- 25 Jan, 2014 3 commits
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
This allows ending recovery as a consistent state has been reached. Without this, there was no easy way to e.g restore an online backup, without replaying any extra WAL after the backup ended. MauMau and me.
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Noah Misch authored
Per report from Jeffrey Walton, libpq has been accepting only TLSv1 exactly. Along the lines of the backend code, libpq will now support new versions as OpenSSL adds them. Marko Kreen, reviewed by Wim Lewis.
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Noah Misch authored
Marko Kreen, reviewed by Wim Lewis.
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- 24 Jan, 2014 6 commits
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Stephen Frost authored
During parallel pg_dump, a worker process closing the connection caused a minor memory leak (particularly minor as we are likely about to exit anyway). Instead, free the memory in this case prior to returning NULL to indicate connection closed. Spotting by the Coverity scanner. Back patch to 9.3 where this was introduced.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
The maxoff field is not used in the new, compressed page format. Let's reset it when converting an old-format page to the new format. The code won't care either way, but this makes it possible to use the field for something else in the future.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
Spotted by Alexander Korotkov
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
When vacuuming a data leaf page, any compressed posting lists that are not modified, are copied back to the buffer from a later location in the same buffer rather than from a palloc'd copy. IOW, they are just moved downwards in the same buffer. Because the source and destination addresses can overlap, we must use memmove rather than memcpy. Report and fix by Alexander Korotkov.
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Stephen Frost authored
Add the ability to specify the objects to move by who those objects are owned by (as relowner) and change ALL to mean ALL objects. This makes the command always operate against a well-defined set of objects and not have the objects-to-be-moved based on the role of the user running the command. Per discussion with Simon and Tom.
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Fujii Masao authored
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- 23 Jan, 2014 8 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Since C99, it's been standard for printf and friends to accept a "z" size modifier, meaning "whatever size size_t has". Up to now we've generally dealt with printing size_t values by explicitly casting them to unsigned long and using the "l" modifier; but this is really the wrong thing on platforms where pointers are wider than longs (such as Win64). So let's start using "z" instead. To ensure we can do that on all platforms, teach src/port/snprintf.c to understand "z", and add a configure test to force use of that implementation when the platform's version doesn't handle "z". Having done that, modify a bunch of places that were using the unsigned-long hack to use "z" instead. This patch doesn't pretend to have gotten everyplace that could benefit, but it catches many of them. I made an effort in particular to ensure that all uses of the same error message text were updated together, so as not to increase the number of translatable strings. It's possible that this change will result in format-string warnings from pre-C99 compilers. We might have to reconsider if there are any popular compilers that will warn about this; but let's start by seeing what the buildfarm thinks. Andres Freund, with a little additional work by me
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
The Sparc machines in the buildfarm are crashing because of misaligned access to posting lists stored in entry tuples. I accidentally removed a critical SHORTALIGN() from ginFormTuple, as part of the packed posting lists patch. Perhaps I thought it was unnecessary, because the index_form_tuple() call above the SHORTALIGN already aligned the size, missing the fact that the null-category byte makes it misaligned again (I think the SHORTALIGN is indeed unnecessary if there's no null- category byte, but let's just play it safe...)
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
Not all compilers understand that elog(ERROR, ...) never returns.
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Alvaro Herrera authored
Some cases were still reporting errors and aborting, instead of a NOTICE that the object was being skipped. This makes it more difficult to cleanly handle pg_dump --clean, so change that to instead skip missing objects properly. Per bug #7873 reported by Dave Rolsky; apparently this affects a large number of users. Authors: Pavel Stehule and Dean Rasheed. Some tweaks by Álvaro Herrera
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Fujii Masao authored
There was a bug in the psql's meta command \conninfo. When the IP address was specified in the hostaddr and psql used it to create a connection (i.e., psql -d "hostaddr=xxx"), \conninfo could not display that address. This is because \conninfo got the connection information only from PQhost() which could not return hostaddr. This patch adds PQhostaddr(), and changes \conninfo so that it can display not only the host name that PQhost() returns but also the IP address which PQhostaddr() returns. The bug has existed since 9.1 where \conninfo was introduced. But it's too late to add new libpq function into the released versions, so no backpatch.
