- 06 Oct, 2016 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
Per discussion with Andrew Dunstan, it seems there are three peculiarities of the Python installation on MinGW (or at least, of the instance on buildfarm member frogmouth). First, the library name doesn't contain "2.7" but just "27". It looks like we can deal with that by consulting get_config_vars('VERSION') to see whether a dot should be used or not. Second, the library might be in c:/Windows/System32, analogously to it possibly being in /usr/lib on Unix-oid platforms. Third, it's apparently not standard to use the prefix "lib" on the file name. This patch will accept files with or without "lib", but the first part of that may well be dead code.
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- 05 Oct, 2016 4 commits
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Robert Haas authored
Loose ends from commit 2a0f89cd. Daniel Gustafsson
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Tom Lane authored
Most Unix-oid platforms provide a symlink "libfoo.so" -> "libfoo.so.n.n" to allow the linker to resolve a reference "-lfoo" to a version-numbered shared library. OpenBSD has apparently hacked ld(1) to do this internally, because there are no such symlinks to be found in their library directories. Tweak the new code in PGAC_CHECK_PYTHON_EMBED_SETUP to cope. Per buildfarm member curculio.
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Robert Haas authored
Thomas Munro
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Robert Haas authored
Windows apparently has a constant named WAIT_TIMEOUT, and some of these other names are pretty generic, too. Insert "PG_" at the front of each name in order to disambiguate. Michael Paquier
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- 04 Oct, 2016 13 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Debian does it that way, for no doubt what seems to them a good reason. Thanks to Aidan Van Dyk for confirmation.
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Tom Lane authored
Older versions of Python produce garbage (or at least useless) values of get_config_vars('LDLIBRARY'). Newer versions produce garbage (or at least useless) values of get_config_vars('SO'), which was defeating our configure logic that attempted to identify where the Python shlib really is. The net result, at least with a stock Python 3.5 installation on macOS, was that we were linking against a static library in the mistaken belief that it was a shared library. This managed to work, if you count statically absorbing libpython into plpython.so as working. But it no longer works as of commit d51924be, because now we get separate static copies of libpython in plpython.so and hstore_plpython.so, and those can't interoperate on the same data. There are some other infelicities like assuming that nobody ever installs a private version of Python on a macOS machine. Hence, forget about looking in $python_configdir for the Python shlib; as far as I can tell no version of Python has ever put one there, and certainly no currently-supported version does. Also, rather than relying on get_config_vars('SO'), just try all the possibilities for shlib extensions. Also, rather than trusting Py_ENABLE_SHARED, believe we've found a shlib only if it has a recognized extension. Last, explicitly cope with the possibility that the shlib is really in /usr/lib and $python_libdir is a red herring --- this is the actual situation on older macOS, but we were only accidentally working with it. Discussion: <5300.1475592228@sss.pgh.pa.us>
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Robert Haas authored
Commit 6f3bd98e is still making the buildfarm unhappy. This time it's mastodon that is complaining.
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Robert Haas authored
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
Preloading is done by logtape.c now.
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Robert Haas authored
Buildfarm member mylodon doesn't like them. Actually, I don't like them either, but I failed to notice these before pushing commit 6f3bd98e.
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Robert Haas authored
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Robert Haas authored
WaitLatch, WaitLatchOrSocket, and WaitEventSetWait now taken an additional wait_event_info parameter; legal values are defined in pgstat.h. This makes it possible to uniquely identify every point in the core code where we are waiting for a latch; extensions can pass WAIT_EXTENSION. Because latches were the major wait primitive not previously covered by this patch, it is now possible to see information in pg_stat_activity on a large number of important wait events not previously addressed, such as ClientRead, ClientWrite, and SyncRep. Unfortunately, many of the wait events added by this patch will fail to appear in pg_stat_activity because they're only used in background processes which don't currently appear in pg_stat_activity. We should fix this either by creating a separate view for such information, or else by deciding to include them in pg_stat_activity after all. Michael Paquier and Robert Haas, reviewed by Alexander Korotkov and Thomas Munro.
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Tom Lane authored
In commit d51924be, I overlooked the need to provide linkage for PLyUnicode_FromStringAndSize, because that's only used (and indeed only exists) in Python 3 builds. In light of the need to #if this item, rearrange the ordering of the code related to each function pointer, so as not to need more #if's than absolutely necessary. Per buildfarm.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
mergepreread()/mergeprereadone() don't exist anymore, the function that does roughly the same is now called mergereadnext().
