- 17 Mar, 2018 7 commits
-
-
Tom Lane authored
The test to exit the loop if the integer control value would overflow an int32 turns out not to work on some ICC versions, as it's dependent on the assumption that the compiler will execute the code as written rather than "optimize" it. ICC lacks any equivalent of gcc's -fwrapv switch, so it was optimizing on the assumption of no integer overflow, and that breaks this. Rewrite into a form that in fact does not do any overflowing computations. Per Tomas Vondra and buildfarm member fulmar. It's been like this for a long time, although it was not till we added a regression test case covering the behavior (in commit dd2243f2) that the problem became apparent. Back-patch to all supported versions. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/50562fdc-0876-9843-c883-15b8566c7511@2ndquadrant.com
-
Tom Lane authored
"UPDATE/DELETE WHERE CURRENT OF cursor_name" failed, with an error message like "cannot extract system attribute from virtual tuple", if the cursor was using a index-only scan for the target table. Fix it by digging the current TID out of the indexscan state. It seems likely that the same failure could occur for CustomScan plans and perhaps some FDW plan types, so that leaving this to be treated as an internal error with an obscure message isn't as good an idea as it first seemed. Hence, add a bit of heaptuple.c infrastructure to let us deliver a more on-topic message. I chose to make the message match what you get for the case where execCurrentOf can't identify the target scan node at all, "cursor "foo" is not a simply updatable scan of table "bar"". Perhaps it should be different, but we can always adjust that later. In the future, it might be nice to provide hooks that would let custom scan providers and/or FDWs deal with this in other ways; but that's not a suitable topic for a back-patchable bug fix. It's been like this all along, so back-patch to all supported branches. Yugo Nagata and Tom Lane Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180201013349.937dfc5f.nagata@sraoss.co.jp
-
Michael Meskes authored
Patch by "Shinoda, Noriyoshi" <noriyoshi.shinoda@hpe.com>
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
Since SSL compression is no longer recommended, turn the default in libpq from on to off. OpenSSL 1.1.0 and many distribution packages already turn compression off by default, so such a server won't accept compression anyway. So this will mainly affect users of older OpenSSL installations. Also update the documentation to make clear that this setting is no longer recommended. Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/595cf3b1-4ffe-7f05-6f72-f72b7afa7993%402ndquadrant.com
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
This allows specifying an external command for prompting for or otherwise obtaining passphrases for SSL key files. This is useful because in many cases there is no TTY easily available during service startup. Also add a setting ssl_passphrase_command_supports_reload, which allows supporting SSL configuration reload even if SSL files need passphrases. Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
-
Andres Freund authored
This allows to deduplicate some existing code, but mainly avoids some duplication in upcoming commits. In passing, fix variable names indicating wrong unit (seconds instead of ms). Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180314002740.cah3mdsonz5mxney@alap3.anarazel.de
-
Andres Freund authored
'long' is not useful type across platforms, as it's 32bit on 32 bit platforms, and even on some 64bit platforms (e.g. windows) it's still only 32bits wide. As ExplainPropertyInteger should never be performance critical, change it to accept a 64bit argument and remove ExplainPropertyLong. Author: Andres Freund Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180314164832.n56wt7zcbpzi6zxe@alap3.anarazel.de
-
- 16 Mar, 2018 9 commits
-
-
Tom Lane authored
ExecHashTableCreate allocated some memory that wasn't freed by ExecHashTableDestroy, specifically the per-hash-key function information. That's not a huge amount of data, but if one runs a query that repeats a hash join enough times, it builds up. Fix by arranging for the data in question to be kept in the hashtable's hashCxt instead of leaving it "loose" in the query-lifespan executor context. (This ensures that we'll also clean up anything that the hash functions allocate in fn_mcxt.) Per report from Amit Khandekar. It's been like this forever, so back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ3gD9cFofAWGvcxLOxDHC=B0hjtW8yGmUsF2hdGh97CM38=7g@mail.gmail.com
