- 10 Jan, 2017 4 commits
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Stephen Frost authored
When using pg_dump --strict-names and a schema pattern which doesn't match any schemas (eg: --schema='nonexistant*'), we were incorrectly throwing an error claiming no tables were found when, really, there were no schemas found: -> pg_dump --strict-names --schema='nonexistant*' pg_dump: no matching tables were found for pattern "nonexistant*" Fix that by changing the error message to say 'schemas' instead, since that is what we are actually complaining about. Noticed while testing pg_dump error cases. Back-patch to 9.6 where --strict-names and this error message were introduced.
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Alvaro Herrera authored
A few thinkos I introduced in fa2fa995. Also, amend a similarly broken comment. Report by Daniel Vérité. Authors: Daniel Vérité, Álvaro Herrera Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1706e85e-60d2-494e-8a64-9af1e1b2186e@manitou-mail.org
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Robert Haas authored
Instead of relying on the page contents to know whether we have advanced from the primary bucket page to an overflow page, track that explicitly. Amit Kapila, per a complaint by me.
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Stephen Frost authored
Including the program name twice is not helpful: -> pg_dump -j -1 pg_dump: pg_dump: invalid number of parallel jobs Correct by removing the progname from the exit_horribly() call used when validating the number of parallel jobs. Noticed while testing various pg_dump error cases. Back-patch to 9.3 where parallel pg_dump was added.
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- 09 Jan, 2017 5 commits
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Tom Lane authored
We can't throw elog(ERROR) out of a Tcl command procedure; we have to catch the error and return TCL_ERROR to the Tcl interpreter. pltcl_returnnext failed to meet this requirement, so that errors detected by pltcl_build_tuple_result or other functions called here led to longjmp'ing out of the Tcl interpreter and thereby leaving it in a bad state. Use the existing subtransaction support to prevent that. Oversight in commit 26abb50c, found more or less accidentally by the buildfarm thanks to the tests added in 961bed02. Report: https://postgr.es/m/30647.1483989734@sss.pgh.pa.us
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Alvaro Herrera authored
If inherited tables don't have exactly the same schema, the USING clause in an ALTER TABLE / SET DATA TYPE misbehaves when applied to the children tables since commit 9550e834. Starting with that commit, the attribute numbers in the USING expression are fixed during parse analysis. This can lead to bogus errors being reported during execution, such as: ERROR: attribute 2 has wrong type DETAIL: Table has type smallint, but query expects integer. Since it wouldn't do to revert to the original coding, we now apply a transformation to map the attribute numbers to the correct ones for each child. Reported by Justin Pryzby Analysis by Tom Lane; patch by me. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170102225618.GA10071@telsasoft.com
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Alvaro Herrera authored
... and therefore we ought not to tell XLogRegisterBuffer the opposite, when writing XLog for a brin update that moves the index tuple to a different page. Otherwise, xlog insertion would try to "compress the hole" when producing a full-page image for it; but since we don't update pd_lower/upper, the hole covers the whole page. On WAL replay, the revmap page becomes empty and so the entire portion of the index is useless and needs to be recomputed. This is low-probability: a BRIN update only moves an index tuple to a different page when the summary tuple is larger than the existing one, which doesn't happen with fixed-width datatypes. Also, the revmap page must be first after a checkpoint. Report and patch: Kuntal Ghosh Bug is alleged to have detected by a WAL-consistency-checking tool. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGz5QCJ=00UQjScSEFbV=0qO5ShTZB9WWz_Fm7+Wd83zPs9Geg@mail.gmail.com I posted a test case demonstrating the problem, but I'm refraining from adding it to the test suite; if the WAL consistency tool makes it in, that will be a better way to catch this from regressing. (We should definitely have someting that causes not-same-page updates, though.)
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Tom Lane authored
This raises the test coverage (by line count) in pltcl.c from about 70% to 86%. Karl Lehenbauer and Jim Nasby Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/92a1670d-21b6-8f03-9c13-e4fb2207ab7b@BlueTreble.com
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Magnus Hagander authored
This makes the code easier to read as it becomes more explicit what the different allowed combinations really are. Suggested by Michael Paquier
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- 07 Jan, 2017 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
I noticed that p_value_substitute, which is a single-purpose kluge I added in 2002 (commit b0422b21), could be replaced by having domainAddConstraint install a parser hook that looks for the name "value". The parser hook code only dates back to 2009, so it's not surprising that we had to kluge this in 2002, but we can do it more cleanly now.
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Tom Lane authored
I got annoyed about how some fields of ParseState were documented in the struct's block comment and some weren't; not all of the latter are trivial. Fix that. Also reorder a couple of fields that seem to have been placed rather randomly, or maybe with an idea of avoiding padding space; but there are never so many ParseStates in existence at one time that we ought to value pad space over readability.
