Commit Graph

14103 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Heikki Linnakangas dde6282500 Fix more instances of "the the" in comments.
Plus one instance of "to to" in the docs.
2013-12-13 20:02:01 +02:00
Tom Lane e8312b4f03 Don't let timeout interrupts happen unless ImmediateInterruptOK is set.
Serious oversight in commit 16e1b7a1b7f7ffd8a18713e83c8cd72c9ce48e07:
we should not allow an interrupt to take control away from mainline code
except when ImmediateInterruptOK is set.  Just to be safe, let's adopt
the same save-clear-restore dance that's been used for many years in
HandleCatchupInterrupt and HandleNotifyInterrupt, so that nothing bad
happens if a timeout handler invokes code that tests or even manipulates
ImmediateInterruptOK.

Per report of "stuck spinlock" failures from Christophe Pettus, though
many other symptoms are possible.  Diagnosis by Andres Freund.
2013-12-13 11:50:15 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 50e547096c Add GUC to enable WAL-logging of hint bits, even with checksums disabled.
WAL records of hint bit updates is useful to tools that want to examine
which pages have been modified. In particular, this is required to make
the pg_rewind tool safe (without checksums).

This can also be used to test how much extra WAL-logging would occur if
you enabled checksums, without actually enabling them (which you can't
currently do without re-initdb'ing).

Sawada Masahiko, docs by Samrat Revagade. Reviewed by Dilip Kumar, with
further changes by me.
2013-12-13 16:26:14 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas a49633d8dc Fix WAL-logging of setting the visibility map bit.
The operation that removes the remaining dead tuples from the page must
be WAL-logged before the setting of the VM bit. Otherwise, if you replay
the WAL to between those two records, you end up with the VM bit set, but
the dead tuples are still there.

Backpatch to 9.3, where this bug was introduced.
2013-12-13 14:15:04 +02:00
Tom Lane ccca6f56f5 Fix ancient docs/comments thinko: XID comparison is mod 2^32, not 2^31.
Pointed out by Gianni Ciolli.
2013-12-12 12:39:48 -05:00
Tom Lane f26099057a Improve EXPLAIN to print the grouping columns in Agg and Group nodes.
Per request from Kevin Grittner.
2013-12-12 11:24:38 -05:00
Simon Riggs 8693559cac New autovacuum_work_mem parameter
If autovacuum_work_mem is set, autovacuum workers now use
this parameter in preference to maintenance_work_mem.

Peter Geoghegan
2013-12-12 11:42:39 +00:00
Simon Riggs 36da3cfb45 Allow time delayed standbys and recovery
Set min_recovery_apply_delay to force a delay in recovery apply for commit and
restore point WAL records. Other records are replayed immediately. Delay is
measured between WAL record time and local standby time.

Robert Haas, Fabrízio de Royes Mello and Simon Riggs
Detailed review by Mitsumasa Kondo
2013-12-12 10:53:20 +00:00
Tom Lane 22310b808d Remove bogus executable permissions on xlog.c.
Apparently fat-fingered in 1a3d104475.
Noted by Peter Geoghegan.
2013-12-11 22:12:25 -05:00
Robert Haas 60dd40bbda Under wal_level=logical, when saving old tuples, always save OID.
There's no real point in not doing this.  It doesn't cost anything
in performance or space.  So let's go wild.

Andres Freund, with substantial editing as to style by me.
2013-12-11 13:19:31 -05:00
Robert Haas 66abc2608c Add a new reloption, user_catalog_table.
When this reloption is set and wal_level=logical is configured,
we'll record the CIDs stamped by inserts, updates, and deletes to
the table just as we would for an actual catalog table.  This will
allow logical decoding to use historical MVCC snapshots to access
such tables just as they access ordinary catalog tables.

Replication solutions built around the logical decoding machinery
will likely need to set this operation for their configuration
tables; it might also be needed by extensions which perform table
access in their output functions.

Andres Freund, reviewed by myself and others.
2013-12-10 19:17:34 -05:00
Robert Haas e55704d8b2 Add new wal_level, logical, sufficient for logical decoding.
When wal_level=logical, we'll log columns from the old tuple as
configured by the REPLICA IDENTITY facility added in commit
07cacba983.  This makes it possible
a properly-configured logical replication solution to correctly
follow table updates even if they change the chosen key columns,
or, with REPLICA IDENTITY FULL, even if the table has no key at
all.  Note that updates which do not modify the replica identity
column won't log anything extra, making the choice of a good key
(i.e. one that will rarely be changed) important to performance
when wal_level=logical is configured.

Each insert, update, or delete to a catalog table will also log
the CMIN and/or CMAX values of stamped by the current transaction.
This is necessary because logical decoding will require access to
historical snapshots of the catalog in order to decode some data
types, and the CMIN/CMAX values that we may need in order to judge
row visibility may have been overwritten by the time we need them.

Andres Freund, reviewed in various versions by myself, Heikki
Linnakangas, KONDO Mitsumasa, and many others.
2013-12-10 19:01:40 -05:00
Tom Lane 9ec6199d18 Fix possible crash with nested SubLinks.
An expression such as WHERE (... x IN (SELECT ...) ...) IN (SELECT ...)
could produce an invalid plan that results in a crash at execution time,
if the planner attempts to flatten the outer IN into a semi-join.
This happens because convert_testexpr() was not expecting any nested
SubLinks and would wrongly replace any PARAM_SUBLINK Params belonging
to the inner SubLink.  (I think the comment denying that this case could
happen was wrong when written; it's certainly been wrong for quite a long
time, since very early versions of the semijoin flattening logic.)

Per report from Teodor Sigaev.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-12-10 16:10:17 -05:00
Noah Misch 53685d7981 Rename TABLE() to ROWS FROM().
SQL-standard TABLE() is a subset of UNNEST(); they deal with arrays and
other collection types.  This feature, however, deals with set-returning
functions.  Use a different syntax for this feature to keep open the
possibility of implementing the standard TABLE().
2013-12-10 09:34:37 -05:00
Robert Haas d9250da032 Fixups for dsm.c's file descriptor handling.
Per complaint from Tom Lane.
2013-12-09 11:15:19 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 3164721462 SSL: Support ECDH key exchange
This sets up ECDH key exchange, when compiling against OpenSSL that
supports EC.  Then the ECDHE-RSA and ECDHE-ECDSA cipher suites can be
used for SSL connections.  The latter one means that EC keys are now
usable.

The reason for EC key exchange is that it's faster than DHE and it
allows to go to higher security levels where RSA will be horribly slow.

There is also new GUC option ssl_ecdh_curve that specifies the curve
name used for ECDH.  It defaults to "prime256v1", which is the most
common curve in use in HTTPS.

From: Marko Kreen <markokr@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrian Klaver <adrian.klaver@gmail.com>
2013-12-07 15:11:44 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut ef3267523d SSL: Add configuration option to prefer server cipher order
By default, OpenSSL (and SSL/TLS in general) lets the client cipher
order take priority.  This is OK for browsers where the ciphers were
tuned, but few PostgreSQL client libraries make the cipher order
configurable.  So it makes sense to have the cipher order in
postgresql.conf take priority over client defaults.

This patch adds the setting "ssl_prefer_server_ciphers" that can be
turned on so that server cipher order is preferred.  Per discussion,
this now defaults to on.

From: Marko Kreen <markokr@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrian Klaver <adrian.klaver@gmail.com>
2013-12-07 08:13:50 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 312bde3d40 Fix improper abort during update chain locking
In 247c76a989, I added some code to do fine-grained checking of
MultiXact status of locking/updating transactions when traversing an
update chain.  There was a thinko in that patch which would have the
traversing abort, that is return HeapTupleUpdated, when the other
transaction is a committed lock-only.  In this case we should ignore it
and return success instead.  Of course, in the case where there is a
committed update, HeapTupleUpdated is the correct return value.

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

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

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

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

Backpatch to 9.3.
2013-12-05 17:47:51 -03:00
Tom Lane 74242c23c1 Clear retry flags properly in replacement OpenSSL sock_write function.
Current OpenSSL code includes a BIO_clear_retry_flags() step in the
sock_write() function.  Either we failed to copy the code correctly, or
they added this since we copied it.  In any case, lack of the clear step
appears to be the cause of the server lockup after connection loss reported
in bug #8647 from Valentine Gogichashvili.  Assume that this is correct
coding for all OpenSSL versions, and hence back-patch to all supported
branches.

Diagnosis and patch by Alexander Kukushkin.
2013-12-05 12:48:28 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 07aeb1fec5 Avoid resetting Xmax when it's a multi with an aborted update
HeapTupleSatisfiesUpdate can very easily "forget" tuple locks while
checking the contents of a multixact and finding it contains an aborted
update, by setting the HEAP_XMAX_INVALID bit.  This would lead to
concurrent transactions not noticing any previous locks held by
transactions that might still be running, and thus being able to acquire
subsequent locks they wouldn't be normally able to acquire.

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

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

Noticed by Andres Freund while investigating a different issue reported
by Noah Misch.
2013-12-05 12:21:55 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9e857436ef Don't include unused space in LOG_NEWPAGE records.
This is the same trick we use when taking a full page image of a buffer
passed to XLogInsert.
2013-12-04 00:10:47 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 22122c83f1 Fix full-page writes of internal GIN pages.
Insertion to a non-leaf GIN page didn't make a full-page image of the page,
which is wrong. The code used to do it correctly, but was changed (commit
853d1c3103) because the redo-routine didn't
track incomplete splits correctly when the page was restored from a full
page image. Of course, that was not right way to fix it, the redo routine
should've been fixed instead. The redo-routine was surreptitiously fixed
in 2010 (commit 4016bdef8a), so all we need
to do now is revert the code that creates the record to its original form.

This doesn't change the format of the WAL record.

Backpatch to all supported versions.
2013-12-03 23:16:01 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut fef88b3fda Report exit code from external recovery commands properly
When an external recovery command such as restore_command or
archive_cleanup_command fails, report the exit code properly,
distinguishing signals and normal exists, using the existing
wait_result_to_str() facility, instead of just reporting the return
value from system().

Reviewed-by: Peter Geoghegan <pg@heroku.com>
2013-12-02 22:31:05 -05:00
Tom Lane 7ab321404c Fix crash in assign_collations_walker for EXISTS with empty SELECT list.
We (I think I, actually) forgot about this corner case while coding
collation resolution.  Per bug #8648 from Arjen Nienhuis.
2013-12-02 20:28:45 -05:00
Robert Haas c6d4b1dd3e Flag mmap implemenation of dynamic shared memory as resize-capable.
Error noted by Heikki Linnakangas
2013-12-02 11:18:54 -05:00
Robert Haas a8656a3ab0 Make NUM_TOCHAR_prepare and NUM_TOCHAR_finish macros declare "len".
Remove the variable from the enclosing scopes so that nothing can be
relying on it.  The net result of this refactoring is that we get rid
of a few unnecessary strlen() calls.

Original patch from Greg Jaskiewicz, substantially expanded by me.
2013-12-02 10:51:06 -05:00
Robert Haas 9d140f7be2 Avoid out-of-bounds read in errfinish if error_stack_depth < 0.
If errordata_stack_depth < 0, we won't find that out and correct the
problem until CHECK_STACK_DEPTH() is invoked.  In the meantime,
elevel will be set based on an invalid read.  This is probably
harmless in practice, but it seems cleaner this way.

Xi Wang
2013-12-02 10:42:01 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 3e3520cf7a Translation updates 2013-12-02 00:17:07 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 2393c7d102 Fix a couple of bugs in MultiXactId freezing
Both heap_freeze_tuple() and heap_tuple_needs_freeze() neglected to look
into a multixact to check the members against cutoff_xid.  This means
that a very old Xid could survive hidden within a multi, possibly
outliving its CLOG storage.  In the distant future, this would cause
clog lookup failures:
ERROR:  could not access status of transaction 3883960912
DETAIL:  Could not open file "pg_clog/0E78": No such file or directory.

This mostly was problematic when the updating transaction aborted, since
in that case the row wouldn't get pruned away earlier in vacuum and the
multixact could possibly survive for a long time.  In many cases, data
that is inaccessible for this reason way can be brought back
heuristically.

As a second bug, heap_freeze_tuple() didn't properly handle multixacts
that need to be frozen according to cutoff_multi, but whose updater xid
is still alive.  Instead of preserving the update Xid, it just set Xmax
invalid, which leads to both old and new tuple versions becoming
visible.  This is pretty rare in practice, but a real threat
nonetheless.  Existing corrupted rows, unfortunately, cannot be repaired
in an automated fashion.

Existing physical replicas might have already incorrectly frozen tuples
because of different behavior than in master, which might only become
apparent in the future once pg_multixact/ is truncated; it is
recommended that all clones be rebuilt after upgrading.

Following code analysis caused by bug report by J Smith in message
CADFUPgc5bmtv-yg9znxV-vcfkb+JPRqs7m2OesQXaM_4Z1JpdQ@mail.gmail.com
and privately by F-Secure.

Backpatch to 9.3, where freezing of MultiXactIds was introduced.

Analysis and patch by Andres Freund, with some tweaks by Álvaro.
2013-11-29 21:47:25 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 1ce150b7bb Don't TransactionIdDidAbort in HeapTupleGetUpdateXid
It is dangerous to do so, because some code expects to be able to see what's
the true Xmax even if it is aborted (particularly while traversing HOT
chains).  So don't do it, and instead rely on the callers to verify for
abortedness, if necessary.

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

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

Backpatch to 9.3, where this function was introduced.

Andres Freund
2013-11-29 21:47:21 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 1df0122daa Truncate pg_multixact/'s contents during crash recovery
Commit 9dc842f08 of 8.2 era prevented MultiXact truncation during crash
recovery, because there was no guarantee that enough state had been
setup, and because it wasn't deemed to be a good idea to remove data
during crash recovery anyway.  Since then, due to Hot-Standby, streaming
replication and PITR, the amount of time a cluster can spend doing crash
recovery has increased significantly, to the point that a cluster may
even never come out of it.  This has made not truncating the content of
pg_multixact/ not defensible anymore.

To fix, take care to setup enough state for multixact truncation before
crash recovery starts (easy since checkpoints contain the required
information), and move the current end-of-recovery actions to a new
TrimMultiXact() function, analogous to TrimCLOG().

At some later point, this should probably done similarly to the way
clog.c is doing it, which is to just WAL log truncations, but we can't
do that for the back branches.

Back-patch to 9.0.  8.4 also has the problem, but since there's no hot
standby there, it's much less pressing.  In 9.2 and earlier, this patch
is simpler than in newer branches, because multixact access during
recovery isn't required.  Add appropriate checks to make sure that's not
happening.

Andres Freund
2013-11-29 21:47:15 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera f54106f77e Fix full-table-vacuum request mechanism for MultiXactIds
While autovacuum dutifully launched anti-multixact-wraparound vacuums
when the multixact "age" was reached, the vacuum code was not aware that
it needed to make them be full table vacuums.  As the resulting
partial-table vacuums aren't capable of actually increasing relminmxid,
autovacuum continued to launch anti-wraparound vacuums that didn't have
the intended effect, until age of relfrozenxid caused the vacuum to
finally be a full table one via vacuum_freeze_table_age.

To fix, introduce logic for multixacts similar to that for plain
TransactionIds, using the same GUCs.

Backpatch to 9.3, where permanent MultiXactIds were introduced.

Andres Freund, some cleanup by Álvaro
2013-11-29 21:47:13 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 76a31c689c Replace hardcoded 200000000 with autovacuum_freeze_max_age
Parts of the code used autovacuum_freeze_max_age to determine whether
anti-multixact-wraparound vacuums are necessary, while others used a
hardcoded 200000000 value.  This leads to problems when
autovacuum_freeze_max_age is set to a non-default value.  Use the latter
everywhere.

Backpatch to 9.3, where vacuuming of multixacts was introduced.

Andres Freund
2013-11-29 21:47:09 -03:00
Tom Lane 8b151558c8 Be sure to release proc->backendLock after SetupLockInTable() failure.
The various places that transferred fast-path locks to the main lock table
neglected to release the PGPROC's backendLock if SetupLockInTable failed
due to being out of shared memory.  In most cases this is no big deal since
ensuing error cleanup would release all held LWLocks anyway.  But there are
some hot-standby functions that don't consider failure of
FastPathTransferRelationLocks to be a hard error, and in those cases this
oversight could lead to system lockup.  For consistency, make all of these
places look the same as FastPathTransferRelationLocks.

Noted while looking for the cause of Dan Wood's bugs --- this wasn't it,
but it's a bug anyway.
2013-11-29 17:35:09 -05:00
Tom Lane 16e1b7a1b7 Fix assorted race conditions in the new timeout infrastructure.
Prevent handle_sig_alarm from losing control partway through due to a query
cancel (either an asynchronous SIGINT, or a cancel triggered by one of the
timeout handler functions).  That would at least result in failure to
schedule any required future interrupt, and might result in actual
corruption of timeout.c's data structures, if the interrupt happened while
we were updating those.

We could still lose control if an asynchronous SIGINT arrives just as the
function is entered.  This wouldn't break any data structures, but it would
have the same effect as if the SIGALRM interrupt had been silently lost:
we'd not fire any currently-due handlers, nor schedule any new interrupt.
To forestall that scenario, forcibly reschedule any pending timer interrupt
during AbortTransaction and AbortSubTransaction.  We can avoid any extra
kernel call in most cases by not doing that until we've allowed
LockErrorCleanup to kill the DEADLOCK_TIMEOUT and LOCK_TIMEOUT events.

Another hazard is that some platforms (at least Linux and *BSD) block a
signal before calling its handler and then unblock it on return.  When we
longjmp out of the handler, the unblock doesn't happen, and the signal is
left blocked indefinitely.  Again, we can fix that by forcibly unblocking
signals during AbortTransaction and AbortSubTransaction.

These latter two problems do not manifest when the longjmp reaches
postgres.c, because the error recovery code there kills all pending timeout
events anyway, and it uses sigsetjmp(..., 1) so that the appropriate signal
mask is restored.  So errors thrown outside any transaction should be OK
already, and cleaning up in AbortTransaction and AbortSubTransaction should
be enough to fix these issues.  (We're assuming that any code that catches
a query cancel error and doesn't re-throw it will do at least a
subtransaction abort to clean up; but that was pretty much required already
by other subsystems.)

Lastly, ProcSleep should not clear the LOCK_TIMEOUT indicator flag when
disabling that event: if a lock timeout interrupt happened after the lock
was granted, the ensuing query cancel is still going to happen at the next
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS, and we want to report it as a lock timeout not a user
cancel.

Per reports from Dan Wood.

Back-patch to 9.3 where the new timeout handling infrastructure was
introduced.  We may at some point decide to back-patch the signal
unblocking changes further, but I'll desist from that until we hear
actual field complaints about it.
2013-11-29 16:41:00 -05:00
Robert Haas 8e18d04d4d Refine our definition of what constitutes a system relation.
Although user-defined relations can't be directly created in
pg_catalog, it's possible for them to end up there, because you can
create them in some other schema and then use ALTER TABLE .. SET SCHEMA
to move them there.  Previously, such relations couldn't afterwards
be manipulated, because IsSystemRelation()/IsSystemClass() rejected
all attempts to modify objects in the pg_catalog schema, regardless
of their origin.  With this patch, they now reject only those
objects in pg_catalog which were created at initdb-time, allowing
most operations on user-created tables in pg_catalog to proceed
normally.

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

Andres Freund, with some modifications by me.
2013-11-28 20:57:20 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2fe69cacff Another gin_desc fix.
The number of items inserted was incorrectly printed as if it was a boolean.
2013-11-28 23:35:50 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 97c19e6c38 Fix gin_desc routine to match the WAL format.
In the GIN incomplete-splits patch, I used BlockIdDatas to store the block
number of left and right children, when inserting a downlink after a split
to an internal page posting list page. But gin_desc thought they were stored
as BlockNumbers.
2013-11-28 21:57:42 +02:00
Tom Lane da8a716089 Fix latent(?) race condition in LockReleaseAll.
We have for a long time checked the head pointer of each of the backend's
proclock lists and skipped acquiring the corresponding locktable partition
lock if the head pointer was NULL.  This was safe enough in the days when
proclock lists were changed only by the owning backend, but it is pretty
questionable now that the fast-path patch added cases where backends add
entries to other backends' proclock lists.  However, we don't really wish
to revert to locking each partition lock every time, because in simple
transactions that would add a lot of useless lock/unlock cycles on
already-heavily-contended LWLocks.  Fortunately, the only way that another
backend could be modifying our proclock list at this point would be if it
was promoting a formerly fast-path lock of ours; and any such lock must be
one that we'd decided not to delete in the previous loop over the locallock
table.  So it's okay if we miss seeing it in this loop; we'd just decide
not to delete it again.  However, once we've detected a non-empty list,
we'd better re-fetch the list head pointer after acquiring the partition
lock.  This guards against possibly fetching a corrupt-but-non-null pointer
if pointer fetch/store isn't atomic.  It's not clear if any practical
architectures are like that, but we've never assumed that before and don't
wish to start here.  In any case, the situation certainly deserves a code
comment.

While at it, refactor the partition traversal loop to use a for() construct
instead of a while() loop with goto's.

Back-patch, just in case the risk is real and not hypothetical.
2013-11-28 12:17:46 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera d51a8c52ba Unbreak buildfarm
I removed an intermediate commit before pushing and forgot to test the
resulting tree :-(
2013-11-28 12:59:45 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 247c76a989 Use a more granular approach to follow update chains
Instead of simply checking the KEYS_UPDATED bit, we need to check
whether each lock held on the future version of the tuple conflicts with
the lock we're trying to acquire.

Per bug report #8434 by Tomonari Katsumata
2013-11-28 12:00:12 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera e4828e9ccb Compare Xmin to previous Xmax when locking an update chain
Not doing so causes us to traverse an update chain that has been broken
by concurrent page pruning.  All other code that traverses update chains
uses this check as one of the cases in which to stop iterating, so
replicate it here too.  Failure to do so leads to erroneous CLOG,
subtrans or multixact lookups.

Per discussion following the bug report by J Smith in
CADFUPgc5bmtv-yg9znxV-vcfkb+JPRqs7m2OesQXaM_4Z1JpdQ@mail.gmail.com
as diagnosed by Andres Freund.
2013-11-28 12:00:12 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera c235a6a589 Don't try to set InvalidXid as page pruning hint
If a transaction updates/deletes a tuple just before aborting, and a
concurrent transaction tries to prune the page concurrently, the pruner
may see HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum return HEAPTUPLE_DELETE_IN_PROGRESS,
but a later call to HeapTupleGetUpdateXid() return InvalidXid.  This
would cause an assertion failure in development builds, but would be
otherwise Mostly Harmless.

Fix by checking whether the updater Xid is valid before trying to apply
it as page prune point.

Reported by Andres in 20131124000203.GA4403@alap2.anarazel.de
2013-11-28 12:00:12 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera e518fa7adf Cope with heap_fetch failure while locking an update chain
The reason for the fetch failure is that the tuple was removed because
it was dead; so the failure is innocuous and can be ignored.  Moreover,
there's no need for further work and we can return success to the caller
immediately.  EvalPlanQualFetch is doing something very similar to this
already.

Report and test case from Andres Freund in
20131124000203.GA4403@alap2.anarazel.de
2013-11-28 12:00:12 -03:00
Tom Lane 7db285afc9 Fix stale-pointer problem in fast-path locking logic.
When acquiring a lock in fast-path mode, we must reset the locallock
object's lock and proclock fields to NULL.  They are not necessarily that
way to start with, because the locallock could be left over from a failed
lock acquisition attempt earlier in the transaction.  Failure to do this
led to all sorts of interesting misbehaviors when LockRelease tried to
clean up no-longer-related lock and proclock objects in shared memory.
Per report from Dan Wood.

In passing, modify LockRelease to elog not just Assert if it doesn't find
lock and proclock objects for a formerly fast-path lock, matching the code
in FastPathGetRelationLockEntry and LockRefindAndRelease.  This isn't a
bug but it will help in diagnosing any future bugs in this area.

Also, modify FastPathTransferRelationLocks and FastPathGetRelationLockEntry
to break out of their loops over the fastpath array once they've found the
sole matching entry.  This was inconsistently done in some search loops
and not others.

