Commit Graph

34816 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
101d6ae755 Prevent "\g filename" from affecting subsequent commands after an error.
In the previous coding, psql's state variable saying that output should
go to a file was only reset after successful completion of a query
returning tuples.  Thus for example,

regression=# select 1/0
regression-# \g somefile
ERROR:  division by zero
regression=# select 1/2;
regression=#

... huh, I wonder where that output went.  Even more oddly, the state
was not reset even if it's the file that's causing the failure:

regression=# select 1/2 \g /foo
/foo: Permission denied
regression=# select 1/2;
/foo: Permission denied
regression=# select 1/2;
/foo: Permission denied

This seems to me not to satisfy the principle of least surprise.
\g is certainly not documented in a way that suggests its effects are
at all persistent.

To fix, adjust the code so that the flag is reset at exit from SendQuery
no matter what happened.

Noted while reviewing the \gset patch, which had comparable issues.
Arguably this is a bug fix, but I'll refrain from back-patching for now.
2013-02-02 14:22:17 -05:00
Simon Riggs
84725aa5ef Mark vacuum_defer_cleanup_age as PGC_POSTMASTER.
Following bug analysis of #7819 by Tom Lane
2013-02-02 18:49:54 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
e8ae019661 Adjust COPY FREEZE error message to be more accurate and consistent.
Per suggestions from Noah and Tom.
2013-02-02 12:56:52 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
f4987049ef doc: Tiny whitespace fix 2013-02-01 21:44:22 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
e1d25de35a Move Assert() definitions to c.h
This way, they can be used by frontend and backend code.  We already
supported that, but doing it this way allows us to mix true frontend
files with backend files compiled in frontend environment.

Author: Andres Freund
2013-02-01 17:50:04 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
dd1569da67 Fix typo in freeze_table_age implementation
The original code used freeze_min_age instead of freeze_table_age.  The
main consequence of this mistake is that lowering freeze_min_age would
cause full-table scans to occur much more frequently, which causes
serious issues because the number of writes required is much larger.
That feature (freeze_min_age) is supposed to affect only how soon tuples
are frozen; some pages should still be skipped due to the visibility
map.

Backpatch to 8.4, where the freeze_table_age feature was introduced.

Report and patch from Andres Freund
2013-02-01 12:00:40 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
9ee00ef4c7 Fill tuple before HeapSatisfiesHOTAndKeyUpdate
Failing to do this results in almost all updates to system catalogs
being non-HOT updates, because the OID column would differ (not having
been set for the new tuple), which is an indexed column.

While at it, make sure to set the tableoid early in both old and new
tuples as well.  This isn't of much consequence, since that column is
seldom (never?) indexed.

Report and patch from Andres Freund.
2013-02-01 10:43:09 -03:00
Peter Eisentraut
5839052693 Add CREATE RECURSIVE VIEW syntax
This is specified in the SQL standard.  The CREATE RECURSIVE VIEW
specification is transformed into a normal CREATE VIEW statement with a
WITH RECURSIVE clause.

reviewed by Abhijit Menon-Sen and Stephen Frost
2013-01-31 22:31:58 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
b1980f6d03 PL/Tcl: Fix compiler warnings with Tcl 8.6
Some constification was added in the Tcl APIs, so add the modifiers in
PL/Tcl as well.
2013-01-31 22:08:53 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
b78647a0e6 Restrict infomask bits to set on multixacts
We must only set the bit(s) for the strongest lock held in the tuple;
otherwise, a multixact containing members with exclusive lock and
key-share lock will behave as though only a share lock is held.

This bug was introduced in commit 0ac5ad5134, somewhere along
development, when we allowed a singleton FOR SHARE lock to be
implemented without a MultiXact by using a multi-bit pattern.
I overlooked that GetMultiXactIdHintBits() needed to be tweaked as well.
Previously, we could have the bits for FOR KEY SHARE and FOR UPDATE
simultaneously set and it wouldn't cause a problem.

Per report from digoal@126.com
2013-01-31 19:35:31 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
77a3082fc5 pgrowlocks: fix bogus lock strength output
Per report from digoal@126.com
2013-01-31 19:15:35 -03:00
Bruce Momjian
a11e15c7b6 pg_upgrade docs: mention modification of postgresql.conf in new cluster
Mention it might be necessary to modify postgresql.conf in the new
cluster to match the old cluster.

Backpatch to 9.2.

Suggested by user.
2013-01-31 16:32:35 -05:00
Simon Riggs
3f0ab05233 Switch timelines if we crash soon after promotion.
Previous patch to skip checkpoints at end of recovery didn't
correctly perform crash recovery, fumbling the timeline switch.
Now we record the minRecoveryPointTLI of the newly selected
timeline, so that we crash recover to the correct timeline.

Bug report from Fujii Masao, investigated by me.
2013-01-31 19:29:32 +00:00
Tom Lane
9afc58396a Reject nonzero day fields in AT TIME ZONE INTERVAL functions.
It's not sensible for an interval that's used as a time zone value to be
larger than a day.  When we changed the interval type to contain a separate
day field, check_timezone() was adjusted to reject nonzero day values, but
timetz_izone(), timestamp_izone(), and timestamptz_izone() evidently were
overlooked.

