ecpg_build_params() failed to check for ecpg_alloc failure in one
newly-added code path, and leaked a temporary string in another path.
Errors in commit a1dc6ab46, spotted by Coverity.
ecpg_register_prepared_stmt() is pretty obviously checking the wrong
variable while trying to detect malloc failure. Error in commit
a1dc6ab46, spotted by Coverity.
Some of the wrapper functions didn't match the callback names. Many of
them due to staying "consistent" with historic naming of the wrapped
functionality. We decided that for most cases it's more important to
be for tableam to be consistent going forward, than with the past.
The one exception is beginscan/endscan/... because it'd have looked
odd to have systable_beginscan/endscan/... with a different naming
scheme, and changing the systable_* APIs would have caused way too
much churn (including breaking a lot of external users).
Author: Ashwin Agrawal, with some small additions by Andres Freund
Reviewed-By: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CALfoeiugyrXZfX7n0ORCa4L-m834dzmaE8eFdbNR6PMpetU4Ww@mail.gmail.com
The access method name "amname" can be dumped as of 3b925e90, but
queries for backends older than 9.5 forgot to map it to a dummy NULL
value, causing the column to not be mapped to a number. As a result,
pg_dump was throwing some spurious errors in its stderr output coming
from libpq:
pg_dump: column number -1 is out of range 0..36
Fix this issue by adding a mapping of "amname" to NULL to all the older
queries.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190522083038.GA16837@paquier.xyz
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Dolgov, Andres Freund, Tom Lane
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
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
This uses a method similar to 68a7c24f and now b8c6014 (applied for
database creation), which guarantees that GRANT commands using the WITH
GRANT OPTION are dumped in a way so as cascading dependencies are
respected. Note that tablespaces do not have support for initial
privileges via pg_init_privs, so the same method needs to be applied
again. It would be nice to merge all the logic generating ACL queries
in dumps under the same banner, but this requires extending the support
of pg_init_privs to objects that cannot use it yet, so this is left as
future work.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190522071555.GB1278@paquier.xyz
Author: Michael Paquier
Reviewed-by: Nathan Bossart
Backpatch-through: 9.6
This is still using the 2.0 version of pg_bsd_indent.
I thought it would be good to commit this separately,
so as to document the differences between 2.0 and 2.1 behavior.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/16296.1558103386@sss.pgh.pa.us
This code was still using the old style of forming a heap tuple rather
than using tuple slots. This would be less efficient if a non-heap
access method was used. And using tuple slots is actually quite a bit
faster when using heap as well.
Also add some test cases for generated columns with null values and
with varlena values. This lack of coverage was discovered while
working on this patch.
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20190331025744.ugbsyks7czfcoksd%40alap3.anarazel.de
Commit 41b54ba78e allowed not only VACUUM but also ANALYZE options
to take a boolean argument. But it forgot to update the documentation
for ANALYZE. This commit adds the descriptions about those ANALYZE
boolean options into the documentation.
This patch also updates tab-completion for ANALYZE boolean options.
Reported-by: Kyotaro Horiguchi
Author: Fujii Masao
Reviewed-by: Masahiko Sawada, Michael Paquier
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHGQGwHTUt-kuwgiwe8f0AvTnB+ySqJWh95jvmh-qcoKW9YA9g@mail.gmail.com
The original coding of this view relied on a correlated IN sub-query.
Our planner is not very bright about correlated sub-queries, and even
if it were, there's no way for it to know that the output of
pg_get_publication_tables() is duplicate-free, making the de-duplicating
semantics of IN unnecessary. Hence, rewrite as a LATERAL sub-query.
This provides circa 100X speedup for me with a few hundred published
tables (the whole regression database), and things would degrade as
roughly O(published_relations * all_relations) beyond that.
Because the rules.out expected output changes, force a catversion bump.
Ordinarily we might not want to do that post-beta1; but we already know
we'll be doing a catversion bump before beta2 to fix pg_statistic_ext
issues, so it's pretty much free to fix it now instead of waiting for v13.
Per report and fix suggestion from PegoraroF10.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1551385426763-0.post@n3.nabble.com
That leads to unsatisfied external references if the C compiler fails
to elide unused static functions. Apparently, we have no buildfarm
members building HEAD that have that issue ... but such compilers still
exist in the wild. Need to do something about that.
In passing, fix Berkeley-era typo in comment.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/27054.1558533367@sss.pgh.pa.us
This uses a method similar to 68a7c24f, which guarantees that GRANT
commands using the WITH GRANT OPTION are dumped in a way so as cascading
dependencies are respected. As databases do not have support for
initial privileges via pg_init_privs, we need to repeat again the same
ACL reordering method.
ACL for databases have been moved from pg_dumpall to pg_dump in v11, so
this impacts pg_dump for v11 and above, and pg_dumpall for v9.6 and
v10.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15788-4e18847520ebcc75@postgresql.org
Author: Nathan Bossart
Reviewed-by: Haribabu Kommi
Backpatch-through: 9.6
Besides implementing the new statement this change fix some issues with the
parsing of PREPARE and EXECUTE statements. The different forms of these
statements are now all handled in a ujnified way.
Author: Matsumura-san <matsumura.ryo@jp.fujitsu.com>
When $(MAKE) is present in a rule, make assumes that target is a
submake, and it doesn't need to buffer its output. But in this case
it's a shell script that needs buffered output. Avoid that heuristic,
by referring to $(MAKE) via an indirection.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20190521004717.qsktdsugj3shagco@alap3.anarazel.de
The use of "set -x" to echo a subset of the test's commands might've
been a good idea during development of this test, but it's been stable
for long enough now that the extra output isn't very useful. Also
our project expectations have been trending towards less output in
non-error cases; the fact that "set -x" produces output on stderr
is particularly annoying from that standpoint. So get rid of it.
