- 18 Apr, 2011 1 commit
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Robert Haas authored
Before commit c016ce72, this wasn't needed, but now that multiple resource manager IDs can percolate down through here, we have to make sure we know which one we've got. Otherwise, we can confuse (for example) an XLOG_XACT_COMMIT record with an XLOG_CHECKPOINT_SHUTDOWN record. Review by Jaime Casanova
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- 17 Apr, 2011 6 commits
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Tom Lane authored
In \d, be more careful to print collation only if it's not the default for the column's data type. Avoid assuming that the name "default" is magic. Fix \d on a composite type so that it will print per-column collations. It's no longer the case that a composite type cannot have modifiers. (In consequence, the expected outputs for composite-type regression tests change.) Fix \dD so that it will print collation for a domain, again only if it's not the same as the base type's collation.
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Tom Lane authored
Curiously, it was already documented in ALTER TYPE ADD ATTRIBUTE, but not here.
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Tom Lane authored
CREATE TYPE and ALTER TYPE ADD ATTRIBUTE handle this, so I suppose it's an intended feature, but pg_dump didn't know about it.
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Tom Lane authored
The other DDL operations that create an inheritance relationship were checking for collation match already, but this one got missed. Also fix comments that failed to mention collation checks.
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Tom Lane authored
This allows the usual rules for assigning a collation to a local variable to be overridden. Per discussion, it seems appropriate to support this rather than forcing all local variables to have the argument-derived collation.
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Tom Lane authored
Fix crash when releasing duplicate entries in the encoding conversion cache list, caused by releasing the current entry of the list being chased by foreach(). We have a standard idiom for handling such cases, but this loop wasn't using it. This got broken in my recent rewrite of GUC assign hooks. Not sure how I missed this when testing the modified code, but I did. Per report from Peter.
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- 16 Apr, 2011 5 commits
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Tom Lane authored
This might have caught the recent embarrassment over trying to modify pg_index while its indexes were being rebuilt. Noah Misch
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Tom Lane authored
For what seem entirely historical reasons, a bitmask "flags" argument was recently added to reindex_relation without subsuming its existing boolean argument into that bitmask. This seems a bit bizarre, so fold them together.
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Tom Lane authored
This area was a few bricks shy of a load, and badly under-commented too. We have to ensure that the generated targetlist entries for a set-operation node expose the correct collation for each entry, since higher-level processing expects the tlist to reflect the true ordering of the plan's output. This hackery wouldn't be necessary if SortGroupClause carried collation info ... but making it do so would inject more pain in the parser than would be saved here. Still, we might want to rethink that sometime.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
This will (hopefully) eliminate the need for the plpython_unicode_0.out expected file.
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Tom Lane authored
The places that attempt to change pg_index.indcheckxmin during a reindexing operation cannot be executed safely if pg_index itself is the subject of the operation. This is the explanation for a couple of recent reports of VACUUM FULL failing with ERROR: duplicate key value violates unique constraint "pg_index_indexrelid_index" DETAIL: Key (indexrelid)=(2678) already exists. However, there isn't any real need to update indcheckxmin in such a situation, if we assume that pg_index can never contain a truly broken HOT chain. This assumption holds if new indexes are never created on it during concurrent operations, which is something we don't consider safe for any system catalog, not just pg_index. Accordingly, modify the code to not manipulate indcheckxmin when reindexing any system catalog. Back-patch to 8.3, where HOT was introduced. The known failure scenarios involve 9.0-style VACUUM FULL, so there might not be any real risk before 9.0, but let's not assume that.
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- 15 Apr, 2011 8 commits
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Tom Lane authored
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Tom Lane authored
Although rowcount estimates really ought not be NaN, a bug elsewhere could perhaps result in that, and that would cause Assert failure in cost_mergejoin, which I believe to be the explanation for bug #5977 from Anton Kuznetsov. Seems like a good idea to expend a couple more cycles to prevent that, even though the real bug is elsewhere. Not back-patching, though, because we don't encourage running production systems with Asserts on.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
apostrophes or dots. There isn't much hope of Microsoft fixing it any time soon, it's been like that for ages, so we better work around it. So, map a few common Windows locale names known to cause problems to aliases that work.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
server-encoding, fall back to UTF-8. It happens at least with the Chinese locale, which implies BIG5. This is safe, because on Windows all locales are compatible with UTF-8.
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Magnus Hagander authored
Peter Eisentraut
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Magnus Hagander authored
Anything including Visual Studio 2010 compilers is not yet supported for building on Windows.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
The hash table is seq scanned at transaction end, to release all locks, and making the hash table larger than necessary makes that slower. With very simple queries, that overhead can amount to a few percent of the total CPU time used. At the moment, backend startup needs 6 locks, and a simple query with one table and index needs 3 locks. 16 is enough for even quite complicated transactions, and it will grow automatically if it fills up.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Also refactor things a little bit so that the same methods for setting test locale and encoding can be used everywhere.
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- 14 Apr, 2011 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
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Robert Haas authored
The latest openjade packages for Ubuntu 10.10 seg fault when building our documentation. Josh Berkus
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Robert Haas authored
The lock level for adding a parent table is now ShareUpdateExclusiveLock; see commit fbcf4b92. This comment didn't get updated to match, but it doesn't seem important to mention this detail here, so rather than updating it now, just take it out.
