- 30 Apr, 2012 3 commits
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Peter Eisentraut authored
All related functions were already so marked.
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Robert Haas authored
Noted by Peter Geoghegan.
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Bruce Momjian authored
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- 29 Apr, 2012 6 commits
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Tom Lane authored
This seems more consistent with the pre-existing choices for names of other statistics columns. Rename assorted internal identifiers to match.
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Tom Lane authored
This spelling seems significantly more readable to me.
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Tom Lane authored
Get rid of the per-column documentation of underlying functions, which did far more to clutter the view descriptions than it did to be helpful, and was rather incomplete and typo-ridden anyway. Instead suggest that people consult the definitions of the standard views to see the underlying functions. The older functions for obtaining individual facts about backends are now somewhat obsoleted by pg_stat_get_activity, which means that they are not documented by any standard view. So I put that information into a separate table. (Maybe we should just deprecate them instead?) In passing, fix a couple more documentation errors.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
In ancient times, it was thought that this wouldn't work because of TrapMacro/AssertMacro, but changing those to use a comma operator appears to work without compiler warnings.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Instead of writing out the .c -> .o rule, use the default one, so that dependency tracking can be used.
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Tom Lane authored
Fix a bunch of typos, improve markup, make wording more uniform, rearrange some material. No substantive changes.
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- 28 Apr, 2012 3 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Display total time and I/O timings in milliseconds, for consistency with the units used for timings in the core statistics views. The columns remain of float8 type, so that sub-msec precision is available. (At some point we will probably want to convert the core views to use float8 type for the same reason, but this patch does not touch that issue.) This is a release-note-requiring change in the meaning of the total_time column. The I/O timing columns are new as of 9.2, so there is no compatibility impact from redefining them. Do some minor copy-editing in the documentation, too.
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Tom Lane authored
This oversight caused the reported times to accumulate in an O(N^2) fashion the longer a backend runs.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
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- 27 Apr, 2012 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Normally whole-row Vars are printed as "tabname.*". However, that does not work at top level of a targetlist, because per SQL standard the parser will think that the "*" should result in column-by-column expansion; which is not at all what a whole-row Var implies. We used to just print the table name in such cases, which works most of the time; but it fails if the table name matches a column name available anywhere in the FROM clause. This could lead for instance to a view being interpreted differently after dump and reload. Adding parentheses doesn't fix it, but there is a reasonably simple kluge we can use instead: attach a no-op cast, so that the "*" isn't syntactically at top level anymore. This makes the printing of such whole-row Vars a lot more consistent with other Vars, and may indeed fix more cases than just the reported one; I'm suspicious that cases involving schema qualification probably didn't work properly before, either. Per bug report and fix proposal from Abbas Butt, though this patch is quite different in detail from his. Back-patch to all supported versions.
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Bruce Momjian authored
--details-after --master-only --oldest-first
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Tom Lane authored
If it fails to open a new log file, the syslogger assumes there's something wrong with its parameters (such as log_directory), and stops attempting automatic time-based or size-based log file rotations. Sending it SIGHUP is supposed to start that up again. However, the original coding for that was really bogus, involving clobbering a couple of GUC variables and hoping that SIGHUP processing would restore them. Get rid of that technique in favor of maintaining a separate flag showing we've turned rotation off. Per report from Mark Kirkwood. Also, the syslogger will automatically attempt to create the log_directory directory if it doesn't exist, but that was only happening at startup. For consistency and ease of use, it should do the same whenever the value of log_directory is changed by SIGHUP. Back-patch to all supported branches.
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Robert Haas authored
The alternative of disallowing index-only scans in HS operation was discussed, but the consensus was that it was better to treat marking a page all-visible as a recovery conflict for snapshots that could still fail to see XIDs on that page. We may in the future try to soften this, so that we simply force index scans to do heap fetches in cases where this may be an issue, rather than throwing a hard conflict.
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- 26 Apr, 2012 6 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Get rid of section 8.5.6 (Date/Time Internals), which appears to confuse people more than it helps, and anyway discussion of Postgres' internal datetime calculation methods seems pretty out of place here. Instead, make datatype.sgml just say that we follow the Gregorian calendar (a bit of specification not previously present anywhere in that chapter :-() and link to the History of Units appendix for more info. Do some mild editorialization on that appendix, too, to make it clearer that we are following proleptic Gregorian calendar rules rather than anything more historically accurate. Per a question from Florence Cousin and subsequent discussion in pgsql-docs.
