- 16 Mar, 2022 3 commits
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Thomas Munro authored
If we run out of space in the checkpointer sync request queue (which is hopefully rare on real systems, but common with very small buffer pool), we wait for it to drain. While waiting, we should report that as a wait event so that users know what is going on, and also handle postmaster death, since otherwise the loop might never terminate if the checkpointer has exited. Back-patch to 12. Although the problem exists in earlier releases too, the code is structured differently before 12 so I haven't gone any further for now, in the absence of field complaints. Reported-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220226213942.nb7uvb2pamyu26dj%40alap3.anarazel.de
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Michael Paquier authored
This commit fixes a set of issues related to the use of the SQL functions in this module when the caller is able to pass down raw page data as input argument: - The page size check was fuzzy in a couple of places, sometimes looking after only a sub-range, but what we are looking for is an exact match on BLCKSZ. After considering a few options here, I have settled down to do a generalization of get_page_from_raw(). Most of the SQL functions already used that, and this is not strictly required if not accessing an 8-byte-wide value from a raw page, but this feels safer in the long run for alignment-picky environment, particularly if a code path begins to access such values. This also reduces the number of strings that need to be translated. - The BRIN function brin_page_items() uses a Relation but it did not check the access method of the opened index, potentially leading to crashes. All the other functions in need of a Relation already did that. - Some code paths could fail on elog(), but we should to use ereport() for failures that can be triggered by the user. Tests are added to stress all the cases that are fixed as of this commit, with some junk raw pages (\set VERBOSITY ensures that this works across all page sizes) and unexpected index types when functions open relations. Author: Michael Paquier, Justin Prysby Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220218030020.GA1137@telsasoft.com Backpatch-through: 10
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Thomas Munro authored
The checkpointer shouldn't ignore its latch. Other backends may be waiting for it to drain the request queue. Hopefully real systems don't have a full queue often, but the condition is reached easily when shared_buffers is small. This involves defining a new wait event, which will appear in the pg_stat_activity view often due to spread checkpoints. Back-patch only to 14. Even though the problem exists in earlier branches too, it's hard to hit there. In 14 we stopped using signal handlers for latches on Linux, *BSD and macOS, which were previously hiding this problem by interrupting the sleep (though not reliably, as the signal could arrive before the sleep begins; precisely the problem latches address). Reported-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220226213942.nb7uvb2pamyu26dj%40alap3.anarazel.de
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- 15 Mar, 2022 1 commit
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Thomas Munro authored
Since LLVM 14 has stopped changing and is about to be released, back-patch the following changes from the master branch: e6a7600202105919bffd62b3dfd941f4a94e082b 807fee1a39de6bb8184082012e643951abb9ad1d a56e7b66010f330782243de9e25ac2a6596be0e1 Back-patch to 11, where LLVM JIT support came in.
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- 11 Mar, 2022 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
Commit 8b069ef5 changed this function to look at pg_constraint.conindid rather than searching pg_depend. That was a good performance improvement, but it failed to preserve the exact semantics. The old code would only return an index that was "owned by" (internally dependent on) the specified constraint, whereas the new code will also return indexes that are just referenced by foreign key constraints. This confuses ALTER TABLE, which was implicitly expecting the previous semantics, into failing with errors like ERROR: relation 146621 has multiple clustered indexes or ERROR: "pk_attbl" is not an index for table "atref" We can fix this without reverting the performance improvement by adding a contype check in get_constraint_index(). Another way could be to make ALTER TABLE check it, but I'm worried that extension code could also have subtle dependencies on the old semantics. Tom Lane and Japin Li, per bug #17409 from Holly Roberts. Back-patch to v14 where the error crept in. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17409-52871dda8b5741cb@postgresql.org
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- 09 Mar, 2022 1 commit
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Michael Paquier authored
ALTER ROUTINE triggers the events ddl_command_start and ddl_command_end, and DROP ROUTINE triggers sql_drop, ddl_command_start and ddl_command_end, but this was not mention on the matrix table. Reported-by: Leslie Lemaire Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/164647533363.646.5802968483136493025@wrigleys.postgresql.org Backpatch-through: 11
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- 05 Mar, 2022 1 commit
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Noah Misch authored
Slow hosts may avoid load-induced, spurious failures by setting environment variable PG_TEST_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT to some number of seconds greater than 180. Developers may see faster failures by setting that environment variable to some lesser number of seconds. In tests, write $PostgreSQL::Test::Utils::timeout_default wherever the convention has been to write 180. This change raises the default for some briefer timeouts. Back-patch to v10 (all supported versions). Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220218052842.GA3627003@rfd.leadboat.com