-
Tom Lane authored
This was not stated in so many words anywhere. Document it to make clear that it's a design limitation and not just an oversight or documentation omission. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/152089733343.1222.6927268289645380498@wrigleys.postgresql.org
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
In some cases, these were different for no apparent reason, making debugging unnecessarily mysterious. Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
Include the savepoint name in the error message and rephrase it a bit to match common style. Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
Instead of embedding the savepoint name in a list and then requiring complex code to unpack it, just add another struct field to store it directly. Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
We call this thing a "transaction block" everywhere except in a few functions, where it is mysteriously called a "transaction chain". In the SQL standard, a transaction chain is something different. So rename these functions to match the common terminology. Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
After a6542a4b, some function comments were misplaced. Fix that. Reviewed-by: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@alvh.no-ip.org>
-
Tom Lane authored
Part of the intent in commit fd1a421f was to allow SQL functions that are declared to return VOID to contain anything, including an unrelated final SELECT, the same as SQL-language procedures can. However, the planner's inlining logic didn't get that memo. Fix it, and add some regression tests covering this area, since evidently we had none. In passing, clean up some typos in comments in create_function_3.sql, and get rid of its none-too-safe assumption that DROP CASCADE notice output is immutably ordered. Per report from Prabhat Sahu. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CANEvxPqxAj6nNHVcaXxpTeEFPmh24Whu+23emgjiuKrhJSct0A@mail.gmail.com
-
Tom Lane authored
Commit 3b7ab438 added some tests that require ecpg to be given the new "-C ORACLE" switch. Teach the MSVC build infrastructure about that. Michael Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8299.1521154647@sss.pgh.pa.us
-
- 15 Mar, 2018 9 commits
-
-
Tom Lane authored
Many of the objects we create during the regression tests are put in the public schema, so that using the same names in different regression tests creates a hazard of test failures if any two such scripts run concurrently. This patch cleans up a bunch of latent hazards of that sort, as well as two live hazards. The current situation in this regard is far worse than it was a year or two back, because practically all of the partitioning-related test cases have reused table names with enthusiasm. I despaired of cleaning up that mess within the five most-affected tests (create_table, alter_table, insert, update, inherit); fortunately those don't run concurrently. Other than partitioning problems, most of the issues boil down to using names like "foo", "bar", "tmp", etc, without thought for the fact that other test scripts might use similar names concurrently. I've made an effort to make all such names more specific. One of the live hazards was that commit 7421f4b8 caused with.sql to create a table named "test", conflicting with a similarly-named table in alter_table.sql; this was exposed in the buildfarm recently. The other one was that join.sql and transactions.sql both create tables named "foo" and "bar"; but join.sql's uses of those names date back only to December or so. Since commit 7421f4b8 was back-patched to v10, back-patch a minimal fix for that problem. The rest of this is just future-proofing. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4627.1521070268@sss.pgh.pa.us
-
Robert Haas authored
There's no functional change here, or at least I hope there isn't, just code rearrangement. The rearrangement is motivated by partition-wise aggregate, which doesn't need to consider the degenerate case but wants to reuse the logic for the ordinary case. Based loosely on a patch from Ashutosh Bapat and Jeevan Chalke, but I whacked it around pretty heavily. The larger patch series of which this patch is a part was also reviewed and tested by Antonin Houska, Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, David Rowley, Dilip Kumar, Konstantin Knizhnik, Pascal Legrand, Rafia Sabih, and me. Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRewpqCmVkwvq6qrRjmbMDpN0CZvRRzjd8UvncczA3Oz1Q@mail.gmail.com
-
Alvaro Herrera authored
Should have done this in e69f5e0e ... Per note from Tom Lane.