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- 06 Jan, 2017 5 commits
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Stephen Frost authored
For reasons unknown, pg_dumpall and pg_restore managed to escape the basic set of TAP tests that were added for pg_dump in 6bd356c3, so let's get them added now. A few minor adjustments are also made to the dump/restore tests to improve code coverage for pg_restore/pg_dumpall.
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Tom Lane authored
Make pltcl_trigger_handler() construct modified tuples using pltcl_build_tuple_result(), rather than its own copy of essentially the same logic. This results in slightly different message wording for the error cases, and in one case a different SQLSTATE, but it seems unlikely that any existing applications are depending on any of those details. While at it, fix a typo in commit 26abb50c: pltcl_build_tuple_result was applying encoding conversion in the wrong direction. That would be a back-patchable bug fix, except the code hasn't shipped yet. Jim Nasby, reviewed by me Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/d2c6425a-d9e0-f034-f774-4a872c234d89@BlueTreble.com
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Stephen Frost authored
findTableByOid() is allowed to return NULL and we should therefore be checking for that case. getOwnedSeqs() and dumpSequence() shouldn't ever actually see this happen, but given odd circumstances it might and commit f9e439b1 probably shouldn't have removed that check. Pointed out by Coverity. Initial patch from Michael Paquier. Back-patch to 9.6, where that commit had removed the check.
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Tom Lane authored
This fixes problems where a plan must change but fails to do so, as seen in a bug report from Rajkumar Raghuwanshi. For ALTER FOREIGN TABLE OPTIONS, do this through the standard method of forcing a relcache flush on the table. For ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER and ALTER SERVER, just flush the whole plan cache on any change in pg_foreign_data_wrapper or pg_foreign_server. That matches the way we handle some other low-probability cases such as opclass changes, and it's unclear that the case arises often enough to be worth working harder. Besides, that gives a patch that is simple enough to back-patch with confidence. Back-patch to 9.3. In principle we could apply the code change to 9.2 as well, but (a) we lack postgres_fdw to test it with, (b) it's doubtful that anyone is doing anything exciting enough with FDWs that far back to need this desperately, and (c) the patch doesn't apply cleanly. Patch originally by Amit Langote, reviewed by Etsuro Fujita and Ashutosh Bapat, who each contributed substantial changes as well. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6m5cA6rRPTKkqVdJ-R=KKDfe35Q_ZuUqxDSV_4hwga=og@mail.gmail.com
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Robert Haas authored
This commit purported to use a variable hash seed for Partial HashAggregate, but actually did the opposite - it made us use a variable seed for any HashAggregate that is NOT partial. Woops.
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- 05 Jan, 2017 5 commits
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Robert Haas authored
Commit 4aec4989 reorganized the order of operations here so that we no longer increment the number of "extra waits" before locking the semaphore, but it did not change the starting value of extraWaits from 0 to -1 to compensate. In the worst case, this could leak a semaphore count, but that seems to be unlikely in practice. Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/CAA4eK1JyVqXiMba+-a589Rk0pyHsyKkGxeumVKjU6Y74hdrVLQ@mail.gmail.com Amit Kapila, per an off-list report by Dilip Kumar. Reviewed by me.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
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Robert Haas authored
With the old code, a backend that read pg_stat_activity without ever having executed a parallel query might see a backend in the midst of executing one waiting on a DSA LWLock, resulting in a crash. The solution is for backends to register the tranche at startup time, not the first time a parallel query is executed. Report by Andreas Seltenreich. Patch by me, reviewed by Thomas Munro.
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Tom Lane authored
array_fill(..., array[0]) produced an empty array, which is probably what users expect, but it was a one-dimensional zero-length array which is not our standard representation of empty arrays. Also, for no very good reason, it rejected empty input arrays; that case should be allowed and produce an empty output array. In passing, remove the restriction that the input array(s) have lower bound 1. That seems rather pointless, and it would have needed extra complexity to make the check deal with empty input arrays. Per bug #14487 from Andrew Gierth. It's been broken all along, so back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20170105152156.10135.64195@wrigleys.postgresql.org
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Simon Riggs authored
Small number of fixes to perl docs for TAP tests. Plus two comments that use "xlog" rather than WAL Michael Paquier
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- 04 Jan, 2017 16 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Inheritance operations must treat the OID column, if any, much like regular user columns. But MergeAttributesIntoExisting() neglected to do that, leading to weird results after a table with OIDs is associated to a parent with OIDs via ALTER TABLE ... INHERIT. Report and patch by Amit Langote, reviewed by Ashutosh Bapat, some adjustments by me. It's been broken all along, so back-patch to all supported branches. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/cb13cfe7-a48c-5720-c383-bb843ab28298@lab.ntt.co.jp
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Robert Haas authored
Be more clear that we represent timestamps in microseconds when integer timestamps are used, and in fractional seconds when floating-point timestamps are used. Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/20161212135045.GB15488@e733.localdomain Report by Alexander Alekseev. Wording by me with a suggestion from Tom Lane.
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Robert Haas authored
Michael Paquier, per Coverity.
