro Fujita

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9cqpP=WvJj=dv1ONkPWjy8ZuUaOM4_x86i3uQPas=0_jg@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-24 18:08:08 -04:00
Tom Lane
e2c8100e60 Fix race condition in predicate-lock init code in EXEC_BACKEND builds.
Trading a little too heavily on letting the code path be the same whether
we were creating shared data structures or only attaching to them,
InitPredicateLocks() inserted the "scratch" PredicateLockTargetHash entry
unconditionally.  This is just wrong if we're in a postmaster child,
which would only reach this code in EXEC_BACKEND builds.  Most of the
time, the hash_search(HASH_ENTER) call would simply report that the
entry already existed, causing no visible effect since the code did not
bother to check for that possibility.  However, if this happened while
some other backend had transiently removed the "scratch" entry, then
that other backend's eventual RestoreScratchTarget would suffer an
assert failure; this appears to be the explanation for a recent failure
on buildfarm member culicidae.  In non-assert builds, there would be
no visible consequences there either.  But nonetheless this is a pretty
bad bug for EXEC_BACKEND builds, for two reasons:

1. Each new backend would perform the hash_search(HASH_ENTER) call
without holding any lock that would prevent concurrent access to the
PredicateLockTargetHash hash table.  This creates a low but certainly
nonzero risk of corruption of that hash table.

2. In the event that the race condition occurred, by reinserting the
scratch entry too soon, we were defeating the entire purpose of the
scratch entry, namely to guarantee that transaction commit could move
hash table entries around with no risk of out-of-memory failure.
The odds of an actual OOM failure are quite low, but not zero, and if
it did happen it would again result in corruption of the hash table.

The user-visible symptoms of such corruption are a little hard to predict,
but would presumably amount to misbehavior of SERIALIZABLE transactions
that'd require a crash or postmaster restart to fix.

To fix, just skip the hash insertion if IsUnderPostmaster.  I also
inserted a bunch of assertions that the expected things happen
depending on whether IsUnderPostmaster is true.  That might be overkill,
since most comparable code in other functions isn't quite that paranoid,
but once burnt twice shy.

In passing, also move a couple of lines to places where they seemed
to make more sense.

Diagnosis of problem by Thomas Munro, patch by me.  Back-patch to
all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10593.1500670709@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-07-24 16:45:58 -04:00
Robert Haas
7086be6e36 When WCOs are present, disable direct foreign table modification.
If the user modifies a view that has CHECK OPTIONs and this gets
translated into a modification to an underlying relation which happens
to be a foreign table, the check options should be enforced.  In the
normal code path, that was happening properly, but it was not working
properly for "direct" modification because the whole operation gets
pushed to the remote side in that case and we never have an option to
enforce the constraint against individual tuples.  Fix by disabling
direct modification when there is a need to enforce CHECK OPTIONs.

Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Kyotaro Horiguchi and by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/f8a48f54-6f02-9c8a-5250-9791603171ee@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-07-24 15:57:24 -04:00
Tom Lane
b4af9e3f37 Ensure that pg_get_ruledef()'s output matches pg_get_viewdef()'s.
Various cases involving renaming of view columns are handled by having
make_viewdef pass down the view's current relation tupledesc to
get_query_def, which then takes care to use the column names from the
tupledesc for the output column names of the SELECT.  For some reason
though, we'd missed teaching make_ruledef to do similarly when it is
printing an ON SELECT rule, even though this is exactly the same case.
The results from pg_get_ruledef would then be different and arguably wrong.
In particular, this breaks pre-v10 versions of pg_dump, which in some
situations would define views by means of emitting a CREATE RULE ... ON
SELECT command.  Third-party tools might not be happy either.

In passing, clean up some crufty code in make_viewdef; we'd apparently
modernized the equivalent code in make_ruledef somewhere along the way,
and missed this copy.