-
Tom Lane authored
Since these names are global, using the same ones in different regression tests creates a hazard of test failures if any two such scripts run concurrently. Let's establish a policy of not doing that. In the cases where a conflict existed, I chose to rename both sides: in principle one script or the other could've been left in possession of the common name, but that seems to just invite more trouble of the same sort. There are a number of places where scripts are using names that seem unduly generic, but in the absence of actual conflicts I left them alone. In addition, fix insert.sql's use of "someone_else" as a role name. That's a flat out violation of longstanding project policy, so back-patch that change to v10 where the usage appeared. The rest of this is just future-proofing, as no two of these scripts are actually run concurrently in the existing parallel_schedule. Conflicts of schema-qualified names also exist, but will be dealt with separately. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4627.1521070268@sss.pgh.pa.us
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
Fix the warnings created by the compiler warning options -Wformat-overflow=2 -Wformat-truncation=2, supported since GCC 7. This is a more aggressive variant of the fixes in 6275f5d2, which GCC 7 warned about by default. The issues are all harmless, but some dubious coding patterns are cleaned up. One issue that is of external interest is that BGW_MAXLEN is increased from 64 to 96. Apparently, the old value would cause the bgw_name of logical replication workers to be truncated in some circumstances. But this doesn't actually add those warning options. It appears that the warnings depend a bit on compilation and optimization options, so it would be annoying to have to keep up with that. This is more of a once-in-a-while cleanup. Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
-
Robert Haas authored
get_number_of_groups() and make_partial_grouping_target() currently fish information directly out of the PlannerInfo; in the former case, the target list, and in the latter case, the HAVING qual. This works fine if there's only one grouping relation, but if the pending patch for partition-wise aggregate gets committed, we'll have multiple grouping relations and must therefore use appropriately translated versions of these values for each one. To make that simpler, pass the values to be used as arguments. Jeevan Chalke. The larger patch series of which this patch is a part was also reviewed and tested by Antonin Houska, Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, David Rowley, Dilip Kumar, Konstantin Knizhnik, Pascal Legrand, Rafia Sabih, and me. Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAM2+6=UqFnFUypOvLdm5TgC+2M=-E0Q7_LOh0VDFFzmk2BBPzQ@mail.gmail.com Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAM2+6=W+L=C4yBqMrgrfTfNtbtmr4T53-hZhwbA2kvbZ9VMrrw@mail.gmail.com
-
Alvaro Herrera authored
So that it works on MSVC, too. Author: Michaël Paquier Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/29889.1520968202@sss.pgh.pa.us
-
Alvaro Herrera authored
Doing so causes a pg_upgrade of a database containing these objects to fail whenever pg_class changes. And it's pointless anyway: we have more interesting tables anyhow. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD5tBc+s8pW9WvH2+_z=B4x95FD4QuzZKcaMpff_9H4rS0VU1A@mail.gmail.com
-
Alvaro Herrera authored
The logical replication type map seems to have been misused by its only caller -- it would try to use the remote OID as input for local type routines, which unsurprisingly could result in bogus "cache lookup failed for type XYZ" errors, or random other type names being picked up if they happened to use the right OID. Fix that, changing Oid logicalrep_typmap_getid(Oid remoteid) to char *logicalrep_typmap_gettypname(Oid remoteid) which is more useful. If the remote type is not part of the typmap, this simply prints "unrecognized type" instead of choking trying to figure out -- a pointless exercise (because the only input for that comes from replication messages, which are not under the local node's control) and dangerous to boot, when called from within an error context callback. Once that is done, it comes to light that the local OID in the typmap entry was not being used for anything; the type/schema names are what we need, so remove local type OID from that struct. Once you do that, it becomes pointless to attach a callback to regular syscache invalidation. So remove that also. Reported-by: Dang Minh Huong Author: Masahiko Sawada Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera, Petr Jelínek, Dang Minh Huong, Atsushi Torikoshi Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/75DB81BEEA95B445AE6D576A0A5C9E936A6BE964@BPXM05GP.gisp.nec.co.jp Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/75DB81BEEA95B445AE6D576A0A5C9E936A6C4B0A@BPXM05GP.gisp.nec.co.jp
-
- 14 Mar, 2018 9 commits
-
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
It is not used for anything internally, and it cannot be relied on for external uses, so it can just be removed. To correct recommended way to check for a primary key is in pg_index. Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/b1a24c6c-6913-f89c-674e-0704f0ed69db@2ndquadrant.com
-
Stephen Frost authored
In b5635948, a couple of function header comments weren't changed, or weren't changed correctly, to reflect the arguments being passed into the functions. Specifically, get_number_of_groups() had the wrong argument name in the commit and create_grouping_paths() wasn't updated even though the arguments had been changed. The issue with create_grouping_paths() was noticed by Ashutosh Bapat, while I discovered the issue with get_number_of_groups() by looking to see if there were any similar issues from that commit. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRcbp4702jcp387PExt3fNCt62QJN8++DQGwBhsW6wRHWA@mail.gmail.com
