- 19 Sep, 2012 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
DST law changes in Fiji.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
It is no longer used, but was still being checked for. bug #7548 from Reinhard Max
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- 18 Sep, 2012 3 commits
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Tom Lane authored
In commit 9e8da0f7, I improved btree to handle ScalarArrayOpExpr quals natively, so that constructs like "indexedcol IN (list)" could be supported by index-only scans. Using such a qual results in multiple scans of the index, under-the-hood. I went to some lengths to ensure that this still produces rows in index order ... but I failed to recognize that if a higher-order index column is lacking an equality constraint, rescans can produce out-of-order data from that column. Tweak the planner to not expect sorted output in that case. Per trouble report from Robert McGehee.
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Tom Lane authored
Not sure how we missed this case, but we did. Per bug #7551 from Diego de Lima.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
It prevented the libpq directory from being installable by itself.
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- 17 Sep, 2012 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Somewhere along the line, somebody decided to remove all trace of this notation from the documentation text. It was still in the command syntax synopses, or at least some of them, but with no indication what it meant. This will not do, as evidenced by the confusion apparent in bug #7543; even if the notation is now unnecessary, people will find it in legacy SQL code and need to know what it does.
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Currently, we are making mangled copies of plpython/{expected,sql} to plpython/python3/{expected,sql}, and run the tests in plpython/python3. This has the disadvantage that the regression.diffs file, if any, ends up in plpython/python3, which is not the normal location. If we instead make the mangled copies in plpython/{expected,sql}/python3/, we can run the tests from the normal directory, regression.diffs ends up the normal place, and the pg_regress invocation also becomes a lot simpler. It's also more obvious at run time what's going on, because the tests end up being named "python3/something" in the test output.
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- 16 Sep, 2012 3 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Some experimentation with examples similar to bug #7539 has convinced me that indxpath.c's original implementation of parameterized-path generation was several bricks shy of a load. In general, if we are relying on a particular outer rel or set of outer rels for a parameterized path, the path should use every indexable join clause that's available from that rel or rels. Any join clauses that get left out of the indexqual will end up getting applied as plain filter quals (qpquals), and that's generally a significant loser compared to having the index AM enforce them. (This is particularly true with btree, which can skip the index scan entirely if it can see that the given indexquals are mutually contradictory.) The original heuristics failed to ensure this, though, and were overly complicated anyway. Rewrite to make the code explicitly identify each useful set of outer rels and then select all applicable join clauses for each one. The one plan that changes in the regression tests is in fact for the better according to the planner's cost estimates. (Note: this is not a correctness issue but just a matter of plan quality. I don't yet know what is going on in bug #7539, but I don't expect this change to fix that.)
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Simon Riggs authored
Recovery code documents clearly that a shutdown checkpoint is executed at end of recovery - a shutdown checkpoint WAL record is written but the buffer manager had been altered to treat end of recovery as a normal checkpoint. This bug exacerbates the bufmgr relpersistence bug. Bug spotted by Andres Freund, patch by me.
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Kevin Grittner authored
The documentation mentioned setting autovacuum_freeze_max_age to "its maximum allowed value of a little less than two billion". This led to a post asking about the exact maximum allowed value, which is precisely two billion, not "a little less". Based on question by Radovan Jablonovsky. Backpatch to 8.3.
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- 15 Sep, 2012 2 commits
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Tom Lane authored
Looks like the correct size of DOS-ified tenk.data is 680800 not 680801. (I got the latter from a version of unix2dos that appends a trailing ^Z, which evidently is not git's practice.)
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Peter Eisentraut authored
- ALTER DOMAIN ... DROP/RENAME/VALIDATE CONSTRAINT - ALTER TABLE ... RENAME/VALIDATE CONSTRAINT - COMMENT ON CONSTRAINT - SET CONSTRAINTS
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- 14 Sep, 2012 3 commits
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Tom Lane authored
The idea here is to provide a more easily diagnosable failure diff when the problem is that tenk.data has been DOS-ified, as I believe to be happening currently on buildfarm member hamerkop. Per suggestion from Magnus Hagander. Also, sync output/largeobject_1.source with current regression test. Failure to do that in commit 3a0e4d36 turns out to be the real reason that hamerkop has been complaining.
