Commit Graph

46014 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Thomas Munro 2839bf3538 Don't unset MAKEFLAGS in non-GNU Makefile.
It's useful to be able to pass down options like -s and -j.

Back-patch to 9.5, like commit a76200de.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKG%2Be1M8-BbL%3DPqhTp6oO6XPO6%2Bs9WGQMLfbuZ%3DG9CtzyXg%40mail.gmail.com
2019-06-25 09:40:20 +12:00
Thomas Munro be5676f414 Remove misleading comment from pathnodes.h.
As of commit e5253fdc, it is no longer true that the leader always
executes the subplan of a Gather Merge node.  Remove comment to that
effect.

Back-patch to 11.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGJEaZJYezXAOutuiWT%2BfxCA44%2BoKtVPAND2ubLiigR%3D-w%40mail.gmail.com
2019-06-25 09:20:36 +12:00
Tom Lane afaf48afb1 Further fix ALTER COLUMN TYPE's handling of indexes and index constraints.
This patch reverts all the code changes of commit e76de8861, which turns
out to have been seriously misguided.  We can't wait till later to compute
the definition string for an index; we must capture that before applying
the data type change for any column it depends on, else ruleutils.c will
deliverr wrong/misleading results.  (This fine point was documented
nowhere, of course.)

I'd also managed to forget that ATExecAlterColumnType executes once per
ALTER COLUMN TYPE clause, not once per statement; which resulted in the
code being basically completely broken for any case in which multiple ALTER
COLUMN TYPE clauses are applied to a table having non-constraint indexes
that must be rebuilt.  Through very bad luck, none of the existing test
cases nor the ones added by e76de8861 caught that, but of course it was
soon found in the field.

The previous patch also had an implicit assumption that if a constraint's
index had a dependency on a table column, so would the constraint --- but
that isn't actually true, so it didn't fix such cases.

Instead of trying to delete unneeded index dependencies later, do the
is-there-a-constraint lookup immediately on seeing an index dependency,
and switch to remembering the constraint if so.  In the unusual case of
multiple column dependencies for a constraint index, this will result in
duplicate constraint lookups, but that's not that horrible compared to all
the other work that happens here.  Besides, such cases did not work at all
before, so it's hard to argue that they're performance-critical for anyone.

Per bug #15865 from Keith Fiske.  As before, back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15865-17940eacc8f8b081@postgresql.org
2019-06-24 16:43:05 -04:00
Tom Lane 40dde82907 Fix spinlock assembly code for MIPS so it works on MIPS r6.
Original MIPS-I processors didn't have the LL/SC instructions (nor any
other userland synchronization primitive).  If the build toolchain
targets that ISA variant by default, as an astonishingly large fraction
of MIPS platforms still do, the assembler won't take LL/SC without
coercion in the form of a ".set mips2" instruction.  But we issued that
unconditionally, making it an ISA downgrade for chips later than MIPS2.
That breaks things for the latest MIPS r6 ISA, which encodes these
instructions differently.  Adjust the code so we don't change ISA level
if it's >= 2.

Note that this patch doesn't change what happens on an actual MIPS-I
processor: either the kernel will emulate these instructions
transparently, or you'll get a SIGILL failure.  That tradeoff seemed
fine in 2002 when this code was added (cf 3cbe6b247), and it's even
more so today when MIPS-I is basically extinct.  But let's add a
comment about that.

YunQiang Su (with cosmetic adjustments by me).  Back-patch to all
supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15844-8f62fe7e163939b3@postgresql.org
2019-06-22 20:31:50 -04:00
Noah Misch a40dca815d Consolidate methods for translating a Perl path to a Windows path.
This fixes some TAP suites when using msys Perl and a builddir located
in an msys mount point other than "/".  For example, builddir=/c/pg
exhibited the problem, since /c/pg falls in mount point "/c".
Back-patch to 9.6, where tests first started to perform such
translations.  In back branches, offer both new and old APIs.

Reviewed by Andrew Dunstan.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190610045838.GA238501@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-06-21 20:47:34 -07:00
Thomas Munro f7aebd7f74 Remove obsolete comments about sempahores from proc.c.
Commit 6753333f switched from a semaphore-based wait to a latch-based
wait for ProcSleep()/ProcWakeup(), but left behind some stray references
to semaphores.

Back-patch to 9.5.

Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+hUKGLs5H6zhmgTijZ1OaJvC1sG0=AFXc1aHuce32tKiQrdEA@mail.gmail.com
2019-06-21 10:57:32 +12:00
Michael Paquier 6dfc946447 Fix description of WAL record XLOG_BTREE_META_CLEANUP
This record uses one metadata buffer and registers some data associated
to the buffer, but when parsing the record for its description a direct
access to the record data was done, but there is none.  This leads
usually to an incorrect description, but can also cause crashes like in
pg_waldump.  Instead, fix things so as the parsing uses the data
associated to the metadata block.

This is an oversight from 3d92796, so backpatch down to 11.

Author: Michael Paquier
Description: https://postgr.es/m/20190617013059.GA3153@paquier.xyz
Backpatch-through: 11
2019-06-19 11:02:28 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 5246d3e791 Avoid spurious deadlocks when upgrading a tuple lock
This puts back reverted commit de87a084c0, with some bug fixes.

When two (or more) transactions are waiting for transaction T1 to release a
tuple-level lock, and transaction T1 upgrades its lock to a higher level, a
spurious deadlock can be reported among the waiting transactions when T1
finishes.  The simplest example case seems to be:

T1: select id from job where name = 'a' for key share;
Y: select id from job where name = 'a' for update; -- starts waiting for T1
Z: select id from job where name = 'a' for key share;
T1: update job set name = 'b' where id = 1;
Z: update job set name = 'c' where id = 1; -- starts waiting for T1
T1: rollback;

At this point, transaction Y is rolled back on account of a deadlock: Y
holds the heavyweight tuple lock and is waiting for the Xmax to be released,
while Z holds part of the multixact and tries to acquire the heavyweight
lock (per protocol) and goes to sleep; once T1 releases its part of the
multixact, Z is awakened only to be put back to sleep on the heavyweight
lock that Y is holding while sleeping.  Kaboom.

This can be avoided by having Z skip the heavyweight lock acquisition.  As
far as I can see, the biggest downside is that if there are multiple Z
transactions, the order in which they resume after T1 finishes is not
guaranteed.

Backpatch to 9.6.  The patch applies cleanly on 9.5, but the new tests don't
work there (because isolationtester is not smart enough), so I'm not going
to risk it.

Author: Oleksii Kliukin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/B9C9D7CD-EB94-4635-91B6-E558ACEC0EC3@hintbits.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2815.1560521451@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-06-18 18:23:16 -04:00
Thomas Munro 14d8b539d3 Prevent Parallel Hash Join for JOIN_UNIQUE_INNER.
WHERE EXISTS (...) queries cannot be executed by Parallel Hash Join
with jointype JOIN_UNIQUE_INNER, because there is no way to make a
partial plan totally unique.  The consequence of allowing such plans
was duplicate results from some EXISTS queries.

Back-patch to 11.  Bug #15857.

Author: Thomas Munro
Reviewed-by: Tom Lane
Reported-by: Vladimir Kriukov
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15857-d1ba2a64bce0795e%40postgresql.org
2019-06-19 02:13:52 +12:00
Tom Lane e5f26d79ba Stamp 11.4. 2019-06-17 17:15:30 -04:00
Tom Lane a4e4418c3f Last-minute updates for release notes.
Security: CVE-2019-10164
2019-06-17 10:53:45 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut bf94911d43 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: https://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 599a4bccd28710a88972e1a0ef6961c9bad816fc
2019-06-17 15:32:44 +02:00
Michael Paquier 27c464e42a Fix buffer overflow when processing SCRAM final message in libpq
When a client connects to a rogue server sending specifically-crafted
messages, this can suffice to execute arbitrary code as the operating
system account used by the client.

While on it, fix one error handling when decoding an incorrect salt
included in the first message received from server.

Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Katz, Heikki Linnakangas
Security: CVE-2019-10164
Backpatch-through: 10
2019-06-17 22:14:04 +09:00
Michael Paquier 4c779ce324 Fix buffer overflow when parsing SCRAM verifiers in backend
Any authenticated user can overflow a stack-based buffer by changing the
user's own password to a purpose-crafted value.  This often suffices to
execute arbitrary code as the PostgreSQL operating system account.

This fix is contributed by multiple folks, based on an initial analysis
from Tom Lane.  This issue has been introduced by 68e61ee, so it was
possible to make use of it at authentication time.  It became more
easily to trigger after ccae190 which has made the SCRAM parsing more
strict when changing a password, in the case where the client passes
down a verifier already hashed using SCRAM.  Back-patch to v10 where
SCRAM has been introduced.

Reported-by: Alexander Lakhin
Author: Jonathan Katz, Heikki Linnakangas, Michael Paquier
Security: CVE-2019-10164
Backpatch-through: 10
2019-06-17 21:48:25 +09:00
Alvaro Herrera 28dc2c25c5 Revert "Avoid spurious deadlocks when upgrading a tuple lock"
This reverts commits 3da73d6839 and de87a084c0.

