29325 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
91120734db Add missing buffer lock acquisition in GetTupleForTrigger().
If we had not been holding buffer pin continuously since the tuple was
initially fetched by the UPDATE or DELETE query, it would be possible for
VACUUM or a page-prune operation to move the tuple while we're trying to
copy it.  This would result in a garbage "old" tuple value being passed to
an AFTER ROW UPDATE or AFTER ROW DELETE trigger.  The preconditions for
this are somewhat improbable, and the timing constraints are very tight;
so it's not so surprising that this hasn't been reported from the field,
even though the bug has been there a long time.

Problem found by Andres Freund.  Back-patch to all active branches.
2012-11-30 13:56:19 -05:00
Tom Lane
25b2499d56 Produce a more useful error message for over-length Unix socket paths.
The length of a socket path name is constrained by the size of struct
sockaddr_un, and there's not a lot we can do about it since that is a
kernel API.  However, it would be a good thing if we produced an
intelligible error message when the user specifies a socket path that's too
long --- and getaddrinfo's standard API is too impoverished to do this in
the natural way.  So insert explicit tests at the places where we construct
a socket path name.  Now you'll get an error that makes sense and even
tells you what the limit is, rather than something generic like
"Non-recoverable failure in name resolution".

Per trouble report from Jeremy Drake and a fix idea from Andrew Dunstan.
2012-11-29 19:57:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
518d58daa5 Fix assorted bugs in CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY.
This patch changes CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY so that the pg_index
flag changes it makes without exclusive lock on the index are made via
heap_inplace_update() rather than a normal transactional update.  The
latter is not very safe because moving the pg_index tuple could result in
concurrent SnapshotNow scans finding it twice or not at all, thus possibly
resulting in index corruption.

In addition, fix various places in the code that ought to check to make
sure that the indexes they are manipulating are valid and/or ready as
appropriate.  These represent bugs that have existed since 8.2, since
a failed CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY could leave a corrupt or invalid
index behind, and we ought not try to do anything that might fail with
such an index.

Also fix RelationReloadIndexInfo to ensure it copies all the pg_index
columns that are allowed to change after initial creation.  Previously we
could have been left with stale values of some fields in an index relcache
entry.  It's not clear whether this actually had any user-visible
consequences, but it's at least a bug waiting to happen.

This is a subset of a patch already applied in 9.2 and HEAD.  Back-patch
into all earlier supported branches.

Tom Lane and Andres Freund
2012-11-29 14:52:22 -05:00
Michael Meskes
f22a6edad8 When processing nested structure pointer variables ecpg always expected an
array datatype which of course is wrong.

Applied patch by Muhammad Usama <m.usama@gmail.com> to fix this.
2012-11-29 17:15:52 +01:00
Bruce Momjian
67b5effe8c Remove inaccurate "Incrementally Updated Backups" documentation section;
already removed from 9.0+.

Applied to 8.3 and 8.4.
2012-11-26 17:36:21 -05:00
Tom Lane
60511606fb Fix pg_resetxlog to use correct path to postmaster.pid.
Since we've already chdir'd into the data directory, the file should
be referenced as just "postmaster.pid", without prefixing the directory
path.  This is harmless in the normal case where an absolute PGDATA path
is used, but quite dangerous if a relative path is specified, since the
program might then fail to notice an active postmaster.

Reported by Hari Babu.  This got broken in my commit
eb5949d190e80360386113fde0f05854f0c9824d, so patch all active versions.
2012-11-22 11:23:42 -05:00
Tom Lane
9e74c02259 Improve handling of INT_MIN / -1 and related cases.
Some platforms throw an exception for this division, rather than returning
a necessarily-overflowed result.  Since we were testing for overflow after
the fact, an exception isn't nice.  We can avoid the problem by treating
division by -1 as negation.

Add some regression tests so that we'll find out if any compilers try to
optimize away the overflow check conditions.

Back-patch of commit 1f7cb5c30983752ff8de833de30afcaee63536d0.

Per discussion with Xi Wang, though this is different from the patch he
submitted.
2012-11-19 21:21:54 -05:00
Tom Lane
73af46e82c Limit values of archive_timeout, post_auth_delay, auth_delay.milliseconds.
The previous definitions of these GUC variables allowed them to range
up to INT_MAX, but in point of fact the underlying code would suffer
overflows or other errors with large values.  Reduce the maximum values
to something that won't misbehave.  There's no apparent value in working
harder than this, since very large delays aren't sensible for any of
these.  (Note: the risk with archive_timeout is that if we're late
checking the state, the timestamp difference it's being compared to
might overflow.  So we need some amount of slop; the choice of INT_MAX/2
is arbitrary.)

