Commit Graph

13672 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
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
Heikki Linnakangas f897c4744f Fix "element <@ range" cost estimation.
The statistics-based cost estimation patch for range types broke that, by
incorrectly assuming that the left operand of all range oeprators is a
range. That lead to a "type x is not a range type" error. Because it took so
long for anyone to notice, add a regression test for that case.

We still don't do proper statistics-based cost estimation for that, so you
just get a default constant estimate. We should look into implementing that,
but this patch at least fixes the regression.

Spotted by Tom Lane, when testing query from Josh Berkus.
2013-03-21 11:21:51 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera f8348ea32e Allow extracting machine-readable object identity
Introduce pg_identify_object(oid,oid,int4), which is similar in spirit
to pg_describe_object but instead produces a row of machine-readable
information to uniquely identify the given object, without resorting to
OIDs or other internal representation.  This is intended to be used in
the event trigger implementation, to report objects being operated on;
but it has usefulness of its own.

Catalog version bumped because of the new function.
2013-03-20 18:19:19 -03:00
Simon Riggs bb7cc2623f Remove PageSetTLI and rename pd_tli to pd_checksum
Remove use of PageSetTLI() from all page manipulation functions
and adjust README to indicate change in the way we make changes
to pages. Repurpose those bytes into the pd_checksum field and
explain how that works in comments about page header.

Refactoring ahead of actual feature patch which would make use
of the checksum field, arriving later.

Jeff Davis, with comments and doc changes by Simon Riggs
Direction suggested by Robert Haas; many others providing
review comments.
2013-03-18 13:46:42 +00:00
Robert Haas 05f3f9c7b2 Extend object-access hook machinery to support post-alter events.
This also slightly widens the scope of what we support in terms of
post-create events.

KaiGai Kohei, with a few changes, mostly to the comments, by me
2013-03-17 22:57:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 6ac7facdd3 Improve signal-handler lockout mechanism in timeout.c.
Rather than doing a fairly-expensive setitimer() call to prevent interrupts
from happening, let's just invent a simple boolean flag that the signal
handler is required to check.  This is not only faster but considerably
more robust than before, since the previous code effectively assumed that
only ITIMER_REAL events would ever fire the SIGALRM handler, which is
obviously something that can be broken easily by third-party code.

Zoltán Böszörményi and Tom Lane
2013-03-17 22:42:19 -04:00
Tom Lane da5aeccf64 Move pqsignal() to libpgport.
We had two copies of this function in the backend and libpq, which was
already pretty bogus, but it turns out that we need it in some other
programs that don't use libpq (such as pg_test_fsync).  So put it where
it probably should have been all along.  The signal-mask-initialization
support in src/backend/libpq/pqsignal.c stays where it is, though, since
we only need that in the backend.
2013-03-17 12:06:42 -04:00
Tom Lane d43837d030 Add lock_timeout configuration parameter.
This GUC allows limiting the time spent waiting to acquire any one
heavyweight lock.

In support of this, improve the recently-added timeout infrastructure
to permit efficiently enabling or disabling multiple timeouts at once.
That reduces the performance hit from turning on lock_timeout, though
it's still not zero.

Zoltán Böszörményi, reviewed by Tom Lane,
Stephen Frost, and Hari Babu
2013-03-16 23:22:57 -04:00
Tom Lane dcafdbcde1 Improve error reporting in code that checks for buffer refcount leaks.
Formerly we just Assert'ed that each refcount was zero, which was quick
and easy but failed to provide a good overview of what was wrong.
Change the code so that we'll call PrintBufferLeakWarning() for each
buffer with a nonzero refcount, and then Assert at the end of the loop.
This costs nothing in runtime and might ease diagnosis of some bugs.

Greg Smith, reviewed by Satoshi Nagayasu, further tweaked by me
2013-03-15 12:26:26 -04:00
Tom Lane 73e7025bd8 Extend format() to handle field width and left/right alignment.
This change adds some more standard sprintf() functionality to format().

Pavel Stehule, reviewed by Dean Rasheed and Kyotaro Horiguchi
2013-03-14 22:56:56 -04:00
Tom Lane 1a1832eb08 Avoid inserting no-op Limit plan nodes.
This was discussed in connection with the patch to avoid inserting no-op
Result nodes, but not actually implemented therein.
2013-03-14 15:11:05 -04:00
Kevin Grittner fb60e7296c Revert unnecessary change in MV call to checkRuleResultList().
Due to a misreading of the function's comment block, there was an
unneeded change to a call in rewriteDefine.c.  There is, in fact
no reason to pass false for a MV; it should be true just like a
view.

Fixes issue pointed out by Tom Lane
2013-03-14 13:59:52 -05:00
Tom Lane 4387cf956b Avoid inserting Result nodes that only compute identity projections.
The planner sometimes inserts Result nodes to perform column projections
(ie, arbitrary scalar calculations) above plan nodes that lack projection
logic of their own.  However, we did that even if the lower plan node was
in fact producing the required column set already; which is a pretty common
case given the popularity of "SELECT * FROM ...".  Measurements show that
the useless plan node adds non-negligible overhead, especially when there
are many columns in the result.  So add a check to avoid inserting a Result
node unless there's something useful for it to do.

There are a couple of remaining places where unnecessary Result nodes
could get inserted, but they are (a) much less performance-critical,
and (b) coded in such a way that it's hard to avoid inserting a Result,
because the desired tlist is changed on-the-fly in subsequent logic.
We'll leave those alone for now.

Kyotaro Horiguchi; reviewed and further hacked on by Amit Kapila and
Tom Lane.
2013-03-14 13:43:18 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas a5ff502fce Change the way UESCAPE is lexed, to reduce the size of the flex tables.
The error rule used to avoid backtracking with the U&'...' UESCAPE 'x'
syntax bloated the flex tables, so refactor that. This patch makes the error
rule shorter, by introducing a new exclusive flex state that's entered after
parsing U&'...'. This shrinks the postgres binary by about 220kB.
2013-03-14 19:04:43 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 59d0bf9dca Add cost estimation of range @> and <@ operators.
The estimates are based on the existing lower bound histogram, and a new
histogram of range lengths.

Bump catversion, because the range length histogram now needs to be present
in statistic slot kind 6, or you get an error on @> and <@ queries. (A
re-ANALYZE would be enough to fix that, though)

Alexander Korotkov, with some refactoring by me.
2013-03-14 15:36:56 +02:00
Tom Lane a0c6dfeecf Allow default expressions to be attached to columns of foreign tables.
There's still some discussion about exactly how postgres_fdw ought to
handle this case, but there seems no debate that we want to allow defaults
to be used for inserts into foreign tables.  So remove the core-code
restrictions that prevented it.

While at it, get rid of the special grammar productions for CREATE FOREIGN
TABLE, and instead add explicit FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED error checks for the
disallowed cases.  This makes the grammar a shade smaller, and more
importantly results in much more intelligible error messages for
unsupported cases.  It's also one less thing to fix if we ever start
supporting constraints on foreign tables.
2013-03-12 17:37:07 -04:00
Tom Lane 41eef0ff75 Fix thinko in matview patch.
"break" instead of "continue" suppressed view expansion for views appearing
later in the range table.  Per report from Erikjan Rijkers.

While at it, improve the associated comment a bit.
2013-03-11 12:00:24 -04:00
Andrew Dunstan 38fb4d978c JSON generation improvements.
This adds the following:

    json_agg(anyrecord) -> json
    to_json(any) -> json
    hstore_to_json(hstore) -> json (also used as a cast)
    hstore_to_json_loose(hstore) -> json

The last provides heuristic treatment of numbers and booleans.

Also, in json generation, if any non-builtin type has a cast to json,
that function is used instead of the type's output function.

Andrew Dunstan, reviewed by Steve Singer.

Catalog version bumped.
2013-03-10 17:35:36 -04:00
Tom Lane 21734d2fb8 Support writable foreign tables.
This patch adds the core-system infrastructure needed to support updates
on foreign tables, and extends contrib/postgres_fdw to allow updates
against remote Postgres servers.  There's still a great deal of room for
improvement in optimization of remote updates, but at least there's basic
functionality there now.

KaiGai Kohei, reviewed by Alexander Korotkov and Laurenz Albe, and rather
heavily revised by Tom Lane.
2013-03-10 14:16:02 -04:00
Magnus Hagander 7f49a67f95 Report pg_hba line number and contents when users fail to log in
Instead of just reporting which user failed to log in, log both the
line number in the active pg_hba.conf file (which may not match reality
in case the file has been edited and not reloaded) and the contents of
the matching line (which will always be correct), to make it easier
to debug incorrect pg_hba.conf files.

The message to the client remains unchanged and does not include this
information, to prevent leaking security sensitive information.

Reviewed by Tom Lane and Dean Rasheed
2013-03-10 15:54:37 +01:00
Heikki Linnakangas 23f10b6473 SP-GiST support of the range adjacent operator -|-
Alexander Korotkov, reviewed by Jeff Davis.
2013-03-08 15:03:19 +02:00
Tom Lane a7b61d4f5a Fix infinite-loop risk in fixempties() stage of regex compilation.
The previous coding of this function could get into situations where it
would never terminate, because successive passes would re-add EMPTY arcs
that had been removed by the previous pass.  Rewrite the function
completely using a new algorithm that is guaranteed to terminate, and
also seems to be usually faster than the old one.  Per Tcl bugs 3604074
and 3606683.

Tom Lane and Don Porter
2013-03-07 11:51:03 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7ccefe8610 Fix tli history file fetching, broken by the archive after crash recevery patch.
If we were about to enter archive recovery after crash recovery, we scanned
the archive for the latest tli history file, and set the recovery target
timeline to that. However, when we actually tried to read the history file,
we would not fetch the file from the archive, because we were not in archive
recovery yet.

To fix, make readTimeLineHistory and existsTimeLineHistory to always fetch
the file from archive if archive recovery is requested, even if we're not in
archive recovery yet.

Backpatch to 9.2. Mitsumasa KONDO
2013-03-07 12:33:24 +02:00
Tom Lane 1908abc4a3 Arrange to cache FdwRoutine structs in foreign tables' relcache entries.
This saves several catalog lookups per reference.  It's not all that
exciting right now, because we'd managed to minimize the number of places
that need to fetch the data; but the upcoming writable-foreign-tables patch
needs this info in a lot more places.
2013-03-06 23:48:09 -05:00
Robert Haas f90cc26982 Code beautification for object-access hook machinery.
KaiGai Kohei
2013-03-06 20:53:25 -05:00
Kevin Grittner c5bf7a2052 WAL-log the extension of a new empty MV heap which is being populated.
This page with no tuples is used to distinguish an MV containing a
zero-row resultset of its backing query from an MV which has not
been populated by its backing query.  Unless WAL-logged, recovery
and hot standby don't work correctly with what should be an empty
but scannable materialized view.

Fixes bugs reported by Fujii Masao in testing MVs on hot standby.
2013-03-06 17:15:34 -06:00
Tom Lane 80b011ef0a Fix to_char() to use ASCII-only case-folding rules where appropriate.
formatting.c used locale-dependent case folding rules in some code paths
where the result isn't supposed to be locale-dependent, for example
to_char(timestamp, 'DAY').  Since the source data is always just ASCII
in these cases, that usually didn't matter ... but it does matter in
Turkish locales, which have unusual treatment of "i" and "I".  To confuse
matters even more, the misbehavior was only visible in UTF8 encoding,
because in single-byte encodings we used pg_toupper/pg_tolower which
don't have locale-specific behavior for ASCII characters.  Fix by providing
intentionally ASCII-only case-folding functions and using these where
appropriate.  Per bug #7913 from Adnan Dursun.  Back-patch to all active
branches, since it's been like this for a long time.
2013-03-05 13:02:30 -05:00
Tom Lane 542eeba269 Fix overflow check in tm2timestamp (this time for sure).
I fixed this code back in commit 841b4a2d5, but didn't think carefully
enough about the behavior near zero, which meant it improperly rejected
1999-12-31 24:00:00.  Per report from Magnus Hagander.
2013-03-04 15:13:31 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 54d6706ded Remove accidentally-committed .orig file. 2013-03-04 15:17:13 +00:00
Tom Lane bc61878682 Fix map_sql_value_to_xml_value() to treat domains like their base types.
This was already the case for domains over arrays, but not for domains
over certain built-in types such as boolean.  The special formatting
rules for those types should apply to domains over them as well.
Per discussion.

While this is a bug fix, it's also a behavioral change that seems likely
to trip up some applications.  So no back-patch.

Pavel Stehule
2013-03-03 19:32:22 -05:00
Kevin Grittner 3bf3ab8c56 Add a materialized view relations.
A materialized view has a rule just like a view and a heap and
other physical properties like a table.  The rule is only used to
populate the table, references in queries refer to the
materialized data.

This is a minimal implementation, but should still be useful in
many cases.  Currently data is only populated "on demand" by the
CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW and REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW statements.
It is expected that future releases will add incremental updates
with various timings, and that a more refined concept of defining
what is "fresh" data will be developed.  At some point it may even
be possible to have queries use a materialized in place of
references to underlying tables, but that requires the other
above-mentioned features to be working first.

Much of the documentation work by Robert Haas.
Review by Noah Misch, Thom Brown, Robert Haas, Marko Tiikkaja
Security review by KaiGai Kohei, with a decision on how best to
implement sepgsql still pending.
2013-03-03 18:23:31 -06:00
Tom Lane b15a6da292 Get rid of any toast table when converting a table to a view.
Also make sure other fields of the view's pg_class entry are appropriate
for a view; it shouldn't have relfrozenxid set for instance.

This ancient omission isn't believed to have any serious consequences in
versions 8.4-9.2, so no backpatch.  But let's fix it before it does bite
us in some serious way.  It's just luck that the case doesn't cause
problems for autovacuum.  (It did cause problems in 8.3, but that's out
of support.)

Andres Freund
2013-03-03 19:05:47 -05:00
Tom Lane 2b78d101d1 Fix SQL function execution to be safe with long-lived FmgrInfos.
fmgr_sql had been designed on the assumption that the FmgrInfo it's called
with has only query lifespan.  This is demonstrably unsafe in connection
with range types, as shown in bug #7881 from Andrew Gierth.  Fix things
so that we re-generate the function's cache data if the (sub)transaction
it was made in is no longer active.

Back-patch to 9.2.  This might be needed further back, but it's not clear
whether the case can realistically arise without range types, so for now
I'll desist from back-patching further.
2013-03-03 17:39:58 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3a9e64aa0d Cannot use WL_SOCKET_WRITEABLE without WL_SOCKET_READABLE.
In copy-out mode, the frontend should not send any messages until the
backend has finished streaming, by sending a CopyDone message. I'm not sure
if it would be legal for the client to send a new query before receiving the
CopyDone message from the backend, but trying to support that would require
bigger changes to the backend code structure.

Fixes an assertion failure reported by Fujii Masao.
2013-02-27 19:28:51 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3d009e45bd Add support for piping COPY to/from an external program.
This includes backend "COPY TO/FROM PROGRAM '...'" syntax, and corresponding
psql \copy syntax. Like with reading/writing files, the backend version is
superuser-only, and in the psql version, the program is run in the client.

In the passing, the psql \copy STDIN/STDOUT syntax is subtly changed: if you
the stdin/stdout is quoted, it's now interpreted as a filename. For example,
"\copy foo from 'stdin'" now reads from a file called 'stdin', not from
standard input. Before this, there was no way to specify a filename called
stdin, stdout, pstdin or pstdout.

This creates a new function in pgport, wait_result_to_str(), which can
be used to convert the exit status of a process, as returned by wait(3),
to a human-readable string.