Improve assorted related comments, too.

Back-patch to 9.2 where the fast-path mechanism was introduced.
2013-11-27 18:10:00 -05:00
Tom Lane 8c84803e14 Minor corrections in lmgr/README.
Correct an obsolete statement that no backend touches another backend's
PROCLOCK lists.  This was probably wrong even when written (the deadlock
checker looks at everybody's lists), and it's certainly quite wrong now
that fast-path locking can require creation of lock and proclock objects
on behalf of another backend.  Also improve some statements in the hot
standby explanation, and do one or two other trivial bits of wordsmithing/
reformatting.
2013-11-27 15:07:13 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 631118fe1e Get rid of the post-recovery cleanup step of GIN page splits.
Replace it with an approach similar to what GiST uses: when a page is split,
the left sibling is marked with a flag indicating that the parent hasn't been
updated yet. When the parent is updated, the flag is cleared. If an insertion
steps on a page with the flag set, it will finish split before proceeding
with the insertion.

The post-recovery cleanup mechanism was never totally reliable, as insertion
to the parent could fail e.g because of running out of memory or disk space,
leaving the tree in an inconsistent state.

This also divides the responsibility of WAL-logging more clearly between
the generic ginbtree.c code, and the parts specific to entry and posting
trees. There is now a common WAL record format for insertions and deletions,
which is written by ginbtree.c, followed by tree-specific payload, which is
returned by the placetopage- and split- callbacks.
2013-11-27 19:21:23 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas ce5326eed3 More GIN refactoring.
Separate the insertion payload from the more static portions of GinBtree.
GinBtree now only contains information related to searching the tree, and
the information of what to insert is passed separately.

Add root block number to GinBtree, instead of passing it around all the
functions as argument.

Split off ginFinishSplit() from ginInsertValue(). ginFinishSplit is
responsible for finding the parent and inserting the downlink to it.
2013-11-27 15:43:05 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 82b43f7df2 Don't update relfrozenxid if any pages were skipped.
Vacuum recognizes that it can update relfrozenxid by checking whether it has
processed all pages of a relation. Unfortunately it performed that check
after truncating the dead pages at the end of the relation, and used the new
number of pages to decide whether all pages have been scanned. If the new
number of pages happened to be smaller or equal to the number of pages
scanned, it incorrectly decided that all pages were scanned.

This can lead to relfrozenxid being updated, even though some pages were
skipped that still contain old XIDs. That can lead to data loss due to xid
wraparounds with some rows suddenly missing. This likely has escaped notice
so far because it takes a large number (~2^31) of xids being used to see the
effect, while a full-table vacuum before that would fix the issue.

The incorrect logic was introduced by commit
b4b6923e03. Backpatch this fix down to 8.4,
like that commit.

Andres Freund, with some modifications by me.
2013-11-27 13:43:27 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 85ed91ee7d Implement information_schema.parameters.parameter_default column
Reviewed-by: Ali Dar <ali.munir.dar@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Amit Khandekar <amit.khandekar@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Rodolfo Campero <rodolfo.campero@anachronics.com>
2013-11-26 23:21:35 -05:00
Jeff Davis 7cc0ba9f17 Add missing entry for session_preload_libraries in sample config.
The omission was apparently an oversight in the original patch.
2013-11-25 21:03:07 -08:00
Bruce Momjian a6542a4b68 Change SET LOCAL/CONSTRAINTS/TRANSACTION and ABORT behavior
Change SET LOCAL/CONSTRAINTS/TRANSACTION behavior outside of a
transaction block from error (post-9.3) to warning.  (Was nothing in <=
9.3.)  Also change ABORT outside of a transaction block from notice to
warning.
2013-11-25 19:19:40 -05:00
Jeff Davis 559d535819 Lessen library-loading log level.
Previously, messages were emitted at the LOG level every time a
backend preloaded a library. That was acceptable (though unnecessary)
for shared_preload_libraries; but it was excessive for
local_preload_libraries and session_preload_libraries. Reduce to
DEBUG1.

Also, there was logic in the EXEC_BACKEND case to avoid repeated
messages for shared_preload_libraries by demoting them to
DEBUG2. DEBUG1 seems more appropriate there, as well, so eliminate
that special case.

Peter Geoghegan.
2013-11-24 10:50:54 -08:00
Tom Lane 36a3be6540 Fix new and latent bugs with errno handling in secure_read/secure_write.
These functions must be careful that they return the intended value of
errno to their callers.  There were several scenarios where this might
not happen:

1. The recent SSL renegotiation patch added a hunk of code that would
execute after setting errno.  In the first place, it's doubtful that we
should consider renegotiation to be successfully completed after a failure,
and in the second, there's no real guarantee that the called OpenSSL
routines wouldn't clobber errno.  Fix by not executing that hunk except
during success exit.

2. errno was left in an unknown state in case of an unrecognized return
code from SSL_get_error().  While this is a "can't happen" case, it seems
like a good idea to be sure we know what would happen, so reset errno to
ECONNRESET in such cases.  (The corresponding code in libpq's fe-secure.c
already did this.)

3. There was an (undocumented) assumption that client_read_ended() wouldn't
change errno.  While true in the current state of the code, this seems less
than future-proof.  Add explicit saving/restoring of errno to make sure
that changes in the called functions won't break things.

I see no need to back-patch, since #1 is new code and the other two issues
are mostly hypothetical.

Per discussion with Amit Kapila.
2013-11-24 13:09:38 -05:00
Tom Lane 45e02e3232 Fix array slicing of int2vector and oidvector values.
The previous coding labeled expressions such as pg_index.indkey[1:3] as
being of int2vector type; which is not right because the subscript bounds
of such a result don't, in general, satisfy the restrictions of int2vector.
To fix, implicitly promote the result of slicing int2vector to int2[],
or oidvector to oid[].  This is similar to what we've done with domains
over arrays, which is a good analogy because these types are very much
like restricted domains of the corresponding regular-array types.

A side-effect is that we now also forbid array-element updates on such
columns, eg while "update pg_index set indkey[4] = 42" would have worked
before if you were superuser (and corrupted your catalogs irretrievably,
no doubt) it's now disallowed.  This seems like a good thing since, again,
some choices of subscripting would've led to results not satisfying the
restrictions of int2vector.  The case of an array-slice update was
rejected before, though with a different error message than you get now.
We could make these cases work in future if we added a cast from int2[]
to int2vector (with a cast function checking the subscript restrictions)
but it seems unlikely that there's any value in that.

Per report from Ronan Dunklau.  Back-patch to all supported branches
because of the crash risks involved.
2013-11-23 20:03:56 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut b7212c9726 Fix thinko in SPI_execute_plan() calls
Two call sites were apparently thinking that the last argument of
SPI_execute_plan() is the number of query parameters, but it is actually
the row limit.  Change the calls to 0, since we don't care about the
limit there.  The previous code didn't break anything, but it was still
wrong.
2013-11-23 09:34:57 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 4053189d59 Avoid potential buffer overflow crash
A pointer to a C string was treated as a pointer to a "name" datum and
passed to SPI_execute_plan().  This pointer would then end up being
passed through datumCopy(), which would try to copy the entire 64 bytes
of name data, thus running past the end of the C string.  Fix by
converting the string to a proper name structure.

Found by LLVM AddressSanitizer.
2013-11-23 07:25:37 -05:00
Tom Lane f19e92ed04 Flatten join alias Vars before pulling up targetlist items from a subquery.
pullup_replace_vars()'s decisions about whether a pulled-up replacement
expression needs to be wrapped in a PlaceHolderVar depend on the assumption
that what looks like a Var behaves like a Var.  However, if the Var is a
join alias reference, later flattening of join aliases might replace the
Var with something that's not a Var at all, and should have been wrapped.

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

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

Having seen this, I'm wondering if it wouldn't be prudent to do all
alias-variable flattening earlier, perhaps even in the rewriter.
But that would probably not be a back-patchable change.
2013-11-22 14:37:21 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 98f58a30c1 Fix Hot-Standby initialization of clog and subtrans.
These bugs can cause data loss on standbys started with hot_standby=on at
the moment they start to accept read only queries, by marking committed
transactions as uncommited. The likelihood of such corruptions is small
unless the primary has a high transaction rate.

5a031a5556 fixed bugs in HS's startup logic
by maintaining less state until at least STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_PENDING state
was reached, missing the fact that both clog and subtrans are written to
before that. This only failed to fail in common cases because the usage
of ExtendCLOG in procarray.c was superflous since clog extensions are
actually WAL logged.

f44eedc3f0f347a856eea8590730769125964597/I then tried to fix the missing
extensions of pg_subtrans due to the former commit's changes - which are
not WAL logged - by performing the extensions when switching to a state
> STANDBY_INITIALIZED and not performing xid assignments before that -
again missing the fact that ExtendCLOG is unneccessary - but screwed up
twice: Once because latestObservedXid wasn't updated anymore in that
state due to the earlier commit and once by having an off-by-one error in
the loop performing extensions. This means that whenever a
CLOG_XACTS_PER_PAGE (32768 with default settings) boundary was crossed
between the start of the checkpoint recovery started from and the first
xl_running_xact record old transactions commit bits in pg_clog could be
overwritten if they started and committed in that window.

Fix this mess by not performing ExtendCLOG() in HS at all anymore since
it's unneeded and evidently dangerous and by performing subtrans
extensions even before reaching STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_PENDING.

Analysis and patch by Andres Freund. Reported by Christophe Pettus.
Backpatch down to 9.0, like the previous commit that caused this.
2013-11-22 14:45:41 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 1a3d104475 Avoid acquiring spinlock when checking if recovery has finished, for speed.
RecoveryIsInProgress() can be called very frequently. During normal
operation, it just checks a backend-local variable and returns quickly,
but during hot standby, it checks a spinlock-protected shared variable.
Those spinlock acquisitions can become a point of contention on a busy
hot standby system.

Replace the spinlock acquisition with a memory barrier.

Per discussion with Andres Freund, Ants Aasma and Merlin Moncure.
2013-11-22 13:07:23 +02:00
Tom Lane 784e762e88 Support multi-argument UNNEST(), and TABLE() syntax for multiple functions.
This patch adds the ability to write TABLE( function1(), function2(), ...)
as a single FROM-clause entry.  The result is the concatenation of the
first row from each function, followed by the second row from each
function, etc; with NULLs inserted if any function produces fewer rows than
others.  This is believed to be a much more useful behavior than what
Postgres currently does with multiple SRFs in a SELECT list.

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

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

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

Andrew Gierth, reviewed by Zoltán Böszörményi and Heikki Linnakangas, and
significantly revised by me
2013-11-21 19:37:20 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 04eee1fa9e More GIN refactoring.
Split off the portion of ginInsertValue that inserts the tuple to current
level into a separate function, ginPlaceToPage. ginInsertValue's charter
is now to recurse up the tree to insert the downlink, when a page split is
required.

This is in preparation for a patch to change the way incomplete splits are
handled, which will need to do these operations separately. And IMHO makes
the code more readable anyway.
2013-11-20 17:01:33 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 501012631e Refactor the internal GIN B-tree interface for forming a downlink.
This creates a new gin-btree callback function for creating a downlink for
a page. Previously, ginxlog.c duplicated the logic used during normal
operation.
2013-11-20 16:57:41 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 04965ad40e Further GIN refactoring.
Merge some functions that were always called together. Makes the code
little bit more readable.
2013-11-20 16:09:14 +02:00
Robert Haas f1df4731ee Use cstring_to_text_with_len when length is known.
This avoids a potentially-expensive extra call to strlen().

David Rowley
2013-11-18 10:19:00 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4c697d8f48 Count locked pages that don't need vacuuming as scanned.
Previously, if VACUUM skipped vacuuming a page because it's pinned, it
didn't count that page as scanned. However, that meant that relfrozenxid
was not bumped up either, which prevented anti-wraparound vacuum from
doing its job.

Report by Миша Тюрин, analysis and patch by Sergey Burladyn and Jeff Janes.
Backpatch to 9.2, where the skip-locked-pages behavior was introduced.
2013-11-18 09:51:09 +02:00
Tom Lane f901bb50e3 Add make_date() and make_time() functions.
Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Jeevan Chalke and Atri Sharma
2013-11-17 15:06:50 -05:00
Tom Lane 69c8fbac20 Improve performance of numeric sum(), avg(), stddev(), variance(), etc.
This patch improves performance of most built-in aggregates that formerly
used a NUMERIC or NUMERIC array as their transition type; this includes
not only aggregates on numeric inputs, but some aggregates on integer
inputs where overflow of an int8 value is a possibility.  The code now
uses a special-purpose data structure to avoid array construction and
deconstruction overhead, as well as packing and unpacking overhead for
numeric values.

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

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

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

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

Hadi Moshayedi, reviewed by Pavel Stehule and Tomas Vondra
2013-11-16 16:03:40 -05:00
Tom Lane f1f21b2d6f Fix incorrect loop counts in tidbitmap.c.
A couple of places that should have been iterating over WORDS_PER_CHUNK
words were iterating over WORDS_PER_PAGE words instead.  This thinko
accidentally failed to fail, because (at least on common architectures
with default BLCKSZ) WORDS_PER_CHUNK is a bit less than WORDS_PER_PAGE,
and the extra words being looked at were always zero so nothing happened.
Still, it's a bug waiting to happen if anybody ever fools with the
parameters affecting TIDBitmap sizes, and it's a small waste of cycles
too.  So back-patch to all active branches.

Etsuro Fujita
2013-11-15 18:34:14 -05:00
Tom Lane f3b3b8d5be Compute correct em_nullable_relids in get_eclass_for_sort_expr().
Bug #8591 from Claudio Freire demonstrates that get_eclass_for_sort_expr
must be able to compute valid em_nullable_relids for any new equivalence
class members it creates.  I'd worried about this in the commit message
for db9f0e1d9a, but claimed that it wasn't a
problem because multi-member ECs should already exist when it runs.  That
is transparently wrong, though, because this function is also called by
initialize_mergeclause_eclasses, which runs during deconstruct_jointree.
The example given in the bug report (which the new regression test item
is based upon) fails because the COALESCE() expression is first seen by
initialize_mergeclause_eclasses rather than process_equivalence.

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

Back-patch to 9.2, like the previous patch in this area.
2013-11-15 16:46:18 -05:00
Tom Lane 80e3a470ba Minor comment corrections for sequence hashtable patch.
There were enough typos in the comments to annoy me ...
2013-11-15 12:17:12 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 5cb719beee Fix bogus hash table creation.
Andres Freund
2013-11-15 14:23:40 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 21025d4a53 Use a hash table to store current sequence values.
This speeds up nextval() and currval(), when you touch a lot of different
sequences in the same backend.

David Rowley
2013-11-15 12:29:38 +02:00
Robert Haas c46c803f8a Fix relfilenodemap.c's handling of cache invalidations.
The old code entered a new hash table entry first, then scanned
pg_class to determine what value to fill in, and then populated the
entry.  This fails to work properly if a cache invalidation happens
as a result of opening pg_class.  Repair.

Along the way, get rid of the idea of blowing away the entire hash
table as a method of processing invalidations.  Instead, just delete
all the entries one by one.  This is probably not quite as cheap but
it's simpler, and shouldn't happen often.

Andres Freund
2013-11-13 10:52:59 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 07fca603b5 Fix bug in GIN posting tree root creation.
The root page is filled with as many items as fit, and the rest are inserted
using normal insertions. However, I fumbled the variable names, and the code
actually memcpy'd all the items on the page, overflowing the buffer. While
at it, rename the variable to make the distinction more clear.

Reported by Teodor Sigaev. This bug was introduced by my recent
refactorings, so no backpatching required.
2013-11-13 13:47:59 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut aa04b323c3 Move variable closer to where it is used
This avoids an unused variable warning on Windows when building without
asserts

From: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com>
2013-11-13 06:26:27 -05:00
Tom Lane ebefbb5fde Fix failure with whole-row reference to a subquery.
Simple oversight in commit 1cb108efb0 ---
recursively examining a subquery output column is only sane if the
original Var refers to a single output column.  Found by Kevin Grittner.
2013-11-11 16:36:27 -05:00
Tom Lane 0b7e660d6c Fix ruleutils pretty-printing to not generate trailing whitespace.
The pretty-printing logic in ruleutils.c operates by inserting a newline
and some indentation whitespace into strings that are already valid SQL.
This naturally results in leaving some trailing whitespace before the
newline in many cases; which can be annoying when processing the output
with other tools, as complained of by Joe Abbate.  We can fix that in
a pretty localized fashion by deleting any trailing whitespace before
we append a pretty-printing newline.  In addition, we have to modify the
code inserted by commit 2f582f76b1 so that
we also delete trailing whitespace when transposing items from temporary
buffers into the main result string, when a temporary item starts with a
newline.

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

Back-patch to 9.3, because the aforementioned commit resulted in many
more cases of trailing whitespace than had occurred in earlier branches.
2013-11-11 13:36:38 -05:00
Tom Lane 648bd05b13 Re-allow duplicate aliases within aliased JOINs.
Although the SQL spec forbids duplicate table aliases, historically
we've allowed queries like
    SELECT ... FROM tab1 x CROSS JOIN (tab2 x CROSS JOIN tab3 y) z
on the grounds that the aliased join (z) hides the aliases within it,
therefore there is no conflict between the two RTEs named "x".  The
LATERAL patch broke this, on the misguided basis that "x" could be
ambiguous if tab3 were a LATERAL subquery.  To avoid breaking existing
queries, it's better to allow this situation and complain only if
tab3 actually does contain an ambiguous reference.  We need only remove
the check that was throwing an error, because the column lookup code
is already prepared to handle ambiguous references.  Per bug #8444.
2013-11-11 10:42:57 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 001e114b8d Fix whitespace issues found by git diff --check, add gitattributes
Set per file type attributes in .gitattributes to fine-tune whitespace
checks.  With the associated cleanups, the tree is now clean for git
2013-11-10 14:48:29 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas ac4ab97ec0 Fix race condition in GIN posting tree page deletion.
If a page is deleted, and reused for something else, just as a search is
following a rightlink to it from its left sibling, the search would continue
scanning whatever the new contents of the page are. That could lead to
incorrect query results, or even something more curious if the page is
reused for a different kind of a page.

To fix, modify the search algorithm to lock the next page before releasing
the previous one, and refrain from deleting pages from the leftmost branch
of the tree.

Add a new Concurrency section to the README, explaining why this works.
There is a lot more one could say about concurrency in GIN, but that's for
another patch.

Backpatch to all supported versions.
2013-11-08 22:21:42 +02:00
Robert Haas 07cacba983 Add the notion of REPLICA IDENTITY for a table.
Pending patches for logical replication will use this to determine
which columns of a tuple ought to be considered as its candidate key.

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

Because the new code only descends into SubLinks, not SubPlans or
InitPlans, the change only affects the planner's behavior during
prepjointree processing and not later on --- for example, you can still get
it to use a volatile function in an indexqual if you wrap the function in
(SELECT ...).  That's a historical behavior, for sure, but it's reasonable
given that the executor's evaluation rules for subplans don't depend on
whether there are volatile functions inside them.  In any case, we need to
constrain the behavioral change as narrowly as we can to make this
reasonable to back-patch.
2013-11-08 11:36:57 -05:00
Tom Lane 060b22a99a Fix subtly-wrong volatility checking in BeginCopyFrom().
contain_volatile_functions() is best applied to the output of
expression_planner(), not its input, so that insertion of function
default arguments and constant-folding have been done.  (See comments
at CheckMutability, for instance.)  It's perhaps unlikely that anyone
will notice a difference in practice, but still we should do it properly.

In passing, change variable type from Node* to Expr* to reduce the net
number of casts needed.

Noted while perusing uses of contain_volatile_functions().
2013-11-08 08:59:39 -05:00
Tom Lane 20803d7881 Make LOCK_PRINT & PROCLOCK_PRINT expand to ((void) 0) when not in use.
This avoids warnings from more-anal-than-average compilers, and might
prevent hidden syntax problems in the future.

Andres Freund
2013-11-07 19:07:48 -05:00
Kevin Grittner b64b5ccb6a Silence benign warnings from clang version 3.0-6ubuntu3. 2013-11-07 16:35:43 -06:00
Tom Lane c28b289bf3 Prevent display of dropped columns in row constraint violation messages.
ExecBuildSlotValueDescription() printed "null" for each dropped column in
a row being complained of by ExecConstraints().  This has some sanity in
terms of the underlying implementation, but is of course pretty surprising
to users.  To fix, we must pass the target relation's descriptor to
ExecBuildSlotValueDescription(), because the slot descriptor it had been
using doesn't get labeled with attisdropped markers.

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

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

In 9.2 and 9.1, this requires back-porting the tlist_same_exprs() function
introduced in commit 4387cf956b, else we'd
uselessly add a Result node in cases that worked before.  It's rather
tempting to back-patch that whole commit so that we can avoid extra Result
nodes in mainline cases too; but I'll refrain, since that code hasn't
really seen all that much field testing yet.
2013-11-07 13:14:14 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas fde7172d93 Fix setting of right bound at GIN page split.
Broken by my refactoring.
2013-11-07 19:45:07 +02:00
Tom Lane 8dace66e07 Add #ifdef guards for some POSIX error symbols that Windows doesn't like.
Per buildfarm results.  It looks like the older the Windows version, the
more errno codes it hasn't got ...
2013-11-06 20:22:42 -05:00
Tom Lane 8e68816cc2 Be more robust when strerror() doesn't give a useful result.
glibc, at least, is capable of returning "???" instead of anything useful
if it doesn't like the setting of LC_CTYPE.  If this happens, or in the
previously-known case of strerror() returning an empty string, try to
print the C macro name for the error code ("EACCES" etc).  Only if we
don't have the error code in our compiled-in list of popular error codes
(which covers most though not quite all of what's called out in the POSIX
spec) will we fall back to printing a numeric error code.  This should
simplify debugging.

Note that this functionality is currently only provided for %m in backend
ereport/elog messages.  That may be sufficient, since we don't fool with the
locale environment in frontend clients, but it's foreseeable that we might
want similar code in libpq for instance.

There was some talk of back-patching this, but let's see how the buildfarm
likes it first.  It seems likely that at least some of the POSIX-defined
error code symbols don't exist on all platforms.  I don't want to clutter
the entire list with #ifdefs, but we may need more than are here now.

MauMau, edited by me
2013-11-06 15:50:17 -05:00
Tom Lane bb45c64041 Support default arguments and named-argument notation for window functions.
These things didn't work because the planner omitted to do the necessary
preprocessing of a WindowFunc's argument list.  Add the few dozen lines
of code needed to handle that.

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

(Note that these features still don't work for aggregates, and fixing that
case will be harder since we represent aggregate arg lists as target lists
not bare expression lists.  There's no crash risk though because CREATE
AGGREGATE doesn't accept defaults, and we reject named-argument notation
when parsing an aggregate call.)
2013-11-06 13:33:09 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 5829082a57 Keep heap open until new heap generated in RMV.
Early close became apparent when invalidation messages were
processed in a new location under CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS builds, due
to additional locking.

Back-patch to 9.3
2013-11-06 12:27:52 -06:00
Heikki Linnakangas 0ea53256a8 Fix missing argument and function prototypes.
Not sure how I missed these in previous commit.
2013-11-06 11:22:58 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas ecaa4708e5 Misc GIN refactoring.
Merge the isEnoughSpace and placeToPage functions in the b-tree interface
into one function that tries to put a tuple on page, and returns false if
it doesn't fit.

Move createPostingTree function to gindatapage.c, and change its contract
so that it can be passed more items than fit on the root page. It's in a
better position than the callers to know how many items fit.

Move ginMergeItemPointers out of gindatapage.c, into a separate file.

