Commit Graph

39907 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane 3bc6bc3ee2 Detect integer overflow while computing new array dimensions.
array_set_element() and related functions allow an array to be
enlarged by assigning to subscripts outside the current array bounds.
While these places were careful to check that the new bounds are
allowable, they neglected to consider the risk of integer overflow
in computing the new bounds.  In edge cases, we could compute new
bounds that are invalid but get past the subsequent checks,
allowing bad things to happen.  Memory stomps that are potentially
exploitable for arbitrary code execution are possible, and so is
disclosure of server memory.

To fix, perform the hazardous computations using overflow-detecting
arithmetic routines, which fortunately exist in all still-supported
branches.

The test cases added for this generate (after patching) errors that
mention the value of MaxArraySize, which is platform-dependent.
Rather than introduce multiple expected-files, use psql's VERBOSITY
parameter to suppress the printing of the message text.  v11 psql
lacks that parameter, so omit the tests in that branch.

Our thanks to Pedro Gallegos for reporting this problem.

Security: CVE-2023-5869
2023-11-06 10:56:43 -05:00
Tom Lane 4f4a422fbb Compute aggregate argument types correctly in transformAggregateCall().
transformAggregateCall() captures the datatypes of the aggregate's
arguments immediately to construct the Aggref.aggargtypes list.
This seems reasonable because the arguments have already been
transformed --- but there is an edge case where they haven't been.
Specifically, if we have an unknown-type literal in an ANY argument
position, nothing will have been done with it earlier.  But if we
also have DISTINCT, then addTargetToGroupList() converts the literal
to "text" type, resulting in the aggargtypes list not matching the
actual runtime type of the argument.  The end result is that the
aggregate tries to interpret a "text" value as being of type
"unknown", that is a zero-terminated C string.  If the text value
contains no zero bytes, this could result in disclosure of server
memory following the text literal value.

To fix, move the collection of the aggargtypes list to the end
of transformAggregateCall(), after DISTINCT has been handled.
This requires slightly more code, but not a great deal.

Our thanks to Jingzhou Fu for reporting this problem.

Security: CVE-2023-5868
2023-11-06 10:38:00 -05:00
Noah Misch fbc3719094 Set GUC "is_superuser" in all processes that set AuthenticatedUserId.
It was always false in single-user mode, in autovacuum workers, and in
background workers.  This had no specifically-identified security
consequences, but non-core code or future work might make it
security-relevant.  Back-patch to v11 (all supported versions).

Jelte Fennema-Nio.  Reported by Jelte Fennema-Nio.
2023-11-06 06:14:16 -08:00
Noah Misch 595c988c90 Ban role pg_signal_backend from more superuser backend types.
Documentation says it cannot signal "a backend owned by a superuser".
On the contrary, it could signal background workers, including the
logical replication launcher.  It could signal autovacuum workers and
the autovacuum launcher.  Block all that.  Signaling autovacuum workers
and those two launchers doesn't stall progress beyond what one could
achieve other ways.  If a cluster uses a non-core extension with a
background worker that does not auto-restart, this could create a denial
of service with respect to that background worker.  A background worker
with bugs in its code for responding to terminations or cancellations
could experience those bugs at a time the pg_signal_backend member
chooses.  Back-patch to v11 (all supported versions).

Reviewed by Jelte Fennema-Nio.  Reported by Hemanth Sandrana and
Mahendrakar Srinivasarao.

Security: CVE-2023-5870
2023-11-06 06:14:16 -08:00
Peter Eisentraut 8913ed121e Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: https://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 15fb3bd712561df7018c37a08ced1b71a05d4c31
2023-11-06 13:16:22 +01:00
Bruce Momjian a5bee67c36 doc: \copy can get data values \. and end-of-input confused
Reported-by: Svante Richter

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fcd57e4-8f23-4c3e-a5db-2571d09208e2@beta.fastmail.com

Backpatch-through: 11
2023-11-03 13:57:59 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut 04d2d605f3 pg_upgrade: Add missing newline to message
This was the backport of 2e3dc8c148, but in older releases the newline
must be in the message.
2023-11-03 12:07:11 -04:00
Tom Lane ae33659d42 Be more wary about NULL values for GUC string variables.
get_explain_guc_options() crashed if a string GUC marked GUC_EXPLAIN
has a NULL boot_val.  Nosing around found a couple of other places
that seemed insufficiently cautious about NULL string values, although
those are likely unreachable in practice.  Add some commentary
defining the expectations for NULL values of string variables,
in hopes of forestalling future additions of more such bugs.

Xing Guo, Aleksander Alekseev, Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CACpMh+AyDx5YUpPaAgzVwC1d8zfOL4JoD-uyFDnNSa1z0EsDQQ@mail.gmail.com
2023-11-02 11:47:33 -04:00
Michael Paquier 2001aab860 Fix 003_check_guc.pl when loading modules with custom GUCs
The test missed that custom GUCs need to be ignored from the list of
parameters that can exist in postgresql.conf.sample.  This caused the
test to fail on a server where such a module is loaded, when using
EXTRA_INSTALL and TEMP_CONFIG, for instance.

