Commit Graph

4693 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane 4be058fe9e In the planner, replace an empty FROM clause with a dummy RTE.
The fact that "SELECT expression" has no base relations has long been a
thorn in the side of the planner.  It makes it hard to flatten a sub-query
that looks like that, or is a trivial VALUES() item, because the planner
generally uses relid sets to identify sub-relations, and such a sub-query
would have an empty relid set if we flattened it.  prepjointree.c contains
some baroque logic that works around this in certain special cases --- but
there is a much better answer.  We can replace an empty FROM clause with a
dummy RTE that acts like a table of one row and no columns, and then there
are no such corner cases to worry about.  Instead we need some logic to
get rid of useless dummy RTEs, but that's simpler and covers more cases
than what was there before.

For really trivial cases, where the query is just "SELECT expression" and
nothing else, there's a hazard that adding the extra RTE makes for a
noticeable slowdown; even though it's not much processing, there's not
that much for the planner to do overall.  However testing says that the
penalty is very small, close to the noise level.  In more complex queries,
this is able to find optimizations that we could not find before.

The new RTE type is called RTE_RESULT, since the "scan" plan type it
gives rise to is a Result node (the same plan we produced for a "SELECT
expression" query before).  To avoid confusion, rename the old ResultPath
path type to GroupResultPath, reflecting that it's only used in degenerate
grouping cases where we know the query produces just one grouped row.
(It wouldn't work to unify the two cases, because there are different
rules about where the associated quals live during query_planner.)

Note: although this touches readfuncs.c, I don't think a catversion
bump is required, because the added case can't occur in stored rules,
only plans.

Patch by me, reviewed by David Rowley and Mark Dilger

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15944.1521127664@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-28 17:54:23 -05:00
Amit Kapila a23676503b Revert "Avoid creation of the free space map for small heap relations."
This reverts commit ac88d2962a.
2019-01-28 11:31:44 +05:30
Amit Kapila ac88d2962a Avoid creation of the free space map for small heap relations.
Previously, all heaps had FSMs. For very small tables, this means that the
FSM took up more space than the heap did. This is wasteful, so now we
refrain from creating the FSM for heaps with 4 pages or fewer. If the last
known target block has insufficient space, we still try to insert into some
other page before giving up and extending the relation, since doing
otherwise leads to table bloat. Testing showed that trying every page
penalized performance slightly, so we compromise and try every other page.
This way, we visit at most two pages. Any pages with wasted free space
become visible at next relation extension, so we still control table bloat.
As a bonus, directly attempting one or two pages can even be faster than
consulting the FSM would have been.

Once the FSM is created for a heap we don't remove it even if somebody
deletes all the rows from the corresponding relation.  We don't think it is
a useful optimization as it is quite likely that relation will again grow
to the same size.

Author: John Naylor with design inputs and some code contribution by Amit Kapila
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Tested-by: Mithun C Y
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAJVSVGWvB13PzpbLEecFuGFc5V2fsO736BsdTakPiPAcdMM5tQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-28 08:14:06 +05:30
Tom Lane d6f6f0fc2d Allow for yet another crash symptom in 013_crash_restart.pl.
Given the right timing, psql could emit "connection to server was lost"
rather than one of the other messages that this test script checked for.
It looks like commit 4247db625 may have made this more likely, but
I don't really believe it was impossible before then.  Rather than
stress about it, just add that spelling as one of the crash-successfully-
detected cases.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19344.1548554028@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-26 22:12:48 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 1e4730c639 Make regression test output locale-independent
In some locales, letters sort before numbers, so change the object
naming to not depend on that.  Introduced by commit
7c079d7417.
2019-01-26 09:22:27 +01:00
Tom Lane ebfe20dc70 Allow UNLISTEN in hot-standby mode.
Since LISTEN is (still) disallowed, UNLISTEN must be a no-op in a
hot-standby session, and so there's no harm in allowing it.  This
change allows client code to not worry about whether it's connected
to a primary or standby server when performing session-state-reset
type activities.  (Note that DISCARD ALL, which includes UNLISTEN,
was already allowed, making it inconsistent to reject UNLISTEN.)

Per discussion, back-patch to all supported versions.

Shay Rojansky, reviewed by Mi Tar

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADT4RqCf2gA_TJtPAjnGzkC3ZiexfBZiLmA-mV66e4UyuVv8bA@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-25 21:14:49 -05:00
Michael Paquier c9b75c5838 Simplify restriction handling of two-phase commit for temporary objects
There were two flags used to track the access to temporary tables and
to the temporary namespace of a session which are used to restrict
PREPARE TRANSACTION, however the first control flag is a concept
included in the second.  This removes the flag for temporary table
tracking, keeping around only the one at namespace level.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190118053126.GH1883@paquier.xyz
2019-01-26 10:45:23 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 7c079d7417 Allow generalized expression syntax for partition bounds
Previously, only literals were allowed.  This change allows general
expressions, including functions calls, which are evaluated at the
time the DDL command is executed.

Besides offering some more functionality, it simplifies the parser
structures and removes some inconsistencies in how the literals were
handled.

Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Tom Lane, Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@2ndquadrant.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/9f88b5e0-6da2-5227-20d0-0d7012beaa1c@lab.ntt.co.jp/
2019-01-25 11:28:49 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera efd9366dce Fix droppability of constraints upon partition detach
We were failing to set conislocal correctly for constraints in
partitions after partition detach, leading to those constraints becoming
undroppable.  Fix by setting the flag correctly.  Existing databases
might contain constraints with the conislocal wrongly set to false, for
partitions that were detached; this situation should be fixable by
applying an UPDATE on pg_constraint to set conislocal true.  This
problem should otherwise be innocuous and should disappear across a
dump/restore or pg_upgrade.

Secondarily, when constraint drop was attempted in a partitioned table,
ATExecDropConstraint would try to recurse to partitions after doing
performDeletion() of the constraint in the partitioned table itself; but
since the constraint in the partitions are dropped by the initial call
of performDeletion() (because of following dependencies), the recursion
step would fail since it would not find the constraint, causing the
whole operation to fail.  Fix by preventing recursion.

Reported-by: Amit Langote
Diagnosed-by: Amit Langote
Author: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f2b8ead5-4131-d5a8-8016-2ea0a31250af@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-01-24 14:09:56 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera ae366aa577 Detach constraints when partitions are detached
I (Álvaro) forgot to do this in eb7ed3f306, leading to undroppable
constraints after partitions are detached.  Repair.

Reported-by: Amit Langote
Author: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c1c9b688-b886-84f7-4048-1e4ebe9b1d06@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-01-24 00:01:32 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 0464fdf07f Create action triggers when partitions are detached
Detaching a partition from a partitioned table that's constrained by
foreign keys requires additional action triggers on the referenced side;
otherwise, DELETE/UPDATE actions there fail to notice rows in the table
that was partition, and so are incorrectly allowed through.  With this
commit, those triggers are now created.  Conversely, when a table that
has a foreign key is attached as a partition to a table that also has
the same foreign key, those action triggers are no longer needed, so we
remove them.

Add a minimal test case verifying (part of) this.

Authors: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f2b8ead5-4131-d5a8-8016-2ea0a31250af@lab.ntt.co.jp
2019-01-21 20:08:52 -03:00
Tom Lane f1ad067fc3 Sort the dependent objects before recursing in findDependentObjects().
Historically, the notices output by DROP CASCADE tended to come out
in uncertain order, and in some cases you might get different claims
about which object depends on which other one.  This is because we
just traversed the dependency tree in the order in which pg_depend
entries are seen, and nbtree has never promised anything about the
order of equal-keyed index entries.  We've put up with that for years,
hacking regression tests when necessary to prevent them from emitting
unstable output.  However, it's a problem for pending work that will
change nbtree's behavior for equal keys, as that causes unexpected
changes in the regression test results.

Hence, adjust findDependentObjects to sort the results of each
indexscan before processing them.  The sort is on descending OID of
the dependent objects, hence more or less reverse creation order.
While this rule could still result in bogus regression test failures
if an OID wraparound occurred mid-test, that seems unlikely to happen
in any plausible development or packaging-test scenario.

This is enough to ensure output stability for ordinary DROP CASCADE
commands, but not for DROP OWNED BY, because that has a different
code path with the same problem.  We might later choose to sort in
the DROP OWNED BY code as well, but this patch doesn't do so.

I've also not done anything about reverting the existing hacks to
suppress unstable DROP CASCADE output in specific regression tests.
It might be worth undoing those, but it seems like a distinct question.

The first indexscan loop in findDependentObjects is not touched,
meaning there is a hazard of unstable error reports from that too.
However, said hazard is not the fault of that code: it was designed
on the assumption that there could be at most one "owning" object
to complain about, and that assumption does not seem unreasonable.
The recent patch that added the possibility of multiple
DEPENDENCY_INTERNAL_AUTO links broke that assumption, but we should
fix that situation not band-aid around it.  That's a matter for
another patch, though.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/12244.1547854440@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-01-21 13:48:14 -05:00
Andres Freund 8cc157b234 Fix ALTER TRIGGER ... RENAME, broken in WITH OIDS removal.
I (Andres) broke this in 578b229718.

