- 29 Dec, 2010 4 commits
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Robert Haas authored
The contents of an unlogged table are WAL-logged; thus, they are not available on standby servers and are truncated whenever the database system enters recovery. Indexes on unlogged tables are also unlogged. Unlogged GiST indexes are not currently supported.
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Magnus Hagander authored
This privilege is required to do Streaming Replication, instead of superuser, making it possible to set up a SR slave that doesn't have write permissions on the master. Superuser privileges do NOT override this check, so in order to use the default superuser account for replication it must be explicitly granted the REPLICATION permissions. This is backwards incompatible change, in the interest of higher default security.
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Tom Lane authored
The "date" type supports a wider range of dates than int64 timestamps do. However, there is pre-int64-timestamp code in the planner that assumes that all date values can be converted to timestamp with impunity. Fortunately, what we really need out of the conversion is always a double (float8) value; so even when the date is out of timestamp's range it's possible to produce a sane answer. All we need is a code path that doesn't try to force the result into int64. Per trouble report from David Rericha. Back-patch to all supported versions. Although this is surely a corner case, there's not much point in advertising a date range wider than timestamp's if we will choke on such values in unexpected places.
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Tom Lane authored
This is how it was documented originally, but several years ago somebody decided that DEFAULT isn't a type of constraint. Well, the grammar thinks it is. The documentation was wrong in two ways: it alleged that DEFAULT had to appear before any other kind of constraint, and it alleged that you can't prefix a DEFAULT clause with a "CONSTRAINT name" clause, when in fact you can. (The latter behavior probably isn't SQL-standard, but our grammar has always allowed it.) This patch responds to Fujii Masao's observation that the ALTER TABLE documentation mistakenly implied that you couldn't include DEFAULT in ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN; though this isn't the way he proposed fixing it.
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- 28 Dec, 2010 5 commits
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Peter Eisentraut authored
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Tom Lane authored
It must be added at the end of the ExecStatusType enum to avoid ABI breakage compared to previous libpq versions. Noted by Magnus.
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Magnus Hagander authored
Move the list of what's restricted to superusers into the table itself, so it doesn't get missed again.
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Bruce Momjian authored
postmaster.pid file is larger than in previous major versions. This is a bug introduced when I added lines to the file recently.
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- 27 Dec, 2010 10 commits
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
per change to the file for pg_ctl.
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Tom Lane authored
No longer needed now that bitand() and bitor() have been renamed.
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Tom Lane authored
This is to avoid use of the C++ keywords "bitand" and "bitor" in the header file utils/varbit.h. Note the functions' SQL-level names are not changed, only their C-level names. In passing, make some comments in varbit.c conform to project-standard layout.
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Tom Lane authored
This is slower than the original coding but avoids the problem of including files in an unpredictable order. Aside from being more trustworthy, we can get rid of some exclusions that were formerly made for what turn out to be ordering or re-inclusion problems. I also modified it to include libpq's exported files in the check. ecpg should be included as well, but I'm unclear on which ecpg .h files are meant to be included by clients.
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Tom Lane authored
Noted while experimenting with cpluspluscheck.
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Tom Lane authored
gram.h has ordering dependencies, which are satisfied when it's included from gramparse.h, but might not be if it's pulled in directly.
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Tom Lane authored
"private" is a keyword in C++, so this breaks the poorly-enforced policy that header files should be include-able in C++ code. Per report from Craig Ringer and some investigation with cpluspluscheck.
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Alvaro Herrera authored
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Robert Haas authored
My previous commit, 85cff3ce on 2010-12-25, failed to update errcodes.sgml or plerrcodes.h. This patch corrects that oversight, per a gripe from Tom Lane, and also corrects a typographical error.
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- 26 Dec, 2010 1 commit
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Andrew Dunstan authored
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- 25 Dec, 2010 2 commits
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Robert Haas authored
Extracted from a much larger patch by Shigeru Hanada.
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Robert Haas authored
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- 24 Dec, 2010 7 commits
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Peter Eisentraut authored
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Andrew Dunstan authored
Allow vpath builds and regression tests to succeed on Mingw. Backpatch to release 8.4 - earlier releases would require more changes and it's not worth the trouble.
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Bruce Momjian authored
quotes are not required. This now matches postgresql.conf's specification of booleans.