Author: Anton A. Melnikov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fc5509ce-5144-4dac-8d13-21793da44fc5@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch-through: 15
2023-11-02 12:38:28 +09:00
Bruce Momjian cbf6c07f4f doc: 1-byte varlena headers can be used for user PLAIN storage
This also updates some C comments.

Reported-by: suchithjn22@gmail.com

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/167336599095.2667301.15497893107226841625@wrigleys.postgresql.org

Author: Laurenz Albe (doc patch)

Backpatch-through: 11
2023-10-31 09:10:35 -04:00
Noah Misch e633e9b132 Diagnose !indisvalid in more SQL functions.
pgstatindex failed with ERRCODE_DATA_CORRUPTED, of the "can't-happen"
class XX.  The other functions succeeded on an empty index; they might
have malfunctioned if the failed index build left torn I/O or other
complex state.  Report an ERROR in statistics functions pgstatindex,
pgstatginindex, pgstathashindex, and pgstattuple.  Report DEBUG1 and
skip all index I/O in maintenance functions brin_desummarize_range,
brin_summarize_new_values, brin_summarize_range, and
gin_clean_pending_list.  Back-patch to v11 (all supported versions).

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20231001195309.a3@google.com
2023-10-30 14:46:08 -07:00
Tom Lane 592cb11fbe Fix intra-query memory leak when a SRF returns zero rows.
When looping around after finding that the set-returning function
returned zero rows for the current input tuple, ExecProjectSet
neglected to reset either of the two memory contexts it's
responsible for cleaning out.  Typically this wouldn't cause much
problem, because once the SRF does return at least one row, the
contexts would get reset on the next call.  However, if the SRF
returns no rows for many input tuples in succession, quite a lot
of memory could be transiently consumed.

To fix, make sure we reset both contexts while looping around.

Per bug #18172 from Sergei Kornilov.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18172-9b8c5fc1d676ded3@postgresql.org
2023-10-28 14:04:43 -04:00
Tom Lane 85b98a70bb Remove PHOT from our default timezone abbreviations list.
Debian recently decided to split out a bunch of "obsolete" timezone
names into a new tzdata-legacy package, which isn't installed by
default.  One of these zone names is Pacific/Enderbury, and that
breaks our regression tests (on --with-system-tzdata builds)
because our default timezone abbreviations list defines PHOT as
Pacific/Enderbury.

Pacific/Enderbury got renamed to Pacific/Kanton in tzdata 2021b,
so that in distros that still have this entry it's just a symlink
to Pacific/Kanton anyway.  So one answer would be to redefine PHOT
as Pacific/Kanton.  However, then things would fail if the
installed tzdata predates 2021b, which is recent enough that that
seems like a real problem.

Instead, let's just remove PHOT from the default list.  That seems
likely to affect nobody in the real world, because (a) it was an
abbreviation that the tzdb crew made up in the first place, with
no evidence of real-world usage, and (b) the total human population
of the Phoenix Islands is less than two dozen persons, per Wikipedia.
If anyone does use this zone abbreviation they can easily put it back
via a custom abbreviations file.

We'll keep PHOT in the Pacific.txt reference file, but change it
to Pacific/Kanton there, as that definition seems more likely to
be useful to future readers of that file.

Per report from Victor Wagner.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20231027152049.4b5c8044@wagner.wagner.home
2023-10-28 11:54:59 -04:00
Tomas Vondra 2fbb2fcb0c Fix minmax-multi distance for extreme interval values
When calculating distance for interval values, the code mostly mimicked
interval_mi, i.e. it built a new interval value for the difference.
That however does not work for sufficiently distant interval values,
when the difference overflows the interval range.

Instead, we can calculate the distance directly, without constructing
the intermediate (and unnecessary) interval value.

Backpatch to 14, where minmax-multi indexes were introduced.

Reported-by: Dean Rasheed
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat, Dean Rasheed
Backpatch-through: 14
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/eef0ea8c-4aaa-8d0d-027f-58b1f35dd170@enterprisedb.com
2023-10-27 18:38:05 +02:00
Tomas Vondra d04a9283b7 Fix minmax-multi on infinite date/timestamp values
Make sure that infinite values in date/timestamp columns are treated as
if in infinite distance. Infinite values should not be merged with other
values, leaving them as outliers. The code however returned distance 0
in this case, so that infinite values were merged first. While this does
not break the index (i.e. it still produces correct query results), it
may make it much less efficient.

We don't need explicit handling of infinite date/timestamp values when
calculating distances, because those values are represented as extreme
but regular values (e.g. INT64_MIN/MAX for the timestamp type).

We don't need an exact distance, just a value that is much larger than
distanced between regular values. With the added cast to double values,
we can simply subtract the values.

The regression test queries a value in the "gap" and checks the range
was properly eliminated by the BRIN index.

This only affects minmax-multi indexes on timestamp/date columns with
infinite values, which is not very common in practice. The affected
indexes may need to be rebuilt.

Backpatch to 14, where minmax-multi indexes were introduced.

Reported-by: Ashutosh Bapat
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat, Dean Rasheed
Backpatch-through: 14
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/eef0ea8c-4aaa-8d0d-027f-58b1f35dd170@enterprisedb.com
2023-10-27 18:38:02 +02:00
Tomas Vondra 088233f8db Fix calculation in brin_minmax_multi_distance_date
When calculating the distance between date values, make sure to subtract
them in the right order, i.e. (larger - smaller).