Per report from Gilles Darold.  Back-patch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ec05659a-40ff-4510-fc45-ca9d965d0838@dalibo.com
2017-07-24 15:16:31 -04:00
Tom Lane
278cb43411 Be more consistent about errors for opfamily member lookup failures.
Add error checks in some places that were calling get_opfamily_member
or get_opfamily_proc and just assuming that the call could never fail.
Also, standardize the wording for such errors in some other places.

None of these errors are expected in normal use, hence they're just
elog not ereport.  But they may be handy for diagnosing omissions in
custom opclasses.

Rushabh Lathia found the oversight in RelationBuildPartitionKey();
I found the others by grepping for all callers of these functions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGPqQf2R9Nk8htpv0FFi+FP776EwMyGuORpc9zYkZKC8sFQE3g@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-24 11:23:27 -04:00
Noah Misch
bbbd9121e6 MSVC: Finish clean.bat build artifact coverage.
With this, "git clean -dnx" is clear after a "clean dist" following a
build.  Preserve sql_help.h in non-dist cleans, like the Makefile does.
2017-07-24 00:13:23 -07:00
Noah Misch
71ad8000da MSVC: Accept tcl86.lib in addition to tcl86t.lib.
ActiveTcl8.6.4.1.299124-win32-x86_64-threaded.exe ships just tcl86.lib.
Back-patch to 9.2, like the commit recognizing tcl86t.lib.
2017-07-23 23:53:27 -07:00
Tom Lane
93f039b494 Fix pg_dump's handling of event triggers.
pg_dump with the --clean option failed to emit DROP EVENT TRIGGER
commands for event triggers.  In a closely related oversight,
it also did not emit ALTER OWNER commands for event triggers.
Since only superusers can create event triggers, the latter oversight
is of little practical consequence ... but if we're going to record
an owner for event triggers, then surely pg_dump should preserve it.

Per complaint from Greg Atkins.  Back-patch to 9.3 where event triggers
were introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170722191142.yi4e7tzcg3iacclg@gmail.com
2017-07-22 20:20:09 -04:00
Tom Lane
ab2324fd46 Improve comments about partitioned hash table freelists.
While I couldn't find any live bugs in commit 44ca4022f, the comments
seemed pretty far from adequate; in particular it was not made plain that
"borrowing" entries from other freelists is critical for correctness.
Try to improve the commentary.  A couple of very minor code style
tweaks, as well.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10593.1500670709@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-07-22 18:02:26 -04:00
Tom Lane
991c8b04fc Update expected results for collate.linux.utf8 regression test.
I believe this changed as a consequence of commit 54baa4813: trying to
clone the "C" collation now produces a true clone with collencoding -1,
hence the error message if it's duplicate no longer specifies an encoding.

Per buildfarm member crake, which apparently hadn't been running this
test for the last few weeks.
2017-07-22 12:15:19 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
de38489b92 Fix typo in comment
Commit fd31cd2651 renamed the variable to skipping_blocks, but forgot
to update this comment.

Noticed while inspecting code.
2017-07-21 20:08:53 -04:00
Robert Haas
a46fe6e8be pg_rewind: Fix some problems when copying files >2GB.
When incrementally updating a file larger than 2GB, the old code could
either fail outright (if the client asked the server for bytes beyond
the 2GB boundary) or fail to copy all the blocks that had actually
been modified (if the server reported a file size to the client in
excess of 2GB), resulting in data corruption.  Generally, such files
won't occur anyway, but they might if using a non-default segment size
or if there the directory contains stray files unrelated to
PostgreSQL.  Fix by a more prudent choice of data types.

Even with these improvements, this code still uses a mix of different
types (off_t, size_t, uint64, int64) to represent file sizes and
offsets, not all of which necessarily have the same width or
signedness, so further cleanup might be in order here.  However, at
least now they all have the potential to be 64 bits wide on 64-bit
platforms.