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Andrew Dunstan authored
Dilip Kumar.
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Fujii Masao authored
In the platform that doesn't support Unix-domain socket, when neither host nor hostaddr are specified, the default host 'localhost' is used to connect to the server and PQhost() must return that, but it didn't. This patch fixes PQhost() so that it returns the default host in that case. Also this patch fixes PQhost() so that it doesn't return Unix-domain socket directory path in the platform that doesn't support Unix-domain socket. Back-patch to all supported versions.
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Bruce Momjian authored
Report from Eric Howe
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- 22 Jan, 2014 4 commits
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
gcc 4.8 was happy with having a duplicate typedef, but most compilers seem not to be, per buildfarm.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
GIN posting lists are now encoded using varbyte-encoding, which allows them to fit in much smaller space than the straight ItemPointer array format used before. The new encoding is used for both the lists stored in-line in entry tree items, and in posting tree leaf pages. To maintain backwards-compatibility and keep pg_upgrade working, the code can still read old-style pages and tuples. Posting tree leaf pages in the new format are flagged with GIN_COMPRESSED flag, to distinguish old and new format pages. Likewise, entry tree tuples in the new format have a GIN_ITUP_COMPRESSED flag set in a bit that was previously unused. This patch bumps GIN_CURRENT_VERSION from 1 to 2. New indexes created with version 9.4 will therefore have version number 2 in the metapage, while old pg_upgraded indexes will have version 1. The code treats them the same, but it might be come handy in the future, if we want to drop support for the uncompressed format. Alexander Korotkov and me. Reviewed by Tomas Vondra and Amit Langote.
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Andrew Dunstan authored
This will help in preparation of clean patches for upcoming json work.
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Stephen Frost authored
A while back, 2c92edad allowed type_func_name_keywords to be used in more places, including role identifiers. Unfortunately, that commit missed out on cases where name_list was used for lists-of-roles, eg: for DROP ROLE. This resulted in the unfortunate situation that you could CREATE a role with a type_func_name_keywords-allowed identifier, but not DROP it (directly- ALTER could be used to rename it to something which could be DROP'd). This extends allowing type_func_name_keywords to places where role lists can be used. Back-patch to 9.0, as 2c92edad was.
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- 21 Jan, 2014 5 commits
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Tom Lane authored
All these constructs generate parse trees consisting of a Const and a run-time type coercion (perhaps a FuncExpr or a CoerceViaIO). Modify the raw parse output so that we end up with the original token's location attached to the type coercion node while the Const has location -1; before, it was the other way around. This makes no difference in terms of what exprLocation() will say about the parse tree as a whole, so it should not have any user-visible impact. The point of changing it is that we do not want contrib/pg_stat_statements to treat these constructs as replaceable constants. It will do the right thing if the Const has location -1 rather than a valid location. This is a pretty ugly hack, but then this code is ugly already; we should someday replace this translation with special-purpose parse node(s) that would allow ruleutils.c to reconstruct the original query text. (See also commit 5d3fcc4c, which also hacked location assignment rules for the benefit of pg_stat_statements.) Back-patch to 9.2 where pg_stat_statements grew the ability to recognize replaceable constants. Kyotaro Horiguchi
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Robert Haas authored
Unlike our other array functions, this considers the total number of elements across all dimensions, and returns 0 rather than NULL when the array has no elements. But it seems that both of those behaviors are almost universally disliked, so hopefully that's OK. Marko Tiikkaja, reviewed by Dean Rasheed and Pavel Stehule
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Robert Haas authored
Commit a5bca4ef accidentally changed the semantics when the "skipping missing configuration file" is emitted, because it forced OK to true instead of leaving the value untouched. Spotted by Tom Lane.