Author: Rushabh Lathia
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGPqQf04PywZX3sVQaF6H=oLiW9GJncRW+=e78vTy4MokEWcZw@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-21 09:13:43 -08:00
Tomas Vondra 31f3817402 Allow COPY FROM to filter data using WHERE conditions
Extends the COPY FROM command with a WHERE condition, which allows doing
various types of filtering while importing the data (random sampling,
condition on a data column, etc.).  Until now such filtering required
either preprocessing of the input data, or importing all data and then
filtering in the database. COPY FROM ... WHERE is an easy-to-use and
low-overhead alternative for most simple cases.

Author: Surafel Temesgen
Reviewed-by: Tomas Vondra, Masahiko Sawada, Lim Myungkyu
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/CALAY4q_DdpWDuB5-Zyi-oTtO2uSk8pmy+dupiRe3AvAc++1imA@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-20 00:22:14 +01:00
Magnus Hagander 0301db623d Replace @postgresql.org with @lists.postgresql.org for mailinglists
Commit c0d0e54084 replaced the ones in the documentation, but missed out
on the ones in the code. Replace those as well, but unlike c0d0e54084,
don't backpatch the code changes to avoid breaking translations.
2019-01-19 19:06:35 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera 0325d7a595 Fix creation of duplicate foreign keys on partitions
When creating a foreign key in a partitioned table, if some partitions
already have equivalent constraints, we wastefully create duplicates of
the constraints instead of attaching to the existing ones.  That's
inconsistent with the de-duplication that is applied when a table is
attached as a partition.  To fix, reuse the FK-cloning code instead of
having a separate code path.

Backpatch to Postgres 11.  This is a subtle behavior change, but surely
a welcome one since there's no use in having duplicate foreign keys.

Discovered by Álvaro Herrera while thinking about a different problem
reported by Jesper Pedersen (bug #15587).

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/201901151935.zfadrzvyof4k@alvherre.pgsql
2019-01-18 15:00:45 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut f04ad77a30 Remove obsolete comment 2019-01-18 09:48:51 +01:00
Michael Paquier 396676b0ec Enforce non-parallel plan when calling current_schema() in newly-added test
current_schema() gets called in the recently-added regression test from
c5660e0, and can be used in a parallel context, causing its call to fail
when creating a temporary schema.

Per buildfarm members crake and lapwing.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190118005949.GD1883@paquier.xyz
2019-01-18 10:51:39 +09:00
Michael Paquier c5660e0aa5 Restrict the use of temporary namespace in two-phase transactions
Attempting to use a temporary table within a two-phase transaction is
forbidden for ages.  However, there have been uncovered grounds for
a couple of other object types and commands which work on temporary
objects with two-phase commit.  In short, trying to create, lock or drop
an object on a temporary schema should not be authorized within a
two-phase transaction, as it would cause its state to create
dependencies with other sessions, causing all sorts of side effects with
the existing session or other sessions spawned later on trying to use
the same temporary schema name.

Regression tests are added to cover all the grounds found, the original
report mentioned function creation, but monitoring closer there are many
other patterns with LOCK, DROP or CREATE EXTENSION which are involved.
One of the symptoms resulting in combining both is that the session
which used the temporary schema is not able to shut down completely,
waiting for being able to drop the temporary schema, something that it
cannot complete because of the two-phase transaction involved with
temporary objects.  In this case the client is able to disconnect but
the session remains alive on the backend-side, potentially blocking
connection backend slots from being used.  Other problems reported could
also involve server crashes.

This is back-patched down to v10, which is where 9b013dc has introduced
MyXactFlags, something that this patch relies on.

Reported-by: Alexey Bashtanov
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5d910e2e-0db8-ec06-dd5f-baec420513c3@imap.cc
Backpatch-through: 10
2019-01-18 09:21:44 +09:00
Andrew Gierth d16d453870 Postpone aggregate checks until after collation is assigned.
Previously, parseCheckAggregates was run before
assign_query_collations, but this causes problems if any expression
has already had a collation assigned by some transform function (e.g.
transformCaseExpr) before parseCheckAggregates runs. The differing
collations would cause expressions not to be recognized as equal to
the ones in the GROUP BY clause, leading to spurious errors about
unaggregated column references.

The result was that CASE expr WHEN val ... would fail when "expr"
contained a GROUPING() expression or matched one of the group by
expressions, and where collatable types were involved; whereas the
supposedly identical CASE WHEN expr = val ... would succeed.

Backpatch all the way; this appears to have been wrong ever since
collations were introduced.

Per report from Guillaume Lelarge, analysis and patch by me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAECtzeVSO_US8C2Khgfv54ZMUOBR4sWq+6_bLrETnWExHT=rFg@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/87muo0k0c7.fsf@news-spur.riddles.org.uk
2019-01-17 06:46:10 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut 304e9f031b Increase test coverage in RI_Initial_Check()
This covers the special error handling of FKCONSTR_MATCH_FULL.

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Mi Tar <mmitar@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/7ae17c95-0c99-d420-032a-c271f510112b@2ndquadrant.com/
2019-01-16 16:56:18 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 45ed6e1ae0 Increase test coverage in RI_FKey_fk_upd_check_required()
This checks the code path of FKCONSTR_MATCH_FULL and
RI_KEYS_SOME_NULL.

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Mi Tar <mmitar@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/7ae17c95-0c99-d420-032a-c271f510112b@2ndquadrant.com/
2019-01-16 16:56:18 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut cdaf4a4727 Increase test coverage in RI_FKey_pk_upd_check_required()
This checks the case where the primary key has at least one null
column.

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Mi Tar <mmitar@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/7ae17c95-0c99-d420-032a-c271f510112b@2ndquadrant.com/
2019-01-16 16:56:18 +01:00
Peter Eisentraut 74bd06648b Add test case for ON DELETE NO ACTION/RESTRICT
This was previously not covered at all; function
RI_FKey_restrict_del() was not exercised in the tests.

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Reviewed-by: Mi Tar <mmitar@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/7ae17c95-0c99-d420-032a-c271f510112b@2ndquadrant.com/
2019-01-16 16:56:18 +01:00
Andres Freund 148e632c05 Fix parent of WCO qual.
The parent of some WCO expressions was, apparently by accident, set to
the the source of DML queries, rather than the target table.  This
causes problems for the upcoming pluggable storage work, because the
target and source table might be of different storage types.

It's possible that this is already problematic, but neither
experimenting nor inquiries on -hackers have found them. So don't
backpatch for now.

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181205225213.hiwa3kgoxeybqcqv@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-01-15 12:04:32 -08:00
Andres Freund de66987adb Re-add default_with_oids GUC to avoid breaking old dump files.
After 578b229718 / the removal of WITH OIDS support, older dump files
containing
    SET default_with_oids = false;
either report unnecessary errors (as the subsequent tables have no
oids) or even fail to restore entirely (when using transaction mode).
To avoid that, re-add the GUC, but don't allow setting it to true.

Per complaint from Tom Lane.

Author: Amit Khandekar, editorialized by me
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9dZyxrtL0rJfoNoOj6v7fJSDaXBngi9wy5XU8m-ioXhAA@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-14 15:30:24 -08:00
Alvaro Herrera 0ad41cf537 Fix unique INCLUDE indexes on partitioned tables
We were considering the INCLUDE columns as part of the key, allowing
unicity-violating rows to be inserted in different partitions.

Concurrent development conflict in eb7ed3f306 and 8224de4f42.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190109065109.GA4285@telsasoft.com
2019-01-14 19:28:10 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut 0acb3bc33a Change default of recovery_target_timeline to 'latest'
This is what one usually wants for recovery and almost always wants
for a standby.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/6dd2c23a-4162-8469-410f-bfe146e28c0c@2ndquadrant.com/
Reviewed-by: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
2019-01-13 10:01:05 +01:00
Andrew Dunstan 3b174b1a35 Fix missing values when doing ALTER TABLE ALTER COLUMN TYPE
This was an oversight in commit 16828d5c. If the table is going to be
rewritten, we simply clear all the missing values from all the table's
attributes, since there will no longer be any rows with the attributes
missing. Otherwise, we repackage the missing value in an array
constructed with the new type specifications.

Backpatch to release 11.

This fixes bug #15446, reported by Dmitry Molotkov

Reviewed by Dean Rasheed
2019-01-10 15:53:45 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut be2e329f2e isolationtester: Use atexit()
Replace exit_nicely() calls with standard exit() and register the
cleanup actions using atexit().

Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/ec4135ba-84e9-28bf-b584-0e78d47448d5@2ndquadrant.com/
2019-01-07 16:25:16 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera 807ae415c5 Don't create relfilenode for relations without storage
Some relation kinds had relfilenode set to some non-zero value, but
apparently the actual files did not really exist because creation was
prevented elsewhere.  Get rid of the phony pg_class.relfilenode values.

Catversion bumped, but only because the sanity_test check will fail if
run in a system initdb'd with the previous version.

Reviewed-by: Kyotaro HORIGUCHI, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181206215552.fm2ypuxq6nhpwjuc@alvherre.pgsql
2019-01-04 14:51:17 -03:00
Tom Lane 4879a5172a Support plpgsql variable names that conflict with unreserved SQL keywords.
A variable name matching a statement-introducing keyword, such as
"comment" or "update", caused parse failures if one tried to write
a statement using that keyword.  Commit bb1b8f69 already addressed
this scenario for the case of variable names matching unreserved
plpgsql keywords, but we didn't think about unreserved core-grammar
keywords.  The same heuristic (viz, it can't be a variable name
unless the next token is assignment or '[') should work fine for
that case too, and as a bonus the code gets shorter and less
duplicative.

