- 12 Sep, 2009 3 commits
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Tom Lane authored
If Apple doesn't fix that reasonably soon, we'll have to consider back-patching a workaround; but for now, just hack it in HEAD so that we can get buildfarm reports on HEAD from OS X machines. Per Jan Otto.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
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Tom Lane authored
In this case we generate two PathKey references to the expression (one for DISTINCT and one for ORDER BY) and they really need to refer to the same EquivalenceClass. However get_eclass_for_sort_expr was being overly paranoid and creating two different EC's. Correct behavior is to use the SortGroupRef index to decide whether two references to volatile expressions that are equal() (ie textually equivalent) should be considered the same. Backpatch to 8.4. Possibly this should be changed in 8.3 as well, but I'll refrain in the absence of evidence of a visible failure in that branch. Per bug #5049.
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- 11 Sep, 2009 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
use that value when the backend is new enough to allow it. This responds to bug report from Keh-Cheng Chu pointing out that although 2 extra digits should be sufficient to dump and restore float8 exactly, it is possible to need 3 extra digits for float4 values.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
per Bruno Guimarães Carneiro
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- 10 Sep, 2009 3 commits
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Alvaro Herrera authored
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Tatsuo Ishii authored
are used to populate the tables with -i, but when running actual benchmark it has values separately hard-coded in the query metacommands. This patch makes the metacommands obtain their values from the relevant #defines. Patch provided by Jeff Janes.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
file handle on it, the file goes into "pending deletion" state where it still shows up in directory listing, but isn't accessible otherwise. That confuses RemoveOldXLogFiles(), making it think that the file hasn't been archived yet, while it actually was, and it was deleted along with the .done file. Fix that by renaming the file with ".deleted" extension before deleting it. Also check the return value of rename() and unlink(), so that if the removal fails for any reason (e.g another process is holding the file locked), we don't delete the .done file until the WAL file is really gone. Backpatch to 8.2, which is the oldest version supported on Windows.
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- 09 Sep, 2009 2 commits
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Before, PL/Python converted data between SQL and Python by going through a C string representation. This broke for bytea in two ways: - On input (function parameters), you would get a Python string that contains bytea's particular external representation with backslashes etc., instead of a sequence of bytes, which is what you would expect in a Python environment. This problem is exacerbated by the new bytea output format. - On output (function return value), null bytes in the Python string would cause truncation before the data gets stored into a bytea datum. This is now fixed by converting directly between the PostgreSQL datum and the Python representation. The required generalized infrastructure also allows for other improvements in passing: - When returning a boolean value, the SQL datum is now true if and only if Python considers the value that was passed out of the PL/Python function to be true. Previously, this determination was left to the boolean data type input function. So, now returning 'foo' results in true, because Python considers it true, rather than false because PostgreSQL considers it false. - On input, we can convert the integer and float types directly to their Python equivalents without having to go through an intermediate string representation. original patch by Caleb Welton, with updates by myself
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Tom Lane authored
code was already okay with this, but the hack that obtained the output column types of a recursive union in advance of doing real parse analysis of the recursive union forgot to handle the case where there was an inner WITH clause available to the non-recursive term. Best fix seems to be to refactor so that we don't need the "throwaway" parse analysis step at all. Instead, teach the transformSetOperationStmt code to set up the CTE's output column information after it's processed the non-recursive term normally. Per report from David Fetter.
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- 08 Sep, 2009 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
perl_embed_ldflags setting. On OS X it seems that ExtUtils::Embed is trying to force a universal binary to be built, but you need to specify that a lot further upstream if you want Postgres built that way; the only result of including -arch in perl_embed_ldflags is some warnings at the plperl.so link step. Per my complaint and Jan Otto's suggestion.
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Tom Lane authored
build actually attempts to advertise itself via Bonjour. Formerly it always did so, which meant that packagers had to decide for their users whether this behavior was wanted or not. The default is "off" to be on the safe side, though this represents a change in the default behavior of a Bonjour-enabled build. Per discussion.
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Tom Lane authored
with the not-so-deprecated DNSServiceRegister. This patch shouldn't change any user-visible behavior, it just gets rid of a deprecation warning in --with-bonjour builds. The new code will fail on OS X releases before 10.3, but it seems unlikely that anyone will want to run Postgres 8.5 on 10.2.
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Tom Lane authored
It seems the flex developers have decided to change yyleng from int to size_t. This has already happened in the latest release of OS X, and will start happening elsewhere once the next release of flex appears. Rather than trying to divine how it's declared in any particular build, let's just remove the one existing not-very-necessary external usage. Back-patch to all supported branches; not so much because users in the field are likely to care about building old branches with cutting-edge flex, as to keep OSX-based buildfarm members from having problems with old branches.
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- 07 Sep, 2009 1 commit
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Magnus Hagander authored
IPV6 headers in newer SDKs.
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- 06 Sep, 2009 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
to the Default timezone abbreviation set. Back-port the the current file set to all branches that contain tznames. This includes adding SGT to the Default set in pre-8.4 releases. Joachim Wieland
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- 05 Sep, 2009 2 commits
- 04 Sep, 2009 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
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Tom Lane authored
Formerly, these message types would be discarded unless there was already a stats hash table entry for the target table. However, the intent of saving hash table space for unused tables was subverted by the fact that the physical I/O done by the vacuum or analyze would result in an immediately following tabstat message, which would create the hash table entry anyway. All that we had left was surprising loss of statistical data, as in a recent complaint from Jaime Casanova. It seems unlikely that a real database would have many tables that go totally untouched over the long haul, so the consensus is that this "optimization" serves little purpose anyhow. Remove it, and just create the hash table entry on demand in all cases.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
input functions don't accept either. While the backend can handle such values fine, they can cause trouble in clients and in pg_dump/restore. This is followup to the original issue on time datatype reported by Andrew McNamara a while ago. Like that one, none of these seem worth back-patching.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
specify an encoding explicitly, we used to treat it as being in database encoding when we parsed it, but then perform a UTF-8 -> database encoding conversion on it, which was completely bogus. It's now consistently treated as UTF-8.