Per followup investigation of bug #7670.  Although this isn't a very
significant fix, might as well back-patch.
2012-11-18 17:15:27 -05:00
Tom Lane
694f4ff835 Fix the int8 and int2 cases of (minimum possible integer) % (-1).
The correct answer for this (or any other case with arg2 = -1) is zero,
but some machines throw a floating-point exception instead of behaving
sanely.  Commit f9ac414c35ea084ff70c564ab2c32adb06d5296f dealt with this
in int4mod, but overlooked the fact that it also happens in int8mod
(at least on my Linux x86_64 machine).  Protect int2mod as well; it's
not clear whether any machines fail there (mine does not) but since the
test is so cheap it seems better safe than sorry.  While at it, simplify
the original guard in int4mod: we need only check for arg2 == -1, we
don't need to check arg1 explicitly.

Xi Wang, with some editing by me.
2012-11-14 17:30:14 -05:00
Tom Lane
e405151b25 Fix memory leaks in record_out() and record_send().
record_out() leaks memory: it fails to free the strings returned by the
per-column output functions, and also is careless about detoasted values.
This results in a query-lifespan memory leakage when returning composite
values to the client, because printtup() runs the output functions in the
query-lifespan memory context.  Fix it to handle these issues the same way
printtup() does.  Also fix a similar leakage in record_send().

(At some point we might want to try to run output functions in
shorter-lived memory contexts, so that we don't need a zero-leakage policy
for them.  But that would be a significantly more invasive patch, which
doesn't seem like material for back-patching.)

In passing, use appendStringInfoCharMacro instead of appendStringInfoChar
in the innermost data-copying loop of record_out, to try to shave a few
cycles from this function's runtime.

Per trouble report from Carlos Henrique Reimer.  Back-patch to all
supported versions.
2012-11-13 14:44:52 -05:00
Tom Lane
78542e37b8 Check for stack overflow in transformSetOperationTree().
Since transformSetOperationTree() recurses, it can be driven to stack
overflow with enough UNION/INTERSECT/EXCEPT clauses in a query.  Add a
check to ensure it fails cleanly instead of crashing.  Per report from
Matthew Gerber (though it's not clear whether this is the only thing
going wrong for him).

Historical note: I think the reasoning behind not putting a check here in
the beginning was that the check in transformExpr() ought to be sufficient
to guard the whole parser.  However, because transformSetOperationTree()
recurses all the way to the bottom of the set-operation tree before doing
any analysis of the statement's expressions, that check doesn't save it.
2012-11-11 19:56:32 -05:00
Tom Lane
4fa38136f7 Fix handling of inherited check constraints in ALTER COLUMN TYPE.
This case got broken in 8.4 by the addition of an error check that
complains if ALTER TABLE ONLY is used on a table that has children.
We do use ONLY for this situation, but it's okay because the necessary
recursion occurs at a higher level.  So we need to have a separate
flag to suppress recursion without making the error check.

Reported and patched by Pavan Deolasee, with some editorial adjustments by
me.  Back-patch to 8.4, since this is a regression of functionality that
worked in earlier branches.
2012-11-05 13:36:36 -05:00
Tom Lane
7e765cb068 Prefer actual constants to pseudo-constants in equivalence class machinery.
generate_base_implied_equalities_const() should prefer plain Consts over
other em_is_const eclass members when choosing the "pivot" value that
all the other members will be equated to.  This makes it more likely that
the generated equalities will be useful in constraint-exclusion proofs.
Per report from Rushabh Lathia.
2012-10-26 14:20:10 -04:00
Tom Lane
67efc03a81 Prevent parser from believing that views have system columns.
Views should not have any pg_attribute entries for system columns.
However, we forgot to remove such entries when converting a table to a
view.  This could lead to crashes later on, if someone attempted to
reference such a column, as reported by Kohei KaiGai.