Per bug #15555 from Feike Steenbergen.  Since this hasn't been
complained of before, and is easily worked around anyway,
I won't risk a back-patch.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15555-149bbd70ddc7b4b6@postgresql.org
2019-01-04 12:16:19 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut cb719fa02d Make sort-test.py Python 3 compatible
Python 2 is still supported.
2019-01-04 11:23:24 +01:00
Tom Lane d33faa285b Move the built-in conversions into the initial catalog data.
Instead of running a SQL script to create the standard conversion
functions and pg_conversion entries, put those entries into the
initial data in postgres.bki.

This shaves a few percent off the runtime of initdb, and also allows
accurate comments to be attached to the conversion functions; the
previous script labeled them with machine-generated comments that
were not quite right for multi-purpose conversion functions.
Also, we can get rid of the duplicative Makefile and MSVC perl
implementations of the generation code for that SQL script.

A functional change is that these pg_proc and pg_conversion entries
are now "pinned" by initdb.  Leaving them unpinned was perhaps a
good thing back while the conversions feature was under development,
but there seems no valid reason for it now.

Also, the conversion functions are now marked as immutable, where
before they were volatile by virtue of lacking any explicit
specification.  That seems like it was just an oversight.

To avoid using magic constants in pg_conversion.dat, extend
genbki.pl to allow encoding names to be converted, much as it
does for language, access method, etc names.

John Naylor

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJVSVGWtUqxpfAaxS88vEGvi+jKzWZb2EStu5io-UPc4p9rSJg@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-03 19:47:53 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut acfe1392ef Switch pg_regress to output unified diffs by default
Author: Christoph Berg <myon@debian.org>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20170406223103.ixihdedf6d6d4kbk@alap3.anarazel.de/
2019-01-02 21:20:53 +01:00
Tom Lane 69ae9dcb44 Ensure link commands list *.o files before LDFLAGS.
It's important for link commands to list *.o input files before -l
switches for libraries, as library code may not get pulled into the link
unless referenced by an earlier command-line entry.  This is certainly
necessary for static libraries (.a style).  Apparently on some platforms
it is also necessary for shared libraries, as reported by Donald Dong.

We often put -l switches for within-tree libraries into LDFLAGS, meaning
that link commands that list *.o files after LDFLAGS are hazardous.
Most of our link commands got this right, but a few did not.  In
particular, places that relied on gmake's default implicit link rule
failed, because that puts LDFLAGS first.  Fix that by overriding the
built-in rule with our own.  The implicit link rules in
src/makefiles/Makefile.* for single-.o-file shared libraries mostly
got this wrong too, so fix them.  I also changed the link rules for the
backend and a couple of other places for consistency, even though they
are not (currently) at risk because they aren't adding any -l switches
to LDFLAGS.

Arguably, the real problem here is that we're abusing LDFLAGS by
putting -l switches in it and we should stop doing that.  But changing
that would be quite invasive, so I'm not eager to do so.

Perhaps this is a candidate for back-patching, but so far it seems
that problems can only be exhibited in test code we don't normally
build, and at least some of the problems are new in HEAD anyway.
So I'll refrain for now.

Donald Dong and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKABAquXn-BF-vBeRZxhzvPyfMqgGuc74p8BmQZyCFDpyROBJQ@mail.gmail.com
2019-01-02 13:57:54 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 97c39498e5 Update copyright for 2019
Backpatch-through: certain files through 9.4
2019-01-02 12:44:25 -05:00
Noah Misch 94600dd4f4 pg_regress: Promptly detect failed postmaster startup.
Detect it the way pg_ctl's wait_for_postmaster() does.  When pg_regress
spawned a postmaster that failed startup, we were detecting that only
with "pg_regress: postmaster did not respond within 60 seconds".
Back-patch to 9.4 (all supported versions).

Reviewed by Tom Lane.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181231172922.GA199150@gust.leadboat.com
2018-12-31 13:50:32 -08:00
Tom Lane d01e75d68e Update leakproofness markings on some btree comparison functions.
Mark pg_lsn and oidvector comparison functions as leakproof.  Per
discussion, these clearly are leakproof so we might as well mark them so.

On the other hand, remove leakproof markings from name comparison
functions other than equal/not-equal.  Now that these depend on
varstr_cmp, they can't be considered leakproof if text comparison isn't.
(This was my error in commit 586b98fdf.)

While at it, add some opr_sanity queries to catch cases where related
functions do not have the same volatility and leakproof markings.
This would clearly be bogus for commutator or negator pairs.  In the
domain of btree comparison functions, we do have some exceptions,
because text equality is leakproof but inequality comparisons are not.
That's odd on first glance but is reasonable (for now anyway) given
the much greater complexity of the inequality code paths.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181231172551.GA206480@gust.leadboat.com
2018-12-31 16:38:11 -05:00
Tom Lane 0a6ea4001a Add a hash opclass for type "tid".
Up to now we've not worried much about joins where the join key is a
relation's CTID column, reasoning that storing a table's CTIDs in some
other table would be pretty useless.  However, there are use-cases for
this sort of query involving self-joins, so that argument doesn't really
hold water.

With larger relations, a merge or hash join is desirable.  We had a btree
opclass for type "tid", allowing merge joins on CTID, but no hash opclass
so that hash joins weren't possible.  Add the missing infrastructure.

This also potentially enables hash aggregation on "tid", though the
use-cases for that aren't too clear.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1853.1545453106@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-30 15:40:04 -05:00
Tom Lane b5415e3c21 Support parameterized TidPaths.
Up to now we've not worried much about joins where the join key is a
relation's CTID column, reasoning that storing a table's CTIDs in some
other table would be pretty useless.  However, there are use-cases for
this sort of query involving self-joins, so that argument doesn't really
hold water.

This patch allows generating plans for joins on CTID that use a nestloop
with inner TidScan, similar to what we might do with an index on the join
column.  This is the most efficient way to join when the outer side of
the nestloop is expected to yield relatively few rows.

This change requires upgrading tidpath.c and the generated TidPaths
to work with RestrictInfos instead of bare qual clauses, but that's
long-postponed technical debt anyway.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17443.1545435266@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-30 15:24:28 -05:00
Alexander Korotkov 0c6f4f9212 Reduce length of GIN predicate locking isolation test suite
Isolation test suite of GIN predicate locking was criticized for being too slow,
especially under Valgrind.  This commit is intended to accelerate it.  Tests are
simplified in the following ways.

  1) Amount of data is reduced.  We're now close to the minimal amount of data,
     which produces at least one posting tree and at least two pages of entry
     tree.
  2) Three isolation tests are merged into one.
  3) Only one tuple is queried from posting tree.  So, locking of index is the
     same, but tuple locks are not propagated to relation lock.  Also, it is
     faster.
  4) Test cases itself are simplified.  Now each test case run just one INSERT
     and one SELECT involving GIN, which either conflict or not.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181204000740.ok2q53nvkftwu43a%40alap3.anarazel.de
Reported-by: Andres Freund
Tested-by: Andrew Dunstan
Author: Alexander Korotkov
Backpatch-through: 11
2018-12-28 03:33:10 +03:00
Michael Paquier 1e504f01da Ignore inherited temp relations from other sessions when truncating
Inheritance trees can include temporary tables if the parent is
permanent, which makes possible the presence of multiple temporary
children from different sessions.  Trying to issue a TRUNCATE on the
parent in this scenario causes a failure, so similarly to any other
queries just ignore such cases, which makes TRUNCATE work
transparently.

This makes truncation behave similarly to any other DML query working on
the parent table with queries which need to be work on the children.  A
set of isolation tests is added to cover basic cases.

Reported-by: Zhou Digoal
Author: Amit Langote, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15565-ce67a48d0244436a@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2018-12-27 10:16:19 +09:00
Michael Paquier bf491a9073 Disable WAL-skipping optimization for COPY on views and foreign tables
COPY can skip writing WAL when loading data on a table which has been
created in the same transaction as the one loading the data, however
this cannot work on views or foreign table as this would result in
trying to flush relation files which do not exist.  So disable the
optimization so as commands are able to work the same way with any
configuration of wal_level.

Tests are added to cover the different cases, which need to have
wal_level set to minimal to allow the problem to show up, and that is
not the default configuration.

Reported-by: Luis M. Carril, Etsuro Fujita
Author: Amit Langote, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Etsuro Fujita
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15552-c64aa14c5c22f63c@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 10, where support for COPY on views has been added,
while v11 has added support for COPY on foreign tables.
2018-12-23 16:42:22 +09:00
Greg Stark 1075dfdaf3 Fix ADD IF NOT EXISTS used in conjunction with ALTER TABLE ONLY
The flag for IF NOT EXISTS was only being passed down in the normal
recursing case. It's been this way since originally added in 9.6 in
commit 2cd40adb85 so backpatch back to 9.6.
2018-12-19 19:38:31 -05:00
Tom Lane 2ece7c07dc Add text-vs-name cross-type operators, and unify name_ops with text_ops.
Now that name comparison has effectively the same behavior as text
comparison, we might as well merge the name_ops opfamily into text_ops,
allowing cross-type comparisons to be processed without forcing a
datatype coercion first.  We need do little more than add cross-type
operators to make the opfamily complete, and fix one or two places
in the planner that assumed text_ops was a single-datatype opfamily.