Also, pass "-A trust" to initdb explicitly so that it won't issue
a warning about "trust" being an insecure default. This matches
what the TAP tests have done for a long time, and again gets rid
of some noise on stderr.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/21766.1558397960@sss.pgh.pa.us
We're seeing occasional instability in the plans generated for
parallel queries on the "a_star" table hierarchy. This suggests
that something is changing the planner's stats for those tables,
but that should not be happening within a regression test run.
To try to gather some information about what's happening, insert
additional queries to check the basic page/tuple counts for these
tables, as well as whether any vacuums or analyzes have happened
on them. (We expect that only the database-wide VACUUM in
sanity_check.sql will have touched them.)
I added the probes not only in select_parallel.sql itself, but
also in stats.sql, bearing in mind that the stats collector's
lag may prevent the initial query from reporting current truth.
If any extra vacuum/analyze has happened, the recheck in stats.sql
definitely ought to see it.
This commit can be reverted once we figure out what's going on.
Per suggestion from David Rowley, though I changed the queries around.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA+hUKG+0CxrKRWRMf5ymN3gm+BECHna2B-q1w8onKBep4HasUw@mail.gmail.com
Define the meanings of the POSIX-spec character classes in line,
rather than referring to the ctype(3) man page. That man page
doesn't even exist on many modern systems, and if it does exist
it probably says the wrong things about non-ASCII characters.
Also document our non-POSIX-spec "ascii" character class.
Also, point out here that this behavior is controlled by collation or
LC_CTYPE, since the existing text explaining that is pretty far away.
Per gripe from Geert Lobbestael. Given the lack of prior complaints,
I'm not excited about back-patching this.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/155837022049.1359.2948065118562813468@wrigleys.postgresql.org
This shouldn't have been committed without even running the tests (nor
were the tests added that were suggested). I'm fixing up the results
to get the buildfarm back to green, it's quite possible we'll want to
revert this later.
Commit 41b54ba78e allowed existing VACUUM options to take a boolean
argument. It's documented that valid boolean values that VACUUM can
accept are true, false, on, off, 1, and 0. But previously the parser
failed to accept 1 and 0 as a boolean value in VACUUM syntax because
of a lack of NumericOnly clause for vac_analyze_option_arg in gram.y.
This commit adds such NumericOnly clause so that VACUUM options
can take also 1 and 0 as a boolean value.
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAHGQGwGYg82A8UCQxZe7Zn9MnyUBGdyB=1CNpKF3jBny+RbyfA@mail.gmail.com
For partial aggregation combine steps,
AggStatePerTrans->numTransInputs was set to the transition function's
number of inputs, rather than the combine function's number of
inputs (always 1).
That lead to partial aggregates with strict combine functions to
wrongly check for NOT NULL input as required by strictness. When the
aggregate wasn't exactly passed one argument, the strictness check was
either omitted (in the 0 args case) or too many arguments were
checked. In the latter case we'd read beyond the end of
FunctionCallInfoData->args (only in master).
AggStatePerTrans->numTransInputs actually has been wrong since since
9.6, where partial aggregates were added. But it turns out to not be
an active problem in 9.6 and 10, because numTransInputs wasn't used at
all for combine functions: Before c253b722f6 there simply was no NULL
check for the input to strict trans functions, and after that the
check was simply hardcoded for the right offset in fcinfo, as it's
done by code specific to combine functions.
In bf6c614a2f (11) the strictness check was generalized, with common
code doing the strictness checks for both plain and combine transition
functions, based on numTransInputs. For combine functions this lead to
not emitting an expression step to check for strict input in the 0
arguments case, and in the > 1 arguments case, we'd check too many
arguments.Due to the fact that the relevant fcinfo->isnull[2..] was
always zero-initialized (more or less by accident, by being part of
the AggStatePerTrans struct, which is palloc0'ed), there was no
observable damage in the latter case before a9c35cf85c, we just
checked too many array elements.
Due to the changes in a9c35cf85c, > 1 argument bug became visible,
because these days fcinfo is a) dynamically allocated without being
zeroed b) exactly the length required for the number of specified
arguments (hardcoded to 2 in this case).
This commit only contains a fairly minimal fix, setting numTransInputs
to a hardcoded 1 when building a pertrans for a combine function. It
seems likely that we'll want to clean this up further (e.g. the
arguments build_pertrans_for_aggref() aren't particularly meaningful
for combine functions). But the wrap date for 12 beta1 is coming up
fast, so it seems good to have a minimal fix in place.
Backpatch to 11. While AggStatePerTrans->numTransInputs was set
wrongly before that, the value was not used for combine functions.
Reported-By: Rajkumar Raghuwanshi
Diagnosed-By: Kyotaro Horiguchi, Jeevan Chalke, Andres Freund, David Rowley
Author: David Rowley, Kyotaro Horiguchi, Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAKcux6=uZEyWyLw0N7HtR9OBc-sWEFeByEZC7t-KDf15FKxVew@mail.gmail.com
The comment for SNAPSHOT_SELF was unfortunately explaining
SNAPSHOT_DIRTY, as reported by Sergei. Also expand a few comments, and
include a few more comments from heapam_visibility.c, so they're in an
AM independent place.
Reported-By: Sergei Kornilov
Author: Andres Freund
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/9152241558192351@sas1-d856b3d759c7.qloud-c.yandex.net