These changes make no difference now, but reduce the footprint of Alexander
Korotkov's upcoming patch to pack item pointers more tightly.
2013-11-06 10:32:09 +02:00
Tom Lane 920c8261d5 Improve the error message given for modifying a window with frame clause.
For rather inscrutable reasons, SQL:2008 disallows copying-and-modifying a
window definition that has any explicit framing clause.  The error message
we gave for this only made sense if the referencing window definition
itself contains an explicit framing clause, which it might well not.
Moreover, in the context of an OVER clause it's not exactly obvious that
"OVER (windowname)" implies copy-and-modify while "OVER windowname" does
not.  This has led to multiple complaints, eg bug #5199 from Iliya
Krapchatov.  Change to a hopefully more intelligible error message, and
in the case where we have just "OVER (windowname)", add a HINT suggesting
that omitting the parentheses will fix it.  Also improve the related
documentation.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-11-05 21:58:08 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 2636ecf78b Lock relation used to generate fresh data for RMV.
The relation should not be accessible to any other process, but it
should be locked for consistency.  Since this is not known to
cause any bug, it will not be back-patch, at least for now.

Per report from Andres Freund
2013-11-05 15:36:33 -06:00
Tom Lane 6331de1d44 Fix some obsolete information in src/backend/optimizer/README.
Constant quals aren't handled the same way they used to be.  Also,
add mention of a couple more major steps in grouping_planner.
Per complaint a couple months back from Etsuro Fujita.
2013-11-05 11:31:35 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 732758db4c Fix breakage of MV column name list usage.
Per bug report from Tomonari Katsumata.

Back-patch to 9.3.
2013-11-04 14:31:07 -06:00
Robert Haas dddc34408a Fix format code used to print dsm request sizes.
Per report from Peter Eisentraut.
2013-11-04 11:22:03 -05:00
Tom Lane e36ce0c7f7 Get rid of more cases of the "must detoast before output function" meme.
I missed that json.c was doing this too, because for some bizarre reason
it wasn't doing it adjacent to the output function call.
2013-11-03 11:55:37 -05:00
Tom Lane b006f4ddb9 Prevent memory leaks from accumulating across printtup() calls.
Historically, printtup() has assumed that it could prevent memory leakage
by pfree'ing the string result of each output function and manually
managing detoasting of toasted values.  This amounts to assuming that
datatype output functions never leak any memory internally; an assumption
we've already decided to be bogus elsewhere, for example in COPY OUT.
range_out in particular is known to leak multiple kilobytes per call, as
noted in bug #8573 from Godfried Vanluffelen.  While we could go in and fix
that leak, it wouldn't be very notationally convenient, and in any case
there have been and undoubtedly will again be other leaks in other output
functions.  So what seems like the best solution is to run the output
functions in a temporary memory context that can be reset after each row,
as we're doing in COPY OUT.  Some quick experimentation suggests this is
actually a tad faster than the retail pfree's anyway.

This patch fixes all the variants of printtup, except for debugtup()
which is used in standalone mode.  It doesn't seem worth worrying
about query-lifespan leaks in standalone mode, and fixing that case
would be a bit tedious since debugtup() doesn't currently have any
startup or shutdown functions.

While at it, remove manual detoast management from several other
output-function call sites that had copied it from printtup().  This
doesn't make a lot of difference right now, but in view of recent
discussions about supporting "non-flattened" Datums, we're going to
want that code gone eventually anyway.

Back-patch to 9.2 where range_out was introduced.  We might eventually
decide to back-patch this further, but in the absence of known major
leaks in older output functions, I'll refrain for now.
2013-11-03 11:33:05 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 2a781d57dc Acquire appropriate locks when rewriting during RMV.
Since the query has not been freshly parsed when executing REFRESH
MATERIALIZED VIEW, locks must be explicitly taken before rewrite.

Backpatch to 9.3.

Andres Freund
2013-11-02 19:18:08 -05:00
Kevin Grittner be420fa02e Fix subquery reference to non-populated MV in CMV.
A subquery reference to a matview should be allowed by CREATE
MATERIALIZED VIEW WITH NO DATA, just like a direct reference is.

Per bug report from Laurent Sartran.

Backpatch to 9.3.
2013-11-02 18:38:17 -05:00
Tom Lane 24ace4053d Retry after buffer locking failure during SPGiST index creation.
The original coding thought this case was impossible, but it can happen
if the bgwriter or checkpointer processes decide to write out an index
page while creation is still proceeding, leading to a bogus "unexpected
spgdoinsert() failure" error.  Problem reported by Jonathan S. Katz.

Teodor Sigaev
2013-11-02 16:45:42 -04:00
Tom Lane bffd1ce92c Ensure all files created for a single BufFile have the same resource owner.
Callers expect that they only have to set the right resource owner when
creating a BufFile, not during subsequent operations on it.  While we could
insist this be fixed at the caller level, it seems more sensible for the
BufFile to take care of it.  Without this, some temp files belonging to
a BufFile can go away too soon, eg at the end of a subtransaction,
leading to errors or crashes.

Reported and fixed by Andres Freund.  Back-patch to all active branches.
2013-11-01 16:09:48 -04:00
Tom Lane 45f64f1bbf Remove CTimeZone/HasCTZSet, root and branch.
These variables no longer have any useful purpose, since there's no reason
to special-case brute force timezones now that we have a valid
session_timezone setting for them.  Remove the variables, and remove the
SET/SHOW TIME ZONE code that deals with them.

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

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

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

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

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

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-11-01 12:13:18 -04:00
Robert Haas cacbdd7810 Use appendStringInfoString instead of appendStringInfo where possible.
This shaves a few cycles, and generally seems like good programming
practice.

David Rowley
2013-10-31 10:55:59 -04:00
Robert Haas 343bb134ea Avoid too-large shift on 32-bit Windows.
Apparently, shifts greater than or equal to the width of the type
are undefined, and can surprisingly produce a non-zero value.

Amit Kapila, with a comment by me.
2013-10-30 09:14:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 9a9473f3cc Prevent using strncpy with src == dest in TupleDescInitEntry.
The C and POSIX standards state that strncpy's behavior is undefined when
source and destination areas overlap.  While it remains dubious whether any
implementations really misbehave when the pointers are exactly equal, some
platforms are now starting to force the issue by complaining when an
undefined call occurs.  (In particular OS X 10.9 has been seen to dump core
here, though the exact set of circumstances needed to trigger that remain
elusive.  Similar behavior can be expected to be optional on Linux and
other platforms in the near future.)  So tweak the code to explicitly do
nothing when nothing need be done.

Back-patch to all active branches.  In HEAD, this also lets us get rid of
an exception in valgrind.supp.

Per discussion of a report from Matthias Schmitt.
2013-10-28 20:49:24 -04:00
Robert Haas d2aecaea15 Modify dynamic shared memory code to use Size rather than uint64.
This is more consistent with what we do elsewhere.
2013-10-28 12:12:06 -04:00
Tom Lane c2b51cf190 Improve documentation about usage of FDW validator functions.
SGML documentation, as well as code comments, failed to note that an FDW's
validator will be applied to foreign-table options for foreign tables using
the FDW.

Etsuro Fujita
2013-10-28 10:28:35 -04:00
Noah Misch c50b7c09d8 Add large object functions catering to SQL callers.
With these, one need no longer manipulate large object descriptors and
extract numeric constants from header files in order to read and write
large object contents from SQL.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Rushabh Lathia.
2013-10-27 22:56:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 43fe90f66a Suppress -0 in the C field of lines computed by line_construct_pts().
It's not entirely clear why some PPC machines are generating -0 here, since
the underlying computation should be exactly 0 - 0.  Perhaps there's some
wider-than-nominal-precision calculations happening?  Anyway, the best way
to avoid platform-dependent results seems to be to explicitly reset -0 to
regular zero.
2013-10-25 15:55:15 -04:00
Tom Lane 3147acd63e Use improved vsnprintf calling logic in more places.
When we are using a C99-compliant vsnprintf implementation (which should be
most places, these days) it is worth the trouble to make use of its report
of how large the buffer needs to be to succeed.  This patch adjusts
stringinfo.c and some miscellaneous usages in pg_dump to do that, relying
on the logic recently added in libpgcommon's psprintf.c.  Since these
places want to know the number of bytes written once we succeed, modify the
API of pvsnprintf() to report that.

There remains near-duplicate logic in pqexpbuffer.c, but since that code
is in libpq, psprintf.c's approach of exit()-on-error isn't appropriate
for use there.  Also note that I didn't bother touching the multitude
of places that call (v)snprintf without any attempt to provide a resizable
buffer.

Release-note-worthy incompatibility: the API of appendStringInfoVA()
changed.  If there's any third-party code that's calling that directly,
it will need tweaking along the same lines as in this patch.

David Rowley and Tom Lane
2013-10-24 21:43:57 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 98c50656ca Increase the number of different values used when seeding random().
When a backend process is forked, we initialize the system's random number
generator with srandom(). The seed used is derived from the backend's pid
and the timestamp. However, we only used the microseconds part of the
timestamp, and it was XORed with the pid, so the total range of different
seed values chosen was 0-999999. That's quite limited.

Change the code to also use the seconds part of the timestamp in the seed,
and shift the microseconds so that all 32 bits of the seed are used.

Honza Horak
2013-10-24 17:00:18 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 138184adc5 Plug memory leak when reloading config file.
The absolute path to config file was not pfreed. There are probably more
small leaks here and there in the config file reload code and assign hooks,
and in practice no-one reloads the config files frequently enough for it to
be a problem, but this one is trivial enough that might as well fix it.

Backpatch to 9.3 where the leak was introduced.
2013-10-24 15:27:40 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas bb598456dc Fix memory leak when an empty ident file is reloaded.
Hari Babu
2013-10-24 14:03:26 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4d6d425ab8 Fix typos in comments. 2013-10-24 11:50:02 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 83eb54001c Fix two bugs in setting the vm bit of empty pages.
Use a critical section when setting the all-visible flag on an empty page,
and WAL-logging it. log_newpage_buffer() contains an assertion that it
must be called inside a critical section, and it's the right thing to do
when modifying a buffer anyway.

Also, the page should be marked dirty before calling log_newpage_buffer(),
per the comment in log_newpage_buffer() and src/backend/access/transam/README.

Patch by Andres Freund, in response to my report. Backpatch to 9.2, like
the patch that introduced these bugs (a6370fd9).
2013-10-23 14:24:37 +03:00
Tom Lane 5f1ab46101 Suppress a couple of compiler warnings seen with older gcc versions.
To wit,
bgworker.c: In function `RegisterDynamicBackgroundWorker':
bgworker.c:761: warning: `generation' might be used uninitialized in this function
dsm_impl.c: In function `dsm_impl_op':
dsm_impl.c:197: warning: control reaches end of non-void function

Neither of these represent actual bugs, but we may as well tweak the code
so that more compilers can tell that.  This won't change the generated code
on compilers that do recognize that the cases are unreachable.
2013-10-22 21:31:57 -04:00
Tom Lane 2c66f9924c Replace pg_asprintf() with psprintf().
This eliminates an awkward coding pattern that's also unnecessarily
inconsistent with backend coding.  psprintf() is now the thing to
use everywhere.
2013-10-22 19:40:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 09a89cb5fc Get rid of use of asprintf() in favor of a more portable implementation.
asprintf(), aside from not being particularly portable, has a fundamentally
badly-designed API; the psprintf() function that was added in passing in
the previous patch has a much better API choice.  Moreover, the NetBSD
implementation that was borrowed for the previous patch doesn't work with
non-C99-compliant vsnprintf, which is something we still have to cope with
on some platforms; and it depends on va_copy which isn't all that portable
either.  Get rid of that code in favor of an implementation similar to what
we've used for many years in stringinfo.c.  Also, move it into libpgcommon
since it's not really libpgport material.

I think this patch will be enough to turn the buildfarm green again, but
there's still cosmetic work left to do, namely get rid of pg_asprintf()
in favor of using psprintf().  That will come in a followon patch.
2013-10-22 18:42:13 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 586a8fc75b Make use of psprintf() in recent changes 2013-10-22 07:04:41 -04:00
Tom Lane 2885881147 Fix blatantly broken record_image_cmp() logic for pass-by-value fields.
Doesn't anybody here pay attention to compiler warnings?
2013-10-22 00:38:53 -04:00
Noah Misch 709170b790 Consistently use unsigned arithmetic for alignment calculations.
This avoids an assumption about the signed number representation.  It is
anticipated to have no functional changes on supported configurations;
many two's complement assumptions remain elsewhere.

Per a suggestion from Andres Freund.
2013-10-20 21:04:52 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 713a9f210d Add libpgcommon to backend gettext source files
This ought to have been done when libpgcommon was split off from
libpgport.
2013-10-19 13:49:05 -04:00
Robert Haas cab5dc5daf Allow only some columns of a view to be auto-updateable.
Previously, unless all columns were auto-updateable, we wouldn't
inserts, updates, or deletes, or at least not without a rule or trigger;
now, we'll allow inserts and updates that target only the auto-updateable
columns, and deletes even if there are no auto-updateable columns at
all provided the view definition is otherwise suitable.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Marko Tiikkaja
2013-10-18 10:35:36 -04:00
Robert Haas 523beaa11b Provide a reliable mechanism for terminating a background worker.
Although previously-introduced APIs allow the process that registers a
background worker to obtain the worker's PID, there's no way to prevent
a worker that is not currently running from being restarted.  This
patch introduces a new API TerminateBackgroundWorker() that prevents
the background worker from being restarted, terminates it if it is
currently running, and causes it to be unregistered if or when it is
not running.

Patch by me.  Review by Michael Paquier and KaiGai Kohei.
2013-10-18 10:23:11 -04:00
Robert Haas ea91a6be89 Remove IRIX port.
Development of IRIX has been discontinued, and support is scheduled
to end in December of 2013.  Therefore, there will be no supported
versions of this operating system by the time PostgreSQL 9.4 is
released.  Furthermore, we have no maintainer for this platform.
2013-10-18 08:14:21 -04:00
Robert Haas 81051a86bc Remove spinlock support for SINIX, Sun3, and NS32K.
All of these platforms are very much obsolete.

As far as I can determine, the last version of SINIX, later renamed
Reliant, occurred some time between 2002 and 2005.

The last release of SunOS that would run on a sun3 was released in
November of 1991; the last release of OpenBSD which supported that
platform was in 2001.  The highest clock speed of any processor in
the family was 25MHz.

The NS32K (national semiconductor 320xx) architecture was retired
in 1990.

Support can be re-added if a maintainer emerges for any of these
platforms, but it seems unlikely.

Reviewed by Andres Freund.
2013-10-17 12:02:05 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 86029b31e5 Silence compiler warning when SSL not in use
Per Jaime Casanova and Vik Fearing
2013-10-17 11:28:50 -03:00
Bruce Momjian 7778ddc7a2 Allow 5+ digit years for non-ISO timestamp/date strings, where appropriate
Report from Haribabu Kommi
2013-10-16 13:22:55 -04:00
Robert Haas e515861367 In dsm_impl_windows, don't error out when the segment already exists.
This is the behavior of the other implementations, and the behavior
expected by the callers of this function.

Amit Kapila
2013-10-14 11:48:49 -04:00
Robert Haas 05a0283e7a Fix details missed by dynamic shared memory patch.
Additional documentation update, and a comment fix.

Both issues reported by Amit Kapila.
2013-10-14 08:00:26 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 5b6d08cd29 Add use of asprintf()
Add asprintf(), pg_asprintf(), and psprintf() to simplify string
allocation and composition.  Replacement implementations taken from
NetBSD.

Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Asif Naeem <anaeem.it@gmail.com>
2013-10-13 00:09:18 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 4cbb646334 Fix several possibly non-portable gaffs in record_image_ops.
Sparc machines in the buildfarm were made happy by the previous
fix, but PowerPC machines still are still failing.  Hopefully this
will cure that.
2013-10-11 13:02:52 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera ada01014d4 Use $(PERL) to invoke duplicate_oids
Per buildfarm failure reported by smilodon
2013-10-10 23:45:38 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 31cf1a1a43 Rework SSL renegotiation code
The existing renegotiation code was home for several bugs: it might
erroneously report that renegotiation had failed; it might try to
execute another renegotiation while the previous one was pending; it
failed to terminate the connection if the renegotiation never actually
took place; if a renegotiation was started, the byte count was reset,
even if the renegotiation wasn't completed (this isn't good from a
security perspective because it means continuing to use a session that
should be considered compromised due to volume of data transferred.)

The new code is structured to avoid these pitfalls: renegotiation is
started a little earlier than the limit has expired; the handshake
sequence is retried until it has actually returned successfully, and no
more than that, but if it fails too many times, the connection is
closed.  The byte count is reset only when the renegotiation has
succeeded, and if the renegotiation byte count limit expires, the
connection is terminated.

This commit only touches the master branch, because some of the changes
are controversial.  If everything goes well, a back-patch might be
considered.

Per discussion started by message
20130710212017.GB4941@eldon.alvh.no-ip.org
2013-10-10 23:45:20 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut 5dd41f3574 Remove maintainer-check target, fold into normal build
make maintainer-check was obscure and rarely called in practice, and
many breakages were missed.  Fold everything that make maintainer-check
used to do into the normal build.  Specifically:

- Call duplicate_oids when genbki.pl is called.

- Check for tabs in SGML files when the documentation is built.

- Run msgfmt with the -c option during the regular build.  Add an
  additional configure check to see whether we are using the GNU
  version.  (make maintainer-check probably used to fail with non-GNU
  msgfmt.)

Keep maintainer-check as around as phony target for the time being in
case anyone is calling it.  But it won't do anything anymore.
2013-10-10 20:11:56 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 15e46fd1dd Fix bug in record_image_ops on big endian machines.
The buildfarm pointed out the problem.

Fix based on suggestion by Robert Haas.
2013-10-10 11:25:30 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 4d212bac17 json_typeof function.
Andrew Tipton.
2013-10-10 12:21:59 -04:00
Robert Haas 4b7b9a7904 Fix incorrect use of shm_unlink where unlink should be used.
Per buildfarm.
2013-10-10 10:57:10 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 261c7d4b65 Revive line type
Change the input/output format to {A,B,C}, to match the internal
representation.

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

Reviewed-by: rui hua <365507506hua@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeevan Chalke <jeevan.chalke@enterprisedb.com>
2013-10-09 22:34:38 -04:00
Robert Haas 0ac5e5a7e1 Allow dynamic allocation of shared memory segments.
Patch by myself and Amit Kapila.  Design help from Noah Misch.  Review
by Andres Freund.
2013-10-09 21:05:02 -04:00
Kevin Grittner f566515192 Add record_image_ops opclass for matview concurrent refresh.
REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW CONCURRENTLY was broken for any matview
containing a column of a type without a default btree operator
class.  It also did not produce results consistent with a non-
concurrent REFRESH or a normal view if any column was of a type
which allowed user-visible differences between values which
compared as equal according to the type's default btree opclass.
Concurrent matview refresh was modified to use the new operators
to solve these problems.

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

Reviewed by Steve Singer, who suggested some of the doc language.
2013-10-09 14:26:09 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 0c6b675076 Centralize effective_cache_size default setting 2013-10-09 08:33:12 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 96dfa6ec0d Adjust the effective_cache_size default for standalone backends 2013-10-08 23:53:39 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 6b82f78ff9 Again move function where we set effective_cache_size's default 2013-10-08 23:12:45 -04:00
Bruce Momjian cbafd6618a Move new effective_cache_size function
Previously set_default_effective_cache_size() could not handle fork,
non-fork, and bootstrap cases.
2013-10-08 22:41:23 -04:00
Bruce Momjian bf46524b31 Fix C comment in check_effective_cache_size() 2013-10-08 19:25:26 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 6648775028 Update postgres.conf.sample for effective_cache_size's new default 2013-10-08 12:50:05 -04:00
Bruce Momjian ee1e5662d8 Auto-tune effective_cache size to be 4x shared buffers 2013-10-08 12:12:24 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 5962519b36 TYPEALIGN doesn't work on int64 on 32-bit platforms.
The TYPEALIGN macro, and the related ones like MAXALIGN, don't work with
values larger than intptr_t, because TYPEALIGN casts the argument to
intptr_t to do the arithmetic. That's not a problem when dealing with
pointers or lengths or offsets related to pointers, but the XLogInsert
scaling patch added a call to MAXALIGN with an XLogRecPtr argument.

To fix, add wider variants of the macros, called TYPEALIGN64 and MAXALIGN64,
which are just like the existing variants but work with uint64 instead of
intptr_t.

Report and patch by David Rowley, analysis by Andres Freund.
2013-10-08 01:59:57 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 81fbbfe335 Fix bugs in SSI tuple locking.
1. In heap_hot_search_buffer(), the PredicateLockTuple() call is passed
wrong offset number. heapTuple->t_self is set to the tid of the first
tuple in the chain that's visited, not the one actually being read.

2. CheckForSerializableConflictIn() uses the tuple's t_ctid field
instead of t_self to check for exiting predicate locks on the tuple. If
the tuple was updated, but the updater rolled back, t_ctid points to the
aborted dead tuple.

Reported by Hannu Krosing. Backpatch to 9.1.
2013-10-08 00:18:43 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 0b109c822b Translation updates 2013-10-07 16:51:52 -04:00
Robert Haas 16a906f535 Make DISCARD SEQUENCES also discard the last used sequence.
Otherwise, we access already-freed memory.  Oops.

Report by Michael Paquier.  Fix by me.
2013-10-07 15:55:56 -04:00
Kevin Grittner c01262a824 Eliminate xmin from hash tag for predicate locks on heap tuples.
If a tuple was frozen while its predicate locks mattered,
read-write dependencies could be missed, resulting in failure to
detect conflicts which could lead to anomalies in committed
serializable transactions.

This field was added to the tag when we still thought that it was
necessary to carry locks forward to a new version of an updated
row.  That was later proven to be unnecessary, which allowed
simplification of the code, but elimination of xmin from the tag
was missed at the time.

Per report and analysis by Heikki Linnakangas.
Backpatch to 9.1.
2013-10-07 14:16:54 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera bf2617981c Fix various bugs in postmaster SIGKILL processing
Clamp the minimum sleep time during immediate shutdown or crash to a
minimum of zero, not a maximum of one second.  The previous code could
result in a negative sleep time, leading to failure in select() calls.

Also, on crash recovery, reset AbortStartTime as soon as SIGKILL is sent
or abort processing has commenced instead of waiting until the startup
process completes.  Reset AbortStartTime as soon as SIGKILL is sent,
too, to avoid doing that repeatedly.

Per trouble report from Jeff Janes on
CAMkU=1xd3=wFqZwwuXPWe4BQs3h1seYo8LV9JtSjW5RodoPxMg@mail.gmail.com

Author: MauMau
2013-10-05 23:52:04 -03:00
Bruce Momjian a54141aebc Issue error on SET outside transaction block in some cases
Issue error for SET LOCAL/CONSTRAINTS/TRANSACTION outside a transaction
block, as they have no effect.

Per suggestion from Morten Hustveit
2013-10-04 13:50:28 -04:00
Robert Haas 0f1ef79095 Fix silly thinko in ResetSequenceCaches.
Report from Kevin Hale Boyes.
2013-10-03 20:17:51 -04:00
Robert Haas d90ced8bb2 Add DISCARD SEQUENCES command.
DISCARD ALL will now discard cached sequence information, as well.

Fabrízio de Royes Mello, reviewed by Zoltán Böszörményi, with some
further tweaks by me.
2013-10-03 16:23:31 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas c2b175b948 Minor GIN code refactoring.
It makes for cleaner code to have separate Get/Add functions for PostingItems
and ItemPointers.  A few callsites that have to deal with both types need to
be duplicated because of this, but all the callers have to know which one
they're dealing with anyway. Overall, this reduces the amount of casting
required.

Extracted from Alexander Korotkov's larger patch to change the data page
format.
2013-10-03 11:51:31 +03:00
Bruce Momjian d50f281210 Adjust C comments that would be wrap-able. 2013-10-01 19:45:01 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 15732b34e8 Add WaitForLockers in lmgr, refactoring index.c code
This is in support of a future REINDEX CONCURRENTLY feature.

Michael Paquier
2013-10-01 17:57:01 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas ee01d848f3 In bms_add_member(), use repalloc() if the bms needs to be enlarged.
Previously bms_add_member() would palloc a whole-new copy of the existing
set, copy the words, and pfree the old one. repalloc() is potentially much
faster, and more importantly, this is less surprising if CurrentMemoryContext
is not the same as the context the old set is in. bms_add_member() still
allocates a new bitmapset in CurrentMemoryContext if NULL is passed as
argument, but that is a lot less likely to induce bugs.