Kuntal Ghosh and Michael Paquier, with a tweak by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAGz5QC+8gbkz=Brp0TgoKNqHWTzonbPtPex80U0O6Uh_bevbaA@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-21 14:25:36 -04:00
Robert Haas
063ff9210c pg_rewind: Fix busted sanity check.
As written, the code would only fail the sanity check if none of the
columns returned by the server were of the expected type, but we want
it to fail if even one column is not of the expected type.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+TgmoYuY5zW7JEs+1hSS1D=V5K8h1SQuESrq=bMNeo0B71Sfw@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-21 12:59:22 -04:00
Teodor Sigaev
7e1fb4c59e Fix double shared memory allocation.
SLRU buffer lwlocks are allocated twice by oversight in commit
fe702a7b3f where that locks were moved to
separate tranche. The bug doesn't have user-visible effects except small
overspending of shared memory.

Backpatch to 9.6 where it was introduced.

Alexander Korotkov with small editorization by me.
2017-07-21 13:31:20 +03:00
Dean Rasheed
68f785fd52 Make the new partition regression tests locale-independent.
The order of partitions listed by \d+ is in general locale-dependent.
Rename the partitions in the test added by d363d42bb9 to force them to
be listed in a consistent order.
2017-07-21 10:18:01 +01:00
Dean Rasheed
d363d42bb9 Use MINVALUE/MAXVALUE instead of UNBOUNDED for range partition bounds.
Previously, UNBOUNDED meant no lower bound when used in the FROM list,
and no upper bound when used in the TO list, which was OK for
single-column range partitioning, but problematic with multiple
columns. For example, an upper bound of (10.0, UNBOUNDED) would not be
collocated with a lower bound of (10.0, UNBOUNDED), thus making it
difficult or impossible to define contiguous multi-column range
partitions in some cases.

Fix this by using MINVALUE and MAXVALUE instead of UNBOUNDED to
represent a partition column that is unbounded below or above
respectively. This syntax removes any ambiguity, and ensures that if
one partition's lower bound equals another partition's upper bound,
then the partitions are contiguous.

Also drop the constraint prohibiting finite values after an unbounded
column, and just document the fact that any values after MINVALUE or
MAXVALUE are ignored. Previously it was necessary to repeat UNBOUNDED
multiple times, which was needlessly verbose.

Note: Forces a post-PG 10 beta2 initdb.

Report by Amul Sul, original patch by Amit Langote with some
additional hacking by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAAJ_b947mowpLdxL3jo3YLKngRjrq9+Ej4ymduQTfYR+8=YAYQ@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-21 09:20:47 +01:00
Tom Lane
eb145fdfea Fix dumping of outer joins with empty qual lists.
Normally, a JoinExpr would have empty "quals" only if it came from CROSS
JOIN syntax.  However, it's possible to get to this state by specifying
NATURAL JOIN between two tables with no common column names, and there
might be other ways too.  The code previously printed no ON clause if
"quals" was empty; that's right for CROSS JOIN but syntactically invalid
if it's some type of outer join.  Fix by printing ON TRUE in that case.

This got broken by commit 2ffa740be, which stopped using NATURAL JOIN
syntax in ruleutils output due to its brittleness in the face of
column renamings.  Back-patch to 9.3 where that commit appeared.

Per report from Tushar Ahuja.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/98b283cd-6dda-5d3f-f8ac-87db8c76a3da@enterprisedb.com
2017-07-20 11:29:36 -04:00
Tom Lane
3cb29c42f9 Add static assertions about pg_control fitting into one disk sector.
When pg_control was first designed, sizeof(ControlFileData) was small
enough that a comment seemed like plenty to document the assumption that
it'd fit into one disk sector.  Now it's nearly 300 bytes, raising the
possibility that somebody would carelessly add enough stuff to create
a problem.  Let's add a StaticAssertStmt() to ensure that the situation
doesn't pass unnoticed if it ever occurs.