-
Stephen Frost authored
The comment should have been referring to the number of workers, not the number of paths. Author: Ashutosh Bapat Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFjFpRcbp4702jcp387PExt3fNCt62QJN8++DQGwBhsW6wRHWA@mail.gmail.com
-
Michael Meskes authored
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
In a top-level CALL, the values of INOUT arguments will be returned as a result row. In PL/pgSQL, the values are assigned back to the input arguments. In other languages, the same convention as for return a record from a function is used. That does not require any code changes in the PL implementations. Reviewed-by: Pavel Stehule <pavel.stehule@gmail.com>
-
Alvaro Herrera authored
Autovacuum's 'workitem' request queue is of limited size, so requests can fail if they arrive more quickly than autovacuum can process them. Emit a log message when this happens, to provide better visibility of this. Backpatch to 10. While this represents an API change for AutoVacuumRequestWork, that function is not yet prepared to deal with external modules calling it, so there doesn't seem to be any risk (other than log spam, that is.) Author: Masahiko Sawada Reviewed-by: Fabrízio Mello, Ildar Musin, Álvaro Herrera Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoB1HrQhp6_4rTyHN5kWEJCEsG8YzsjZNt-ctoXSn5Uisw@mail.gmail.com
-
Stephen Frost authored
resultRelInfo is the argument for the function, not projectReturning. Author: Etsuro Fujita Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5AA8E11E.1040609@lab.ntt.co.jp
-
Peter Eisentraut authored
This tests how the different forks of unlogged tables behave in crash recovery. Author: David Steele <david@pgmasters.net>
-
- 13 Mar, 2018 6 commits
-
-
Michael Meskes authored
In some cases Oracle Pro*C handles char array differently than ECPG. This patch adds a Oracle compatibility mode to make ECPG behave like Pro*C. Patch by David Rader <davidr@openscg.com>
-
Michael Meskes authored
Patch by Patrick Krecker <patrick@judicata.com>
-
Andres Freund authored
Previously there were no tests verifying that NULL handling in AND/OR was correct (i.e. that NULL rather than false is returned if expression doesn't return true). Author: Andres Freund
-
Andres Freund authored
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180312222023.i4sgkbl4oqtstus3@alap3.anarazel.de
-
Robert Haas authored
A simple UNION ALL gets flattened into an appendrel of subquery RTEs, but up until now it's been impossible for the appendrel to use the partial paths for the subqueries, so we can implement the appendrel as a Parallel Append but only one with non-partial paths as children. There are three separate obstacles to removing that limitation. First, when planning a subquery, propagate any partial paths to the final_rel so that they are potentially visible to outer query levels (but not if they have initPlans attached, because that wouldn't be safe). Second, after planning a subquery, propagate any partial paths for the final_rel to the subquery RTE in the outer query level in the same way we do for non-partial paths. Third, teach finalize_plan() to account for the possibility that the fake parameter we use for rescan signalling when the plan contains a Gather (Merge) node may be propagated from an outer query level. Patch by me, reviewed and tested by Amit Khandekar, Rajkumar Raghuwanshi, and Ashutosh Bapat. Test cases based on examples by Rajkumar Raghuwanshi. Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CA+Tgmoa6L9A1nNCk3aTDVZLZ4KkHDn1+tm7mFyFvP+uQPS7bAg@mail.gmail.com
-
Tom Lane authored
The existing logic for updating pg_class.reltuples trusted the sampling results only for the pages ANALYZE actually visited, preferring to believe the previous tuple density estimate for all the unvisited pages. While there's some rationale for doing that for VACUUM (first that VACUUM is likely to visit a very nonrandom subset of pages, and second that we know for sure that the unvisited pages did not change), there's no such rationale for ANALYZE: by assumption, it's looked at an unbiased random sample of the table's pages. Furthermore, in a very large table ANALYZE will have examined only a tiny fraction of the table's pages, meaning it cannot slew the overall density estimate very far at all. In a table that is physically growing, this causes reltuples to increase nearly proportionally to the change in relpages, regardless of what is actually happening in the table. This has been observed to cause reltuples to become so much larger than reality that it effectively shuts off autovacuum, whose threshold for doing anything is a fraction of reltuples. (Getting to the point where that would happen seems to require some additional, not well understood, conditions. But it's undeniable that if reltuples is seriously off in a large table, ANALYZE alone will not fix it in any reasonable number of iterations, especially not if the table is continuing to grow.) Hence, restrict the use of vac_estimate_reltuples() to VACUUM alone, and in ANALYZE, just extrapolate from the sample pages on the assumption that they provide an accurate model of the whole table. If, by very bad luck, they don't, at least another ANALYZE will fix it; in the old logic a single bad estimate could cause problems indefinitely. In HEAD, let's remove vac_estimate_reltuples' is_analyze argument altogether; it was never used for anything and now it's totally pointless. But keep it in the back branches, in case any third-party code is calling this function. Per bug #15005. Back-patch to all supported branches. David Gould, reviewed by Alexander Kuzmenkov, cosmetic changes by me Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20180117164916.3fdcf2e9@engels
-