28954 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Magnus Hagander
deca07eddd Ensure the directory for gram.h is created on win32
Result of bad testing of my last commit.
2011-01-09 17:03:12 +01:00
Magnus Hagander
ed67b6cc2f Properly install gram.h on MSVC builds
This file is now needed by pgAdmin builds, which started
failing since it was missing in the installer builds.
2011-01-09 15:38:08 +01:00
Andrew Dunstan
5739935188 Allow older branches to be built with Visual Studio 2008. This is a backport of commit df0cdd53 to the 8.2, 8.3 and 8.4 branches. 2011-01-04 16:06:30 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
1d1a434222 Work around header misdefines in modern Windows SDK when _WIN32_WINNT is less than 0x0501. Only required for versions 8.2, 8.3 and 8.4., as we defined _WIN32_WINNT as 0x0501 after that. 2011-01-04 09:42:04 -05:00
Tom Lane
d5b2587c20 Avoid unexpected conversion overflow in planner for distant date values.
The "date" type supports a wider range of dates than int64 timestamps do.
However, there is pre-int64-timestamp code in the planner that assumes that
all date values can be converted to timestamp with impunity.  Fortunately,
what we really need out of the conversion is always a double (float8)
value; so even when the date is out of timestamp's range it's possible to
produce a sane answer.  All we need is a code path that doesn't try to
force the result into int64.  Per trouble report from David Rericha.

Back-patch to all supported versions.  Although this is surely a corner
case, there's not much point in advertising a date range wider than
timestamp's if we will choke on such values in unexpected places.
2010-12-28 22:50:30 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
370a899696 Allow vpath builds and regression tests to succeed on Mingw. Backpatch to release 8.4 - earlier releases would require more changes and it's not worth the trouble. 2010-12-24 13:32:20 -05:00
Tom Lane
a5db8e12b3 Fix up handling of simple-form CASE with constant test expression.
eval_const_expressions() can replace CaseTestExprs with constants when
the surrounding CASE's test expression is a constant.  This confuses
ruleutils.c's heuristic for deparsing simple-form CASEs, leading to
Assert failures or "unexpected CASE WHEN clause" errors.  I had put in
a hack solution for that years ago (see commit
514ce7a331c5bea8e55b106d624e55732a002295 of 2006-10-01), but bug #5794
from Peter Speck shows that that solution failed to cover all cases.

Fortunately, there's a much better way, which came to me upon reflecting
that Peter's "CASE TRUE WHEN" seemed pretty redundant: we can "simplify"
the simple-form CASE to the general form of CASE, by simply omitting the
constant test expression from the rebuilt CASE construct.  This is
intuitively valid because there is no need for the executor to evaluate
the test expression at runtime; it will never be referenced, because any
CaseTestExprs that would have referenced it are now replaced by constants.
This won't save a whole lot of cycles, since evaluating a Const is pretty
cheap, but a cycle saved is a cycle earned.  In any case it beats kluging
ruleutils.c still further.  So this patch improves const-simplification
and reverts the previous change in ruleutils.c.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  The bug exists in 8.1 too, but it's
out of warranty.
2010-12-19 15:32:03 -05:00
Tom Lane
15884d494e Fix erroneous parsing of tsquery input "... & !(subexpression) | ..."
After parsing a parenthesized subexpression, we must pop all pending
ANDs and NOTs off the stack, just like the case for a simple operand.
Per bug #5793.

Also fix clones of this routine in contrib/intarray and contrib/ltree,
where input of types query_int and ltxtquery had the same problem.

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2010-12-19 12:48:48 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
2bb6050c45 Document unavailable parameters in some configurations
Add a note to user-facing parameters that can be removed completely
(and not just empty) by #ifdef's depending on build configuration.
2010-12-18 16:31:33 +01:00
Tom Lane
0a0eec670d Remove optreset from src/port/ implementations of getopt and getopt_long.
We don't actually need optreset, because we can easily fix the code to
ensure that it's cleanly restartable after having completed a scan over the
argv array; which is the only case we need to restart in.  Getting rid of
it avoids a class of interactions with the system libraries and allows
reversion of my change of yesterday in postmaster.c and postgres.c.

Back-patch to 8.4.  Before that the getopt code was a bit different anyway.
2010-12-16 16:22:18 -05:00
Tom Lane
2dffe1f8bb Fix up getopt() reset management so it works on recent mingw.
The mingw people don't appear to care about compatibility with non-GNU
versions of getopt, so force use of our own copy of getopt on Windows.
Also, ensure that we make use of optreset when using our own copy.

