- 25 May, 2000 8 commits
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Tom Lane authored
the oper field should be a valid Node structure so it can be dumped by outfuncs.c without risk of coredump. (We had been using a raw pointer to character string, which surely is NOT a valid Node.) This doesn't cause any backwards compatibility problems for stored rules, since raw unanalyzed parsetrees are never stored.
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Tom Lane authored
*last*, after all updating of system catalogs. In old code, an error detected during TypeRename left the relation hosed. Also, add a call to flush the relation's relcache entry, rather than trusting to shared cache invalidation to flush it for us.
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Tom Lane authored
relation being dropped.
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Tom Lane authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
! * themselves, they'll need to check the connection status if we ! * return an error. Alfred Perlstein
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Tatsuo Ishii authored
(it returns error with errno ECHILD upon successful completion of commands). This fix ignores an error from system() if errno == ECHILD.
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- 24 May, 2000 5 commits
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Tom Lane authored
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Tom Lane authored
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Marc G. Fournier authored
add a --with-setproctitle switch to configure that leaves the use of setproctitle() disabled by default ...
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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- 23 May, 2000 7 commits
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Bruce Momjian authored
what to do.
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Tom Lane authored
think that both sides of indexqual look like index keys. An example is create table inside (f1 float8 primary key); create table outside (g1 float8, g2 float8); select * from inside,outside where f1 = atan2(g1+1, g2); ERROR: ExecInitIndexScan: both left and right ops are rel-vars (note that failure is potentially platform-dependent). Solution is a cleanup I had had in mind to make anyway: functional index keys should be represented as Var nodes in the fixed indexqual, just like regular index keys.
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Tom Lane authored
it exists) before testing 'using namespace std'. This is necessary on some C++ setups where the compiler won't take a 'using' until you've included a header that mentions namespace std. (Pretty braindead if you ask me, but...)
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Tom Lane authored
--with-includes) to makefiles for pltcl and plperl, so that these switches will be used even though we do not want other top-level CFLAGS. Ain't it fun trying to support multiple-compiler platforms?
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Tom Lane authored
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- 22 May, 2000 4 commits
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Peter Eisentraut authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
project I am working on (Recall - a distributed, fault-tolerant, replicated, storage framework @ http://www.fault-tolerant.org). Recall is written in C++. I need to include the postgres headers and there are some problems when including the headers w/C++. Attached is a patch generated from postgres/src that fixes my problems. I was hoping to get this into the main source. It's very small (2k) and 3 files are changed: backend/utils/fmgr/fmgr.c, backend/utils/Gen_fmgrtab.sh.in, and include/access/tupdesc.h. In C++, you get a multiply defined symbol because the variable (FmgrInfo *fmgr_pl_finfo) is defined in the header (the patch moves it to the .c file). The other problem in tupdesc.h is the use of typeid is a problem in c++ (I renamed it to oidtypeid). Thanks, Neal Norwitz
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- 21 May, 2000 3 commits
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Tom Lane authored
some platforms --- and I also see that it is documented as not thread- safe on HPUX and possibly other platforms. No good reason not to just use IPPROTO_TCP constant from <netinet/in.h> instead.
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Tom Lane authored
really ought to fix relcache entry construction so that it does not do so much with CurrentMemoryContext = CacheCxt. As is, relatively harmless leaks in either sequential or index scanning translate to permanent leaks if they occur when called from relcache build. For the moment, however, the path of least resistance is to repair all such leaks...
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Tom Lane authored
defined then statistics about memory usage of all the global memory contexts are printed after each commit.
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- 20 May, 2000 7 commits
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Tom Lane authored
duplicate global declarations, no points for style at all!)
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Tatsuo Ishii authored
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Tatsuo Ishii authored
SJIS UDC (NEC selection IBM kanji) support contributed by Eiji Tokuya
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Tatsuo Ishii authored
terminate the backend that has no frontend anymore.
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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- 19 May, 2000 4 commits
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Tom Lane authored
an index on a table's OID column. Mea maxima culpa ... but how'd we get through beta with no one noticing this?
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Tom Lane authored
Hiroshi. ReleaseRelationBuffers now removes rel's buffers from pool, instead of merely marking them nondirty. The old code would leave valid buffers for a deleted relation, which didn't cause any known problems but can't possibly be a good idea. There were several places which called ReleaseRelationBuffers *and* FlushRelationBuffers, which is now unnecessary; but there were others that did not. FlushRelationBuffers no longer emits a warning notice if it finds dirty buffers to flush, because with the current bufmgr behavior that's not an unexpected condition. Also, FlushRelationBuffers will flush out all dirty buffers for the relation regardless of block number. This ensures that pg_upgrade's expectations are met about tuple on-row status bits being up-to-date on disk. Lastly, tweak BufTableDelete() to clear the buffer's tag so that no one can mistake it for being a still-valid buffer for the page it once held. Formerly, the buffer would not be found by buffer hashtable searches after BufTableDelete(), but it would still be thought to belong to its old relation by the routines that sequentially scan the shared-buffer array. Again I know of no bugs caused by that, but it still can't be a good idea.
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Tom Lane authored
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- 18 May, 2000 2 commits
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Bruce Momjian authored
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Bruce Momjian authored
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