Nicholas White.
2013-09-30 16:54:03 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 357f752138 Fix snapshot leak if lo_open called on non-existent object.
lo_open registers the currently active snapshot, and checks if the
large object exists after that. Normally, snapshots registered by lo_open
are unregistered at end of transaction when the lo descriptor is closed, but
if we error out before the lo descriptor is added to the list of open
descriptors, it is leaked. Fix by moving the snapshot registration to after
checking if the large object exists.

Reported by Pavel Stehule. Backpatch to 8.4. The snapshot registration
system was introduced in 8.4, so prior versions are not affected (and not
supported, anyway).
2013-09-30 12:53:14 +03:00
Robert Haas 4334639f4b Allow printf-style padding specifications in log_line_prefix.
David Rowley, after a suggestion from Heikki Linnakangas.  Reviewed by
Albe Laurenz, and further edited by me.
2013-09-26 17:56:31 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas adaba2751f Fix spurious warning after vacuuming a page on a table with no indexes.
There is a rare race condition, when a transaction that inserted a tuple
aborts while vacuum is processing the page containing the inserted tuple.
Vacuum prunes the page first, which normally removes any dead tuples, but
if the inserting transaction aborts right after that, the loop after
pruning will see a dead tuple and remove it instead. That's OK, but if the
page is on a table with no indexes, and the page becomes completely empty
after removing the dead tuple (or tuples) on it, it will be immediately
marked as all-visible. That's OK, but the sanity check in vacuum would
throw a warning because it thinks that the page contains dead tuples and
was nevertheless marked as all-visible, even though it just vacuumed away
the dead tuples and so it doesn't actually contain any.

Spotted this while reading the code. It's difficult to hit the race
condition otherwise, but can be done by putting a breakpoint after the
heap_page_prune() call.

Backpatch all the way to 8.4, where this code first appeared.
2013-09-26 11:31:53 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 77ae7f7c35 Plug memory leak in range_cmp function.
B-tree operators are not allowed to leak memory into the current memory
context. Range_cmp leaked detoasted copies of the arguments. That caused
a quick out-of-memory error when creating an index on a range column.

Reported by Marian Krucina, bug #8468.
2013-09-25 16:02:00 +03:00
Alvaro Herrera b2fc4d6142 Fix pgindent comment breakage 2013-09-24 18:20:37 -03:00
Robert Haas ba3d39c969 Don't allow system columns in CHECK constraints, except tableoid.
Previously, arbitray system columns could be mentioned in table
constraints, but they were not correctly checked at runtime, because
the values weren't actually set correctly in the tuple.  Since it
seems easy enough to initialize the table OID properly, do that,
and continue allowing that column, but disallow the rest unless and
until someone figures out a way to make them work properly.

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

Amit Kapila, reviewed by Rushabh Lathia, with doc changes by me.
2013-09-23 13:31:22 -04:00
Robert Haas 496439d943 Fix compiler warning in WaitForBackgroundWorkerStartup().
Per complaint from Andrew Gierth.
2013-09-19 13:00:17 -04:00
Robert Haas 86a174bff0 Typo fix.
Etsuro Fujita
2013-09-18 08:57:44 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 1247ea28cb Remove `proc` argument from LockCheckConflicts
This has been unused since commit 8563ccae2c.

Noted by Antonin Houska
2013-09-16 22:14:14 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera dd778e9d88 Rename various "freeze multixact" variables
It seems to make more sense to use "cutoff multixact" terminology
throughout the backend code; "freeze" is associated with replacing of an
Xid with FrozenTransactionId, which is not what we do for MultiXactIds.

Andres Freund
Some adjustments by Álvaro Herrera
2013-09-16 15:47:31 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 0892ecbc01 Add a GUC to report whether data page checksums are enabled.
Bernd Helmle
2013-09-16 14:36:01 +03:00
Noah Misch d41cb869aa Ignore interrupts during quickdie().
Once the administrator has called for an immediate shutdown or a backend
crash has triggered a reinitialization, no mere SIGINT or SIGTERM should
change that course.  Such derailment remains possible when the signal
arrives before quickdie() blocks signals.  That being a narrow race
affecting most PostgreSQL signal handlers in some way, leave it for
another patch.  Back-patch this to all supported versions.
2013-09-11 20:10:15 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut b34f8f409b Show schemas in information_schema.schemata that the current has access to
Before, it would only show schemas that the current user owns.  Per
discussion, the new behavior is more useful and consistent for PostgreSQL.
2013-09-09 22:25:37 -04:00
Robert Haas 71901ab6da Introduce InvalidCommandId.
This allows a 32-bit field to represent an *optional* command ID
without a separate flag bit.

Andres Freund
2013-09-09 16:25:29 -04:00
Noah Misch b8104730c8 Don't VALGRIND_PRINTF() each query string.
Doing so was helpful for some Valgrind usage and distracting for other
usage.  One can achieve the same effect by changing log_statement and
pointing both PostgreSQL and Valgrind logging to stderr.

Per gripe from Andres Freund.
2013-09-06 19:42:00 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 277607d600 Eliminate pg_rewrite.ev_attr column and related dead code.
Commit 95ef6a3448 removed the
ability to create rules on an individual column as of 7.3, but
left some residual code which has since been useless.  This cleans
up that dead code without any change in behavior other than
dropping the useless column from the catalog.
2013-09-05 14:03:43 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 20cb18db46 Make catalog cache hash tables resizeable.
If the hash table backing a catalog cache becomes too full (fillfactor > 2),
enlarge it. A new buckets array, double the size of the old, is allocated,
and all entries in the old hash are moved to the right bucket in the new
hash.

This has two benefits. First, cache lookups don't get so expensive when
there are lots of entries in a cache, like if you access hundreds of
thousands of tables. Second, we can make the (initial) sizes of the caches
much smaller, which saves memory.

This patch dials down the initial sizes of the catcaches. The new sizes are
chosen so that a backend that only runs a few basic queries still won't need
to enlarge any of them.
2013-09-05 20:20:03 +03:00
Jeff Davis b1892aaeaa Revert WAL posix_fallocate() patches.
This reverts commit 269e780822
and commit 5b571bb8c8.

Unfortunately, the initial patch had insufficient performance testing,
and resulted in a regression.

Per report by Thom Brown.
2013-09-04 23:43:41 -07:00
Bruce Momjian f5c2f5a8f6 Add GUC descriptions for compile-time postgresql.conf settings
Previous text was "No description available".

Tianyin Xu
2013-09-04 17:44:04 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 375d8526f2 Keep heavily-contended fields in XLogCtlInsert on different cache lines.
Performance testing shows that if the insertpos_lck spinlock and the fields
that it protects are on the same cache line with other variables that are
frequently accessed, the false sharing can hurt performance a lot. Keep
them apart by adding some padding.
2013-09-04 23:14:33 +03:00
Robert Haas cc52d5b33f Expose fsync_fname as a public API.
Andres Freund
2013-09-04 11:15:00 -04:00
Tom Lane 0c66a22377 Update comments concerning PGC_S_TEST.
This GUC context value was once only used by ALTER DATABASE SET and
ALTER USER SET.  That's not true anymore, though, so rewrite the
comments to be a bit more general.

Patch in HEAD only, since this is just an internal documentation issue.
2013-09-03 18:56:22 -04:00
Tom Lane 546f7c2e38 Don't fail for bad GUCs in CREATE FUNCTION with check_function_bodies off.
The previous coding attempted to activate all the GUC settings specified
in SET clauses, so that the function validator could operate in the GUC
environment expected by the function body.  However, this is problematic
when restoring a dump, since the SET clauses might refer to database
objects that don't exist yet.  We already have the parameter
check_function_bodies that's meant to prevent forward references in
function definitions from breaking dumps, so let's change CREATE FUNCTION
to not install the SET values if check_function_bodies is off.

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

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

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

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

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

initdb forced because of new aggvariadic field in Aggref parse nodes.
2013-09-03 17:08:46 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas a93bdfc711 Fix typo in comment.
Also line-wrap an over-wide line in a comment that's ignored by pgindent.
2013-09-03 13:17:09 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut 6a007fa1eb Translation updates 2013-09-02 02:43:18 -04:00
Tom Lane 8e2b71d2d0 Reset the binary heap in MergeAppend rescans.
Failing to do so can cause queries to return wrong data, error out or crash.
This requires adding a new binaryheap_reset() method to binaryheap.c,
but that probably should have been there anyway.

Per bug #8410 from Terje Elde.  Diagnosis and patch by Andres Freund.
2013-08-30 19:15:21 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 9381cb5229 Make error wording more consistent 2013-08-29 12:42:28 -04:00
Robert Haas 090d0f2050 Allow discovery of whether a dynamic background worker is running.
Using the infrastructure provided by this patch, it's possible either
to wait for the startup of a dynamically-registered background worker,
or to poll the status of such a worker without waiting.  In either
case, the current PID of the worker process can also be obtained.
As usual, worker_spi is updated to demonstrate the new functionality.

Patch by me.  Review by Andres Freund.
2013-08-28 14:08:13 -04:00
Robert Haas c9e2e2db5c Partially restore comments discussing enum renumbering hazards.
As noted by Tom Lane, commit 813fb03155
was overly optimistic about how safe it is to concurrently change
enumsortorder values under MVCC catalog scan semantics.  Restore
some of the previous text, with hopefully-correct adjustments for
the new state of play.
2013-08-28 13:21:08 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera e246cfc95f Initialize cached OID to Invalid in new hash entries
Andres Freund; bug detected by valgrind
2013-08-27 14:53:17 -04:00
Tom Lane 2aac3399ae Account better for planning cost when choosing whether to use custom plans.
The previous coding in plancache.c essentially used 10% of the estimated
runtime as its cost estimate for planning.  This can be pretty bogus,
especially when the estimated runtime is very small, such as in a simple
expression plan created by plpgsql, or a simple INSERT ... VALUES.

While we don't have a really good handle on how planning time compares
to runtime, it seems reasonable to use an estimate based on the number of
relations referenced in the query, with a rather large multiplier.  This
patch uses 1000 * cpu_operator_cost * (nrelations + 1), so that even a
trivial query will be charged 1000 * cpu_operator_cost for planning.
This should address the problem reported by Marc Cousin and others that
9.2 and up prefer custom plans in cases where the planning time greatly
exceeds what can be saved.
2013-08-24 15:14:17 -04:00
Magnus Hagander db4ef73760 Don't crash when pg_xlog is empty and pg_basebackup -x is used
The backup will not work (without a logarchive, and that's the whole
point of -x) in this case, this patch just changes it to throw an
error instead of crashing when this happens.

Noticed and diagnosed by TAKATSUKA Haruka
2013-08-24 17:13:49 +02:00
Tom Lane fcf9ecad57 In locate_grouping_columns(), don't expect an exact match of Var typmods.
It's possible that inlining of SQL functions (or perhaps other changes?)
has exposed typmod information not known at parse time.  In such cases,
Vars generated by query_planner might have valid typmod values while the
original grouping columns only have typmod -1.  This isn't a semantic
problem since the behavior of grouping only depends on type not typmod,
but it breaks locate_grouping_columns' use of tlist_member to locate the
matching entry in query_planner's result tlist.

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

Per bug #8393 from Evan Martin.  The added regression test case is
basically the same as his example.  This has been broken for a very long
time, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-08-23 17:30:53 -04:00
Tom Lane 3454876314 Fix hash table size estimation error in choose_hashed_distinct().
We should account for the per-group hashtable entry overhead when
considering whether to use a hash aggregate to implement DISTINCT.  The
comparable logic in choose_hashed_grouping() gets this right, but I think
I omitted it here in the mistaken belief that there would be no overhead
if there were no aggregate functions to be evaluated.  This can result in
more than 2X underestimate of the hash table size, if the tuples being
aggregated aren't very wide.  Per report from Tomas Vondra.

This bug is of long standing, but per discussion we'll only back-patch into
9.3.  Changing the estimation behavior in stable branches seems to carry too
much risk of destabilizing plan choices for already-tuned applications.
2013-08-21 13:38:34 -04:00
Tom Lane 20fe870753 Be more wary of unwanted whitespace in pgstat_reset_remove_files().
sscanf isn't the easiest thing to use for exact pattern checks ...
also, don't use strncmp where strcmp will do.
2013-08-19 19:36:04 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera f9b50b7c18 Fix removal of files in pgstats directories
Instead of deleting all files in stats_temp_directory and the permanent
directory on a crash, only remove those files that match the pattern of
files we actually write in them, to avoid possibly clobbering existing
unrelated contents of the temporary directory.  Per complaint from Jeff
Janes, and subsequent discussion, starting at message
CAMkU=1z9+7RsDODnT4=cDFBRBp8wYQbd_qsLcMtKEf-oFwuOdQ@mail.gmail.com

Also, fix a bug in the same routine to avoid removing files from the
permanent directory twice (instead of once from that directory and then
from the temporary directory), also per report from Jeff Janes, in
message
CAMkU=1wbk947=-pAosDMX5VC+sQw9W4ttq6RM9rXu=MjNeEQKA@mail.gmail.com
2013-08-19 17:48:17 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3619a20d33 Rename the "fast_promote" file to just "promote".
This keeps the usual trigger file name unchanged from 9.2, avoiding nasty
issues if you use a pre-9.3 pg_ctl binary with a 9.3 server or vice versa.
The fallback behavior of creating a full checkpoint before starting up is now
triggered by a file called "fallback_promote". That can be useful for
debugging purposes, but we don't expect any users to have to resort to that
and we might want to remove that in the future, which is why the fallback
mechanism is undocumented.
2013-08-19 20:59:51 +03:00
Tom Lane c64de21e96 Fix qual-clause-misplacement issues with pulled-up LATERAL subqueries.
In an example such as
SELECT * FROM
  i LEFT JOIN LATERAL (SELECT * FROM j WHERE i.n = j.n) j ON true;
it is safe to pull up the LATERAL subquery into its parent, but we must
then treat the "i.n = j.n" clause as a qual clause of the LEFT JOIN.  The
previous coding in deconstruct_recurse mistakenly labeled the clause as
"is_pushed_down", resulting in wrong semantics if the clause were applied
at the join node, as per an example submitted awhile ago by Jeremy Evans.
To fix, postpone processing of such clauses until we return back up to
the appropriate recursion depth in deconstruct_recurse.

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

A regression test case equivalent to Jeremy's example was already in my
commit of yesterday, but was giving the wrong results because of this
bug.  This patch fixes the expected output for that, and also adds a
test case for the second problem.
2013-08-19 13:19:41 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 78e1220104 Fix pg_upgrade failure from servers older than 9.3
When upgrading from servers of versions 9.2 and older, and MultiXactIds
have been used in the old server beyond the first page (that is, 2048
multis or more in the default 8kB-page build), pg_upgrade would set the
next multixact offset to use beyond what has been allocated in the new
cluster.  This would cause a failure the first time the new cluster
needs to use this value, because the pg_multixact/offsets/ file wouldn't
exist or wouldn't be large enough.  To fix, ensure that the transient
server instances launched by pg_upgrade extend the file as necessary.

Per report from Jesse Denardo in
CANiVXAj4c88YqipsyFQPboqMudnjcNTdB3pqe8ReXqAFQ=HXyA@mail.gmail.com
2013-08-19 12:56:18 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a2f2e902b8 Translation updates 2013-08-18 23:41:03 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 28154bb23b Remove relcache entry invalidation in REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW.
This was added as part of the attempt to support unlogged matviews
along with a populated status.  It got missed when unlogged
support was removed pre-commit.

Noticed by Noah Misch.  Back-patched to 9.3 branch.
2013-08-18 16:19:22 -05:00
Tom Lane f1d5fce7cf Fix thinko in comment. 2013-08-17 20:36:29 -04:00
Tom Lane 9e7e29c75a Fix planner problems with LATERAL references in PlaceHolderVars.
The planner largely failed to consider the possibility that a
PlaceHolderVar's expression might contain a lateral reference to a Var
coming from somewhere outside the PHV's syntactic scope.  We had a previous
report of a problem in this area, which I tried to fix in a quick-hack way
in commit 4da6439bd8, but Antonin Houska
pointed out that there were still some problems, and investigation turned
up other issues.  This patch largely reverts that commit in favor of a more
thoroughly thought-through solution.  The new theory is that a PHV's
ph_eval_at level cannot be higher than its original syntactic level.  If it
contains lateral references, those don't change the ph_eval_at level, but
rather they create a lateral-reference requirement for the ph_eval_at join
relation.  The code in joinpath.c needs to handle that.

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

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

This patch doesn't fix the original join-qual-placement problem reported by
Jeremy Evans (and indeed, one of the new regression test cases shows the
wrong answer because of that).  But the PlaceHolderVar problems need to be
fixed before that issue can be addressed, so committing this separately
seems reasonable.
2013-08-17 20:22:37 -04:00
Robert Haas 2dee7998f9 Move more bgworker code to bgworker.c; also, some renaming.
Per discussion on pgsql-hackers.

Michael Paquier, slightly modified by me.  Original suggestion
from Amit Kapila.
2013-08-16 15:31:28 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 05cbce6f30 Fix typo in comment. 2013-08-16 16:26:22 +03:00
Kevin Grittner 3f78b1715c Don't allow ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW ADD UNIQUE.
Was accidentally allowed, but not documented and lacked support
for rename or drop once created.

Per report from Noah Misch.
2013-08-15 13:14:48 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 229fb58d4f Treat timeline IDs as unsigned in replication parser
Timeline IDs are unsigned ints everywhere, except the replication parser
treated them as signed ints.
2013-08-14 23:18:49 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 32f7c0ae17 Improve error message when view is not updatable
Avoid using the term "updatable" in confusing ways.  Suggest a trigger
first, before a rule.
2013-08-14 23:02:59 -04:00
Tom Lane 1b1d3d92c3 Remove ph_may_need from PlaceHolderInfo, with attendant simplifications.
The planner logic that attempted to make a preliminary estimate of the
ph_needed levels for PlaceHolderVars seems to be completely broken by
lateral references.  Fortunately, the potential join order optimization
that this code supported seems to be of relatively little value in
practice; so let's just get rid of it rather than trying to fix it.

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

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

Back-patch to 9.3.  The problem case can't arise without LATERAL, so
no need to touch older branches.
2013-08-14 18:38:47 -04:00
Kevin Grittner e2cd368678 Remove Assert that matview is not in system schema from REFRESH.
We don't want to prevent an extension which creates a matview from
being installed in pg_catalog.

Issue was raised by Hitoshi Harada.
Backpatched to 9.3.
2013-08-14 12:36:55 -05:00
Tom Lane 3d5282c6f0 Emit a log message if output is about to be redirected away from stderr.
We've seen multiple cases of people looking at the postmaster's original
stderr output to try to diagnose problems, not realizing/remembering that
their logging configuration is set up to send log messages somewhere else.
This seems particularly likely to happen in prepackaged distributions,
since many packagers patch the code to change the factory-standard logging
configuration to something more in line with their platform conventions.

In hopes of reducing confusion, emit a LOG message about this at the point
in startup where we are about to switch log output away from the original
stderr, providing a pointer to where to look instead.  This message will
appear as the last thing in the original stderr output.  (We might later
also try to emit such link messages when logging parameters are changed
on-the-fly; but that case seems to be both noticeably harder to do nicely,
and much less frequently a problem in practice.)

Per discussion, back-patch to 9.3 but not further.
2013-08-13 15:24:52 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 072457b360 Message punctuation and pluralization fixes 2013-08-09 08:02:44 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 9d775d8894 Message style improvements 2013-08-07 22:48:40 -04:00
Fujii Masao 91c3613d37 Fix assertion failure by an immediate shutdown.
In PM_WAIT_DEAD_END state, checkpointer process must be dead already.
But an immediate shutdown could make postmaster's state machine
transition to PM_WAIT_DEAD_END state even if checkpointer process is
still running,  and which caused assertion failure. This bug was introduced
in commit 457d6cf049.

This patch ensures that postmaster's state machine doesn't transition to
PM_WAIT_DEAD_END state in an immediate shutdown while checkpointer
process is running.
2013-08-08 02:48:53 +09:00
Tom Lane 3ced8837db Simplify query_planner's API by having it return the top-level RelOptInfo.
Formerly, query_planner returned one or possibly two Paths for the topmost
join relation, so that grouping_planner didn't see the join RelOptInfo
(at least not directly; it didn't have any hesitation about examining
cheapest_path->parent, though).  However, correct selection of the Paths
involved a significant amount of coupling between query_planner and
grouping_planner, a problem which has gotten worse over time.  It seems
best to give up on this API choice and instead return the topmost
RelOptInfo explicitly.  Then grouping_planner can pull out the Paths it
wants from the rel's path list.  In this way we can remove all knowledge
of grouping behaviors from query_planner.

The only real benefit of the old way is that in the case of an empty
FROM clause, we never made any RelOptInfos at all, just a Path.  Now
we have to gin up a dummy RelOptInfo to represent the empty FROM clause.
That's not a very big deal though.

While at it, simplify query_planner's API a bit more by having the caller
set up root->tuple_fraction and root->limit_tuples, rather than passing
those values as separate parameters.  Since query_planner no longer does
anything with either value, requiring it to fill the PlannerInfo fields
seemed pretty arbitrary.

This patch just rearranges code; it doesn't (intentionally) change any
behaviors.  Followup patches will do more interesting things.
2013-08-05 15:01:09 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 841c29c8b3 Various cleanups for REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW CONCURRENTLY.
Open and lock each index before checking definition in RMVC.  The
ExclusiveLock on the related table is not viewed as sufficient to
ensure that no changes are made to the index definition, and
invalidation messages from other backends might have been missed.
Additionally, use RelationGetIndexExpressions() and check for NIL
rather than doing our own loop.

Protect against redefinition of tid and rowvar operators in RMVC.
While working on this, noticed that the fixes for bugs found during
the CF made the UPDATE statement useless, since no rows could
qualify for that treatment any more.  Ripping out code to support
the UPDATE statement simplified the operator cleanups.

Change slightly confusing local field name.

Use meaningful alias names on queries in refresh_by_match_merge().

Per concerns of raised by Andres Freund and comments and
suggestions from Noah Misch.  Some additional issues remain, which
will be addressed separately.
2013-08-05 09:57:56 -05:00
Tom Lane 221e92f64c Make sure float4in/float8in accept all standard spellings of "infinity".
The C99 and POSIX standards require strtod() to accept all these spellings
(case-insensitively): "inf", "+inf", "-inf", "infinity", "+infinity",
"-infinity".  However, pre-C99 systems might accept only some or none of
these, and apparently Windows still doesn't accept "inf".  To avoid
surprising cross-platform behavioral differences, manually check for each
of these spellings if strtod() fails.  We were previously handling just
"infinity" and "-infinity" that way, but since C99 is most of the world
now, it seems likely that applications are expecting all these spellings
to work.

Per bug #8355 from Basil Peace.  It turns out this fix won't actually
resolve his problem, because Python isn't being this careful; but that
doesn't mean we shouldn't be.
2013-08-03 12:40:27 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 706f9dd914 Fix old visibility bug in HeapTupleSatisfiesDirty
If a tuple is locked but not updated by a concurrent transaction,
HeapTupleSatisfiesDirty would return that transaction's Xid in xmax,
causing callers to wait on it, when it is not necessary (in fact, if the
other transaction had used a multixact instead of a plain Xid to mark
the tuple, HeapTupleSatisfiesDirty would have behave differently and
*not* returned the Xmax).

This bug was introduced in commit 3f7fbf85dc, dated December 1998,
so it's almost 15 years old now.  However, it's hard to see this
misbehave, because before we had NOWAIT the only consequence of this is
that transactions would wait for slightly more time than necessary; so
it's not surprising that this hasn't been reported yet.

Craig Ringer and Andres Freund
2013-08-02 17:02:36 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 88c556680c Fix crash in error report of invalid tuple lock
My tweak of these error messages in commit c359a1b082 contained the
thinko that a query would always have rowMarks set for a query
containing a locking clause.  Not so: when declaring a cursor, for
instance, rowMarks isn't set at the point we're checking, so we'd be
dereferencing a NULL pointer.

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

Per report from Robert Haas.
2013-08-02 13:18:37 -04:00
Robert Haas 05ee328d66 Fix typo in comment.
Etsuro Fujita
2013-08-02 09:15:42 -04:00
Kevin Grittner f31c149f13 Improve comments for IncrementalMaintenance DML enabling functions.
Move the static functions after the comment and expand the comment.