I chose to unify hash name_ops into hash text_ops as well, since the
types have compatible hashing semantics.  This allows marking the
new cross-type equality operators as oprcanhash.

(Note: this doesn't remove the name_ops opclasses, so there's no
breakage of index definitions.  Those opclasses are just reparented
into the text_ops opfamily.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15938.1544377821@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-19 17:46:25 -05:00
Tom Lane 6b0faf7236 Make collation-aware system catalog columns use "C" collation.
Up to now we allowed text columns in system catalogs to use collation
"default", but that isn't really safe because it might mean something
different in template0 than it means in a database cloned from template0.
In particular, this could mean that cloned pg_statistic entries for such
columns weren't entirely valid, possibly leading to bogus planner
estimates, though (probably) not any outright failures.

In the wake of commit 5e0928005, a better solution is available: if we
label such columns with "C" collation, then their pg_statistic entries
will also use that collation and hence will be valid independently of
the database collation.

This also provides a cleaner solution for indexes on such columns than
the hack added by commit 0b28ea79c: the indexes will naturally inherit
"C" collation and don't have to be forced to use text_pattern_ops.

Also, with the planned improvement of type "name" to be collation-aware,
this policy will apply cleanly to both text and name columns.

Because of the pg_statistic angle, we should also apply this policy
to the tables in information_schema.  This patch does that by adjusting
information_schema's textual domain types to specify "C" collation.
That has the user-visible effect that order-sensitive comparisons to
textual information_schema view columns will now use "C" collation
by default.  The SQL standard says that the collation of those view
columns is implementation-defined, so I think this is legal per spec.
At some point this might allow for translation of such comparisons
into indexable conditions on the underlying "name" columns, although
additional work will be needed before that can happen.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19346.1544895309@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-18 12:48:15 -05:00
Michael Paquier f94cec6447 Include partitioned indexes to system view pg_indexes
pg_tables already includes partitioned tables, so for consistency
pg_indexes should show partitioned indexes.

Author: Suraj Kharage
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAF1DzPVrYo4XNTEnc=PqVp6aLJc7LFYpYR4rX=_5pV=wJ2KdZg@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-18 16:37:51 +09:00
Michael Paquier 3e514c1238 Tweak description comments in tests for partition functions
The new wording is more generic and fixes one grammar mistake and one
typo on the way.

Per discussion between Amit Langote and me.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181217064028.GJ31474@paquier.xyz
2018-12-18 10:52:21 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera ca4103025d Fix tablespace handling for partitioned tables
When partitioned tables were introduced, we failed to realize that by
copying the tablespace handling for other relation kinds with no
physical storage we were causing the secondary effect that their
partitions would not automatically inherit the tablespace setting.  This
is surprising and unhelpful, so change it to adopt the behavior
introduced in pg11 (commit 33e6c34c32) for partitioned indexes: the
parent relation remembers the tablespace specification, which is then
used for any new partitions that don't declare one.

Because this commit changes behavior of the TABLESPACE clause for
partitioned tables (it's no longer a no-op), it is not backpatched.

Author: David Rowley, Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f9SxVzqDrGD1teosFd6jBMM0UEaa14_8mRvcWE19Tu0hA@mail.gmail.com
2018-12-17 15:37:40 -03:00
Michael Paquier 67915fb8e5 Fix use-after-free bug when renaming constraints
This is an oversight from recent commit b13fd344.  While on it, tweak
the previous test with a better name for the renamed primary key.

Detected by buildfarm member prion which forces relation cache release
with -DRELCACHE_FORCE_RELEASE.  Back-patch down to 9.4 as the previous
commit.
2018-12-17 12:43:00 +09:00
Michael Paquier b13fd344c5 Make constraint rename issue relcache invalidation on target relation
When a constraint gets renamed, it may have associated with it a target
relation (for example domain constraints don't have one).  Not
invalidating the target relation cache when issuing the renaming can
result in issues with subsequent commands that refer to the old
constraint name using the relation cache, causing various failures.  One
pattern spotted was using CREATE TABLE LIKE after a constraint
renaming.

Reported-by: Stuart <sfbarbee@gmail.com>
Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2047094.V130LYfLq4@station53.ousa.org
2018-12-17 10:34:44 +09:00
Tom Lane a73d083195 Modernize our code for looking up descriptive strings for Unix signals.
At least as far back as the 2008 spec, POSIX has defined strsignal(3)
for looking up descriptive strings for signal numbers.  We hadn't gotten
the word though, and were still using the crufty old sys_siglist array,
which is in no standard even though most Unixen provide it.

Aside from not being formally standards-compliant, this was just plain
ugly because it involved #ifdef's at every place using the code.

To eliminate the #ifdef's, create a portability function pg_strsignal,
which wraps strsignal(3) if available and otherwise falls back to
sys_siglist[] if available.  The set of Unixen with neither API is
probably empty these days, but on any platform with neither, you'll
just get "unrecognized signal".  All extant callers print the numeric
signal number too, so no need to work harder than that.

Along the way, upgrade pg_basebackup's child-error-exit reporting
to match the rest of the system.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25758.1544983503@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-16 19:38:57 -05:00
Tom Lane 04fe805a17 Drop no-op CoerceToDomain nodes from expressions at planning time.
If a domain has no constraints, then CoerceToDomain doesn't really do
anything and can be simplified to a RelabelType.  This not only
eliminates cycles at execution, but allows the planner to optimize better
(for instance, match the coerced expression to an index on the underlying
column).  However, we do have to support invalidating the plan later if
a constraint gets added to the domain.  That's comparable to the case of
a change to a SQL function that had been inlined into a plan, so all the
necessary logic already exists for plans depending on functions.  We
need only duplicate or share that logic for domains.

ALTER DOMAIN ADD/DROP CONSTRAINT need to be taught to send out sinval
messages for the domain's pg_type entry, since those operations don't
update that row.  (ALTER DOMAIN SET/DROP NOT NULL do update that row,
so no code change is needed for them.)

Testing this revealed what's really a pre-existing bug in plpgsql:
it caches the SQL-expression-tree expansion of type coercions and
had no provision for invalidating entries in that cache.  Up to now
that was only a problem if such an expression had inlined a SQL
function that got changed, which is unlikely though not impossible.
But failing to track changes of domain constraints breaks an existing
regression test case and would likely cause practical problems too.

We could fix that locally in plpgsql, but what seems like a better
idea is to build some generic infrastructure in plancache.c to store
standalone expressions and track invalidation events for them.
(It's tempting to wonder whether plpgsql's "simple expression" stuff
could use this code with lower overhead than its current use of the
heavyweight plancache APIs.  But I've left that idea for later.)

Other stuff fixed in passing:

* Allow estimate_expression_value() to drop CoerceToDomain
unconditionally, effectively assuming that the coercion will succeed.
This will improve planner selectivity estimates for cases involving
estimatable expressions that are coerced to domains.  We could have
done this independently of everything else here, but there wasn't
previously any need for eval_const_expressions_mutator to know about
CoerceToDomain at all.

* Use a dlist for plancache.c's list of cached plans, rather than a
manually threaded singly-linked list.  That eliminates a potential
performance problem in DropCachedPlan.

* Fix a couple of inconsistencies in typecmds.c about whether
operations on domains drop RowExclusiveLock on pg_type.  Our common
practice is that DDL operations do drop catalog locks, so standardize
on that choice.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/19958.1544122124@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-12-13 13:24:43 -05:00
Tom Lane 0f7ec8d9c3 Repair bogus handling of multi-assignment Params in upper plan levels.
Our support for multiple-set-clauses in UPDATE assumes that the Params
referencing a MULTIEXPR_SUBLINK SubPlan will appear before that SubPlan
in the targetlist of the plan node that calculates the updated row.
(Yeah, it's a hack...)  In some PG branches it's possible that a Result
node gets inserted between the primary calculation of the update tlist
and the ModifyTable node.  setrefs.c did the wrong thing in this case
and left the upper-level Params as Params, causing a crash at runtime.
What it should do is replace them with "outer" Vars referencing the child
plan node's output.  That's a result of careless ordering of operations
in fix_upper_expr_mutator, so we can fix it just by reordering the code.

Fix fix_join_expr_mutator similarly for consistency, even though join
nodes could never appear in such a context.  (In general, it seems
likely to be a bit cheaper to use Vars than Params in such situations
anyway, so this patch might offer a tiny performance improvement.)

The hazard extends back to 9.5 where the MULTIEXPR_SUBLINK stuff
was introduced, so back-patch that far.  However, this may be a live
bug only in 9.6.x and 10.x, as the other branches don't seem to want
to calculate the final tlist below the Result node.  (That plan shape
change between branches might be a mini-bug in itself, but I'm not
really interested in digging into the reasons for that right now.
Still, add a regression test memorializing what we expect there,
so we'll notice if it changes again.)

