the checkpoint in immediate or lazy mode. This is to address complaints
that pg_start_backup() takes a long time even when there's no need to minimize
its I/O consumption.
alias for array_length(v,1). The efficiency gain here is doubtless
negligible --- what I'm interested in is making sure that if we have
second thoughts about the definition, we will not have to force a
post-beta initdb to change the implementation.
of discovery, rather than reverse order. This doesn't matter functionally
(I suppose the previous coding dates from the time when lcons was markedly
cheaper than lappend). However now that EXPLAIN is labeling subplans with
IDs that are based on order of creation, this may help produce a slightly
less surprising printout.
are individually labeled, rather than just grouped under an "InitPlan"
or "SubPlan" heading. This in turn makes it possible for decompilation of
a subplan reference to usefully identify which subplan it's referencing.
I also made InitPlans identify which parameter symbol(s) they compute,
so that references to those parameters elsewhere in the plan tree can
be connected to the initplan that will be executed. Per a gripe from
Robert Haas about EXPLAIN output of a WITH query being inadequate,
plus some longstanding pet peeves of my own.
are using our own ports of getopt or getopt_long, those will define
the variable for themselves; and if not, we don't need these, because
we never touch the variable anyway.
provides optreset. Current mastodon results prove that in fact it
does not; it was only because getopt.c defined the variable anyway
that things failed to fall over.
of adding optional namespace and action fields to DefElem. Having three
node types that do essentially the same thing bloats the code and leads
to errors of confusion, such as in yesterday's bug report from Khee Chin.
when we are waiting for old snapshots to go away during a concurrent index
build. In particular, this rule lets us avoid waiting for
idle-in-transaction sessions.
This logic could be improved further if we had some way to wake up when
the session we are currently waiting for goes idle-in-transaction. However
that would be a significantly more complex/invasive patch, so it'll have to
wait for some other day.
Simon Riggs, with some improvements by Tom.
interval_eq() considers equal. I'm not sure how that fundamental requirement
escaped us through multiple revisions of this hash function, but there it is;
it's been wrong since interval_hash was first written for PG 7.1.
Per bug #4748 from Roman Kononov.
Backpatch to all supported releases.
This patch changes the contents of hash indexes for interval columns. That's
no particular problem for PG 8.4, since we've broken on-disk compatibility
of hash indexes already; but it will require a migration warning note in
the next minor releases of all existing branches: "if you have any hash
indexes on columns of type interval, REINDEX them after updating".
To implement this without almost duplicating the reloption table, treat
relopt_kind as a bitmask instead of an integer value. This decreases the
range of allowed values, but it's not clear that there's need for that much
values anyway.
This patch also makes heap_reloptions explicitly a no-op for relation kinds
other than heap and TOAST tables.
Patch by ITAGAKI Takahiro with minor edits from me. (In particular I removed
the bit about adding relation kind to an error message, which I intend to
commit separately.)
Windows without that, but we shouldn't put bad examples where people might
copy them. Also, reformat slightly to improve the odds that pgindent
won't go nuts on this.
try to protect an already-existing buffer from being evicted. This was
left as an open issue when the posix_fadvise patch was committed. I'm
not sure there's any evidence to justify more work in this area, but we
should have some record about it in the source code.
for its arguments. Also add a regression test, since someone apparently
changed every single plpython test case to use only named parameters; else
we'd have noticed this sooner.
Euler Taveira de Oliveira, per a report from Alvaro
This method will not catch all different ways since the locale
handling in NTFS doesn't provide an easy way to do that, but it
will hopefully solve the most common cases causing startup
problems when the backend is found in the system PATH.
Attempts to fix bug #4694.
for simple Var targetlist entries all the time, even when there are other
entries that are not simple Vars. Also, ensure that we prefetch attributes
(with slot_getsomeattrs) for all Vars in the targetlist, even those buried
within expressions. In combination these changes seem to significantly
reduce the runtime for cases where tlists are mostly but not exclusively
Vars. Per my proposal of yesterday.
conversion functions. This allows transaction rollback to revert to a
previous client_encoding setting without doing fresh catalog lookups.
I believe that this explains and fixes the recent report of "failed to commit
client_encoding" failures.
This bug is present in 8.3.x, but it doesn't seem prudent to back-patch
the fix, at least not till it's had some time for field testing in HEAD.