Etsuro Fujita, reviewed by Amit Kapila.
2013-02-27 18:22:31 +02:00
Tom Lane 73dc003bee Add missing error check in regexp parser.
parseqatom() failed to check for an error return (NULL result) from its
recursive call to parsebranch(), and in consequence could crash with a
null-pointer dereference after an error return.  This bug has been there
since day one, but wasn't noticed before, probably because most error cases
in parsebranch() didn't actually lead to returning NULL.  Add the missing
error check, and also tweak parsebranch() to exit in a less indirect
fashion after a call to parseqatom() fails.

Report by Tomasz Karlik, fix by me.
2013-02-27 10:40:03 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut ca9c666602 Correct tense in log message 2013-02-23 23:30:14 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 4f36292669 Add quotes to messages 2013-02-22 23:33:07 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 6c4f6664b2 Fix thinko in previous commit.
We must still initialize minRecoveryPoint if we start straight with archive
recovery, e.g when recovering from a normal base backup taken with
pg_start/stop_backup. Otherwise we never consider the system consistent.
2013-02-22 13:12:43 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas abf5c5c9a4 If recovery.conf is created after "pg_ctl stop -m i", do crash recovery.
If you create a base backup using an atomic filesystem snapshot, and try to
perform PITR starting from that base backup, or if you just kill a master
server and create recovery.conf to put it into standby mode, we don't know
how far we need to recover before reaching consistency. Normally in crash
recovery, we replay all the WAL present in pg_xlog, and assume that we're
consistent after that. And normally in archive recovery, minRecoveryPoint,
backupEndRequired, or backupEndPoint is set in the control file, indicating
how far we need to replay to reach consistency. But if the server was
previously up and running normally, and you kill -9 it or take an atomic
filesystem snapshot, none of those fields are set in the control file.

The solution is to perform crash recovery first, replaying all the WAL in
pg_xlog. After that's done, we assume that the system is consistent like in
normal crash recovery, and switch to archive recovery mode after that.

Per report from Kyotaro HORIGUCHI. In his scenario, recovery.conf was
created after "pg_ctl stop -m i". I'm not sure we need to support that exact
scenario, but we should support backing up using a filesystem snapshot,
which looks identical.

This issue goes back to at least 9.0, where hot standby was introduced and
we started to track when consistency is reached. In 9.1 and 9.2, we would
open up for hot standby too early, and queries could briefly see an
inconsistent state. But 9.2 made it more visible, as we started to PANIC if
we see a reference to a non-existing page during recovery, if we've already
reached consistency. This is a fairly big patch, so back-patch to 9.2 only,
where the issue is more visible. We can consider back-patching further after
this has received some more testing in 9.2 and master.
2013-02-22 12:32:41 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera a730183926 Move relpath() to libpgcommon
This enables non-backend code, such as pg_xlogdump, to use it easily.
The previous location, in src/backend/catalog/catalog.c, made that
essentially impossible because that file depends on many backend-only
facilities; so this needs to live separately.
2013-02-21 22:46:17 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 6e3fd96463 Remove useless variable
Per Jeff Janes
2013-02-21 11:46:46 -03:00
Tom Lane d0d75c4022 Add postgres_fdw contrib module.
There's still a lot of room for improvement, but it basically works,
and we need this to be present before we can do anything much with the
writable-foreign-tables patch.  So let's commit it and get on with testing.

Shigeru Hanada, reviewed by KaiGai Kohei and Tom Lane
2013-02-21 05:27:16 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 5d6899dbae Fix yet another typo in comment.
Etsuro Fujita
2013-02-20 12:31:26 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera 187492b6c2 Split pgstat file in smaller pieces
We now write one file per database and one global file, instead of
having the whole thing in a single huge file.  This reduces the I/O that
must be done when partial data is required -- which is all the time,
because each process only needs information on its own database anyway.
Also, the autovacuum launcher does not need data about tables and
functions in each database; having the global stats for all DBs is
enough.

Catalog version bumped because we have a new subdir under PGDATA.

Author: Tomas Vondra.  Some rework by Álvaro
Testing by Jeff Janes
Other discussion by Heikki Linnakangas, Tom Lane.
2013-02-18 18:12:52 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut 9475db3a4e Add ALTER ROLE ALL SET command
This generalizes the existing ALTER ROLE ... SET and ALTER DATABASE
... SET functionality to allow creating settings that apply to all users
in all databases.

reviewed by Pavel Stehule
2013-02-17 23:45:36 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 1bd42cd70a Better fix for "unarchived WAL files get deleted on crash recovery" bug.
Revert my earlier fix for the bug that unarchived WAL files get deleted on
crash recovery, commit c9cc7e05c6. We create
a .done file for files streamed or restored from archive, so the WAL file
recycling logic used during normal operation works just as well during
archive recovery.

Per Fujii Masao's suggestion.
2013-02-15 19:33:31 +02:00
Simon Riggs c2f79ba269 Force archive_status of .done for xlogs created by dearchival/replication.
This is a forward-patch of commit 6f4b8a4f4f,
applied to 9.2 back in August. The plan was to do something else in master,
but it looks like it's not going to happen, so let's just apply the 9.2
solution to master as well.

Fujii Masao
2013-02-15 19:28:06 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas c9cc7e05c6 Don't delete unarchived WAL files during crash recovery.
Bug reported by Jehan-Guillaume (ioguix) de Rorthais. This was introduced
with the change to keep WAL files restored from archive in pg_xlog, in 9.2.
2013-02-15 17:43:59 +02:00
Tom Lane fdaf44862b Invent pre-commit/pre-prepare/pre-subcommit events for xact callbacks.
Currently it's only possible for loadable modules to get control during
post-commit cleanup of a transaction.  That doesn't work too well if they
want to do something that could throw an error; for example, an FDW might
need to issue a remote commit, which could well fail.  To improve matters,
extend the existing APIs for XactCallback and SubXactCallback functions
to provide new pre-commit events for this purpose.

The release notes will need to mention that existing callback functions
should be checked to make sure they don't do something unwanted when one
of the new event types occurs.  In the examples within our source tree,
contrib/sepgsql was fine but plpgsql had been a bit too cute.
2013-02-14 20:35:08 -05:00
Tom Lane 71627f3d19 Fix CVE-2013-0255 properly.
Revert commit ab0f7b6089 (in HEAD only)
in favor of the proper solution, which is to declare enum_recv() correctly
in the system catalogs.  It should be declared to take type "internal"
not "cstring".

Also improve the type_sanity regression test, which should have caught
this typo, so that it actually would.  Most of the relevant checks on
the signature of type I/O functions should not have been restricted to
basetypes/pseudotypes, as they should apply to any type's I/O functions.
2013-02-13 16:20:01 -05:00
Tom Lane cd89965aab Fix bogus when-to-deregister-from-listener-array logic.
Since a backend adds itself to the global listener array during
Exec_ListenPreCommit, it's inappropriate for it to remove itself during
Exec_UnlistenCommit or Exec_UnlistenAllCommit --- that leads to failure
when committing a transaction that did UNLISTEN then LISTEN, since we end
up not registered though we should be.  (This leads to missing later
notifications, or to Assert failures in assert-enabled builds.)  Instead
deal with deregistering at the bottom of AtCommit_Notify, when we know the
final state of the listenChannels list.

Also, simplify the representation of registration status by replacing the
transient backendHasExecutedInitialListen flag with an amRegisteredListener
flag.

Per report from Greg Sabino Mullane.  Back-patch to 9.0, where the problem
was introduced during the LISTEN/NOTIFY rewrite.
2013-02-13 12:48:05 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas fdf9e21196 Update visibility map in the second phase of vacuum.
There's a high chance that a page becomes all-visible when the second phase
of vacuum removes all the dead tuples on it, so it makes sense to check for
that. Otherwise the visibility map won't get updated until the next vacuum.

Pavan Deolasee, reviewed by Jeff Janes.
2013-02-13 17:52:10 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera 8396447cdb Create libpgcommon, and move pg_malloc et al to it
libpgcommon is a new static library to allow sharing code among the
various frontend programs and backend; this lets us eliminate duplicate
implementations of common routines.  We avoid libpgport, because that's
intended as a place for porting issues; per discussion, it seems better
to keep them separate.

The first use case, and the only implemented by this patch, is pg_malloc
and friends, which many frontend programs were already using.

At the same time, we can use this to provide palloc emulation functions
for the frontend; this way, some palloc-using files in the backend can
also be used by the frontend cleanly.  To do this, we change palloc() in
the backend to be a function instead of a macro on top of
MemoryContextAlloc().  This was previously believed to cause loss of
performance, but this implementation has been tweaked by Tom and Andres
so that on modern compilers it provides a slight improvement over the
previous one.

This lets us clean up some places that were already with
localized hacks.

Most of the pg_malloc/palloc changes in this patch were authored by
Andres Freund. Zoltán Böszörményi also independently provided a form of
that.  libpgcommon infrastructure was authored by Álvaro.
2013-02-12 11:21:05 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut 0cb1fac3b1 Add noreturn attributes to some error reporting functions 2013-02-12 07:13:22 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 62401db45c Support unlogged GiST index.
The reason this wasn't supported before was that GiST indexes need an
increasing sequence to detect concurrent page-splits. In a regular WAL-
logged GiST index, the LSN of the page-split record is used for that
purpose, and in a temporary index, we can get away with a backend-local
counter. Neither of those methods works for an unlogged relation.

To provide such an increasing sequence of numbers, create a "fake LSN"
counter that is saved and restored across shutdowns. On recovery, unlogged
relations are blown away, so the counter doesn't need to survive that
either.

Jeevan Chalke, based on discussions with Robert Haas, Tom Lane and me.
2013-02-11 23:07:09 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas b669f416ce Fix checkpoint after fast promotion.
The intention was to request a regular online checkpoint immediately after
end of recovery, when performing "fast promotion". However, because the
checkpoint was requested before other backends were allowed to write WAL,
the checkpointer process performed a restartpoint rather than a checkpoint.

Delay the RequestCheckPoint call until after recovery has truly ended, so
that you get a real checkpoint.
2013-02-11 22:22:08 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7803e9327d Include previous TLI in end-of-recovery and shutdown checkpoint records.
This isn't used for anything but a sanity check at the moment, but it could
be highly valuable for debugging purposes. It could also be used to recreate
timeline history by traversing WAL, which seems useful.
2013-02-11 18:16:25 +02:00
Tom Lane c352ea2d74 Further cleanup of gistsplit.c.
After further reflection I was unconvinced that the existing coding is
guaranteed to return valid union datums in every code path for multi-column
indexes.  Fix that by forcing a gistunionsubkey() call at the end of the
recursion.  Having done that, we can remove some clearly-redundant calls
elsewhere.  This should be a little faster for multi-column indexes (since
the previous coding would uselessly do such a call for each column while
unwinding the recursion), as well as much harder to break.

Also, simplify the handling of cases where one side or the other of a
primary split contains only don't-care tuples.  The previous coding used a
very ugly hack in removeDontCares() that essentially forced one random
tuple to be treated as non-don't-care, providing a random initial choice of
seed datum for the secondary split.  It seems unlikely that that method
will give better-than-random splits.  Instead, treat such a split as
degenerate and just let the next column determine the split, the same way
that we handle fully degenerate cases where the two sides produce identical
union datums.
2013-02-10 16:21:26 -05:00
Tom Lane db3d7e9f0d Remove useless picksplit-doesn't-support-secondary-split log spam.
This LOG message was put in over five years ago with the evident
expectation that we'd make all GiST opclasses support secondary split
directly.  However, no such thing ever happened, and indeed the number of
opclasses supporting it decreased to zero in 9.2.  The reason is that
improving on the default implementation isn't that easy --- the
opclass-specific code that did exist, before 9.2, doesn't appear to have
been any improvement over the default.

Hence, remove the message altogether.  There's certainly no point in
nagging users about this in released branches, but I doubt that we'll
ever implement complete opclass-specific support anyway.
2013-02-10 13:07:40 -05:00
Tom Lane dacc185f52 Remove vestigial secondary-split support in gist_box_picksplit().
Not only is this implementation of secondary-split not better than the
default implementation in gistsplit.c, it's actually worse.  The gistsplit.c
code at least looks to see if switching the left and right sides would make
a better merge with the previously-split tuples, while this doesn't.

In any case it's rather useless to support secondary split only in an edge
case.  There used to be more complete support for it here (in chooseLR()),
but that was removed in commit 7f3bd86843.
It appears to me though that the chooseLR() code was really isomorphic to
the default implementation, since it was still based on choosing the cheaper
way of adding two sub-split vectors that had been chosen without regard to
the primary split initially.  I think an implementation of secondary split
that could beat the default implementation would have to be pretty fully
integrated into the split algorithm, not plastered on at the end.

Back-patch to 9.2, but not further; previous branches have the chooseLR()
code which I don't feel a great need to mess with.  This is mainly so we
just have two behaviors and not three among the various branches (IOW, this
patch is cleanup for commit 7f3bd86843e5aad84585a57d3f6b80db3c609916's
incomplete removal of secondary-split support).
2013-02-10 12:40:09 -05:00
Tom Lane 0fd0f3688b Document and clean up gistsplit.c.
Improve comments, rename some variables and functions, slightly simplify
a couple of APIs, in an attempt to make this code readable by people other
than its original author.

Even though this is essentially just cosmetic, back-patch to all active
branches, because otherwise it's going to make back-patching future fixes
in this file very painful.
2013-02-10 11:58:15 -05:00
Tom Lane a187c96d26 Reduce log level of picksplit-doesn't-support-secondary-split whining.
This was agreed to back in 2007, but never actually done.

Josh Hansen
2013-02-09 12:17:55 -05:00
Tom Lane c61e26ee3e Add support for ALTER RULE ... RENAME TO.
Ali Dar, reviewed by Dean Rasheed.
2013-02-08 23:58:40 -05:00
Tom Lane f806c191a3 Simplify box_overlap computations.
Given the assumption that a box's high coordinates are not less than its
low coordinates, the tests in box_ov() are overly complicated and can be
reduced to about half as much work.  Since many other functions in
geo_ops.c rely on that assumption, there doesn't seem to be a good reason
not to use it here.

Per discussion of Alexander Korotkov's GiST fix, which was already using
the simplified logic (in a non-fuzzy form, but the equivalence holds just
as well for fuzzy).
2013-02-08 18:26:08 -05:00
Tom Lane 3c29b196b0 Fix gist_box_same and gist_point_consistent to handle fuzziness correctly.
While there's considerable doubt that we want fuzzy behavior in the
geometric operators at all (let alone as currently implemented), nobody is
stepping forward to redesign that stuff.  In the meantime it behooves us
to make sure that index searches agree with the behavior of the underlying
operators.  This patch fixes two problems in this area.

First, gist_box_same was using fuzzy equality, but it really needs to use
exact equality to prevent not-quite-identical upper index keys from being
treated as identical, which for example would prevent an existing upper
key from being extended by an amount less than epsilon.  This would result
in inconsistent indexes.  (The next release notes will need to recommend
that users reindex GiST indexes on boxes, polygons, circles, and points,
since all four opclasses use gist_box_same.)

Second, gist_point_consistent used exact comparisons for upper-page
comparisons in ~= searches, when it needs to use fuzzy comparisons to
ensure it finds all matches; and it used fuzzy comparisons for point <@ box
searches, when it needs to use exact comparisons because that's what the
<@ operator (rather inconsistently) does.

The added regression test cases illustrate all three misbehaviors.

Back-patch to all active branches.  (8.4 did not have GiST point_ops,
but it still seems prudent to apply the gist_box_same patch to it.)

Alexander Korotkov, reviewed by Noah Misch
2013-02-08 18:03:17 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 5766228bc6 Fix Xmax freeze conditions
I broke this in 0ac5ad5134; previously, freezing a tuple marked with an
IS_MULTI xmax was not necessary.