Per complaint from Andres Freund, although using different comment
text.
2013-08-01 14:31:09 -05:00
Robert Haas 149e38e5ee Assorted bgworker-related comment fixes.
Per gripes by Amit Kapila.
2013-08-01 12:20:31 -04:00
Robert Haas 813fb03155 Remove SnapshotNow and HeapTupleSatisfiesNow.
We now use MVCC catalog scans, and, per discussion, have eliminated
all other remaining uses of SnapshotNow, so that we can now get rid of
it.  This will break third-party code which is still using it, which
is intentional, as we want such code to be updated to do things the
new way.
2013-08-01 10:46:19 -04:00
Stephen Frost ddef1a39c6 Allow a context to be passed in for error handling
As pointed out by Tom Lane, we can allow other users of the error
handler callbacks to provide their own memory context by adding
the context to use to ErrorData and using that instead of explicitly
using ErrorContext.

This then allows GetErrorContextStack() to be called from inside
exception handlers, so modify plpgsql to take advantage of that and
add an associated regression test for it.
2013-08-01 01:07:20 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera a59516b631 Fix mis-indented lines
Per Coverity
2013-07-31 17:57:15 -04:00
Tom Lane d074b4e50d Fix regexp_matches() handling of zero-length matches.
We'd find the same match twice if it was of zero length and not immediately
adjacent to the previous match.  replace_text_regexp() got similar cases
right, so adjust this search logic to match that.  Note that even though
the regexp_split_to_xxx() functions share this code, they did not display
equivalent misbehavior, because the second match would be considered
degenerate and ignored.

Jeevan Chalke, with some cosmetic changes by me.
2013-07-31 11:31:22 -04:00
Fujii Masao c876fb4241 Fix typo in comment.
Hitoshi Harada
2013-07-31 22:53:20 +09:00
Noah Misch 16f38f72ab Restore REINDEX constraint validation.
Refactoring as part of commit 8ceb245680
had the unintended effect of making REINDEX TABLE and REINDEX DATABASE
no longer validate constraints enforced by the indexes in question;
REINDEX INDEX still did so.  Indexes marked invalid remained so, and
constraint violations arising from data corruption went undetected.
Back-patch to 9.0, like the causative commit.
2013-07-30 18:36:52 -04:00
Greg Stark c62736cc37 Add SQL Standard WITH ORDINALITY support for UNNEST (and any other SRF)
Author: Andrew Gierth, David Fetter
Reviewers: Dean Rasheed, Jeevan Chalke, Stephen Frost
2013-07-29 16:38:01 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 626092a2e1 Message style improvements 2013-07-28 07:01:13 -04:00
Tom Lane 3d13623d75 Prevent leakage of SPI tuple tables during subtransaction abort.
plpgsql often just remembers SPI-result tuple tables in local variables,
and has no mechanism for freeing them if an ereport(ERROR) causes an escape
out of the execution function whose local variable it is.  In the original
coding, that wasn't a problem because the tuple table would be cleaned up
when the function's SPI context went away during transaction abort.
However, once plpgsql grew the ability to trap exceptions, repeated
trapping of errors within a function could result in significant
intra-function-call memory leakage, as illustrated in bug #8279 from
Chad Wagner.

We could fix this locally in plpgsql with a bunch of PG_TRY/PG_CATCH
coding, but that would be tedious, probably slow, and prone to bugs of
omission; moreover it would do nothing for similar risks elsewhere.
What seems like a better plan is to make SPI itself responsible for
freeing tuple tables at subtransaction abort.  This patch attacks the
problem that way, keeping a list of live tuple tables within each SPI
function context.  Currently, such freeing is automatic for tuple tables
made within the failed subtransaction.  We might later add a SPI call to
mark a tuple table as not to be freed this way, allowing callers to opt
out; but until someone exhibits a clear use-case for such behavior, it
doesn't seem worth bothering.

A very useful side-effect of this change is that SPI_freetuptable() can
now defend itself against bad calls, such as duplicate free requests;
this should make things more robust in many places.  (In particular,
this reduces the risks involved if a third-party extension contains
now-redundant SPI_freetuptable() calls in error cleanup code.)

Even though the leakage problem is of long standing, it seems imprudent
to back-patch this into stable branches, since it does represent an API
semantics change for SPI users.  We'll patch this in 9.3, but live with
the leakage in older branches.
2013-07-25 16:46:14 -04:00
Robert Haas ed93feb808 Change currtid functions to use an MVCC snapshot, not SnapshotNow.
This has a slight performance cost, but the only known consumers
of these functions, known at the SQL level as currtid and currtid2,
is pgsql-odbc; whose usage, we hope, is not sufficiently intensive
to make this a problem.

Per discussion.
2013-07-25 16:32:02 -04:00
Robert Haas 3483f4332d Don't use SnapshotNow in get_actual_variable_range.
Instead, use the active snapshot.  Per Tom Lane, this function is
most interested in knowing the range of tuples our scan will actually
see.

This is another step towards full removal of SnapshotNow.
2013-07-25 14:30:00 -04:00
Stephen Frost 9bd0feeba8 Improvements to GetErrorContextStack()
As GetErrorContextStack() borrowed setup and tear-down code from other
places, it was less than clear that it must only be called as a
top-level entry point into the error system and can't be called by an
exception handler (unlike the rest of the error system, which is set up
to be reentrant-safe).

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

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

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Rushabh Lathia and rather heavily whacked
around by Stephen Frost.
2013-07-24 18:53:27 -04:00
Tom Lane fa2fad3c06 Improve ilist.h's support for deletion of slist elements during iteration.
Previously one had to use slist_delete(), implying an additional scan of
the list, making this infrastructure considerably less efficient than
traditional Lists when deletion of element(s) in a long list is needed.
Modify the slist_foreach_modify() macro to support deleting the current
element in O(1) time, by keeping a "prev" pointer in addition to "cur"
and "next".  Although this makes iteration with this macro a bit slower,
no real harm is done, since in any scenario where you're not going to
delete the current list element you might as well just use slist_foreach
instead.  Improve the comments about when to use each macro.

Back-patch to 9.3 so that we'll have consistent semantics in all branches
that provide ilist.h.  Note this is an ABI break for callers of
slist_foreach_modify().

Andres Freund and Tom Lane
2013-07-24 17:42:34 -04:00
Tom Lane b32a25c3d5 Fix booltestsel() for case where we have NULL stats but not MCV stats.
In a boolean column that contains mostly nulls, ANALYZE might not find
enough non-null values to populate the most-common-values stats,
but it would still create a pg_statistic entry with stanullfrac set.
The logic in booltestsel() for this situation did the wrong thing for
"col IS NOT TRUE" and "col IS NOT FALSE" tests, forgetting that null
values would satisfy these tests (so that the true selectivity would
be close to one, not close to zero).  Per bug #8274.

Fix by Andrew Gierth, some comment-smithing by me.
2013-07-24 00:44:09 -04:00
Tom Lane 10a509d829 Move strip_implicit_coercions() from optimizer to nodeFuncs.c.
Use of this function has spread into the parser and rewriter, so it seems
like time to pull it out of the optimizer and put it into the more central
nodeFuncs module.  This eliminates the need to #include optimizer/clauses.h
in most of the calling files, demonstrating that this function was indeed a
bit outside the normal code reference patterns.
2013-07-23 18:21:19 -04:00
Tom Lane ef655663c5 Further hacking on ruleutils' new column-alias-assignment code.
After further thought about implicit coercions appearing in a joinaliasvars
list, I realized that they represent an additional reason why we might need
to reference the join output column directly instead of referencing an
underlying column.  Consider SELECT x FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 USING (x) where
t1.x is of type date while t2.x is of type timestamptz.  The merged output
variable is of type timestamptz, but it won't go to null when t2 does,
therefore neither t1.x nor t2.x is a valid substitute reference.

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

In HEAD and 9.3, this patch also fixes a problem with some new code in
ruleutils.c that was failing to cope with implicitly-casted joinaliasvars
entries, as per recent report from Feike Steenbergen.  That oversight was
because of an inadequate description of the data structure in parsenodes.h,
which I've now corrected.  There were some pre-existing oversights of the
same ilk elsewhere, which I believe are now all fixed.
2013-07-23 16:23:45 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera c359a1b082 Tweak FOR UPDATE/SHARE error message wording (again)
In commit 0ac5ad5134 I changed some error messages from "FOR
UPDATE/SHARE" to a rather long gobbledygook which nobody liked.  Then,
in commit cb9b66d31 I changed them again, but the alternative chosen
there was deemed suboptimal by Peter Eisentraut, who in message
1373937980.20441.8.camel@vanquo.pezone.net proposed an alternative
involving a dynamically-constructed string based on the actual locking
strength specified in the SQL command.  This patch implements that
suggestion.
2013-07-23 14:03:09 -04:00
Robert Haas 765ad89be3 Use InvalidSnapshot, now SnapshotNow, as the default snapshot.
As far as I can determine, there's no code in the core distribution
that fails to explicitly set the snapshot of a scan or executor
state.  If there is any such code, this will probably cause it to
seg fault; friendlier suggestions were discussed on pgsql-hackers,
but there was no consensus that anything more than this was
needed.

This is another step towards the hoped-for complete removal of
SnapshotNow.
2013-07-23 10:58:32 -04:00
Robert Haas 21e28e4531 Fix cache flush hazard in ExecRefreshMatView.
Andres Freund
2013-07-22 18:10:05 -04:00
Robert Haas f40a318eea Remove bgw_sighup and bgw_sigterm.
Per discussion on pgsql-hackers, these aren't really needed.  Interim
versions of the background worker patch had the worker starting with
signals already unblocked, which would have made this necessary.
But the final version does not, so we don't really need it; and it
doesn't work well with the new facility for starting dynamic background
workers, so just rip it out.

Also per discussion on pgsql-hackers, back-patch this change to 9.3.
It's best to get the API break out of the way before we do an
official release of this facility, to avoid more pain for extension
authors later.
2013-07-22 14:13:00 -04:00
Robert Haas 0518eceec3 Adjust HeapTupleSatisfies* routines to take a HeapTuple.
Previously, these functions took a HeapTupleHeader, but upcoming
patches for logical replication will introduce new a new snapshot
type under which the tuple's TID will be used to lookup (CMIN, CMAX)
for visibility determination purposes.  This makes that information
available.  Code churn is minimal since HeapTupleSatisfiesVisibility
took the HeapTuple anyway, and deferenced it before calling the
satisfies function.

Independently of logical replication, this allows t_tableOid and
t_self to be cross-checked via assertions in tqual.c.  This seems
like a useful way to make sure that all callers are setting these
values properly, which has been previously put forward as
desirable.

Andres Freund, reviewed by Álvaro Herrera
2013-07-22 13:38:44 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 0aeb5ae204 Silence compiler warning on an unused variable
Also, tweak wording in comments (per Andres) and documentation (myself)
to point out that it's the database's default tablespace that can be
passed as 0, not DEFAULTTABLESPACE_OID.  Robert Haas noticed the bug in
the code, but didn't update the accompanying prose.
2013-07-22 13:15:13 -04:00
Robert Haas f01d1ae3a1 Add infrastructure for mapping relfilenodes to relation OIDs.
Future patches are expected to introduce logical replication that
works by decoding WAL.  WAL contains relfilenodes rather than relation
OIDs, so this infrastructure will be needed to find the relation OID
based on WAL contents.

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

Andres Freund, with some changes by me.  Design review, in earlier
versions, by Álvaro Herrera.
2013-07-22 11:09:10 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut ff41a5de09 Clean up new JSON API typedefs
The new JSON API uses a bit of an unusual typedef scheme, where for
example OkeysState is a pointer to okeysState.  And that's not applied
consistently either.  Change that to the more usual PostgreSQL style
where struct typedefs are upper case, and use pointers explicitly.
2013-07-20 06:38:31 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 6737aa72ba Fix HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum on aborted updater xacts
By using only the macro that checks infomask bits
HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY to verify whether a multixact is not an
updater, and not the full HeapTupleHeaderIsOnlyLocked, it would come to
the wrong result in case of a multixact containing an aborted update;
therefore returning the wrong result code.  This would cause predicate.c
to break completely (as in bug report #8273 from David Leverton), and
certain index builds would misbehave.  As far as I can tell, other
callers of the bogus routine would make harmless mistakes or not be
affected by the difference at all; so this was a pretty narrow case.

Also, no other user of the HEAP_XMAX_IS_LOCKED_ONLY macro is as
careless; they all check specifically for the HEAP_XMAX_IS_MULTI case,
and they all verify whether the updater is InvalidXid before concluding
that it's a valid updater.  So there doesn't seem to be any similar bug.
2013-07-19 18:47:37 -04:00
Tom Lane d9f37e6661 Add checks for valid multibyte character length in UtfToLocal, LocalToUtf.
This is mainly to suppress "uninitialized variable" warnings from very
recent versions of gcc.  But it seems like a good robustness thing anyway,
not to mention that we might someday decide to support 6-byte UTF8.

Per report from Karol Trzcionka.  No back-patch since there's no reason
at the moment to think this is more than cosmetic.
2013-07-18 21:55:38 -04:00
Tom Lane e2bd904955 Fix regex match failures for backrefs combined with non-greedy quantifiers.
An ancient logic error in cfindloop() could cause the regex engine to fail
to find matches that begin later than the start of the string.  This
function is only used when the regex pattern contains a back reference,
and so far as we can tell the error is only reachable if the pattern is
non-greedy (i.e. its first quantifier uses the ? modifier).  Furthermore,
the actual match must begin after some potential match that satisfies the
DFA but then fails the back-reference's match test.

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

This option is part of the SQL specification.

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

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Jeevan Chalke.
2013-07-18 11:52:12 -04:00
Tom Lane 405a468b02 Fix direct access to Relation->rd_indpred.
Should use RelationGetIndexPredicate(), since rd_indpred is just a cache
that is not computed until/unless demanded.  Per buildfarm failure on
CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS animals; diagnosis and fix by Hitoshi Harada.
2013-07-18 01:02:18 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 107cbc90a7 Fix variable names mentioned in comment to match the code.
Also, in another comment, explain why holding an insertion slot is a
critical section.

Per review by Amit Kapila.
2013-07-17 23:32:32 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 59c02a36f0 Fix assert failure at end of recovery, broken by XLogInsert scaling patch.
Initialization of the first XLOG buffer at end-of-recovery was broken for
the case that the last read WAL record ended at a page boundary. Instead of
trying to copy the last full xlog page to the buffer cache in that case,
just set shared state so that the next page is initialized when the first
WAL record after startup is inserted. (that's what we did in earlier
version, too)

To make the shared state required for that case less surprising, replace the
XLogCtl->curridx variable, which was the index of the latest initialized
buffer, with an XLogRecPtr of how far the buffers have been initialized.
That also allows us to get rid of the XLogRecEndPtrToBufIdx macro.

While we're at it, make a similar change for XLogCtl->Write.curridx, getting
rid of that variable and calculating the next buffer to write from
XLogCtl->LogwrtResult instead.
2013-07-17 23:12:22 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3f2adace1e Fix end-of-loop optimization in pglz_find_match() function.
After the recent pglz optimization patch, the next/prev pointers in the
hash table are never NULL, INVALID_ENTRY_PTR is used to represent invalid
entries instead. The end-of-loop check in pglz_find_match() function didn't
get the memo. The result was the same from a correctness point of view, but
because the NULL-check would never fail, the tiny optimization turned into
a pessimization.

Reported by Stephen Frost, using Coverity scanner.
2013-07-17 20:37:09 +03:00
Noah Misch ffcf654547 Fix systable_recheck_tuple() for MVCC scan snapshots.
Since this function assumed non-MVCC snapshots, it broke when commit
568d4138c6 switched its one caller from
SnapshotNow scans to MVCC-snapshot scans.

Reviewed by Robert Haas, Tom Lane and Andres Freund.
2013-07-16 20:16:32 -04:00
Noah Misch b560ec1b0d Implement the FILTER clause for aggregate function calls.
This is SQL-standard with a few extensions, namely support for
subqueries and outer references in clause expressions.

catversion bump due to change in Aggref and WindowFunc.

David Fetter, reviewed by Dean Rasheed.
2013-07-16 20:15:36 -04:00
Noah Misch 7a8e9f298e Comment on why planagg.c punts "MIN(x ORDER BY y)". 2013-07-16 20:14:37 -04:00
Kevin Grittner cc1965a99b Add support for REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW CONCURRENTLY.
This allows reads to continue without any blocking while a REFRESH
runs.  The new data appears atomically as part of transaction
commit.

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

Reviewed by Hitoshi Harada, Robert Haas, Andres Freund.
Merged after review with security patch f3ab5d4.
2013-07-16 12:55:44 -05:00
Robert Haas 7f7485a0cd Allow background workers to be started dynamically.
There is a new API, RegisterDynamicBackgroundWorker, which allows
an ordinary user backend to register a new background writer during
normal running.  This means that it's no longer necessary for all
background workers to be registered during processing of
shared_preload_libraries, although the option of registering workers
at that time remains available.

When a background worker exits and will not be restarted, the
slot previously used by that background worker is automatically
released and becomes available for reuse.  Slots used by background
workers that are configured for automatic restart can't (yet) be
released without shutting down the system.

This commit adds a new source file, bgworker.c, and moves some
of the existing control logic for background workers there.
Previously, there was little enough logic that it made sense to
keep everything in postmaster.c, but not any more.

This commit also makes the worker_spi contrib module into an
extension and adds a new function, worker_spi_launch, which can
be used to demonstrate the new facility.
2013-07-16 13:02:15 -04:00
Stephen Frost 4ed22e891f Check get_tle_by_resno() result before deref
When creating a sort to support a group by, we need to look up the
target entry in the target list by the resno using get_tle_by_resno().
This particular code-path didn't check the result prior to attempting
to dereference it, while all other callers did.  While I can't see a
way for this usage of get_tle_by_resno() to fail (you can't ask for
a column to be sorted on which isn't included in the group by), it's
probably best to check that we didn't end up with a NULL somehow
anyway than risk the segfault.

I'm willing to back-patch this if others feel it's necessary, but my
guess is new features are what might tickle this rather than anything
existing.

Missing check spotted by the Coverity scanner.
2013-07-15 15:04:19 -04:00
Robert Haas 42c80c696e Assert that syscache lookups don't happen outside transactions.
Andres Freund
2013-07-15 13:31:36 -04:00
Stephen Frost 273dcd1628 Ensure 64bit arithmetic when calculating tapeSpace
In tuplesort.c:inittapes(), we calculate tapeSpace by first figuring
out how many 'tapes' we can use (maxTapes) and then multiplying the
result by the tape buffer overhead for each.  Unfortunately, when
we are on a system with an 8-byte long, we allow work_mem to be
larger than 2GB and that allows maxTapes to be large enough that the
32bit arithmetic can overflow when multiplied against the buffer
overhead.

When this overflow happens, we end up adding the overflow to the
amount of space available, causing the amount of memory allocated to
be larger than work_mem.

Note that to reach this point, you have to set work mem to at least
24GB and be sorting a set which is at least that size.  Given that a
user who can set work_mem to 24GB could also set it even higher, if
they were looking to run the system out of memory, this isn't
considered a security issue.

This overflow risk was found by the Coverity scanner.

Back-patch to all supported branches, as this issue has existed
since before 8.4.
2013-07-14 16:26:16 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 070518ddab Add session_preload_libraries configuration parameter
This is like shared_preload_libraries except that it takes effect at
backend start and can be changed without a full postmaster restart.  It
is like local_preload_libraries except that it is still only settable by
a superuser.  This can be a better way to load modules such as
auto_explain.

Since there are now three preload parameters, regroup the documentation
a bit.  Put all parameters into one section, explain common
functionality only once, update the descriptions to reflect current and
future realities.

Reviewed-by: Dimitri Fontaine <dimitri@2ndQuadrant.fr>
2013-07-12 21:23:50 -04:00
Noah Misch f3ab5d4696 Switch user ID to the object owner when populating a materialized view.
This makes superuser-issued REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW safe regardless of
the object's provenance.  REINDEX is an earlier example of this pattern.
As a downside, functions called from materialized views must tolerate
running in a security-restricted operation.  CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW
need not change user ID.  Nonetheless, avoid creation of materialized
views that will invariably fail REFRESH by making it, too, start a
security-restricted operation.

Back-patch to 9.3 so materialized views have this from the beginning.

Reviewed by Kevin Grittner.
2013-07-12 18:21:22 -04:00
Noah Misch 448fee2e23 Make comments reflect that omission of SPI_gettypmod() is intentional. 2013-07-12 18:07:46 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 8dead08c54 Fix lack of message pluralization 2013-07-09 20:49:44 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 7888c61238 Fix bool abuse
path_encode's "closed" argument used to take three values: TRUE, FALSE,
or -1, while being of type bool.  Replace that with a three-valued enum
for more clarity.
2013-07-08 22:42:39 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas f489470f8a Fix Windows build.
Was broken by my xloginsert scaling patch. XLogCtl global variable needs
to be initialized in each process, as it's not inherited by fork() on
Windows.
2013-07-08 17:28:48 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9a20a9b21b Improve scalability of WAL insertions.
This patch replaces WALInsertLock with a number of WAL insertion slots,
allowing multiple backends to insert WAL records to the WAL buffers
concurrently. This is particularly useful for parallel loading large amounts
of data on a system with many CPUs.

This has one user-visible change: switching to a new WAL segment with
pg_switch_xlog() now fills the remaining unused portion of the segment with
zeros. This potentially adds some overhead, but it has been a very common
practice by DBA's to clear the "tail" of the segment with an external
pg_clearxlogtail utility anyway, to make the WAL files compress better.
With this patch, it's no longer necessary to do that.

This patch adds a new GUC, xloginsert_slots, to tune the number of WAL
insertion slots. Performance testing suggests that the default, 8, works
pretty well for all kinds of worklods, but I left the GUC in place to allow
others with different hardware to test that easily. We might want to remove
that before release.

Reviewed by Andres Freund.
2013-07-08 11:23:56 +03:00
Tom Lane 5372275b4b Fix planning of parameterized appendrel paths with expensive join quals.
The code in set_append_rel_pathlist() for building parameterized paths
for append relations (inheritance and UNION ALL combinations) supposed
that the cheapest regular path for a child relation would still be cheapest
when reparameterized.  Which might not be the case, particularly if the
added join conditions are expensive to compute, as in a recent example from
Jeff Janes.  Fix it to compare child path costs *after* reparameterizing.
We can short-circuit that if the cheapest pre-existing path is already
parameterized correctly, which seems likely to be true often enough to be
worth checking for.

Back-patch to 9.2 where parameterized paths were introduced.
2013-07-07 22:37:24 -04:00
Jeff Davis 5b571bb8c8 Handle posix_fallocate() errors.
On some platforms, posix_fallocate() is available but may still return
EINVAL if the underlying filesystem does not support it.  So, in case
of an error, fall through to the alternate implementation that just
writes zeros.

Per buildfarm failure and analysis by Tom Lane.
2013-07-06 13:46:04 -07:00
Noah Misch 02d2b694ee Update messages, comments and documentation for materialized views.
All instances of the verbiage lagging the code.  Back-patch to 9.3,
where materialized views were introduced.
2013-07-05 15:37:51 -04:00
Jeff Davis 269e780822 Use posix_fallocate() for new WAL files, where available.
This function is more efficient than actually writing out zeroes to
the new file, per microbenchmarks by Jon Nelson. Also, it may reduce
the likelihood of WAL file fragmentation.

Jon Nelson, with review by Andres Freund, Greg Smith and me.
2013-07-05 12:30:29 -07:00
Magnus Hagander c87ff71f37 Expose the estimation of number of changed tuples since last analyze
This value, now pg_stat_all_tables.n_mod_since_analyze, was already
tracked and used by autovacuum, but not exposed to the user.