The distance is used to determine which values to merge, and is expected
to be a positive value. The code unfortunately did the subtraction in
the opposite order, i.e. (smaller - larger), thus producing negative
values and merging values the most distant values first.

The resulting index is correct (i.e. produces correct results), but may
be significantly less efficient. This affects all minmax-multi indexes
on date columns.

Backpatch to 14, where minmax-multi indexes were introduced.

Reported-by: Ashutosh Bapat
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat, Dean Rasheed
Backpatch-through: 14
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/eef0ea8c-4aaa-8d0d-027f-58b1f35dd170@enterprisedb.com
2023-10-27 18:37:59 +02:00
Tomas Vondra daa7b0d7ce Fix overflow when calculating timestamp distance in BRIN
When calculating distances for timestamp values for BRIN minmax-multi
indexes, we need to be careful about overflows for extreme values. If
the value overflows into a negative value, the index may be inefficient.

The new regression test checks this for the timestamp type by adding a
table with enough values to force range compaction/merging. The values
are close to min/max, which means a risk of overflow.

Fixed by converting the int64 values to double first, before calculating
the distance. This prevents the overflow. We may lose some precision, of
course, but that's good enough. In the worst case we build a slightly
less efficient index, but for large distances this won't matter.

This only affects minmax-multi indexes on timestamp columns, with ranges
containing values sufficiently distant to cause an overflow. That seems
like a fairly rare case in practice.

Backpatch to 14, where minmax-multi indexes were introduced.

Reported-by: Ashutosh Bapat
Reviewed-by: Ashutosh Bapat, Dean Rasheed
Backpatch-through: 14
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/eef0ea8c-4aaa-8d0d-027f-58b1f35dd170@enterprisedb.com
2023-10-27 18:37:56 +02:00
Tom Lane 1268e73781 Fix problems when a plain-inheritance parent table is excluded.
When an UPDATE/DELETE/MERGE's target table is an old-style
inheritance tree, it's possible for the parent to get excluded
from the plan while some children are not.  (I believe this is
only possible if we can prove that a CHECK ... NO INHERIT
constraint on the parent contradicts the query WHERE clause,
so it's a very unusual case.)  In such a case, ExecInitModifyTable
mistakenly concluded that the first surviving child is the target
table, leading to at least two bugs:

1. The wrong table's statement-level triggers would get fired.

2. In v16 and up, it was possible to fail with "invalid perminfoindex
0 in RTE with relid nnnn" due to the child RTE not having permissions
data included in the query plan.  This was hard to reproduce reliably
because it did not occur unless the update triggered some non-HOT
index updates.

In v14 and up, this is easy to fix by defining ModifyTable.rootRelation
to be the parent RTE in plain inheritance as well as partitioned cases.

While the wrong-triggers bug also appears in older branches, the
relevant code in both the planner and executor is quite a bit
different, so it would take a good deal of effort to develop and
test a suitable patch.  Given the lack of field complaints about the
trigger issue, I'll desist for now.  (Patching v11 for this seems
unwise anyway, given that it will have no more releases after next
month.)

Per bug #18147 from Hans Buschmann.

Amit Langote and Tom Lane

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18147-6fc796538913ee88@postgresql.org
2023-10-24 14:48:34 -04:00
Thomas Munro f72790b295 Fix min_dynamic_shared_memory on Windows.
When min_dynamic_shared_memory is set above 0, we try to find space in a
pre-allocated region of the main shared memory area instead of calling
dsm_impl_XXX() routines to allocate more.  The dsm_pin_segment() and
dsm_unpin_segment() routines had a bug: they called dsm_impl_XXX()
routines even for main region segments.  Nobody noticed before now
because those routines do nothing on Unix, but on Windows they'd fail
while attempting to duplicate an invalid Windows HANDLE.  Add the
missing gating.

Back-patch to 14, where commit 84b1c63a added this feature.  Fixes
pgsql-bugs bug #18165.

Reported-by: Maxime Boyer <maxime.boyer@cra-arc.gc.ca>
Tested-by: Alexander Lakhin <exclusion@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18165-bf4f525cea6e51de%40postgresql.org
2023-10-22 10:05:40 +13:00
Tom Lane 5463319acd Dodge a compiler bug affecting timetz_zone/timetz_izone.
This avoids a compiler bug occurring in AIX's xlc, even in pretty
late-model revisions.  Buildfarm testing has now confirmed that
only 64-bit xlc is affected.  Although we are contemplating
dropping support for xlc in v17, it's still supported in the
back branches, so we need this fix.

Back-patch of code changes from HEAD commit 19fa97731.
(The test cases were already back-patched, in 4a427b82c et al.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+hUKGK=DOC+hE-62FKfZy=Ybt5uLkrg3zCZD-jFykM-iPn8yw@mail.gmail.com
2023-10-20 13:40:15 -04:00
Tom Lane 985ac5ce29 Improve pglz_decompress's defenses against corrupt compressed data.
When processing a match tag, check to see if the claimed "off"
is more than the distance back to the output buffer start.
If it is, then the data is corrupt, and what's more we would
fetch from outside the buffer boundaries and potentially incur
a SIGSEGV.  (Although the odds of that seem relatively low, given
that "off" can't be more than 4K.)