Per brokenness report from Jeff Janes.
2013-02-08 12:50:58 -03:00
Magnus Hagander c572bfaf39 Fix another typo in a comment
Noted by Thom Brown
2013-02-08 15:42:01 +01:00
Magnus Hagander 733701d274 Fix typo in comment
Etsuro Fujita
2013-02-08 11:45:42 +01:00
Tom Lane bcc6c4c291 Fix performance issue in EXPLAIN (ANALYZE, TIMING OFF).
Commit af7914c662, which added the TIMING
option to EXPLAIN, had an oversight: if the TIMING option is disabled
then control in InstrStartNode() goes through an elog(DEBUG2) call, which
typically does nothing but takes a noticeable amount of time to do it.
Tweak the logic to avoid that.

In HEAD, also change the elog(DEBUG2)'s in instrument.c to elog(ERROR).
It's not very clear why they weren't like that to begin with, but this
episode shows that not complaining more vociferously about misuse is
likely to do little except allow bugs to remain hidden.

While at it, adjust some code that was making possibly-dangerous
assumptions about flag bits being in the rightmost byte of the
instrument_options word.

Problem reported by Pavel Stehule (via Tomas Vondra).
2013-02-07 22:53:00 -05:00
Tom Lane 166d534fcd Repair bugs in GiST page splitting code for multi-column indexes.
When considering a non-last column in a multi-column GiST index,
gistsplit.c tries to improve on the split chosen by the opclass-specific
pickSplit function by considering penalties for the next column.  However,
there were two bugs in this code: it failed to recompute the union keys for
the leftmost index columns, even though these might well change after
reassigning tuples; and it included the old union keys in the recomputation
for the columns it did recompute, so that those keys couldn't get smaller
even if they should.  The first problem could result in an invalid index
in which searches wouldn't find index entries that are in fact present;
the second would make the index less efficient to search.

Both of these errors were caused by misuse of gistMakeUnionItVec, whose
API was designed in a way that just begged such errors to be made.  There
is no situation in which it's safe or useful to compute the union keys for
a subset of the index columns, and there is no caller that wants any
previous union keys to be included in the computation; so the undocumented
choice to treat the union keys as in/out rather than pure output parameters
is a waste of code as well as being dangerous.

Hence, rather than just making a minimal patch, I've changed the API of
gistMakeUnionItVec to remove the "startkey" parameter (it now always
processes all index columns) and treat the attr/isnull arrays as purely
output parameters.

In passing, also get rid of a couple of unnecessary and dangerous uses
of static variables in gistutil.c.  It's remarkable that the one in
gistMakeUnionKey hasn't given us portability troubles before now, because
in addition to posing a re-entrancy hazard, it was unsafely assuming that
a static char[] array would have at least Datum alignment.

Per investigation of a trouble report from Tomas Vondra.  (There are also
some bugs in contrib/btree_gist to be fixed, but that seems like material
for a separate patch.)  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-02-07 17:44:02 -05:00
Tom Lane c5aad8dc14 Fix possible failure to send final transaction counts to stats collector.
Normally, we suppress sending a tabstats message to the collector unless
there were some actual table stats to send.  However, during backend exit
we should force out the message if there are any transaction commit/abort
counts to send, else the session's last few commit/abort counts will never
get reported at all.  We had logic for this, but the short-circuit test
at the top of pgstat_report_stat() ignored the "force" flag, with the
consequence that session-ending transactions that touched no database-local
tables would not get counted.  Seems to be an oversight in my commit
641912b4d1, which added the "force" flag.
That was back in 8.3, so back-patch to all supported versions.
2013-02-07 14:44:00 -05:00
Simon Riggs 072521b8c8 Rely only on checkpoint 1 at end of recovery.
Searching for checkpoint 2 (previous) is not
correct in all cases.

Bug report from Heikki Linnakangas
2013-02-07 16:33:05 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan e1c1e21732 Enable building with Microsoft Visual Studio 2012.
Backpatch to release 9.2

Brar Piening and Noah Misch, reviewed by Craig Ringer.
2013-02-06 14:52:29 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 5a1cd89f8f Split out list of XLog resource managers
The new rmgrlist.h header, containing all necessary data
about built-in resource managers, allows other pieces of code to
access them.

In particular, this allows a future pg_xlogdump program to extract
rm_desc function pointers, without having to keep a duplicate list of
them.
2013-02-06 08:47:28 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera cb9b66d31a Improve error message wording
The wording changes applied in 0ac5ad513 were universally disliked.

Per gripe from Andrew Dunstan
2013-02-06 00:19:53 -03:00
Tom Lane ab0f7b6089 Prevent execution of enum_recv() from SQL.
This function was misdeclared to take cstring when it should take internal.
This at least allows crashing the server, and in principle an attacker
might be able to use the function to examine the contents of server memory.

The correct fix is to adjust the system catalog contents (and fix the
regression tests that should have caught this but failed to).  However,
asking users to correct the catalog contents in existing installations
is a pain, so as a band-aid fix for the back branches, install a check
in enum_recv() to make it throw error if called with a cstring argument.
We will later revert this in HEAD in favor of correcting the catalogs.

Our thanks to Sumit Soni (via Secunia SVCRP) for reporting this issue.

Security: CVE-2013-0255
2013-02-04 16:25:01 -05:00
Simon Riggs f480e29449 Reset vacuum_defer_cleanup_age to PGC_SIGHUP.
Revert commit 84725aa5ef
2013-02-04 16:39:55 +00:00
Simon Riggs bd56e74127 Reset master xmin when hot_standby_feedback disabled.
If walsender has xmin of standby then ensure we
reset the value to 0 when we change from hot_standby_feedback=on
to hot_standby_feedback=off.
2013-02-04 10:29:22 +00:00
Tom Lane 62e666400d Perform line wrapping and indenting by default in ruleutils.c.
This patch changes pg_get_viewdef() and allied functions so that
PRETTY_INDENT processing is always enabled.  Per discussion, only the
PRETTY_PAREN processing (that is, stripping of "unnecessary" parentheses)
poses any real forward-compatibility risk, so we may as well make dump
output look as nice as we safely can.

Also, set the default wrap length to zero (i.e, wrap after each SELECT
or FROM list item), since there's no very principled argument for the
former default of 80-column wrapping, and most people seem to agree this
way looks better.

Marko Tiikkaja, reviewed by Jeevan Chalke, further hacking by Tom Lane
2013-02-03 15:56:45 -05:00
Simon Riggs 84725aa5ef Mark vacuum_defer_cleanup_age as PGC_POSTMASTER.
Following bug analysis of #7819 by Tom Lane
2013-02-02 18:49:54 +00:00
Bruce Momjian e8ae019661 Adjust COPY FREEZE error message to be more accurate and consistent.
Per suggestions from Noah and Tom.
2013-02-02 12:56:52 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera dd1569da67 Fix typo in freeze_table_age implementation
The original code used freeze_min_age instead of freeze_table_age.  The
main consequence of this mistake is that lowering freeze_min_age would
cause full-table scans to occur much more frequently, which causes
serious issues because the number of writes required is much larger.
That feature (freeze_min_age) is supposed to affect only how soon tuples
are frozen; some pages should still be skipped due to the visibility
map.

Backpatch to 8.4, where the freeze_table_age feature was introduced.

Report and patch from Andres Freund
2013-02-01 12:00:40 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 9ee00ef4c7 Fill tuple before HeapSatisfiesHOTAndKeyUpdate
Failing to do this results in almost all updates to system catalogs
being non-HOT updates, because the OID column would differ (not having
been set for the new tuple), which is an indexed column.

While at it, make sure to set the tableoid early in both old and new
tuples as well.  This isn't of much consequence, since that column is
seldom (never?) indexed.

Report and patch from Andres Freund.
2013-02-01 10:43:09 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut 5839052693 Add CREATE RECURSIVE VIEW syntax
This is specified in the SQL standard.  The CREATE RECURSIVE VIEW
specification is transformed into a normal CREATE VIEW statement with a
WITH RECURSIVE clause.

reviewed by Abhijit Menon-Sen and Stephen Frost
2013-01-31 22:31:58 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera b78647a0e6 Restrict infomask bits to set on multixacts
We must only set the bit(s) for the strongest lock held in the tuple;
otherwise, a multixact containing members with exclusive lock and
key-share lock will behave as though only a share lock is held.

This bug was introduced in commit 0ac5ad5134, somewhere along
development, when we allowed a singleton FOR SHARE lock to be
implemented without a MultiXact by using a multi-bit pattern.
I overlooked that GetMultiXactIdHintBits() needed to be tweaked as well.
Previously, we could have the bits for FOR KEY SHARE and FOR UPDATE
simultaneously set and it wouldn't cause a problem.

Per report from digoal@126.com
2013-01-31 19:35:31 -03:00
Simon Riggs 3f0ab05233 Switch timelines if we crash soon after promotion.
Previous patch to skip checkpoints at end of recovery didn't
correctly perform crash recovery, fumbling the timeline switch.
Now we record the minRecoveryPointTLI of the newly selected
timeline, so that we crash recover to the correct timeline.

Bug report from Fujii Masao, investigated by me.
2013-01-31 19:29:32 +00:00
Tom Lane 9afc58396a Reject nonzero day fields in AT TIME ZONE INTERVAL functions.
It's not sensible for an interval that's used as a time zone value to be
larger than a day.  When we changed the interval type to contain a separate
day field, check_timezone() was adjusted to reject nonzero day values, but
timetz_izone(), timestamp_izone(), and timestamptz_izone() evidently were
overlooked.

While at it, make the error messages for these three cases consistent.
2013-01-31 12:12:23 -05:00
Tom Lane 0900ac2d0d Fix plpgsql's reporting of plan-time errors in possibly-simple expressions.
exec_simple_check_plan and exec_eval_simple_expr attempted to call
GetCachedPlan directly.  This meant that if an error was thrown during
planning, the resulting context traceback would not include the line
normally contributed by _SPI_error_callback.  This is already inconsistent,
but just to be really odd, a re-execution of the very same expression
*would* show the additional context line, because we'd already have cached
the plan and marked the expression as non-simple.

The problem is easy to demonstrate in 9.2 and HEAD because planning of a
cached plan doesn't occur at all until GetCachedPlan is done.  In earlier
versions, it could only be an issue if initial planning had succeeded, then
a replan was forced (already somewhat improbable for a simple expression),
and the replan attempt failed.  Since the issue is mainly cosmetic in older
branches anyway, it doesn't seem worth the risk of trying to fix it there.
It is worth fixing in 9.2 since the instability of the context printout can
affect the results of GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS, as per a recent discussion
on pgsql-novice.

To fix, introduce a SPI function that wraps GetCachedPlan while installing
the correct callback function.  Use this instead of calling GetCachedPlan
directly from plpgsql.

Also introduce a wrapper function for extracting a SPI plan's
CachedPlanSource list.  This lets us stop including spi_priv.h in
pl_exec.c, which was never a very good idea from a modularity standpoint.

In passing, fix a similar inconsistency that could occur in SPI_cursor_open,
which was also calling GetCachedPlan without setting up a context callback.
2013-01-30 20:02:23 -05:00
Tom Lane 670a6c7a22 Fix grammar for subscripting or field selection from a sub-SELECT result.
Such cases should work, but the grammar failed to accept them because of
our ancient precedence hacks to convince bison that extra parentheses
around a sub-SELECT in an expression are unambiguous.  (Formally, they
*are* ambiguous, but we don't especially care whether they're treated as
part of the sub-SELECT or part of the expression.  Bison cares, though.)
Fix by adding a redundant-looking production for this case.

This is a fine example of why fixing shift/reduce conflicts via
precedence declarations is more dangerous than it looks: you can easily
cause the parser to reject cases that should work.

This has been wrong since commit 3db4056e22
or maybe before, and apparently some people have been working around it
by inserting no-op casts.  That method introduces a dump/reload hazard,
as illustrated in bug #7838 from Jan Mate.  Hence, back-patch to all
active branches.
2013-01-30 14:17:48 -05:00
Tom Lane 991f3e5ab3 Provide database object names as separate fields in error messages.
This patch addresses the problem that applications currently have to
extract object names from possibly-localized textual error messages,
if they want to know for example which index caused a UNIQUE_VIOLATION
failure.  It adds new error message fields to the wire protocol, which
can carry the name of a table, table column, data type, or constraint
associated with the error.  (Since the protocol spec has always instructed
clients to ignore unrecognized field types, this should not create any
compatibility problem.)

Support for providing these new fields has been added to just a limited set
of error reports (mainly, those in the "integrity constraint violation"
SQLSTATE class), but we will doubtless add them to more calls in future.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed and extensively revised by Peter Geoghegan, with
additional hacking by Tom Lane.
2013-01-29 17:08:26 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas c9d7dbacd3 Skip truncating ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS temp tables, if the transaction hasn't
touched any temporary tables.

We could try harder, and keep track of whether we've inserted to any temp
tables, rather than accessed them, and which temp tables have been inserted
to. But this is dead simple, and already covers many interesting scenarios.
2013-01-29 10:43:33 +02:00
Simon Riggs fd4ced5230 Fast promote mode skips checkpoint at end of recovery.
pg_ctl promote -m fast will skip the checkpoint at end of recovery so that we
can achieve very fast failover when the apply delay is low. Write new WAL record
XLOG_END_OF_RECOVERY to allow us to switch timeline correctly for downstream log
readers. If we skip synchronous end of recovery checkpoint we request a normal
spread checkpoint so that the window of re-recovery is low.

Simon Riggs and Kyotaro Horiguchi, with input from Fujii Masao.
Review by Heikki Linnakangas
2013-01-29 00:06:15 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera ee22c55f5a REASSIGN OWNED: handle shared objects, too
Give away ownership of shared objects (databases, tablespaces) along
with local objects, per original code intention.  Try to make the
documentation clearer, too.

Per discussion about DROP OWNED's brokenness, in bug #7748.

This is not backpatched because it'd require some refactoring of the
ALTER/SET OWNER code for databases and tablespaces.
2013-01-28 18:45:50 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera ec41b8edc1 DROP OWNED: don't try to drop tablespaces/databases
My "fix" for bugs #7578 and #6116 on DROP OWNED at fe3b5eb08a not only
misstated that it applied to REASSIGN OWNED (which it did not affect),
but it also failed to fix the problems fully, because I didn't test the
case of owned shared objects.  Thus I created a new bug, reported by
Thomas Kellerer as #7748, which would cause DROP OWNED to fail with a
not-for-user-consumption error message.  The code would attempt to drop
the database, which not only fails to work because the underlying code
does not support that, but is a pretty dangerous and undesirable thing
to be doing as well.

This patch fixes that bug by having DROP OWNED only attempt to process
shared objects when grants on them are found, ignoring ownership.

Backpatch to 8.3, which is as far as the previous bug was backpatched.
2013-01-28 18:40:51 -03:00
Tom Lane 2378d79ab2 Make LATERAL implicit for functions in FROM.
The SQL standard does not have general functions-in-FROM, but it does
allow UNNEST() there (see the <collection derived table> production),
and the semantics of that are defined to include lateral references.
So spec compliance requires allowing lateral references within UNNEST()
even without an explicit LATERAL keyword.  Rather than making UNNEST()
a special case, it seems best to extend this flexibility to any
function-in-FROM.  We'll still allow LATERAL to be written explicitly
for clarity's sake, but it's now a noise word in this context.

In theory this change could result in a change in behavior of existing
queries, by allowing what had been an outer reference in a function-in-FROM
to be captured by an earlier FROM-item at the same level.  However, all
pre-9.3 PG releases have a bug that causes them to match variable
references to earlier FROM-items in preference to outer references (and
then throw an error).  So no previously-working query could contain the
type of ambiguity that would risk a change of behavior.