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Andres Freund authored
Before initializing iteration over a subtransaction's changes, the last few changes were not spilled to disk. That's correct if the transaction didn't spill to disk, but otherwise... This bug can lead to missed or misorderd subtransaction contents when they were spilled to disk. Move spilling of the remaining in-memory changes to ReorderBufferIterTXNInit(), where it can easily be applied to the top transaction and, if present, subtransactions. Since this code had too many bugs already, noticeably increase test coverage. Fixes: #14319 Reported-By: Huan Ruan Discussion: <20160909012610.20024.58169@wrigleys.postgresql.org> Backport: 9,4-, where logical decoding was added
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Tom Lane authored
Previously, on most platforms, we allowed hstore_plpython's references to hstore and plpython to be unresolved symbols at link time, trusting the dynamic linker to resolve them when the module is loaded. This has a number of problems, the worst being that the dynamic linker does not know where the references come from and can do nothing but fail if those other modules haven't been loaded. We've more or less gotten away with that for the limited use-case of datatype transform modules, but even there, it requires some awkward hacks, most recently commit 83c24920. Instead, let's not treat these references as linker-resolvable at all, but use function pointers that are manually filled in by the module's _PG_init function. There are few enough contact points that this doesn't seem unmaintainable, at least for these use-cases. (Note that the same technique wouldn't work at all for decoupling from libpython itself, but fortunately that's just a standard shared library and can be linked to normally.) This is an initial patch that just converts hstore_plpython. If the buildfarm doesn't find any fatal problems, I'll work on the other transform modules soon. Tom Lane, per an idea of Andres Freund's. Discussion: <2652.1475512158@sss.pgh.pa.us>
- 03 Oct, 2016 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Commit 88e98230 invented GUC_UNIT_XSEGS for min_wal_size and max_wal_size, but neglected to make it display sensibly in pg_settings.unit (by adding a case to the switch in GetConfigOptionByNum). Fix that, and adjust said switch to throw a run-time error the next time somebody forgets. In passing, avoid using a static buffer for the output string --- the rest of this function pstrdup's from a local buffer, and I see no very good reason why the units code should do it differently and less safely. Per report from Otar Shavadze. Back-patch to 9.5 where the new unit type was added. Report: <CAG-jOyA=iNFhN+yB4vfvqh688B7Tr5SArbYcFUAjZi=0Exp-Lg@mail.gmail.com>
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Stephen Frost authored
Attempting to COPY a subset of columns from a table with RLS enabled would fail due to an invalid query being constructed (using a single ColumnRef with the list of fields to exact in 'fields', but that's for the different levels of an indirection for a single column, not for specifying multiple columns). Correct by building a ColumnRef and then RestTarget for each column being requested and then adding those to the targetList for the select query. Include regression tests to hopefully catch if this is broken again in the future. Patch-By: Adam Brightwell Reviewed-By: Michael Paquier
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Tom Lane authored
pg_upgrade checks whether all the shared libraries used in the old cluster are also available in the new one by issuing LOAD for each library name. Previously, it cared not what order it did the LOADs in. Ideally it should not have to care, but currently the transform modules in contrib fail unless both the language and datatype modules they depend on are loaded first. A backend-side solution for that looks possible but probably not back-patchable, so as a stopgap measure, let's do the LOAD tests in order by library name length. That should fix the problem for reasonably-named transform modules, eg "hstore_plpython" will be loaded after both "hstore" and "plpython". (Yeah, it's a hack.) In a larger sense, having a predictable order of these probes is a good thing, since it will make upgrades predictably work or not work in the face of inter-library dependencies. Also, this patch replaces O(N^2) de-duplication logic with O(N log N) logic, which could matter in installations with very many databases. So I don't foresee reverting this even after we have a proper fix for the library-dependency problem. In passing, improve a couple of SQL queries used here. Per complaint from Andrew Dunstan that pg_upgrade'ing the transform contrib modules failed. Back-patch to 9.5 where transform modules were introduced. Discussion: <f7ac29f3-515c-2a44-21c5-ec925053265f@dunslane.net>
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
Don't pre-read tuples into SortTuple slots during merge. Instead, use the memory for larger read buffers in logtape.c. We're doing the same number of READTUP() calls either way, but managing the pre-read SortTuple slots is much more complicated. Also, the on-tape representation is more compact than SortTuples, so we can fit more pre-read tuples into the same amount of memory this way. And we have better cache-locality, when we use just a small number of SortTuple slots. Now that we only hold one tuple from each tape in the SortTuple slots, we can greatly simplify the "batch memory" management. We now maintain a small set of fixed-sized slots, to hold the tuples, and fall back to palloc() for larger tuples. We use this method during all merge phases, not just the final merge, and also when randomAccess is requested, and also in the TSS_SORTEDONTAPE case. In other words, it's used whenever we do an external sort. Reviewed by Peter Geoghegan and Claudio Freire. Discussion: <CAM3SWZTpaORV=yQGVCG8Q4axcZ3MvF-05xe39ZvORdU9JcD6hQ@mail.gmail.com>