In passing, remove SetDefaultClientEncoding(), which was used nowhere.
we failed to assign, even in "can't happen" cases. Motivated by wondering
what's going on in a recent trouble report where "failed to commit" did
happen.
casting effort whenever the input value was NULL. However this prevents
application of not-null domain constraints in the cases that use this
function, as illustrated in bug #4741. Since this function isn't meant
for use in performance-critical paths anyway, this certainly seems like
another case of "premature optimization is the root of all evil".
Back-patch as far as 8.2; older versions made no effort to enforce
domain constraints here anyway.
temp relations; this is no more expensive than before, now that we have
pg_class.relistemp. Insert tests into bufmgr.c to prevent attempting
to fetch pages from nonlocal temp relations. This provides a low-level
defense against bugs-of-omission allowing temp pages to be loaded into shared
buffers, as in the contrib/pgstattuple problem reported by Stuart Bishop.
While at it, tweak a bunch of places to use new relcache tests (instead of
expensive probes into pg_namespace) to detect local or nonlocal temp tables.
relations (including a temp table's indexes and toast table/index), and
false for normal relations. For ease of checking, this commit just adds
the column and fills it correctly --- revising the relation access machinery
to use it will come separately.
at the same instant as a new backend is spawned. Since CountActiveBackends()
doesn't hold ProcArrayLock, it needs to be prepared for the case that a
pointer at the end of the proc array is still NULL even though numProcs says
it should be valid, since it doesn't hold ProcArrayLock. Backpatch to 8.1.
8.0 and earlier had this right, but it was broken in the split of PGPROC and
sinval shared memory arrays.
Per report and proposal by Marko Kreen.
TupleTableSlots. We have functions for retrieving a minimal tuple from a slot
after storing a regular tuple in it, or vice versa; but these were implemented
by converting the internal storage from one format to the other. The problem
with that is it invalidates any pass-by-reference Datums that were already
fetched from the slot, since they'll be pointing into the just-freed version
of the tuple. The known problem cases involve fetching both a whole-row
variable and a pass-by-reference value from a slot that is fed from a
tuplestore or tuplesort object. The added regression tests illustrate some
simple cases, but there may be other failure scenarios traceable to the same
bug. Note that the added tests probably only fail on unpatched code if it's
built with --enable-cassert; otherwise the bug leads to fetching from freed
memory, which will not have been overwritten without additional conditions.
Fix by allowing a slot to contain both formats simultaneously; which turns out
not to complicate the logic much at all, if anything it seems less contorted
than before.
Back-patch to 8.2, where minimal tuples were introduced.
mode while callers hold pointers to in-memory tuples. I reported this for
the case of nodeWindowAgg's primary scan tuple, but inspection of the code
shows that all of the calls in nodeWindowAgg and nodeCtescan are at risk.
For the moment, fix it with a rather brute-force approach of copying
whenever one of the at-risk callers requests a tuple. Later we might
think of some sort of reference-count approach to reduce tuple copying.
In the backend, I changed only a handful of exemplary or important-looking
instances to make use of the plural support; there is probably more work
there. For the rest of the source, this should cover all relevant cases.
"physical tlist" optimization on the outer relation (ie, force a projection
step to occur in its scan). This avoids storing useless column values when
the outer relation's tuples are written to temporary batch files.
Modified version of a patch by Michael Henderson and Ramon Lawrence.
method to pass extra data to the consistent() and comparePartial() methods.
This is the core infrastructure needed to support the soon-to-appear
contrib/btree_gin module. The APIs are still upward compatible with the
definitions used in 8.3 and before, although *not* with the previous 8.4devel
function definitions.
catversion bump for changes in pg_proc entries (although these are just
cosmetic, since GIN doesn't actually look at the function signature before
calling it...)
Teodor Sigaev and Oleg Bartunov
them from degrading badly when the input is sorted or nearly so. In this
scenario the tree is unbalanced to the point of becoming a mere linked list,
so insertions become O(N^2). The easiest and most safely back-patchable
solution is to stop growing the tree sooner, ie limit the growth of N. We
might later consider a rebalancing tree algorithm, but it's not clear that
the benefit would be worth the cost and complexity. Per report from Sergey
Burladyan and an earlier complaint from Heikki.
Back-patch to 8.2; older versions didn't have GIN indexes.
multiple index entries in a holding area before adding them to the main index
structure. This helps because bulk insert is (usually) significantly faster
than retail insert for GIN.
This patch also removes GIN support for amgettuple-style index scans. The
API defined for amgettuple is difficult to support with fastupdate, and
the previously committed partial-match feature didn't really work with
it either. We might eventually figure a way to put back amgettuple
support, but it won't happen for 8.4.
catversion bumped because of change in GIN's pg_am entry, and because
the format of GIN indexes changed on-disk (there's a metapage now,
and possibly a pending list).