While at it, rename PG_CONTROL_SIZE to PG_CONTROL_FILE_SIZE to make it
clearer what that symbol means, and convert the existing runtime
comparisons of sizeof(ControlFileData) vs. PG_CONTROL_FILE_SIZE to be
static asserts --- we didn't have that technology when this code was
first written.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9192.1500490591@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-07-19 16:16:57 -04:00
Tom Lane
04a2c7f412 Improve make_tsvector() to handle empty input, and simplify its callers.
It seemed a bit silly that each caller of make_tsvector() was laboriously
special-casing the situation where no lexemes were found, when it would
be easy and much more bullet-proof to make make_tsvector() handle that.
2017-07-18 13:13:47 -04:00
Tom Lane
b4c6d31c0b Fix serious performance problems in json(b) to_tsvector().
In an off-list followup to bug #14745, Bob Jones complained that
to_tsvector() on a 2MB jsonb value took an unreasonable amount of
time and space --- enough to draw the wrath of the OOM killer on
his machine.  On my machine, his example proved to require upwards
of 18 seconds and 4GB, which seemed pretty bogus considering that
to_tsvector() on the same data treated as text took just a couple
hundred msec and 10 or so MB.

On investigation, the problem is that the implementation scans each
string element of the json(b) and converts it to tsvector separately,
then applies tsvector_concat() to join those separate tsvectors.
The unreasonable memory usage came from leaking every single one of
the transient tsvectors --- but even without that mistake, this is an
O(N^2) or worse algorithm, because tsvector_concat() has to repeatedly
process the words coming from earlier elements.

We can fix it by accumulating all the lexeme data and applying
make_tsvector() just once.  As a side benefit, that also makes the
desired adjustment of lexeme positions far cheaper, because we can
just tweak the running "pos" counter between JSON elements.

In passing, try to make the explanation of that tweak more intelligible.
(I didn't think that a barely-readable comment far removed from the
actual code was helpful.)  And do some minor other code beautification.
2017-07-18 12:45:51 -04:00
Robert Haas
c85ec643ff Reverse-convert row types in ExecWithCheckOptions.
Just as we already do in ExecConstraints, and for the same reason:
to improve the quality of error messages.

Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Amit Langote

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/56e0baa8-e458-2bbb-7936-367f7d832e43@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-07-17 21:56:31 -04:00
Robert Haas
f81a91db4d Use a real RT index when setting up partition tuple routing.
Before, we always used a dummy value of 1, but that's not right when
the partitioned table being modified is inside of a WITH clause
rather than part of the main query.

Amit Langote, reported and reviewd by Etsuro Fujita, with a comment
change by me.

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/ee12f648-8907-77b5-afc0-2980bcb0aa37@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-07-17 21:29:45 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
cde11fa3c0 Improve legibility of numeric literal 2017-07-17 15:35:46 -04:00
Tom Lane
a570feaf92 Merge large_object.sql test into largeobject.source.
It seems pretty confusing to have tests named both largeobject and
large_object.  The latter is of very recent vintage (commit ff992c074),
so get rid of it in favor of merging into the former.

Also, enable the LO comment test that was added by commit 70ad7ed4e,
since the later commit added the then-missing pg_upgrade functionality.
The large_object.sql test case is almost completely redundant with that,
but not quite: it seems like creating a user-defined LO with an OID in
the system range might be an interesting case for pg_upgrade, so let's
keep it.

Like the earlier patch, back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18665.1500306372@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-07-17 15:28:20 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
6c6970a280 Use usleep instead of select for timeouts in PostgresNode.pm
select() for pure timeouts is not portable, and in particular doesn't
work on Windows.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/186943e0-3405-978d-b19d-9d3335427c86@2ndQuadrant.com
2017-07-17 15:22:37 -04:00
Robert Haas
09c2e7cd2f hash: Fix write-ahead logging bugs related to init forks.
One, logging for CREATE INDEX was oblivious to the fact that when
an unlogged table is created, *only* operations on the init fork
should be logged.

Two, init fork buffers need to be flushed after they are written;
otherwise, a filesystem-level copy following recovery may do the
wrong thing.  (There may be a better fix for this issue than the
one used here, but this is transposed from the similar logic already
present in XLogReadBufferForRedoExtended, and a broader refactoring
after beta2 seems inadvisable.)

