- 06 Apr, 2016 8 commits
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Teodor Sigaev authored
It inserts a new value into an jsonb array at arbitrary position or a new key to jsonb object. Author: Dmitry Dolgov Reviewers: Petr Jelinek, Vitaly Burovoy, Andrew Dunstan
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Some object types have names that are only unique for one table. But for those we generally didn't put the table name into the dump TOC tag. So it was impossible to identify these objects if the same name was used for multiple tables. This affects policies, column defaults, constraints, triggers, and rules. Fix by adding the table name to the TOC tag, so that it now reads "$schema $table $object". Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
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Tom Lane authored
Getting annoyed at the amount of unrelated chatter I get from pgindent'ing Rowley's unique-joins patch. Re-indent all the files it touches.
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Simon Riggs authored
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Fujii Masao authored
Commit cee31f5f fixed this problem, but commit 989be081 accidentally reverted the fix. Thomas Munro
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Simon Riggs authored
Remove recent changes to logging XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS by request.
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Simon Riggs authored
API and mechanism to allow generic messages to be inserted into WAL that are intended to be read by logical decoding plugins. This commit adds an optional new callback to the logical decoding API. Messages are either text or bytea. Messages can be transactional, or not, and are identified by a prefix to allow multiple concurrent decoding plugins. (Not to be confused with Generic WAL records, which are intended to allow crash recovery of extensible objects.) Author: Petr Jelinek and Andres Freund Reviewers: Artur Zakirov, Tomas Vondra, Simon Riggs Discussion: 5685F999.6010202@2ndquadrant.com
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Fujii Masao authored
Previously synchronous replication offered only the ability to confirm that all changes made by a transaction had been transferred to at most one synchronous standby server. This commit extends synchronous replication so that it supports multiple synchronous standby servers. It enables users to consider one or more standby servers as synchronous, and increase the level of transaction durability by ensuring that transaction commits wait for replies from all of those synchronous standbys. Multiple synchronous standby servers are configured in synchronous_standby_names which is extended to support new syntax of 'num_sync ( standby_name [ , ... ] )', where num_sync specifies the number of synchronous standbys that transaction commits need to wait for replies from and standby_name is the name of a standby server. The syntax of 'standby_name [ , ... ]' which was used in 9.5 or before is also still supported. It's the same as new syntax with num_sync=1. This commit doesn't include "quorum commit" feature which was discussed in pgsql-hackers. Synchronous standbys are chosen based on their priorities. synchronous_standby_names determines the priority of each standby for being chosen as a synchronous standby. The standbys whose names appear earlier in the list are given higher priority and will be considered as synchronous. Other standby servers appearing later in this list represent potential synchronous standbys. The regression test for multiple synchronous standbys is not included in this commit. It should come later. Authors: Sawada Masahiko, Beena Emerson, Michael Paquier, Fujii Masao Reviewed-By: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Amit Kapila, Robert Haas, Simon Riggs, Amit Langote, Thomas Munro, Sameer Thakur, Suraj Kharage, Abhijit Menon-Sen, Rajeev Rastogi Many thanks to the various individuals who were involved in discussing and developing this feature.
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- 05 Apr, 2016 9 commits
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Alvaro Herrera authored
Commit b8a91d9d put the description of the new IF EXISTS clause in the wrong place -- move it where it belongs. Backpatch to 9.2.
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Alvaro Herrera authored
This introduces a new dependency type which marks an object as depending on an extension, such that if the extension is dropped, the object automatically goes away; and also, if the database is dumped, the object is included in the dump output. Currently the grammar supports this for indexes, triggers, materialized views and functions only, although the utility code is generic so adding support for more object types is a matter of touching the parser rules only. Author: Abhijit Menon-Sen Reviewed-by: Alexander Korotkov, Álvaro Herrera Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20160115062649.GA5068@toroid.org
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Robert Haas authored
has_parallel_hazard() was ignoring the proparallel markings for aggregates, which is no good. Fix that. There was no way to mark an aggregate as actually being parallel-safe, either, so add a PARALLEL option to CREATE AGGREGATE. Patch by me, reviewed by David Rowley.