Teodor Sigaev
probes --- the BUFFER_READ_DONE probe provides the same information and more
besides. Expand the LOCK_WAIT_START/DONE probe arguments so that there's
actually some chance of telling what is being waited for. Update and
clean up the documentation.
DTrace probes, so that ordinary reads can be distinguished from relation
extension operations. Move buffer_read_start probe to before the
smgrnblocks() call that's needed in the isExtend case, since really that step
should be charged as part of the time needed for the extension operation.
(This makes it slightly harder to match the read_start with the associated
read_done, since now you can't match them on blockNumber, but it should still
be possible since isExtend operations on the same relation can never be
interleaved.) Per recent discussion.
In passing, add the page identity (forkNum/blockNum) to the parameters of the
buffer_flush_start/buffer_flush_done probes, which were unaccountably lacking
the info.
is still available, but you must now write the long equivalent --inserts
or --column-inserts. This change is made to eliminate confusion with the
use of -d to specify a database name in most other Postgres client programs.
Original patch by Greg Mullane, modified per subsequent discussion.
noise words for the last twelve years, for compatibility with Berkeley-era
output formatting of the special INVALID values for those datatypes.
Considering that the datatypes themselves have been deprecated for awhile,
this is taking backwards compatibility a little far. Per gripe from Josh
Berkus.
distribution, by creating a special fast path for the (first few) most common
values of the outer relation. Tuples having hashvalues matching the MCVs
are effectively forced to be in the first batch, so that we never write
them out to the batch temp files.
Bryce Cutt and Ramon Lawrence, with some editorialization by me.
the cause of the "could not write to log file: Bad file descriptor"
errors reported at
http://archives.postgresql.org//pgsql-general/2008-06/msg00193.php
Backpatch to 8.3, the race condition was introduced by the CSV logging
patch.
Analysis and patch by Gurjeet Singh.
to date, as per bug #4702 and subsequent discussion. In particular, make it
work for years specified using AD/BC or CC fields, and fix the test for "no
year specified" so that it doesn't trigger inappropriately for 1 BC (which it
was doing even in code paths that had nothing to do with to_timestamp). I
also did some minor code beautification in the non-ISO-day-number code path.
This area has been busted all along, but because the code has been rewritten
repeatedly, it would be considerable trouble to back-patch. It's such a
corner case that it doesn't seem worth the effort.
make it include the time for the possible smgropen() call, but that
results in a null pointer dereference :-(.
An alternative solution would be to fetch the buffer tag instead of
looking at *reln, but I'll just put it back as it was for the moment.
BTW, this indicates that DTrace probes evaluate their arguments even
when nominally inactive. What was that about "zero cost", again?
format codes are misapplied to a numeric argument. (The code still produces
a pretty bogus error message in such cases, but I'll settle for stopping the
crash for now.) Per bug #4700 from Sergey Burladyan.
Problem exists in all supported branches, so patch all the way back.
In HEAD, also clean up some ugly coding in the nearby cache management
code.
some bufmgr probes, take out redundant and memory-leak-inducing path arguments
to smgr__md__read__done and smgr__md__write__done, fix bogus attempt to
recalculate space used in sort__done, clean up formatting in places where
I'm not sure pgindent will do a nice job by itself.
are not an alphabetic character although they are not word-breakers too.
So, treat them as part of word.
Per off-list discussion with Dibyendra Hyoju <dibyendra@gmail.com> and
and Bal Krishna Bal <balkrishna7bal@gmail.com> about Nepali language and
Devanagari alphabet.
running pg_restore, which might run in parallel).
Only reopen archive file when we really need to read from it, in parallel code. Otherwise,
close it immediately in a worker, if possible.
exact-match pattern (no wildcard) can be index-optimized in some cases where a
prefix-match pattern cannot; specifically, since the required index clause is
simple equality, it works for regular text/varchar indexes even when the
locale is not C. I'm not sure how often this case really comes up, but since
it requires hardly any additional work to handle it, we might as well get it
right. Motivated by a discussion on the JDBC list.
for consistency with the (relatively) recent addition of typmod to SubLink.
An example of why it's a good idea is to be seen in the recent "failed to
locate grouping columns" bug, which wouldn't have happened if a SubPlan
exposed the same typmod info as the SubLink it was derived from.