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- 03 Sep, 2009 9 commits
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Tom Lane authored
7.4.26.
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Tom Lane authored
to unload and re-load the library. The difficulty with unloading a library is that we haven't defined safe protocols for doing so. In particular, there's no safe mechanism for getting out of a "hook" function pointer unless libraries are unloaded in reverse order of loading. And there's no mechanism at all for undefining a custom GUC variable, so GUC would be left with a pointer to an old value that might or might not still be valid, and very possibly wouldn't be in the same place anymore. While the unload and reload behavior had some usefulness in easing development of new loadable libraries, it's of no use whatever to normal users, so just disabling it isn't giving up that much. Someday we might care to expend the effort to develop safe unload protocols; but even if we did, there'd be little certainty that every third-party loadable module was following them, so some security restrictions would still be needed. Back-patch to 8.2; before that, LOAD was superuser-only anyway. Security: unprivileged users could crash backend. CVE not assigned yet
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Tom Lane authored
functions. This extends the previous patch that forbade SETting these variables inside security-definer functions. RESET is equally a security hole, since it would allow regaining privileges of the caller; furthermore it can trigger Assert failures and perhaps other internal errors, since the code is not expecting these variables to change in such contexts. The previous patch did not cover this case because assign hooks don't really have enough information, so move the responsibility for preventing this into guc.c. Problem discovered by Heikki Linnakangas. Security: no CVE assigned yet, extends CVE-2007-6600
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Tom Lane authored
to occur for division by zero, even though the code is carefully avoiding that. All available evidence is that the only functions affected are int24div, int48div, and int28div, so patch just those three functions to include a "return" after the ereport() call. Backpatch to 8.4 so that the fix can be tested in production builds. For older branches our recommendation will continue to be to use -O1 on affected platforms (which are mostly non-mainstream anyway).
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Michael Meskes authored
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Michael Meskes authored
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Michael Meskes authored
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Tom Lane authored
Egypt, Mauritius, Bangladesh.
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Tom Lane authored
flat password file, because it never will anymore. We had managed to miss this during the recent flat-file-ectomy because it only happens if --pwfile or --pwprompt is specified to initdb. Apparently, few hackers use those. Reported by Erik Rijkers.
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- 02 Sep, 2009 3 commits
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Magnus Hagander authored
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Tom Lane authored
that's generated for a whole-row Var referencing the subquery, when the subquery is in the nullable side of an outer join. The previous coding instead put PlaceHolderVars around the elements of the RowExpr. The effect was that when the outer join made the subquery outputs go to null, the whole-row Var produced ROW(NULL,NULL,...) rather than just NULL. There are arguments afoot about whether those things ought to be semantically indistinguishable, but for the moment they are not entirely so, and the planner needs to take care that its machinations preserve the difference. Per bug #5025. Making this feasible required refactoring ResolveNew() to allow more caller control over what is substituted for a Var. I chose to make ResolveNew() a wrapper around a new general-purpose function replace_rte_variables(). I also fixed the ancient bogosity that ResolveNew might fail to set a query's hasSubLinks field after inserting a SubLink in it. Although all current callers make sure that happens anyway, we've had bugs of that sort before, and it seemed like a good time to install a proper solution. Back-patch to 8.4. The problem can be demonstrated clear back to 8.0, but the fix would be too invasive in earlier branches; not to mention that people may be depending on the subtly-incorrect behavior. The 8.4 series is new enough that fixing this probably won't cause complaints, but it might in older branches. Also, 8.4 shows the incorrect behavior in more cases than older branches do, because it is able to flatten subqueries in more cases.
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Tom Lane authored
(could happen if either postgresql.conf or postmaster.opts is empty). It's been broken since the C version was written for 8.0, so patch all the way back. initdb's copy of the function is broken in the same way, but it's less important there since the input files should never be empty. Patch that in HEAD only, and also fix some cosmetic differences that crept into that copy of the function. Per report from Corry Haines and Jeff Davis.
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- 01 Sep, 2009 5 commits
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Tom Lane authored
own database's datfrozenxid, if the current value is old enough to be forcing autovacuums or warning messages. This ensures that a bogus value is replaced as soon as possible. Per a comment from Heikki.
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Tom Lane authored
because of readjustment of 2PC rmgr IDs for flatfile removal.
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Tom Lane authored
declaration.
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Alvaro Herrera authored
Recent commits have removed the various uses it was supporting. It was a performance bottleneck, according to bug report #4919 by Lauris Ulmanis; seems it slowed down user creation after a billion users.
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Tom Lane authored
to fix the problem that SetClientEncoding needs to be done before InitializeClientEncoding, as reported by Zdenek Kotala. We get at least the small consolation of being able to remove the bizarre API detail that had InitPostgres returning whether user is a superuser.
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- 31 Aug, 2009 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
via the "flat files" facility. This requires making it enough like a backend to be able to run transactions; it's no longer an "auxiliary process" but more like the autovacuum worker processes. Also, its signal handling has to be brought into line with backends/workers. In particular, since it now has to handle procsignal.c processing, the special autovac-launcher-only signal conditions are moved to SIGUSR2. Alvaro, with some cleanup from Tom
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