Back-patch to v13; before that, this function wasn't really
trying to protect against bad data.

Report and fix by Flavien Guedez.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/01fc0593-e31e-463d-902c-dd43174acee2@oopacity.net
2023-10-18 20:43:17 -04:00
Thomas Munro b60e3ac760 jit: Changes for LLVM 17.
Changes required by https://llvm.org/docs/NewPassManager.html.

Back-patch to 12, leaving the final release of 11 unchanged, consistent
with earlier decision not to back-patch LLVM 16 support either.

Author: Dmitry Dolgov <9erthalion6@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2BWXznXCyTgCADd%3DHWkP9Qksa6chd7L%3DGCnZo-MBgg9Lg%40mail.gmail.com
2023-10-19 05:15:38 +13:00
Thomas Munro b2e0977886 jit: Supply LLVMGlobalGetValueType() for LLVM < 8.
Commit 37d5babb used this C API function while adding support for LLVM
16 and opaque pointers, but it's not available in LLVM 7 and older.
Provide it in our own llvmjit_wrap.cpp.  It just calls a C++ function
that pre-dates LLVM 3.9, our minimum target.

Back-patch to 12, like 37d5babb.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGKnLnJnWrkr%3D4mSGhE5FuTK55FY15uULR7%3Dzzc%3DwX4Nqw%40mail.gmail.com
2023-10-19 03:03:27 +13:00
Thomas Munro eed1feb3fe jit: Support opaque pointers in LLVM 16.
Remove use of LLVMGetElementType() and provide the type of all pointers
to LLVMBuildXXX() functions when emitting IR, as required by modern LLVM
versions[1].

 * For LLVM <= 14, we'll still use the old LLVMBuildXXX() functions.
 * For LLVM == 15, we'll continue to do the same, explicitly opting
   out of opaque pointer mode.
 * For LLVM >= 16, we'll use the new LLVMBuildXXX2() functions that take
   the extra type argument.

The difference is hidden behind some new IR emitting wrapper functions
l_load(), l_gep(), l_call() etc.  The change is mostly mechanical,
except that at each site the correct type had to be provided.

In some places we needed to do some extra work to get functions types,
including some new wrappers for C++ APIs that are not yet exposed by in
LLVM's C API, and some new "example" functions in llvmjit_types.c
because it's no longer possible to start from the function pointer type
and ask for the function type.

Back-patch to 12, because it's a little tricker in 11 and we agreed not
to put the latest LLVM support into the upcoming final release of 11.

[1] https://llvm.org/docs/OpaquePointers.html

Reviewed-by: Dmitry Dolgov <9erthalion6@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ronan Dunklau <ronan.dunklau@aiven.io>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGKNX_%3Df%2B1C4r06WETKTq0G4Z_7q4L4Fxn5WWpMycDj9Fw%40mail.gmail.com
2023-10-18 22:59:46 +13:00
Michael Paquier c4e561c1e0 pg_upgrade: Fix test name in 002_pg_upgrade.pl
Author: Hou Zhijie
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/TYAPR01MB5724A40D47E71F4717357EC694D5A@TYAPR01MB5724.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
Backpatch-through: 15
2023-10-18 18:23:50 +09:00
Tom Lane 29231dbd40 Back-patch test cases for timetz_zone/timetz_izone.
Per code coverage reports, we had zero regression test coverage
of these functions.  That came back to bite us, as apparently
that's allowed us to miss discovering misbehavior of this code
with AIX's xlc compiler.  Install relevant portions of the
test cases added in 97957fdba, 2f0472030, 19fa97731.

(Assuming the expected outcome that the xlc problem does appear
in back branches, a code fix will follow.)

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+hUKGK=DOC+hE-62FKfZy=Ybt5uLkrg3zCZD-jFykM-iPn8yw@mail.gmail.com
2023-10-17 13:55:45 -04:00
Nathan Bossart c9265ae80b Avoid calling proc_exit() in processes forked by system().
The SIGTERM handler for the startup process immediately calls
proc_exit() for the duration of the restore_command, i.e., a call
to system().  This system() call forks a new process to execute the
shell command, and this child process inherits the parent's signal
handlers.  If both the parent and child processes receive SIGTERM,
both will attempt to call proc_exit().  This can end badly.  For
example, both processes will try to remove themselves from the
PGPROC shared array.

To fix this problem, this commit adds a check in
StartupProcShutdownHandler() to see whether MyProcPid == getpid().
If they match, this is the parent process, and we can proc_exit()
like before.  If they do not match, this is a child process, and we
just emit a message to STDERR (in a signal safe manner) and
_exit(), thereby skipping any problematic exit callbacks.

This commit also adds checks in proc_exit(), ProcKill(), and
AuxiliaryProcKill() that verify they are not being called within
such child processes.