This could be back-patched, since it doesn't affect any on-disk data format,
but for the moment it doesn't seem necessary to do so.
by the planning process. This prevents the "failed to locate grouping columns"
error recently reported by Dickson Guedes. That happens because planning
replaces SubLinks by SubPlans in the subquery's targetlist, and exprTypmod()
is smarter about the former than the latter, causing the apparent type of
the subquery's output columns to change. This seems to be a deficiency we
should fix in exprTypmod(), but that will be a much more invasive patch
with possible side-effects elsewhere, so I'll do that only in HEAD.
Back-patch to 8.3. Arguably the lack of a copying step is broken/dangerous
all the way back, but in the absence of known problems I'll refrain from
making the older branches pay the extra cost. (The reason this particular
symptom didn't appear before is that exprTypmod() wasn't smart about SubLinks
either, until 8.3.)
kwlist.h, to avoid having to link the backend object file into other programs
like pg_dump. We can now simply symlink a single source file from the backend
(kwlookup.c, containing the shared routine ScanKeywordLookup) and compile it
locally, which is a lot cleaner.
amgettuple or only implement amgetbitmap, instead of the former assumption
that every AM supports both APIs. Extracted with minor editorialization
from Teodor's fast-GIN-insert patch; whatever becomes of that, this seems
like a simple and reasonable generalization of the index AM interface spec.
attribute numbering. Also, a parent whole-row reference should not require
select privilege on child columns that aren't inherited from the parent.
Problem diagnosed by KaiGai Kohei, though this isn't exactly his patch.
fail to provide the function itself. Not sure how we escaped testing anything
later than 7.3 on such cases, but they still exist, as per André Volpato's
report about AIX 5.3.
composite, enum and array types, as those are surely not binary-compatible
with anything else because of the embedded OIDs.
Inspired by bug report by Oleg Serov.
recovery: if background writer or pgstat process dies during recovery (or
any other child process, but those two are the only ones running), send
SIGQUIT to the startup process using correct pid.
As pointed out by ITAGAKI Takahiro, we split SInvalLock into two in 8.4,
so to keep the numbers of the rest of the locks unchanged from 8.3, we
don't need a placeholder.
encoding conversion of any elog/ereport message being sent to the frontend.
This generalizes a patch that I put in last October, which suppressed
translation of only specific messages known to be associated with recursive
can't-translate-the-message behavior. As shown in bug #4680, we need a more
general answer in order to have some hope of coping with broken encoding
conversion setups. This approach seems a good deal less klugy anyway.
Patch in all supported branches.
- pg_wchar and wchar_t could have different size, so char2wchar
doesn't call pg_mb2wchar_with_len to prevent out-of-bound
memory bug
- make char2wchar/wchar2char symmetric, now they should not be
called with C-locale because mbstowcs/wcstombs oftenly doesn't
work correct with C-locale.
- Text parser uses pg_mb2wchar_with_len directly in case of
C-locale and multibyte encoding
Per bug report by Hiroshi Inoue <inoue@tpf.co.jp> and
following discussion.
Backpatch up to 8.2 when multybyte support was implemented in tsearch.
fail on zero-length inputs. This isn't an issue in normal use because the
conversion infrastructure skips calling the converters for empty strings.
However a problem was created by yesterday's patch to check whether the
right conversion function is supplied in CREATE CONVERSION. The most
future-proof fix seems to be to make the converters safe for this corner case.
input lists before we grovel through the lists. This doesn't save much,
but testing shows that the case of both inputs NIL is common enough that
it saves something. And this is used enough to be a hotspot.
to 100ms (from 1000). This still seems to be comfortably larger than the
useful range of the parameter, and it should help discourage people from
picking uselessly large values. Tweak the documentation to recommend small
values, too. Per discussion of a couple weeks ago.
the ON clause of an outer join. Doing so is semantically correct but results
in de-optimizing queries that were structured to take advantage of the sublink
style of execution, as seen in recent complaint from Kevin Grittner. Since
the user can get the other behavior by reorganizing his query, having the
flattening happen automatically is just a convenience, and that doesn't
justify breaking existing applications. Eventually it would be nice to
re-enable this, but that seems to require a significantly different approach
to outer joins in the executor.
function for the specified source and destination encodings. We do that by
calling the function with an empty string. If it can't perform the requested
conversion, it will throw an error.
Backport to 7.4 - 8.3. Per bug report #4680 by Denis Afonin.
missing.