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- 02 Oct, 2016 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Without this, an extension containing an access method is not properly dumped/restored during pg_upgrade --- the AM ends up not being a member of the extension after upgrading. Another oversight in commit 473b9328, reported by Andrew Dunstan. Report: <f7ac29f3-515c-2a44-21c5-ec925053265f@dunslane.net>
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Tom Lane authored
Fixes errors introduced in commit bc34223b, as detected by Coverity. In passing, report ENOSPC for a short write while padding a new wal file in open_walfile, make certain that close_walfile closes walfile in all cases, and improve a couple of comments. Michael Paquier and Tom Lane
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- 01 Oct, 2016 8 commits
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Tom Lane authored
In standard Unix builds, postmaster child processes do ClosePostmasterPorts immediately after InitPostmasterChild, that is almost immediately after being spawned. This is important because we don't want children holding open the postmaster's end of the postmaster death watch pipe. However, in EXEC_BACKEND builds, SubPostmasterMain was postponing this responsibility significantly, in order to make it slightly more convenient to pass the right flag value to ClosePostmasterPorts. This is bad, particularly seeing that process_shared_preload_libraries() might invoke nearly-arbitrary code. Rearrange so that we do it as soon as we've fetched the socket FDs via read_backend_variables(). Also move the comment explaining about randomize_va_space to before the call of PGSharedMemoryReAttach, which is where it's relevant. The old placement was appropriate when the reattach happened inside CreateSharedMemoryAndSemaphores, but that was a long time ago. Back-patch to 9.3; the patch doesn't apply cleanly before that, and it doesn't seem worth a lot of effort given that we've had no actual field complaints traceable to this. Discussion: <4157.1475178360@sss.pgh.pa.us>
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Tom Lane authored
collect_corrupt_items() failed to initialize tuple.t_self. While HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum() doesn't actually use that value, it does Assert that it's valid, so that the code would dump core if ip_posid chanced to be zero. (That's somewhat unlikely, which probably explains how this got missed. In any case it wouldn't matter for field use.) Also, collect_corrupt_items was returning the wrong TIDs, that is the contents of t_ctid rather than the tuple's own location. This would be the same thing in simple cases, but it could be wrong if, for example, a past update attempt had been rolled back, leaving a live tuple whose t_ctid doesn't point at itself. Also, in pg_visibility(), guard against trying to read a page past the end of the rel. The VM code handles inquiries beyond the end of the map by silently returning zeroes, and it seems like we should do the same thing here. I ran into the assertion failure while using pg_visibility to check pg_upgrade's behavior, and then noted the other problems while reading the code. Report: <29043.1475288648@sss.pgh.pa.us>
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Tom Lane authored
Add omitted names for some function parameters. Fix some minor grammatical issues.
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Tom Lane authored
There is no need for "all: all-lib" to be placed before inclusion of Makefile.shlib. Makefile.global is what ensures that "all" is the default target, and we already document that that has to be included first. Per comment from Pavel Raiskup. Discussion: <1925924.izSMJEZO3x@unused-4-107.brq.redhat.com>
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Tom Lane authored
The sequence "configure; cd src/pl/plpython; make -j" failed due to trying to compile plpython's .o files before the generated headers finished building. (This is an important real-world case, since it's the typical second step when building both plpython2 and plpython3.) This happens because the submake-generated-headers target is not placed in a way to make it a prerequisite to compiling the .o files. Fix that. Checking other uses of submake-generated-headers, I noted that the one attached to pg_regress was similarly misplaced; but it's actually not needed at all for pg_regress.o, rather regress.o, so move it to be a prerequisite of that. Back-patch to 9.6 where submake-generated-headers was introduced (by commit 548af97f). It's not immediately clear to me why the previous coding didn't have the same issue; but since we've not had field reports of plpython make failing, leave it alone in the older branches. Pavel Raiskup and Tom Lane Discussion: <1925924.izSMJEZO3x@unused-4-107.brq.redhat.com>
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Before pg_regress runs psql, set the application name to the test name. Similarly, set the application name to the test file name in the TAP tests. Also, set a default log_line_prefix that show the application name, as well as the PID and a time stamp. That way, the server log output can be correlated to the test input files, making debugging a bit easier.