Amit Kapila, reviewed by Ashutosh Sharma, Kyotaro Horiguchi,
and Michael Paquier

Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1JpcMsEtOL_J7WODumeEfyrPi7FPYHeVdS7fyyrCrgp4w@mail.gmail.com
2017-07-17 12:03:35 -04:00
Noah Misch
2f7f45a64b MSVC: Don't link libpgcommon into pgcrypto.
Doing so was useful in 273c458a2b but
became obsolete when 818fd4a67d caused
postgres.exe to provide the relevant symbols.  No other loadable module
links to libpgcommon directly.
2017-07-16 23:13:58 -07:00
Andrew Dunstan
deb0129a22 fix typo 2017-07-16 12:01:13 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan
fd2487e49f Fix vcregress.pl PROVE_FLAGS bug in commit 93b7d9731f
This change didn't adjust the publicly visible taptest function, causing
buildfarm failures on bowerbird.

Backpatch to 9.4 like previous change.
2017-07-16 11:24:29 -04:00
Tom Lane
de2af6e001 Improve comments for execExpr.c's handling of FieldStore subexpressions.
Given this code's general eagerness to use subexpressions' output variables
as temporary workspace, it's not exactly clear that it is safe for
FieldStore to tell a newval subexpression that it can write into the same
variable that is being supplied as a potential input.  Document the chain
of assumptions needed for that to be safe.
2017-07-15 16:57:43 -04:00
Tom Lane
e9b64824a0 Improve comments for execExpr.c's isAssignmentIndirectionExpr().
I got confused about why this function doesn't need to recursively
search the expression tree for a CaseTestExpr node.  After figuring
that out, add a comment to save the next person some time.
2017-07-15 14:03:39 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
837255cc81 pg_upgrade i18n: Fix "%s server/cluster" wording
The original wording was impossible to translate correctly.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170523002827.lzc2jkzh2gubclqb@alvherre.pgsql
2017-07-14 19:21:34 -04:00
Tom Lane
decb08ebdf Code review for NextValueExpr expression node type.
Add missing infrastructure for this node type, notably in ruleutils.c where
its lack could demonstrably cause EXPLAIN to fail.  Add outfuncs/readfuncs
support.  (outfuncs support is useful today for debugging purposes.  The
readfuncs support may never be needed, since at present it would only
matter for parallel query and NextValueExpr should never appear in a
parallelizable query; but it seems like a bad idea to have a primnode type
that isn't fully supported here.)  Teach planner infrastructure that
NextValueExpr is a volatile, parallel-unsafe, non-leaky expression node
with cost cpu_operator_cost.  Given its limited scope of usage, there
*might* be no live bug today from the lack of that knowledge, but it's
certainly going to bite us on the rear someday.  Teach pg_stat_statements
about the new node type, too.

While at it, also teach cost_qual_eval() that MinMaxExpr, SQLValueFunction,
XmlExpr, and CoerceToDomain should be charged as cpu_operator_cost.
Failing to do this for SQLValueFunction was an oversight in my commit
0bb51aa96.  The others are longer-standing oversights, but no time like the
present to fix them.  (In principle, CoerceToDomain could have cost much
higher than this, but it doesn't presently seem worth trying to examine the
domain's constraints here.)

Modify execExprInterp.c to execute NextValueExpr as an out-of-line
function; it seems quite unlikely to me that it's worth insisting that
it be inlined in all expression eval methods.  Besides, providing the
out-of-line function doesn't stop anyone from inlining if they want to.