Since this touches most lines of the help output, also change the mix of
puts and printf calls to printf everywhere, for easier code editing and
reviewing.
to be syntactically part of a semijoin clause. For example given
WHERE EXISTS(SELECT ... WHERE upper.var = lower.var AND some-condition)
where some-condition is just a restriction on the lower relation, we can
use unique-ification on lower.var after having applied some-condition within
the scan on lower.
been broken for more than a month, so evidently it's not needed, at
least not for any configuration in the buildfarm. We can correct it
and replace it later if we find something that still needs it.
looks for a CaseTestExpr to figure out what the parser did, but it failed to
consider the possibility that an implicit coercion might be inserted above
the CaseTestExpr. This could result in an Assert failure in some cases
(but correct results if Asserts weren't enabled), or an "unexpected CASE WHEN
clause" error in other cases. Per report from Alan Li.
Back-patch to 8.1; problem doesn't exist before that because CASE was
implemented differently.
making pull_up_sublinks() construct a full-blown JoinExpr tree representation
of IN/EXISTS SubLinks that it is able to convert to semi or anti joins.
This makes pull_up_sublinks() a shade more complex, but the gain in semantic
clarity is worth it. I still have more to do in this area to address the
previously-discussed problems, but this commit in itself fixes at least one
bug in HEAD, as shown by added regression test case.
wrappers (similar to procedural languages). This way we don't need to retain
the nearly empty libraries, and we are more free in how to implement the
wrapper API in the future.
TABLE: if the command is executed by someone other than the table owner (eg,
a superuser) and the table has a toast table, the toast table's pg_type row
ends up with the wrong typowner, ie, the command issuer not the table owner.
This is quite harmless for most purposes, since no interesting permissions
checks consult the pg_type row. However, it could lead to unexpected failures
if one later tries to drop the role that issued the command (in 8.1 or 8.2),
or strange warnings from pg_dump afterwards (in 8.3 and up, which will allow
the DROP ROLE because we don't create a "redundant" owner dependency for table
rowtypes). Problem identified by Cott Lang.
Back-patch to 8.1. The problem is actually far older --- the CLUSTER variant
can be demonstrated in 7.0 --- but it's mostly cosmetic before 8.1 because we
didn't track ownership dependencies before 8.1. Also, fixing it before 8.1
would require changing the call signature of heap_create_with_catalog(), which
seems to carry a nontrivial risk of breaking add-on modules.
IS NULL condition is rendered redundant by detection of an antijoin.
If we know that a join is an antijoin, then *any* Var coming out of its
righthand side must be NULL, not only the joining column(s). Also,
it's still gonna be null after being passed up through higher joins,
whether they're outer joins or not. I was misled by a faulty analogy
to reduce_outer_joins() in the original coding. But consider
select * from a left join b on a.x = b.y where b.y is null and b.z is null;
The first IS NULL condition justifies deciding that the join is an antijoin
(if the = is strict) and then the second one is just plain redundant.
selectively mark up their arguments for translation, the Perl xsubpp tool
generates a bunch of additional Perl_croak calls that we cannot control,
so we'd be creating a confusing mix of translated and untranslated messages
of a similar kind. This is something that might deserve a more
comprehensive solution later.
Also remove _ from gettext triggers, because it wasn't used.
Use SPI.c instead of SPI.xs as source file for xgettext, because the .xs
format isn't really supported in xgettext.
unary minus operators. We weren't attempting to prevent minus zero anywhere
else; in view of our gradual trend to make the float datatypes more IEEE
standard compliant, we should allow minus zero here rather than disallow it
elsewhere.
We don't, however, expect that all platforms will produce minus zero, so
we need to adjust the one affected regression test to allow both results.
Per discussion of bug #4660.
(In passing, clean up a couple other minor infelicities in float.c.)
its usual buffer cleaning duties during archive recovery, and it's responsible
for performing restartpoints.
This requires some changes in postmaster. When the startup process has done
all the initialization and is ready to start WAL redo, it signals the
postmaster to launch the background writer. The postmaster is signaled again
when the point in recovery is reached where we know that the database is in
consistent state. Postmaster isn't interested in that at the moment, but
that's the point where we could let other backends in to perform read-only
queries. The postmaster is signaled third time when the recovery has ended,
so that postmaster knows that it's safe to start accepting connections.
The startup process now traps SIGTERM, and performs a "clean" shutdown. If
you do a fast shutdown during recovery, a shutdown restartpoint is performed,
like a shutdown checkpoint, and postmaster kills the processes cleanly. You
still have to continue the recovery at next startup, though.
Currently, the background writer is only launched during archive recovery.