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- 04 Mar, 2022 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
pg_regress reported "Unix socket" as the default location whenever HAVE_UNIX_SOCKETS is defined. However, that's not been accurate on Windows since 8f3ec75d. Update this logic to match what libpq actually does now. This is just cosmetic, but still it's potentially misleading. Back-patch to v13 where 8f3ec75d came in. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3894060.1646415641@sss.pgh.pa.us
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Tom Lane authored
This macro cast the result to BlockNumber after shifting, not before, which is the wrong thing. Per the C spec, the uint16 fields would promote to int not unsigned int, so that (for 32-bit int) the shift potentially shifts a nonzero bit into the sign position. I doubt there are any production systems where this would actually end with the wrong answer, but it is undefined behavior per the C spec, and clang's -fsanitize=undefined option reputedly warns about it on some platforms. (I can't reproduce that right now, but the code is undeniably wrong per spec.) It's easy to fix by casting to BlockNumber (uint32) in the proper places. It's been wrong for ages, so back-patch to all supported branches. Report and patch by Zhihong Yu (cosmetic tweaking by me) Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALNJ-vT9r0DSsAOw9OXVJFxLENoVS_68kJ5x0p44atoYH+H4dg@mail.gmail.com
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- 03 Mar, 2022 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
Most of these are cases where we could call memcpy() or other libc functions with a NULL pointer and a zero count, which is forbidden by POSIX even though every production version of libc allows it. We've fixed such things before in a piecemeal way, but apparently never made an effort to try to get them all. I don't claim that this patch does so either, but it gets every failure I observe in check-world, using clang 12.0.1 on current RHEL8. numeric.c has a different issue that the sanitizer doesn't like: "ln(-1.0)" will compute log10(0) and then try to assign the resulting -Inf to an integer variable. We don't actually use the result in such a case, so there's no live bug. Back-patch to all supported branches, with the idea that we might start running a buildfarm member that tests this case. This includes back-patching c1132aae3 (Check the size in COPY_POINTER_FIELD), which previously silenced some of these issues in copyfuncs.c. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALNJ-vT9r0DSsAOw9OXVJFxLENoVS_68kJ5x0p44atoYH+H4dg@mail.gmail.com
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- 02 Mar, 2022 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
This change makes libpq apply the same private-key-file ownership and permissions checks that we have used in the backend since commit 9a83564c. Namely, that the private key can be owned by either the current user or root (with different file permissions allowed in the two cases). This allows system-wide management of key files, which is just as sensible on the client side as the server, particularly when the client is itself some application daemon. Sync the comments about this between libpq and the backend, too. Back-patch of a59c79564 and 50f03473e into all supported branches. David Steele Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/f4b7bc55-97ac-9e69-7398-335e212f7743@pgmasters.net
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- 25 Feb, 2022 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Perl can be convinced to execute user-defined code during compilation of a plperl function (or at least a plperlu function). That's not such a big problem as long as the activity is confined within the Perl interpreter, and it's not clear we could do anything about that anyway. However, if such code tries to use plperl's SPI functions, we have a bigger problem. In the first place, those functions are likely to crash because current_call_data->prodesc isn't set up yet. In the second place, because it isn't set up, we lack critical info such as whether the function is supposed to be read-only. And in the third place, this path allows code execution during function validation, which is strongly discouraged because of the potential for security exploits. Hence, reject execution of the SPI functions until compilation is finished. While here, add check_spi_usage_allowed() calls to various functions that hadn't gotten the memo about checking that. I think that perhaps plperl_sv_to_literal may have been intentionally omitted on the grounds that it was safe at the time; but if so, the addition of transforms functionality changed that. The others are more recently added and seem to be flat-out oversights. Per report from Mark Murawski. Back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9acdf918-7fff-4f40-f750-2ffa84f083d2@intellasoft.net
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Andres Freund authored
When opening a WAL file smaller than XLOG_BLCKSZ (e.g. 0 bytes long) while determining the wal_segment_size, pg_waldump checked errno, despite errno not being set by the short read. Resulting in a bogus error message. Author: Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220214.181847.775024684568733277.horikyota.ntt@gmail.com Backpatch: 11-, the bug was introducedin fc49e24f
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- 24 Feb, 2022 1 commit
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