This problem is corrected properly in HEAD (by removing the pg_attribute
entries during conversion), but in the back branches we need to defend
against existing mis-converted views.  This fix costs us an extra syscache
lookup per system column reference, which is annoying but probably not
really measurable in the big scheme of things.
2012-10-24 14:54:12 -04:00
Tom Lane
f20d91866e Fix hash_search to avoid corruption of the hash table on out-of-memory.
An out-of-memory error during expand_table() on a palloc-based hash table
would leave a partially-initialized entry in the table.  This would not be
harmful for transient hash tables, since they'd get thrown away anyway at
transaction abort.  But for long-lived hash tables, such as the relcache
hash, this would effectively corrupt the table, leading to crash or other
misbehavior later.

To fix, rearrange the order of operations so that table enlargement is
attempted before we insert a new entry, rather than after adding it
to the hash table.

Problem discovered by Hitoshi Harada, though this is a bit different
from his proposed patch.
2012-10-19 15:24:27 -04:00
Tom Lane
44ee57a6f2 Fix ruleutils to print "INSERT INTO foo DEFAULT VALUES" correctly.
Per bug #7615 from Marko Tiikkaja.  Apparently nobody ever tried this
case before ...
2012-10-19 13:40:29 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
69d8644374 Further tweaking of the readfile() function in pg_ctl.
Don't leak a file descriptor if the file is empty or we can't read its size.

Expect there to be a newline at the end of the last line, too. If there
isn't, ignore anything after the last newline. This makes it a tiny bit
more robust in case the file is appended to concurrently, so that we don't
return the last line if it hasn't been fully written yet. And this makes
the code a bit less obscure, anyway. Per Tom Lane's suggestion.

Backpatch to all supported branches.
2012-10-18 22:30:50 +03:00
Tom Lane
7790162714 Fix planning of non-strict equivalence clauses above outer joins.
If a potential equivalence clause references a variable from the nullable
side of an outer join, the planner needs to take care that derived clauses
are not pushed to below the outer join; else they may use the wrong value
for the variable.  (The problem arises only with non-strict clauses, since
if an upper clause can be proven strict then the outer join will get
simplified to a plain join.)  The planner attempted to prevent this type
of error by checking that potential equivalence clauses aren't
outerjoin-delayed as a whole, but actually we have to check each side
separately, since the two sides of the clause will get moved around
separately if it's treated as an equivalence.  Bugs of this type can be
demonstrated as far back as 7.4, even though releases before 8.3 had only
a very ad-hoc notion of equivalence clauses.

In addition, we neglected to account for the possibility that such clauses
might have nonempty nullable_relids even when not outerjoin-delayed; so the
equivalence-class machinery lacked logic to compute correct nullable_relids
values for clauses it constructs.  This oversight was harmless before 9.2
because we were only using RestrictInfo.nullable_relids for OR clauses;
but as of 9.2 it could result in pushing constructed equivalence clauses
to incorrect places.  (This accounts for bug #7604 from Bill MacArthur.)

Fix the first problem by adding a new test check_equivalence_delay() in
distribute_qual_to_rels, and fix the second one by adding code in
equivclass.c and called functions to set correct nullable_relids for
generated clauses.  Although I believe the second part of this is not
currently necessary before 9.2, I chose to back-patch it anyway, partly to
keep the logic similar across branches and partly because it seems possible
we might find other reasons why we need valid values of nullable_relids in
the older branches.

Add regression tests illustrating these problems.  In 9.0 and up, also
add test cases checking that we can push constants through outer joins,
since we've broken that optimization before and I nearly broke it again
with an overly simplistic patch for this problem.
2012-10-18 12:29:13 -04:00
Simon Riggs
d76f2f0371 Fix typo in previous commit 2012-10-17 09:24:16 +01:00
Simon Riggs
8ae503a5be Add hash index caution to CREATE INDEX docs 2012-10-17 08:35:39 +01:00
Heikki Linnakangas
6d934e4aae Fix race condition in pg_ctl reading postmaster.pid.
If postmaster changed postmaster.pid while pg_ctl was reading it, pg_ctl
could overrun the buffer it allocated for the file. Fix by reading the
whole file to memory with one read() call.

initdb contains an identical copy of the readfile() function, but the files
that initdb reads are static, not modified concurrently. Nevertheless, add
a simple bounds-check there, if only to silence static analysis tools.

Per report from Dave Vitek. Backpatch to all supported branches.
2012-10-15 10:54:26 +03:00
Tom Lane
55eaeef0b9 Fix cross-type case in partial row matching for hashed subplans.
When hashing a subplan like "WHERE (a, b) NOT IN (SELECT x, y FROM ...)",
findPartialMatch() attempted to match rows using the hashtable's internal
equality operators, which of course are for x and y's datatypes.  What we
need to use are the potentially cross-type operators for a=x, b=y, etc.
Failure to do that leads to wrong answers or even crashes.  The scope for
problems is limited to cases where we have different types with compatible
hash functions (else we'd not be using a hashed subplan), but for example
int4 vs int8 can cause the problem.

