- 08 May, 2009 3 commits
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
tsearch2 tests. This should make 'comet_moth' buildfarm member pass contrib check. Zdenek Kotala.
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
linkage on Win32. Tested by Hiroshi Saito
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- 07 May, 2009 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
a toast table to be built, even if the sum-of-column-widths calculation indicates one isn't needed. This is needed by pg_migrator because if the old table has a toast table, we have to migrate over the toast table since it might contain some live data, even though subsequent column drops could mean that no recently-added rows could require toasting.
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Tom Lane authored
pgbench_history, and pgbench_tellers, rather than just accounts, branches, history, and tellers. This is to prevent accidental conflicts with real application tables, as has been reported to happen at least once. Also remove the automatic "SET search_path = public" that it did at startup, as this seems to restrict testing flexibility without actually buying much. Per proposal by Joshua Drake and ensuing discussion. Joshua Drake and Tom Lane
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Tom Lane authored
restrictions specified for semijoins in optimizer/README, to wit that you can't reassociate outer joins into or out of the RHS of a semijoin. Per report from Heikki.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
you can end up with an unrecoverable backup if you start a new base backup right after finishing archive recovery. In that scenario, the redo pointer of the checkpoint that pg_start_backup() writes points to the XLOG segment where the timeline-changing end-of-archive-recovery checkpoint is. The beginning of that segment contains pages with the old timeline ID, and we don't accept that in recovery unless we find a history file covering the old timeline ID. If you omit pg_xlog from the base backup and clear the archive directory before starting the backup, there will be no such history file available. The bug is present in all versions since PITR was introduced in 8.0, but I'm back-patching only back to 8.2. Earlier versions didn't have XLOG switch records, making this fix unfeasible. Given the lack of reports until now, it doesn't seem worthwhile to spend more effort to fix 8.0 and 8.1. Per report and suggestion by Mikael Krantz
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- 06 May, 2009 3 commits
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Tom Lane authored
can be pushed to the top of the join tree, we update both the relids and qualscope variables to keep them in sync. This prevents a possible later failure of an Assert clause, and affects nothing else since qualscope isn't used later except for that Assert. At the moment the Assert shouldn't be reachable when we've pushed the qual up; but this is cheap insurance, and it's more sensible anyway in terms of the overall logic of the routine. Per analysis of a bug report from Stefan Huehner. I'm not back-patching this since it's just future-proofing; but if anyone gets tempted to change check_outerjoin_delay again in the back branches, this might be needed.
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Tom Lane authored
must be used for the new database, except when copying from template0. This is the same rule that we now enforce for locale settings, and it has the same motivation: databases other than template0 might contain data that would be invalid according to a different setting. This represents another step in a continuing process of locking down ways in which encoding violations could occur inside the backend. Per discussion of a few days ago. In passing, fix pre-existing breakage of mbregress.sh, and fix up a couple of ereport() calls in dbcommands.c that failed to specify sqlstate codes.
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Tom Lane authored
standard_conforming_strings is on.
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- 05 May, 2009 11 commits
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Tom Lane authored
locales are database-wide, not server-wide.
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Tom Lane authored
affected by CloseHandle() or Sleep().
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Tom Lane authored
Every other ereport in scan.l has one, this should too.
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Tom Lane authored
will still be performed if something in a backend process calls exit() directly, instead of going through proc_exit() as we prefer. This is a second response to the issue that we might load third-party code that doesn't know it should not call exit(). Such a call will now cause a reasonably graceful backend shutdown, if possible. (Of course, if the reason for the exit() call is out-of-memory or some such, we might not be able to recover, but at least we will try.)
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Tom Lane authored
a backend has done exit(0) or exit(1) without having disengaged itself from shared memory. We are at risk for this whenever third-party code is loaded into a backend, since such code might not know it's supposed to go through proc_exit() instead. Also, it is reported that under Windows there are ways to externally kill a process that cause the status code returned to the postmaster to be indistinguishable from a voluntary exit (thank you, Microsoft). If this does happen then the system is probably hosed --- for instance, the dead session might still be holding locks. So the best recovery method is to treat this like a backend crash. The dead man switch is armed for a particular child process when it acquires a regular PGPROC, and disarmed when the PGPROC is released; these should be the first and last touches of shared memory resources in a backend, or close enough anyway. This choice means there is no coverage for auxiliary processes, but I doubt we need that, since they shouldn't be executing any user-provided code anyway. This patch also improves the management of the EXEC_BACKEND ShmemBackendArray array a bit, by reducing search costs. Although this problem is of long standing, the lack of field complaints seems to mean it's not critical enough to risk back-patching; at least not till we get some more testing of this mechanism.