Per a suggestion from Andrew Gierth, though I didn't use his patch.
2013-01-26 16:18:42 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 8865fe0ad3 Update comments in new DROP IF EXISTS code; commit message update
DROP IF EXISTS with a missing schema in commit
7e2322dff3 applies not only to tables, but
to DROP IF EXISTS with missing schemas for indexes, views, sequences,
and foreign tables.  Yeah!
2013-01-26 14:51:59 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 51cfb87ae2 Update LookupExplicitNamespace() comments; commit message update
Also, commit 7e2322dff3 affected DROP
TABLE IF EXISTS, not CREATE TABLE IF EXISTS.
2013-01-26 13:47:50 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 4deb57de7d Issue ERROR if FREEZE mode can't be honored by COPY
Previously non-honored FREEZE mode was ignored.  This also issues an
appropriate error message based on the cause of the failure, per
suggestion from Tom.  Additional regression test case added.
2013-01-26 13:33:24 -05:00
Bruce Momjian 7e2322dff3 Allow CREATE TABLE IF EXIST so succeed if the schema is nonexistent
Previously, CREATE TABLE IF EXIST threw an error if the schema was
nonexistent.  This was done by passing 'missing_ok' to the function that
looks up the schema oid.
2013-01-26 13:24:50 -05:00
Tom Lane 0d5fbdc157 Change plan caching to honor, not resist, changes in search_path.
In the initial implementation of plan caching, we saved the active
search_path when a plan was first cached, then reinstalled that path
anytime we needed to reparse or replan.  The idea of that was to try to
reselect the same referenced objects, in somewhat the same way that views
continue to refer to the same objects in the face of schema or name
changes.  Of course, that analogy doesn't bear close inspection, since
holding the search_path fixed doesn't cope with object drops or renames.
Moreover sticking with the old path seems to create more surprises than
it avoids.  So instead of doing that, consider that the cached plan depends
on search_path, and force reparse/replan if the active search_path is
different than it was when we last saved the plan.

This gets us fairly close to having "transparency" of plan caching, in the
sense that the cached statement acts the same as if you'd just resubmitted
the original query text for another execution.  There are still some corner
cases where this fails though: a new object added in the search path
schema(s) might capture a reference in the query text, but we'd not realize
that and force a reparse.  We might try to fix that in the future, but for
the moment it looks too expensive and complicated.
2013-01-25 14:14:41 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas ba1cc6501e Add some randomness to the choice of which GiST page to insert to.
When descending the tree for an insert, and there are multiple equally good
pages we could insert to, make the choice in random. Previously, we would
always choose the tuple with lowest offset number. That meant that when two
non-leaf pages overlap - in the extreme case they might have exactly the same
key - all but the first such page went unused. That wasn't optimal for space
usage; if you deleted some tuples from the non-first pages, the space would
never be reused.

With this patch, the other pages are sometimes chosen too, although there's
still a heavy bias towards low-offset tuples, so that we don't lose cache
locality when doing a lot of inserts with similar keys.

Original idea by Alexander Korotkov, although this patch version was written
by me and copy-edited by Tom Lane.
2013-01-25 16:58:38 +02:00
Tom Lane 760f3c043a Fix concat() and format() to handle VARIADIC-labeled arguments correctly.
Previously, the VARIADIC labeling was effectively ignored, but now these
functions act as though the array elements had all been given as separate
arguments.

Pavel Stehule
2013-01-25 00:19:56 -05:00
Tom Lane 2ddc600f8f Fix SPI documentation for new handling of ExecutorRun's count parameter.
Since 9.0, the count parameter has only limited the number of tuples
actually returned by the executor.  It doesn't affect the behavior of
INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE unless RETURNING is specified, because without
RETURNING, the ModifyTable plan node doesn't return control to execMain.c
for each tuple.  And we only check the limit at the top level.

While this behavioral change was unintentional at the time, discussion of
bug #6572 led us to the conclusion that we prefer the new behavior anyway,
and so we should just adjust the docs to match rather than change the code.
Accordingly, do that.  Back-patch as far as 9.0 so that the docs match the
code in each branch.
2013-01-24 18:34:00 -05:00
Simon Riggs 5c54f63fd6 Fix rare missing cancellations in Hot Standby.
The machinery around XLOG_HEAP2_CLEANUP_INFO failed
to correctly pass through the necessary information
on latestRemovedXid, avoiding cancellations in some
infrequent concurrent update/cleanup scenarios.

Backpatchable fix to 9.0

Detailed bug report and fix by Noah Misch,
backpatchable version by me.
2013-01-24 14:19:29 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas 168d315703 Also fix rotation of csvlog on Windows.
Backpatch to 9.2, like the previous fix.
2013-01-24 11:41:30 +02:00
Tom Lane 8556869f2f Fix failure to rotate postmaster log file for size reasons on Windows.
When we eliminated "unnecessary" wakeups of the syslogger process, we
broke size-based logfile rotation on Windows, because on that platform
data transfer is done in a separate thread.  While non-Windows platforms
would recheck the output file size after every log message, Windows only
did so when the control thread woke up for some other reason, which might
be quite infrequent.  Per bug #7814 from Tsunezumi.  Back-patch to 9.2
where the problem was introduced.

Jeff Janes
2013-01-23 22:08:01 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 0ac5ad5134 Improve concurrency of foreign key locking
This patch introduces two additional lock modes for tuples: "SELECT FOR
KEY SHARE" and "SELECT FOR NO KEY UPDATE".  These don't block each
other, in contrast with already existing "SELECT FOR SHARE" and "SELECT
FOR UPDATE".  UPDATE commands that do not modify the values stored in
the columns that are part of the key of the tuple now grab a SELECT FOR
NO KEY UPDATE lock on the tuple, allowing them to proceed concurrently
with tuple locks of the FOR KEY SHARE variety.

Foreign key triggers now use FOR KEY SHARE instead of FOR SHARE; this
means the concurrency improvement applies to them, which is the whole
point of this patch.

The added tuple lock semantics require some rejiggering of the multixact
module, so that the locking level that each transaction is holding can
be stored alongside its Xid.  Also, multixacts now need to persist
across server restarts and crashes, because they can now represent not
only tuple locks, but also tuple updates.  This means we need more
careful tracking of lifetime of pg_multixact SLRU files; since they now
persist longer, we require more infrastructure to figure out when they
can be removed.  pg_upgrade also needs to be careful to copy
pg_multixact files over from the old server to the new, or at least part
of multixact.c state, depending on the versions of the old and new
servers.

Tuple time qualification rules (HeapTupleSatisfies routines) need to be
careful not to consider tuples with the "is multi" infomask bit set as
being only locked; they might need to look up MultiXact values (i.e.
possibly do pg_multixact I/O) to find out the Xid that updated a tuple,
whereas they previously were assured to only use information readily
available from the tuple header.  This is considered acceptable, because
the extra I/O would involve cases that would previously cause some
commands to block waiting for concurrent transactions to finish.

Another important change is the fact that locking tuples that have
previously been updated causes the future versions to be marked as
locked, too; this is essential for correctness of foreign key checks.
This causes additional WAL-logging, also (there was previously a single
WAL record for a locked tuple; now there are as many as updated copies
of the tuple there exist.)

With all this in place, contention related to tuples being checked by
foreign key rules should be much reduced.

As a bonus, the old behavior that a subtransaction grabbing a stronger
tuple lock than the parent (sub)transaction held on a given tuple and
later aborting caused the weaker lock to be lost, has been fixed.

Many new spec files were added for isolation tester framework, to ensure
overall behavior is sane.  There's probably room for several more tests.

There were several reviewers of this patch; in particular, Noah Misch
and Andres Freund spent considerable time in it.  Original idea for the
patch came from Simon Riggs, after a problem report by Joel Jacobson.
Most code is from me, with contributions from Marti Raudsepp, Alexander
Shulgin, Noah Misch and Andres Freund.

This patch was discussed in several pgsql-hackers threads; the most
important start at the following message-ids:
	AANLkTimo9XVcEzfiBR-ut3KVNDkjm2Vxh+t8kAmWjPuv@mail.gmail.com
	1290721684-sup-3951@alvh.no-ip.org
	1294953201-sup-2099@alvh.no-ip.org
	1320343602-sup-2290@alvh.no-ip.org
	1339690386-sup-8927@alvh.no-ip.org
	4FE5FF020200002500048A3D@gw.wicourts.gov
	4FEAB90A0200002500048B7D@gw.wicourts.gov
2013-01-23 12:04:59 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 990fe3c4ed Fix more issues with cascading replication and timeline switches.
When a standby server follows the master using WAL archive, and it chooses
a new timeline (recovery_target_timeline='latest'), it only fetches the
timeline history file for the chosen target timeline, not any other history
files that might be missing from pg_xlog. For example, if the current
timeline is 2, and we choose 4 as the new recovery target timeline, the
history file for timeline 3 is not fetched, even if it's part of this
server's history. That's enough for the standby itself - the history file
for timeline 4 includes timeline 3 as well - but if a cascading standby
server wants to recover to timeline 3, it needs the history file. To fix,
when a new recovery target timeline is chosen, try to copy any missing
history files from the archive to pg_xlog between the old and new target
timeline.

A second similar issue was with the WAL files. When a standby recovers from
archive, and it reaches a segment that contains a switch to a new timeline,
recovery fetches only the WAL file labelled with the new timeline's ID. The
file from the new timeline contains a copy of the WAL from the old timeline
up to the point where the switch happened, and recovery recovers it from the
new file. But in streaming replication, walsender only tries to read it
from the old timeline's file. To fix, change walsender to read it from the
new file, so that it behaves the same as recovery in that sense, and doesn't
try to open the possibly nonexistent file with the old timeline's ID.
2013-01-23 10:19:20 +02:00
Robert Haas ddef9a0028 Fix a few small bugs in yesterday's event trigger patch.
Dimitri Fontaine
2013-01-22 21:37:01 -05:00
Tom Lane 75b39e7909 Add infrastructure for storing a VARIADIC ANY function's VARIADIC flag.
Originally we didn't bother to mark FuncExprs with any indication whether
VARIADIC had been given in the source text, because there didn't seem to be
any need for it at runtime.  However, because we cannot fold a VARIADIC ANY
function's arguments into an array (since they're not necessarily all the
same type), we do actually need that information at runtime if VARIADIC ANY
functions are to respond unsurprisingly to use of the VARIADIC keyword.
Add the missing field, and also fix ruleutils.c so that VARIADIC ANY
function calls are dumped properly.

Extracted from a larger patch that also fixes concat() and format() (the
only two extant VARIADIC ANY functions) to behave properly when VARIADIC is
specified.  This portion seems appropriate to review and commit separately.

Pavel Stehule
2013-01-21 20:26:15 -05:00
Robert Haas 841a5150c5 Add ddl_command_end support for event triggers.
Dimitri Fontaine, with slight changes by me
2013-01-21 18:00:24 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 765cbfdc92 Refactor ALTER some-obj RENAME implementation
Remove duplicate implementations of catalog munging and miscellaneous
privilege checks.  Instead rely on already existing data in
objectaddress.c to do the work.

Author: KaiGai Kohei, changes by me
Reviewed by: Robert Haas, Álvaro Herrera, Dimitri Fontaine
2013-01-21 12:06:41 -03:00
Tom Lane 535e69a43f Fix error-checking typo in check_TSCurrentConfig().
The code failed to detect an out-of-memory failure.

Xi Wang
2013-01-20 23:09:35 -05:00
Tom Lane d5b31cc32b Fix an O(N^2) performance issue for sessions modifying many relations.
AtEOXact_RelationCache() scanned the entire relation cache at the end of
any transaction that created a new relation or assigned a new relfilenode.
Thus, clients such as pg_restore had an O(N^2) performance problem that
would start to be noticeable after creating 10000 or so tables.  Since
typically only a small number of relcache entries need any cleanup, we
can fix this by keeping a small list of their OIDs and doing hash_searches
for them.  We fall back to the full-table scan if the list overflows.

Ideally, the maximum list length would be set at the point where N
hash_searches would cost just less than the full-table scan.  Some quick
experimentation says that point might be around 50-100; I (tgl)
conservatively set MAX_EOXACT_LIST = 32.  For the case that we're worried
about here, which is short single-statement transactions, it's unlikely
there would ever be more than about a dozen list entries anyway; so it's
probably not worth being too tense about the value.

We could avoid the hash_searches by instead keeping the target relcache
entries linked into a list, but that would be noticeably more complicated
and bug-prone because of the need to maintain such a list in the face of
relcache entry drops.  Since a relcache entry can only need such cleanup
after a somewhat-heavyweight filesystem operation, trying to save a
hash_search per cleanup doesn't seem very useful anyway --- it's the scan
over all the not-needing-cleanup entries that we wish to avoid here.

Jeff Janes, reviewed and tweaked a bit by Tom Lane
2013-01-20 13:45:10 -05:00
Tom Lane c2a14bc7c9 Protect against SnapshotNow race conditions in pg_tablespace scans.
Use of SnapshotNow is known to expose us to race conditions if the tuple(s)
being sought could be updated by concurrently-committing transactions.
CREATE DATABASE and DROP DATABASE are particularly exposed because they do
heavyweight filesystem operations during their scans of pg_tablespace,
so that the scans run for a very long time compared to most.  Furthermore,
the potential consequences of a missed or twice-visited row are nastier
than average:

* createdb() could fail with a bogus "file already exists" error, or
  silently fail to copy one or more tablespace's worth of files into the
  new database.

* remove_dbtablespaces() could miss one or more tablespaces, thus failing
  to free filesystem space for the dropped database.

* check_db_file_conflict() could likewise miss a tablespace, leading to an
  OID conflict that could result in data loss either immediately or in
  future operations.  (This seems of very low probability, though, since a
  duplicate database OID would be unlikely to start with.)

Hence, it seems worth fixing these three places to use MVCC snapshots, even
though this will someday be superseded by a generic solution to SnapshotNow
race conditions.

Back-patch to all active branches.

Stephen Frost and Tom Lane
2013-01-18 18:06:20 -05:00
Robert Haas d8c3896626 Unbreak lock conflict detection for Hot Standby.
This got broken in the original fast-path locking patch, because
I failed to account for the fact that Hot Standby startup process
might take a strong relation lock on a relation in a database to
which it is not bound, and confused MyDatabaseId with the database
ID of the relation being locked.

Report and diagnosis by Andres Freund.  Final form of patch by me.
2013-01-18 11:52:28 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 8c17144c75 Fix off-by-one bug in xlog reading logic
Bug reported by Michael Paquier

Author: Andres Freund
2013-01-18 11:19:53 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 6f7cddc7ae Now that START_REPLICATION returns the next timeline's ID after reaching end
of timeline, take advantage of that in walreceiver.

Startup process is still in control of choosign the target timeline, by
scanning the timeline history files present in pg_xlog, but walreceiver now
uses the next timeline's ID to fetch its history file immediately after it
has finished streaming the old timeline. Before, the standby would first try
to restart streaming on the old timeline, which fetches the missing timeline
history file as a side-effect, and only then restart from the new timeline.
This patch eliminates the extra iteration, which speeds up the timeline
switch and reduces the noise in the log caused by the extra restart on the
old timeline.
2013-01-18 11:59:34 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 2ff6555313 Use the right timeline when beginning to stream from master.
The xlogreader refactoring broke the logic to decide which timeline to start
streaming from. XLogPageRead() uses the timeline history to check which
timeline the requested WAL position falls into. However, after the
refactoring, XLogPageRead() is always first called with the first page in
the segment, to verify the segment header, and only then with the actual WAL
position we're interested in. That first read of the segment's header made
XLogPageRead() to always start streaming from the old timeline containing
the segment header, not the timeline containing the actual record, if there
was a timeline switch within the segment.

I thought I fixed this yesterday, but that fix was too narrow and only fixed
this for the corner-case that the timeline switch happened in the first page
of the segment. To fix this more robustly, pass explicitly the position of
the record we're actually interested in to XLogPageRead, and use that to
decide which timeline to read from, rather than deduce it from the page and
offset.