Mark Kirkwood, review by Laurenz Albe
2013-07-05 15:10:15 +02:00
Noah Misch 79e0f87a15 Use type "int64" for memory accounting in tuplesort.c/tuplestore.c.
Commit 263865a489 switched tuplesort.c and
tuplestore.c variables representing memory usage from type "long" to
type "Size".  This was unnecessary; I thought doing so avoided overflow
scenarios on 64-bit Windows, but guc.c already limited work_mem so as to
prevent the overflow.  It was also incomplete, not touching the logic
that assumed a signed data type.  Change the affected variables to
"int64".  This is perfect for 64-bit platforms, and it reduces the need
to contemplate platform-specific overflow scenarios.  It also puts us
close to being able to support work_mem over 2 GiB on 64-bit Windows.

Per report from Andres Freund.
2013-07-04 23:13:54 -04:00
Fujii Masao 7842d41df5 Fix typo in comment.
Michael Paquier
2013-07-05 02:47:49 +09:00
Robert Haas 6bc8ef0b7f Add new GUC, max_worker_processes, limiting number of bgworkers.
In 9.3, there's no particular limit on the number of bgworkers;
instead, we just count up the number that are actually registered,
and use that to set MaxBackends.  However, that approach causes
problems for Hot Standby, which needs both MaxBackends and the
size of the lock table to be the same on the standby as on the
master, yet it may not be desirable to run the same bgworkers in
both places.  9.3 handles that by failing to notice the problem,
which will probably work fine in nearly all cases anyway, but is
not theoretically sound.

A further problem with simply counting the number of registered
workers is that new workers can't be registered without a
postmaster restart.  This is inconvenient for administrators,
since bouncing the postmaster causes an interruption of service.
Moreover, there are a number of applications for background
processes where, by necessity, the background process must be
started on the fly (e.g. parallel query).  While this patch
doesn't actually make it possible to register new background
workers after startup time, it's a necessary prerequisite.

Patch by me.  Review by Michael Paquier.
2013-07-04 11:24:24 -04:00
Fujii Masao 2ef085d0e6 Get rid of pg_class.reltoastidxid.
Treat TOAST index just the same as normal one and get the OID
of TOAST index from pg_index but not pg_class.reltoastidxid.
This change allows us to handle multiple TOAST indexes, and
which is required infrastructure for upcoming
REINDEX CONCURRENTLY feature.

Patch by Michael Paquier, reviewed by Andres Freund and me.
2013-07-04 03:24:09 +09:00
Tom Lane 5530a82643 Fix handling of auto-updatable views on inherited tables.
An INSERT into such a view should work just like an INSERT into its base
table, ie the insertion should go directly into that table ... not be
duplicated into each child table, as was happening before, per bug #8275
from Rushabh Lathia.  On the other hand, the current behavior for
UPDATE/DELETE seems reasonable: the update/delete traverses the child
tables, or not, depending on whether the view specifies ONLY or not.
Add some regression tests covering this area.

Dean Rasheed
2013-07-03 12:26:52 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 620935ad08 Unbreak postmaster restart-after-crash sequence
In patch 82233ce7ea, AbortStartTime wasn't being reset appropriately
after the restart sequence, causing subsequent iterations through
ServerLoop to malfunction.
2013-07-03 11:08:52 -04:00
Robert Haas 3682025015 Add support for multiple kinds of external toast datums.
To that end, support tags rather than lengths for external datums.
As an example of how this can be used, add support or "indirect"
tuples which point to some externally allocated memory containing
a toast tuple.  Similar infrastructure could be used for other
purposes, including, perhaps, support for alternative compression
algorithms.

Andres Freund, reviewed by Hitoshi Harada and myself
2013-07-02 13:38:55 -04:00
Robert Haas 568d4138c6 Use an MVCC snapshot, rather than SnapshotNow, for catalog scans.
SnapshotNow scans have the undesirable property that, in the face of
concurrent updates, the scan can fail to see either the old or the new
versions of the row.  In many cases, we work around this by requiring
DDL operations to hold AccessExclusiveLock on the object being
modified; in some cases, the existing locking is inadequate and random
failures occur as a result.  This commit doesn't change anything
related to locking, but will hopefully pave the way to allowing lock
strength reductions in the future.

The major issue has held us back from making this change in the past
is that taking an MVCC snapshot is significantly more expensive than
using a static special snapshot such as SnapshotNow.  However, testing
of various worst-case scenarios reveals that this problem is not
severe except under fairly extreme workloads.  To mitigate those
problems, we avoid retaking the MVCC snapshot for each new scan;
instead, we take a new snapshot only when invalidation messages have
been processed.  The catcache machinery already requires that
invalidation messages be sent before releasing the related heavyweight
lock; else other backends might rely on locally-cached data rather
than scanning the catalog at all.  Thus, making snapshot reuse
dependent on the same guarantees shouldn't break anything that wasn't
already subtly broken.

Patch by me.  Review by Michael Paquier and Andres Freund.
2013-07-02 09:47:01 -04:00
Robert Haas 0d22987ae9 Add a convenience routine makeFuncCall to reduce duplication.
David Fetter and Andrew Gierth, reviewed by Jeevan Chalke
2013-07-01 14:46:54 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 7408c5d29b Add timezone offset output option to to_char()
Add ability for to_char() to output the timezone's UTC offset (OF).  We
already have the ability to return the timezone abbeviation (TZ/tz).
Per request from Andrew Dunstan
2013-07-01 13:40:32 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 031cc55bbe Optimize pglz compressor for small inputs.
The pglz compressor has a significant startup cost, because it has to
initialize to zeros the history-tracking hash table. On a 64-bit system, the
hash table was 64kB in size. While clearing memory is pretty fast, for very
short inputs the relative cost of that was quite large.

This patch alleviates that in two ways. First, instead of storing pointers
in the hash table, store 16-bit indexes into the hist_entries array. That
slashes the size of the hash table to 1/2 or 1/4 of the original, depending
on the pointer width. Secondly, adjust the size of the hash table based on
input size. For very small inputs, you don't need a large hash table to
avoid collisions.

Review by Amit Kapila.
2013-07-01 11:00:14 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 79ce29c734 Retry short writes when flushing WAL.
We don't normally bother retrying when the number of bytes written by
write() is short of what was requested. It is generally assumed that a
write() to disk doesn't return short, unless you run out of disk space.
While writing the WAL, however, it seems prudent to try a bit harder,
because a failure leads to PANIC. The write() is also much larger than most
write()s in the backend (up to wal_buffers), so there's more room for
surprises.

Also retry on EINTR. All signals used in the backend are flagged SA_RESTART
nowadays, so it shouldn't happen, but better to be defensive.
2013-07-01 09:36:00 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas ee6556555b Inline ginCompareItemPointers function for speed.
ginCompareItemPointers function is called heavily in gin index scans -
inlining it speeds up some kind of queries a lot.
2013-06-29 12:55:34 +03:00
Simon Riggs d51b271059 Change errcode for lock_timeout to match NOWAIT
Set errcode to ERRCODE_LOCK_NOT_AVAILABLE

Zoltán Bsöszörményi
2013-06-29 00:57:25 +01:00
Simon Riggs f177cbfe67 ALTER TABLE ... ALTER CONSTRAINT for FKs
Allow constraint attributes to be altered,
so the default setting of NOT DEFERRABLE
can be altered to DEFERRABLE and back.

Review by Abhijit Menon-Sen
2013-06-29 00:27:30 +01:00
Simon Riggs 2f74e4ec50 Assert that ALTER TABLE subcommands have pass set 2013-06-29 00:26:46 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera 82233ce7ea Send SIGKILL to children if they don't die quickly in immediate shutdown
On immediate shutdown, or during a restart-after-crash sequence,
postmaster used to send SIGQUIT (and then abandon ship if shutdown); but
this is not a good strategy if backends don't die because of that
signal.  (This might happen, for example, if a backend gets tangled
trying to malloc() due to gettext(), as in an example illustrated by
MauMau.)  This causes problems when later trying to restart the server,
because some processes are still attached to the shared memory segment.

Instead of just abandoning such backends to their fates, we now have
postmaster hang around for a little while longer, send a SIGKILL after
some reasonable waiting period, and then exit.  This makes immediate
shutdown more reliable.

There is disagreement on whether it's best for postmaster to exit after
sending SIGKILL, or to stick around until all children have reported
death.  If this controversy is resolved differently than what this patch
implements, it's an easy change to make.

Bug reported by MauMau in message 20DAEA8949EC4E2289C6E8E58560DEC0@maumau

MauMau and Álvaro Herrera
2013-06-28 17:49:46 -04:00
Robert Haas 5893ffa79c Make the OVER keyword unreserved.
This results in a slightly less specific error message when OVER
is used in a context where we don't accept window functions, but
per discussion, it's worth it to get the benefit of not needing
to reserve this keyword any more.  This same refactoring will
also let us avoid reserving some other keywords that we expect
to add in upcoming patches (specifically, IGNORE, RESPECT, and
FILTER).

Troels Nielsen, with minor changes by me
2013-06-28 11:11:00 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9e0bc7c1e8 Track spinlock delay in microsecond granularity.
On many platforms the OS will round the sleep time to millisecond
resolution, but there is no reason for us to pre-emptively round the
argument to pg_usleep.

When the delay was measured in milliseconds and started from 1 ms, it
sometimes took many attempts until the logic that increases the delay by
multiplying with a random value between 1 and 2 actually managed to bump it
from 1 ms to 2 ms. That lead to a sequence of 1 ms waits until the delay
started to increase. This wasn't really a problem but it looked odd if you
observed the waits. There is no measurable difference in performance, but
it's more readable this way.

Jeff Janes
2013-06-28 12:39:55 +03:00
Noah Misch 263865a489 Permit super-MaxAllocSize allocations with MemoryContextAllocHuge().
The MaxAllocSize guard is convenient for most callers, because it
reduces the need for careful attention to overflow, data type selection,
and the SET_VARSIZE() limit.  A handful of callers are happy to navigate
those hazards in exchange for the ability to allocate a larger chunk.
Introduce MemoryContextAllocHuge() and repalloc_huge().  Use this in
tuplesort.c and tuplestore.c, enabling internal sorts of up to INT_MAX
tuples, a factor-of-48 increase.  In particular, B-tree index builds can
now benefit from much-larger maintenance_work_mem settings.

Reviewed by Stephen Frost, Simon Riggs and Jeff Janes.
2013-06-27 14:53:57 -04:00
Noah Misch 19085116ee Cooperate with the Valgrind instrumentation framework.
Valgrind "client requests" in aset.c and mcxt.c teach Valgrind and its
Memcheck tool about the PostgreSQL allocator.  This makes Valgrind
roughly as sensitive to memory errors involving palloc chunks as it is
to memory errors involving malloc chunks.  Further client requests in
PageAddItem() and printtup() verify that all bits being added to a
buffer page or furnished to an output function are predictably-defined.
Those tests catch failures of C-language functions to fully initialize
the bits of a Datum, which in turn stymie optimizations that rely on
_equalConst().  Define the USE_VALGRIND symbol in pg_config_manual.h to
enable these additions.  An included "suppression file" silences nominal
errors we don't plan to fix.

Reviewed in earlier versions by Peter Geoghegan and Korry Douglas.
2013-06-26 20:22:25 -04:00
Noah Misch a855148a29 Refactor aset.c and mcxt.c in preparation for Valgrind cooperation.
Move some repeated debugging code into functions and store intermediates
in variables where not presently necessary.  No code-generation changes
in a production build, and no functional changes.  This simplifies and
focuses the main patch.
2013-06-26 19:56:03 -04:00
Noah Misch 1d96bb9602 Initialize pad bytes in GinFormTuple().
Every other core buffer page consumer initializes the bytes it furnishes
to PageAddItem().  For consistency, do the same here.  No back-patch;
regardless, we couldn't count on the fix so long as binary upgrade can
carry forward affected index builds.
2013-06-26 19:55:15 -04:00
Noah Misch 5f538ad004 Renovate display of non-ASCII messages on Windows.
GNU gettext selects a default encoding for the messages it emits in a
platform-specific manner; it uses the Windows ANSI code page on Windows
and follows LC_CTYPE on other platforms.  This is inconvenient for
PostgreSQL server processes, so realize consistent cross-platform
behavior by calling bind_textdomain_codeset() on Windows each time we
permanently change LC_CTYPE.  This primarily affects SQL_ASCII databases
and processes like the postmaster that do not attach to a database,
making their behavior consistent with PostgreSQL on non-Windows
platforms.  Messages from SQL_ASCII databases use the encoding implied
by the database LC_CTYPE, and messages from non-database processes use
LC_CTYPE from the postmaster system environment.  PlatformEncoding
becomes unused, so remove it.

Make write_console() prefer WriteConsoleW() to write() regardless of the
encodings in use.  In this situation, write() will invariably mishandle
non-ASCII characters.

elog.c has assumed that messages conform to the database encoding.
While usually true, this does not hold for SQL_ASCII and MULE_INTERNAL.
Introduce MessageEncoding to track the actual encoding of message text.
The present consumers are Windows-specific code for converting messages
to UTF16 for use in system interfaces.  This fixes the appearance in
Windows event logs and consoles of translated messages from SQL_ASCII
processes like the postmaster.  Note that SQL_ASCII inherently disclaims
a strong notion of encoding, so non-ASCII byte sequences interpolated
into messages by %s may yet yield a nonsensical message.  MULE_INTERNAL
has similar problems at present, albeit for a different reason: its lack
of libiconv support or a conversion to UTF8.

Consequently, one need no longer restart Windows with a different
Windows ANSI code page to broadly test backend logging under a given
language.  Changing the user's locale ("Format") is enough.  Several
accounts can simultaneously run postmasters under different locales, all
correctly logging localized messages to Windows event logs and consoles.

Alexander Law and Noah Misch
2013-06-26 11:17:33 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 4ca50e0710 Avoid inconsistent type declaration
Clang 3.3 correctly complains that a variable of type enum
MultiXactStatus cannot hold a value of -1, which makes sense.  Change
the declared type of the variable to int instead, and apply casting as
necessary to avoid the warning.

Per notice from Andres Freund
2013-06-25 16:41:47 -04:00
Fujii Masao 985bd7d497 Support clean switchover.
In replication, when we shutdown the master, walsender tries to send
all the outstanding WAL records to the standby, and then to exit. This
basically means that all the WAL records are fully synced between
two servers after the clean shutdown of the master. So, after
promoting the standby to new master, we can restart the stopped
master as new standby without the need for a fresh backup from
new master.

But there was one problem so far: though walsender tries to send all
the outstanding WAL records, it doesn't wait for them to be replicated
to the standby. Then, before receiving all the WAL records,
walreceiver can detect the closure of connection and exit. We cannot
guarantee that there is no missing WAL in the standby after clean
shutdown of the master. In this case, backup from new master is
required when restarting the stopped master as new standby.

This patch fixes this problem. It just changes walsender so that it
waits for all the outstanding WAL records to be replicated to the
standby before closing the replication connection.

Per discussion, this is a fix that needs to get backpatched rather than
new feature. So, back-patch to 9.1 where enough infrastructure for
this exists.

Patch by me, reviewed by Andres Freund.
2013-06-26 02:14:37 +09:00
Simon Riggs 4f14c86d74 Reverting previous commit, pending investigation
of sporadic seg faults from various build farm members.
2013-06-24 21:21:18 +01:00
Simon Riggs b577a57d41 ALTER TABLE ... ALTER CONSTRAINT for FKs
Allow constraint attributes to be altered,
so the default setting of NOT DEFERRABLE
can be altered to DEFERRABLE and back.

Review by Abhijit Menon-Sen
2013-06-24 20:07:41 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut ce18b01159 Translation updates 2013-06-24 14:16:44 -04:00
Simon Riggs 1f09121b4e Ensure no xid gaps during Hot Standby startup
In some cases with higher numbers of subtransactions
it was possible for us to incorrectly initialize
subtrans leading to complaints of missing pages.

Bug report by Sergey Konoplev
Analysis and fix by Andres Freund
2013-06-23 11:05:02 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 7dfd5cd21c Clarify terminology standalone backend vs. single-user mode
Most of the documentation uses "single-user mode", so use that in the
code as well.  Adjust the documentation to match the new error message
wording.  Also add a documentation index entry for "single-user mode".

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff Janes <jeff.janes@gmail.com>
2013-06-20 23:03:18 -04:00
Fujii Masao bab54e383d Support TB (terabyte) memory unit in GUC variables.
Patch by Simon Riggs, reviewed by Jeff Janes and me.
2013-06-20 08:17:14 +09:00
Jeff Davis b8fd1a09f3 Add buffer_std flag to MarkBufferDirtyHint().
MarkBufferDirtyHint() writes WAL, and should know if it's got a
standard buffer or not. Currently, the only callers where buffer_std
is false are related to the FSM.

In passing, rename XLOG_HINT to XLOG_FPI, which is more descriptive.

Back-patch to 9.3.
2013-06-17 08:02:12 -07:00
Tom Lane a64ca63e59 Use WaitLatch, not pg_usleep, for delaying in pg_sleep().
This avoids platform-dependent behavior wherein pg_sleep() might fail to be
interrupted by statement timeout, query cancel, SIGTERM, etc.  Also, since
there's no reason to wake up once a second any more, we can reduce the
power consumption of a sleeping backend a tad.

Back-patch to 9.3, since use of SA_RESTART for SIGALRM makes this a bigger
issue than it used to be.
2013-06-15 16:23:24 -04:00
Tom Lane 873ab97219 Use SA_RESTART for all signals, including SIGALRM.
The exclusion of SIGALRM dates back to Berkeley days, when Postgres used
SIGALRM in only one very short stretch of code.  Nowadays, allowing it to
interrupt kernel calls doesn't seem like a very good idea, since its use
for statement_timeout means SIGALRM could occur anyplace in the code, and
there are far too many call sites where we aren't prepared to deal with
EINTR failures.  When third-party code is taken into consideration, it
seems impossible that we ever could be fully EINTR-proof, so better to
use SA_RESTART always and deal with the implications of that.  One such
implication is that we should not assume pg_usleep() will be terminated
early by a signal.  Therefore, long sleeps should probably be replaced
by WaitLatch operations where practical.

Back-patch to 9.3 so we can get some beta testing on this change.
2013-06-15 15:39:51 -04:00
Tom Lane e472b92140 Avoid deadlocks during insertion into SP-GiST indexes.
SP-GiST's original scheme for avoiding deadlocks during concurrent index
insertions doesn't work, as per report from Hailong Li, and there isn't any
evident way to make it work completely.  We could possibly lock individual
inner tuples instead of their whole pages, but preliminary experimentation
suggests that the performance penalty would be huge.  Instead, if we fail
to get a buffer lock while descending the tree, just restart the tree
descent altogether.  We keep the old tuple positioning rules, though, in
hopes of reducing the number of cases where this can happen.

Teodor Sigaev, somewhat edited by Tom Lane
2013-06-14 14:26:43 -04:00
Tom Lane c62866eeaf Remove special-case treatment of LOG severity level in standalone mode.
elog.c has historically treated LOG messages as low-priority during
bootstrap and standalone operation.  This has led to confusion and even
masked a bug, because the normal expectation of code authors is that
elog(LOG) will put something into the postmaster log, and that wasn't
happening during initdb.  So get rid of the special-case rule and make
the priority order the same as it is in normal operation.  To keep from
cluttering initdb's output and the behavior of a standalone backend,
tweak the severity level of three messages routinely issued by xlog.c
during startup and shutdown so that they won't appear in these cases.
Per my proposal back in December.
2013-06-13 23:15:15 -04:00
Tom Lane f04216341d Refactor checksumming code to make it easier to use externally.
pg_filedump and other external utility programs are likely to want to be
able to check Postgres page checksums.  To avoid messy duplication of code,
move the checksumming functionality into an exported header file, much as
we did awhile back for the CRC code.

In passing, get rid of an unportable assumption that a static char[] array
will be word-aligned, and do some other minor code beautification.
2013-06-13 22:35:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 629b3e96dd Only install a portal's ResourceOwner if it actually has one.
In most scenarios a portal without a ResourceOwner is dead and not subject
to any further execution, but a portal for a cursor WITH HOLD remains in
existence with no ResourceOwner after the creating transaction is over.
In this situation, if we attempt to "execute" the portal directly to fetch
data from it, we were setting CurrentResourceOwner to NULL, leading to a
segfault if the datatype output code did anything that required a resource
owner (such as trying to fetch system catalog entries that weren't already
cached).  The case appears to be impossible to provoke with stock libpq,
but psqlODBC at least is able to cause it when working with held cursors.

Simplest fix is to just skip the assignment to CurrentResourceOwner, so
that any resources used by the data output operations will be managed by
the transaction-level resource owner instead.  For consistency I changed
all the places that install a portal's resowner as current, even though
some of them are probably not reachable with a held cursor's portal.

Per report from Joshua Berry (with thanks to Hiroshi Inoue for developing
a self-contained test case).  Back-patch to all supported versions.
2013-06-13 13:12:49 -04:00
Noah Misch 66008564f8 Avoid reading past datum end when parsing JSON.
Several loops in the JSON parser examined a byte in memory just before
checking whether its address was in-bounds, so they could read one byte
beyond the datum's allocation.  A SIGSEGV is possible.  New in 9.3, so
no back-patch.
2013-06-12 19:51:12 -04:00
Noah Misch 3a5d0c5533 Avoid reading below the start of a stack variable in tokenize_file().
We would wrongly overwrite the prior stack byte if it happened to
contain '\n' or '\r'.  New in 9.3, so no back-patch.
2013-06-12 19:50:52 -04:00
Noah Misch 813895e4ac Don't pass oidvector by value.
Since the structure ends with a flexible array, doing so truncates any
vector having more than one element.  New in 9.3, so no back-patch.
2013-06-12 19:50:37 -04:00
Noah Misch fb435f40d5 Observe array length in HaveVirtualXIDsDelayingChkpt().
Since commit f21bb9cfb5, this function
ignores the caller-provided length and loops until it finds a
terminator, which GetVirtualXIDsDelayingChkpt() never adds.  Restore the
previous loop control logic.  In passing, revert the addition of an
unused variable by the same commit, presumably a debugging relic.
2013-06-12 19:50:14 -04:00
Noah Misch ff53890f68 Don't use ordinary NULL-terminated strings as Name datums.
Consumers are entitled to read the full 64 bytes pertaining to a Name;
using a shorter NULL-terminated string leads to reading beyond the end
its allocation; a SIGSEGV is possible.  Use the frequent idiom of
copying to a NameData on the stack.  New in 9.3, so no back-patch.
2013-06-12 19:49:50 -04:00
Tom Lane dc3eb56383 Improve updatability checking for views and foreign tables.
Extend the FDW API (which we already changed for 9.3) so that an FDW can
report whether specific foreign tables are insertable/updatable/deletable.
The default assumption continues to be that they're updatable if the
relevant executor callback function is supplied by the FDW, but finer
granularity is now possible.  As a test case, add an "updatable" option to
contrib/postgres_fdw.

This patch also fixes the information_schema views, which previously did
not think that foreign tables were ever updatable, and fixes
view_is_auto_updatable() so that a view on a foreign table can be
auto-updatable.

initdb forced due to changes in information_schema views and the functions
they rely on.  This is a bit unfortunate to do post-beta1, but if we don't
change this now then we'll have another API break for FDWs when we do
change it.

Dean Rasheed, somewhat editorialized on by Tom Lane
2013-06-12 17:53:33 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 78ed8e03c6 Fix unescaping of JSON Unicode escapes, especially for non-UTF8.
Per discussion  on -hackers. We treat Unicode escapes when unescaping
them similarly to the way we treat them in PostgreSQL string literals.
Escapes in the ASCII range are always accepted, no matter what the
database encoding. Escapes for higher code points are only processed in
UTF8 databases, and attempts to process them in other databases will
result in an error. \u0000 is never unescaped, since it would result in
an impermissible null byte.
2013-06-12 13:35:24 -04:00
Tom Lane e262755bfc Fix cache flush hazard in cache_record_field_properties().
We need to increment the refcount on the composite type's cached tuple
descriptor while we do lookups of its column types.  Otherwise a cache
flush could occur and release the tuple descriptor before we're done with
it.  This fails reliably with -DCLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS, but the odds of a
failure in a production build seem rather low (since the pfree'd descriptor
typically wouldn't get scribbled on immediately).  That may explain the
lack of any previous reports.  Buildfarm issue noted by Christian Ullrich.