If a checkpoint happens during the index build, and the system crashes after the checkpoint and the index build have finished, the data written to the index before the checkpoint started could be lost. The checkpoint won't have fsync'd it, and it won't be replayed at crash recovery either. Fix by calling smgrimmedsync() after the index build, just like in B-tree index build. Backpatch to v14 where the sorted GiST index build was introduced. Reported-by: Melanie Plageman Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAAKRu_ZJJynimxKj5xYBSziL62-iEtPE+fx-B=JzR=jUtP92mw@mail.gmail.com
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- 23 Feb, 2022 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
Commit 3db826bd intended that valid_custom_variable_name's rules for valid identifiers match those of scan.l. However, I (tgl) had some kind of brain fade and put "_" in the wrong list. Fix by Japin Li, per bug #17415 from Daniel Polski. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17415-ebdb683d7e09a51c@postgresql.org
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- 22 Feb, 2022 1 commit
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Michael Paquier authored
"regress" is a new mode added to compute_query_id aimed at facilitating regression testing when a module computing query IDs is loaded into the backend, like pg_stat_statements. It works the same way as "auto", meaning that query IDs are computed if a module enables it, except that query IDs are hidden in EXPLAIN outputs to ensure regression output stability. Like any GUCs of the kind (force_parallel_mode, etc.), this new configuration can be added to an instance's postgresql.conf, or just passed down with PGOPTIONS at command level. compute_query_id uses an enum for its set of option values, meaning that this addition ensures ABI compatibility. Using this new configuration mode allows installcheck-world to pass when running the tests on an instance with pg_stat_statements enabled, stabilizing the test output while checking the paths doing query ID computations. Reported-by: Anton Melnikov Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1634283396.372373993@f75.i.mail.ru Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/YgHlxgc/OimuPYhH@paquier.xyz Backpatch-through: 14
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- 21 Feb, 2022 1 commit
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Andres Freund authored
When cleaning up temporary objects during process exit the cleanup could fail with: FATAL: cannot fetch toast data without an active snapshot The bug is caused by RemoveTempRelationsCallback() not setting up a snapshot. If an object with toasted catalog data needs to be cleaned up, init_toast_snapshot() could fail with the above error. Most of the time however the the problem is masked due to cached catalog snapshots being returned by GetOldestSnapshot(). But dropping an object can cause catalog invalidations to be emitted. If no further catalog accesses are necessary between the invalidation processing and the next toast datum deletion, the bug becomes visible. It's easy to miss this bug because it typically happens after clients disconnect and the FATAL error just ends up in the log. Luckily temporary table cleanup at the next use of the same temporary schema or during DISCARD ALL does not have the same problem. Fix the bug by pushing a snapshot in RemoveTempRelationsCallback(). Also add isolation tests for temporary object cleanup, including objects with toasted catalog data. A future HEAD only commit will add more assertions. Reported-By: Miles Delahunty Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOFAq3BU5Mf2TTvu8D9n_ZOoFAeQswuzk7yziAb7xuw_qyw5gw@mail.gmail.com Backpatch: 10-
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- 20 Feb, 2022 2 commits
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Andrew Dunstan authored
Following migration of Windows buildfarm members running TAP tests to use of ucrt64 perl for those tests, special processing for msys perl is no longer necessary and so is removed. Backpatch to release 10 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c65a8781-77ac-ea95-d185-6db291e1baeb@dunslane.net
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Andrew Dunstan authored
Commit f1ac4a74de disabled this processing, and as nothing has broken (as expected) here we proceed to remove the routine and adjust all the call sites. Backpatch to release 10 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0ba775a2-8aa0-0d56-d780-69427cf6f33d@dunslane.net Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220125023609.5ohu3nslxgoygihl@alap3.anarazel.de
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- 18 Feb, 2022 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
GCC 12 complains that set_stack_base is storing the address of a local variable in a long-lived pointer. This is an entirely reasonable warning (indeed, it just helped us find a bug); but that behavior is intentional here. We can work around it by using __builtin_frame_address(0) instead of a specific local variable; that produces an address a dozen or so bytes different, in my testing, but we don't care about such a small difference. Maybe someday a compiler lacking that function will start to issue a similar warning, but we'll worry about that when it happens. Patch by me, per a suggestion from Andres Freund. Back-patch to v12, which is as far back as the patch will go without some pain. (Recently-established project policy would permit a back-patch as far as 9.2, but I'm disinclined to expend the work until GCC 12 is much more widespread.) Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3773792.1645141467@sss.pgh.pa.us
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- 16 Feb, 2022 1 commit
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Etsuro Fujita authored
Document that they can be modified using COPY as well. Back-patch to v11 where commit 3d956d95 added support for COPY in postgres_fdw.