Suggested-by: Andres Freund
Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y9nGDSgIm83FHcad%40paquier.xyz
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20230223231503.GA743455%40nathanxps13
Backpatch-through: 11
2023-10-17 10:42:06 -05:00
Tom Lane 0d1a7cd14e Ensure we have a snapshot while dropping ON COMMIT DROP temp tables.
Dropping a temp table could entail TOAST table access to clean out
toasted catalog entries, such as large pg_constraint.conbin strings
for complex CHECK constraints.  If we did that via ON COMMIT DROP,
we triggered the assertion in init_toast_snapshot(), because
there was no provision for setting up a snapshot for the drop
actions.  Fix that.

(I assume here that the adjacent truncation actions for ON COMMIT
DELETE ROWS don't have a similar problem: it doesn't seem like
nontransactional truncations would need to touch any toasted fields.
If that proves wrong, we could refactor a bit to have the same
snapshot acquisition cover that too.)

The test case added here does not fail before v15, because that
assertion was added in 277692220 which was not back-patched.
However, the race condition the assertion warns of surely
exists further back, so back-patch to all supported branches.

Per report from Richard Guo.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMbWs4-x26=_QxxgdJyNbiCDzvtr2WV5ZDso_v-CukKEe6cBZw@mail.gmail.com
2023-10-16 14:06:15 -04:00
Nathan Bossart 882e522d64 Move extra code out of the Pre/PostRestoreCommand() section.
If SIGTERM is received within this section, the startup process
will immediately proc_exit() in the signal handler, so it is
inadvisable to include any more code than is required there (as
such code is unlikely to be compatible with doing proc_exit() in a
signal handler).  This commit moves the code recently added to this
section (see 1b06d7bac9 and 7fed801135) to outside of the section.
This ensures that the startup process only calls proc_exit() in its
SIGTERM handler for the duration of the system() call, which is how
this code worked from v8.4 to v14.

Reported-by: Michael Paquier, Thomas Munro
Analyzed-by: Andres Freund
Suggested-by: Tom Lane
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier, Robert Haas, Thomas Munro, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/Y9nGDSgIm83FHcad%40paquier.xyz
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20230223231503.GA743455%40nathanxps13
Backpatch-through: 15
2023-10-16 12:43:24 -05:00
Thomas Munro 5e39884d32 Try to handle torn reads of pg_control in frontend.
Some of our src/bin tools read the control file without any kind of
interlocking against concurrent writes from the server.  At least ext4
and ntfs can expose partially modified contents when you do that.

For now, we'll try to tolerate this by retrying up to 10 times if the
checksum doesn't match, until we get two reads in a row with the same
bad checksum.  This is not guaranteed to reach the right conclusion, but
it seems very likely to.  Thanks to Tom Lane for this suggestion.

Various ideas for interlocking or atomicity were considered too
complicated, unportable or expensive given the lack of field reports,
but remain open for future reconsideration.

Back-patch as far as 12.  It doesn't seem like a good idea to put a
heuristic change for a very rare problem into the final release of 11.

Reviewed-by: Anton A. Melnikov <aamelnikov@inbox.ru>
Reviewed-by: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221123014224.xisi44byq3cf5psi%40awork3.anarazel.de
2023-10-16 17:23:02 +13:00
Thomas Munro 606be8a35d Acquire ControlFileLock in relevant SQL functions.
Commit dc7d70ea added functions that read the control file, but didn't
acquire ControlFileLock.  With unlucky timing, file systems that have
weak interlocking like ext4 and ntfs could expose partially overwritten
contents, and the checksum would fail.

Back-patch to all supported releases.

Reviewed-by: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
Reviewed-by: Anton A. Melnikov <aamelnikov@inbox.ru>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20221123014224.xisi44byq3cf5psi%40awork3.anarazel.de
2023-10-16 10:45:18 +13:00
Noah Misch 782be0f712 Dissociate btequalimage() from interval_ops, ending its deduplication.
Under interval_ops, some equal values are distinguishable.  One such
pair is '24:00:00' and '1 day'.  With that being so, btequalimage()
breaches the documented contract for the "equalimage" btree support
function.  This can cause incorrect results from index-only scans.
Users should REINDEX any btree indexes having interval-type columns.
After updating, pg_amcheck will report an error for almost all such
indexes.  This fix makes interval_ops simply omit the support function,
like numeric_ops does.  Back-pack to v13, where btequalimage() first
appeared.  In back branches, for the benefit of old catalog content,
btequalimage() code will return false for type "interval".  Going
forward, back-branch initdb will include the catalog change.

Reviewed by Peter Geoghegan.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20231011013317.22.nmisch@google.com
2023-10-14 16:33:54 -07:00
Noah Misch 1102f4ece3 Don't spuriously report FD_SETSIZE exhaustion on Windows.
Starting on 2023-08-03, this intermittently terminated a "pgbench -C"
test in CI.  It could affect a high-client-count "pgbench" without "-C".
While parallel reindexdb and vacuumdb reach the same problematic check,
sufficient client count and/or connection turnover is less plausible for
them.  Given the lack of examples from the buildfarm or from manual
builds, reproducing this must entail rare operating system
configurations.  Also correct the associated error message, which was
wrong for non-Windows.  Back-patch to v12, where the pgbench check first
appeared.  While v11 vacuumdb has the problematic check, reaching it
with typical vacuumdb usage is implausible.