Back-patch to 9.1 where the bogus code was added.
2013-06-11 17:26:42 -04:00
Tom Lane a4424c57c3 Remove unnecessary restrictions about RowExprs in transformAExprIn().
When the existing code here was written, it made sense to special-case
RowExprs because that was the only way that we could handle row comparisons
at all.  Now that we have record_eq() and arrays of composites, the generic
logic for "scalar" types will in fact work on RowExprs too, so there's no
reason to throw error for combinations of RowExprs and other ways of
forming composite values, nor to ignore the possibility of using a
ScalarArrayOpExpr.  But keep using the old logic when comparing two
RowExprs, for consistency with the main transformAExprOp() logic.  (This
allows some cases with not-quite-identical rowtypes to succeed, so we might
get push-back if we removed it.)  Per bug #8198 from Rafal Rzepecki.

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

Rafal Rzepecki and Tom Lane
2013-06-09 18:39:20 -04:00
Tom Lane f3839ea117 Remove ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES' requirement of schema CREATE permissions.
Per discussion, this restriction isn't needed for any real security reason,
and it seems to confuse people more often than it helps them.  It could
also result in some database states being unrestorable.  So just drop it.

Back-patch to 9.0, where ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES was introduced.
2013-06-09 15:26:40 -04:00
Tom Lane 007556bf08 Remove fixed limit on the number of concurrent AllocateFile() requests.
AllocateFile(), AllocateDir(), and some sister routines share a small array
for remembering requests, so that the files can be closed on transaction
failure.  Previously that array had a fixed size, MAX_ALLOCATED_DESCS (32).
While historically that had seemed sufficient, Steve Toutant pointed out
that this meant you couldn't scan more than 32 file_fdw foreign tables in
one query, because file_fdw depends on the COPY code which uses
AllocateFile().  There are probably other cases, or will be in the future,
where this nonconfigurable limit impedes users.

We can't completely remove any such limit, at least not without a lot of
work, since each such request requires a kernel file descriptor and most
platforms limit the number we can have.  (In principle we could
"virtualize" these descriptors, as fd.c already does for the main VFD pool,
but not without an additional layer of overhead and a lot of notational
impact on the calling code.)  But we can at least let the array size be
configurable.  Hence, change the code to allow up to max_safe_fds/2
allocated file requests.  On modern platforms this should allow several
hundred concurrent file_fdw scans, or more if one increases the value of
max_files_per_process.  To go much further than that, we'd need to do some
more work on the data structure, since the current code for closing
requests has potentially O(N^2) runtime; but it should still be all right
for request counts in this range.

Back-patch to 9.1 where contrib/file_fdw was introduced.
2013-06-09 13:46:54 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan d535136b5d Don't downcase non-ascii identifier chars in multi-byte encodings.
Long-standing code has called tolower() on identifier character bytes
with the high bit set. This is clearly an error and produces junk output
when the encoding is multi-byte. This patch therefore restricts this
activity to cases where there is a character with the high bit set AND
the encoding is single-byte.

There have been numerous gripes about this, most recently from Martin
Schäfer.

Backpatch to all live releases.
2013-06-08 10:00:09 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 94e3311b97 Handle Unicode surrogate pairs correctly when processing JSON.
In 9.2, Unicode escape sequences are not analysed at all other than
to make sure that they are in the form \uXXXX. But in 9.3 many of the
new operators and functions try to turn JSON text values into text in
the server encoding, and this includes de-escaping Unicode escape
sequences. This processing had not taken into account the possibility
that this might contain a surrogate pair to designate a character
outside the BMP. That is now handled correctly.

This also enforces correct use of surrogate pairs, something that is not
done by the type's input routines. This fact is noted in the docs.
2013-06-08 09:12:48 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas f73cb5567c Fix typo in comment. 2013-06-06 18:27:01 +03:00
Robert Haas a6370fd9ed Ensure that XLOG_HEAP2_VISIBLE always targets an initialized page.
Andres Freund
2013-06-06 10:21:47 -04:00
Tom Lane 964c0d0f80 Prevent pushing down WHERE clauses into unsafe UNION/INTERSECT nests.
The planner is aware that it mustn't push down upper-level quals into
subqueries if the quals reference subquery output columns that contain
set-returning functions or volatile functions, or are non-DISTINCT outputs
of a DISTINCT ON subquery.  However, it missed making this check when
there were one or more levels of UNION or INTERSECT above the dangerous
expression.  This could lead to "set-valued function called in context that
cannot accept a set" errors, as seen in bug #8213 from Eric Soroos, or to
silently wrong answers in the other cases.

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

This has been broken since commit 05f916e6ad,
which makes the bug over ten years old.  A bit surprising nobody noticed it
before now.
2013-06-05 23:45:11 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut a3bd6096bd Update SQL features list 2013-06-05 22:05:18 -04:00
Tom Lane 3f783c8827 Put analyze_keyword back in explain_option_name production.
In commit 2c92edad48, I broke "EXPLAIN
(ANALYZE)" syntax, because I mistakenly thought that ANALYZE/ANALYSE were
only partially reserved and thus would be included in NonReservedWord;
but actually they're fully reserved so they still need to be called out
here.

A nicer solution would be to demote these words to type_func_name_keyword
status (they can't be less than that because of "VACUUM [ANALYZE] ColId").
While that works fine so far as the core grammar is concerned, it breaks
ECPG's grammar for reasons I don't have time to isolate at the moment.
So do this for the time being.

Per report from Kevin Grittner.  Back-patch to 9.0, like the previous
commit.
2013-06-05 13:32:53 -04:00
Tom Lane 530acda4da Provide better message when CREATE EXTENSION can't find a target schema.
The new message (and SQLSTATE) matches the corresponding error cases in
namespace.c.

This was thought to be a "can't happen" case when extension.c was written,
so we didn't think hard about how to report it.  But it definitely can
happen in 9.2 and later, since we no longer require search_path to contain
any valid schema names.  It's probably also possible in 9.1 if search_path
came from a noninteractive source.  So, back-patch to all releases
containing this code.

Per report from Sean Chittenden, though this isn't exactly his patch.
2013-06-04 17:22:29 -04:00
Tom Lane dbc6eb1f4b Fix memory leak in LogStandbySnapshot().
The array allocated by GetRunningTransactionLocks() needs to be pfree'd
when we're done with it.  Otherwise we leak some memory during each
checkpoint, if wal_level = hot_standby.  This manifests as memory bloat
in the checkpointer process, or in bgwriter in versions before we made
the checkpointer separate.

Reported and fixed by Naoya Anzai.  Back-patch to 9.0 where the issue
was introduced.

In passing, improve comments for GetRunningTransactionLocks(), and add
an Assert that we didn't overrun the palloc'd array.
2013-06-04 14:58:46 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 15386281a6 Put back allow_system_table_mods check in heap_create().
This reverts commit a475c60367.

Erik Rijkers reported back in January 2013 that after the patch, if you do
"pg_dump -t myschema.mytable" to dump a single table, and restore that in
a database where myschema does not exist, the table is silently created in
pg_catalog instead. That is because pg_dump uses
"SET search_path=myschema, pg_catalog" to set schema the table is created
in. While allow_system_table_mods is not a very elegant solution to this,
we can't leave it as it is, so for now, revert it back to the way it was
previously.
2013-06-03 17:22:31 +03:00
Stephen Frost f129615fe7 Additional spelling corrections
A few more minor spelling corrections, no functional changes.

Thom Brown
2013-06-03 08:40:27 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas e1e2bb34f1 Code review of recycling WAL segments in a restartpoint.
Seems cleaner to get the currently-replayed TLI in the same call to
GetXLogReplayRecPtr that we get the WAL position. Make it more clear in the
comment what the code does when recovery has already ended
(RecoveryInProgress() will set ThisTimeLineID in that case). Finally, make
resetting ThisTimeLineID afterwards more explicit.
2013-06-03 09:25:12 +03:00
Tom Lane 2c92edad48 Allow type_func_name_keywords in some places where they weren't before.
This change makes type_func_name_keywords less reserved than they were
before, by allowing them for role names, language names, EXPLAIN and COPY
options, and SET values for GUCs; which are all places where few if any
actual keywords could appear instead, so no new ambiguities are introduced.

The main driver for this change is to allow "COPY ... (FORMAT BINARY)"
to work without quoting the word "binary".  That is an inconsistency that
has been complained of repeatedly over the years (at least by Pavel Golub,
Kurt Lidl, and Simon Riggs); but we hadn't thought of any non-ugly solution
until now.

Back-patch to 9.0 where the COPY (FORMAT BINARY) syntax was introduced.
2013-06-02 20:09:20 -04:00
Stephen Frost c9fc28a7f1 Minor spelling fixes
Fix a few spelling mistakes.

Per bug report #8193 from Lajos Veres.
2013-06-01 10:18:59 -04:00
Stephen Frost 551938ae22 Post-pgindent cleanup
Make slightly better decisions about indentation than what pgindent
is capable of.  Mostly breaking out long function calls into one
line per argument, with a few other minor adjustments.

No functional changes- all whitespace.
pgindent ran cleanly (didn't change anything) after.
Passes all regressions.
2013-06-01 09:38:15 -04:00
Noah Misch 97c4d9b7c7 Don't emit non-canonical empty arrays in array_remove().
Dean Rasheed
2013-05-31 21:50:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 8b5a3998a1 Remove whitespace from end of lines 2013-05-30 21:05:07 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut d7eb6f46de Minor spell checking 2013-05-30 20:56:58 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 97a11fd0e3 postgresql.conf.sample: Improve whitespace 2013-05-29 22:00:13 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 9af4159fce pgindent run for release 9.3
This is the first run of the Perl-based pgindent script.  Also update
pgindent instructions.
2013-05-29 16:58:43 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas e2ef289363 Print line number correctly in COPY.
When COPY uses the multi-insert method to insert a batch of tuples into the
heap at a time, incorrect line number was printed if something went wrong in
inserting the index tuples (primary key failure, for exampl), or processing
after row triggers.

Fixes bug #8173 reported by Lloyd Albin. Backpatch to 9.2, where the multi-
insert code was added.
2013-05-23 07:49:59 -04:00
Simon Riggs 22a27ef113 After fast promotion use CHECKPOINT_FORCE
Not necessary for correctness, just to make
log_checkpoints output look less singular.

Requested by Fujii Masao
2013-05-21 21:27:12 +01:00
Simon Riggs 75a192638f Maintain ThisTimeLineID correctly in checkpointer
checkpointer needs to reset ThisTimeLineID after
a restartpoint to allow installing/recycling new
WAL files. If recovery has already ended this
would leave ThisTimeLineID set incorrectly and
so we must reset it otherwise later checkpoints
do not have the correct timeline.

Bug report by Heikki Linnakangas.
Further investigation by Heikki and myself.
2013-05-21 21:17:04 +01:00
Tom Lane 2af0971f35 Clarify documentation of EXPLAIN (TIMING OFF) option.
Clarify that this option doesn't suppress measurement of the statement's
total runtime.

Greg Smith
2013-05-19 22:03:32 -04:00
Simon Riggs d4337a0dcb Init crash recovery using the latest available TLI
This simplifies the handling of crashes after fast promotion and various
minor cases that can exist in short timing windows around that case.

Broad fix to bug reported by Michael Paquier on -hackers,
approach prompted by Heikki Linnakangas
2013-05-19 17:31:07 +01:00
Simon Riggs 1781744cfc Emit msg correctly for timeline-crossing crash 2013-05-19 17:00:18 +01:00
Simon Riggs c94dff4c3c Remove single space on end of a line in xlog.c
Michael Paquier
2013-05-19 15:38:47 +01:00
Tom Lane 403bd6a18b Fix crash when trying to display a NOTIFY rule action.
Fixes oversight in commit 2ffa740be9.
Per report from Josh Kupershmidt.

I think we've broken this case before, so let's add a regression test
this time.
2013-05-16 16:47:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 6563fb2b45 Fix fd.c to preserve errno where needed.
PathNameOpenFile failed to ensure that the correct value of errno was
returned to its caller after a failure (because it incorrectly supposed
that free() can never change errno).  In some cases this would result
in a user-visible failure because an expected ENOENT errno was replaced
with something else.  Bogus EINVAL failures have been observed on OS X,
for example.

There were also a couple of places that could mangle an important value
of errno if FDDEBUG was defined.  While the usefulness of that debug
support is highly debatable, we might as well make it safe to use,
so add errno save/restore logic to the DO_DB macro.

Per bug #8167 from Nelson Minar, diagnosed by RhodiumToad.
Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-05-16 15:04:31 -04:00
Tom Lane b142068622 Allow CREATE FOREIGN TABLE to include SERIAL columns.
The behavior is that the required sequence is created locally, which is
appropriate because the default expression will be evaluated locally.
Per gripe from Brad Nicholson that this case was refused with a confusing
error message.  We could have improved the error message but it seems
better to just allow the case.

Also, remove ALTER TABLE's arbitrary prohibition against being applied to
foreign tables, which was pretty inconsistent considering we allow it for
views, sequences, and other relation types that aren't even called tables.
This is needed to avoid breaking pg_dump, which sometimes emits column
defaults using separate ALTER TABLE commands.  (I think this can happen
even when the default is not associated with a sequence, so that was a
pre-existing bug once we allowed column defaults for foreign tables.)
2013-05-15 19:03:29 -04:00
Tom Lane e9c336c786 Fix handling of OID wraparound while in standalone mode.
If OID wraparound should occur while in standalone mode (unlikely but
possible), we want to advance the counter to FirstNormalObjectId not
FirstBootstrapObjectId.  Otherwise, user objects might be created with OIDs
in the system-reserved range.  That isn't immediately harmful but it poses
a risk of conflicts during future pg_upgrade operations.

Noted by Andres Freund.  Back-patch to all supported branches, since all of
them are supported sources for pg_upgrade operations.
2013-05-13 15:40:16 -04:00
Tom Lane 904af8db8a Fix handling of strict non-set functions with NULLs in set-valued inputs.
In a construct like "select plain_function(set_returning_function(...))",
the plain function is applied to each output row of the SRF successively.
If some of the SRF outputs are NULL, and the plain function is strict,
you'd expect to get NULL results for such rows ... but what actually
happened was that such rows were omitted entirely from the result set.
This was due to confusion of this case with what should happen for nested
set-returning functions; a strict SRF is indeed supposed to yield an empty
set for null input.  Per bug #8150 from Erwin Brandstetter.

Although this has been broken forever, we're not back-patching because
of the possibility that some apps out there expect the incorrect behavior.
This change should be listed as a possible incompatibility in the 9.3
release notes.
2013-05-12 13:08:12 -04:00
Tom Lane 35d50b527a Fix to_number() to correctly ignore thousands separator when it's '.'.
The existing code in NUM_numpart_from_char has hard-wired logic to treat
'.' as decimal point, even when we're using a locale-aware format string
and the locale says that '.' is the thousands separator.  This results in
clearly wrong answers in FM mode (where we must be able to identify the
decimal point location), as per bug report from Patryk Kordylewski.

Since the initialization code in NUM_prepare_locale already sets up
Np->decimal as either the locale decimal-point string or "." depending
on which decimal-point format code was used, there's really no need to
have any extra logic at all in NUM_numpart_from_char: we only need to
test for a match to Np->decimal.

(Note: AFAICS there's nothing in here that explicitly checks for thousands
separators --- rather, any unmatched character is silently skipped over.
That's pretty bogus IMO but it's not the issue being complained of.)

This is a longstanding bug, but it's possible that some existing apps
are depending on '.' being recognized as decimal point even when using
a D format code.  Hence, no back-patch.  We should probably list this
as a potential incompatibility in the 9.3 release notes.
2013-05-11 16:35:03 -04:00
Tom Lane 69cc60dcfd Guard against input_rows == 0 in estimate_num_groups().
This case doesn't normally happen, because the planner usually clamps
all row estimates to at least one row; but I found that it can arise
when dealing with relations excluded by constraints.  Without a defense,
estimate_num_groups() can return zero, which leads to divisions by zero
inside the planner as well as assertion failures in the executor.

An alternative fix would be to change set_dummy_rel_pathlist() to make
the size estimate for a dummy relation 1 row instead of 0, but that seemed
pretty ugly; and probably someday we'll want to drop the convention that
the minimum rowcount estimate is 1 row.

Back-patch to 8.4, as the problem can be demonstrated that far back.
2013-05-10 17:15:30 -04:00
Tom Lane 91715e8293 Fix management of fn_extra caching during repeated GiST index scans.
Commit d22a09dc70 introduced official support
for GiST consistentFns that want to cache data using the FmgrInfo fn_extra
pointer: the idea was to preserve the cached values across gistrescan(),
whereas formerly they'd been leaked.  However, there was an oversight in
that, namely that multiple scan keys might reference the same column's
consistentFn; the code would result in propagating the same cache value
into multiple scan keys, resulting in crashes or wrong answers.  Use a
separate array instead to ensure that each scan key keeps its own state.

Per bug #8143 from Joel Roller.  Back-patch to 9.2 where the bug was
introduced.
2013-05-09 23:09:04 -04:00
Tom Lane a7b965382c Better fix for permissions tests in excluded subqueries.
This reverts the code changes in 50c137487c,
which turned out to induce crashes and not completely fix the problem
anyway.  That commit only considered single subqueries that were excluded
by constraint-exclusion logic, but actually the problem also exists for
subqueries that are appendrel members (ie part of a UNION ALL list).  In
such cases we can't add a dummy subpath to the appendrel's AppendPath list
without defeating the logic that recognizes when an appendrel is completely
excluded.  Instead, fix the problem by having setrefs.c scan the rangetable
an extra time looking for subqueries that didn't get into the plan tree.
(This approach depends on the 9.2 change that made set_subquery_pathlist
generate dummy paths for excluded single subqueries, so that the exclusion
behavior is the same for single subqueries and appendrel members.)

Note: it turns out that the appendrel form of the missed-permissions-checks
bug exists as far back as 8.4.  However, since the practical effect of that
bug seems pretty minimal, consensus is to not attempt to fix it in the back
branches, at least not yet.  Possibly we could back-port this patch once
it's gotten a reasonable amount of testing in HEAD.  For the moment I'm
just going to revert the previous patch in 9.2.
2013-05-08 16:59:58 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2ffa66f497 Fix walsender failure at promotion.
If a standby server has a cascading standby server connected to it, it's
possible that WAL has already been sent up to the next WAL page boundary,
splitting a WAL record in the middle, when the first standby server is
promoted. Don't throw an assertion failure or error in walsender if that
happens.

Also, fix a variant of the same bug in pg_receivexlog: if it had already
received WAL on previous timeline up to a segment boundary, when the
upstream standby server is promoted so that the timeline switch record falls
on the previous segment, pg_receivexlog would miss the segment containing
the timeline switch. To fix that, have walsender send the position of the
timeline switch at end-of-streaming, in addition to the next timeline's ID.
It was previously assumed that the switch happened exactly where the
streaming stopped.

Note: this is an incompatible change in the streaming protocol. You might
get an error if you try to stream over timeline switches, if the client is
running 9.3beta1 and the server is more recent. It should be fine after a
reconnect, however.

Reported by Fujii Masao.
2013-05-08 20:30:17 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas cb953d8b1b Use the term "radix tree" instead of "suffix tree" for SP-GiST text opclass.
What we have implemented is a radix tree (or a radix trie or a patricia
trie), but the docs and code comments incorrectly called it a "suffix tree".

Alexander Korotkov
2013-05-08 14:34:26 +03:00
Tom Lane 1d6c72a55b Move materialized views' is-populated status into their pg_class entries.
Previously this state was represented by whether the view's disk file had
zero or nonzero size, which is problematic for numerous reasons, since it's
breaking a fundamental assumption about heap storage.  This was done to
allow unlogged matviews to revert to unpopulated status after a crash
despite our lack of any ability to update catalog entries post-crash.
However, this poses enough risk of future problems that it seems better to
not support unlogged matviews until we can find another way.  Accordingly,
revert that choice as well as a number of existing kluges forced by it
in favor of creating a pg_class.relispopulated flag column.
2013-05-06 13:27:22 -04:00
Tom Lane 5da5798004 Back out some recent translation updates.
Very old versions of msgfmt choke on these specific messages, for reasons
that are unclear at the moment.  Remove them so that we can ship a beta
release and not get complaints from testers (these messages will just go
untranslated, instead, and we're hardly at 100% coverage anyway).
Peter Eisentraut will look for a better fix later.
2013-05-06 12:28:13 -04:00
Tom Lane 3223b25ff7 Disallow unlogged materialized views.
The initial implementation of this feature was really unsupportable,
because it's relying on the physical size of an on-disk file to carry the
relation's populated/unpopulated state, which is at least a modularity
violation and could have serious long-term consequences.  We could say that
an unlogged matview goes to empty on crash, but not everybody likes that
definition, so let's just remove the feature for 9.3.  We can add it back
when we have a less klugy implementation.

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

I'm committing this separately to ease identification of what should be
reverted when/if we are able to re-enable the feature.
2013-05-06 12:00:06 -04:00
Bruce Momjian 8b06e6aba8 Revert idea of zer-padding padding session id in log_line_prefix
Removal of doc adjustment and release note mention as well.
2013-05-06 08:59:39 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 539ecc9241 Translation updates 2013-05-05 22:34:23 -04:00
Kevin Grittner b69ec7cc99 Prevent (auto)vacuum from truncating first page of populated matview.
Per report from Fujii Masao, with regression test using his example.
2013-05-02 17:33:03 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 5f8b4319b9 Use correct length to convert json unicode escapes.
Bug reported on IRC - fix due to Andrew Gierth.
2013-05-01 18:47:18 -04:00
Tom Lane 50c137487c Fix permission tests for views/tables proven empty by constraint exclusion.
A view defined as "select <something> where false" had the curious property
that the system wouldn't check whether users had the privileges necessary
to select from it.  More generally, permissions checks could be skipped
for tables referenced in sub-selects or views that were proven empty by
constraint exclusion (although some quick testing suggests this seldom
happens in cases of practical interest).  This happened because the planner
failed to include rangetable entries for such tables in the finished plan.

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

Back-patch to 9.2 where the bug was introduced (by commit
7741dd6590).
2013-05-01 18:26:50 -04:00
Simon Riggs 443951748c Record data_checksum_version in control file.
The value is not used anywhere in code, but will
allow future changes to the checksum version
should that become necessary in the future.
2013-04-30 12:27:12 +01:00
Simon Riggs 730924397c Ensure we MarkBufferDirty before visibilitymap_set()
logs the heap page and sets the LSN. Otherwise a
checkpoint could occur between those actions and
leave us in an inconsistent state.

Jeff Davis
2013-04-30 08:15:49 +01:00
Simon Riggs fdea2530bd Compiler optimizations for page checksum code.
Ants Aasma and Jeff Davis
2013-04-30 06:59:26 +01:00
Tom Lane db9f0e1d9a Postpone creation of pathkeys lists to fix bug #8049.
This patch gets rid of the concept of, and infrastructure for,
non-canonical PathKeys; we now only ever create canonical pathkey lists.

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

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

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

Back-patch to 9.2 but not to earlier branches, since they don't exhibit
this bug for lack of join-clause-movement logic that depends on
em_nullable_relids being correct.  (We might have to revisit that choice
if any related bugs turn up.)  In 9.2, don't change the signature of
make_pathkeys_for_sortclauses nor remove canonicalize_pathkeys, so as
not to risk more plugin breakage than we have to.
2013-04-29 14:50:03 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 5fc893760f Ensure ANALYZE phase is not skipped because of canceled truncate.
Patch b19e4250b4 attempted to
preserve existing behavior regarding statistics generation in the
case that a truncation attempt was canceled due to lock conflicts.
It failed to do this accurately in two regards: (1) autovacuum had
previously generated statistics if the truncate attempt failed to
initially get the lock rather than having started the attempt, and
(2) the VACUUM ANALYZE command had always generated statistics.

Both of these changes were unintended, and are reverted by this
patch.  On review, there seems to be consensus that the previous
failure to generate statistics when the truncate was terminated
was more an unfortunate consequence of how that effort was
previously terminated than a feature we want to keep; so this
patch generates statistics even when an autovacuum truncation
attempt terminates early.  Another unintended change which is kept
on the basis that it is an improvement is that when a VACUUM
command is truncating, it will the new heuristic for avoiding
blocking other processes, rather than keeping an
AccessExclusiveLock on the table for however long the truncation
takes.

