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Peter Geoghegan authored
Holding just a buffer pin (with no buffer lock) on an nbtree buffer/page provides very weak guarantees, especially compared to heapam, where it's often safe to read a page while only holding a buffer pin. This commit has Valgrind enforce the following rule: it is never okay to access an nbtree buffer without holding both a pin and a lock on the buffer. A draft version of this patch detected questionable code that was cleaned up by commits fa7ff642 and 7154aa16. The code in question used to access an nbtree buffer page's special/opaque area with no buffer lock (only a buffer pin). This practice (which isn't obviously unsafe) is hereby formally disallowed in nbtree. There doesn't seem to be any reason to allow it, and banning it keeps things simple for Valgrind. The new checks are implemented by adding custom nbtree client requests (located in LockBuffer() wrapper functions); these requests are "superimposed" on top of the generic bufmgr.c Valgrind client requests added by commit 1e0dfd16. No custom resource management cleanup code is needed to undo the effects of marking buffers as non-accessible under this scheme. Author: Peter Geoghegan Reviewed-By: Anastasia Lubennikova, Georgios Kokolatos Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WzkLgyN3zBvRZ1pkNJThC=xi_0gpWRUb_45eexLH1+k2_Q@mail.gmail.com
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