Per report from Andrew Dunstan.  Back-patch to all versions supported
on Windows.
2010-12-15 23:50:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
7bfefa9a12 Fix contrib/seg's GiST picksplit method.
Fix the same size_alpha versus size_beta typo that was recently fixed
in contrib/cube.  Noted by Alexander Korotkov.

Back-patch to all supported branches (there is a more invasive fix in
HEAD).
2010-12-15 21:23:11 -05:00
Marc G. Fournier
35862ff7f2 Tag 8.4.6. REL8_4_6 2010-12-13 22:59:19 -04:00
Tom Lane
0f311ae7d5 Update release notes for releases 9.0.2, 8.4.6, 8.3.13, 8.2.19, and 8.1.23. 2010-12-13 20:23:21 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
9ee4b6f0e1 Translation updates for release 8.4.6 2010-12-13 22:40:15 +02:00
Tom Lane
8baa1dbd21 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2010o: DST law changes in
Fiji and Samoa.  Historical corrections for Hong Kong.
2010-12-13 12:42:40 -05:00
Tom Lane
999e82cc8a Fix efficiency problems in tuplestore_trim().
The original coding in tuplestore_trim() was only meant to work efficiently
in cases where each trim call deleted most of the tuples in the store.
Which, in fact, was the pattern of the original usage with a Material node
supporting mark/restore operations underneath a MergeJoin.  However,
WindowAgg now uses tuplestores and it has considerably less friendly
trimming behavior.  In particular it can attempt to trim one tuple at a
time off a large tuplestore.  tuplestore_trim() had O(N^2) runtime in this
situation because of repeatedly shifting its tuple pointer array.  Fix by
avoiding shifting the array until a reasonably large number of tuples have
been deleted.  This can waste some pointer space, but we do still reclaim
the tuples themselves, so the percentage wastage should be pretty small.

Per Jie Li's report of slow percent_rank() evaluation.  cume_dist() and
ntile() would certainly be affected as well, along with any other window
function that has a moving frame start and requires reading substantially
ahead of the current row.

Back-patch to 8.4, where window functions were introduced.  There's no
need to tweak it before that.
2010-12-10 11:34:36 -05:00
Tom Lane
f3224e010d Force default wal_sync_method to be fdatasync on Linux.
Recent versions of the Linux system header files cause xlogdefs.h to
believe that open_datasync should be the default sync method, whereas
formerly fdatasync was the default on Linux.  open_datasync is a bad
choice, first because it doesn't actually outperform fdatasync (in fact
the reverse), and second because we try to use O_DIRECT with it, causing
failures on certain filesystems (e.g., ext4 with data=journal option).
This part of the patch is largely per a proposal from Marti Raudsepp.
More extensive changes are likely to follow in HEAD, but this is as much
change as we want to back-patch.

Also clean up confusing code and incorrect documentation surrounding the
fsync_writethrough option.  Those changes shouldn't result in any actual
behavioral change, but I chose to back-patch them anyway to keep the
branches looking similar in this area.

In 9.0 and HEAD, also do some copy-editing on the WAL Reliability
documentation section.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since any of them might get used
on modern Linux versions.
2010-12-08 20:01:19 -05:00
Tom Lane
234ad01f9e Add a stack overflow check to copyObject().
There are some code paths, such as SPI_execute(), where we invoke
copyObject() on raw parse trees before doing parse analysis on them.  Since
the bison grammar is capable of building heavily nested parsetrees while
itself using only minimal stack depth, this means that copyObject() can be
the front-line function that hits stack overflow before anything else does.
Accordingly, it had better have a check_stack_depth() call.  I did a bit of
performance testing and found that this slows down copyObject() by only a
few percent, so the hit ought to be negligible in the context of complete
processing of a query.