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Robert Haas authored
Experimentation shows this only costs about 6kB, which seems well worth it given the major performance effects that can be caused by insufficient alignment, especially on larger systems. Discussion: 14166.1458924422@sss.pgh.pa.us
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Tom Lane authored
PL/Python failed if a PL/Python function was invoked recursively via SPI, since arguments are passed to the function in its global dictionary (a horrible decision that's far too ancient to undo) and it would delete those dictionary entries on function exit, leaving the outer recursion level(s) without any arguments. Not deleting them would be little better, since the outer levels would then see the innermost level's arguments. Since PL/Python uses ValuePerCall mode for evaluating set-returning functions, it's possible for multiple executions of the same SRF to be interleaved within a query. PL/Python failed in such a case, because it stored only one iterator per function, directly in the function's PLyProcedure struct. Moreover, one interleaved instance of the SRF would see argument values that should belong to another. Hence, invent code for saving and restoring the argument entries. To fix the recursion case, we only need to save at recursive entry and restore at recursive exit, so the overhead in non-recursive cases is negligible. To fix the SRF case, we have to save when suspending a SRF and restore when resuming it, which is potentially not negligible; but fortunately this is mostly a matter of manipulating Python object refcounts and should not involve much physical data copying. Also, store the Python iterator and saved argument values in a structure associated with the SRF call site rather than the function itself. This requires adding a memory context deletion callback to ensure that the SRF state is cleaned up if the calling query exits before running the SRF to completion. Without that we'd leak a refcount to the iterator object in such a case, resulting in session-lifespan memory leakage. (In the pre-existing code, there was no memory leak because there was only one iterator pointer, but what would happen is that the previous iterator would be resumed by the next query attempting to use the SRF. Hardly the semantics we want.) We can buy back some of whatever overhead we've added by getting rid of PLy_function_delete_args(), which seems a useless activity: there is no need to delete argument entries from the global dictionary on exit, since the next time anyone would see the global dict is on the next fresh call of the PL/Python function, at which time we'd overwrite those entries with new arg values anyway. Also clean up some really ugly coding in the SRF implementation, including such gems as returning directly out of a PG_TRY block. (The only reason that failed to crash hard was that all existing call sites immediately exited their own PG_TRY blocks, popping the dangling longjmp pointer before there was any chance of it being used.) In principle this is a bug fix; but it seems a bit too invasive relative to its value for a back-patch, and besides the fix depends on memory context callbacks so it could not go back further than 9.5 anyway. Alexey Grishchenko and Tom Lane
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Robert Haas authored
This lets us use parallel aggregate for a variety of useful cases that didn't work before, like sum(int8), sum(numeric), several versions of avg(), and various other functions. Add some regression tests, as well, testing the general sanity of these and future catalog entries. David Rowley, reviewed by Tomas Vondra, with a few further changes by me.
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Magnus Hagander authored
Previously non-exclusive backups had to be done using the replication protocol and pg_basebackup. With this commit it's now possible to make them using pg_start_backup/pg_stop_backup as well, as long as the backup program can maintain a persistent connection to the database. Doing this, backup_label and tablespace_map are returned as results from pg_stop_backup() instead of being written to the data directory. This makes the server safe from a crash during an ongoing backup, which can be a problem with exclusive backups. The old syntax of the functions remain and work exactly as before, but since the new syntax is safer this should eventually be deprecated and removed. Only reference documentation is included. The main section on backup still needs to be rewritten to cover this, but since that is already scheduled for a separate large rewrite, it's not included in this patch. Reviewed by David Steele and Amit Kapila
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Magnus Hagander authored
Etsuro Fujita
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Peter Eisentraut authored
found by Ian Barwick
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- 04 Apr, 2016 12 commits
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Tom Lane authored
As noted by Julian Schauder in bug #14063, the configuration-file parser doesn't support embedded newlines in string literals. While there might someday be a good reason to remove that restriction, there doesn't seem to be one right now. However, ALTER SYSTEM SET could accept strings containing newlines, since many of the variable-specific value-checking routines would just see a newline as whitespace. This led to writing a postgresql.auto.conf file that was broken and had to be removed manually. Pending a reason to work harder, just throw an error if someone tries this. In passing, fix several places in the ALTER SYSTEM logic that failed to provide an errcode() for an ereport(), and thus would falsely log the failure as an internal XX000 error. Back-patch to 9.4 where ALTER SYSTEM was introduced.
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Alvaro Herrera authored
This makes it easier to identify the source of a recovery problem in case of a bug or data corruption.
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Tom Lane authored
Alex Shulgin complained that the underlying strategy wasn't all that apparent, particularly not the fact that we intentionally have two code paths depending on whether we think the column has a limited set of possible values or not. Try to make it clearer.
