dblink_build_sql_insert() and related functions. Now the column numbers
are treated as logical not physical column numbers. This will provide saner
behavior in the presence of dropped columns; furthermore, if we ever get
around to allowing rearrangement of logical column ordering, the original
definition would become nearly untenable from a usability standpoint.
Per recent discussion of dblink's handling of dropped columns.
Not back-patched for fear of breaking existing applications.
columns correctly. In passing, get rid of some dead logic in the
underlying get_sql_insert() etc functions --- there is no caller that
will pass null value-arrays to them.
Per bug report from Robert Voinea.
dblink_build_sql_insert() and related functions. In particular, be sure to
reject references to dropped and out-of-range column numbers. The numbers
are still interpreted as physical column numbers, though, for backward
compatibility.
This patch replaces Joe's patch of 2010-02-03, which handled only some aspects
of the problem.
lock the target relation just once per SQL function call. The original coding
obtained and released lock several times per call. Aside from saving a
not-insignificant number of cycles, this eliminates possible race conditions
if someone tries to modify the relation's schema concurrently. Also
centralize locking and permission-checking logic.
Problem noted while investigating a trouble report from Robert Voinea --- his
problem is still to be fixed, though.
hardcoding a 'template0' check, per suggestion from Alvaro.
This might fix a problem where someone has allowed 'template0'
connections, but it is a cleaner approach even if doesn't fix the
bug.
* There is no chmod() on Windows.
* Must always use the 3-parameter version of open()
* There is no dynloader.h - but it also appears unnecessary on all platforms
* Don't include shlobj.h because it causes compile errors, and from what I can
see it's not actually used. This may need to be added back for mingw
and/or cygwin in the worst case.
cmp parameter for pg_scandir(). The code failed to support this anyway
for Sun/Windows, so pretending we could accept a parameter other than
NULL was just asking for trouble.
rather than returning NULL for some-but-not-all failures as they used to.
Remove now-redundant tests for NULL from call sites.
We had to do something about this because many call sites were failing to
check for NULL; and changing it like this seems a lot more useful and
mistake-proof than adding checks to the call sites without them.