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Robert Haas authored
Instead of using slightly-too-clever heuristics to decide when we must create a TOAST table, just check whether one is needed every time the table is altered. Checking whether a toast table is needed is cheap enough that we needn't worry about doing it on every ALTER TABLE command, and the previous coding is apparently prone to accidental breakage: commit 04e17bae broken ALTER TABLE .. SET STORAGE, which moved some actions from AT_PASS_COL_ATTRS to AT_PASS_MISC, and commit 6c572399 broke ALTER TABLE .. ADD COLUMN by changing the way that adding columns recurses into child tables. Noah Misch, with one comment change by me
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- 13 Apr, 2011 7 commits
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Tom Lane authored
When we are doing GEQO join planning, the current memory context is a short-lived context that will be reset at the end of geqo_eval(). However, the RelOptInfos for base relations are set up before that and then re-used across many GEQO cycles. Hence, any code that modifies a baserel during join planning has to be careful not to put pointers to the short-lived context into the baserel struct. mark_dummy_rel got this wrong, leading to easy-to-reproduce-once-you-know-how crashes in 8.4, as reported off-list by Leo Carson of SDSC. Some improvements made in 9.0 make it difficult to demonstrate the crash in 9.0 or HEAD; but there's no doubt that there's still a risk factor here, so patch all branches that have the function. (Note: 8.3 has a similar function, but it's only applied to joinrels and thus is not a hazard.)
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Tom Lane authored
DST law changes in Chile, Cuba, Falkland Islands, Morocco, Samoa, Turkey. Historical corrections for South Australia, Alaska, Hawaii.
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Robert Haas authored
Andres Freund
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
than on other platforms, and only IPv6 addresses are returned. Because of those two issues, fall back to ioctl(SIOCGIFCONF) on HP/UX, so that it at least compiles and finds IPv4 addresses. This function is currently only used for interpreting samehost/samenet in pg_hba.conf, which isn't that critical.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
crash recovery, and throw an error if not. hubert depesz lubaczewski pointed out that that situation also happens in the crash recovery following a system crash that happens during an online backup. We might want to do something smarter in 9.1, like put the check back for backups taken with pg_basebackup, but that's for another patch.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
to the regular stack. The code to do that is platform and compiler specific, add support for the HP-UX native compiler.
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Tom Lane authored
Per a suggestion from Josh Kupershmidt, though I modified his patch quite a lot.
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- 12 Apr, 2011 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Since collation is effectively an argument, not a property of the function, FmgrInfo is really the wrong place for it; and this becomes critical in cases where a cached FmgrInfo is used for varying purposes that might need different collation settings. Fix by passing it in FunctionCallInfoData instead. In particular this allows a clean fix for bug #5970 (record_cmp not working). This requires touching a bit more code than the original method, but nobody ever thought that collations would not be an invasive patch...
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Tom Lane authored
The recent patch to remove gcc 4.6 warnings created some new ones, at least on my rather old gcc version. Try to make everybody happy by casting to "void" when we just want to discard the result.
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Tom Lane authored
In particular, if we don't have real ndistinct estimates for both sides, fall back to assuming that half of the left-hand rows have join partners. This is what was done in 8.2 and 8.3 (cf nulltestsel() in those versions). It's pretty stupid but it won't lead us to think that an antijoin produces no rows out, as seen in recent example from Uwe Schroeder.
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Tom Lane authored
If the referencing and referenced columns have different collations, the parser will be unable to resolve which collation to use unless it's helped out in this way. The effects are sometimes masked, if we end up using a non-collation-sensitive plan; but if we do use a mergejoin we'll see a failure, as recently noted by Robert Haas. The SQL spec states that the referenced column's collation should be used to resolve RI checks, so that's what we do. Note however that we currently don't append a COLLATE clause when writing a query that examines only the referencing column. If we ever support collations that have varying notions of equality, that will have to be changed. For the moment, though, it's preferable to leave it off so that we can use a normal index on the referencing column.
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- 11 Apr, 2011 4 commits
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Peter Eisentraut authored
This warning is new in gcc 4.6 and part of -Wall. This patch cleans up most of the noise, but there are some still warnings that are trickier to remove.
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Tom Lane authored
This is necessary, not optional, now that ILIKE and regexes are collation aware --- else we might derive a wrong comparison constant for index optimized pattern matches.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
entry's commitSeqNo to that of the old one being transferred, or take the minimum commitSeqNo if it is merging two lock entries. Also, CreatePredicateLock should initialize commitSeqNo for to InvalidSerCommitSeqNo instead of to 0. (I don't think using 0 would actually affect anything, but we should be consistent.) I also added a couple of assertions I used to track this down: a lock's commitSeqNo should never be zero, and it should be InvalidSerCommitSeqNo if and only if the lock is not held by OldCommittedSxact. Dan Ports, to fix leak of predicate locks reported by YAMAMOTO Takashi.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
This way they don't compete with the regular lock manager for the slack shared memory, making the behavior more predictable.
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- 10 Apr, 2011 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
Per buildfarm.
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