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- 14 Feb, 2022 2 commits
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Amit Kapila authored
Currently, during UPDATE, the unchanged replica identity key attributes are not logged separately because they are getting logged as part of the new tuple. But if they are stored externally then the untoasted values are not getting logged as part of the new tuple and logical replication won't be able to replicate such UPDATEs. So we need to log such attributes as part of the old_key_tuple during UPDATE. Reported-by: Haiying Tang Author: Dilip Kumar and Amit Kapila Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera, Haiying Tang, Andres Freund Backpatch-through: 10 Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/OS0PR01MB611342D0A92D4F4BF26C0F47FB229@OS0PR01MB6113.jpnprd01.prod.outlook.com
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Alexander Korotkov authored
Fix ExecReScanIndexScan() to free the referenced tuples while emptying the priority queue. Backpatch to all supported versions. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHqSB9gECMENBQmpbv5rvmT3HTaORmMK3Ukg73DsX5H7EJV7jw%40mail.gmail.com Author: Aliaksandr Kalenik Reviewed-by: Tom Lane, Alexander Korotkov Backpatch-through: 10
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- 12 Feb, 2022 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
In commit 1f39a1c0 I made PQisBusy consider conn->write_failed, but that is now looking like complete brain fade. In the first place, the logic is quite wrong: it ought to be like "and not" rather than "or". This meant that once we'd gotten into a write_failed state, PQisBusy would always return true, probably causing the calling application to iterate its loop until PQconsumeInput returns a hard failure thanks to connection loss. That's not what we want: the intended behavior is to return an error PGresult, which the application probably has much cleaner support for. But in the second place, checking write_failed here seems like the wrong thing anyway. The idea of the write_failed mechanism is to postpone handling of a write failure until we've read all we can from the server; so that flag should not interfere with input-processing behavior. (Compare 7247e243.) What we *should* check for is status = CONNECTION_BAD, ie, socket already closed. (Most places that close the socket don't touch asyncStatus, but they do reset status.) This primarily ensures that if PQisBusy() returns true then there is an open socket, which is assumed by several call sites in our own code, and probably other applications too. While at it, fix a nearby thinko in libpq's my_sock_write: we should only consult errno for res < 0, not res == 0. This is harmless since pqsecure_raw_write would force errno to zero in such a case, but it still could confuse readers. Noted by Andres Freund. Backpatch to v12 where 1f39a1c0 came in. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220211011025.ek7exh6owpzjyudn@alap3.anarazel.de
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- 11 Feb, 2022 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
createplan.c tries to save a runtime projection step by specifying a scan plan node's output as being exactly the table's columns, or index's columns in the case of an index-only scan, if there is not a reason to do otherwise. This logic did not previously pay attention to whether an index's columns are returnable. That worked, sort of accidentally, until commit 9a3ddeb51 taught setrefs.c to reject plans that try to read a non-returnable column. I have no desire to loosen setrefs.c's new check, so instead adjust use_physical_tlist() to not try to optimize this way when there are non-returnable column(s). Per report from Ryan Kelly. Like the previous patch, back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHUie24ddN+pDNw7fkhNrjrwAX=fXXfGZZEHhRuofV_N_ftaSg@mail.gmail.com
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- 10 Feb, 2022 5 commits
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Tom Lane authored