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Robert Haas authored
RelationGetPartitionQual() and generate_partition_qual() are always called with recurse = true, so we don't need an argument for that. Extracted by me from a larger patch by Amit Langote.
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Robert Haas authored
After a tuple is routed to a partition, it has been converted from the root table's row type to the partition's row type. ExecConstraints needs to report the failure using the original tuple and the parent's tuple descriptor rather than the ones for the selected partition. Amit Langote
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Simon Riggs authored
Craig Ringer, reviewed by Euler Taveira and Naoki Okano
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Simon Riggs authored
Allow pg_recvlogical to specify an ending LSN, complementing the existing -—startpos=LSN option. Craig Ringer, reviewed by Euler Taveira and Naoki Okano
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Tom Lane authored
configure can only probe the existence of gcc intrinsics, not how well they're implemented, and unfortunately the answer is sometimes "badly". In particular we've found that multiple compilers fail to implement char-width __sync_lock_test_and_set() correctly on PPC; and even a correct implementation would necessarily be pretty inefficient, since that hardware has only a word-wide primitive to work with. Given the knowledge we've accumulated in s_lock.h, it appears that it's best to rely on int-width TAS operations on most non-Intel architectures. Hence, pick int not char when both are nominally available to us in generic-gcc.h (note that that code is not used for x86[_64]). Back-patch to fix regression test failures on FreeBSD/PPC. Ordinarily back-patching a change like this would be verboten because of ABI breakage. But since pg_atomic_flag is not yet used in any Postgres data structure, there's no ABI to break. It seems safer to back-patch to avoid possible gotchas, if someday we do back-patch something that uses pg_atomic_flag. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/25414.1483076673@sss.pgh.pa.us
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Robert Haas authored
Commit 2ac3ef7a added a TupleTapleSlot for partition tuple slot to EState (es_partition_tuple_slot) but it's more logical to have it as part of ModifyTableState (mt_partition_tuple_slot) and CopyState (partition_tuple_slot). Discussion: http://postgr.es/m/1bd459d9-4c0c-197a-346e-e5e59e217d97@lab.ntt.co.jp Amit Langote, per a gripe from me
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Tom Lane authored
Leave OpenSSL's default passphrase collection callback in place during the first call of secure_initialize() in server startup. Although that doesn't work terribly well in daemon contexts, some people feel we should not break it for anyone who was successfully using it before. We still block passphrase demands during SIGHUP, meaning that you can't adjust SSL configuration on-the-fly if you used a passphrase, but this is no worse than what it was before commit de41869b. And we block passphrase demands during EXEC_BACKEND reloads; that behavior wasn't useful either, but at least now it's documented. Tweak some related log messages for more readability, and avoid issuing essentially duplicate messages about reload failure caused by a passphrase. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/29982.1483412575@sss.pgh.pa.us
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Robert Haas authored
The typical size of an LWLock is now 16 bytes even on 64-bit platforms, and the size of slock_t is now irrelevant. But pg_atomic_uint32 can (perhaps surprisingly) still be larger than 4 bytes, so there's still some marginal point to allowing LWLOCK_MINIMAL_SIZE == 64. Commit 008608b9 made the changes that led to the need for these updates.
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Simon Riggs authored
Add new tests for physical repl slots and hot standby feedback. Craig Ringer, reviewed by Aleksander Alekseev and Simon Riggs
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Simon Riggs authored
Add methods to the core test framework PostgresNode.pm to allow us to test that standby nodes have caught up with the master, as well as basic LSN handling. Used in tests recovery/t/001_stream_rep.pl and recovery/t/004_timeline_switch.pl Craig Ringer, reviewed by Aleksander Alekseev and Simon Riggs
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Peter Eisentraut authored
The purpose of the test was to check access to the sequence relation on a hot standby, so change the test to read a different column from the sequence, instead of just reading the catalog. From: Andreas Karlsson <andreas@proxel.se>
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Magnus Hagander authored
These files are deleted but not yet gone from the filesystem. Operations on them will return ERROR_DELETE_PENDING. With this we start treating that as ENOENT, meaning files does not exist (which is the state it will soon reach). This should be safe in every case except when we try to recreate a file with exactly the same name. This is an operation that PostgreSQL does very seldom, so hopefully that won't happen much -- and even if it does, this treatment should be no worse than treating it as an unhandled error. We've been un able to reproduce the bug reliably, so pushing this to master to get buildfarm coverage and other testing. Once it's proven to be stable, it should be considered for backpatching. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20160712083220.1426.58667%40wrigleys.postgresql.org Patch by me and Michael Paquier
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Magnus Hagander authored
Since streaming is now supported for all output formats, make this the default as this is what most people want. To get the old behavior, the parameter -X none can be specified to turn it off. This also removes the parameter -x for fetch, now requiring -X fetch to be specified to use that. Reviewed by Vladimir Rusinov, Michael Paquier and Simon Riggs
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- 03 Jan, 2017 3 commits
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
Backpatch-through: certain files through 9.2
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