1. 13 May, 2014 3 commits
  2. 12 May, 2014 3 commits
  3. 11 May, 2014 5 commits
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Stamp 9.4beta1. · e6df2e1b
      Tom Lane authored
      e6df2e1b
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Find postgresql.auto.conf in PGDATA even when postgresql.conf is elsewhere. · 195e81af
      Tom Lane authored
      The original coding for ALTER SYSTEM made a fundamentally bogus assumption
      that postgresql.auto.conf could be sought relative to the main config file
      if we hadn't yet determined the value of data_directory.  This fails for
      common arrangements with the config file elsewhere, as reported by
      Christoph Berg.
      
      The simplest fix is to not try to read postgresql.auto.conf until after
      SelectConfigFiles has chosen (and locked down) the data_directory setting.
      
      Because of the logic in ProcessConfigFile for handling resetting of GUCs
      that've been removed from the config file, we cannot easily read the main
      and auto config files separately; so this patch adopts a brute force
      approach of reading the main config file twice during postmaster startup.
      That's a tad ugly, but the actual time cost is likely to be negligible,
      and there's no time for a more invasive redesign before beta.
      
      With this patch, any attempt to set data_directory via ALTER SYSTEM
      will be silently ignored.  It would probably be better to throw an
      error, but that can be dealt with later.  This bug, however, would
      prevent any testing of ALTER SYSTEM by a significant fraction of the
      userbase, so it seems important to get it fixed before beta.
      195e81af
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Rename jsonb_hash_ops to jsonb_path_ops. · 12e611d4
      Tom Lane authored
      There's no longer much pressure to switch the default GIN opclass for
      jsonb, but there was still some unhappiness with the name "jsonb_hash_ops",
      since hashing is no longer a distinguishing property of that opclass,
      and anyway it seems like a relatively minor detail.  At the suggestion of
      Heikki Linnakangas, we'll use "jsonb_path_ops" instead; that captures the
      important characteristic that each index entry depends on the entire path
      from the document root to the indexed value.
      
      Also add a user-facing explanation of the implementation properties of
      these two opclasses.
      12e611d4
    • Peter Eisentraut's avatar
      Translation updates · e136271a
      Peter Eisentraut authored
      e136271a
    • Bruce Momjian's avatar
      ea78ce1d
  4. 10 May, 2014 6 commits
  5. 09 May, 2014 15 commits
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Fix broken allocation logic in recently-rewritten jsonb_util.c. · 3d8c2b49
      Tom Lane authored
      reserveFromBuffer() failed to consider the possibility that it needs to
      more-than-double the current buffer size.  Beyond that, it seems likely
      that we'd someday need to worry about integer overflow of the buffer
      length variable.  Rather than reinvent the logic that's already been
      debugged in stringinfo.c, let's go back to using that logic.  We can
      still have the same targeted API, but we'll rely on stringinfo.c to
      manage reallocation.
      
      Per report from Alexander Korotkov.
      3d8c2b49
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Improve user-facing JSON documentation. · 0b92a77c
      Tom Lane authored
      I started out with the intention of just fixing the info about the jsonb
      operator classes, but soon found myself copy-editing most of the JSON
      material.  Hopefully it's more readable now.
      0b92a77c
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Get rid of bogus dependency on typcategory in to_json() and friends. · 0ca6bda8
      Tom Lane authored
      These functions were relying on typcategory to identify arrays and
      composites, which is not reliable and not the normal way to do it.
      Using typcategory to identify boolean, numeric types, and json itself is
      also pretty questionable, though the code in those cases didn't seem to be
      at risk of anything worse than wrong output.  Instead, use the standard
      lsyscache functions to identify arrays and composites, and rely on a direct
      check of the type OID for the other cases.
      
      In HEAD, also be sure to look through domains so that a domain is treated
      the same as its base type for conversions to JSON.  However, this is a
      small behavioral change; given the lack of field complaints, we won't
      back-patch it.
      
      In passing, refactor so that there's only one copy of the code that decides
      which conversion strategy to apply, not multiple copies that could (and
      have) gotten out of sync.
      0ca6bda8
    • Robert Haas's avatar
      Code review for logical decoding patch. · f1d8dd36
      Robert Haas authored
      Post-commit review identified a number of places where addition was
      used instead of multiplication or memory wasn't zeroed where it should
      have been.  This commit also fixes one case where a structure member
      was mis-initialized, and moves another memory allocation closer to
      the place where the allocated storage is used for clarity.
      