"pg_ctl stop/restart" checked that the postmaster PID is valid just once, as a side-effect of sending the stop signal, and then would wait-till-timeout for the postmaster.pid file to go away. This neglects the case wherein the postmaster dies uncleanly after we signal it. Similarly, once "pg_ctl promote" has sent the signal, it'd wait for the corresponding on-disk state change to occur even if the postmaster dies. I'm not sure how we've managed not to notice this problem, but it seems to explain slow execution of the 017_shm.pl test script on AIX since commit 4fdbf9af5, which added a speculative "pg_ctl stop" with the idea of making real sure that the postmaster isn't there. In the test steps that kill-9 and then restart the postmaster, it's possible to get past the initial signal attempt before kill() stops working for the doomed postmaster. If that happens, pg_ctl waited till PGCTLTIMEOUT before giving up ... and the buildfarm's AIX members have that set very high. To fix, include a "kill(pid, 0)" test (similar to what postmaster_is_alive uses) in these wait loops, so that we'll give up immediately if the postmaster PID disappears. While here, I chose to refactor those loops out of where they were. do_stop() and do_restart() can perfectly well share one copy of the wait-for-stop loop, and it seems desirable to put a similar function beside that for wait-for-promote. Back-patch to all supported versions, since pg_ctl's wait logic is substantially identical in all, and we're seeing the slow test behavior in all branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220210023537.GA3222837@rfd.leadboat.com
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Andrew Dunstan authored
Modern msys systems lack pexports but have gendef instead, so use that. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3ccde7a9-e4f9-e194-30e0-0936e6ad68ba@dunslane.net Backpatch to release 9.4 to enable building with perl on older branches. Before that pexports is not used for plperl.
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Tom Lane authored
Commit 09cf1d52 taught schedule_alarm() to not do anything if the next requested event is after when we expect the next interrupt to fire. However, if somehow an interrupt gets lost, we'll continue to not do anything indefinitely, even after the "next interrupt" time is obviously in the past. Thus, one missed interrupt can break timeout scheduling for the life of the session. Michael Harris reported a scenario where a bug in a user-defined function caused this to happen, so you don't even need to assume kernel bugs exist to think this is worth fixing. We can make things more robust at little cost by detecting the case where signal_due_at is before "now" and forcing a new setitimer call to occur. This isn't a completely bulletproof fix of course; but in our typical usage pattern where we frequently set timeouts and clear them before they are reached, the interrupt will get re-enabled after at most one timeout interval, which with a little luck will be before we really need it. While here, let's mark signal_due_at as volatile, since the signal handler can both examine and set it. I'm not sure there's any actual risk given that signal_pending is already volatile, but it's surely questionable. Backpatch to v14 where this logic came in. Michael Harris and Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CADofcAWbMrvgwSMqO4iG_iD3E2v8ZUrC-_crB41my=VMM02-CA@mail.gmail.com
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Daniel Gustafsson authored
The connection strings in the SSL client tests were using the host set up from Cluster.pm which is a temporary pathname. When SNI is enabled we pass the host to OpenSSL in order to set the server name indication ClientHello extension via SSL_set_tlsext_host_name. OpenSSL doesn't validate the hostname apart from checking the max length, but LibreSSL checks for RFC 5890 conformance which results in errors during testing as the pathname from Cluster.pm is not a valid hostname. Fix by setting the host explicitly to localhost, as that's closer to the intent of the test. Backpatch through 14 where SNI support came in. Reported-by: Nazir Bilal Yavuz <byavuz81@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17391-304f81bcf724b58b@postgresql.org Backpatch-through: 14
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Noah Misch authored
Some pre-2017 Test::More versions need perfect $Test::Builder::Level maintenance to find the variable. Buildfarm member snapper reported an overall failure that the file intended to hide via the TODO construct. That trouble was reachable in v11 and v10. For later branches, this serves as defense in depth. Back-patch to v10 (all supported versions). Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220202055556.GB2745933@rfd.leadboat.com
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- 09 Feb, 2022 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Commit 6a2a70a0 supposed that any platform having <sys/epoll.h> would also have <sys/signalfd.h>. It turns out there are still a few people using platforms where that's not so, so we'd better make a separate configure probe for it. But since it took this long to notice, I'm content with the decision to not have a separate code path for epoll-only machines; we'll just fall back to using poll() for these stragglers. Per gripe from Gabriela Serventi. Back-patch to v14 where this code came in. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHOHWE-JjJDfcYuLAAEO7Jk07atFAU47z8TzHzg71gbC0aMy=g@mail.gmail.com