Per bug report from Eduards Bezverhijs.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/b6cd572a-3e44-8785-75e9-c512a5a17a73@tieto.com
2018-12-12 13:49:41 -05:00
Michael Paquier cc53123bcc Tweak pg_partition_tree for undefined relations and unsupported relkinds
This fixes a crash which happened when calling the function directly
with a relation OID referring to a non-existing object, and changes the
behavior so as NULL is returned for unsupported relkinds instead of
generating an error.  This puts the new function in line with many other
system functions, and eases actions like full scans of pg_class.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Stephen Frost
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181207010406.GO2407@paquier.xyz
2018-12-12 09:49:39 +09:00
Tom Lane 7a28e9aa0f Fix test_rls_hooks to assign expression collations properly.
This module overlooked this necessary fixup step on the results of
transformWhereClause().  It accidentally worked anyway, because the
constructed expression involved type "name" which is not collatable,
but it fell over while I was experimenting with changing "name" to
be collatable.

Back-patch, not because there's any live bug here in back branches,
but because somebody might use this code as a model for some real
application and then not understand why it doesn't work.
2018-12-11 11:48:00 -05:00
Noah Misch 1db439ad49 Raise some timeouts to 180s, in test code.
Slow runs of buildfarm members chipmunk, hornet and mandrill saw the
shorter timeouts expire.  The 180s timeout in poll_query_until has been
trouble-free since 2a0f89cd71 introduced
it two years ago, so use 180s more widely.  Back-patch to 9.6, where the
first of these timeouts was introduced.

Reviewed by Michael Paquier.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181209001601.GC2973271@rfd.leadboat.com
2018-12-10 20:15:42 -08:00
Stephen Frost 2d7eeb1b14 Add additional partition tests to pg_dump
This adds a few tests for non-inherited constraints.

Author: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181208001735.GT3415%40tamriel.snowman.net
2018-12-10 09:46:36 -05:00
Michael Paquier 7fee252f6f Add timestamp of last received message from standby to pg_stat_replication
The timestamp generated by the standby at message transmission has been
included in the protocol since its introduction for both the status
update message and hot standby feedback message, but it has never
appeared in pg_stat_replication.  Seeing this timestamp does not matter
much with a cluster which has a lot of activity, but on a mostly-idle
cluster, this makes monitoring able to react faster than the configured
timeouts.

Author: MyungKyu LIM
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1657809367.407321.1533027417725.JavaMail.jboss@ep2ml404
2018-12-09 16:35:06 +09:00
Tom Lane 5deadfef28 Fix misapplication of pgstat_count_truncate to wrong relation.
The stanza of ExecuteTruncate[Guts] that truncates a target table's toast
relation re-used the loop local variable "rel" to reference the toast rel.
This was safe enough when written, but commit d42358efb added code below
that that supposed "rel" still pointed to the parent table.  Therefore,
the stats counter update was applied to the wrong relcache entry (the
toast rel not the user rel); and if we were unlucky and that relcache
entry had been flushed during reindex_relation, very bad things could
ensue.

(I'm surprised that CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS testing hasn't found this.
I'm even more surprised that the problem wasn't detected during the
development of d42358efb; it must not have been tested in any case
with a toast table, as the incorrect stats counts are very obvious.)

To fix, replace use of "rel" in that code branch with a more local
variable.  Adjust test cases added by d42358efb so that some of them
use tables with toast tables.

Per bug #15540 from Pan Bian.  Back-patch to 9.5 where d42358efb came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15540-01078812338195c0@postgresql.org
2018-12-07 12:11:59 -05:00
Michael Paquier 730422afcd Fix some errhint and errdetail strings missing a period
As per the error message style guide of the documentation, those should
be full sentences.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://1E8D49B4-16BC-4420-B4ED-58501D9E076B@yesql.se
2018-12-07 07:47:42 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 71a05b2232 Don't mark partitioned indexes invalid unnecessarily
When an indexes is created on a partitioned table using ONLY (don't
recurse to partitions), it gets marked invalid until index partitions
are attached for each table partition.  But there's no reason to do this
if there are no partitions ... and moreover, there's no way to get the
index to become valid afterwards, because all partitions that get
created/attached get their own index partition already attached to the
parent index, so there's no chance to do ALTER INDEX ... ATTACH PARTITION
that would make the parent index valid.

Fix by not marking the index as invalid to begin with.

This is very similar to 9139aa1942, but the pg_dump aspect does not
appear to be relevant until we add FKs that can point to PKs on
partitioned tables.  (I tried to cause the pg_upgrade test to break by
leaving some of these bogus tables around, but wasn't able to.)

Making this change means that an index that was supposed to be invalid
in the insert_conflict regression test is no longer invalid; reorder the
DDL so that the test continues to verify the behavior we want it to.

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181203225019.2vvdef2ybnkxt364@alvherre.pgsql
2018-12-05 13:31:51 -03:00
Michael Paquier ee2b37ae04 Add some missing schema qualifications
This does not improve the security and reliability of the touched areas,
but it makes the style more consistent.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by- Noah Misch
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180309075538.GD9376@paquier.xyz
2018-12-03 14:21:52 +09:00
Michael Paquier d3c09b9b13 Add PGXS options to control TAP and isolation tests, take two
The following options are added for extensions:
- TAP_TESTS, to allow an extention to run TAP tests which are the ones
present in t/*.pl.  A subset of tests can always be run with the
existing PROVE_TESTS for developers.
- ISOLATION, to define a list of isolation tests.
- ISOLATION_OPTS, to pass custom options to isolation_tester.

A couple of custom Makefile rules have been accumulated across the tree
to cover the lack of facility in PGXS for a couple of releases when
using those test suites, which are all now replaced with the new flags,
without reducing the test coverage.  Note that tests of contrib/bloom/
are not enabled yet, as those are proving unstable in the buildfarm.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Adam Berlin, Álvaro Herrera, Tom Lane, Nikolay Shaplov,
Arthur Zakirov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180906014849.GG2726@paquier.xyz
2018-12-03 09:27:35 +09:00
Michael Paquier d79fb5d237 Add missing NO_INSTALLCHECK in commit_ts and test_rls_hooks
This bypasses installcheck if specified, which makes sense for those
modules as they require non-default configuration, something which
typical users don't have.  Those have been missing from the start, still
no back-patch is done.

This will be used by an upcoming patch for MSVC scripts adding support
for NO_INSTALLCHECK as installcheck is the default mode for contrib and
modules for performance reasons in the buildfarm.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Andrew Dunstan
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181126054302.GI1776@paquier.xyz
2018-11-29 09:39:07 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut f2cbffc7a6 Only allow one recovery target setting
The previous recovery.conf regime accepted multiple recovery_target*
settings and used the last one.  This does not translate well to the
general GUC system.  Specifically, under EXEC_BACKEND, the settings
are written out not in any particular order, so the order in which
they were originally set is not available to new processes.

Rather than redesign the GUC system, it was decided to abandon the old
behavior and only allow one recovery target setting.  A second setting
will cause an error.  However, it is allowed to set the same parameter
multiple times or unset a parameter and set a different one.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/27802171543235530%40iva2-6ec8f0a6115e.qloud-c.yandex.net#701a59c837ad0bf8c244344aaf3ef5a4
2018-11-28 13:55:54 +01:00
Andres Freund b238527664 Fix jit compilation bug on wide tables.
The function generated to perform JIT compiled tuple deforming failed
when HeapTupleHeader's t_hoff was bigger than a signed int8. I'd
failed to realize that LLVM's getelementptr would treat an int8 index
argument as signed, rather than unsigned.  That means that a hoff
larger than 127 would result in a negative offset being applied.  Fix
that by widening the index to 32bit.

Add a testcase with a wide table. Don't drop it, as it seems useful to
verify other tools deal properly with wide tables.

Thanks to Justin Pryzby for both reporting a bug and then reducing it
to a reproducible testcase!

Reported-By: Justin Pryzby
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181115223959.GB10913@telsasoft.com
Backpatch: 11, just as jit compilation was
2018-11-27 10:07:03 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut f17889b221 Update ssl test certificates and keys
Debian testing and newer now require that RSA and DHE keys are at
least 2048 bit long and no longer allow SHA-1 for signatures in
certificates.  This is currently causing the ssl tests to fail there
because the test certificates and keys have been created in violation
of those conditions.

Update the parameters to create the test files and create a new set of
test files.

Author: Kyotaro HORIGUCHI <horiguchi.kyotaro@lab.ntt.co.jp>
Reported-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20180917131340.GE31460%40paquier.xyz
2018-11-27 15:16:14 +01:00
Tom Lane 70d7e507ef Fix translation of special characters in psql's LaTeX output modes.
latex_escaped_print() mistranslated \ and failed to provide any translation
for # ^ and ~, all of which would typically lead to LaTeX document syntax
errors.  In addition it didn't translate < > and |, which would typically
render as unexpected characters.

To some extent this represents shortcomings in ancient versions of LaTeX,
which if memory serves had no easy way to render these control characters
as ASCII text.  But that's been fixed for, um, decades.  In any case there
is no value in emitting guaranteed-to-fail output for these characters.