Reviewed by Thomas Munro.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+hUKG+JwvTNdcyJTriy9BbtzF1veSRQ=9M_ZKFn9_LqE7Kp7Q@mail.gmail.com
2023-10-14 15:54:49 -07:00
David Rowley 1e81d3e6e0 Fix runtime partition pruning for HASH partitioned tables
This could only affect HASH partitioned tables with at least 2 partition
key columns.

If partition pruning was delayed until execution and the query contained
an IS NULL qual on one of the partitioned keys, and some subsequent
partitioned key was being compared to a non-Const, then this could result
in a crash due to the incorrect keyno being used to calculate the
stateidx for the expression evaluation code.

Here we fix this by properly skipping partitioned keys which have a
nullkey set.  Effectively, this must be the same as what's going on
inside perform_pruning_base_step().

Sergei Glukhov also provided a patch, but that's not what's being used
here.

Reported-by: Sergei Glukhov
Reviewed-by: tender wang, Sergei Glukhov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d05b26fa-af54-27e1-f693-6c31590802fa@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch-through: 11, where runtime partition pruning was added.
2023-10-13 01:13:36 +13:00
David Rowley 916adc7c50 Fix incorrect step generation in HASH partition pruning
get_steps_using_prefix_recurse() incorrectly assumed that it could stop
recursive processing of the 'prefix' list when cur_keyno was one before
the step_lastkeyno.  Since hash partition pruning can prune using IS
NULL quals, and these IS NULL quals are not present in the 'prefix'
list, then that logic could cause more levels of recursion than what is
needed and lead to there being no more items in the 'prefix' list to
process.  This would manifest itself as a crash in some code that
expected the 'start' ListCell not to be NULL.

Here we adjust the logic so that instead of stopping recursion at 1 key
before the step_lastkeyno, we just look at the llast(prefix) item and
ensure we only recursively process up until just before whichever the last
key is.  This effectively allows keys to be missing in the 'prefix' list.

This change does mean that step_lastkeyno is no longer needed, so we
remove that from the static functions.  I also spent quite some time
reading this code and testing it to try to convince myself that there
are no other issues.  That resulted in the irresistible temptation of
rewriting some comments, many of which were just not true or inconcise.

Reported-by: Sergei Glukhov
Reviewed-by: Sergei Glukhov, tender wang
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2f09ce72-315e-2a33-589a-8519ada8df61@postgrespro.ru
Backpatch-through: 11, where partition pruning was introduced.
2023-10-12 19:52:05 +13:00
Jeff Davis b9bb02620d Fix bug in GenericXLogFinish().
Mark the buffers dirty before writing WAL.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25104133-7df8-cae3-b9a2-1c0aaa1c094a@iki.fi
Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas
Backpatch-through: 11
2023-10-10 11:02:45 -07:00
Etsuro Fujita bb91256305 Remove extra parenthesis from comment. 2023-10-06 18:30:03 +09:00
David Rowley 689af6db6c Fix memory leak in Memoize code
Ensure we switch to the per-tuple memory context to prevent any memory
leaks of detoasted Datums in MemoizeHash_hash() and MemoizeHash_equal().

Reported-by: Orlov Aleksej
Author: Orlov Aleksej, David Rowley
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/83281eed63c74e4f940317186372abfd%40cft.ru
Backpatch-through: 14, where Memoize was added
2023-10-05 20:31:51 +13:00
Michael Paquier 95e91da66c Avoid memory size overflow when allocating backend activity buffer
The code in charge of copying the contents of PgBackendStatus to local
memory could fail on memory allocation because of an overflow on the
amount of memory to use.  The overflow can happen when combining a high
value track_activity_query_size (max at 1MB) with a large
max_connections, when both multiplied get higher than INT32_MAX as both
parameters treated as signed integers.  This could for example trigger
with the following functions, all calling pgstat_read_current_status():
- pg_stat_get_backend_subxact()
- pg_stat_get_backend_idset()
- pg_stat_get_progress_info()
- pg_stat_get_activity()
- pg_stat_get_db_numbackends()

The change to use MemoryContextAllocHuge() has been introduced in
8d0ddccec6, so backpatch down to 12.

Author: Jakub Wartak
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKZiRmw8QSNVw2qNK-dznsatQqz+9DkCquxP0GHbbv1jMkGHMA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 12
2023-10-03 15:37:19 +09:00
Michael Paquier afc79591de Fail hard on out-of-memory failures in xlogreader.c
This commit changes the WAL reader routines so as a FATAL for the
backend or exit(FAILURE) for the frontend is triggered if an allocation
for a WAL record decode fails in walreader.c, rather than treating this
case as bogus data, which would be equivalent to the end of WAL.  The
key is to avoid palloc_extended(MCXT_ALLOC_NO_OOM) in walreader.c,
relying on plain palloc() calls.

The previous behavior could make WAL replay finish too early than it
should.  For example, crash recovery finishing earlier may corrupt
clusters because not all the WAL available locally was replayed to
ensure a consistent state.  Out-of-memory failures would show up
randomly depending on the memory pressure on the host, but one simple
case would be to generate a large record, then replay this record after
downsizing a host, as Ethan Mertz originally reported.