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Tom Lane authored
On reflection, the pre-existing logic in ANALYZE is specifically meant to compare the frequency of a candidate MCV against the estimated frequency of a random distinct value across the whole table. The change to compare it against the average frequency of values actually seen in the sample doesn't seem very principled, and if anything it would make us less likely not more likely to consider a value an MCV. So revert that, but keep the aspect of considering only nonnull values, which definitely is correct. In passing, rename the local variables in these stanzas to "ndistinct_table", to avoid confusion with the "ndistinct" that appears at an outer scope in compute_scalar_stats.
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Alvaro Herrera authored
Reported by Peter Eisentraut to occur on 32bit systems
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Tom Lane authored
\gexec executes the just-entered query, like \g, but instead of printing the results it takes each field as a SQL command to send to the server. Computing a series of queries to be executed is a fairly common thing, but up to now you always had to resort to kluges like writing the queries to a file and then inputting the file. Now it can be done with no intermediate step. The implementation is fairly straightforward except for its interaction with FETCH_COUNT. ExecQueryUsingCursor isn't capable of being called recursively, and even if it were, its need to create a transaction block interferes unpleasantly with the desired behavior of \gexec after a failure of a generated query (i.e., that it can continue). Therefore, disable use of ExecQueryUsingCursor when doing the master \gexec query. We can still apply it to individual generated queries, however, and there might be some value in doing so. While testing this feature's interaction with single-step mode, I (tgl) was led to conclude that SendQuery needs to recognize SIGINT (cancel_pressed) as a negative response to the single-step prompt. Perhaps that's a back-patchable bug fix, but for now I just included it here. Corey Huinker, reviewed by Jim Nasby, Daniel Vérité, and myself
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Tom Lane authored
This elevel is useful for logging audit messages and similar information that should not be passed to the client. It's equivalent to LOG in terms of decisions about logging priority in the postmaster log, but messages with this elevel will never be sent to the client. In the current implementation, it's just an alias for the longstanding COMMERROR elevel (or more accurately, we've made COMMERROR an alias for this). At some point it might be interesting to allow a LOG_ONLY flag to be attached to any elevel, but that would be considerably more complicated, and it's not clear there's enough use-cases to justify the extra work. For now, let's just take the easy 90% solution. David Steele, reviewed by Fabien Coelho, Petr Jelínek, and myself
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Tom Lane authored
The first iteration of the signal-checking loop would compute sigmask(0) which expands to 1<<(-1) which is undefined behavior according to the C standard. The lack of field reports of trouble suggest that it evaluates to 0 on all existing Windows compilers, but that's hardly something to rely on. Since signal 0 isn't a queueable signal anyway, we can just make the loop iterate from 1 instead, and save a few cycles as well as avoiding the undefined behavior. In passing, avoid evaluating the volatile expression UNBLOCKED_SIGNAL_QUEUE twice in a row; there's no reason to waste cycles like that. Noted by Aleksander Alekseev, though this isn't his proposed fix. Back-patch to all supported branches.
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Teodor Sigaev authored
Michael Paquier
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Teodor Sigaev authored
Andreas Ulbrich
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Dean Rasheed authored
When adjusting the estimate for the number of distinct values from a rel in a grouped query to take into account the selectivity of the rel's restrictions, use a formula that is less likely to produce under-estimates. The old formula simply multiplied the number of distinct values in the rel by the restriction selectivity, which would be correct if the restrictions were fully correlated with the grouping expressions, but can produce significant under-estimates in cases where they are not well correlated. The new formula is based on the random selection probability, and so assumes that the restrictions are not correlated with the grouping expressions. This is guaranteed to produce larger estimates, and of course risks over-estimating in cases where the restrictions are correlated, but that has less severe consequences than under-estimating, which might lead to a HashAgg that consumes an excessive amount of memory. This could possibly be improved upon in the future by identifying correlated restrictions and using a hybrid of the old and new formulae. Author: Tomas Vondra, with some hacking be me Reviewed-by: Mark Dilger, Alexander Korotkov, Dean Rasheed and Tom Lane Discussion: http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/56CD0381.5060502@2ndquadrant.com
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Simon Riggs authored
If archive_timeout > 0 we should avoid logging XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS if idle. Bug 13685 reported by Laurence Rowe, investigated in detail by Michael Paquier, though this is not his proposed fix. 20151016203031.3019.72930@wrigleys.postgresql.org Simple non-invasive patch to allow later backpatch to 9.4 and 9.5
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- 03 Apr, 2016 6 commits
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Tom Lane authored
The restore() function assumed that the result of sprintf() with %e format would necessarily contain an 'e', which is false: what if the supplied number is an infinity or NaN? If that did happen, we'd get a null-pointer-dereference core dump. The case appears impossible currently, because seg_in() does not accept such values, and there are no seg-creating functions that would create one. But it seems unwise to rely on it never happening in future. Quite aside from that, the code was pretty ugly: it relied on modifying a static format string when it could use a "*" precision argument, and it used strtok() entirely gratuitously, and it stripped off trailing spaces by hand instead of just not asking for them to begin with. Coverity noticed the potential null pointer dereference (though I wonder why it didn't complain years ago, since this code is ancient). Since this is just code cleanup and forestalling a hypothetical future bug, there seems no need for back-patching.