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Tom Lane authored
bitmap_scan_cost_est() has to be able to cope with a BitmapOrPath, but I'd taken a shortcut that didn't work for that case. Noted by Heikki. Add some regression tests since this area is evidently under-covered.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Before 9.1, PL/Python functions returning composite types could return a string and it would be parsed using record_in. The 9.1 changes made PL/Python only expect dictionaries, tuples, or objects supporting getattr as output of composite functions, resulting in a regression and a confusing error message, as the strings were interpreted as sequences and the code for transforming lists to database tuples was used. Fix this by treating strings separately as before, before checking for the other types. The reason why it's important to support string to database tuple conversion is that trigger functions on tables with composite columns get the composite row passed in as a string (from record_out). Without supporting converting this back using record_in, this makes it impossible to implement pass-through behavior for these columns, as PL/Python no longer accepts strings for composite values. A better solution would be to fix the code that transforms composite inputs into Python objects to produce dictionaries that would then be correctly interpreted by the Python->PostgreSQL counterpart code. But that would be too invasive to backpatch to 9.1, and it is too late in the 9.2 cycle to attempt it. It should be revisited in the future, though. Reported as bug #6559 by Kirill Simonov. Jan Urbański
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Add/complete support for: - ALTER DOMAIN / VALIDATE CONSTRAINT - ALTER DOMAIN / RENAME - ALTER DOMAIN / RENAME CONSTRAINT - ALTER TABLE / RENAME CONSTRAINT
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Tom Lane authored
We have been seeing intermittent buildfarm failures due to a query sometimes not using an index-only scan plan, because a background auto-ANALYZE prevented the table's all-visible bits from being set immediately, thereby causing the estimated cost of an index-only scan to go up considerably. Adjust the test case so that a bitmap index scan is preferred instead, which serves equally well for the purpose the test case is actually meant for. (Of course, it would be better to eliminate the interference from auto-ANALYZE, but I see no low-risk way to do that, so any such fix will have to be left for 9.3 or later.)
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Tom Lane authored
setrefs.c failed to do "rtoffset" adjustment of Vars in RETURNING lists, which meant they were left with the wrong varnos when the RETURNING list was in a subquery. That was never possible before writable CTEs, of course, but now it's broken. The executor fails to notice any problem because ExecEvalVar just references the ecxt_scantuple for any normal varno; but EXPLAIN breaks when the varno is wrong, as illustrated in a recent complaint from Bartosz Dmytrak. Since the eventual rtoffset of the subquery is not known at the time we are preparing its plan node, the previous scheme of executing set_returning_clause_references() at that time cannot handle this adjustment. Fortunately, it turns out that we don't really need to do it that way, because all the needed information is available during normal setrefs.c execution; we just have to dig it out of the ModifyTable node. So, do that, and get rid of the kluge of early setrefs processing of RETURNING lists. (This is a little bit of a cheat in the case of inherited UPDATE/DELETE, because we are not passing a "root" struct that corresponds exactly to what the subplan was built with. But that doesn't matter, and anyway this is less ugly than early setrefs processing was.) Back-patch to 9.1, where the problem became possible to hit.
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- 25 Apr, 2012 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Due to rather sloppy thinking (on my part, I'm afraid) about the appropriate behavior for boundary conditions, pg_next_dst_boundary() gave undefined, platform-dependent results when the input time is exactly the last recorded DST transition time for the specified time zone, as a result of fetching values one past the end of its data arrays. Change its specification to be that it always finds the next DST boundary *after* the input time, and adjust code to match that. The sole existing caller, DetermineTimeZoneOffset, doesn't actually care about this distinction, since it always uses a probe time earlier than the instant that it does care about. So it seemed best to me to change the API to make the result=1 and result=0 cases more consistent, specifically to ensure that the "before" outputs always describe the state at the given time, rather than hacking the code to obey the previous API comment exactly. Per bug #6605 from Sergey Burladyan. Back-patch to all supported versions.