Noted while fooling with test cases added by commit 9a98984f4.  Back-patch
the code change to all supported versions.
2018-11-26 17:32:51 -05:00
Tom Lane 95dcb8fc05 Avoid locale-dependent output in numericlocale check.
I'd forgotten that in the buildfarm, parts of the regression tests
may run with psql exposed to a non-default LC_NUMERIC setting.
Hence we can't assume that C locale prevails, nor is there any
accessible way to force the setting for this single test step.
Lobotomize the test case added by commit 9a98984f4 so that it covers as
much as we can of print.c without having any locale-varying output.
2018-11-26 15:30:24 -05:00
Tom Lane aa2ba50c2c Add CSV table output mode in psql.
"\pset format csv", or --csv, selects comma-separated values table format.
This is compliant with RFC 4180, except that we aren't too picky about
whether the record separator is LF or CRLF; also, the user may choose a
field separator other than comma.

This output format is directly compatible with the server's COPY CSV
format, and will also be useful as input to other programs.  It's
considerably safer for that purpose than the old recommendation to
use "unaligned" format, since the latter couldn't handle data
containing the field separator character.

Daniel Vérité, reviewed by Fabien Coelho and David Fetter, some
tweaking by me

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/a8de371e-006f-4f92-ab72-2bbe3ee78f03@manitou-mail.org
2018-11-26 15:18:55 -05:00
Tom Lane 9a98984f49 Improve regression test coverage for psql output formats.
As penance for the "\pset format latex" silliness, add some regression
test coverage for the off-the-beaten-path output formats, which formerly
had exactly no coverage, except for some poorly-thought-out (unreadable,
repetitive, and incomplete) tests for asciidoc format.

I make no claims for the behavior exposed here actually being correct;
these test cases are just designed to ensure full code coverage in
fe_utils/print.c.  This brings the line coverage for that file up
from ~60% to ~93%.
2018-11-26 12:41:42 -05:00
Michael Paquier 1d7dd18686 Revert all new recent changes to add PGXS options for TAP and isolation
A set of failures in buildfarm machines are proving that this is not
quite ready yet because of another set of issues:
- MSVC scripts assume that REGRESS_OPTS can only use top_builddir.  Some
test suites actually finish by using top_srcdir, like pg_stat_statements
which cause the regression tests to never run.
- Trying to enforce top_builddir does not work either when using VPATH
as this is not recognized properly.
- TAP tests of bloom are unstable on various platforms, causing various
failures.
2018-11-26 11:12:11 +09:00
Michael Paquier 03faa4a8dd Add PGXS options to control TAP and isolation tests
The following options are added for extensions:
- TAP_TESTS, to allow an extention to run TAP tests which are the ones
present in t/*.pl.  A subset of tests can always be run with the
existing PROVE_TESTS for developers.
- ISOLATION, to define a list of isolation tests.
- ISOLATION_OPTS, to pass custom options to isolation_tester.

A couple of custom Makefile targets have been accumulated across the
tree to cover the lack of facility in PGXS for a couple of releases when
using those test suites, which are all now replaced with the new flags,
without reducing the test coverage.  This also fixes an issue with
contrib/bloom/, which had a custom target to trigger its TAP tests of
its own not part of the main check runs.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Adam Berlin, Álvaro Herrera, Tom Lane, Nikolay Shaplov,
Arthur Zakirov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180906014849.GG2726@paquier.xyz
2018-11-26 08:39:19 +09:00
Peter Eisentraut 2dedf4d9a8 Integrate recovery.conf into postgresql.conf
recovery.conf settings are now set in postgresql.conf (or other GUC
sources).  Currently, all the affected settings are PGC_POSTMASTER;
this could be refined in the future case by case.

Recovery is now initiated by a file recovery.signal.  Standby mode is
initiated by a file standby.signal.  The standby_mode setting is
gone.  If a recovery.conf file is found, an error is issued.

The trigger_file setting has been renamed to promote_trigger_file as
part of the move.

The documentation chapter "Recovery Configuration" has been integrated
into "Server Configuration".

pg_basebackup -R now appends settings to postgresql.auto.conf and
creates a standby.signal file.

Author: Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@gmail.com>
Author: Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com>
Author: Abhijit Menon-Sen <ams@2ndquadrant.com>
Author: Sergei Kornilov <sk@zsrv.org>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/607741529606767@web3g.yandex.ru/
2018-11-25 16:33:40 +01:00
Tom Lane 452b637d4b Adjust new test case for more portability.
Early returns from the buildfarm say that most critters are good with
commit cbdb8b4c0, but gaur gives unexpected results with the test case
involving a float8 that's one-ULP-less-than-2^63.  It appears that that
platform's version of rint() rounds that value up to 2^63 instead of
leaving it be.  This is possibly a bug, and it's also possible that no
other platform anybody is using anywhere behaves likewise.  Still, the
point of the test is not to insist that everybody's rint() behaves exactly
the same.  Let's use two-ULPs-less-than-2^63 instead, which I've tested
to act the same on gaur as on more modern hardware.

(This is, more or less, exactly the portability issue I'd feared might
arise...)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15519-4fc785b483201ff1@postgresql.org
2018-11-23 23:49:25 -05:00
Tom Lane cbdb8b4c01 Fix float-to-integer coercions to handle edge cases correctly.
ftoi4 and its sibling coercion functions did their overflow checks in
a way that looked superficially plausible, but actually depended on an
assumption that the MIN and MAX comparison constants can be represented
exactly in the float4 or float8 domain.  That fails in ftoi4, ftoi8,
and dtoi8, resulting in a possibility that values near the MAX limit will
be wrongly converted (to negative values) when they need to be rejected.

Also, because we compared before rounding off the fractional part,
the other three functions threw errors for values that really ought
to get rounded to the min or max integer value.

Fix by doing rint() first (requiring an assumption that it handles
NaN and Inf correctly; but dtoi8 and ftoi8 were assuming that already),
and by comparing to values that should coerce to float exactly, namely
INTxx_MIN and -INTxx_MIN.  Also remove some random cosmetic discrepancies
between these six functions.

Per bug #15519 from Victor Petrovykh.  This should get back-patched,
but first let's see what the buildfarm thinks of it --- I'm not too
sure about portability of some of the regression test cases.

Patch by me; thanks to Andrew Gierth for analysis and discussion.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15519-4fc785b483201ff1@postgresql.org
2018-11-23 20:57:11 -05:00
Tom Lane a314c34079 Clamp semijoin selectivity to be not more than inner-join selectivity.
We should never estimate the output of a semijoin to be more rows than
we estimate for an inner join with the same input rels and join condition;
it's obviously impossible for that to happen.  However, given the
relatively poor quality of our semijoin selectivity estimates ---
particularly, but not only, in cases where we punt and return a default
estimate --- we did often deliver such estimates.  To improve matters,
calculate both estimates inside eqjoinsel() and take the smaller one.

The bulk of this patch is just mechanical refactoring to avoid repetitive
information lookup when we call both eqjoinsel_semi and eqjoinsel_inner.
The actual new behavior is just

	selec = Min(selec, inner_rel->rows * selec_inner);

which looks a bit odd but is correct because of our different definitions
for inner and semi join selectivity.

There is one ensuing plan change in the regression tests, but it looks
reasonable enough (and checking the actual row counts shows that the
estimate moved closer to reality, not further away).

Per bug #15160 from Alexey Ermakov.  Although this is arguably a bug fix,
I won't risk destabilizing plan choices in stable branches by
back-patching.

Tom Lane, reviewed by Melanie Plageman

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/152395805004.19366.3107109716821067806@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-11-23 12:48:49 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 3be5fe2b10 Silence compiler warnings
Commit cfdf4dc4fc left a few unnecessary assignments, one of which
caused compiler warnings, as reported by Erik Rijkers.  Remove them all.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/df0dcca2025b3d90d946ecc508ca9678@xs4all.nl
2018-11-23 13:01:05 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera de38ce1b83 Don't allow partitioned indexes in pg_global tablespace
Missing in dfa6081419.

Author: David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-M3NMTCpv=vDfkoqHbMPFf=3-Z1ud=+1DHH00tC+zLaQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-23 08:48:20 -03:00
Thomas Munro cfdf4dc4fc Add WL_EXIT_ON_PM_DEATH pseudo-event.
Users of the WaitEventSet and WaitLatch() APIs can now choose between
asking for WL_POSTMASTER_DEATH and then handling it explicitly, or asking
for WL_EXIT_ON_PM_DEATH to trigger immediate exit on postmaster death.
This reduces code duplication, since almost all callers want the latter.

Repair all code that was previously ignoring postmaster death completely,
or requesting the event but ignoring it, or requesting the event but then
doing an unconditional PostmasterIsAlive() call every time through its
event loop (which is an expensive syscall on platforms for which we don't
have USE_POSTMASTER_DEATH_SIGNAL support).

Assert that callers of WaitLatchXXX() under the postmaster remember to
ask for either WL_POSTMASTER_DEATH or WL_EXIT_ON_PM_DEATH, to prevent
future bugs.

The only process that doesn't handle postmaster death is syslogger.  It
waits until all backends holding the write end of the syslog pipe
(including the postmaster) have closed it by exiting, to be sure to
capture any parting messages.  By using the WaitEventSet API directly
it avoids the new assertion, and as a by-product it may be slightly
more efficient on platforms that have epoll().