Per report from Fujii Masao.
2013-01-18 11:46:49 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 88228e6f1d When xlogreader asks the callback function to read a page, make sure we
get a large enough part of the page to include the beginning of the next
record we're interested in. The XLogPageRead callback uses the requested
length to decide which timeline to stream WAL from, and if the first call
is short, and the page contains a timeline switch, we'll repeatedly try
to stream that page from the old timeline, and never get across the
timeline switch.
2013-01-17 23:46:33 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3684a534ef I added a result set to START_STREAMING command, but neglected walreceiver.
The patch to allow pg_receivexlog to switch timeline added a result set
after copy has ended in START_STREAMING command, to return the next
timeline's ID to the client. But walreceived didn't get the memo, and threw
an error on the unexpected result set. Fix.
2013-01-17 23:45:45 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera 279628a0a7 Accelerate end-of-transaction dropping of relations
When relations are dropped, at end of transaction we need to remove the
files and clean the buffer pool of buffers containing pages of those
relations.  Previously we would scan the buffer pool once per relation
to clean up buffers.  When there are many relations to drop, the
repeated scans make this process slow; so we now instead pass a list of
relations to drop and scan the pool once, checking each buffer against
the passed list.  When the number of relations is larger than a
threshold (which as of this patch is being set to 20 relations) we sort
the array before starting, and bsearch the array; when it's smaller, we
simply scan the array linearly each time, because that's faster.  The
exact optimal threshold value depends on many factors, but the
difference is not likely to be significant enough to justify making it
user-settable.

This has been measured to be a significant win (a 15x win when dropping
100,000 relations; an extreme case, but reportedly a real one).

Author: Tomas Vondra, some tweaks by me
Reviewed by: Robert Haas, Shigeru Hanada, Andres Freund, Álvaro Herrera
2013-01-17 16:13:17 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 0b6329130e Make pg_receivexlog and pg_basebackup -X stream work across timeline switches.
This mirrors the changes done earlier to the server in standby mode. When
receivelog reaches the end of a timeline, as reported by the server, it
fetches the timeline history file of the next timeline, and restarts
streaming from the new timeline by issuing a new START_STREAMING command.

When pg_receivexlog crosses a timeline, it leaves the .partial suffix on the
last segment on the old timeline. This helps you to tell apart a partial
segment left in the directory because of a timeline switch, and a completed
segment. If you just follow a single server, it won't make a difference, but
it can be significant in more complicated scenarios where new WAL is still
generated on the old timeline.

This includes two small changes to the streaming replication protocol:
First, when you reach the end of timeline while streaming, the server now
sends the TLI of the next timeline in the server's history to the client.
pg_receivexlog uses that as the next timeline, so that it doesn't need to
parse the timeline history file like a standby server does. Second, when
BASE_BACKUP command sends the begin and end WAL positions, it now also sends
the timeline IDs corresponding the positions.
2013-01-17 20:23:00 +02:00
Tom Lane 8ae35e9180 Improve memory space management in tuplesort and tuplestore.
The code originally just doubled the size of the tuple-pointer array so
long as that would fit in allowedMem.  This could result in failing to use
as much as half of allowedMem, if (as is typical) the last doubling attempt
didn't quite fit.  Worse, we might double the array size but be unable to
use most of the added slots, because there was no room left within the
allowedMem limit for tuples the slots should point to.  To fix, double only
so long as we've used less than half of allowedMem in total.  Then do one
more array enlargement, but scale it based on total memory consumption so
far.  This will work nicely as long as the average tuple size is reasonably
stable, and in any case should be better than the old method.

This change will result in large sort operations consuming a larger
fraction of work_mem than they typically did in the past.  The release
notes should mention that users may want to revisit their work_mem
settings, if they'd tuned those settings based on the old behavior of
sorting.

Jeff Janes, reviewed by Peter Geoghegan and Robert Haas
2013-01-17 13:12:56 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 1296d5c53c Fix a couple of error-handling bugs in the xlogreader patch.
XLogReadRecord should reset its state on every error, to make sure it
re-reads the page on next call. It was inconsistent in that some errors did
that, but some did not.

In ReadRecord(), don't give up on an error if we're in standby mode. The
loop was set up to retry, but the checks within the loop broke out of the
loop on any error.

Andres Freund, with some tweaking by me.
2013-01-17 19:27:04 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 9ee4d06f3f Make GiST indexes on-disk compatible with 9.2 again.
The patch that turned XLogRecPtr into a uint64 inadvertently changed the
on-disk format of GiST indexes, because the NSN field in the GiST page
opaque is an XLogRecPtr. That breaks pg_upgrade. Revert the format of that
field back to the two-field struct that XLogRecPtr was before. This is the
same we did to LSNs in the page header to avoid changing on-disk format.

Bump catversion, as this invalidates any existing GiST indexes built on
9.3devel.
2013-01-17 16:46:16 +02:00
Magnus Hagander bba486f372 Base the default SSL ciphers on DEFAULT instead of ALL
It's better to start from what the OpenSSL people consider a good
default and then remove insecure things (low encryption, exportable
encryption and md5 at this point) from that, instead of starting
from everything that exists and remove from that. We trust the
OpenSSL people to make good choices about what the default is.
2013-01-17 15:04:44 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera 7fcbf6a405 Split out XLog reading as an independent facility
This new facility can not only be used by xlog.c to carry out crash
recovery, but also by external programs.  By supplying a function to
read XLog pages from somewhere, all the WAL reading can be used for
completely different purposes.

For the standard backend use, the behavior should be pretty much the
same as previously.  As for non-backend programs, an hypothetical
pg_xlogdump program is now closer to reality, but some more backend
support is still necessary.

This patch was originally submitted by Andres Freund in a different
form, but Heikki Linnakangas opted for and authored another design of
the concept.  Andres has advanced the patch since Heikki's initial
version.  Review and some (mostly cosmetics) changes by me.
2013-01-16 16:12:53 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 7ac5760fa2 Rework order of checks in ALTER / SET SCHEMA
When attempting to move an object into the schema in which it already
was, for most objects classes we were correctly complaining about
exactly that ("object is already in schema"); but for some other object
classes, such as functions, we were instead complaining of a name
collision ("object already exists in schema").  The latter is wrong and
misleading, per complaint from Robert Haas in
CA+TgmoZ0+gNf7RDKRc3u5rHXffP=QjqPZKGxb4BsPz65k7qnHQ@mail.gmail.com

To fix, refactor the way these checks are done.  As a bonus, the
resulting code is smaller and can also share some code with Rename
cases.

While at it, remove use of getObjectDescriptionOids() in error messages.
These are normally disallowed because of translatability considerations,
but this one had slipped through since 9.1.  (Not sure that this is
worth backpatching, though, as it would create some untranslated
messages in back branches.)

This is loosely based on a patch by KaiGai Kohei, heavily reworked by
me.
2013-01-15 13:23:43 -03:00
Tom Lane 1b794d3f32 Fix hash_update_hash_key() to handle same-bucket case correctly.
Original coding would corrupt the hashtable if the item being updated was
at the end of its bucket chain and the new hash key hashed to that same
bucket.  Diagnosis and fix by Heikki Linnakangas.
2013-01-14 21:57:15 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 3f4b1749a8 Return value of lseek() can be negative on failure.
Because the return value of lseek() was assigned to an unsigned size_t
variable, we'd fail to notice an error return code -1. Compiler gave a
warning about this.

Andres Freund
2013-01-15 00:42:37 +02:00
Tom Lane 325c54b69c Fix obsolete SQL syntax in comment.
This was legal back in the days of add_missing_from, though perhaps
never good style.  It's not legal anymore ...

Jan Urbański
2013-01-14 15:48:12 -05:00
Tom Lane 5c4eb9166e Reject out-of-range dates in to_date().
Dates outside the supported range could be entered, but would not print
reasonably, and operations such as conversion to timestamp wouldn't behave
sanely either.  Since this has the potential to result in undumpable table
data, it seems worth back-patching.

Hitoshi Harada
2013-01-14 15:19:48 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 692079e5dc Remove spurious space
Andres Freund
2013-01-14 12:08:59 -03:00
Tom Lane 2065dd2834 Prevent very-low-probability PANIC during PREPARE TRANSACTION.
The code in PostPrepare_Locks supposed that it could reassign locks to
the prepared transaction's dummy PGPROC by deleting the PROCLOCK table
entries and immediately creating new ones.  This was safe when that code
was written, but since we invented partitioning of the shared lock table,
it's not safe --- another process could steal away the PROCLOCK entry in
the short interval when it's on the freelist.  Then, if we were otherwise
out of shared memory, PostPrepare_Locks would have to PANIC, since it's
too late to back out of the PREPARE at that point.

Fix by inventing a dynahash.c function to atomically update a hashtable
entry's key.  (This might possibly have other uses in future.)

This is an ancient bug that in principle we ought to back-patch, but the
odds of someone hitting it in the field seem really tiny, because (a) the
risk window is small, and (b) nobody runs servers with maxed-out lock
tables for long, because they'll be getting non-PANIC out-of-memory errors
anyway.  So fixing it in HEAD seems sufficient, at least until the new
code has gotten some testing.
2013-01-13 22:20:22 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 9d2cd99a60 Make spelling more uniform 2013-01-13 21:42:03 -05:00
Tom Lane 24dd0502a1 Update comments for elog_start().
Forgot I was going to do this as part of the previous patch ...
2013-01-13 18:50:48 -05:00
Tom Lane b853eb9718 Improve handling of ereport(ERROR) and elog(ERROR).
In commit 71450d7fd6, we added code to inform
suitably-intelligent compilers that ereport() doesn't return if the elevel
is ERROR or higher.  This patch extends that to elog(), and also fixes a
double-evaluation hazard that the previous commit created in ereport(),
as well as reducing the emitted code size.

The elog() improvement requires the compiler to support __VA_ARGS__, which
should be available in just about anything nowadays since it's required by
C99.  But our minimum language baseline is still C89, so add a configure
test for that.

The previous commit assumed that ereport's elevel could be evaluated twice,
which isn't terribly safe --- there are already counterexamples in xlog.c.
On compilers that have __builtin_constant_p, we can use that to protect the
second test, since there's no possible optimization gain if the compiler
doesn't know the value of elevel.  Otherwise, use a local variable inside
the macros to prevent double evaluation.  The local-variable solution is
inferior because (a) it leads to useless code being emitted when elevel
isn't constant, and (b) it increases the optimization level needed for the
compiler to recognize that subsequent code is unreachable.  But it seems
better than not teaching non-gcc compilers about unreachability at all.

Lastly, if the compiler has __builtin_unreachable(), we can use that
instead of abort(), resulting in a noticeable code savings since no
function call is actually emitted.  However, it seems wise to do this only
in non-assert builds.  In an assert build, continue to use abort(), so that
the behavior will be predictable and debuggable if the "impossible"
happens.

These changes involve making the ereport and elog macros emit do-while
statement blocks not just expressions, which forces small changes in
a few call sites.

Andres Freund, Tom Lane, Heikki Linnakangas
2013-01-13 18:40:09 -05:00
Tom Lane 31f38f28b0 Redesign the planner's handling of index-descent cost estimation.
Historically we've used a couple of very ad-hoc fudge factors to try to
get the right results when indexes of different sizes would satisfy a
query with the same number of index leaf tuples being visited.  In
commit 21a39de580 I tweaked one of these
fudge factors, with results that proved disastrous for larger indexes.
Commit bf01e34b55 fudged it some more,
but still with not a lot of principle behind it.

What seems like a better way to address these issues is to explicitly model
index-descent costs, since that's what's really at stake when considering
diferent indexes with similar leaf-page-level costs.  We tried that once
long ago, and found that charging random_page_cost per page descended
through was way too much, because upper btree levels tend to stay in cache
in real-world workloads.  However, there's still CPU costs to think about,
and the previous fudge factors can be seen as a crude attempt to account
for those costs.  So this patch replaces those fudge factors with explicit
charges for the number of tuple comparisons needed to descend the index
tree, plus a small charge per page touched in the descent.  The cost
multipliers are chosen so that the resulting charges are in the vicinity of
the historical (pre-9.2) fudge factors for indexes of up to about a million
tuples, while not ballooning unreasonably beyond that, as the old fudge
factor did (even more so in 9.2).

To make this work accurately for btree indexes, add some code that allows
extraction of the known root-page height from a btree.  There's no
equivalent number readily available for other index types, but we can use
the log of the number of index pages as an approximate substitute.

This seems like too much of a behavioral change to risk back-patching,
but it should improve matters going forward.  In 9.2 I'll just revert
the fudge-factor change.
2013-01-11 12:56:58 -05:00
Tom Lane c00dc337b8 Fix potential corruption of lock table in CREATE/DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY.
If VirtualXactLock() has to wait for a transaction that holds its VXID lock
as a fast-path lock, it must first convert the fast-path lock to a regular
lock.  It failed to take the required "partition" lock on the main
shared-memory lock table while doing so.  This is the direct cause of the
assert failure in GetLockStatusData() recently observed in the buildfarm,
but more worryingly it could result in arbitrary corruption of the shared
lock table if some other process were concurrently engaged in modifying the
same partition of the lock table.  Fortunately, VirtualXactLock() is only
used by CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY and DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY, so the
opportunities for failure are fewer than they might have been.

In passing, improve some comments and be a bit more consistent about
order of operations.
2013-01-08 18:25:58 -05:00
Robert Haas a0dc23f205 Fix incorrect error message when schema-CREATE permission is absent.
Report by me.  Fix by KaiGai Kohei.
2013-01-07 11:54:59 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 49e7a26d67 Make some spelling more consistent 2013-01-05 08:25:21 -05:00
Tom Lane 94afbd5831 Invent a "one-shot" variant of CachedPlans for better performance.
SPI_execute() and related functions create a CachedPlan, execute it once,
and immediately discard it, so that the functionality offered by
plancache.c is of no value in this code path.  And performance measurements
show that the extra data copying and invalidation checking done by
plancache.c slows down simple queries by 10% or more compared to 9.1.
However, enough of the SPI code is shared with functions that do need plan
caching that it seems impractical to bypass plancache.c altogether.
Instead, let's invent a variant version of cached plans that preserves
99% of the API but doesn't offer any of the actual functionality, nor the
overhead.  This puts SPI_execute() performance back on par, or maybe even
slightly better, than it was before.  This change should resolve recent
complaints of performance degradation from Dong Ye, Pavel Stehule, and
others.

By avoiding data copying, this change also reduces the amount of memory
needed to execute many-statement SPI_execute() strings, as for instance in
a recent complaint from Tomas Vondra.

An additional benefit of this change is that multi-statement SPI_execute()
query strings are now processed fully serially, that is we complete
execution of earlier statements before running parse analysis and planning
on following ones.  This eliminates a long-standing POLA violation, in that
DDL that affects the behavior of a later statement will now behave as
expected.

Back-patch to 9.2, since this was a performance regression compared to 9.1.
(In 9.2, place the added struct fields so as to avoid changing the offsets
of existing fields.)

Heikki Linnakangas and Tom Lane
2013-01-04 17:42:19 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas b0daba57bb Tolerate timeline switches while "pg_basebackup -X fetch" is running.
If you take a base backup from a standby server with "pg_basebackup -X
fetch", and the timeline switches while the backup is being taken, the
backup used to fail with an error "requested WAL segment %s has already
been removed". This is because the server-side code that sends over the
required WAL files would not construct the WAL filename with the correct
timeline after a switch.

Fix that by using readdir() to scan pg_xlog for all the WAL segments in the
range, regardless of timeline.