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Robert Haas authored
There's no apparent way to trigger this, so I'm not going to worry about back-patching it for now. But it's still wrong. Marti Raudsepp
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Robert Haas authored
Commit 138184ad plugged some but not all of the leaks from commit 2a0c81a1. This tightens things up some more. Amit Kapila, per an observation by Tom Lane
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- 20 Jan, 2014 5 commits
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Alvaro Herrera authored
This is so that auto_explain can use it. Kyotaro HORIGUCHI
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Tom Lane authored
When there are consecutive spaces (or other non-format-code characters) in the format, we should advance over exactly that many characters of input. The previous coding mistakenly did a "skip whitespace" action between such characters, possibly allowing more input to be skipped than the user intended. We only need to skip whitespace just before an actual field. This is really a bug fix, but given the minimal number of field complaints and the risk of breaking applications coded to expect the old behavior, let's not back-patch it. Jeevan Chalke
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Fujii Masao authored
Sawada Masahiko
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Simon Riggs authored
Previously the presence of a nextval() prevented the use of batch-mode COPY. This patch introduces a special case just for nextval() functions. In future we will introduce a general case solution for labelling volatile functions as safe for use.
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- 19 Jan, 2014 5 commits
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Magnus Hagander authored
In the MSVC build system we've never separated krb5 from gss, and always built them both. Since the removal of native krb5 support, this parameter only controls GSSAPI, so rename it accordingly.
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Magnus Hagander authored
krb5 has been deprecated since 8.3, and the recommended way to do Kerberos authentication is using the GSSAPI authentication method (which is still fully supported). libpq retains the ability to identify krb5 authentication, but only gives an error message about it being unsupported. Since all authentication is initiated from the backend, there is no need to keep it at all in the backend.
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Magnus Hagander authored
Suggested by Tom
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Stephen Frost authored
Tablespaces have a few options which can be set on them to give PG hints as to how the tablespace behaves (perhaps it's faster for sequential scans, or better able to handle random access, etc). These options were only available through the ALTER TABLESPACE command. This adds the ability to set these options at CREATE TABLESPACE time, removing the need to do both a CREATE TABLESPACE and ALTER TABLESPACE to get the correct options set on the tablespace. Vik Fearing, reviewed by Michael Paquier.
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Tom Lane authored
Historically, VACUUM has just reported its new_rel_tuples estimate (the same thing it puts into pg_class.reltuples) to the stats collector. That number counts both live and dead-but-not-yet-reclaimable tuples. This behavior may once have been right, but modern versions of the pgstats code track live and dead tuple counts separately, so putting the total into n_live_tuples and zero into n_dead_tuples is surely pretty bogus. Fix it to report live and dead tuple counts separately. This doesn't really do much for situations where updating transactions commit concurrently with a VACUUM scan (possibly causing double-counting or omission of the tuples they add or delete); but it's clearly an improvement over what we were doing before. Hari Babu, reviewed by Amit Kapila
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- 18 Jan, 2014 4 commits
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Stephen Frost authored
This adds a 'MOVE' sub-command to ALTER TABLESPACE which allows moving sets of objects from one tablespace to another. This can be extremely handy and avoids a lot of error-prone scripting. ALTER TABLESPACE ... MOVE will only move objects the user owns, will notify the user if no objects were found, and can be used to move ALL objects or specific types of objects (TABLES, INDEXES, or MATERIALIZED VIEWS).
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Stephen Frost authored
We've always allowed CREATE TABLE to create tables in the database's default tablespace without checking for CREATE permissions on that tablespace. Unfortunately, the original implementation of ALTER TABLE ... SET TABLESPACE didn't pick up on that exception. This changes ALTER TABLE ... SET TABLESPACE to allow the database's default tablespace without checking for CREATE rights on that tablespace, just as CREATE TABLE works today. Users could always do this through a series of commands (CREATE TABLE ... AS SELECT * FROM ...; DROP TABLE ...; etc), so let's fix the oversight in SET TABLESPACE's original implementation.
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Tom Lane authored
These changes should generally improve correctness/maintainability. A nice side benefit is that several kilobytes move from initialized data to text segment, allowing them to be shared across processes and probably reducing copy-on-write overhead while forking a new backend. Unfortunately this doesn't seem to help libpq in the same way (at least not when it's compiled with -fpic on x86_64), but we can hope the linker at least collects all nominally-const data together even if it's not actually part of the text segment. Also, make pg_encname_tbl[] static in encnames.c, since there seems no very good reason for any other code to use it; per a suggestion from Wim Lewis, who independently submitted a patch that was mostly a subset of this one. Oskari Saarenmaa, with some editorialization by me
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Andrew Dunstan authored
Patch from Amit Kapila.
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