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Tom Lane authored
The code was supposing that rd_amcache wouldn't disappear from under it during a scan; which is wrong. Copy the data out of the relcache rather than trying to reference it there.
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Tom Lane authored
Coverity complained about implicit sign-extension in the BloomPageGetFreeSpace macro, probably because sizeOfBloomTuple isn't wide enough for size calculations. No overflow is really possible as long as maxoff and sizeOfBloomTuple are small enough to represent a realistic situation, but it seems like a good idea to declare sizeOfBloomTuple as Size not int32. Add missing check on BloomPageAddItem() result, again from Coverity. Avoid core dump due to not allocating so->sign array when scan->numberOfKeys is zero. Also thanks to Coverity. Use FLEXIBLE_ARRAY_MEMBER rather than declaring an array as size 1 when it isn't necessarily. Very minor beautification of related code. Unfortunately, none of the Coverity-detected mistakes look like they could account for the remaining buildfarm unhappiness with this module. It's barely possible that the FLEXIBLE_ARRAY_MEMBER mistake does account for that, if it's enabling bogus compiler optimizations; but I'm not terribly optimistic. We probably still have bugs to find here.
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Simon Riggs authored
Replay of XLOG_BTREE_VACUUM during Hot Standby was previously thought to require complex interlocking that matched the requirements on the master. This required an O(N) operation that became a significant problem with large indexes, causing replication delays of seconds or in some cases minutes while the XLOG_BTREE_VACUUM was replayed. This commit skips the pin scan that was previously required, by observing in detail when and how it is safe to do so, with full documentation. The pin scan is skipped only in replay; the VACUUM code path on master is not touched here and WAL is identical. The current commit applies in all cases, effectively replacing commit 687f2cd7.
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Tom Lane authored
Often, upon getting an unexpected error in psql, one's first wish is that the verbosity setting had been higher; for example, to be able to see the schema-name field or the server code location info. Up to now the only way has been to adjust the VERBOSITY variable and repeat the failing query. That's a pain, and it doesn't work if the error isn't reproducible. This commit adds a psql feature that redisplays the most recent server error at full verbosity, without needing to make any variable changes or re-execute the failed command. We just need to hang onto the latest error PGresult in case the user executes \errverbose, and then apply libpq's new PQresultVerboseErrorMessage() function to it. This will consume some trivial amount of psql memory, but otherwise the cost when the feature isn't used should be negligible. Alex Shulgin, reviewed by Daniel Vérité, some improvements by me
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Tom Lane authored
Often, upon getting an unexpected error in psql, one's first wish is that the verbosity setting had been higher; for example, to be able to see the schema-name field or the server code location info. Up to now the only way has been to adjust the VERBOSITY variable and repeat the failing query. That's a pain, and it doesn't work if the error isn't reproducible. This commit adds support in libpq for regenerating the error message for an existing error PGresult at any desired verbosity level. This is almost just a matter of refactoring the existing code into a subroutine, but there is one bit of possibly-needed information that was not getting put into PGresults: the text of the last query sent to the server. We must add that string to the contents of an error PGresult. But we only need to save it if it might be used, which with the existing error-formatting code only happens if there is a PG_DIAG_STATEMENT_POSITION error field, which is probably pretty rare for errors in production situations. So really the overhead when the feature isn't used should be negligible. Alex Shulgin, reviewed by Daniel Vérité, some improvements by me
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- 02 Apr, 2016 5 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Per buildfarm member pademelon.
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Tom Lane authored
The inconsistency here triggered compiler warnings on some buildfarm members, and it's surely pretty pointless.
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Tom Lane authored
Some buildfarm members are showing "comparison is always false due to limited range of data type" complaints on this test, so #ifdef it out on machines with 32-bit int.
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Teodor Sigaev authored
Comment is right, but if - not.
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Stephen Frost authored
s/afer/after Pointed out by Andreas 'ads' Scherbaum
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