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Tom Lane authored
Recent versions of Devel::PPPort try to redefine eval_pv() to dodge a bug in pre-5.31 Perl versions. Unfortunately the redefinition fails on compilers that don't support statements nested within expressions. However, we aren't actually interested in this bug fix, since we always call eval_pv() with croak_on_error = FALSE. So, until there's an upstream fix for this breakage, just comment out the macro to revert to the older behavior. Per report from Wei Sun, as well as previous buildfarm failure on pademelon (which I'd unfortunately not looked at carefully enough to understand the cause). Back-patch to all supported versions, since we're using the same ppport.h in all. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/tencent_2EFCC8BA0107B6EC0F97179E019A8A43C806@qq.com Report: https://buildfarm.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/show_log.pl?nm=pademelon&dt=2022-02-02%2001%3A22%3A58
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- 07 Feb, 2022 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git Source-Git-Hash: 063c497a909612d444c7c7188482db9aef86200f
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- 06 Feb, 2022 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
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- 05 Feb, 2022 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
A very well-informed user might deduce this from what we said already, but I'd bet against it. Lay it out explicitly. While here, rewrite the comment about tuple routing to be more intelligible to an average SQL user. Per bug #17395 from Alexander Lakhin. Back-patch to v11. (The text in this area is different in v10 and I'm not sufficiently excited about this point to adapt the patch.) Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17395-8c326292078d1a57@postgresql.org
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Tom Lane authored
There are two Asserts in nodeMergejoin.c that are reachable if the input data is not in the expected order. This seems way too fragile. Alexander Lakhin reported a case where the assertions could be triggered with misconfigured foreign-table partitions, and bitter experience with unstable operating system collation definitions suggests another easy route to hitting them. Neither Assert is in a place where we can't afford one more test-and-branch, so replace 'em with plain test-and-elog logic. Per bug #17395. While the reported symptom is relatively recent, collation changes could happen anytime, so back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17395-8c326292078d1a57@postgresql.org
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- 04 Feb, 2022 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
As usual, the release notes for older branches will be made by cutting these down, but put them up for community review first.
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- 03 Feb, 2022 2 commits
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Andres Freund authored
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20220203183655.ralgkh54sdcgysmn@alap3.anarazel.de Backpatch: 14-, like f862d57057f
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Etsuro Fujita authored
We assume that direct-modify ForeignScan nodes cannot be re-evaluated during EvalPlanQual processing, but the rework for inherited UPDATE/DELETE in commit 86dc9005 changed things, without considering that, so that such ForeignScan nodes get called as part of the EvalPlanQual subtree during EvalPlanQual processing in the case of an inherited UPDATE/DELETE where the inheritance set contains foreign target relations. To avoid re-evaluating such ForeignScan nodes during EvalPlanQual processing, commit c3928b467 modified nodeForeignscan.c, but the assumption made there that ExecForeignScan() should never be called for such ForeignScan nodes during EvalPlanQual processing turned out to be wrong in some cases, leading to a segmentation fault or a "cannot re-evaluate a Foreign Update or Delete during EvalPlanQual" error. Fix by modifying nodeForeignscan.c further to avoid re-evaluating such ForeignScan nodes even in ExecForeignScan()/ExecReScanForeignScan() during EvalPlanQual processing. Since this makes non-reachable the test-and-elog added to ForeignNext() by commit c3928b467 that produced the aforesaid error, convert the test-and-elog to an Assert. Per bug #17355 from Alexander Lakhin. Back-patch to v14 where both commits came in. Patch by me, reviewed and tested by Alexander Lakhin and Amit Langote. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/17355-de8e362eb7001a96@postgresql.org
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