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Tom Lane authored
Given what we now know about the cause of this bug, it seems like it'd be a real good idea to include it in the plperl regression tests, so as to catch any platform-specific cases where the code gets misoptimized.
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Robert Haas authored
This can result in buffers failing to be properly flushed at checkpoint time, leading to data loss. Report, diagnosis, and patch by Jeff Davis.
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- 13 Sep, 2012 3 commits
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Tom Lane authored
This at least saves some palloc overhead, and should furthermore reduce the risk of anything going wrong, eg somebody resetting the context the current_call_data record was in.
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Tom Lane authored
In commit 1bc16a94 I added a minor optimization to drop the component variables of a GROUP BY expression from the target list computed at the aggregation level of a query, if those Vars weren't referenced elsewhere in the tlist. However, I overlooked that the window-function planning code would deconstruct such expressions and thus need to have access to their component variables. Fix it to not do that. While at it, I removed the distinction between volatile and nonvolatile window partition/order expressions: the code now computes all of them at the aggregation level. This saves a relatively expensive check for volatility, and it's unclear that the resulting plan isn't better anyway. Per bug #7535 from Louis-David Mitterrand. Back-patch to 9.2.
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Kevin Grittner authored
Backpatch to 9.2. Etsuro Fujit
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- 12 Sep, 2012 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
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Andrew Dunstan authored
Backpatch to 9.2.
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Tom Lane authored
I made multiple errors in commit 97532f7c, stemming mostly from failure to think about the available frequency data as being element frequencies not value frequencies (so that occurrences of different elements are not mutually exclusive). This led to sillinesses such as estimating that "word" would match more rows than "word:*". The choice to clamp to a minimum estimate of DEFAULT_TS_MATCH_SEL also seems pretty ill-considered in hindsight, as it would frequently result in an estimate much larger than the available data suggests. We do need some sort of clamp, since a pattern not matching any of the MCELEMs probably still needs a selectivity estimate of more than zero. I chose instead to clamp to at least what a non-MCELEM word would be estimated as, preserving the property that "word:*" doesn't get an estimate less than plain "word", whether or not the word appears in MCELEM. Per investigation of a gripe from Bill Martin, though I suspect that his example case actually isn't even reaching the erroneous code. Back-patch to 9.1 where this code was introduced.
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Kevin Grittner authored
Dan Scott
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- 10 Sep, 2012 2 commits
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Andrew Dunstan authored
This follows recent addition of Windows/Mingw testing. Backpatch to Release 9.2 so we can get some buildfarm testing going.
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Tom Lane authored
validate_plperl_function() supposed that it could free an old plperl_proc_desc struct immediately upon detecting that it was stale. However, if a plperl function is called recursively, this could result in deleting the struct out from under an outer invocation, leading to misbehavior or crashes. Add a simple reference-count mechanism to ensure that such structs are freed only when the last reference goes away. Per investigation of bug #7516 from Marko Tiikkaja. I am not certain that this error explains his report, because he says he didn't have any recursive calls --- but it's hard to see how else it could have crashed right there. In any case, this definitely fixes some problems in the area. Back-patch to all active branches.
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- 09 Sep, 2012 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
Investigation shows that some intermittent build failures in ecpg are the result of a gmake bug that was reported quite some time ago: http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?30653 Preventing parallel builds of the ecpg subdirectories seems to dodge the bug. Per yesterday's pgsql-hackers discussion, there are some other things in the subdirectory makefiles that seem rather unsafe for parallel builds too, but there's little point in fixing them as long as we have to work around a make bug. Back-patch to 9.1; parallel builds weren't very well supported before that anyway.