Per bug #7597 from Bo Jensen.  This has been wrong since the hashed-subplan
code was written, so patch all the way back.
2012-10-11 12:21:24 -04:00
Tom Lane
facc2047fe Fix PGXS support for building loadable modules on AIX.
Building a shlib on AIX requires use of the mkldexport.sh script, but we
failed to install that, preventing its use from non-source-tree contexts.
Also, Makefile.aix had the wrong idea about where to find the installed
copy of the postgres.imp symbol file used by AIX.

Per report from John Pierce.  Patch all the way back, since this has been
broken since the beginning of PGXS.
2012-10-09 21:04:26 -04:00
Tom Lane
cd07b5a07f Fix lo_import and lo_export to return useful error messages more often.
I found that these functions tend to return -1 while leaving an empty error
message string in the PGconn, if they suffer some kind of I/O error on the
file.  The reason is that lo_close, which thinks it's executed a perfectly
fine SQL command, clears the errorMessage.  The minimum-change workaround
is to reorder operations here so that we don't fill the errorMessage until
after lo_close.
2012-10-08 21:52:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
4f03cd8597 Fix lo_export usage in example programs.
lo_export returns -1, not zero, on failure.
2012-10-08 21:19:08 -04:00
Tom Lane
ef23ad39be Fix permissions explanations in CREATE DATABASE and CREATE SCHEMA docs.
These reference pages still claimed that you have to be superuser to create
a database or schema owned by a different role.  That was true before 8.1,
but it was changed in commits aa1110624c08298393dfce996f7b21809d98d3fd and
f91370cd2faf1fd35a1ac74d84652a85ed841919 to allow assignment of ownership
to any role you are a member of.  However, at the time we were thinking of
that primarily as a change to the ALTER OWNER rules, so the need to touch
these two CREATE ref pages got missed.
2012-10-04 13:41:16 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
3a937bf72f REASSIGN OWNED: consider grants on tablespaces, too
Apparently this was considered in the original code (see commit
cec3b0a9) but I failed to notice that such entries would always be
skipped by the database check at the start of the loop.

Per bugs #7578 by Nikolay, #6116 by tushar.qa@gmail.com.
2012-10-03 12:28:17 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
43dfc5cac3 Fix access past end of string in date parsing.
This affects date_in(), and a couple of other funcions that use DecodeDate().

Hitoshi Harada
2012-10-02 10:48:27 +03:00
Tom Lane
19d95fca25 Fix bugs in "restore.sql" script emitted in pg_dump tar output.
The tar output module did some very ugly and ultimately incorrect hacking
on COPY commands to try to get them to work in the context of restoring a
deconstructed tar archive.  In particular, it would fail altogether for
table names containing any upper-case characters, since it smashed the
command string to lower-case before modifying it (and, just to add insult
to injury, did that in a way that would fail in multibyte encodings).
I don't see any particular value in being flexible about the case of the
command keywords, since the string will just have been created by
dumpTableData, so let's get rid of the whole case-folding thing.

Also, it doesn't seem to meet the POLA for the script to restore data only
in COPY mode, so add \i commands to make it have comparable behavior in
--inserts mode.

Noted while looking at the tar-output code in connection with Brian
Weaver's patch.
2012-09-29 17:57:00 -04:00
Tom Lane
e067a771f8 Fix pg_restore to accept POSIX-conformant tar files.
Back-patch portions of commit 05b555d12bc2ad0d581f48a12b45174db41dc10d.
We need to patch pg_restore to accept either version of the magic string,
in hopes of avoiding compatibility problems when 9.3 comes out.  I also
fixed pg_dump to write the correct 2-block EOF marker, since that won't
create a compatibility problem with pg_restore and it could help with some
versions of tar.