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Heikki Linnakangas, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm%3D1TCviRykkUb69ppWLr_V697rzd1j3eZsRMmbXvETfqbQ%40mail.gmail.com,
            https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2LqHzizbe7muD7-2yHUbTOoF7Q+qkSD5Q41kuhttRTwA@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-23 20:46:34 +13:00
Tom Lane eba2ce1712 Fix another crash in json{b}_populate_recordset and json{b}_to_recordset.
populate_recordset_worker() failed to consider the possibility that the
supplied JSON data contains no rows, so that update_cached_tupdesc never
got called.  This led to a null-pointer dereference since commit 9a5e8ed28;
before that it led to a bogus "set-valued function called in context that
cannot accept a set" error.  Fix by forcing the update to happen.

Per bug #15514.  Back-patch to v11 as 9a5e8ed28 was.  (If we were excited
about the bogus error, we could perhaps go back further, but it'd take more
work to figure out how to fix it in older branches.  Given the lack of
field complaints about that aspect, I'm not excited.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15514-59d5b4c4065b178b@postgresql.org
2018-11-22 15:14:01 -05:00
Andres Freund 578b229718 Remove WITH OIDS support, change oid catalog column visibility.
Previously tables declared WITH OIDS, including a significant fraction
of the catalog tables, stored the oid column not as a normal column,
but as part of the tuple header.

This special column was not shown by default, which was somewhat odd,
as it's often (consider e.g. pg_class.oid) one of the more important
parts of a row.  Neither pg_dump nor COPY included the contents of the
oid column by default.

The fact that the oid column was not an ordinary column necessitated a
significant amount of special case code to support oid columns. That
already was painful for the existing, but upcoming work aiming to make
table storage pluggable, would have required expanding and duplicating
that "specialness" significantly.

WITH OIDS has been deprecated since 2005 (commit ff02d0a05280e0).
Remove it.

Removing includes:
- CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE syntax for declaring the table to be
  WITH OIDS has been removed (WITH (oids[ = true]) will error out)
- pg_dump does not support dumping tables declared WITH OIDS and will
  issue a warning when dumping one (and ignore the oid column).
- restoring an pg_dump archive with pg_restore will warn when
  restoring a table with oid contents (and ignore the oid column)
- COPY will refuse to load binary dump that includes oids.
- pg_upgrade will error out when encountering tables declared WITH
  OIDS, they have to be altered to remove the oid column first.
- Functionality to access the oid of the last inserted row (like
  plpgsql's RESULT_OID, spi's SPI_lastoid, ...) has been removed.

The syntax for declaring a table WITHOUT OIDS (or WITH (oids = false)
for CREATE TABLE) is still supported. While that requires a bit of
support code, it seems unnecessary to break applications / dumps that
do not use oids, and are explicit about not using them.

The biggest user of WITH OID columns was postgres' catalog. This
commit changes all 'magic' oid columns to be columns that are normally
declared and stored. To reduce unnecessary query breakage all the
newly added columns are still named 'oid', even if a table's column
naming scheme would indicate 'reloid' or such.  This obviously
requires adapting a lot code, mostly replacing oid access via
HeapTupleGetOid() with access to the underlying Form_pg_*->oid column.

The bootstrap process now assigns oids for all oid columns in
genbki.pl that do not have an explicit value (starting at the largest
oid previously used), only oids assigned later by oids will be above
FirstBootstrapObjectId. As the oid column now is a normal column the
special bootstrap syntax for oids has been removed.

Oids are not automatically assigned during insertion anymore, all
backend code explicitly assigns oids with GetNewOidWithIndex(). For
the rare case that insertions into the catalog via SQL are called for
the new pg_nextoid() function can be used (which only works on catalog
tables).

The fact that oid columns on system tables are now normal columns
means that they will be included in the set of columns expanded
by * (i.e. SELECT * FROM pg_class will now include the table's oid,
previously it did not). It'd not technically be hard to hide oid
column by default, but that'd mean confusing behavior would either
have to be carried forward forever, or it'd cause breakage down the
line.

While it's not unlikely that further adjustments are needed, the
scope/invasiveness of the patch makes it worthwhile to get merge this
now. It's painful to maintain externally, too complicated to commit
after the code code freeze, and a dependency of a number of other
patches.

Catversion bump, for obvious reasons.

Author: Andres Freund, with contributions by John Naylor
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180930034810.ywp2c7awz7opzcfr@alap3.anarazel.de
2018-11-20 16:00:17 -08:00
Alvaro Herrera d56e0fde82 psql: Describe partitioned tables/indexes as such
In \d and \z, instead of conflating partitioned tables and indexes with
plain ones, set the "type" column and table title differently to make
the distinction obvious.  A simple ease-of-use improvement.

Author: Pavel Stehule, Michaël Paquier, Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFj8pRDMWPgijpt_vPj1t702PgLG4Ls2NCf+rEcb+qGPpossmg@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-19 17:30:06 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 5c9a5513a3 Disallow COPY FREEZE on partitioned tables
This didn't actually work: COPY would fail to flush the right files, and
instead would try to flush a non-existing file, causing the whole
transaction to fail.

Cope by raising an error as soon as the command is sent instead, to
avoid a nasty later surprise.  Of course, it would be much better to
make it work, but we don't have a patch for that yet, and we don't know
if we'll want to backpatch one when we do.

Reported-by: Tomas Vondra
Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Steve Singer, Tomas Vondra
2018-11-19 11:16:28 -03:00
Tom Lane 34c9e455d0 Improve performance of partition pruning remapping a little.
ExecFindInitialMatchingSubPlans has to update the PartitionPruneState's
subplan mapping data to account for the removal of subplans it prunes.
However, that's only necessary if run-time pruning will also occur,
so we can skip it when that won't happen, which should result in not
needing to do the remapping in many cases.  (We now need it only when
some partitions are potentially startup-time prunable and others are
potentially run-time prunable, which seems like an unusual case.)

Also make some marginal performance improvements in the remapping
itself.  These will mainly win if most partitions got pruned by
the startup-time pruning, which is perhaps a debatable assumption
in this context.

Also fix some bogus comments, and rearrange code to marginally
reduce space consumption in the executor's query-lifespan context.

David Rowley, reviewed by Yoshikazu Imai

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f9+m6-di-zyy4B4AGn0y1B9F8UKDRigtBbNviXOkuyOpw@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-15 13:34:16 -05:00
Tom Lane 600b04d6b5 Add a timezone-specific variant of date_trunc().
date_trunc(field, timestamptz, zone_name) performs truncation using
the named time zone as reference, rather than working in the session
time zone as is the default behavior.  It's equivalent to

date_trunc(field, timestamptz at time zone zone_name) at time zone zone_name

but it's faster, easier to type, and arguably easier to understand.

Vik Fearing and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/6249ffc4-2b22-4c1b-4e7d-7af84fedd7c6@2ndquadrant.com
2018-11-14 15:41:07 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 9079fe60b2 Add INSERT ON CONFLICT test on partitioned tables with transition table
This case was uncovered by existing tests, so breakage went undetected.
Make sure it remains stable.

Extracted from a larger patch by
Author: David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-aGCJ5H7_hiSs5PhWs6Obmj+vGARjGymqH1=o5PcrNnQ@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-13 18:12:39 -03:00
Thomas Munro 257ef3cd4f Fix handling of HBA ldapserver with multiple hostnames.
Commit 35c0754f failed to handle space-separated lists of alternative
hostnames in ldapserver, when building a URI for ldap_initialize()
(OpenLDAP).  Such lists need to be expanded to space-separated URIs.

Repair.  Back-patch to 11, to fix bug report #15495.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reported-by: Renaud Navarro
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15495-2c39fc196c95cd72%40postgresql.org
2018-11-13 17:46:28 +13:00
Tom Lane fa2952d8eb Fix missing role dependencies for some schema and type ACLs.
This patch fixes several related cases in which pg_shdepend entries were
never made, or were lost, for references to roles appearing in the ACLs of
schemas and/or types.  While that did no immediate harm, if a referenced
role were later dropped, the drop would be allowed and would leave a
dangling reference in the object's ACL.  That still wasn't a big problem
for normal database usage, but it would cause obscure failures in
subsequent dump/reload or pg_upgrade attempts, taking the form of
attempts to grant privileges to all-numeric role names.  (I think I've
seen field reports matching that symptom, but can't find any right now.)

Several cases are fixed here:

1. ALTER DOMAIN SET/DROP DEFAULT would lose the dependencies for any
existing ACL entries for the domain.  This case is ancient, dating
back as far as we've had pg_shdepend tracking at all.

2. If a default type privilege applies, CREATE TYPE recorded the
ACL properly but forgot to install dependency entries for it.
This dates to the addition of default privileges for types in 9.2.

3. If a default schema privilege applies, CREATE SCHEMA recorded the
ACL properly but forgot to install dependency entries for it.
This dates to the addition of default privileges for schemas in v10
(commit ab89e465c).

Another somewhat-related problem is that when creating a relation
rowtype or implicit array type, TypeCreate would apply any available
default type privileges to that type, which we don't really want
since such an object isn't supposed to have privileges of its own.
(You can't, for example, drop such privileges once they've been added
to an array type.)

ab89e465c is also to blame for a race condition in the regression tests:
privileges.sql transiently installed globally-applicable default
privileges on schemas, which sometimes got absorbed into the ACLs of
schemas created by concurrent test scripts.  This should have resulted
in failures when privileges.sql tried to drop the role holding such
privileges; but thanks to the bug fixed here, it instead led to dangling
ACLs in the final state of the regression database.  We'd managed not to
notice that, but it became obvious in the wake of commit da906766c, which
allowed the race condition to occur in pg_upgrade tests.