This code has some tricky corner cases that I'm not sure are correct and
not properly tested anyway, so I'm reverting the whole thing for next
week's releases (reintroducing the deadlock bug that we set to fix).
I'll try again afterwards.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1hbXKQ-0003g1-0C@gemulon.postgresql.org
2019-06-16 22:24:21 -04:00
Tom Lane f5ee6a7acc Doc: update 11.4 release notes through today.
Also improve wording of some items (thanks to Noah Misch for suggestions).
2019-06-16 14:47:34 -04:00
Andrew Gierth 7f28fc8e92 Prefer timezone name "UTC" over alternative spellings.
tzdb 2019a made "UCT" a link to the "UTC" zone rather than a separate
zone with its own abbreviation. Unfortunately, our code for choosing a
timezone in initdb has an arbitrary preference for names earlier in
the alphabet, and so it would choose the spelling "UCT" over "UTC"
when the system is running on a UTC zone.

Commit 23bd3cec6 was backpatched in order to address this issue, but
that code helps only when /etc/localtime exists as a symlink, and does
nothing to help on systems where /etc/localtime is a copy of a zone
file (as is the standard setup on FreeBSD and probably some other
platforms too) or when /etc/localtime is simply absent (giving UTC as
the default).

Accordingly, add a preference for the spelling "UTC", such that if
multiple zone names have equally good content matches, we prefer that
name before applying the existing arbitrary rules. Also add a slightly
lower preference for "Etc/UTC"; lower because that preserves the
previous behaviour of choosing the shorter name, but letting us still
choose "Etc/UTC" over "Etc/UCT" when both exist but "UTC" does
not (not common, but I've seen it happen).

Backpatch all the way, because the tzdb change that sparked this issue
is in those branches too.
2019-06-15 18:16:43 +01:00
Tom Lane 0995cefa74 First-draft release notes for 11.4.
As usual, the release notes for other branches will be made by cutting
these down, but put them up for community review first.
2019-06-14 16:56:49 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 1f8f144fe3 Silence compiler warning
Introduced in de87a084c0.
2019-06-14 11:33:40 -04:00
Tom Lane 995b4fe0b1 Attempt to identify system timezone by reading /etc/localtime symlink.
On many modern platforms, /etc/localtime is a symlink to a file within the
IANA database.  Reading the symlink lets us find out the name of the system
timezone directly, without going through the brute-force search embodied in
scan_available_timezones().  This shortens the runtime of initdb by some
tens of ms, which is helpful for the buildfarm, and it also allows us to
reliably select the same zone name the system was actually configured for,
rather than possibly choosing one of IANA's many zone aliases.  (For
example, in a system configured for "Asia/Tokyo", the brute-force search
would not choose that name but its alias "Japan", on the grounds of the
latter string being shorter.  More surprisingly, "Navajo" is preferred
to either "America/Denver" or "US/Mountain", as seen in an old complaint
from Josh Berkus.)

If /etc/localtime doesn't exist, or isn't a symlink, or we can't make
sense of its contents, or the contents match a zone we know but that
zone doesn't match the observed behavior of localtime(), fall back to
the brute-force search.

Also, tweak initdb so that it prints the zone name it selected.

In passing, replace the last few references to the "Olson" database in
code comments with "IANA", as that's been our preferred term since
commit b2cbced9e.

Back-patch of commit 23bd3cec6.  The original intention was to not
back-patch, since this can result in cosmetic behavioral changes ---
for example, on my own workstation initdb now chooses "America/New_York",
where it used to prefer "US/Eastern" which is equivalent and shorter.
However, our hand has been more or less forced by tzdb update 2019a,
which made the "UCT" zone fully equivalent to "UTC".  Our old code
now prefers "UCT" on the grounds of it being alphabetically first,
and that's making nobody happy.  Choosing the alias indicated by
/etc/localtime is a more defensible behavior.  (Users who don't like
the results can always force the decision by setting the TZ environment
variable before running initdb.)