We could launch it during crash recovery as well, but it seems better to keep
that codepath as simple as possible, for the sake of robustness. And it
couldn't do any restartpoints during crash recovery anyway, so it wouldn't be
that useful.
log_restartpoints is gone. Use log_checkpoints instead. This is yet to be
documented.
This whole operation is a pre-requisite for Hot Standby, but has some value of
its own whether the hot standby patch makes 8.4 or not.
Simon Riggs, with lots of modifications by me.
unique for a particular query, if the index predicate is satisfied. This
requires a bit of reordering of operations so that we check the predicates
before doing any selectivity estimates, but shouldn't really cause any
noticeable slowdown. Per a comment from Michal Politowski.
replace the old recursive-SQL-function implementation of _pg_keysequal()
with use of the built-in array containment operators, and change
table_constraints' UNION to UNION ALL. Per discussion with Octavio Alvarez.
initdb not forced since this doesn't affect results, but you'd need to
initdb or reload the information_schema to see the new definitions.
any LISTEN command. This is more important than it used to be because
DISCARD ALL invokes UNLISTEN. Connection-pooled applications making heavy
use of DISCARD ALL were seeing significant contention for pg_listener,
as reported by Matteo Beccati. It seems unlikely that clients using LISTEN
would use pooled connections, so this simple tweak seems sufficient,
especially since the pg_listener implementation is slated to go away soon
anyway.
Back-patch to 8.3, where DISCARD ALL was introduced.
instead of vice versa. Update the regression test expectations to support
that. In the plpgsql test, adjust the test data so that this isn't an
issue. In the char and varchar tests, add new expected files.
get rid of the OID column. This eliminates the problem discovered by Heikki
back in November that 8.4's suppression of "unnecessary" junk filtering in
INSERT/SELECT could lead to an Assert failure, or storing of oids into a table
that shouldn't have them if Asserts are off. While that particular problem
could have been solved in other ways, it seems likely to be just a forerunner
of things to come if we continue to allow tables to contain rows that disagree
with the pg_class.relhasoids setting. It's better to make this operation slow
than to sacrifice performance or risk bugs in more common code paths.
Also, add ALTER TABLE SET WITH OIDS to rewrite the table to add oids.
This was a bit more controversial, but in view of the very small amount of
extra code needed given the current ALTER TABLE infrastructure, it seems best
to eliminate the asymmetry in features.
on AIX with a non-gcc compiler. The previous coding would do this only if
CC was exactly "xlc"; which is a bad idea, as demonstrated by trouble report
from Mihai Criveti.
presumably designed, but didn't act). This allows running the temp install
tests in a non-C locale, thus exercising users' real environments better.
Document how to change locales for test runs.
per-table overrides of parameters.
This removes a whole class of problems related to misusing the catalog,
and perhaps more importantly, gives us pg_dump support for the parameters.
Based on a patch by Euler Taveira de Oliveira, heavily reworked by me.
from the source table. This could never happen anyway before 8.4 because
the executor invariably applied a "junk filter" to rows due to be inserted;
but now that we skip doing that when it's not necessary, the case can occur.
Problem noted 2008-11-27 by KaiGai Kohei, though I misunderstood what he
was on about at the time (the opacity of the patch he proposed didn't help).
keys when considering a semi or anti join. This requires estimating the
selectivity of the merge qual as though it were a regular inner join condition.
To allow caching both that and the real outer-join-aware selectivity, split
RestrictInfo.this_selec into two fields.
This fixes one of the problems reported by Kevin Grittner.
has_column_privilege and has_any_column_privilege SQL functions; fix the
information_schema views that are supposed to pay attention to column
privileges; adjust pg_stats to show stats for any column you have select
privilege on; and fix COPY to allow copying a subset of columns if the user
has suitable per-column privileges for all the columns.
To improve efficiency of some of the information_schema views, extend the
has_xxx_privilege functions to allow inquiring about the OR of a set of
privileges in just one call. This is just exposing capability that already
existed in the underlying aclcheck routines.
In passing, make the information_schema views report the owner's own
privileges as being grantable, since Postgres assumes this even when the grant
option bit is not set in the ACL. This is a longstanding oversight.
Also, make the new has_xxx_privilege functions for foreign data objects follow
the same coding conventions used by the older ones.
Stephen Frost and Tom Lane
the cheapest-total inner path as a new candidate while truncating the
sort key list, if it already matched the full sort key list. This is
too much of a corner case to be worth back-patching, since it's unusual
for the cheapest total path to be sorted, and anyway no real harm is
done (except in JOIN_SEMI/ANTI cases where cost_mergejoin is a bit
broken at the moment). But it wasn't behaving as intended, so fix it.