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- 08 Sep, 2012 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
Commit 2cfb1c6f fixed some issues caused by Python 3.3 choosing to iterate through dict entries in a different order than before. But here's another one: the test cases adjusted here made two bad entries in a dict and expected the one complained of would always be the same. Possibly this should be back-patched further than 9.2, but there seems little point unless the earlier fix is too.
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- 07 Sep, 2012 1 commit
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Tom Lane authored
Create an internal function pqDropConnection that does the physical socket close and cleans up closely-associated state. This removes a bunch of ad hoc, not always consistent closure code. The ulterior motive is to have a single place to wait for a spawned child backend to exit, but this seems like good cleanup even if that never happens. I went back and forth on whether to include "conn->status = CONNECTION_BAD" in pqDropConnection's actions, but for the moment decided not to. Only a minority of the call sites actually want that, and in any case it's arguable that conn->status is slightly higher-level state, and thus not part of this function's purview.
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- 06 Sep, 2012 9 commits
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Robert Haas authored
Etsuro Fujita
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Robert Haas authored
This affects initdb, clusterdb, reindexdb, and vacuumdb in master and 9.2; in earlier branches, only initdb is affected.
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Tom Lane authored
This fix removes an unnecessary incompatibility with the old behavior of the unix_socket_directory parameter. Since pathnames with embedded spaces are fairly popular on some platforms, the incompatibility could be significant in practice. We'll still strip unquoted leading/trailing spaces, however. No docs update since the documentation already implied that it worked like this. Per bug #7514 from Murray Cumming.
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Tom Lane authored
Shigeru Hanada
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Andrew Dunstan authored
If we call pg_ctl stop, the server might continue and thus hold a log file for a short time after it has deleted its pid file, (which is when pg_ctl will exit), and so a subsequent attempt to open the log file might fail. We therefore try to open it a few times, sleeping one second between tries, to give the server time to exit. This corrects an error that was observed on the buildfarm. Backpatched to 9.2,
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Peter Eisentraut authored
Show target number of tuples and percentage in addition to current number.
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Heikki Linnakangas authored
When the startup process restores a WAL file from the archive, it deletes any old file with the same name and renames the new file in its place. On Windows, however, when a file is deleted, it still lingers as long as a process holds a file handle open on it. With cascading replication, a walsender process can hold the old file open, so the rename() in the startup process would fail. To fix that, rename the old file to a temporary name, to make the original file name available for reuse, before deleting the old file.
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Tom Lane authored
Give the correct name of the GUC parameter being complained of. Also, emit a more suitable SQLSTATE (INVALID_PARAMETER_VALUE, not the default INTERNAL_ERROR). Gurjeet Singh, errcode adjustment by me
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Tom Lane authored
Also, set the release date to 2012-09-10, since we're pretty well committed to that now.
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- 05 Sep, 2012 4 commits
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Andrew Dunstan authored
Call pg_dumpall using -f switch instead of redirection, to avoid writing the output in text mode and generating spurious carriage returns. Remove to carriage return ignoring hack introduced by commit e442b0f0. Backpatch to 9.2.
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Andrew Dunstan authored
pg_upgrade opened the output from pg_dumpall in text mode and wrote the split files in text mode. This caused unwanted eating of intended carriage returns on input and production of spurious carriage returns on output. To avoid this, open all these files in binary mode. On non-Windows platforms, this change has no effect. Backpatch to 9.0. On 9.0 and 9.1, we also switch from redirecting pg_dumpall's output to using pg_dumpall's -f switch, for the same reason.
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Tom Lane authored
Perl, for some unaccountable reason, believes it's a good idea to reset SIGFPE handling to SIG_IGN. Which wouldn't be a good idea even if it worked; but on some platforms (Linux at least) it doesn't work at all, instead resulting in forced process termination if the signal occurs. Given the lack of other complaints, it seems safe to assume that Perl never actually provokes SIGFPE and so there is no value in the setting anyway. Hence, reset it to our normal handler after initializing Perl. Report, analysis and patch by Andres Freund.
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Tom Lane authored
This is just neatnik-ism, but since we do it for comparable code in elog.c, we may as well do it here.
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