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Tom Lane authored
The previous design for this had copyFile(), linkFile(), and rewriteVisibilityMap() returning strerror strings, with the caller producing one-size-fits-all error messages based on that. This made it impossible to produce messages that described the failures with any degree of precision, especially not short-read problems since those don't set errno at all. Since pg_upgrade has no intention of continuing after any error in this area, let's fix this by just letting these functions call pg_fatal() for themselves, making it easy for each point of failure to have a suitable error message. Taking this approach also allows dropping cleanup code that was unnecessary and was often rather sloppy about preserving errno. To not lose relevant info that was reported before, pass in the schema name and table name of the current table so that they can be included in the error reports. An additional problem was the use of getErrorText(), which was flat out wrong for all but a couple of call sites, because it unconditionally did "_dosmaperr(GetLastError())" on Windows. That's only appropriate when reporting an error from a Windows-native API, which only a couple of the callers were actually doing. Thus, even the reported strerror string would be unrelated to the actual failure in many cases on Windows. To fix, get rid of getErrorText() altogether, and just have call sites do strerror(errno) instead, since that's the way all the rest of our frontend programs do it. Add back the _dosmaperr() calls in the two places where that's actually appropriate. In passing, make assorted messages hew more closely to project style guidelines, notably by removing initial capitals in not-complete-sentence primary error messages. (I didn't make any effort to clean up places I didn't have another reason to touch, though.) Per discussion of a report from Thomas Kellerer. Back-patch to 9.6, but no further; given the relative infrequency of reports of problems here, it's not clear it's worth adapting the patch to older branches. Patch by me, but with credit to Alvaro Herrera for spotting the issue with getErrorText's misuse of _dosmaperr(). Discussion: <nsjrbh$8li$1@blaine.gmane.org>
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Tom Lane authored
This is new code in 9.6, and evidently we missed out testing it as thoroughly as it should have been. Bugs fixed here: 1. Use binary not text mode to open the files on Windows. Before, if the visibility map chanced to contain two bytes that looked like \r\n, Windows' read() would convert that to \n, which both corrupts the map data and causes the file to look shorter than it should. Unless you were *very* unlucky and had an exact multiple of 8K such occurrences in each VM file, this would cause pg_upgrade to report a failure, though with a rather obscure error message. 2. The code for copying rebuilt bytes into the output was simply wrong. It chanced to work okay on little-endian machines but would emit the bytes in the wrong order on big-endian, leading to silent corruption of the visibility map data. 3. The code was careless about alignment of the working buffers. Given all three of an alignment-picky architecture, a compiler that chooses to put the new_vmbuf[] local variable at an odd starting address, and a checksum-enabled database, pg_upgrade would dump core. Point one was reported by Thomas Kellerer, the other two detected by code-reading. Point two is much the nastiest of these issues from an impact standpoint, though fortunately it affects only a minority of users. The Windows issue will definitely bite people, but it seems quite unlikely that there would be undetected corruption from that. In addition, I failed to resist the temptation to do some minor cosmetic adjustments, mostly improving the comments. It would be a good idea to try to improve the error reporting here, but that seems like material for a separate patch. Discussion: <nsjrbh$8li$1@blaine.gmane.org>
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- 30 Sep, 2016 8 commits
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Peter Eisentraut authored
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Otherwise the enum symbols are not visible outside the struct in C++. Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Prototypes for functions implementing V1-callable functions are no longer necessary. Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
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Peter Eisentraut authored
atoi() needs stdlib.h strcmp() needs string.h Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Using exit() requires stdlib.h, which is not included. Use return instead. Also add return type for main(). Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Using offsetof() with a run-time computed argument is not allowed in either C or C++. Apparently, gcc allows it, but g++ doesn't. Reviewed-by: Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> Reviewed-by: Thomas Munro <thomas.munro@enterprisedb.com>
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Magnus Hagander authored
There is a small window between when the server closes out the existing segment and the new one is created. Put a loop around the open call in this case to make sure we wait for the new file to actually appear.
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Stephen Frost authored
Now that we track initial privileges on extension objects and changes to those permissions, we can drop the superuser() checks from the various functions which are part of the pgstattuple extension and rely on the GRANT system to control access to those functions. Since a pg_upgrade will preserve the version of the extension which existed prior to the upgrade, we can't simply modify the existing functions but instead need to create new functions which remove the checks and update the SQL-level functions to use the new functions (and to REVOKE EXECUTE rights on those functions from PUBLIC). Thanks to Tom and Andres for adding support for extensions to follow update paths (see: 40b449ae), allowing this patch to be much smaller since no new base version script needed to be included. Approach suggested by Noah. Reviewed by Michael Paquier.
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