Patch by me, per a suggestion from Robert Haas; review by Michael Paquier

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7408.1525812528@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190604085735.GD24018@msg.df7cb.de
2019-06-14 11:25:13 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera 85600b7b5d Avoid spurious deadlocks when upgrading a tuple lock
When two (or more) transactions are waiting for transaction T1 to release a
tuple-level lock, and transaction T1 upgrades its lock to a higher level, a
spurious deadlock can be reported among the waiting transactions when T1
finishes.  The simplest example case seems to be:

T1: select id from job where name = 'a' for key share;
Y: select id from job where name = 'a' for update; -- starts waiting for X
Z: select id from job where name = 'a' for key share;
T1: update job set name = 'b' where id = 1;
Z: update job set name = 'c' where id = 1; -- starts waiting for X
T1: rollback;

At this point, transaction Y is rolled back on account of a deadlock: Y
holds the heavyweight tuple lock and is waiting for the Xmax to be released,
while Z holds part of the multixact and tries to acquire the heavyweight
lock (per protocol) and goes to sleep; once X releases its part of the
multixact, Z is awakened only to be put back to sleep on the heavyweight
lock that Y is holding while sleeping.  Kaboom.

This can be avoided by having Z skip the heavyweight lock acquisition.  As
far as I can see, the biggest downside is that if there are multiple Z
transactions, the order in which they resume after X finishes is not
guaranteed.

Backpatch to 9.6.  The patch applies cleanly on 9.5, but the new tests don't
work there (because isolationtester is not smart enough), so I'm not going
to risk it.

Author: Oleksii Kliukin
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/B9C9D7CD-EB94-4635-91B6-E558ACEC0EC3@hintbits.com
2019-06-13 17:28:24 -04:00
Tom Lane 07accce500 Mark ReplicationSlotCtl as PGDLLIMPORT.
Also MyReplicationSlot, in branches where it wasn't already.

This was discussed in the thread that resulted in c572599c6, but
for some reason nobody pulled the trigger.  Now that we have another
request for the same thing, we should just do it.

Craig Ringer

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMsr+YFTsq-86MnsNng=mPvjjh5EAbzfMK0ptJPvzyvpFARuRg@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/345138875.20190611151943@cybertec.at
2019-06-13 10:53:17 -04:00
Etsuro Fujita 2144601821 postgres_fdw: Account for triggers in non-direct remote UPDATE planning.
Previously, in postgresPlanForeignModify, we planned an UPDATE operation
on a foreign table so that we transmit only columns that were explicitly
targets of the UPDATE, so as to avoid unnecessary data transmission, but
if there were BEFORE ROW UPDATE triggers on the foreign table, those
triggers might change values for non-target columns, in which case we
would miss sending changed values for those columns.  Prevent optimizing
away transmitting all columns if there are BEFORE ROW UPDATE triggers on
the foreign table.

This is an oversight in commit 7cbe57c34 which added triggers on foreign
tables, so apply the patch all the way back to 9.4 where that came in.

Author: Shohei Mochizuki
Reviewed-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/201905270152.x4R1q3qi014550@toshiba.co.jp
2019-06-13 17:59:11 +09:00
Tom Lane afaa32daf2 Doc: improve description of allowed spellings for Boolean input.
datatype.sgml failed to explain that boolin() accepts any unique
prefix of the basic input strings.  Indeed it was actively misleading
because it called out a few minimal prefixes without mentioning that
there were more valid inputs.

I also felt that it wasn't doing anybody any favors by conflating
SQL key words, valid Boolean input, and string literals containing
valid Boolean input.  Rewrite in hopes of reducing the confusion.

Per bug #15836 from Yuming Wang, as diagnosed by David Johnston.
Back-patch to supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15836-656fab055735f511@postgresql.org
2019-06-12 22:54:46 -04:00
Tom Lane f95d8f8106 Fix incorrect printing of queries with duplicated join names.
Given a query in which multiple JOIN nodes used the same alias
(which'd necessarily be in different sub-SELECTs), ruleutils.c
would assign the JOIN nodes distinct aliases for clarity ...
but then it forgot to print the modified aliases when dumping
the JOIN nodes themselves.  This results in a dump/reload hazard
for views, because the emitted query is flat-out incorrect:
Vars will be printed with table names that have no referent.

This has been wrong for a long time, so back-patch to all supported
branches.

Philip Dubé

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CY4PR2101MB080246F2955FF58A6ED1FEAC98140@CY4PR2101MB0802.namprd21.prod.outlook.com
2019-06-12 19:43:09 -04:00
David Rowley e23338cec4 doc: Fix grammatical error in partitioning docs
Reported-by: Amit Langote
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+HiwqGZFkKi0TkBGYpr2_5qrRAbHZoP47AP1BRLUOUkfQdy_A@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 10
2019-06-13 10:35:27 +12:00
Tom Lane 9346d396fd In walreceiver, don't try to do ereport() in a signal handler.
This is quite unsafe, even for the case of ereport(FATAL) where we won't
return control to the interrupted code, and despite this code's use of
a flag to restrict the areas where we'd try to do it.  It's possible
for example that we interrupt malloc or free while that's holding a lock
that's meant to protect against cross-thread interference.  Then, any
attempt to do malloc or free within ereport() will result in a deadlock,
preventing the walreceiver process from exiting in response to SIGTERM.
We hypothesize that this explains some hard-to-reproduce failures seen
in the buildfarm.