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Bruce Momjian authored
port and socket directory into postmaster.pid, and have pg_ctl read from that file, for use by PQping().
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Peter Eisentraut authored
The order on the pg_dump/pg_dumpall man pages is not very strict, but surely putting it under connection options was wrong.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
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Robert Haas authored
The former is the option actually supported by these commands.
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- 23 Dec, 2010 3 commits
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Michael Meskes authored
string". This is not really needed because the string gets copied to the output untranslated anyway, but by adding this rule the lexer stays in sync with the backend lexer.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
cleanup stage to finish incomplete inserts or splits anymore. There was two reasons for the cleanup step: 1. When a new tuple was inserted to a leaf page, the downlink in the parent needed to be updated to contain (ie. to be consistent with) the new key. Updating the parent in turn might require recursively updating the parent of the parent. We now handle that by updating the parent while traversing down the tree, so that when we insert the leaf tuple, all the parents are already consistent with the new key, and the tree is consistent at every step. 2. When a page is split, we need to insert the downlink for the new right page(s), and update the downlink for the original page to not include keys that moved to the right page(s). We now handle that by setting a new flag, F_FOLLOW_RIGHT, on the non-rightmost pages in the split. When that flag is set, scans always follow the rightlink, regardless of the NSN mechanism used to detect concurrent page splits. That way the tree is consistent right after split, even though the downlink is still missing. This is very similar to the way B-tree splits are handled. When the downlink is inserted in the parent, the flag is cleared. To keep the insertion algorithm simple, when an insertion sees an incomplete split, indicated by the F_FOLLOW_RIGHT flag, it finishes the split before doing anything else. These changes allow removing the whole "invalid tuple" mechanism, but I retained the scan code to still follow invalid tuples correctly. While we don't create any such tuples anymore, we want to handle them gracefully in case you pg_upgrade a GiST index that has them. If we encounter any on an insert, though, we just throw an error saying that you need to REINDEX. The issue that got me into doing this is that if you did a checkpoint while an insert or split was in progress, and the checkpoint finishes quickly so that there is no WAL record related to the insert between RedoRecPtr and the checkpoint record, recovery from that checkpoint would not know to finish the incomplete insert. IOW, we have the same issue we solved with the rm_safe_restartpoint mechanism during normal operation too. It's highly unlikely to happen in practice, and this fix is far too large to backpatch, so we're just going to live with in previous versions, but this refactoring fixes it going forward. With this patch, you don't get the annoying 'index "FOO" needs VACUUM or REINDEX to finish crash recovery' notices anymore if you crash at an unfortunate moment.
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Bruce Momjian authored
off unless they guarantee that all writes to the BBU arrive in 8kB chunks. Per discussion with Greg Smith
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- 22 Dec, 2010 4 commits
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Robert Haas authored
Noted by Thom Brown.
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Magnus Hagander authored
This function is like the PQserverVersion() function except it returns the version of libpq, making it possible for a client program or driver to determine which version of libpq is in use at runtime, and not just at link time. Suggested by Harald Armin Massa and several others.
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Robert Haas authored
It appears that this will be faster for all but the shortest strings; at least one some platforms, memcmp() can use word-at-a-time comparisons. Noah Misch, somewhat pared down.
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- 21 Dec, 2010 2 commits
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Robert Haas authored
Andreas Karlsson
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Robert Haas authored
On MacOS X, and apparently also on other BSD-derived systems, attaching a debugger causes getppid() to return the pid of the debugging process rather than the actual parent PID. As a result, debugging the autovacuum launcher, startup process, or WAL sender on such systems causes it to exit, because the previous coding of PostmasterIsAlive() detects postmaster death by testing whether getppid() == PostmasterPid. Work around that behavior by checking the return value of getppid() more carefully. If it's PostmasterPid, the postmaster must be alive; if it's 1, assume the postmaster is dead. If it's any other value, assume we've been debugged and fall through to the less-reliable kill() test. Review by Tom Lane.
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- 20 Dec, 2010 2 commits
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Robert Haas authored
This case can arise if a transaction has written data, but only to temporary tables. Loss of the commit record in case of a crash won't matter, because the temporary tables will be lost anyway. Reviewed by Heikki Linnakangas and Simon Riggs.
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Alvaro Herrera authored
Jaime Casanova
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