Noted while examining a test case from Kevin Grittner. This error doesn't
explain his issue, but it does explain why "set enable_seqscan = off"
seemed to reproduce it for me.
in the string, not just at the start. Per bug #4629 from Martin Blazek.
Back-patch to 8.2; prior versions don't have the problem, at least not in
the reported case, because they don't try to recognize INTO in non-SELECT
statements. (IOW, this is really fallout from the RETURNING patch.)
post-data step is run in a separate worker child (a thread on Windows, a child
process elsewhere) up to the concurrent number specified by the new pg_restore
command-line --multi-thread | -m switch.
Andrew Dunstan, with some editing by Tom Lane.
qualifier, and add support for this in pg_dump.
This allows TOAST tables to have user-defined fillfactor, and will also
enable us to move the autovacuum parameters to reloptions without taking
away the possibility of setting values for TOAST tables.
It's missing in older versions too, but it doesn't seem worth
back-porting. All negative are just harmlessly treated as "no limit", and
tightening the check might even brake an application that relies on it.
encoding conversion functions. These are not can't-happen cases because
it's possible to create a conversion with the wrong conversion function
for the specified encoding pair. That would lead to an Assert crash in
an Assert-enabled build, or incorrect conversion otherwise, neither of
which is desirable. This would be a DOS issue if production databases
were customarily built with asserts enabled, but fortunately that's not so.
Per an observation by Heikki.
Back-patch to all supported branches.
to the documented API value. The previous code got it right as
it's implemented, but accepted too much/too little compared to
the API documentation.
Per comment from Zdenek Kotala.
refactor the relcache code that used to do that. This allows other callers
(particularly autovacuum) to do the same without necessarily having to open
and lock a table.
pages were marked as clean as well. The idea is to avoid defeating OS
readahead by skipping a page here and there, and also makes it less likely
that we miss an opportunity to advance relfrozenxid, for the sake of only
a few skipped pages.
case that the command is rewritten into another type of command. The old
behavior to return the command tag of the last executed command was
pretty surprising. In PL/pgSQL, for example, it meant that if a command
was rewritten to a utility statement, FOUND wasn't set at all.
Also, if linked against other versions than the default MSVCRT library
(for example the MSVC build which links against MSVCRT80), also update
the cache in the default MSVCRT at the same time.
This should fix the issues with setting LC_MESSAGES on the MSVC build.
Original patch from Hiroshi Inoue and Hiroshi Saito, much rewritten
by me.
be used instead of the normal exclusive lock, and make WAL redo functions
responsible for calling RestoreBkpBlocks(). They know better what kind of a
lock they need.
At the moment, this just moves things around with no functional change, but
makes the hot standby patch that's under review cleaner.
CREATE/ALTER/DROP USER MAPPING are now allowed either by the server owner or
by a user with USAGE privileges for his own user name. This is more or less
what the SQL standard wants anyway (plus "implementation-defined")
Hide information_schema.user_mapping_options.option_value, unless the current
user is the one associated with the user mapping, or is the server owner and
the mapping is for PUBLIC, or is a superuser. This is to protect passwords.
Also, fix a bug in information_schema._pg_foreign_servers, which hid servers
using wrappers where the current user did not have privileges on the wrapper.
The correct behavior is to hide servers where the current user has no
privileges on the server.
showing system tables, make \dS pattern show system table details, and
have \dtS show system and _user_ tables, to be consistent with other \d*
commands.
equally (in glibc: et_EE, sv_SE, tk_TM). It turns out that this was
already taken care of previously by select_1.out, which I had forgotten to
update for an unrelated change. But might as well avoid the issue
altogether.
array types for composite types. Although pg_dump understood it wasn't
supposed to dump these array types as separate objects, it must include
them in the dependency ordering analysis, and it was improperly assigning them
the same relatively-high sort priority as regular types. This resulted in
effectively moving composite types and tables up to that same high priority,
which broke any ordering requirements that weren't explicitly enforced by
dependencies. In particular user-defined operator classes, which should come
out before tables, failed to do so. Per report from Brendan Jurd.
In passing, also fix an ill-considered decision to give text search objects
the same sort priority as functions and operators --- the sort result looks
a lot nicer if different object types are kept separate. The recent
foreign-data patch had copied that decision, making the sort ordering even
messier :-(
Replace leftover instances of _() by ecpg_gettext(), the latter being the
correct way to refer to the library's message catalog, instead of the one of
the program using the library.
Drop NLS support for ecpg_log(), which is a debugging instrument similar to
elog() in the backend.