Per off-list report from Toshihide Katayama.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.
2010-12-06 22:55:56 -05:00
Tom Lane
6bd3753d4d Prevent inlining a SQL function with multiple OUT parameters.
There were corner cases in which the planner would attempt to inline such
a function, which would result in a failure at runtime due to loss of
information about exactly what the result record type is.  Fix by disabling
inlining when the function's recorded result type is RECORD.  There might
be some sub-cases where inlining could still be allowed, but this is a
simple and backpatchable fix, so leave refinements for another day.
Per bug #5777 from Nate Carson.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  8.1 happens to avoid a core-dump
here, but it still does the wrong thing.
2010-12-01 00:53:29 -05:00
Tom Lane
61f8618016 Fix significant memory leak in contrib/xml2 functions.
Most of the functions that execute XPath queries leaked the data structures
created by libxml2.  This memory would not be recovered until end of
session, so it mounts up pretty quickly in any serious use of the feature.
Per report from Pavel Stehule, though this isn't his patch.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2010-11-26 15:21:00 -05:00
Itagaki Takahiro
ec66f65899 Don't raise "identifier will be truncated" messages in dblink
except creating new connections.
2010-11-25 20:08:33 +09:00
Tom Lane
fab2af30d6 Fix leakage of cost_limit when multiple autovacuum workers are active.
When using default autovacuum_vac_cost_limit, autovac_balance_cost relied
on VacuumCostLimit to contain the correct global value ... but after the
first time through in a particular worker process, it didn't, because we'd
trashed it in previous iterations.  Depending on the state of other autovac
workers, this could result in a steady reduction of the effective
cost_limit setting as a particular worker processed more and more tables,
causing it to go slower and slower.  Spotted by Simon Poole (bug #5759).
Fix by saving and restoring the GUC variables in the loop in do_autovacuum.

In passing, improve a few comments.

Back-patch to 8.3 ... the cost rebalancing code has been buggy since it was
put in.
2010-11-19 22:28:30 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
7ff02add83 The GiST scan algorithm uses LSNs to detect concurrent pages splits, but
temporary indexes are not WAL-logged. We used a constant LSN for temporary
indexes, on the assumption that we don't need to worry about concurrent page
splits in temporary indexes because they're only visible to the current
session. But that assumption is wrong, it's possible to insert rows and
split pages in the same session, while a scan is in progress. For example,
by opening a cursor and fetching some rows, and INSERTing new rows before
fetching some more.

Fix by generating fake increasing LSNs, used in place of real LSNs in
temporary GiST indexes.
2010-11-16 11:29:28 +02:00
Tom Lane
7508d9d87e Fix aboriginal mistake in plpython's set-returning-function support.
We must stay in the function's SPI context until done calling the iterator
that returns the set result.  Otherwise, any attempt to invoke SPI features
in the python code called by the iterator will malfunction.  Diagnosis and
patch by Jan Urbanski, per bug report from Jean-Baptiste Quenot.

Back-patch to 8.2; there was no support for SRFs in previous versions of
plpython.
2010-11-15 14:27:04 -05:00
Robert Haas
2519b8268b Fix bug in cube picksplit algorithm.
Alexander Korotkov
2010-11-14 21:28:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
6318fa0fdb Fix canAcceptConnections() bugs introduced by replication-related patches.
We must not return any "okay to proceed" result code without having checked
for too many children, else we might fail later on when trying to add the
new child to one of the per-child state arrays.  It's not clear whether
this oversight explains Stefan Kaltenbrunner's recent report, but it could
certainly produce a similar symptom.

Back-patch to 8.4; the logic was not broken before that.
2010-11-14 15:57:51 -05:00
Tom Lane
876cb81a11 Add missing outfuncs.c support for struct InhRelation.
This is needed to support debug_print_parse, per report from Jon Nelson.
Cursory testing via the regression tests suggests we aren't missing
anything else.
2010-11-13 00:34:57 -05:00
Tom Lane
5c85d1122b Fix old oversight in const-simplification of COALESCE() expressions.
Once we have found a non-null constant argument, there is no need to
examine additional arguments of the COALESCE.  The previous coding got it
right only if the constant was in the first argument position; otherwise
it tried to simplify following arguments too, leading to unexpected
behavior like this:

regression=# select coalesce(f1, 42, 1/0) from int4_tbl;
ERROR:  division by zero

It's a minor corner case, but a bug is a bug, so back-patch all the way.
2010-11-12 15:18:27 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
d434e8f6ad Fix bug introduced by the recent patch to check that the checkpoint redo
location read from backup label file can be found: wasShutdown was set
incorrectly when a backup label file was found.