Also, include all timeline history files in the backup, if taken with
"-X fetch". That fixes another related bug: If a timeline switch happened
just before the backup was initiated in a standby, the WAL segment
containing the initial checkpoint record contains WAL from the older
timeline too. Recovery will not accept that without a timeline history file
that lists the older timeline.

Backpatch to 9.2. Versions prior to that were not affected as you could not
take a base backup from a standby before 9.2.
2013-01-03 19:51:00 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas ee994272ca Delay reading timeline history file until it's fetched from master.
Streaming replication can fetch any missing timeline history files from the
master, but recovery would read the timeline history file for the target
timeline before reading the checkpoint record, and before walreceiver has
had a chance to fetch it from the master. Delay reading it, and the sanity
checks involving timeline history, until after reading the checkpoint
record.

There is at least one scenario where this makes a difference: if you take
a base backup from a standby server right after a timeline switch, the
WAL segment containing the initial checkpoint record will begin with an
older timeline ID. Without the timeline history file, recovering that file
will fail as the older timeline ID is not recognized to be an ancestor of
the target timeline. If you try to recover from such a backup, using only
streaming replication to fetch the WAL, this patch is required for that to
work.
2013-01-03 10:41:58 +02:00
Alvaro Herrera 84f6fb81b8 Fix IsUnderPostmaster/EXEC_BACKEND confusion 2013-01-02 18:39:20 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 15658911d9 Set MaxBackends only on bootstrap and standalone modes
... not on auxiliary processes.  I managed to overlook the fact that I
had disabled assertions on my HEAD checkout long ago.

Hopefully this will turn the buildfarm green again, and put an end to
today's silliness.
2013-01-02 17:57:56 -03:00
Magnus Hagander 794397ae1d Move tar function headers to pgtar.h
This makes it possible to include them only where they are used, so
we can avoid the conflict of the uid_t and gid_t datatypes that happened
in plperl (since plperl doesn't need the tar functions)
2013-01-02 20:34:08 +01:00
Alvaro Herrera dfbba2c86c Make sure MaxBackends is always set
Auxiliary and bootstrap processes weren't getting it, causing initdb to
fail completely.
2013-01-02 14:39:11 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera cdbc0ca48c Fix background workers for EXEC_BACKEND
Commit da07a1e8 was broken for EXEC_BACKEND because I failed to realize
that the MaxBackends recomputation needed to be duplicated by
subprocesses in SubPostmasterMain.  However, instead of having the value
be recomputed at all, it's better to assign the correct value at
postmaster initialization time, and have it be propagated to exec'ed
backends via BackendParameters.

MaxBackends stays as zero until after modules in
shared_preload_libraries have had a chance to register bgworkers, since
the value is going to be untrustworthy till that's finished.

Heikki Linnakangas and Álvaro Herrera
2013-01-02 12:01:14 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas d194d7a526 Fix bug in streaming replication over multiple tli switches.
After receiving some WAL over streaming replication, try to open the file
from the timeline we're currently recieving, not recoveryTargetTLI. They
are usually the same, which is why wasn't noticed before, but you'd get
an error if there have been more than one timeline switch between the
current point in WAL and the recovery target.
2013-01-02 14:35:15 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 4ffd589f44 Fix silly typo in code, which broke the check for reaching consistency. 2013-01-02 13:44:59 +02:00
Bruce Momjian bd61a623ac Update copyrights for 2013
Fully update git head, and update back branches in ./COPYRIGHT and
legal.sgml files.
2013-01-01 17:15:01 -05:00
Magnus Hagander f5d4bdd3a5 Unify some tar functionality across different parts
Move some of the tar functionality that existed mostly duplicated
in both pg_dump and the walsender basebackup functionality into
port/tar.c instead, so it can be used from both. It will also be
used by pg_basebackup in the future, which would've caused a third
copy of it around.

Zoltan Boszormenyi and Magnus Hagander
2013-01-01 18:15:57 +01:00
Tom Lane 2ffa740be9 Fix ruleutils to cope with conflicts from adding/dropping/renaming columns.
In commit 11e131854f, we improved the
rule/view dumping code so that it would produce valid query representations
even if some of the tables involved in a query had been renamed since the
query was parsed.  This patch extends that idea to fix problems that occur
when individual columns are renamed, or added or dropped.  As before, the
core of the fix is to assign unique new aliases when a name conflict has
been created.  This is complicated by the JOIN USING feature, which
requires the same column alias to be used in both input relations, but we
can handle that with a sufficiently complex approach to assigning aliases.

A fortiori, this patch takes care of situations where the query didn't have
unique column names to begin with, such as in a recent complaint from Bryan
Nuse.  (Because of expansion of "SELECT *", re-parsing a dumped query can
require column name uniqueness even though the original text did not.)
2012-12-31 15:13:26 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut 0e690209ee Fix compiler warning about uninitialized variable 2012-12-31 00:13:40 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 60df192aea Keep timeline history files restored from archive in pg_xlog.
The cascading standby patch in 9.2 changed the way WAL files are treated
when restored from the archive. Before, they were restored under a temporary
filename, and not kept in pg_xlog, but after the patch, they were copied
under pg_xlog. This is necessary for a cascading standby to find them, but
it also means that if the archive goes offline and a standby is restarted,
it can recover back to where it was using the files in pg_xlog. It also
means that if you take an offline backup from a standby server, it includes
all the required WAL files in pg_xlog.

However, the same change was not made to timeline history files, so if the
WAL segment containing the checkpoint record contains a timeline switch, you
will still get an error if you try to restart recovery without the archive,
or recover from an offline backup taken from the standby.

With this patch, timeline history files restored from archive are copied
into pg_xlog like WAL files are, so that pg_xlog contains all the files
required to recover. This is a corner-case pre-existing issue in 9.2, but
even more important in master where it's possible for a standby to follow a
timeline switch through streaming replication. To make that possible, the
timeline history files must be present in pg_xlog.
2012-12-30 14:29:45 +02:00
Robert Haas 82b1b213ca Adjust more backend functions to return OID rather than void.
This is again intended to support extensions to the event trigger
functionality.  This may go a bit further than we need for that
purpose, but there's some value in being consistent, and the OID
may be useful for other purposes also.

Dimitri Fontaine
2012-12-29 07:55:37 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 5ab3af46dd Remove obsolete XLogRecPtr macros
This gets rid of XLByteLT, XLByteLE, XLByteEQ and XLByteAdvance.
These were useful for brevity when XLogRecPtrs were split in
xlogid/xrecoff; but now that they are simple uint64's, they are just
clutter.  The only downside to making this change would be ease of
backporting patches, but that has been negated by other substantive
changes to the involved code anyway.  The clarity of simpler expressions
makes the change worthwhile.

Most of the changes are mechanical, but in a couple of places, the patch
author chose to invert the operator sense, making the code flow more
logical (and more in line with preceding comments).

Author: Andres Freund
Eyeballed by Dimitri Fontaine and Alvaro Herrera
2012-12-28 13:06:15 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera 24eca7977e Assign InvalidXLogRecPtr instead of MemSet(0)
For consistency.

Author: Andres Freund
2012-12-27 18:33:03 -03:00
Tom Lane 3f88b08003 Fix some minor issues in view pretty-printing.
Code review for commit 2f582f76b1945929ff07116cd4639747ce9bb8a1: don't use
a static variable for what ought to be a deparse_context field, fix
non-multibyte-safe test for spaces, avoid useless and potentially O(N^2)
(though admittedly with a very small constant) calculations of wrap
positions when we aren't going to wrap.
2012-12-24 17:52:19 -05:00
Simon Riggs c2b3218064 Update comments on rd_newRelfilenodeSubid.
Ensure comments accurately reflect state of code
given new understanding, and recent changes.
Include example code from Noah Misch to
illustrate how rd_newRelfilenodeSubid can be
reset deterministically. No code changes.
2012-12-24 17:07:06 +00:00
Simon Riggs ae9aba69a8 Keep rd_newRelfilenodeSubid across overflow.
Teach RelationCacheInvalidate() to keep rd_newRelfilenodeSubid across rel cache
message overflows, so that behaviour is now fully deterministic.

Noah Misch
2012-12-24 16:43:22 +00:00
Robert Haas c504513f83 Adjust many backend functions to return OID rather than void.
Extracted from a larger patch by Dimitri Fontaine.  It is hoped that
this will provide infrastructure for enriching the new event trigger
functionality, but it seems possibly useful for other purposes as
well.
2012-12-23 18:37:58 -05:00
Tom Lane 31bc839724 Prevent failure when RowExpr or XmlExpr is parse-analyzed twice.
transformExpr() is required to cope with already-transformed expression
trees, for various ugly-but-not-quite-worth-cleaning-up reasons.  However,
some of its newer subroutines hadn't gotten the memo.  This accounts for
bug #7763 from Norbert Buchmuller: transformRowExpr() was overwriting the
previously determined type of a RowExpr during CREATE TABLE LIKE INCLUDING
INDEXES.  Additional investigation showed that transformXmlExpr had the
same kind of problem, but all the other cases seem to be safe.

Andres Freund and Tom Lane
2012-12-23 14:07:24 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 1ff92eea14 Fix sloppiness in the timeline switch over streaming replication patch.
Here's another attempt at fixing the logic that decides how far the WAL can
be streamed, which was still broken if the timeline changed while streaming.
You would get an assertion failure. The way the logic is now written is more
readable, too.

Thom Brown reported the assertion failure.
2012-12-21 20:08:12 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 36e4456d78 Fix race condition if a file is removed while pg_basebackup is running.
If a relation file was removed when the server-side counterpart of
pg_basebackup was just about to open it to send it to the client, you'd
get a "could not open file" error. Fix that.

Backpatch to 9.1, this goes back to when pg_basebackup was introduced.
2012-12-21 15:34:15 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut 740ee42da5 Make some messages more consistent in style 2012-12-21 00:10:46 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut a0bfb7b36e Fix grammatical mistake in error message 2012-12-20 23:36:13 -05:00
Tom Lane 343c2a865b Fix pg_extension_config_dump() to handle update cases more sanely.
If pg_extension_config_dump() is executed again for a table already listed
in the extension's extconfig, the code was blindly making a new array entry.
This does not seem useful.  Fix it to replace the existing array entry
instead, so that it's possible for extension update scripts to alter the
filter conditions for configuration tables.

In addition, teach ALTER EXTENSION DROP TABLE to check for an extconfig
entry for the target table, and remove it if present.  This is not a 100%
solution because it's allowed for an extension update script to just
summarily DROP a member table, and that code path doesn't go through
ExecAlterExtensionContentsStmt.  We could probably make that case clean
things up if we had to, but it would involve sticking a very ugly wart
somewhere in the guts of dependency.c.  Since on the whole it seems quite
unlikely that extension updates would want to remove pre-existing
configuration tables, making the case possible with an explicit command
seems sufficient.

Per bug #7756 from Regina Obe.  Back-patch to 9.1 where extensions were
introduced.
2012-12-20 16:31:42 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 343ee00b73 Fix recycling of WAL segments after switching timeline during recovery.
This was broken before, we would recycle old WAL segments on wrong timeline
after the recovery target timeline had changed, but my recent commit to
not initialize ThisTimeLineID at all in a standby's checkpointer process
broke this completely.

The problem is that when installing a recycled WAL segment as a future one,
ThisTimeLineID is used to construct the filename. To fix, always update
ThisTimeLineID to the current timeline being recovered, before recycling
WAL segments at a restartpoint.

This still leaves a small window where we might install WAL segments under
wrong timeline ID, if the timeline is changed just as we're about to start
recycling. Also, even if we're replaying timeline X at the momnent, there's
no guarantee that we'll need as many WAL segments on that timeline as we
recycle. We might be just about to reach the point where we switch to next
timeline, so might only need one more WAL segment on the current timeline.
We'll live with the waste in that situation.

Bug pointed out by Fujii Masao. 9.1 and 9.2 had the same issue, when
recovery target timeline was changed, but I committed a slightly different
version of this patch on those branches.
2012-12-20 22:00:58 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas af275a12df Follow TLI of last replayed record, not recovery target TLI, in walsenders.
Most of the time, the last replayed record comes from the recovery target
timeline, but there is a corner case where it makes a difference. When
the startup process scans for a new timeline, and decides to change recovery
target timeline, there is a window where the recovery target TLI has already
been bumped, but there are no WAL segments from the new timeline in pg_xlog
yet. For example, if we have just replayed up to point 0/30002D8, on
timeline 1, there is a WAL file called 000000010000000000000003 in pg_xlog
that contains the WAL up to that point. When recovery switches recovery
target timeline to 2, a walsender can immediately try to read WAL from
0/30002D8, from timeline 2, so it will try to open WAL file
000000020000000000000003. However, that doesn't exist yet - the startup
process hasn't copied that file from the archive yet nor has the walreceiver
streamed it yet, so walsender fails with error "requested WAL segment
000000020000000000000003 has already been removed". That's harmless, in that
the standby will try to reconnect later and by that time the segment is
already created, but error messages that should be ignored are not good.

To fix that, have walsender track the TLI of the last replayed record,
instead of the recovery target timeline. That way walsender will not try to
read anything from timeline 2, until the WAL segment has been created and at
least one record has been replayed from it. The recovery target timeline is
now xlog.c's internal affair, it doesn't need to be exposed in shared memory
anymore.

This fixes the error reported by Thom Brown. depesz the same error message,
but I'm not sure if this fixes his scenario.
2012-12-20 14:39:04 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 1a11d4609e Don't set ThisTimeLineID in checkpointer & bgwriter during recovery.
We used to set it to the current recovery target timeline, but the recovery
target timeline can change during recovery, leaving ThisTimeLineID at an
old value. That seems worse than always leaving it at zero to begin with.

AFAICS there was no good reason to set it in the first place. ThisTimeLineID
is not needed in checkpointer or bgwriter process, until it's time to write
the end-of-recovery checkpoint, and at that point ThisTimeLineID is updated
anyway.
2012-12-20 14:39:04 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas e43f947bf3 Check if we've reached end-of-backup point also if no redo is required.
If you restored from a backup taken from a standby, and the last record in
the backup is the checkpoint record, ie. there is no redo required except
for the checkpoint record, we would fail to notice that we've reached the
end-of-backup point, and the database is consistent. The result was an
error "WAL ends before end of online backup". To fix, move the
have-we-reached-end-of-backup check into CheckRecoveryConsistency(), which
is already responsible for similar checks with minRecoveryPoint, and is
called in the right places.

Backpatch to 9.2, this check and bug did not exist before that.
2012-12-19 14:22:00 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut f2b88080db Rename SQL feature S403 to ARRAY_MAX_CARDINALITY
In an earlier version of the standard, this was called just
"MAX_CARDINALITY".
2012-12-19 07:14:27 -05:00
Tom Lane 6919b7e329 Fix failure to ignore leftover temp tables after a server crash.
During crash recovery, we remove disk files belonging to temporary tables,
but the system catalog entries for such tables are intentionally not
cleaned up right away.  Instead, the first backend that uses a temp schema
is expected to clean out any leftover objects therein.  This approach
requires that we be careful to ignore leftover temp tables (since any
actual access attempt would fail), *even if their BackendId matches our
session*, if we have not yet established use of the session's corresponding
temp schema.  That worked fine in the past, but was broken by commit
debcec7dc3 which incorrectly removed the
rd_islocaltemp relcache flag.  Put it back, and undo various changes
that substituted tests like "rel->rd_backend == MyBackendId" for use
of a state-aware flag.  Per trouble report from Heikki Linnakangas.

Back-patch to 9.1 where the erroneous change was made.  In the back
branches, be careful to add rd_islocaltemp in a spot in the struct that
was alignment padding before, so as not to break existing add-on code.
2012-12-17 20:15:32 -05:00
Tom Lane c299477229 Fix filling of postmaster.pid in bootstrap/standalone mode.
We failed to ever fill the sixth line (LISTEN_ADDR), which caused the
attempt to fill the seventh line (SHMEM_KEY) to fail, so that the shared
memory key never got added to the file in standalone mode.  This has been
broken since we added more content to our lock files in 9.1.