      Andres Freund
      f1d8dd36
    • Robert Haas's avatar
      Remove overeager assertion in logical_heap_begin_rewrite. · b2dada8f
      Robert Haas authored
      It's legal to configure wal_level=logical and max_replication_slots=0
      simultaneously.
      
      Andres Freund
      b2dada8f
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Teach add_json() that jsonb is of TYPCATEGORY_JSON. · 62e57ff0
      Tom Lane authored
      This code really needs to be refactored so that there aren't so many copies
      that can diverge.  Not to mention that this whole approach is probably
      wrong.  But for the moment I'll just stick my finger in the dike.
      Per report from Michael Paquier.
      62e57ff0
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Fix typcategory labeling of jsonb. · bdf9dd4d
      Tom Lane authored
      Dunno who had the cute idea of labeling jsonb as typcategory 'C',
      but it is not a composite type.  Label it 'U', since that's what
      json is using.
      bdf9dd4d
    • Heikki Linnakangas's avatar
      More jsonb cleanup. · d9daff0e
      Heikki Linnakangas authored
      Fix JSONB_MAX_ELEMS and JSONB_MAX_PAIRS macros to use CB_MASK in the
      calculation. JENTRY_POSMASK happens to have the same value at the moment,
      but that's just coincidental.
      
      Refactor jsonb iterator functions, for readability.
      
      Get rid of the JENTRY_ISFIRST flag. Whenever we handle JEntrys, we have
      access to the whole array and have enough context information to know
      which entry is the first. This frees up one bit in the JEntry header for
      future use. While we're at it, shuffle the JEntry bits so that boolean
      true and false go together, for aesthetic reasons.
      
      Bump catalog version as this changes the on-disk format slightly.
      d9daff0e
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Improve key representation for GIN jsonb_ops, and fix existence-search bug. · 46dddf76
      Tom Lane authored
      Change the key representation so that values that would exceed 127 bytes
      are hashed into short strings, and so that the original JSON datatype of
      each value is recorded in the index.  The hashing rule eliminates the major
      objection to having this opclass be the default for jsonb, namely that it
      could fail for plausible input data (due to GIN's restrictions on maximum
      key length).  Preserving datatype information doesn't really buy us much
      right now, but it requires no extra space compared to the previous way,
      and it might be useful later.
      
      Also, change the consistency-checking functions to request recheck for
      exists (jsonb ? text) and related operators.  The original analysis that
      this is an exactly checkable query was incorrect, since the index does
      not preserve information about whether a key appears at top level in
      the indexed JSON object.  Add a test case demonstrating the problem.
      
      Make some other, mostly cosmetic improvements to the code in jsonb_gin.c
      as well.
      
      catversion bump due to on-disk data format change in jsonb_ops indexes.
      46dddf76
    • Heikki Linnakangas's avatar
      Minor cleanup of jsonb_util.c · ff7bbb01
      Heikki Linnakangas authored
      Move the functions around to group related functions together. Remove
      binequal argument from lengthCompareJsonbStringValue, moving that
      responsibility to lengthCompareJsonbPair. Fix typo in comment.
      ff7bbb01
    • Heikki Linnakangas's avatar
      Avoid some pnstrdup()s when constructing jsonb · d3c72e23
      Heikki Linnakangas authored
      This speeds up text to jsonb parsing and hstore to jsonb conversions
      somewhat.
      d3c72e23
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Fix missing dependencies in ecpg's test Makefiles. · 14d309cc
      Tom Lane authored
      Ensure that ecpg preprocessor output files are rebuilt when re-testing
      after a change in the ecpg preprocessor itself, or a change in any of
      several include files that get copied verbatim into the output files.
      The lack of these dependencies was what created problems for Kevin Grittner
      after the recent pgindent run.  There's no way for --enable-depend to
      discover these dependencies automatically, so we've gotta put them into
      the Makefiles by hand.
      