Jeff Davis, with a little tweaking by me.
2010-11-11 19:32:03 +02:00
Tom Lane
5abb72f9af Fix line_construct_pm() for the case of "infinite" (DBL_MAX) slope.
This code was just plain wrong: what you got was not a line through the
given point but a line almost indistinguishable from the Y-axis, although
not truly vertical.  The only caller that tries to use this function with
m == DBL_MAX is dist_ps_internal for the case where the lseg is horizontal;
it would end up producing the distance from the given point to the place
where the lseg's line crosses the Y-axis.  That function is used by other
operators too, so there are several operators that could compute wrong
distances from a line segment to something else.  Per bug #5745 from
jindiax.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2010-11-10 16:53:53 -05:00
Tom Lane
f0e4331d04 Repair memory leakage while ANALYZE-ing complex index expressions.
The general design of memory management in Postgres is that intermediate
results computed by an expression are not freed until the end of the tuple
cycle.  For expression indexes, ANALYZE has to re-evaluate each expression
for each of its sample rows, and it wasn't bothering to free intermediate
results until the end of processing of that index.  This could lead to very
substantial leakage if the intermediate results were large, as in a recent
example from Jakub Ouhrabka.  Fix by doing ResetExprContext for each sample
row.  This necessitates adding a datumCopy step to ensure that the final
expression value isn't recycled too.  Some quick testing suggests that this
change adds at worst about 10% to the time needed to analyze a table with
an expression index; which is annoying, but seems a tolerable price to pay
to avoid unexpected out-of-memory problems.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2010-11-09 11:56:23 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
7c0af833c6 In rewriteheap.c (used by VACUUM FULL and CLUSTER), calculate the tuple
length stored in the line pointer the same way it's calculated in the normal
heap_insert() codepath. As noted by Jeff Davis, the length stored by
raw_heap_insert() included padding but the one stored by the normal codepath
did not. While the mismatch seems to be harmless, inconsistency isn't good,
and the normal codepath has received a lot more testing over the years.

Backpatch to 8.3 where the heap rewrite code was introduced.
2010-11-09 17:48:43 +02:00
Tom Lane
658a630ac0 Fix error handling in temp-file deletion with log_temp_files active.
The original coding in FileClose() reset the file-is-temp flag before
unlinking the file, so that if control came back through due to an error,
it wouldn't try to unlink the file twice.  This was correct when written,
but when the log_temp_files feature was added, the logging action was put
in between those two steps.  An error occurring during the logging action
--- such as a query cancel --- would result in the unlink not getting done
at all, as in recent report from Michael Glaesemann.

To fix this, make sure that we do both the stat and the unlink before doing
anything that could conceivably CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS.  There is a judgment
call here, which is which log message to emit first: if you can see only
one, which should it be?  I chose to log unlink failure at the risk of
losing the log_temp_files log message --- after all, if the unlink does
fail, the temp file is still there for you to see.

Back-patch to all versions that have log_temp_files.  The code was OK
before that.
2010-11-08 22:15:02 -05:00
Tom Lane
faa9007983 Add support for detecting register-stack overrun on IA64.
Per recent investigation, the register stack can grow faster than the
regular stack depending on compiler and choice of options.  To avoid
crashes we must check both stacks in check_stack_depth().

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2010-11-06 22:59:15 -04:00
Tom Lane
78f0924f00 Reduce recursion depth in recently-added regression test.
Some buildfarm members fail the test with the original depth of 10 levels,
apparently because they are running at the minimum max_stack_depth setting
of 100kB and using ~ 10k per recursion level.  While it might be
interesting to try to figure out why they're eating so much stack, it isn't
likely that any fix for that would be back-patchable.  So just change the
test to recurse only 5 levels.  The extra levels don't prove anything
correctness-wise anyway.
2010-11-03 13:42:04 -04:00
Tom Lane
55c3a7c0a5 Fix adjust_semi_join to be more cautious about clauseless joins.
It was reporting that these were fully indexed (hence cheap), when of
course they're the exact opposite of that.  I'm not certain if the case
would arise in practice, since a clauseless semijoin is hard to produce
in SQL, but if it did happen we'd make some dumb decisions.
2010-11-02 18:45:50 -04:00
Tom Lane
5ab15b521f Ensure an index that uses a whole-row Var still depends on its table.
We failed to record any dependency on the underlying table for an index
declared like "create index i on t (foo(t.*))".  This would create trouble
if the table were dropped without previously dropping the index.  To fix,
simplify some overly-cute code in index_create(), accepting the possibility
that sometimes the whole-table dependency will be redundant.  Also document
this hazard in dependency.c.  Per report from Kevin Grittner.