Hence, get rid of the immediate-exit code in WalRcvShutdownHandler,
as well as the logic associated with WalRcvImmediateInterruptOK.
Instead, we need to take care that potentially-blocking operations
in the walreceiver's data transmission logic (libpqwalreceiver.c)
will respond reasonably promptly to the process's latch becoming
set and then call ProcessWalRcvInterrupts.  Much of the needed code
for that was already present in libpqwalreceiver.c.  I refactored
things a bit so that all the uses of PQgetResult use latch-aware
waiting, but didn't need to do much more.

These changes should be enough to ensure that libpqwalreceiver.c
will respond promptly to SIGTERM whenever it's waiting to receive
data.  In principle, it could block for a long time while waiting
to send data too, and this patch does nothing to guard against that.
I think that that hazard is mostly theoretical though: such blocking
should occur only if we fill the kernel's data transmission buffers,
and we don't generally send enough data to make that happen without
waiting for input.  If we find out that the hazard isn't just
theoretical, we could fix it by using PQsetnonblocking, but that
would require more ticklish changes than I care to make now.

Back-patch of commit a1a789eb5.  This problem goes all the way back
to the origins of walreceiver; but given the substantial reworking
the module received during the v10 cycle, it seems unsafe to assume
that our testing on HEAD validates this patch for pre-v10 branches.
And we'd need to back-patch some prerequisite patches (at least
597a87ccc and its followups, maybe other things), increasing the risk
of problems.  Given the dearth of field reports matching this problem,
it's not worth much risk.  Hence back-patch to v10 and v11 only.

Patch by me; thanks to Thomas Munro for review.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190416070119.GK2673@paquier.xyz
2019-06-12 17:29:48 -04:00
Tom Lane 0b6edb9fb3 Fix ALTER COLUMN TYPE failure with a partial exclusion constraint.
ATExecAlterColumnType failed to consider the possibility that an index
that needs to be rebuilt might be a child of a constraint that needs to be
rebuilt.  We missed this so far because usually a constraint index doesn't
have a direct dependency on its table, just on the constraint object.
But if there's a WHERE clause, then dependency analysis of the WHERE
clause results in direct dependencies on the column(s) mentioned in WHERE.
This led to trying to drop and rebuild both the constraint and its
underlying index.

In v11/HEAD, we successfully drop both the index and the constraint,
and then try to rebuild both, and of course the second rebuild hits a
duplicate-index-name problem.  Before v11, it fails with obscure messages
about a missing relation OID, due to trying to drop the index twice.

This is essentially the same kind of problem noted in commit
20bef2c31: the possible dependency linkages are broader than what
ATExecAlterColumnType was designed for.  It was probably OK when
written, but it's certainly been broken since the introduction of
partial exclusion constraints.  Fix by adding an explicit check
for whether any of the indexes-to-be-rebuilt belong to any of the
constraints-to-be-rebuilt, and ignoring any that do.

In passing, fix a latent bug introduced by commit 8b08f7d48: in
get_constraint_index() we must "continue" not "break" when rejecting
a relation of a wrong relkind.  This is harmless today because we don't
expect that code path to be taken anyway; but if there ever were any
relations to be ignored, the existing coding would have an extremely
undesirable dependency on the order of pg_depend entries.

Also adjust a couple of obsolete comments.

Per bug #15835 from Yaroslav Schekin.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15835-32d9b7a76c06a7a9@postgresql.org
2019-06-12 12:29:41 -04:00
Michael Paquier fa5f3a4bcc Fix handling of COMMENT for domain constraints
For a non-superuser, changing a comment on a domain constraint was
leading to a cache lookup failure as the code tried to perform the
ownership lookup on the constraint OID itself, thinking that it was a
type, but this check needs to happen on the type the domain constraint
relies on.  As the type a domain constraint relies on can be guessed
directly based on the constraint OID, first fetch its type OID and
perform the ownership on it.

This is broken since 7eca575, which has split the handling of comments
for table constraints and domain constraints, so back-patch down to
9.5.

Reported-by: Clemens Ladisch
Author: Daniel Gustafsson, Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15833-808e11904835d26f@postgresql.org
Backpatch-through: 9.5
2019-06-12 11:30:41 +09:00
David Rowley 936b5e589e doc: Add best practises section to partitioning docs
A few questionable partitioning designs have been cropping up lately
around the mailing lists.  Generally, these cases have been partitioning
using too many partitions which have caused performance or OOM problems for
the users.