To fix, tweak the logic in CreateLockFile to add an empty LISTEN_ADDR
line in standalone mode.  This is a tad grotty, but since that function
already knows almost everything there is to know about the contents of
lock files, it doesn't seem that it's any better to hack it elsewhere.

It's not clear how significant this bug really is, since a standalone
backend should never have any children and thus it seems not critical
to be able to check the nattch count of the shmem segment externally.
But I'm going to back-patch the fix anyway.

This problem had escaped notice because of an ancient (and in hindsight
pretty dubious) decision to suppress LOG-level messages by default in
standalone mode; so that the elog(LOG) complaint in AddToDataDirLockFile
that should have warned of the problem didn't do anything.  Fixing that
is material for a separate patch though.
2012-12-16 15:02:49 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan 3717f0837b Tidy up from frontend Assert change.
Quiet compiler warnings noted by Peter Eisentraut.
2012-12-16 12:22:57 -05:00
Robert Haas 75758a6ff0 Update comment in heapgetpage() regarding PD_ALL_VISIBLE vs. Hot Standby.
Pavan Deolasee, slightly modified by me
2012-12-14 15:44:38 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas abfd192b1b Allow a streaming replication standby to follow a timeline switch.
Before this patch, streaming replication would refuse to start replicating
if the timeline in the primary doesn't exactly match the standby. The
situation where it doesn't match is when you have a master, and two
standbys, and you promote one of the standbys to become new master.
Promoting bumps up the timeline ID, and after that bump, the other standby
would refuse to continue.

There's significantly more timeline related logic in streaming replication
now. First of all, when a standby connects to primary, it will ask the
primary for any timeline history files that are missing from the standby.
The missing files are sent using a new replication command TIMELINE_HISTORY,
and stored in standby's pg_xlog directory. Using the timeline history files,
the standby can follow the latest timeline present in the primary
(recovery_target_timeline='latest'), just as it can follow new timelines
appearing in an archive directory.

START_REPLICATION now takes a TIMELINE parameter, to specify exactly which
timeline to stream WAL from. This allows the standby to request the primary
to send over WAL that precedes the promotion. The replication protocol is
changed slightly (in a backwards-compatible way although there's little hope
of streaming replication working across major versions anyway), to allow
replication to stop when the end of timeline reached, putting the walsender
back into accepting a replication command.

Many thanks to Amit Kapila for testing and reviewing various versions of
this patch.
2012-12-13 19:17:32 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 527668717a Make xlog_internal.h includable in frontend context.
This makes unnecessary the ugly hack used to #include postgres.h in
pg_basebackup.

Based on Alvaro Herrera's patch
2012-12-13 14:59:13 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 6264cd3d69 In multi-insert, don't go into infinite loop on a huge tuple and fillfactor.
If a tuple is larger than page size minus space reserved for fillfactor,
heap_multi_insert would never find a page that it fits in and repeatedly ask
for a new page from RelationGetBufferForTuple. If a tuple is too large to
fit on any page, taking fillfactor into account, RelationGetBufferForTuple
will always expand the relation. In a normal insert, heap_insert will accept
that and put the tuple on the new page. heap_multi_insert, however, does a
fillfactor check of its own, and doesn't accept the newly-extended page
RelationGetBufferForTuple returns, even though there is no other choice to
make the tuple fit.

Fix that by making the logic in heap_multi_insert more like the heap_insert
logic. The first tuple is always put on the page RelationGetBufferForTuple
gives us, and the fillfactor check is only applied to the subsequent tuples.

Report from David Gould, although I didn't use his patch.
2012-12-12 13:54:42 +02:00
Tom Lane 691c5ebf79 Add defenses against integer overflow in dynahash numbuckets calculations.
The dynahash code requires the number of buckets in a hash table to fit
in an int; but since we calculate the desired hash table size dynamically,
there are various scenarios where we might calculate too large a value.
The resulting overflow can lead to infinite loops, division-by-zero
crashes, etc.  I (tgl) had previously installed some defenses against that
in commit 299d171652, but that covered only one
call path.  Moreover it worked by limiting the request size to work_mem,
but in a 64-bit machine it's possible to set work_mem high enough that the
problem appears anyway.  So let's fix the problem at the root by installing
limits in the dynahash.c functions themselves.

Trouble report and patch by Jeff Davis.
2012-12-11 22:09:05 -05:00
Tom Lane cd3413ec36 Disable event triggers in standalone mode.
Per discussion, this seems necessary to allow recovery from broken event
triggers, or broken indexes on pg_event_trigger.

Dimitri Fontaine
2012-12-11 19:28:31 -05:00
Kevin Grittner b19e4250b4 Fix performance problems with autovacuum truncation in busy workloads.
In situations where there are over 8MB of empty pages at the end of
a table, the truncation work for trailing empty pages takes longer
than deadlock_timeout, and there is frequent access to the table by
processes other than autovacuum, there was a problem with the
autovacuum worker process being canceled by the deadlock checking
code. The truncation work done by autovacuum up that point was
lost, and the attempt tried again by a later autovacuum worker. The
attempts could continue indefinitely without making progress,
consuming resources and blocking other processes for up to
deadlock_timeout each time.

This patch has the autovacuum worker checking whether it is
blocking any other thread at 20ms intervals. If such a condition
develops, the autovacuum worker will persist the work it has done
so far, release its lock on the table, and sleep in 50ms intervals
for up to 5 seconds, hoping to be able to re-acquire the lock and
try again. If it is unable to get the lock in that time, it moves
on and a worker will try to continue later from the point this one
left off.

While this patch doesn't change the rules about when and what to
truncate, it does cause the truncation to occur sooner, with less
blocking, and with the consumption of fewer resources when there is
contention for the table's lock.

The only user-visible change other than improved performance is
that the table size during truncation may change incrementally
instead of just once.

This problem exists in all supported versions but is infrequently
reported, although some reports of performance problems when
autovacuum runs might be caused by this. Initial commit is just the
master branch, but this should probably be backpatched once the
build farm and general developer usage confirm that there are no
surprising effects.

Jan Wieck
2012-12-11 14:33:08 -06:00
Heikki Linnakangas 970fb12de1 Consistency check should compare last record replayed, not last record read.
EndRecPtr is the last record that we've read, but not necessarily yet
replayed. CheckRecoveryConsistency should compare minRecoveryPoint with the
last replayed record instead. This caused recovery to think it's reached
consistency too early.

Now that we do the check in CheckRecoveryConsistency correctly, we have to
move the call of that function to after redoing a record. The current place,
after reading a record but before replaying it, is wrong. In particular, if
there are no more records after the one ending at minRecoveryPoint, we don't
enter hot standby until one extra record is generated and read by the
standby, and CheckRecoveryConsistency is called. These two bugs conspired
to make the code appear to work correctly, except for the small window
between reading the last record that reaches minRecoveryPoint, and
replaying it.

In the passing, rename recoveryLastRecPtr, which is the last record
replayed, to lastReplayedEndRecPtr. This makes it slightly less confusing
with replayEndRecPtr, which is the last record read that we're about to
replay.

Original report from Kyotaro HORIGUCHI, further diagnosis by Fujii Masao.
Backpatch to 9.0, where Hot Standby subtly changed the test from
"minRecoveryPoint < EndRecPtr" to "minRecoveryPoint <= EndRecPtr". The
former works because where the test is performed, we have always read one
more record than we've replayed.
2012-12-11 18:54:02 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 7bffc9b7bf Update minimum recovery point on truncation.
If a file is truncated, we must update minRecoveryPoint. Once a file is
truncated, there's no going back; it would not be safe to stop recovery
at a point earlier than that anymore.

Per report from Kyotaro HORIGUCHI. Backpatch to 8.4. Before that,
minRecoveryPoint was not updated during recovery at all.
2012-12-10 16:57:16 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 6be799664a Fix the tracking of min recovery point timeline.
Forgot to update it at the right place. Also, consider checkpoint record
that switches to new timelne to be on the new timeline.

This fixes erroneous "requested timeline 2 does not contain minimum recovery
point" errors, pointed out by Amit Kapila while testing another patch.
2012-12-10 16:04:26 +02:00
Tom Lane b46c92112b Fix assorted bugs in privileges-for-types patch.
Commit 729205571e added privileges on data
types, but there were a number of oversights.  The implementation of
default privileges for types missed a few places, and pg_dump was
utterly innocent of the whole concept.  Per bug #7741 from Nathan Alden,
and subsequent wider investigation.
2012-12-09 00:08:23 -05:00
Tom Lane a99c42f291 Support automatically-updatable views.
This patch makes "simple" views automatically updatable, without the need
to create either INSTEAD OF triggers or INSTEAD rules.  "Simple" views
are those classified as updatable according to SQL-92 rules.  The rewriter
transforms INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE commands on such views directly into an
equivalent command on the underlying table, which will generally have
noticeably better performance than is possible with either triggers or
user-written rules.  A view that has INSTEAD OF triggers or INSTEAD rules
continues to operate the same as before.

For the moment, security_barrier views are not considered simple.
Also, we do not support WITH CHECK OPTION.  These features may be
added in future.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Amit Kapila
2012-12-08 18:26:21 -05:00
Simon Riggs 1f023f9297 Optimize COPY FREEZE with CREATE TABLE also.
Jeff Davis, additional test by me
2012-12-07 13:26:52 +00:00
Simon Riggs 1eb6cee499 Clarify that COPY FREEZE is not a hard rule.
Remove message when FREEZE not honoured,
clarify reasons in comments and docs.
2012-12-07 12:59:05 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera da07a1e856 Background worker processes
Background workers are postmaster subprocesses that run arbitrary
user-specified code.  They can request shared memory access as well as
backend database connections; or they can just use plain libpq frontend
database connections.

Modules listed in shared_preload_libraries can register background
workers in their _PG_init() function; this is early enough that it's not
necessary to provide an extra GUC option, because the necessary extra
resources can be allocated early on.  Modules can install more than one
bgworker, if necessary.

Care is taken that these extra processes do not interfere with other
postmaster tasks: only one such process is started on each ServerLoop
iteration.  This means a large number of them could be waiting to be
started up and postmaster is still able to quickly service external
connection requests.  Also, shutdown sequence should not be impacted by
a worker process that's reasonably well behaved (i.e. promptly responds
to termination signals.)

The current implementation lets worker processes specify their start
time, i.e. at what point in the server startup process they are to be
started: right after postmaster start (in which case they mustn't ask
for shared memory access), when consistent state has been reached
(useful during recovery in a HOT standby server), or when recovery has
terminated (i.e. when normal backends are allowed).

In case of a bgworker crash, actions to take depend on registration
data: if shared memory was requested, then all other connections are
taken down (as well as other bgworkers), just like it were a regular
backend crashing.  The bgworker itself is restarted, too, within a
configurable timeframe (which can be configured to be never).

More features to add to this framework can be imagined without much
effort, and have been discussed, but this seems good enough as a useful
unit already.

An elementary sample module is supplied.

Author: Álvaro Herrera

This patch is loosely based on prior patches submitted by KaiGai Kohei,
and unsubmitted code by Simon Riggs.

Reviewed by: KaiGai Kohei, Markus Wanner, Andres Freund,
Heikki Linnakangas, Simon Riggs, Amit Kapila
2012-12-06 17:47:30 -03:00
Tom Lane e31d524867 Fix intermittent crash in DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY.
When deleteOneObject closes and reopens the pg_depend relation,
we must see to it that the relcache pointer held by the calling function
(typically performMultipleDeletions) is updated.  Usually the relcache
entry is retained so that the pointer value doesn't change, which is why
the problem had escaped notice ... but after a cache flush event there's
no guarantee that the same memory will be reassigned.  To fix, change
the recursive functions' APIs so that we pass around a "Relation *"
not just "Relation".

Per investigation of occasional buildfarm failures.  This is trivial
to reproduce with -DCLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS, which points up the sad
lack of any buildfarm member running that way on a regular basis.
2012-12-05 23:42:51 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 5e15cdb2ae Update comment at top of index_create
I neglected to update it in commit f4c4335.

Michael Paquier
2012-12-05 23:09:46 -03:00
Tom Lane af4aba2f05 Ensure recovery pause feature doesn't pause unless users can connect.
If we're not in hot standby mode, then there's no way for users to connect
to reset the recoveryPause flag, so we shouldn't pause.  The code was aware
of this but the test to see if pausing was safe was seriously inadequate:
it wasn't paying attention to reachedConsistency, and besides what it was
testing was that we could legally enter hot standby, not that we have
done so.  Get rid of that in favor of checking LocalHotStandbyActive,
which because of the coding in CheckRecoveryConsistency is tantamount to
checking that we have told the postmaster to enter hot standby.

Also, move the recoveryPausesHere() call that reacts to asynchronous
recoveryPause requests so that it's not in the middle of application of a
WAL record.  I put it next to the recoveryStopsHere() call --- in future
those are going to need to interact significantly, so this seems like a
good waystation.

Also, don't bother trying to read another WAL record if we've already
decided not to continue recovery.  This was no big deal when the code was
written originally, but now that reading a record might entail actions like
fetching an archive file, it seems a bit silly to do it like that.

Per report from Jeff Janes and subsequent discussion.  The pause feature
needs quite a lot more work, but this gets rid of some indisputable bugs,
and seems safe enough to back-patch.
2012-12-05 18:27:50 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas d67b06fe3e Oops, meant to change the comment in writeTimeLineHistory. 2012-12-05 21:00:59 +02:00
Simon Riggs 6aa2e49a87 Must not reach consistency before XLOG_BACKUP_RECORD
When waiting for an XLOG_BACKUP_RECORD the minRecoveryPoint
will be incorrect, so we must not declare recovery as consistent
before we have seen the record. Major bug allowing recovery to end
too early in some cases, allowing people to see inconsistent db.
This patch to HEAD and 9.2, other fix required for 9.1 and 9.0

Simon Riggs and Andres Freund, bug report by Jeff Janes
2012-12-05 13:28:03 +00:00
Tom Lane cdf498c5d7 Attempt to un-break Windows builds with USE_LDAP.
The buildfarm shows this case is entirely broken, and I'm betting the
reason is lack of any include file.
2012-12-04 17:25:51 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 90991c40eb Downgrade a status message from LOG to DEBUG2.
I never intended this to be anything other than a debugging aid, but forgot
to change the level before committing.
2012-12-04 17:29:44 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 32f4de0adf Write exact xlog position of timeline switch in the timeline history file.
This allows us to do some more rigorous sanity checking for various
incorrect point-in-time recovery scenarios, and provides more information
for debugging purposes. It will also come handy in the upcoming patch to
allow timeline switches to be replicated by streaming replication.
2012-12-04 17:29:07 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut ec8d1e32dd Fix build of LDAP URL feature
Some code was not ifdef'ed out for non-LDAP builds.

patch from Bruce Momjian
2012-12-04 06:42:25 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 5ce108bf32 Track the timeline associated with minRecoveryPoint, for more sanity checks.
This allows recovery to notice certain incorrect recovery scenarios.
If a server has recovered to point X on timeline 5, and you restart
recovery, it better be on timeline 5 when it reaches point X again, not on
some timeline with a higher ID. This can happen e.g if you a standby server
is shut down, a new timeline appears in the WAL archive, and the standby
server is restarted. It will try to follow the new timeline, which is wrong
because some WAL on the old timeline was already replayed before shutdown.