Adjust some places where NextValueExpr support had been inserted with the
aid of a dartboard rather than keeping it in the same order as elsewhere.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/23862.1499981661@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-07-14 15:25:43 -04:00
Tom Lane
c95275fc20 Fix broken link-command-line ordering for libpgfeutils.
In the frontend Makefiles that pull in libpgfeutils, we'd generally
done it like this:

LDFLAGS += -L$(top_builddir)/src/fe_utils -lpgfeutils $(libpq_pgport)

That method is badly broken, as seen in bug #14742 from Chris Ruprecht.
The -L flag for src/fe_utils ends up being placed after whatever random
-L flags are in LDFLAGS already.  That puts us at risk of pulling in
libpgfeutils.a from some previous installation rather than the freshly
built one in src/fe_utils.  Also, the lack of an "override" is hazardous
if someone tries to specify some LDFLAGS on the make command line.

The correct way to do it is like this:

override LDFLAGS := -L$(top_builddir)/src/fe_utils -lpgfeutils $(libpq_pgport) $(LDFLAGS)

so that libpgfeutils, along with libpq, libpgport, and libpgcommon, are
guaranteed to be pulled in from the build tree and not from any referenced
system directory, because their -L flags will appear first.

In some places we'd been even lazier and done it like this:

LDFLAGS += -L$(top_builddir)/src/fe_utils -lpgfeutils -lpq

which is subtly wrong in an additional way: on platforms where we can't
restrict the symbols exported by libpq.so, it allows libpgfeutils to
latch onto libpgport and libpgcommon symbols from libpq.so, rather than
directly from those static libraries as intended.  This carries hazards
like those explained in the comments for the libpq_pgport macro.

In addition to fixing the broken libpgfeutils usages, I tried to
standardize on using $(libpq_pgport) like so:

override LDFLAGS := $(libpq_pgport) $(LDFLAGS)

even where libpgfeutils is not in the picture.  This makes no difference
right now but will hopefully discourage future mistakes of the same ilk.
And it's more like the way we handle CPPFLAGS in libpq-using Makefiles.

In passing, just for consistency, make pgbench include PTHREAD_LIBS the
same way everyplace else does, ie just after LIBS rather than in some
random place in the command line.  This might have practical effect if
there are -L switches in that macro on some platform.

It looks to me like the MSVC build scripts are not affected by this
error, but someone more familiar with them than I might want to double
check.

Back-patch to 9.6 where libpgfeutils was introduced.  In 9.6, the hazard
this error creates is that a reinstallation might link to the prior
installation's copy of libpgfeutils.a and thereby fail to absorb a
minor-version bug fix.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170714125106.9231.13772@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-07-14 12:26:53 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
8046465c2e Fix pg_basebackup output to stdout on Windows.
When writing a backup to stdout with pg_basebackup on Windows, put stdout
to binary mode. Any CR bytes in the output will otherwise be output
incorrectly as CR+LF.

In the passing, standardize on using "_setmode" instead of "setmode", for
the sake of consistency. They both do the same thing, but according to
MSDN documentation, setmode is deprecated.

Fixes bug #14634, reported by Henry Boehlert. Patch by Haribabu Kommi.
Backpatch to all supported versions.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20170428082818.24366.13134@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-07-14 16:02:53 +03:00
Tom Lane
a3ca72ae9a Fix dumping of FUNCTION RTEs that contain non-function-call expressions.
The grammar will only accept something syntactically similar to a function
call in a function-in-FROM expression.  However, there are various ways
to input something that ruleutils.c won't deparse that way, potentially
leading to a view or rule that fails dump/reload.  Fix by inserting a
dummy CAST around anything that isn't going to deparse as a function
(which is one of the ways to get something like that in there in the
first place).

In HEAD, also make use of the infrastructure added by this to avoid
emitting unnecessary parentheses in CREATE INDEX deparsing.  I did
not change that in back branches, thinking that people might find it
to be unexpected/unnecessary behavioral change.

In HEAD, also fix incorrect logic for when to add extra parens to
partition key expressions.  Somebody apparently thought they could
get away with simpler logic than pg_get_indexdef_worker has, but
they were wrong --- a counterexample is PARTITION BY LIST ((a[1])).
Ignoring the prettyprint flag for partition expressions isn't exactly
a nice solution anyway.

