postgresql/src/backend/storage/smgr
Thomas Munro 4eb2176318 Fix DROP {DATABASE,TABLESPACE} on Windows.
Previously, it was possible for DROP DATABASE, DROP TABLESPACE and ALTER
DATABASE SET TABLESPACE to fail because other backends still had file
handles open for dropped tables.  Windows won't allow a directory
containing unlinked-but-still-open files to be unlinked.  Tackle this
problem by forcing all backends to close all smgr fds.  No change for
Unix systems, which don't suffer from the problem, but the new code path
can be tested by Unix-based developers by defining
USE_BARRIER_SMGRRELEASE explicitly.

It's possible that PROCSIGNAL_BARRIER_SMGRRELEASE will have more
bug-fixing applications soon (under discussion).  Note that this is the
first user of the ProcSignalBarrier mechanism from commit 16a4e4aec.  It
could in principle be back-patched as far as 14, but since field
complaints are rare and ProcSignalBarrier hasn't been battle-tested,
that seems like a bad idea.  Fix in master only, where these failures
have started to show up in automated testing due to new tests.

Suggested-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Reviewed-by: Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+hUKGLdemy2gBm80kz20GTe6hNVwoErE8KwcJk6-U56oStjtg@mail.gmail.com
2022-02-12 10:21:23 +13:00
..
Makefile Split all OBJS style lines in makefiles into one-line-per-entry style. 2019-11-05 14:41:07 -08:00
README Drop the vestigial "smgr" type. 2019-03-07 15:44:04 +13:00
md.c Fix DROP {DATABASE,TABLESPACE} on Windows. 2022-02-12 10:21:23 +13:00
smgr.c Fix DROP {DATABASE,TABLESPACE} on Windows. 2022-02-12 10:21:23 +13:00

README

src/backend/storage/smgr/README

Storage Managers
================

In the original Berkeley Postgres system, there were several storage managers,
of which only the "magnetic disk" manager remains.  (At Berkeley there were
also managers for the Sony WORM optical disk jukebox and persistent main
memory, but these were never supported in any externally released Postgres,
nor in any version of PostgreSQL.)  The "magnetic disk" manager is itself
seriously misnamed, because actually it supports any kind of device for
which the operating system provides standard filesystem operations; which
these days is pretty much everything of interest.  However, we retain the
notion of a storage manager switch in case anyone ever wants to reintroduce
other kinds of storage managers.  Removing the switch layer would save
nothing noticeable anyway, since storage-access operations are surely far
more expensive than one extra layer of C function calls.

In Berkeley Postgres each relation was tagged with the ID of the storage
manager to use for it.  This is gone.  It would be probably more reasonable
to associate storage managers with tablespaces, should we ever re-introduce
multiple storage managers into the system catalogs.

The files in this directory, and their contents, are

    smgr.c	The storage manager switch dispatch code.  The routines in
		this file call the appropriate storage manager to do storage
		accesses requested by higher-level code.  smgr.c also manages
		the file handle cache (SMgrRelation table).

    md.c	The "magnetic disk" storage manager, which is really just
		an interface to the kernel's filesystem operations.

Note that md.c in turn relies on src/backend/storage/file/fd.c.


Relation Forks
==============

Since 8.4, a single smgr relation can be comprised of multiple physical
files, called relation forks. This allows storing additional metadata like
Free Space information in additional forks, which can be grown and truncated
independently of the main data file, while still treating it all as a single
physical relation in system catalogs.

It is assumed that the main fork, fork number 0 or MAIN_FORKNUM, always
exists. Fork numbers are assigned in src/include/common/relpath.h.
Functions in smgr.c and md.c take an extra fork number argument, in addition
to relfilenode and block number, to identify which relation fork you want to
access. Since most code wants to access the main fork, a shortcut version of
ReadBuffer that accesses MAIN_FORKNUM is provided in the buffer manager for
convenience.