Since we have very little else to guide users into good design, here we
add a new section to the partitioning documentation with some best
practise guidelines for good design.

Reviewed-by: Justin Pryzby, Amit Langote, Alvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f-2rx+E9mG3xrCVHupefMjAp1+tpczQa9SEOZWyU7fjEA@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 10
2019-06-12 08:09:11 +12:00
Tom Lane 1c9034579c Fix conversion of JSON strings to JSON output columns in json_to_record().
json_to_record(), when an output column is declared as type json or jsonb,
should emit the corresponding field of the input JSON object.  But it got
this slightly wrong when the field is just a string literal: it failed to
escape the contents of the string.  That typically resulted in syntax
errors if the string contained any double quotes or backslashes.

jsonb_to_record() handles such cases correctly, but I added corresponding
test cases for it too, to prevent future backsliding.

Improve the documentation, as it provided only a very hand-wavy
description of the conversion rules used by these functions.

Per bug report from Robert Vollmert.  Back-patch to v10 where the
error was introduced (by commit cf35346e8).

Note that PG 9.4 - 9.6 also get this case wrong, but differently so:
they feed the de-escaped contents of the string literal to json[b]_in.
That behavior is less obviously wrong, so possibly it's being depended on
in the field, so I won't risk trying to make the older branches behave
like the newer ones.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/D6921B37-BD8E-4664-8D5F-DB3525765DCD@vllmrt.net
2019-06-11 13:33:08 -04:00
Andres Freund c015560176 Don't access catalogs to validate GUCs when not connected to a DB.
Vignesh found this bug in the check function for
default_table_access_method's check hook, but that was just copied
from older GUCs. Investigation by Michael and me then found the bug in
further places.

When not connected to a database (e.g. in a walsender connection), we
cannot perform (most) GUC checks that need database access. Even when
only shared tables are needed, unless they're
nailed (c.f. RelationCacheInitializePhase2()), they cannot be accessed
without pg_class etc. being present.

Fix by extending the existing IsTransactionState() checks to also
check for MyDatabaseOid.

Reported-By: Vignesh C, Michael Paquier, Andres Freund
Author: Vignesh C, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALDaNm1KXK9gbZfY-p_peRFm_XrBh1OwQO1Kk6Gig0c0fVZ2uw%40mail.gmail.com
Backpatch: 9.4-
2019-06-10 23:35:38 -07:00
Alvaro Herrera 6a781c4f5f Make pg_dump emit ATTACH PARTITION instead of PARTITION OF (reprise)
Using PARTITION OF can result in column ordering being changed from the
database being dumped, if the partition uses a column layout different
from the parent's.  It's not pg_dump's job to editorialize on table
definitions, so this is not acceptable; back-patch all the way back to
pg10, where partitioned tables where introduced.

This change also ensures that partitions end up in the correct
tablespace, if different from the parent's; this is an oversight in
ca4103025d (in pg12 only).  Partitioned indexes (in pg11) don't have
this problem, because they're already created as independent indexes and
attached to their parents afterwards.

This change also has the advantage that the partition is restorable from
the dump (as a standalone table) even if its parent table isn't
restored.

The original commits (3b23552ad8 in branch master) failed to cover
subsidiary column elements correctly, such as NOT NULL constraint and
CHECK constraints, as reported by Rushabh Lathia (initially as a failure
to restore serial columns).  They were reverted.  This recapitulation
commit fixes those problems.

Add some pg_dump tests to verify these things more exhaustively,
including constraints with legacy-inheritance tables, which were not
tested originally.  In branches 10 and 11, add a local constraint to the
pg_dump test partition that was added by commit 2d7eeb1b14 to master.

Author: Álvaro Herrera, David Rowley
Reviewed-by: Álvaro Herrera
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_1c260nOt_vBJ067AZ3JXptXVRohDVMLEBmudX1YEx-A@mail.gmail.com
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190423185007.GA27954@alvherre.pgsql
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGPqQf0iQV=PPOv2Btog9J9AwOQp6HmuVd6SbGTR_v3Zp2XT1w@mail.gmail.com
2019-06-10 18:56:23 -04:00
Alexander Korotkov bc93a5ab40 Fix operator naming in pg_trgm GUC option descriptions
Descriptions of pg_trgm GUC options have % replaced with %% like it was
a printf-like format.  But that's not needed since they are just plain strings.
This commit fixed that.  Backpatch to last supported version since this error
present from the beginning.