This has been broken all along, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10477.1499970459@sss.pgh.pa.us
2017-07-13 19:25:03 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
74fc83869e Fix race between GetNewTransactionId and GetOldestActiveTransactionId.
The race condition goes like this:

1. GetNewTransactionId advances nextXid e.g. from 100 to 101
2. GetOldestActiveTransactionId reads the new nextXid, 101
3. GetOldestActiveTransactionId loops through the proc array. There are no
   active XIDs there, so it returns 101 as the oldest active XID.
4. GetNewTransactionid stores XID 100 to MyPgXact->xid

So, GetOldestActiveTransactionId returned XID 101, even though 100 only
just started and is surely still running.

This would be hard to hit in practice, and even harder to spot any ill
effect if it happens. GetOldestActiveTransactionId is only used when
creating a checkpoint in a master server, and the race condition can only
happen on an online checkpoint, as there are no backends running during a
shutdown checkpoint. The oldestActiveXid value of an online checkpoint is
only used when starting up a hot standby server, to determine the starting
point where pg_subtrans is initialized from. For the race condition to
happen, there must be no other XIDs in the proc array that would hold back
the oldest-active XID value, which means that the missed XID must be a top
transaction's XID. However, pg_subtrans is not used for top XIDs, so I
believe an off-by-one error is in fact inconsequential. Nevertheless, let's
fix it, as it's clearly wrong and the fix is simple.

This has been wrong ever since hot standby was introduced, so backport to
all supported versions.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/e7258662-82b6-7a45-56d4-99b337a32bf7@iki.fi
2017-07-13 15:47:02 +03:00
Tom Lane
bc2d716ad0 Fix ruleutils.c for domain-over-array cases, too.
Further investigation shows that ruleutils isn't quite up to speed either
for cases where we have a domain-over-array: it needs to be prepared to
look past a CoerceToDomain at the top level of field and element
assignments, else it decompiles them incorrectly.  Potentially this would
result in failure to dump/reload a rule, if it looked like the one in the
new test case.  (I also added a test for EXPLAIN; that output isn't broken,
but clearly we need more test coverage here.)

Like commit b1cb32fb6, this bug is reachable in cases we already support,
so back-patch all the way.
2017-07-12 18:00:04 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
da11977de9 Reduce memory usage of tsvector type analyze function.
compute_tsvector_stats() detoasted and kept in memory every tsvector value
in the sample, but that can be a lot of memory. The original bug report
described a case using over 10 gigabytes, with statistics target of 10000
(the maximum).

To fix, allocate a separate copy of just the lexemes that we keep around,
and free the detoasted tsvector values as we go. This adds some palloc/pfree
overhead, when you have a lot of distinct lexemes in the sample, but it's
better than running out of memory.

Fixes bug #14654 reported by James C. Reviewed by Tom Lane. Backport to
all supported versions.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20170514200602.1451.46797@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-07-12 22:06:13 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera
ca793c59a5 commit_ts test: Set node name in test
Otherwise, the script output has a lot of pointless warnings.

This was forgotten in 9def031bd2
2017-07-12 14:39:44 -04:00
Tom Lane
512f67c8d0 Avoid integer overflow while sifting-up a heap in tuplesort.c.
If the number of tuples in the heap exceeds approximately INT_MAX/2,
this loop's calculation "2*i+1" could overflow, resulting in a crash.
Fix it by using unsigned int rather than int for the relevant local
variables; that shouldn't cost anything extra on any popular hardware.
Per bug #14722 from Sergey Koposov.

Original patch by Sergey Koposov, modified by me per a suggestion
from Heikki Linnakangas to use unsigned int not int64.

Back-patch to 9.4, where tuplesort.c grew the ability to sort as many
as INT_MAX tuples in-memory (commit 263865a48).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170629161637.1478.93109@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2017-07-12 13:24:16 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
ca906f68f2 Fix variable and type name in comment.
Kyotaro Horiguchi

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20170711.163441.241981736.horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp
2017-07-12 17:07:35 +03:00