Brian Weaver and Tom Lane
2012-09-28 15:42:26 -04:00
Tom Lane
5ced7dc16d Fix examples of how to use "su" while starting the server.
The syntax "su -c 'command' username" is not accepted by all versions of
su, for example not OpenBSD's.  More portable is "su username -c
'command'".  So change runtime.sgml to recommend that syntax.  Also,
add a -D switch to the OpenBSD example script, for consistency with other
examples.  Per Denis Lapshin and Gábor Hidvégi.
2012-09-25 13:53:07 -04:00
Tom Lane
ed23de2692 Stamp 8.4.14. REL8_4_14 2012-09-19 17:55:55 -04:00
Tom Lane
2017244ead Update release notes for 9.2.1, 9.1.6, 9.0.10, 8.4.14, 8.3.21. 2012-09-19 17:39:03 -04:00
Tom Lane
8d2738ff33 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2012f.
DST law changes in Fiji.
2012-09-19 10:45:50 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
de1131f83f Translation updates 2012-09-19 00:06:54 -04:00
Tom Lane
c842673b86 Provide adequate documentation of the "table_name *" notation.
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.
2012-09-17 14:59:46 -04:00
Kevin Grittner
5010bbc2c5 Fix documentation reference to maximum allowed for autovacuum_freeze_max_age.
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.
2012-09-16 12:26:16 -05:00
Tom Lane
1e23454280 Back-patch fix and test case for bug #7516.
Back-patch commits 9afc6481117d2dd936e752da0424a2b6b05f6459 and
b8fbbcf37f22c5e8361da939ad0fc4be18a34ca9.  The first of these is really
a minor code cleanup to save a few cycles, but it turns out to provide
a workaround for the misoptimization problem described in bug #7516.
The second commit adds a regression test case.

Back-patch the fix to all active branches.  The test case only works
as far back as 9.0, because it relies on plpgsql which isn't installed
by default before that.  (I didn't have success modifying it into an
all-plperl form that still provoked a crash, though this may just reflect
my lack of Perl-fu.)
2012-09-14 11:50:15 -04:00
Tom Lane
dc447e1515 Make plperl safe against functions that are redefined while running.
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.
2012-09-09 20:33:10 -04:00
Tom Lane
6e54298bb4 Fix PARAM_EXEC assignment mechanism to be safe in the presence of WITH.
The planner previously assumed that parameter Vars having the same absolute
query level, varno, and varattno could safely be assigned the same runtime
PARAM_EXEC slot, even though they might be different Vars appearing in
different subqueries.  This was (probably) safe before the introduction of
CTEs, but the lazy-evalution mechanism used for CTEs means that a CTE can
be executed during execution of some other subquery, causing the lifespan
of Params at the same syntactic nesting level as the CTE to overlap with
use of the same slots inside the CTE.  In 9.1 we created additional hazards
by using the same parameter-assignment technology for nestloop inner scan
parameters, but it was broken before that, as illustrated by the added
regression test.

To fix, restructure the planner's management of PlannerParamItems so that
items having different semantic lifespans are kept rigorously separated.
This will probably result in complex queries using more runtime PARAM_EXEC
slots than before, but the slots are cheap enough that this hardly matters.
Also, stop generating PlannerParamItems containing Params for subquery
outputs: all we really need to do is reserve the PARAM_EXEC slot number,
and that now only takes incrementing a counter.  The planning code is
simpler and probably faster than before, as well as being more correct.

Per report from Vik Reykja.

Back-patch of commit 46c508fbcf98ac334f1e831d21021d731c882fbb into all
branches that support WITH.
2012-09-07 20:38:50 -04:00
Robert Haas
7e21ff3edb Fix "too many arguments" messages not to index off the end of argv[].
This affects initdb, clusterdb, reindexdb, and vacuumdb in master
and 9.2; in earlier branches, only initdb is affected.
2012-09-06 15:52:07 -04:00
Tom Lane
1cd2d17ed7 Restore SIGFPE handler after initializing PL/Perl.
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.
2012-09-05 16:43:51 -04:00
Tom Lane
d9b9e8b40c Back-patch recent fixes for gistchoose and gistRelocateBuildBuffersOnSplit.
This back-ports commits c8ba697a4bdb934f0c51424c654e8db6133ea255 and
e5db11c5582b469c04a11f217a0f32c827da5dd7, which fix one definite and one
speculative bug in gistchoose, and make the code a lot more intelligible as
well.  In 9.2 only, this also affects the largely-copied-and-pasted logic
in gistRelocateBuildBuffersOnSplit.

The impact of the bugs was that the functions might make poor decisions
as to which index tree branch to push a new entry down into, resulting in
GiST index bloat and poor performance.  The fixes rectify these decisions
for future insertions, but a REINDEX would be needed to clean up any
existing index bloat.