This relies on bae868caf2, as the WAL reader routines now do the
memory allocation required for a record only once its header has been
fully read and validated, making xl_tot_len trustable.  Making the WAL
reader react differently on out-of-memory or bogus record data would
require ABI changes, so this is the safest choice for stable branches.
Also, it is worth noting that 3f1ce97346 has been using a plain
palloc() in this code for some time now.

Thanks to Noah Misch and Thomas Munro for the discussion.

Like the other commit, backpatch down to 12, leaving out v11 that will
be EOL'd soon.  The behavior of considering a failed allocation as bogus
data comes originally from 0ffe11abd3, where the record length
retrieved from its header was not entirely trustable.

Reported-by: Ethan Mertz
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/ZRKKdI5-RRlta3aF@paquier.xyz
Backpatch-through: 12
2023-10-03 10:25:14 +09:00
Tom Lane 10e705bd24 Fix omission of column-level privileges in selective pg_restore.
In a selective restore, ACLs for a table should be dumped if the
table is selected to be dumped.  However, if the table has both
table-level and column-level ACLs, only the table-level ACL was
restored.  This happened because _tocEntryRequired assumed that
an ACL could have only one dependency (the one on its table),
and punted if there was more than one.  But since commit ea9125304,
column-level ACLs also depend on the table-level ACL if any, to
ensure correct ordering in parallel restores.  To fix, adjust the
logic in _tocEntryRequired to ignore dependencies on ACLs.

I extended a test case in 002_pg_dump.pl so that it purports to
test for this; but in fact the test passes even without the fix.
That's because this bug only manifests during a selective restore,
while the scenarios 002_pg_dump.pl tests include only selective dumps.
Perhaps somebody would like to extend the script so that it can test
scenarios including selective restore, but I'm not touching that.

Euler Taveira and Tom Lane, per report from Kong Man.
Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/DM4PR11MB73976902DBBA10B1D652F9498B06A@DM4PR11MB7397.namprd11.prod.outlook.com
2023-10-02 13:27:51 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 0684d1949f Flush WAL stats in bgwriter
bgwriter can write out WAL, but did not flush the WAL pgstat counters,
so the writes were not seen in pg_stat_wal.

Back-patch to v14, where pg_stat_wal was introduced.

Author: Nazir Bilal Yavuz
Reviewed-by: Matthias van de Meent, Kyotaro Horiguchi
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAN55FZ2FPYngovZstr%3D3w1KSEHe6toiZwrurbhspfkXe5UDocg%40mail.gmail.com
2023-10-02 12:49:29 +03:00
Tom Lane 55e188a15e Fix datalen calculation in tsvectorrecv().
After receiving position data for a lexeme, tsvectorrecv()
advanced its "datalen" value by (npos+1)*sizeof(WordEntry)
where the correct calculation is (npos+1)*sizeof(WordEntryPos).
This accidentally failed to render the constructed tsvector
invalid, but it did result in leaving some wasted space
approximately equal to the space consumed by the position data.
That could have several bad effects:

* Disk space is wasted if the received tsvector is stored into a
  table as-is.

* A legal tsvector could get rejected with "maximum total lexeme
  length exceeded" if the extra space pushes it over the MAXSTRPOS
  limit.

* In edge cases, the finished tsvector could be assigned a length
  larger than the allocated size of its palloc chunk, conceivably
  leading to SIGSEGV when the tsvector gets copied somewhere else.
  The odds of a field failure of this sort seem low, though valgrind
  testing could probably have found this.

While we're here, let's express the calculation as
"sizeof(uint16) + npos * sizeof(WordEntryPos)" to avoid the type
pun implicit in the "npos + 1" formulation.  It's not wrong
given that WordEntryPos had better be 2 bytes to avoid padding
problems, but it seems clearer this way.

Report and patch by Denis Erokhin.  Back-patch to all supported
versions.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/009801d9f2d9$f29730c0$d7c59240$@datagile.ru
2023-10-01 13:17:06 -04:00
Tom Lane 95fd5c89ff In COPY FROM, fail cleanly when unsupported encoding conversion is needed.
In recent releases, such cases fail with "cache lookup failed for
function 0" rather than complaining that the conversion function
doesn't exist as prior versions did.  Seems to be a consequence of
sloppy refactoring in commit f82de5c46.  Add the missing error check.

Per report from Pierre Fortin.  Back-patch to v14 where the
oversight crept in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20230929163739.3bea46e5.pfortin@pfortin.com
2023-10-01 12:09:26 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas 5ae2456648 Fix briefly showing old progress stats for ANALYZE on inherited tables.
ANALYZE on a table with inheritance children analyzes all the child
tables in a loop. When stepping to next child table, it updated the
child rel ID value in the command progress stats, but did not reset
the 'sample_blks_total' and 'sample_blks_scanned' counters.
acquire_sample_rows() updates 'sample_blks_total' as soon as the scan
starts and 'sample_blks_scanned' after processing the first block, but
until then, pg_stat_progress_analyze would display a bogus combination
of the new child table relid with old counter values from the
previously processed child table. Fix by resetting 'sample_blks_total'
and 'sample_blks_scanned' to zero at the same time that
'current_child_table_relid' is updated.

Backpatch to v13, where pg_stat_progress_analyze view was introduced.