Reported-by: Masahiko Sawada
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoAgPKODUsu9gqUFiNqEOAqedStxJ-a0sapsJXWWAVp%3Dxg%40mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2019-06-10 20:20:33 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 19dc23a5ef Add docs of missing GUC to pgtrgm.sgml
be8a7a68 introduced pg_trgm.strict_word_similarity_threshold GUC, but missed
docs for that.  This commit fixes that.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/fc907f70-448e-fda3-3aa4-209a59597af0%402ndquadrant.com
Author: Ian Barwick
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada, Michael Paquier
Backpatch-through: 9.6
2019-06-10 20:20:33 +03:00
Alexander Korotkov 76bccb12db Fix docs indentation in pgtrgm.sgml
5871b884 introduced pg_trgm.word_similarity_threshold GUC, but its documentation
contains wrong indentation.  This commit fixes that.  Backpatch for easier
backpatching of other documentation fixes.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/4c735d30-ab59-fc0e-45d8-f90eb5ed3855%402ndquadrant.com
Author: Ian Barwick
Backpatch-through: 9.6
2019-06-10 20:20:33 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas 12a45a20aa Fix copy-pasto in freeing memory on error in vacuumlo.
It's harmless to call PQfreemem() with a NULL argument, so the only
consequence was that if allocating 'schema' failed, but allocating 'table'
or 'field' succeeded, we would leak a bit of memory. That's highly
unlikely to happen, so this is just academical, but let's get it right.

Per bug #15838 from Timur Birsh. Backpatch back to 9.5, where the
PQfreemem() calls were introduced.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/15838-3221652c72c5e69d@postgresql.org
2019-06-07 12:43:55 +03:00
Amit Kapila 17aa054a79 Fix inconsistency in comments atop ExecParallelEstimate.
When this code was initially introduced in commit d1b7c1ff, the structure
used was SharedPlanStateInstrumentation, but later when it got changed to
Instrumentation structure in commit b287df70, we forgot to update the
comment.

Reported-by: Wu Fei
Author: Wu Fei
Reviewed-by: Amit Kapila
Backpatch-through: 9.6
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/52E6E0843B9D774C8C73D6CF64402F0562215EB2@G08CNEXMBPEKD02.g08.fujitsu.local
2019-06-07 05:29:11 +05:30
David Rowley a15e8ce7b6 Docs: concurrent builds of partitioned indexes are not supported
Document that CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY is not currently supported for
indexes on partitioned tables.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKJS1f_CErd2z9L21Q8OGLD4TgH7yw1z9MAtHTSO13sXVG-yow@mail.gmail.com
Backpatch-through: 11
2019-06-06 12:37:04 +12:00
Alvaro Herrera a99b653ac1 Document piecemeal construction of partitioned indexes
Continuous operation cannot be achieved without applying this technique,
so it needs to be properly described.

Author: Álvaro Herrera
Reported-by: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/8756.1556302759@sss.pgh.pa.us
2019-06-04 16:43:45 -04:00
Tom Lane 57e85fa2cb Fix contrib/auto_explain to not cause problems in parallel workers.
A parallel worker process should not be making any decisions of its
own about whether to auto-explain.  If the parent session process
passed down flags asking for instrumentation data, do that, otherwise
not.  Trying to enable instrumentation anyway leads to bugs like the
"could not find key N in shm TOC" failure reported in bug #15821
from Christian Hofstaedtler.

We can implement this cheaply by piggybacking on the existing logic
for not doing anything when we've chosen not to sample a statement.

While at it, clean up some tin-eared coding related to the sampling
feature, including an off-by-one error that meant that asking for 1.0
sampling rate didn't actually result in sampling every statement.

Although the specific case reported here only manifested in >= v11,
I believe that related misbehaviors can be demonstrated in any version
that has parallel query; and the off-by-one error is certainly there
back to 9.6 where that feature was added.  So back-patch to 9.6.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15821-5eb422e980594075@postgresql.org
2019-06-03 18:06:04 -04:00
Tom Lane 601084eb1a Fix unsafe memory management in CloneRowTriggersToPartition().
It's not really supported to call systable_getnext() in a different
memory context than systable_beginscan() was called in, and it's
*definitely* not safe to do so and then reset that context between
calls.  I'm not very clear on how this code survived
CLOBBER_CACHE_ALWAYS testing ... but Alexander Lakhin found a case
that would crash it pretty reliably.