      While at it, reduce the amount of duplication in the ecpg invocations.
      14d309cc
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Document permissions needed for pg_database_size and pg_tablespace_size. · fb1974cc
      Tom Lane authored
      Back in 8.3, we installed permissions checks in these functions (see
      commits 8bc225e7 and cc26599b).  But we forgot to document that
      anywhere in the user-facing docs; it did get mentioned in the 8.3 release
      notes, but nobody's looking at that any more.  Per gripe from Suya Huang.
      fb1974cc
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Increase the default value of effective_cache_size to 4GB. · b910d7ea
      Tom Lane authored
      Per discussion, the old value of 128MB is ridiculously small on modern
      machines; in fact, it's not even any larger than the default value of
      shared_buffers, which it certainly should be.  Increase to 4GB, which
      is unlikely to be any worse than the old default for anyone, and should
      be noticeably better for most.  Eventually we might have an autotuning
      scheme for this setting, but the recent attempt crashed and burned,
      so for now just do this.
      b910d7ea
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Revert "Auto-tune effective_cache size to be 4x shared buffers" · a16d421c
      Tom Lane authored
      This reverts commit ee1e5662, as well as
      a remarkably large number of followup commits, which were mostly concerned
      with the fact that the implementation didn't work terribly well.  It still
      doesn't: we probably need some rather basic work in the GUC infrastructure
      if we want to fully support GUCs whose default varies depending on the
      value of another GUC.  Meanwhile, it also emerged that there wasn't really
      consensus in favor of the definition the patch tried to implement (ie,
      effective_cache_size should default to 4 times shared_buffers).  So whack
      it all back to where it was.  In a followup commit, I'll do what was
      recently agreed to, which is to simply change the default to a higher
      value.
      a16d421c
  6. 08 May, 2014 6 commits
    • Noah Misch's avatar
      Un-break ecpg test suite under --disable-integer-datetimes. · 08c8e896
      Noah Misch authored
      Commit 4318daec broke it.  The change in
      sub-second precision at extreme dates is normal.  The inconsistent
      truncation vs. rounding is essentially a bug, albeit a longstanding one.
      Back-patch to 8.4, like the causative commit.
      08c8e896
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Fix comment. · 1e81f846
      Tom Lane authored
      Previous commit was confused about the case we're handling: actually,
      what the patch is dealing with is platforms that have optreset, *and*
      have <getopt.h>, but the latter fails to declare the former.  Because
      we use a linking probe to set HAVE_INT_OPTRESET, we need to be sure we
      have a declaration even if <getopt.h> doesn't think it exists.
      1e81f846
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Allow for platforms that have optreset but not <getopt.h>. · 0c15a524
      Tom Lane authored
      Reportedly, some versions of mingw are like that, and it seems plausible
      in general that older platforms might be that way.  However, we'd
      determined experimentally that just doing "extern int" conflicts with
      the way Cygwin declares these variables, so explicitly exclude Cygwin.
      
      Michael Paquier, tweaked by me to hopefully not break Cygwin
      0c15a524
    • Heikki Linnakangas's avatar
      Protect against torn pages when deleting GIN list pages. · 4f7bb4b2
      Heikki Linnakangas authored
      To-be-deleted list pages contain no useful information, as they are being
      deleted, but we must still protect the writes from being torn by a crash
      after a partial write. To do that, re-initialize the pages on WAL replay.
      
      Jeff Janes caught this with a test program to test partial writes.
      Backpatch to all supported versions.
      4f7bb4b2
    • Heikki Linnakangas's avatar
      Include files copied from libpqport in .gitignore · 02c9a938
      Heikki Linnakangas authored
      Michael Paquier
      02c9a938
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Avoid buffer bloat in libpq when server is consistently faster than client. · 2f557167
      Tom Lane authored
      If the server sends a long stream of data, and the server + network are
      consistently fast enough to force the recv() loop in pqReadData() to
      iterate until libpq's input buffer is full, then upon processing the last
      incomplete message in each bufferload we'd usually double the buffer size,
      due to supposing that we didn't have enough room in the buffer to finish
      collecting that message.  After filling the newly-enlarged buffer, the
      cycle repeats, eventually resulting in an out-of-memory situation (which
      would be reported misleadingly as "lost synchronization with server").
      Of course, we should not enlarge the buffer unless we still need room
      after discarding already-processed messages.
      
      This bug dates back quite a long time: pqParseInput3 has had the behavior
      since perhaps 2003, getCopyDataMessage at least since commit 70066eb1
      in 2008.  Probably the reason it's not been isolated before is that in
      common environments the recv() loop would always be faster than the server
      (if on the same machine) or faster than the network (if not); or at least
      it wouldn't be slower consistently enough to let the buffer ramp up to a
      problematic size.  The reported cases involve Windows, which perhaps has
      different timing behavior than other platforms.
      
      Per bug #7914 from Shin-ichi Morita, though this is different from his
      proposed solution.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
      2f557167
  7. 07 May, 2014 2 commits