We cannot support NLS in the ecpg compatlib, because that requires
ecpg_gettext, which is in ecpglib, which is not a dependency of compatlib. It
doesn't seem worthwhile to worry about this, since the only translatable
string is "out of memory", and gettext probably won't be able to do much
without memory either.
Adjust messages to project style.
rewritten into another kind of statement, for example if an INSERT is
rewritten into an UPDATE.
Back-patch to 8.3 and 8.2. For HEAD, Tom suggested inventing a new
SPI_OK_REWRITTEN return code, but that's not a backportable solution. I'll
do that as a separate patch, this patch will do as a stopgap measure for HEAD
too in the meanwhile.
It's not possible to do CREATE DATABASE inside a transaction, so previously
we just got a server error instead.
Backpatch to 8.2, which is where the -1 feature appeared.
now always use the system username as the default, and not try to pick it up
from the kerberos ticket.
This fixes the spurious error messages that show up on kerberos-enabled builds
when not actually using kerberos, and puts it in line with how other authentication
methods work.
fillRelOptions routine that stores the parsed values in the struct using a
table-based approach. Per Tom suggestion. Also remove the "continue"
in HANDLE_*_RELOPTION macros, which were useless and in spirit they were
assuming too much of how the macros were going to be used. (Note that these
macros are now unused, but the intention is to introduce some usage in a
future autovacuum patch, which is why they weren't completely removed.)
Also, do not call the string validation routine when not validating. It seems
less error-prone this way, per commentary on the amoptions SGML docs.
the same page we are nanoseconds away from reading for real. There should be
something left to do on the current page before we consider issuing a prefetch.
business with inheritance recursion: ALTER INDEX, ALTER SEQUENCE, ALTER
TRIGGER, ALTER VIEW. They would just silently ignore the ONLY.
ALTER TABLE has mixed behavior and cannot be dealt with this way because
of the resulting shift/reduce conflicts.
GUC variable effective_io_concurrency controls how many concurrent block
prefetch requests will be issued.
(The best way to handle this for plain index scans is still under debate,
so that part is not applied yet --- tgl)
Greg Stark
we can get some buildfarm feedback about whether that function is still
problematic. (Note that the planned async-preread patch will not really
prove anything one way or the other in buildfarm testing, since it will
be inactive with default GUC settings.)
bitmap. This is extracted from Greg Stark's posix_fadvise patch; it seems
worth committing separately, since it's potentially useful independently of
posix_fadvise.
empty query string is passed to PQexecParams and related functions. Its
handling of the NoData response to Describe messages was subtly incorrect.
Per my report of yesterday.
Although I consider this a bug, it's a behavioral change that might affect
applications, so not back-patched.
In passing fix a second issue in the same code: it didn't react well to an
out-of-memory failure while trying to make the PGresult object.
that are set up for execution with ExecPrepareExpr rather than going through
the full planner process. By introducing an explicit notion of "expression
planning", this patch also lays a bit of groundwork for maybe someday
allowing sub-selects in standalone expressions.
like a makefile with real dependencies.
Instead of overwriting the old po file, write the new one to .po.new. This is
less annoying and integrates better with the NLS web site.
Also, we can now merge languages that don't have a po file yet, by merging
against all other po files of that language, to pick up recurring translations
automatically. This previously only worked when a po file already existed.
the default. This setting enables constraint exclusion checks only for
appendrel members (ie, inheritance children and UNION ALL arms), which are
the cases in which constraint exclusion is most likely to be useful. Avoiding
the overhead for simple queries that are unlikely to benefit should bring
the cost down to the point where this is a reasonable default setting.
Per today's discussion.
OutputFunctionCall, and friends. This allows SPI-using functions to invoke
datatype I/O without concern for the possibility that a SPI-using function
will be called (which could be either the I/O function itself, or a function
used in a domain check constraint). It's a tad ugly, but not nearly as ugly
as what'd be needed to make this work via retail insertion of push/pop
operations in all the PLs.
This reverts my patch of 2007-01-30 that inserted some retail SPI_push/pop
calls into plpgsql; that approach only fixed plpgsql, and not any other PLs.
But the other PLs have the issue too, as illustrated by a recent gripe from
Christian Schröder.
Back-patch to 8.2, which is as far back as this solution will work. It's
also as far back as we need to worry about the domain-constraint case, since
earlier versions did not attempt to check domain constraints within datatype
input. I'm not aware of any old I/O functions that use SPI themselves, so
this should be sufficient for a back-patch.