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Tom Lane authored
points where we step right or left to the next page. This should ensure reasonable response time to a query cancel request during an unsuccessful index scan, as seen in recent gripe from Marc Cousin. It's a bit trickier than it might seem at first glance, because CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() is a no-op if executed while holding a buffer lock. So we have to do it just at the point where we've dropped one page lock and not yet acquired the next. Remove CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS calls at the top level of btgetbitmap and hashgetbitmap, since they're pointless given the added checks. I think that GIST is okay already --- at least, there's a CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS at a plausible-looking place in gistnext(). I don't claim to know GIN well enough to try to poke it for this, if indeed it has a problem at all. This is a pre-existing issue, but in view of the lack of prior complaints I'm not going to risk back-patching.
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Tom Lane authored
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Peter Eisentraut authored
standard_conforming_strings is not on, for security reasons.
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Tom Lane authored
ANALYZE's total sample. The original coding is at risk of overflow for statistics targets exceeding about 2675; this was not a problem before 8.4 but it is now. Per bug #4793 from Dennis Noordsij.
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Magnus Hagander authored
it fails because the shared memory segment already exists. This means it can take up to 10 seconds before it reports the error if it *does* exist, but hopefully it will make the system capable of restarting even when the server is under high load.
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Tom Lane authored
volatility columns localizable.
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- 04 May, 2009 6 commits
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
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Magnus Hagander authored
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Magnus Hagander authored
to make sure that the error code is reset, as a precaution in case the API doesn't properly reset it on success. This could be necessary, since we check the error value even if the function doesn't fail for specific success cases.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
tree with references to the appropriate URLs. Robert Haas
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Tom Lane authored
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Alvaro Herrera authored
whether it failed. Modelled after catcache.c's usage of DlList, per suggestion from Tom.
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- 03 May, 2009 6 commits
- 02 May, 2009 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
error message if the installation directory layout is messed up (or at least, something more useful than the behavior exhibited in bug #4787). During postmaster startup, check that get_pkglib_path resolves as a readable directory; and if ParseTzFile() fails to open the expected timezone abbreviation file, check the possibility that the directory is missing rather than just the specified file. In case of either failure, issue a hint suggesting that the installation is broken. These two checks cover the lib/ and share/ trees of a full installation, which should take care of most scenarios where a sysadmin decides to get cute.
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Tom Lane authored
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Tom Lane authored
as per my recent proposal. release.sgml itself is now just a stub that should change rarely; ideally, only once per major release to add a new include line. Most editing work will occur in the release-N.N.sgml files. To update a back branch for a minor release, just copy the appropriate release-N.N.sgml file(s) into the back branch. This commit doesn't change the end-product documentation at all, only the source layout. However, it makes it easy to start omitting ancient information from newer branches' documentation, should we ever decide to do that.
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Tom Lane authored
never a BEGIN block. This is required for Oracle compatibility and is also plainly stated to be the behavior by our original documentation (up until 8.1, in which the docs were adjusted to match the code's behavior; but actually the old docs said the correct thing and the code was wrong). Not back-patched because this introduces an incompatibility that could break working applications. Requires release note.
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- 01 May, 2009 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
failed to consider the possibility that it would get T_SCALAR, T_RECORD, or T_ROW instead because the word happens to match a plpgsql variable name. In particular, give "duplicate declaration" rather than generic "syntax error" if the same identifier is declared twice in the same block, as per my recent complaint. Also behave more sanely when decl_aliasitem or proc_condition or opt_lblname is coincidentally not T_WORD. Refactor the related productions a bit to reduce duplication. This is a longstanding bug, but it doesn't seem critical enough to back-patch.
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Tom Lane authored
part that rounds up to exactly 1.0 second. The previous coding rejected input like "00:12:57.9999999999999999999999999999", with the exact number of nines needed to cause failure varying depending on float-timestamp option and possibly on platform. Obviously this should round up to the next integral second, if we don't have enough precision to distinguish the value from that. Per bug #4789 from Robert Kruus. In passing, fix a missed check for fractional seconds in one copy of the "is it greater than 24:00:00" code. Broken all the way back, so patch all the way back.
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- 30 Apr, 2009 1 commit
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
leftover unused variables. Laurent Laborde
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