Reported-by: Justin Pryzby
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20230122162345.GP13860%40telsasoft.com
2023-09-30 17:07:32 +03:00
Dean Rasheed 3c1a1af91d Fix EvalPlanQual rechecking during MERGE.
Under some circumstances, concurrent MERGE operations could lead to
inconsistent results, that varied according the plan chosen. This was
caused by a lack of rowmarks on the source relation, which meant that
EvalPlanQual rechecking was not guaranteed to return the same source
tuples when re-running the join query.

Fix by ensuring that preprocess_rowmarks() sets up PlanRowMarks for
all non-target relations used in MERGE, in the same way that it does
for UPDATE and DELETE.

Per bug #18103. Back-patch to v15, where MERGE was introduced.

Dean Rasheed, reviewed by Richard Guo.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18103-c4386baab8e355e3%40postgresql.org
2023-09-30 10:55:24 +01:00
Tom Lane ef595bf744 Remove environment sensitivity in pl/tcl regression test.
Add "-gmt 1" to our test invocations of the Tcl "clock" command,
so that they do not consult the timezone environment.  While it
doesn't really matter which timezone is used here, it does
matter that the command not fall over entirely.  We've now
discovered that at least on FreeBSD, "clock scan" will fail if
/etc/localtime is missing.  It seems worth making the test
insensitive to that.

Per Tomas Vondras' buildfarm animal dikkop.  Thanks to
Thomas Munro for the diagnosis.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/316d304a-1dcd-cea1-3d6c-27f794727a06@enterprisedb.com
2023-09-29 20:20:57 -04:00
Tom Lane be3398ea15 Suppress macOS warnings about duplicate libraries in link commands.
As of Xcode 15 (macOS Sonoma), the linker complains about duplicate
references to the same library.  We see warnings about libpgport and
libpgcommon being duplicated in many client executables.  This is a
consequence of the hack introduced in commit 6b7ef076b to list
libpgport before libpq while not removing it from $(LIBS).
(Commit 8396447cd later applied the same rule to libpgcommon.)

The concern in 6b7ef076b was to ensure that the client executable
wouldn't unintentionally depend on pgport functions from libpq.
That concern is obsolete on any platform for which we can do symbol
export control, because if we can then the pgport functions in libpq
won't be exposed anyway.  Hence, we can fix this problem by just
removing libpgport and libpgcommon from $(libpq_pgport), and letting
clients depend on the occurrences in $(LIBS).

In the back branches, do that only on macOS (which we know has
symbol export control).  In HEAD, let's be more aggressive and
remove the extra libraries everywhere.  The only still-supported
platforms that lack export control are MinGW/Cygwin, and it
doesn't seem worth sweating over ABI stability details for those
(or if somebody does care, it'd probably be possible to perform
symbol export control for those too).  As well as being simpler,
this might give some microscopic improvement in build time.

The meson build system is not changed here, as it doesn't have
this particular disease, though it does have some related issues
that we'll fix separately.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/467042.1695766998@sss.pgh.pa.us
2023-09-29 14:07:30 -04:00
Peter Geoghegan cac37c1a1b Fix btmarkpos/btrestrpos array key wraparound bug.
nbtree's mark/restore processing failed to correctly handle an edge case
involving array key advancement and related search-type scan key state.
Scans with ScalarArrayScalarArrayOpExpr quals requiring mark/restore
processing (for a merge join) could incorrectly conclude that an
affected array/scan key must not have advanced during the time between
marking and restoring the scan's position.

As a result of all this, array key handling within btrestrpos could skip
a required call to _bt_preprocess_keys().  This confusion allowed later
primitive index scans to overlook tuples matching the true current array
keys.  The scan's search-type scan keys would still have spurious values
corresponding to the final array element(s) -- not values matching the
first/now-current array element(s).

To fix, remember that "array key wraparound" has taken place during the
ongoing btrescan in a flag variable stored in the scan's state, and use
that information at the point where btrestrpos decides if another call
to _bt_preprocess_keys is required.

Oversight in commit 70bc5833, which taught nbtree to handle array keys
during mark/restore processing, but missed this subtlety.  That commit
was itself a bug fix for an issue in commit 9e8da0f7, which taught
nbtree to handle ScalarArrayOpExpr quals natively.

Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkgP3DDRJxw6DgjCxo-cu-DKrvjEv_ArkP2ctBJatDCYg@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 11- (all supported branches).
2023-09-28 16:29:32 -07:00
Tom Lane 59371f1aeb Fix checking of index expressions in CompareIndexInfo().
This code was sloppy about comparison of index columns that
are expressions.  It didn't reliably reject cases where one
index has an expression where the other has a plain column,
and it could index off the start of the attmap array, leading
to a Valgrind complaint (though an actual crash seems unlikely).

I'm not sure that the expression-vs-column sloppiness leads
to any visible problem in practice, because the subsequent
comparison of the two expression lists would reject cases
where the indexes have different numbers of expressions
overall.  Maybe we could falsely match indexes having the
same expressions in different column positions, but it'd
require unlucky contents of the word before the attmap array.
It's not too surprising that no problem has been reported
from the field.  Nonetheless, this code is clearly wrong.

Per bug #18135 from Alexander Lakhin.  Back-patch to all
supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18135-532f4a755e71e4d2@postgresql.org
2023-09-28 14:05:25 -04:00