To fix, add a function recordDependencyOnNewAcl to encapsulate what
callers of get_user_default_acl need to do; while the original call
sites got that right via ad-hoc code, none of the later-added ones
have.  Also change GenerateTypeDependencies to generate these
dependencies, which requires adding the typacl to its parameter list.
(That might be annoying if there are any extensions calling that
function directly; but if there are, they're most likely buggy in the
same way as the core callers were, so they need work anyway.)  While
I was at it, I changed GenerateTypeDependencies to accept most of its
parameters in the form of a Form_pg_type pointer, making its parameter
list a bit less unwieldy and mistake-prone.

The test race condition is fixed just by wrapping the addition and
removal of default privileges into a single transaction, so that that
state is never visible externally.  We might eventually prefer to
separate out tests of default privileges into a script that runs by
itself, but that would be a bigger change and would make the tests
run slower overall.

Back-patch relevant parts to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15719.1541725287@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-09 20:42:14 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera a28e10e82e Indicate session name in isolationtester notices
When a session under isolationtester produces printable notices (NOTICE,
WARNING) we were just printing them unadorned, which can be confusing
when debugging.  Prefix them with the session name, which makes things
clearer.

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Reviewed-by: Hari Babu Kommi
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181024213451.75nh3f3dctmcdbfq@alvherre.pgsql
2018-11-09 13:08:00 -03:00
Michael Paquier 319a810180 Fix dependency handling of partitions and inheritance for ON COMMIT
This commit fixes a set of issues with ON COMMIT actions when used on
partitioned tables and tables with inheritance children:
- Applying ON COMMIT DROP on a partitioned table with partitions or on a
table with inheritance children caused a failure at commit time, with
complains about the children being already dropped as all relations are
dropped one at the same time.
- Applying ON COMMIT DELETE on a partition relying on a partitioned
table which uses ON COMMIT DROP would cause the partition truncation to
fail as the parent is removed first.

The solution to the first problem is to handle the removal of all the
dependencies in one go instead of dropping relations one-by-one, based
on a suggestion from Álvaro Herrera.  So instead all the relation OIDs
to remove are gathered and then processed in one round of multiple
deletions.

The solution to the second problem is to reorder the actions, with
truncation happening first and relation drop done after.  Even if it
means that a partition could be first truncated, then immediately
dropped if its partitioned table is dropped, this has the merit to keep
the code simple as there is no need to do existence checks on the
relations to drop.

Contrary to a manual TRUNCATE on a partitioned table, ON COMMIT DELETE
does not cascade to its partitions.  The ON COMMIT action defined on
each partition gets the priority.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote, Álvaro Herrera, Robert Haas
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/68f17907-ec98-1192-f99f-8011400517f5@lab.ntt.co.jp
Backpatch-through: 10
2018-11-09 10:03:22 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 705d433fd5 Revise attribute handling code on partition creation
The original code to propagate NOT NULL and default expressions
specified when creating a partition was mostly copy-pasted from
typed-tables creation, but not being a great match it contained some
duplicity, inefficiency and bugs.

This commit fixes the bug that NOT NULL constraints declared in the
parent table would not be honored in the partition.  One reported issue
that is not fixed is that a DEFAULT declared in the child is not used
when inserting through the parent.  That would amount to a behavioral
change that's better not back-patched.

This rewrite makes the code simpler:

1. instead of checking for duplicate column names in its own block,
reuse the original one that already did that;

2. instead of concatenating the list of columns from parent and the one
declared in the partition and scanning the result to (incorrectly)
propagate defaults and not-null constraints, just scan the latter
searching the former for a match, and merging sensibly.  This works
because we know the list in the parent is already correct and there can
only be one parent.

This rewrite makes ColumnDef->is_from_parent unused, so it's removed
on branch master; on released branches, it's kept as an unused field in
order not to cause ABI incompatibilities.

This commit also adds a test case for creating partitions with
collations mismatching that on the parent table, something that is
closely related to the code being patched.  No code change is introduced
though, since that'd be a behavior change that could break some (broken)
working applications.

Amit Langote wrote a less invasive fix for the original
NOT NULL/defaults bug, but while I kept the tests he added, I ended up
not using his original code.  Ashutosh Bapat reviewed Amit's fix.  Amit
reviewed mine.

Author: Álvaro Herrera, Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat, Amit Langote
Reported-by: Jürgen Strobel (bug #15212)
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/152746742177.1291.9847032632907407358@wrigleys.postgresql.org
2018-11-08 16:22:09 -03:00
Tom Lane 5d28c9bd73 Disable recheck_on_update optimization to avoid crashes.
The code added by commit c203d6cf8 causes a crash in at least one case,
where a potentially-optimizable expression index has a storage type
different from the input data type.  A cursory code review turned up
numerous other problems that seem impractical to fix on short notice.

Andres argued for revert of that patch some time ago, and if additional
senior committers had been paying attention, that's likely what would
have happened, but we were not :-(

At this point we can't just revert, at least not in v11, because that would
mean an ABI break for code touching relcache entries.  And we should not
remove the (also buggy) support for the recheck_on_update index reloption,
since it might already be used in some databases in the field.  So this
patch just does the as-little-invasive-as-possible measure of disabling
the feature as though recheck_on_update were forced off for all indexes.
I also removed the related regression tests (which would otherwise fail)
and the user-facing documentation of the reloption.

We should undertake a more thorough code cleanup if the patch can't be
fixed, but not under the extreme time pressure of being already overdue
for 11.1 release.

Per report from Ondřej Bouda and subsequent private discussion among
pgsql-release.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181106185255.776mstcyehnc63ty@alvherre.pgsql
2018-11-06 18:33:28 -05:00
Andrew Gierth 5613da4cc7 Optimize nested ConvertRowtypeExpr nodes.
A ConvertRowtypeExpr is used to translate a whole-row reference of a
child to that of a parent. The planner produces nested
ConvertRowtypeExpr while translating whole-row reference of a leaf
partition in a multi-level partition hierarchy. Executor then
translates the whole-row reference from the leaf partition into all
the intermediate parent's whole-row references before arriving at the
final whole-row reference. It could instead translate the whole-row
reference from the leaf partition directly to the top-most parent's
whole-row reference skipping any intermediate translations.

Ashutosh Bapat, with tests by Kyotaro Horiguchi and some
editorialization by me. Reviewed by Andres Freund, Pavel Stehule,
Kyotaro Horiguchi, Dmitry Dolgov, Tom Lane.
2018-11-06 21:10:10 +00:00
Tom Lane 003c68a3b4 Rename rbtree.c functions to use "rbt" prefix not "rb" prefix.
The "rb" prefix is used by Ruby, so that our existing code results
in name collisions that break plruby.  We discussed ways to prevent
that by adjusting dynamic linker options, but it seems that at best
we'd move the pain to other cases.  Renaming to avoid the collision
is the only portable fix anyway.  Fortunately, our rbtree code is
not (yet?) widely used --- in core, there's only a single usage
in GIN --- so it seems likely that we can get away with a rename.

I chose to do this basically as s/rb/rbt/g, except for places where
there already was a "t" after "rb".  The patch could have been made
smaller by only touching linker-visible symbols, but it would have
resulted in oddly inconsistent-looking code.  Better to make it look
like "rbt" was the plan all along.

Back-patch to v10.  The rbtree.c code exists back to 9.5, but
rb_iterate() which is the actual immediate source of pain was added
in v10, so it seems like changing the names before that would have
more risk than benefit.

Per report from Pavel Raiskup.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4738198.8KVIIDhgEB@nb.usersys.redhat.com
2018-11-06 13:25:24 -05:00
Tom Lane 55f3d10296 Remove unreferenced pg_opfamily entry.
The entry with OID 4035, for GIST jsonb_ops, is unused; apparently
it was added in preparation for index support that never materialized.
Remove it, and add a regression test case to detect future mistakes
of the same kind.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17188.1541379745@sss.pgh.pa.us
2018-11-05 12:02:27 -05:00
Michael Paquier dc3e436b19 Block creation of partitions with open references to its parent
When a partition is created as part of a trigger processing, it is
possible that the partition which just gets created changes the
properties of the table the executor of the ongoing command relies on,
causing a subsequent crash.  This has been found possible when for
example using a BEFORE INSERT which creates a new partition for a
partitioned table being inserted to.

Any attempt to do so is blocked when working on a partition, with
regression tests added for both CREATE TABLE PARTITION OF and ALTER
TABLE ATTACH PARTITION.

Reported-by: Dmitry Shalashov
Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15437-3fe01ee66bd1bae1@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 10
2018-11-05 11:04:02 +09:00
Michael Paquier 4bc772e2af Ignore partitioned tables when processing ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS
Those tables have no physical storage, making this option unusable with
partition trees as at commit time an actual truncation was attempted.
There are still issues with the way ON COMMIT actions are done when
mixing several action types, however this impacts as well inheritance
trees, so this issue will be dealt with later.

Reported-by: Rajkumar Raghuwanshi
Author: Amit Langote
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6mhgcjSiB_egqEAEFgX462QZtncU8QCAJ2HZwM-wWGVew@mail.gmail.com
2018-11-05 09:14:33 +09:00