In passing, prevent a core dump in pg_get_indexdef() if the index's table
can't be found.  I came across this while experimenting with Kevin's
example.  Not sure it's a real issue when the catalogs aren't corrupt, but
might as well be cautious.

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2010-11-02 17:15:19 -04:00
Tom Lane
f44b6fc9f1 Fix plpgsql's handling of "simple" expression evaluation.
In general, expression execution state trees aren't re-entrantly usable,
since functions can store private state information in them.
For efficiency reasons, plpgsql tries to cache and reuse state trees for
"simple" expressions.  It can get away with that most of the time, but it
can fail if the state tree is dirty from a previous failed execution (as
in an example from Alvaro) or is being used recursively (as noted by me).

Fix by tracking whether a state tree is in use, and falling back to the
"non-simple" code path if so.  This results in a pretty considerable speed
hit when the non-simple path is taken, but the available alternatives seem
even more unpleasant because they add overhead in the simple path.  Per
idea from Heikki.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2010-10-28 13:02:53 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
61ba6f4bf0 Fix long-standing segfault when accept() or one of the calls made right
after accepting a connection fails, and the server is compiled with GSSAPI
support. Report and patch by Alexander V. Chernikov, bug #5731.
2010-10-27 20:07:55 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
b7888758d8 Before removing backup_label and irrevocably changing pg_control file, check
that WAL file containing the checkpoint redo-location can be found. This
avoids making the cluster irrecoverable if the redo location is in an earlie
WAL file than the checkpoint record.

Report, analysis and patch by Jeff Davis, with small changes by me.
2010-10-26 21:41:49 +03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
4a75c7f9f1 If pk is NULL, the backend would segfault when accessing ->algo and the
following NULL check was never reached.

This problem was found by Coccinelle (null_ref.cocci from coccicheck).

Marti Raudsepp
2010-10-20 22:24:55 +03:00
Tom Lane
d4346e15b4 Fix ecpg test building process to not generate *.dSYM junk on Macs.
The trick is to not try to build executables directly from .c files,
but to always build the intermediate .o files.  For obscure reasons,
Darwin's version of gcc will leave debug cruft behind in the first
case but not the second.  Per complaint from Robert Haas.
2010-10-20 00:55:07 -04:00
Bruce Momjian
d94d0a8c83 Add mention of using tools/fsync to test fsync methods. Restructure
recent wal_sync_method doc paragraph to be clearer.
2010-10-19 15:49:53 +00:00
Robert Haas
e6e906aee3 Add pg_user_mappings to the table of system views. 2010-10-14 19:13:27 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
d833f42eeb Complete the documentation of the USAGE privilege for foreign servers
The GRANT reference page failed to mention that the USAGE privilege
allows modifying associated user mappings, although this was already
documented on the CREATE/ALTER/DROP USER MAPPING pages.
2010-10-14 20:38:48 +03:00
Michael Meskes
a0e02dc1af Applied patch by Itagaki Takahiro to fix incorrect status calculation in
ecpglib. Instead of parsing the statement just as ask the database server.
2010-10-14 17:51:53 +02:00
Tom Lane
9dfd308643 Fix assorted bugs in GIN's WAL replay logic.
The original coding was quite sloppy about handling the case where
XLogReadBuffer fails (because the page has since been deleted).  This
would result in either "bad buffer id: 0" or an Assert failure during
replay, if indeed the page were no longer there.  In a couple of places
it also neglected to check whether the change had already been applied,
which would probably result in corrupted index contents.  I believe that
bug #5703 is an instance of the first problem.  These issues could show up
without replication, but only if you were unfortunate enough to crash
between modification of a GIN index and the next checkpoint.

Back-patch to 8.2, which is as far back as GIN has WAL support.
2010-10-11 19:04:53 -04:00
Robert Haas
444a726521 Warn that views can be safely used to hide columns, but not rows. 2010-10-08 09:16:20 -04:00
Robert Haas
36f4b4e96b Improve WAL reliability documentation, and add more cross-references to it.
In particular, we are now more explicit about the fact that you may need
wal_sync_method=fsync_writethrough for crash-safety on some platforms,
including MaxOS X.  There's also now an explicit caution against assuming
that the default setting of wal_sync_method is either crash-safe or best
for performance.
2010-10-07 12:22:08 -04:00