Requires an initdb (or at least pg_resetxlog), because this adds a field to
the control file.
2012-12-04 11:31:00 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut aa2fec0a18 Add support for LDAP URLs
Allow specifying LDAP authentication parameters as RFC 4516 LDAP URLs.
2012-12-03 23:31:02 -05:00
Simon Riggs 62656617db Avoid holding vmbuffer pin after VACUUM.
During VACUUM if we pause to perform a cycle
of index cleanup we drop the vmbuffer pin,
so we should do the same thing when heap
scan completes. This avoids holding vmbuffer
pin across the main index cleanup in VACUUM,
which could be minutes or hours longer than
necessary for correctness.

Bug report and suggested fix from Pavan Deolasee
2012-12-03 18:53:31 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan d5652e50d5 Attempt to unbreak MSVC builds broken by f21bb9cfb5.
We can't use type uint, so use uint32.
2012-12-03 10:23:22 -05:00
Simon Riggs f21bb9cfb5 Refactor inCommit flag into generic delayChkpt flag.
Rename PGXACT->inCommit flag into delayChkpt flag,
and generalise comments to allow use in other situations,
such as the forthcoming potential use in checksum patch.
Replace wait loop to look for VXIDs with delayChkpt set.
No user visible changes, not behaviour changes at present.

Simon Riggs, reviewed and rebased by Jeff Davis
2012-12-03 13:13:53 +00:00
Simon Riggs 7a764990d8 Clarify locking for PageGetLSN() in XLogCheckBuffer() 2012-12-03 12:20:31 +00:00
Simon Riggs 1c563a2ae1 Clarify when to use PageSetLSN/PageGetLSN().
Update README to explain prerequisites for
correct access to LSN fields of a page.
Independent chunk removed from checksums
patch to reduce size of patch.
2012-12-03 11:59:25 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas a068c391ab Refactor the code implementing standby-mode logic.
It is now easier to see that it's a state machine, making the code easier
to understand overall.
2012-12-03 12:32:44 +02:00
Simon Riggs 5457a130d3 Reduce scope of changes for COPY FREEZE.
Allow support only for freezing tuples by explicit
command. Previous coding mistakenly extended
slightly beyond what was agreed as correct on -hackers.
So essentially a partial revoke of earlier work,
leaving just the COPY FREEZE command.
2012-12-02 20:52:52 +00:00
Tom Lane 3114cb60a1 Don't advance checkPoint.nextXid near the end of a checkpoint sequence.
This reverts commit c11130690d in favor of
actually fixing the problem: namely, that we should never have been
modifying the checkpoint record's nextXid at this point to begin with.
The nextXid should match the state as of the checkpoint's logical WAL
position (ie the redo point), not the state as of its physical position.
It's especially bogus to advance it in some wal_levels and not others.
In any case there is no need for the checkpoint record to carry the
same nextXid shown in the XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS record just emitted by
LogStandbySnapshot, as any replay operation will already have adopted
that value as current.

This fixes bug #7710 from Tarvi Pillessaar, and probably also explains bug
#6291 from Daniel Farina, in that if a checkpoint were in progress at the
instant of XID wraparound, the epoch bump would be lost as reported.
(And, of course, these days there's at least a 50-50 chance of a checkpoint
being in progress at any given instant.)

Diagnosed by me and independently by Andres Freund.  Back-patch to all
branches supporting hot standby.
2012-12-02 15:20:41 -05:00
Simon Riggs 5c11725867 Rearrange storage of data in xl_running_xacts.
Previously we stored all xids mixed together.
Now we store top-level xids first, followed
by all subxids. Also skip logging any subxids
if the snapshot is suboverflowed, since there
are potentially large numbers of them and they
are not useful in that case anyway. Has value
in the envisaged design for decoding of WAL.
No planned effect on Hot Standby.

Andres Freund, reviewed by me
2012-12-02 19:39:37 +00:00
Simon Riggs c11130690d XidEpoch++ if wraparound during checkpoint.
If wal_level = hot_standby we update the checkpoint nextxid,
though in the case where a wraparound occurred half-way through
a checkpoint we would neglect updating the epoch also. Updating
the nextxid is arguably the wrong thing to do, but changing that
may introduce subtle bugs into hot standby startup, while updating
the value doesn't cause any known bugs yet. Minimal fix now to
HEAD and backbranches, wider fix later in HEAD.

Bug reported in #6291 by Daniel Farina and slightly differently in

Cause analysis and recommended fixes from Tom Lane and Andres Freund.

Applied patch is minimal version of Andres Freund's work.
2012-12-02 14:57:44 +00:00
Simon Riggs 9f98704b82 Clarify operation of online checkpoints.
Previous comments left, but were too obscure
for such an important aspect of the system.
2012-12-02 13:09:55 +00:00
Tom Lane 7b90469b71 Allow adding values to an enum type created in the current transaction.
Normally it is unsafe to allow ALTER TYPE ADD VALUE in a transaction block,
because instances of the value could be added to indexes later in the same
transaction, and then they would still be accessible even if the
transaction rolls back.  However, we can allow this if the enum type itself
was created in the current transaction, because then any such indexes would
have to go away entirely on rollback.

The reason for allowing this is to support pg_upgrade's new usage of
pg_restore --single-transaction: in --binary-upgrade mode, pg_dump emits
enum types as a succession of ALTER TYPE ADD VALUE commands so that it can
preserve the values' OIDs.  The support is a bit limited, so we'll leave
it undocumented.

Andres Freund
2012-12-01 14:27:30 -05:00
Simon Riggs 8de72b66a2 COPY FREEZE and mark committed on fresh tables.
When a relfilenode is created in this subtransaction or
a committed child transaction and it cannot otherwise
be seen by our own process, mark tuples committed ahead
of transaction commit for all COPY commands in same
transaction. If FREEZE specified on COPY
and pre-conditions met then rows will also be frozen.
Both options designed to avoid revisiting rows after commit,
increasing performance of subsequent commands after
data load and upgrade. pg_restore changes later.

Simon Riggs, review comments from Heikki Linnakangas, Noah Misch and design
input from Tom Lane, Robert Haas and Kevin Grittner
2012-12-01 12:54:20 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera 113d25c4e6 Change test ExceptionalCondition to return void
Commit 81107282a changed it in assert.c, but overlooked this other file.
2012-11-30 19:24:21 -03:00
Tom Lane da63fec7db Add missing buffer lock acquisition in GetTupleForTrigger().
If we had not been holding buffer pin continuously since the tuple was
initially fetched by the UPDATE or DELETE query, it would be possible for
VACUUM or a page-prune operation to move the tuple while we're trying to
copy it.  This would result in a garbage "old" tuple value being passed to
an AFTER ROW UPDATE or AFTER ROW DELETE trigger.  The preconditions for
this are somewhat improbable, and the timing constraints are very tight;
so it's not so surprising that this hasn't been reported from the field,
even though the bug has been there a long time.

Problem found by Andres Freund.  Back-patch to all active branches.
2012-11-30 13:55:55 -05:00
Tom Lane 4af446e7cd Produce a more useful error message for over-length Unix socket paths.
The length of a socket path name is constrained by the size of struct
sockaddr_un, and there's not a lot we can do about it since that is a
kernel API.  However, it would be a good thing if we produced an
intelligible error message when the user specifies a socket path that's too
long --- and getaddrinfo's standard API is too impoverished to do this in
the natural way.  So insert explicit tests at the places where we construct
a socket path name.  Now you'll get an error that makes sense and even
tells you what the limit is, rather than something generic like
"Non-recoverable failure in name resolution".

Per trouble report from Jeremy Drake and a fix idea from Andrew Dunstan.
2012-11-29 19:57:01 -05:00
Simon Riggs d3fe59939c Correctly init fast path fields on PGPROC 2012-11-29 22:15:52 +00:00
Simon Riggs f1e57a4ec9 Cleanup VirtualXact at end of Hot Standby. 2012-11-29 21:59:11 +00:00
Robert Haas 7a2fe9bd03 Basic binary heap implementation.
There are probably other places where this can be used, but for now,
this just makes MergeAppend use it, so that this code will have test
coverage.  There is other work in the queue that will use this, as
well.

Abhijit Menon-Sen, reviewed by Andres Freund, Robert Haas, Álvaro
Herrera, Tom Lane, and others.
2012-11-29 11:16:59 -05:00
Tom Lane 3c84046490 Fix assorted bugs in CREATE/DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY.
Commit 8cb53654db, which introduced DROP
INDEX CONCURRENTLY, managed to break CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY via a poor
choice of catalog state representation.  The pg_index state for an index
that's reached the final pre-drop stage was the same as the state for an
index just created by CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY.  This meant that the
(necessary) change to make RelationGetIndexList ignore about-to-die indexes
also made it ignore freshly-created indexes; which is catastrophic because
the latter do need to be considered in HOT-safety decisions.  Failure to
do so leads to incorrect index entries and subsequently wrong results from
queries depending on the concurrently-created index.

To fix, add an additional boolean column "indislive" to pg_index, so that
the freshly-created and about-to-die states can be distinguished.  (This
change obviously is only possible in HEAD.  This patch will need to be
back-patched, but in 9.2 we'll use a kluge consisting of overloading the
formerly-impossible state of indisvalid = true and indisready = false.)

In addition, change CREATE/DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY so that the pg_index
flag changes they make without exclusive lock on the index are made via
heap_inplace_update() rather than a normal transactional update.  The
latter is not very safe because moving the pg_index tuple could result in
concurrent SnapshotNow scans finding it twice or not at all, thus possibly
resulting in index corruption.  This is a pre-existing bug in CREATE INDEX
CONCURRENTLY, which was copied into the DROP code.

In addition, fix various places in the code that ought to check to make
sure that the indexes they are manipulating are valid and/or ready as
appropriate.  These represent bugs that have existed since 8.2, since
a failed CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY could leave a corrupt or invalid
index behind, and we ought not try to do anything that might fail with
such an index.

Also fix RelationReloadIndexInfo to ensure it copies all the pg_index
columns that are allowed to change after initial creation.  Previously we
could have been left with stale values of some fields in an index relcache
entry.  It's not clear whether this actually had any user-visible
consequences, but it's at least a bug waiting to happen.

In addition, do some code and docs review for DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY;
some cosmetic code cleanup but mostly addition and revision of comments.

This will need to be back-patched, but in a noticeably different form,
so I'm committing it to HEAD before working on the back-patch.

Problem reported by Amit Kapila, diagnosis by Pavan Deolassee,
fix by Tom Lane and Andres Freund.
2012-11-28 21:26:01 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera 1577b46b7c Split out rmgr rm_desc functions into their own files
This is necessary (but not sufficient) to have them compilable outside
of a backend environment.
2012-11-28 13:01:15 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas dd7353dde8 If we don't have a backup-end-location, don't claim we've reached it.
This was apparently a typo, which caused recovery to think that it
immediately reached the end of backup, and allowed the database to start
up too early.

Reported by Jeff Janes. Backpatch to 9.2, where this code was introduced.
2012-11-28 15:14:27 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas 1f67078ea3 Add OpenTransientFile, with automatic cleanup at end-of-xact.
Files opened with BasicOpenFile or PathNameOpenFile are not automatically
cleaned up on error. That puts unnecessary burden on callers that only want
to keep the file open for a short time. There is AllocateFile, but that
returns a buffered FILE * stream, which in many cases is not the nicest API
to work with. So add function called OpenTransientFile, which returns a
unbuffered fd that's cleaned up like the FILE* returned by AllocateFile().

This plugs a few rare fd leaks in error cases:

1. copy_file() - fixed by by using OpenTransientFile instead of BasicOpenFile
2. XLogFileInit() - fixed by adding close() calls to the error cases. Can't
   use OpenTransientFile here because the fd is supposed to persist over
   transaction boundaries.
3. lo_import/lo_export - fixed by using OpenTransientFile instead of
   PathNameOpenFile.

In addition to plugging those leaks, this replaces many BasicOpenFile() calls
with OpenTransientFile() that were not leaking, because the code meticulously
closed the file on error. That wasn't strictly necessary, but IMHO it's good
for robustness.

The same leaks exist in older versions, but given the rarity of the issues,
I'm not backpatching this. Not yet, anyway - it might be good to backpatch
later, after this mechanism has had some more testing in master branch.
2012-11-27 10:25:50 +02:00
Tom Lane 532994299e Revert patch for taking fewer snapshots.
This reverts commit d573e239f0, "Take fewer
snapshots".  While that seemed like a good idea at the time, it caused
execution to use a snapshot that had been acquired before locking any of
the tables mentioned in the query.  This created user-visible anomalies
that were not present in any prior release of Postgres, as reported by
Tomas Vondra.  While this whole area could do with a redesign (since there
are related cases that have anomalies anyway), it doesn't seem likely that
any future patch would be reasonably back-patchable; and we don't want 9.2
to exhibit a behavior that's subtly unlike either past or future releases.
Hence, revert to prior code while we rethink the problem.
2012-11-26 15:55:43 -05:00
Tom Lane d3237e04ca Fix SELECT DISTINCT with index-optimized MIN/MAX on inheritance trees.
In a query such as "SELECT DISTINCT min(x) FROM tab", the DISTINCT is
pretty useless (there being only one output row), but nonetheless it
shouldn't fail.  But it could fail if "tab" is an inheritance parent,
because planagg.c's code for fixing up equivalence classes after making the
index-optimized MIN/MAX transformation wasn't prepared to find child-table
versions of the aggregate expression.  The least ugly fix seems to be
to add an option to mutate_eclass_expressions() to skip child-table
equivalence class members, which aren't used anymore at this stage of
planning so it's not really necessary to fix them.  Since child members
are ignored in many cases already, it seems plausible for
mutate_eclass_expressions() to have an option to ignore them too.

Per bug #7703 from Maxim Boguk.

Back-patch to 9.1.  Although the same code exists before that, it cannot
encounter child-table aggregates AFAICS, because the index optimization
transformation cannot succeed on inheritance trees before 9.1 (for lack
of MergeAppend).
2012-11-26 12:57:58 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas 24c19e6bf9 Avoid bogus "out-of-sequence timeline ID" errors in standby-mode.
When startup process opens a WAL segment after replaying part of it, it
validates the first page on the WAL segment, even though the page it's
really interested in later in the file. As part of the validation, it checks
that the TLI on the page header is >= the TLI it saw on the last page it
read. If the segment contains a timeline switch, and we have already
replayed it, and then re-open the WAL segment (because of streaming
replication got disconnected and reconnected, for example), the TLI check
will fail when the first page is validated. Fix that by relaxing the TLI
check when re-opening a WAL segment.

Backpatch to 9.0. Earlier versions had the same code, but before standby
mode was introduced in 9.0, recovery never tried to re-read a segment after
partially replaying it.

Reported by Amit Kapila, while testing a new feature.
2012-11-22 11:44:44 +02:00
Tom Lane 27b2c6a1ef Don't launch new child processes after we've been told to shut down.
Once we've received a shutdown signal (SIGINT or SIGTERM), we should not
launch any more child processes, even if we get signals requesting such.
The normal code path for spawning backends has always understood that,
but the postmaster's infrastructure for hot standby and autovacuum didn't
get the memo.  As reported by Hari Babu in bug #7643, this could lead to
failure to shut down at all in some cases, such as when SIGINT is received
just before the startup process sends PMSIGNAL_RECOVERY_STARTED: we'd
launch a bgwriter and checkpointer, and then those processes would have no
idea that they ought to quit.  Similarly, launching a new autovacuum worker
would result in waiting till it finished before shutting down.

Also, switch the order of the code blocks in reaper() that detect startup
process crash versus shutdown termination.  Once we've sent it a signal,
we should not consider that exit(1) is surprising.  This is just a cosmetic
fix since shutdown occurs correctly anyway, but better not to log a phony
complaint about startup process crash.

Back-patch to 9.0.  Some parts of this might be applicable before that,
but given the lack of prior complaints I'm not going to worry too much
about older branches.
2012-11-21 15:19:30 -05:00