Per multiple reports, with some renaming per patch by Jeff Janes.

Backpatch to 9.0, where problem was created.
2013-04-29 13:05:26 -05:00
Simon Riggs 43e7a66849 Introduce new page checksum algorithm and module.
Isolate checksum calculation to its own module, so that bufpage
knows little if anything about the details of the calculation.

This implementation is a modified FNV-1a hash checksum, details
of which are given in the new checksum.c header comments.

Basic implementation only, so we fix the output value.

Later related commits will add version numbers to pg_control,
compiler optimization flags and memory barriers.

Ants Aasma, reviewed by Jeff Davis and Simon Riggs
2013-04-29 09:05:27 +01:00
Tom Lane f8db76e875 Editorialize a bit on new ProcessUtility() API.
Choose a saner ordering of parameters (adding a new input param after
the output params seemed a bit random), update the function's header
comment to match reality (cmon folks, is this really that hard?),
get rid of useless and sloppily-defined distinction between
PROCESS_UTILITY_SUBCOMMAND and PROCESS_UTILITY_GENERATED.
2013-04-28 00:18:45 -04:00
Tom Lane 5525e6c40b Fix unsafe event-trigger coding in ProcessUtility().
We mustn't run any of the event-trigger support code when handling
utility statements like START TRANSACTION or ABORT, because that code
may need to refresh event-trigger cache data, which requires being
inside a valid transaction.  (This mistake explains the consistent
build failures exhibited by the CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS buildfarm members,
as well as some irreproducible failures on other members.)

The least messy fix seems to be to break standard_ProcessUtility into two
functions, one that handles all the statements not supported by event
triggers, and one that contains the event-trigger support code and handles
the statements that are supported by event triggers.

This change also fixes several inconsistencies, such as four cases where
support had been installed for "ddl_event_start" but not "ddl_event_end"
triggers, plus the fact that InvokeDDLCommandEventTriggersIfSupported()
paid no mind to isCompleteQuery.

Dimitri Fontaine and Tom Lane
2013-04-27 23:11:51 -04:00
Tom Lane 5194024d72 Incidental cleanup of matviews code.
Move checking for unscannable matviews into ExecOpenScanRelation, which is
a better place for it first because the open relation is already available
(saving a relcache lookup cycle), and second because this eliminates the
problem of telling the difference between rangetable entries that will or
will not be scanned by the query.  In particular we can get rid of the
not-terribly-well-thought-out-or-implemented isResultRel field that the
initial matviews patch added to RangeTblEntry.

Also get rid of entirely unnecessary scannability check in the rewriter,
and a bogus decision about whether RefreshMatViewStmt requires a parse-time
snapshot.

catversion bump due to removal of a RangeTblEntry field, which changes
stored rules.
2013-04-27 17:48:57 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut f5d576c6d2 Improve message about failed transaction log archiving
The old phrasing appeared to imply that the failure was terminal.
Improve that by indicating that archiving will be tried again later.
2013-04-26 22:43:54 -04:00
Tom Lane 41a2760f61 Fix collation assignment for aggregates with ORDER BY.
ORDER BY expressions were being treated the same as regular aggregate
arguments for purposes of collation determination, but really they should
not affect the aggregate's collation at all; only collations of the
aggregate's regular arguments should affect it.

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

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

Andrew Gierth and David Fetter
2013-04-26 15:48:53 -04:00
Tom Lane c3d09b3bd2 Avoid deadlock between concurrent CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY commands.
There was a high probability of two or more concurrent C.I.C. commands
deadlocking just before completion, because each would wait for the others
to release their reference snapshots.  Fix by releasing the snapshot
before waiting for other snapshots to go away.

Per report from Paul Hinze.  Back-patch to all active branches.
2013-04-25 16:58:05 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 447b3174f5 Fix typo in comment.
Peter Geoghegan
2013-04-25 14:09:07 +03:00
Kevin Grittner 63e20041a2 Fix assertion failure for REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW in PL.
This was due to incomplete implementation of rowcount reporting
for RMV, which was due to initial waffling on whether it should
be provided.  It seems unlikely to be a useful or universally
available  number as more sophisticated techniques for maintaining
matviews are added, so remove the partial support rather than
completing it.

Per report of Jeevan Chalke, but with a different fix
2013-04-24 08:39:06 -05:00
Simon Riggs 2317a63328 Make fast promotion the default promotion mode.
Continue to allow a request for synchronous
checkpoints as a mechanism in case of problems.
2013-04-24 12:21:18 +01:00
Tom Lane ac63dca607 Fix longstanding race condition in plancache.c.
When creating or manipulating a cached plan for a transaction control
command (particularly ROLLBACK), we must not perform any catalog accesses,
since we might be in an aborted transaction.  However, plancache.c busily
saved or examined the search_path for every cached plan.  If we were
unlucky enough to do this at a moment where the path's expansion into
schema OIDs wasn't already cached, we'd do some catalog accesses; and with
some more bad luck such as an ill-timed signal arrival, that could lead to
crashes or Assert failures, as exhibited in bug #8095 from Nachiket Vaidya.
Fortunately, there's no real need to consider the search path for such
commands, so we can just skip the relevant steps when the subject statement
is a TransactionStmt.  This is somewhat related to bug #5269, though the
failure happens during initial cached-plan creation rather than
revalidation.

This bug has been there since the plan cache was invented, so back-patch
to all supported branches.
2013-04-20 17:00:23 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut cc26ea9fe2 Clean up references to SQL92
In most cases, these were just references to the SQL standard in
general.  In a few cases, a contrast was made between SQL92 and later
standards -- those have been kept unchanged.
2013-04-20 11:04:41 -04:00
Tom Lane 6e481ebff6 Improve error message when an FDW doesn't support WHERE CURRENT OF.
If an FDW fails to take special measures with a CurrentOfExpr, we will
end up trying to execute it as an ordinary qual, which was being treated
as a purely internal failure condition.  Provide a more user-oriented
error message for such cases.
2013-04-19 16:14:56 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut acd5803053 Standardize spelling of "nonblocking"
Only adjusted the user-exposed messages and documentation,  not all
source code comments.
2013-04-18 23:35:19 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 87ae9e7265 Remove some unused and seldom used fields from RelationAmInfo.
This saves some memory from each index relcache entry. At least on a 64-bit
machine, it saves just enough to shrink a typical relcache entry's memory
usage from 2k to 1k. That's nice if you have a lot of backends and a lot of
indexes.
2013-04-16 15:07:58 +03:00
Peter Eisentraut c74d586d2f Fix function return type confusion
When parse_hba_line's return type was changed from bool to a pointer,
the MANDATORY_AUTH_ARG macro wasn't adjusted.
2013-04-15 22:38:08 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 728ec9731f Correct handling of NULL arguments in json funcs.
Per gripe from Tom Lane.
2013-04-15 16:20:21 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut e08fdf1310 Add serial comma 2013-04-14 11:12:30 -04:00
Tom Lane 0b33790421 Clean up the mess around EXPLAIN and materialized views.
Revert the matview-related changes in explain.c's API, as per recent
complaint from Robert Haas.  The reason for these appears to have been
principally some ill-considered choices around having intorel_startup do
what ought to be parse-time checking, plus a poor arrangement for passing
it the view parsetree it needs to store into pg_rewrite when creating a
materialized view.  Do the latter by having parse analysis stick a copy
into the IntoClause, instead of doing it at runtime.  (On the whole,
I seriously question the choice to represent CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW as a
variant of SELECT INTO/CREATE TABLE AS, because that means injecting even
more complexity into what was already a horrid legacy kluge.  However,
I didn't go so far as to rethink that choice ... yet.)

I also moved several error checks into matview parse analysis, and
made the check for external Params in a matview more accurate.

In passing, clean things up a bit more around interpretOidsOption(),
and fix things so that we can use that to force no-oids for views,
sequences, etc, thereby eliminating the need to cons up "oids = false"
options when creating them.

catversion bump due to change in IntoClause.  (I wonder though if we
really need readfuncs/outfuncs support for IntoClause anymore.)
2013-04-12 19:25:31 -04:00
Robert Haas f8a54e936b sepgsql: Enforce db_procedure:{execute} permission.
To do this, we add an additional object access hook type,
OAT_FUNCTION_EXECUTE.

KaiGai Kohei
2013-04-12 08:58:01 -04:00
Robert Haas d017bf41a3 Minor wording corrections for object-access hook stuff.
KaiGai Kohei
2013-04-12 08:40:02 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 6cd18a88b6 Remove quotes around SQL statement in error message 2013-04-11 12:00:09 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 6a76edb188 Fix confusion between ObjectType and ObjectClass
Per report by Will Leinweber and Peter Eisentraut
2013-04-11 11:59:47 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera f62ab623ad Fix SIGUSR1 handling by unconnected bgworkers
Latch activity was not being detected by non-database-connected workers; the
SIGUSR1 signal handler which is normally in charge of that was set to SIG_IGN.
Create a simple handler to call latch_sigusr1_handler instead.

Robert Haas (bug report and suggested fix)
2013-04-10 16:01:16 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 61a7d576f2 Fix SIGHUP handling by unconnected bgworkers
Add a SignalUnconnectedWorkers() call so that non-database-connected background
workers are also notified when postmaster is SIGHUPped.  Previously, only
database-connected workers were.

Michael Paquier (bug report and fix)
2013-04-10 15:59:45 -03:00
Robert Haas 4cff7b9dd6 Remove duplicate initialization in XLogReadRecord.
Per a note from Dickson S. Guedes.
2013-04-09 23:59:31 -04:00
Kevin Grittner 52e6e33ab4 Create a distinction between a populated matview and a scannable one.
The intent was that being populated would, long term, be just one
of the conditions which could affect whether a matview was
scannable; being populated should be necessary but not always
sufficient to scan the relation.  Since only CREATE and REFRESH
currently determine the scannability, names and comments
accidentally conflated these concepts, leading to confusion.

Also add missing locking for the SQL function which allows a
test for scannability, and fix a modularity violatiion.

Per complaints from Tom Lane, although its not clear that these
will satisfy his concerns.  Hopefully this will at least better
frame the discussion.
2013-04-09 13:02:49 -05:00
Robert Haas 0bf42a5f3b Adjust ExplainOneQuery_hook_type to take a DestReceiver argument.
The materialized views patch adjusted ExplainOneQuery to take an
additional DestReceiver argument, but failed to add a matching
argument to the definition of ExplainOneQuery_hook.  This is a
problem for users of the hook that want to call ExplainOnePlan.
Fix by adding the missing argument.
2013-04-09 10:25:08 -04:00
Tom Lane 3ccae48f44 Support indexing of regular-expression searches in contrib/pg_trgm.
This works by extracting trigrams from the given regular expression,
in generally the same spirit as the previously-existing support for
LIKE searches, though of course the details are far more complicated.

Currently, only GIN indexes are supported.  We might be able to make
it work with GiST indexes later.

The implementation includes adding API functions to backend/regex/
to provide a view of the search NFA created from a regular expression.
These functions are meant to be generic enough to be supportable in
a standalone version of the regex library, should that ever happen.

Alexander Korotkov, reviewed by Heikki Linnakangas and Tom Lane
2013-04-09 01:06:54 -04:00
Simon Riggs e60d20a35e Minor rewording of README comments 2013-04-08 17:20:26 +01:00
Heikki Linnakangas 594041311c Fix calculation of how many segments to retain for wal_keep_segments.
KeepLogSeg function was broken when we switched to use a 64-bit int for the
segment number.

Per report from Jeff Janes.
2013-04-08 16:29:56 +03:00
Simon Riggs 5787c6730e Skip extraneous locking in XLogCheckBuffer().
Heikki reported comment was wrong, so fixed
code to match the comment: we only need to
take additional locking precautions when we
have a shared lock on the buffer.
2013-04-08 09:11:49 +01:00
Simon Riggs 47c4333189 Avoid tricky race condition recording XLOG_HINT
We copy the buffer before inserting an XLOG_HINT to avoid WAL CRC errors
caused by concurrent hint writes to buffer while share locked. To make this work
we refactor RestoreBackupBlock() to allow an XLOG_HINT to avoid the normal
path for backup blocks, which assumes the underlying buffer is exclusive locked.
Resulting code completely changes layout of XLOG_HINT WAL records, but
this isn't even beta code, so this is a low impact change.
In passing, avoid taking WALInsertLock for full page writes on checksummed
hints, remove related cruft from XLogInsert() and improve xlog_desc record for
XLOG_HINT.

Andres Freund

Bug report by Fujii Masao, testing by Jeff Janes and Jaime Casanova,
review by Jeff Davis and Simon Riggs. Applied with changes from review
and some comment editing.
2013-04-08 08:52:39 +01:00
Simon Riggs a4b94b8515 README comments on checksums on page holes. 2013-04-08 08:42:52 +01:00
Simon Riggs 1be203519a Tune BufferGetLSNAtomic() when checksums !enabled
From performance analysis by Heikki Linnakangas
2013-04-07 22:37:39 +01:00
Simon Riggs cf8dc9e10c Fix checksums for CLUSTER, VACUUM FULL etc.
In CLUSTER, VACUUM FULL and ALTER TABLE SET TABLESPACE
I erroneously set checksum before log_newpage, which
sets the LSN and invalidates the checksum. So set
checksum immediately *after* log_newpage.

Bug report Fujii Masao, Fix and patch by Jeff Davis
2013-04-07 22:16:51 +01:00
Robert Haas e965e6344c sepgsql: Enforce db_schema:search permission.
KaiGai Kohei, with comment and doc wordsmithing by me
2013-04-05 08:51:31 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan e75feb2834 Fix off by one error in JSON extract path code.
Bug report by David Wheeler, diagnosis assistance from Tom Lane.
2013-04-04 18:26:52 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas bf2b0a1478 Fix crash on compiling a regular expression with more than 32k colors.
Throw an error instead.

Backpatch to all supported branches.
2013-04-04 19:48:11 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas b8ed4cc962 Calculate # of semaphores correctly with --disable-spinlocks.
The old formula didn't take into account that each WAL sender process needs
a spinlock. We had also already exceeded the fixed number of spinlocks
reserved for misc purposes (10). Bump that to 30.

Backpatch to 9.0, where WAL senders were introduced. If I counted correctly,
9.0 had exactly 10 predefined spinlocks, and 9.1 exceeded that, but bump the
limit in 9.0 too because 10 is uncomfortably close to the edge.
2013-04-04 16:40:37 +03:00
Tom Lane f7b0006f42 Avoid updating our PgBackendStatus entry when track_activities is off.
The point of turning off track_activities is to avoid this reporting
overhead, but a thinko in commit 4f42b546fd
caused pgstat_report_activity() to perform half of its updates anyway.
Fix that, and also make sure that we clear all the now-disabled fields
when transitioning to the non-reporting state.
2013-04-03 14:13:28 -04:00
Tom Lane 17fe2793ea Fix insecure parsing of server command-line switches.
An oversight in commit e710b65c1c allowed
database names beginning with "-" to be treated as though they were secure
command-line switches; and this switch processing occurs before client
authentication, so that even an unprivileged remote attacker could exploit
the bug, needing only connectivity to the postmaster's port.  Assorted
exploits for this are possible, some requiring a valid database login,
some not.  The worst known problem is that the "-r" switch can be invoked
to redirect the process's stderr output, so that subsequent error messages
will be appended to any file the server can write.  This can for example be
used to corrupt the server's configuration files, so that it will fail when
next restarted.  Complete destruction of database tables is also possible.

Fix by keeping the database name extracted from a startup packet fully
separate from command-line switches, as had already been done with the
user name field.

The Postgres project thanks Mitsumasa Kondo for discovering this bug,
Kyotaro Horiguchi for drafting the fix, and Noah Misch for recognizing
the full extent of the danger.

Security: CVE-2013-1899
2013-04-01 14:00:51 -04:00
Tom Lane ce9ab88981 Make REPLICATION privilege checks test current user not authenticated user.
The pg_start_backup() and pg_stop_backup() functions checked the privileges
of the initially-authenticated user rather than the current user, which is
wrong.  For example, a user-defined index function could successfully call
these functions when executed by ANALYZE within autovacuum.  This could
allow an attacker with valid but low-privilege database access to interfere
with creation of routine backups.  Reported and fixed by Noah Misch.

Security: CVE-2013-1901
2013-04-01 13:09:24 -04:00
Tom Lane d931ac0ec4 Ignore extra subquery outputs in set_subquery_size_estimates().
In commit 0f61d4dd1b, I added code to copy up
column width estimates for each column of a subquery.  That code supposed
that the subquery couldn't have any output columns that didn't correspond
to known columns of the current query level --- which is true when a query
is parsed from scratch, but the assumption fails when planning a view that
depends on another view that's been redefined (adding output columns) since
the upper view was made.  This results in an assertion failure or even a
crash, as per bug #8025 from lindebg.  Remove the Assert and instead skip
the column if its resno is out of the expected range.
2013-03-31 18:34:15 -04:00
Tom Lane 22f7b9613e Improve code documentation about "magnetic disk" storage manager.
The modern incarnation of md.c is by no means specific to magnetic disk
technology, but every so often we hear from someone who's misled by the
label.  Try to clarify that it will work for anything that supports
standard filesystem operations.  Per suggestion from Andrew Dunstan.
2013-03-30 14:23:45 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan a570c98d7f Add new JSON processing functions and parser API.
The JSON parser is converted into a recursive descent parser, and
exposed for use by other modules such as extensions. The API provides
hooks for all the significant parser event such as the beginning and end
of objects and arrays, and providing functions to handle these hooks
allows for fairly simple construction of a wide variety of JSON
processing functions. A set of new basic processing functions and
operators is also added, which use this API, including operations to
extract array elements, object fields, get the length of arrays and the
set of keys of a field, deconstruct an object into a set of key/value
pairs, and create records from JSON objects and arrays of objects.

Catalog version bumped.

Andrew Dunstan, with some documentation assistance from Merlin Moncure.
2013-03-29 14:12:13 -04:00
Tom Lane 58bc48179b Avoid "variable might be clobbered by longjmp" warning.
On older-model gcc, the original coding of UTILITY_BEGIN_QUERY() can
draw this error because of multiple assignments to _needCleanup.
Rather than mark that variable volatile, we can suppress the warning
by arranging to have just one unconditional assignment before PG_TRY.
2013-03-28 13:19:49 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 473ab40c8b Add sql_drop event for event triggers
This event takes place just before ddl_command_end, and is fired if and
only if at least one object has been dropped by the command.  (For
instance, DROP TABLE IF EXISTS of a table that does not in fact exist
will not lead to such a trigger firing).  Commands that drop multiple
objects (such as DROP SCHEMA or DROP OWNED BY) will cause a single event
to fire.  Some firings might be surprising, such as
ALTER TABLE DROP COLUMN.

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

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

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

Catalog version bumped due to the new function.

Dimitri Fontaine and Álvaro Herrera
Review by Robert Haas, Tom Lane
2013-03-28 13:05:48 -03:00
Simon Riggs 593c39d156 Revoke bc5334d867 2013-03-28 09:18:02 +00:00
Simon Riggs d139a5e26b Revoke 7a5a59d378 2013-03-28 09:12:55 +00:00
Tom Lane 0d1ecd6300 Reset OpenSSL randomness state in each postmaster child process.
Previously, if the postmaster initialized OpenSSL's PRNG (which it will do
when ssl=on in postgresql.conf), the same pseudo-random state would be
inherited by each forked child process.  The problem is masked to a
considerable extent if the incoming connection uses SSL encryption, but
when it does not, identical pseudo-random state is made available to
functions like contrib/pgcrypto.  The process's PID does get mixed into any
requested random output, but on most systems that still only results in 32K
or so distinct random sequences available across all Postgres sessions.
This might allow an attacker who has database access to guess the results
of "secure" operations happening in another session.

To fix, forcibly reset the PRNG after fork().  Each child process that has
need for random numbers from OpenSSL's generator will thereby be forced to
go through OpenSSL's normal initialization sequence, which should provide
much greater variability of the sequences.  There are other ways we might
do this that would be slightly cheaper, but this approach seems the most
future-proof against SSL-related code changes.

This has been assigned CVE-2013-1900, but since the issue and the patch
have already been publicized on pgsql-hackers, there's no point in trying
to hide this commit.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Marko Kreen
2013-03-27 18:50:21 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3cfb572dde Fix buffer pin leak in heap update redo routine.
In a heap update, if the old and new tuple were on different pages, and the
new page no longer existed (because it was subsequently truncated away by
vacuum), heap_xlog_update forgot to release the pin on the old buffer. This
bug was introduced by the "Fix multiple problems in WAL replay" patch,
commit 3bbf668de9 (on master branch).

With full_page_writes=off, this triggered an "incorrect local pin count"
error later in replay, if the old page was vacuumed.

This fixes bug #7969, reported by Yunong Xiao. Backpatch to 9.0, like the
commit that introduced this bug.
2013-03-27 22:00:01 +02:00
Simon Riggs 7a5a59d378 Set recovery_config_directory for EXEC_BACKEND.
Remove comment questioning whether this is necessary for DataDir.
From buildfarm failures on Windows.
2013-03-27 16:35:38 +00:00
Simon Riggs bc5334d867 Allow external recovery_config_directory
If required, recovery.conf can now be located outside of the data directory.
Server needs read/write permissions on this directory.
2013-03-27 11:45:42 +00:00
Tom Lane f7f210b5c4 Fix grammatical errors in some new message strings.
Daniele Varrazzo
2013-03-26 17:52:00 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 28ba260906 In base backup, only include our own tablespace version directory.
If you have clusters of different versions pointing to the same tablespace
location, we would incorrectly include all the data belonging to the other
versions, too.

Fixes bug #7986, reported by Sergey Burladyan.
2013-03-25 20:19:22 +02:00
Kevin Grittner 549dae0352 Fix problems with incomplete attempt to prohibit OIDS with MVs.
Problem with assertion failure in restoring from pg_dump output
reported by Joachim Wieland.

Review and suggestions by Tom Lane and Robert Haas.
2013-03-22 13:27:34 -05:00
Tom Lane 4912385b56 Suppress uninitialized-variable warning in new checksum code.
Some compilers understand that this coding is safe, and some don't.
2013-03-22 12:27:50 -04:00
Simon Riggs 9df56f6d91 Add new README file for pages/checksums 2013-03-22 14:21:58 +00:00
Simon Riggs 96ef3b8ff1 Allow I/O reliability checks using 16-bit checksums
Checksums are set immediately prior to flush out of shared buffers
and checked when pages are read in again. Hint bit setting will
require full page write when block is dirtied, which causes various
infrastructure changes. Extensive comments, docs and README.

WARNING message thrown if checksum fails on non-all zeroes page;
ERROR thrown but can be disabled with ignore_checksum_failure = on.

Feature enabled by an initdb option, since transition from option off
to option on is long and complex and has not yet been implemented.
Default is not to use checksums.

Checksum used is WAL CRC-32 truncated to 16-bits.

Simon Riggs, Jeff Davis, Greg Smith
Wide input and assistance from many community members. Thank you.
2013-03-22 13:54:07 +00:00
Simon Riggs 13fe298ca0 Change commit_delay to be SUSET for 9.3+
Prior to 9.3 the commit_delay affected only the current user,
whereas now only the group leader waits while holding the
WALWriteLock. Deliberate or accidental settings to a poor
value could seriously degrade performance for all users.
Privileges may be delegated by SECURITY DEFINER functions
for anyone that needs per-user settings in real situations.
Request for change from Peter Geoghegan
2013-03-22 12:01:16 +00:00
Tom Lane 9cbc4b80dd Redo postgres_fdw's planner code so it can handle parameterized paths.
I wasn't going to ship this without having at least some example of how
to do that.  This version isn't terribly bright; in particular it won't
consider any combinations of multiple join clauses.  Given the cost of
executing a remote EXPLAIN, I'm not sure we want to be very aggressive
about doing that, anyway.

In support of this, refactor generate_implied_equalities_for_indexcol
so that it can be used to extract equivalence clauses that aren't
necessarily tied to an index.
2013-03-21 19:44:32 -04:00