Per bug #15828.  Fix, and backpatch to v11 where this code came in.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15828-f6ddd7df4852f473@postgresql.org
2019-06-03 16:59:16 -04:00
Michael Paquier 3c461d510d Fix documentation of check_option in information_schema.views
Support of CHECK OPTION for updatable views has been added in 9.4, but
the documentation of information_schema never got the call even if the
information displayed is correct.

Author: Gilles Darold
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/75d07704-6c74-4f26-656a-10045c01a17e@darold.net
Backpatch-through: 9.4
2019-06-01 15:33:58 -04:00
Tom Lane 312017fcc4 Fix C++ incompatibilities in plpgsql's header files.
Rename some exposed parameters so that they don't conflict with
C++ reserved words.

Back-patch to all supported versions.

George Tarasov

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/b517ec3918d645eb950505eac8dd434e@gaz-is.ru
2019-05-31 12:34:54 -04:00
Tomas Vondra 9c9a74cd32 Make error logging in extended statistics more consistent
Most errors reported in extended statistics are internal issues, and so
should use elog(). The MCV list code was already following this rule, but
the functional dependencies and ndistinct coefficients were using a mix
of elog() and ereport(). Fix this by changing most places to elog(), with
the exception of input functions.

This is a mostly cosmetic change, it makes the life a little bit easier
for translators, as elog() messages are not translated. So backpatch to
PostgreSQL 10, where extended statistics were introduced.

Author: Tomas Vondra
Backpatch-through: 10 where extended statistics were added
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190503154404.GA7478@alvherre.pgsql
2019-05-30 17:06:21 +02:00
Noah Misch 88a0e3daf8 In the pg_upgrade test suite, don't write to src/test/regress.
When this suite runs installcheck, redirect file creations from
src/test/regress to src/bin/pg_upgrade/tmp_check/regress.  This closes a
race condition in "make -j check-world".  If the pg_upgrade suite wrote
to a given src/test/regress/results file in parallel with the regular
src/test/regress invocation writing it, a test failed spuriously.  Even
without parallelism, in "make -k check-world", the suite finishing
second overwrote the other's regression.diffs.  This revealed test
"largeobject" assuming @abs_builddir@ is getcwd(), so fix that, too.

Buildfarm client REL_10, released fifty-four days ago, supports saving
regression.diffs from its new location.  When an older client reports a
pg_upgradeCheck failure, it will no longer include regression.diffs.
Back-patch to 9.5, where pg_upgrade moved to src/bin.

Reviewed (in earlier versions) by Andrew Dunstan.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20181224034411.GA3224776@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-05-28 12:59:36 -07:00
Noah Misch 20103a2609 In the pg_upgrade test suite, remove and recreate "tmp_check".
This allows "vcregress upgradecheck" to pass twice in immediate
succession, and it's more like how $(prove_check) works.  Back-patch to
9.5, where pg_upgrade moved to src/bin.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190520012436.GA1480421@rfd.leadboat.com
2019-05-28 12:58:34 -07:00
Tom Lane 329575db94 Doc: fix typo in pgbench random_zipfian() documentation.
Per bug #15819 from Koizumi Satoru.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15819-e6191bef1f7334c0@postgresql.org
2019-05-24 11:16:06 -04:00
Andres Freund 5d91a9e8ac pg_upgrade: Make test.sh's installcheck use to-be-upgraded version's bindir.
On master (after 700538) the old version's installed psql was used -
even when the old version might not actually be installed / might be
installed into a temporary directory. As commonly the case when just
executing make check for pg_upgrade, as $oldbindir is just the current
version's $bindir.

In the back branches, with --install specified, psql from the new
version's temporary installation was used, without --install (e.g for
NO_TEMP_INSTALL, cf 47b3c26642), the new version's installed psql was
used (which might or might not exist).

Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190522175150.c26f4jkqytahajdg@alap3.anarazel.de
2019-05-23 14:46:57 -07:00
Andrew Gierth f7da492dca Fix array size allocation for HashAggregate hash keys.
When there were duplicate columns in the hash key list, the array
sizes could be miscomputed, resulting in access off the end of the
array. Adjust the computation to ensure the array is always large
enough.

(I considered whether the duplicates could be removed in planning, but
I can't rule out the possibility that duplicate columns might have
different hash functions assigned. Simpler to just make sure it works
at execution time regardless.)

Bug apparently introduced in fc4b3dea2 as part of narrowing down the
tuples stored in the hashtable. Reported by Colm McHugh of Salesforce,
though I didn't use their patch. Backpatch back to version 10 where
the bug was introduced.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAFeeJoKKu0u+A_A9R9316djW-YW3-+Gtgvy3ju655qRHR3jtdA@mail.gmail.com
2019-05-23 15:38:33 +01:00