- 10 Mar, 2006 3 commits
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Tom Lane authored
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Tom Lane authored
Otherwise you can't cancel queries like select ... from generate_series(1,1000000).
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- 09 Mar, 2006 1 commit
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Bruce Momjian authored
boilerplate, with approval of author.
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- 08 Mar, 2006 7 commits
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Tom Lane authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Tom Lane authored
tapes) for each merge step. This will give us some idea of how effective the merge distribution algorithm is.
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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- 07 Mar, 2006 9 commits
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Tom Lane authored
performance issue during regular merge passes not only the 'final merge' case. The original design contemplated that there would never be more than about one free block per 'tape', hence no need for an efficient method of keeping the free blocks sorted. But given the later addition of merge preread behavior in tuplesort.c, there is likely to be about work_mem worth of free blocks, which is not so small ... and for that matter the number of tapes isn't necessarily small anymore either. So we'd better get rid of the assumption entirely. Instead, I'm assuming that the usage pattern will involve alternation between merge preread and writing of a new run. This makes it reasonable to just add blocks to the list without sorting during successive ltsReleaseBlock calls, and then do a qsort() when we start getting ltsGetFreeBlock() calls. Experimentation seems to confirm that there aren't many qsort calls relative to the number of ltsReleaseBlock/ltsGetFreeBlock calls.
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Tom Lane authored
we are doing the final merge pass on-the-fly, and not writing the data back onto a 'tape', the number of free blocks in the tape set will become large, leading to a lot of time wasted in ltsReleaseBlock(). There is really no need to track the free blocks anymore in this state, so add a simple shutoff switch. Per report from Stefan Kaltenbrunner.
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Tom Lane authored
process not in the postmaster) and with the right GucSource (needs to be a nontransactional source since we've not started an xact yet).
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Tom Lane authored
(respectively) to rename yylex and related symbols. Some were doing it this way already, while others used not-too-reliable sed hacks in the Makefiles. It's all nice and consistent now.
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Tom Lane authored
not likely ever to be implemented seeing it's been removed from SQL2003. This allows getting rid of the 'filter' version of yylex() that we had in parser.c, which should save at least a few microseconds in parsing.
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Tom Lane authored
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- 06 Mar, 2006 19 commits
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
escape_string_warning = on
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Bruce Momjian authored
> * -Eventually enable escape_string_warning and standard_conforming_strings
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Bruce Momjian authored
- new function justify_interval(interval) - modified function justify_hours(interval) - modified function justify_days(interval) These functions are defined to meet the requirements as discussed in this thread. Specifically: - justify_hours makes certain the sign bit on the hours matches the sign bit on the days. It only checks the sign bit on the days, and not the months, when determining if the hours should be positive or negative. After the call, -24 < hours < 24. - justify_days makes certain the sign bit on the days matches the sign bit on the months. It's behavior does not depend on the hours, nor does it modify the hours. After the call, -30 < days < 30. - justify_interval makes sure the sign bits on all three fields months, days, and hours are all the same. After the call, -24 < hours < 24 AND -30 < days < 30. Mark Dilger
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Bruce Momjian authored
Kevin Grittner
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Bruce Momjian authored
Markus Bertheau
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Bruce Momjian authored
> I've now tested this patch at home w/ 8.2HEAD and it seems to fix the > bug. I plan on testing it under 8.1.2 at work tommorow with > mod_auth_krb5, etc, and expect it'll work there. Assuming all goes > well and unless someone objects I'll forward the patch to -patches. > It'd be great to have this fixed as it'll allow us to use Kerberos to > authenticate to phppgadmin and other web-based tools which use > Postgres. While playing with this patch under 8.1.2 at home I discovered a mistake in how I manually applied one of the hunks to fe-auth.c. Basically, the base code had changed and so the patch needed to be modified slightly. This is because the code no longer either has a freeable pointer under 'name' or has 'name' as NULL. The attached patch correctly frees the string from pg_krb5_authname (where it had been strdup'd) if and only if pg_krb5_authname returned a string (as opposed to falling through and having name be set using name = pw->name;). Also added a comment to this effect. Backpatch to 8.1.X. Stephen Frost
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Bruce Momjian authored
PAM (such as Win32, but also unixen without PAM). On Unix, uses OpenLDAP. On win32, uses the builin WinLDAP library. Magnus Hagander
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Bruce Momjian authored
> o Prevent parent tables from altering or dropping constraints > like CHECK that are inherited by child tables > > Dropping constraints should only be possible with CASCADE. >
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
> o Check WSACancelBlockingCall() for interrupts (win32intr) >
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
> o Add COPY TO STDIN / STDOUT handling
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Bruce Momjian authored
remain as part of the multi-line query.
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Bruce Momjian authored
< * %Disallow changing sequence characteristics like INCREMENT for SERIAL columns > * %Disallow ALTER SEQUENCE changes for SERIAL sequences because pg_dump > does not dump the changes
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Bruce Momjian authored
> * %Disallow changing sequence characteristics like INCREMENT for SERIAL columns
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
returning "ASCII code of the first character of the argument" (see http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.1/interactive/functions-string.html, Table 9-6. "Other String Functions"). Presumably this should read "ASCII code of the first byte of the argument", which is what is returned when the argument is a multi-byte character (although then with UTF-8 at least that might not necessarily be an ASCII code). Ian Barwick
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Bruce Momjian authored
statements before the multi-line statement, rather than inside the multi-line statement.
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- 05 Mar, 2006 1 commit
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Neil Conway authored
columns of the grouping clause to avoid redundant sorts. The optimizer is not currently capable of doing this, so this patch implements a simple hack in the analysis phase (transformGroupClause): if any subset of the GROUP BY clause matches a prefix of the ORDER BY list, that prefix is moved to the front of the GROUP BY clause. This shouldn't change the semantics of the query, and allows a redundant sort to be avoided for queries like "GROUP BY a, b ORDER BY b".
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