Alexander Korotkov, Robert Haas, Tom Lane
2012-08-30 23:48:19 -04:00
Robert Haas
49ffbf52ec Add missing period to detail message.
Per note from Peter Eisentraut.
2012-08-30 13:27:35 -04:00
Tom Lane
d6a3863506 Fix cascading privilege revoke to notice when privileges are still held.
If we revoke a grant option from some role X, but X still holds the option
via another grant, we should not recursively revoke the privilege from
role(s) Y that X had granted it to.  This was supposedly fixed as one
aspect of commit 4b2dafcc0b1a579ef5daaa2728223006d1ff98e9, but I must not
have tested it, because in fact that code never worked: it forgot to shift
the grant-option bits back over when masking the bits being revoked.

Per bug #6728 from Daniel German.  Back-patch to all active branches,
since this has been wrong since 8.0.
2012-08-23 17:25:33 -04:00
Tom Lane
dda44070cc Fix rescan logic in nodeCtescan.
The previous coding essentially assumed that nodes would be rescanned in
the same order they were initialized in; or at least that the "leader" of
a group of CTEscans would be rescanned before any others were required to
execute.  Unfortunately, that isn't even a little bit true.  It's possible
to devise queries in which the leader isn't rescanned until other CTEscans
on the same CTE have run to completion, or even in which the leader never
gets a rescan call at all.

The fix makes the leader specially responsible only for initial creation
and final destruction of the tuplestore; rescan resets are now a
symmetrically shared responsibility.  This means that we might reset the
tuplestore multiple times when restarting a plan subtree containing
multiple CTEscans; but resetting an already-empty tuplestore is cheap
enough that that doesn't seem like a problem.

Per report from Adam Mackler; the new regression test cases are based on
his example query.

Back-patch to 8.4 where CTE scans were introduced.
2012-08-15 19:01:39 -04:00
Tom Lane
1a36a773a6 Stamp 8.4.13. REL8_4_13 2012-08-14 18:45:54 -04:00
Tom Lane
b556e4f897 Update release notes for 9.1.5, 9.0.9, 8.4.13, 8.3.20. 2012-08-14 18:34:17 -04:00
Tom Lane
d9b023c7bc Prevent access to external files/URLs via contrib/xml2's xslt_process().
libxslt offers the ability to read and write both files and URLs through
stylesheet commands, thus allowing unprivileged database users to both read
and write data with the privileges of the database server.  Disable that
through proper use of libxslt's security options.

Also, remove xslt_process()'s ability to fetch documents and stylesheets
from external files/URLs.  While this was a documented "feature", it was
long regarded as a terrible idea.  The fix for CVE-2012-3489 broke that
capability, and rather than expend effort on trying to fix it, we're just
going to summarily remove it.

While the ability to write as well as read makes this security hole
considerably worse than CVE-2012-3489, the problem is mitigated by the fact
that xslt_process() is not available unless contrib/xml2 is installed,
and the longstanding warnings about security risks from that should have
discouraged prudent DBAs from installing it in security-exposed databases.

Reported and fixed by Peter Eisentraut.

Security: CVE-2012-3488
2012-08-14 18:32:44 -04:00
Tom Lane
a34e02bfaf Prevent access to external files/URLs via XML entity references.
xml_parse() would attempt to fetch external files or URLs as needed to
resolve DTD and entity references in an XML value, thus allowing
unprivileged database users to attempt to fetch data with the privileges
of the database server.  While the external data wouldn't get returned
directly to the user, portions of it could be exposed in error messages
if the data didn't parse as valid XML; and in any case the mere ability
to check existence of a file might be useful to an attacker.

The ideal solution to this would still allow fetching of references that
are listed in the host system's XML catalogs, so that documents can be
validated according to installed DTDs.  However, doing that with the
available libxml2 APIs appears complex and error-prone, so we're not going
to risk it in a security patch that necessarily hasn't gotten wide review.
So this patch merely shuts off all access, causing any external fetch to
silently expand to an empty string.  A future patch may improve this.

In HEAD and 9.2, also suppress warnings about undefined entities, which
would otherwise occur as a result of not loading referenced DTDs.  Previous
branches don't show such warnings anyway, due to different error handling
arrangements.

Credit to Noah Misch for first reporting the problem, and for much work
towards a solution, though this simplistic approach was not his preference.
Also thanks to Daniel Veillard for consultation.

Security: CVE-2012-3489
2012-08-14 18:32:43 -04:00