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Robert Haas authored
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Tom Lane authored
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Peter Eisentraut authored
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- 24 Apr, 2012 9 commits
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Predominant standard is two spaces, so adjust outliers to that.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
A few simplifications and stylistic improvements, found while grepping around for makefile problems elsewhere.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
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Robert Haas authored
Prohibiting this outright would break dumps taken from older versions that contain such casts, which would create far more pain than is justified here. Per report by Jaime Casanova and subsequent discussion.
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Robert Haas authored
Noted by Guillaume Smet.
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Robert Haas authored
Josh Kupershmidt
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Robert Haas authored
We must set the visibility map bit before releasing our exclusive lock on the heap page; otherwise, someone might clear the heap page bit before we set the visibility map bit, leading to a situation where the visibility map thinks the page is all-visible but it's really not. This problem has existed since 8.4, but it wasn't critical before we had index-only scans, since the worst case scenario was that the page wouldn't get vacuumed until the next scan_all vacuum. Along the way, a couple of minor, related improvements: (1) if we pause the heap scan to do an index vac cycle, release any visibility map page we're holding, since really long-running pins are not good for a variety of reasons; and (2) warn if we see a page that's marked all-visible in the visibility map but not on the page level, since that should never happen any more (it was allowed in previous releases, but not in 9.2).
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Robert Haas authored
The size is only a hint, but a big hint chews up a lot of memory without apparently improving performance much. Analysis and patch by Noah Misch.
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Robert Haas authored
Fix typo spotted by Thom Brown, and improve wording in another area where Thom spotted a typo.
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- 22 Apr, 2012 1 commit
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Josh Kupershmidt
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- 21 Apr, 2012 3 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Instead of an exact cost comparison, use a fuzzy comparison with 1e-10 delta after all other path metrics have proved equal. This is to avoid having platform-specific roundoff behaviors determine the choice when two paths are really the same to our cost estimators. Adjust the recently-added test case that made it obvious we had a problem here.
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Alvaro Herrera authored
The original syntax wasn't universally loved, and it didn't allow its usage in CREATE TABLE, only ALTER TABLE. It now works everywhere, and it also allows using ALTER TABLE ONLY to add an uninherited CHECK constraint, per discussion. The pg_constraint column has accordingly been renamed connoinherit. This commit partly reverts some of the changes in 61d81bd2, particularly some pg_dump and psql bits, because now pg_get_constraintdef includes the necessary NO INHERIT within the constraint definition. Author: Nikhil Sontakke Some tweaks by me
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Tom Lane authored
For an initial relation that lacks any join clauses (that is, it has to be cartesian-product-joined to the rest of the query), we considered only cartesian joins with initial rels appearing later in the initial-relations list. This creates an undesirable dependency on FROM-list order. We would never fail to find a plan, but perhaps we might not find the best available plan. Noted while discussing the logic with Amit Kapila. Improve the comments a bit in this area, too. Arguably this is a bug fix, but given the lack of complaints from the field I'll refrain from back-patching.
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- 19 Apr, 2012 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
This patch adjusts the treatment of parameterized paths so that all paths with the same parameterization (same set of required outer rels) for the same relation will have the same rowcount estimate. We cache the rowcount estimates to ensure that property, and hopefully save a few cycles too. Doing this makes it practical for add_path_precheck to operate without a rowcount estimate: it need only assume that paths with different parameterizations never dominate each other, which is close enough to true anyway for coarse filtering, because normally a more-parameterized path should yield fewer rows thanks to having more join clauses to apply. In add_path, we do the full nine yards of comparing rowcount estimates along with everything else, so that we can discard parameterized paths that don't actually have an advantage. This fixes some issues I'd found with add_path rejecting parameterized paths on the grounds that they were more expensive than not-parameterized ones, even though they yielded many fewer rows and hence would be cheaper once subsequent joining was considered. To make the same-rowcounts assumption valid, we have to require that any parameterized path enforce *all* join clauses that could be obtained from the particular set of outer rels, even if not all of them are useful for indexing. This is required at both base scans and joins. It's a good thing anyway since the net impact is that join quals are checked at the lowest practical level in the join tree. Hence, discard the original rather ad-hoc mechanism for choosing parameterization joinquals, and build a better one that has a more principled rule for when clauses can be moved. The original rule was actually buggy anyway for lack of knowledge about which relations are part of an outer join's outer side; getting this right requires adding an outer_relids field to RestrictInfo.
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