While at it, make the error messages for these three cases consistent.
2013-01-31 12:12:23 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
bfb8a8d381 Properly zero-pad the day-of-year part of the win32 build number
This ensure the version number increases over time. The first three digits
in the version number is still set to the actual PostgreSQL version
number, but the last one is intended to be an ever increasing build number,
which previosly failed when it changed between 1, 2 and 3 digits long values.

Noted by Deepak
2013-01-31 15:06:45 +01:00
Tatsuo Ishii
6a651d85eb Add --aggregate-interval option.
The new option specifies length of aggregation interval (in
seconds). May be used only together with -l. With this option, the log
contains per-interval summary (number of transactions, min/max latency
and two additional fields useful for variance estimation).

Patch contributed by Tomas Vondra, reviewed by Pavel Stehule. Slight
change by Tatsuo Ishii, suggested by Robert Hass to emit an error
message indicating that the option is not currently supported on
Windows.
2013-01-31 15:53:58 +09:00
Tom Lane
2ab218b576 Don't use spi_priv.h in plpython.
There may once have been a reason to violate modularity like that,
but it doesn't appear that there is anymore.
2013-01-30 20:11:58 -05:00
Tom Lane
0900ac2d0d Fix plpgsql's reporting of plan-time errors in possibly-simple expressions.
exec_simple_check_plan and exec_eval_simple_expr attempted to call
GetCachedPlan directly.  This meant that if an error was thrown during
planning, the resulting context traceback would not include the line
normally contributed by _SPI_error_callback.  This is already inconsistent,
but just to be really odd, a re-execution of the very same expression
*would* show the additional context line, because we'd already have cached
the plan and marked the expression as non-simple.

The problem is easy to demonstrate in 9.2 and HEAD because planning of a
cached plan doesn't occur at all until GetCachedPlan is done.  In earlier
versions, it could only be an issue if initial planning had succeeded, then
a replan was forced (already somewhat improbable for a simple expression),
and the replan attempt failed.  Since the issue is mainly cosmetic in older
branches anyway, it doesn't seem worth the risk of trying to fix it there.
It is worth fixing in 9.2 since the instability of the context printout can
affect the results of GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS, as per a recent discussion
on pgsql-novice.

To fix, introduce a SPI function that wraps GetCachedPlan while installing
the correct callback function.  Use this instead of calling GetCachedPlan
directly from plpgsql.

Also introduce a wrapper function for extracting a SPI plan's
CachedPlanSource list.  This lets us stop including spi_priv.h in
pl_exec.c, which was never a very good idea from a modularity standpoint.

In passing, fix a similar inconsistency that could occur in SPI_cursor_open,
which was also calling GetCachedPlan without setting up a context callback.
2013-01-30 20:02:23 -05:00
Tom Lane
670a6c7a22 Fix grammar for subscripting or field selection from a sub-SELECT result.
Such cases should work, but the grammar failed to accept them because of
our ancient precedence hacks to convince bison that extra parentheses
around a sub-SELECT in an expression are unambiguous.  (Formally, they
*are* ambiguous, but we don't especially care whether they're treated as
part of the sub-SELECT or part of the expression.  Bison cares, though.)
Fix by adding a redundant-looking production for this case.

This is a fine example of why fixing shift/reduce conflicts via
precedence declarations is more dangerous than it looks: you can easily
cause the parser to reject cases that should work.

This has been wrong since commit 3db4056e22
or maybe before, and apparently some people have been working around it
by inserting no-op casts.  That method introduces a dump/reload hazard,
as illustrated in bug #7838 from Jan Mate.  Hence, back-patch to all
active branches.
2013-01-30 14:17:48 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
574f764321 pg_regress: Allow overriding diff options
By setting the environment variable PG_REGRESS_DIFF_OPTS, custom diff
options can be passed.

reviewed by Jeevan Chalke
2013-01-29 22:59:45 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
5bb2ddc0af entab: Fix some compiler warnings 2013-01-29 22:21:21 -05:00
Tom Lane
991f3e5ab3 Provide database object names as separate fields in error messages.
This patch addresses the problem that applications currently have to
extract object names from possibly-localized textual error messages,
if they want to know for example which index caused a UNIQUE_VIOLATION
failure.  It adds new error message fields to the wire protocol, which
can carry the name of a table, table column, data type, or constraint
associated with the error.  (Since the protocol spec has always instructed
clients to ignore unrecognized field types, this should not create any
compatibility problem.)

Support for providing these new fields has been added to just a limited set
of error reports (mainly, those in the "integrity constraint violation"
SQLSTATE class), but we will doubtless add them to more calls in future.

Pavel Stehule, reviewed and extensively revised by Peter Geoghegan, with
additional hacking by Tom Lane.
2013-01-29 17:08:26 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
89d00cbe01 Allow pgbench to use a scale larger than 21474.
Beyond 21474, the number of accounts exceed the range for int4. Change the
initialization code to use bigint for account id columns when scale is large
enough, and switch to using int64s for the variables in pgbench code. The
threshold where we switch to bigints is set at 20000, because that's easier
to remember and document than 21474, and ensures that there is some headroom
when int4s are used.

Greg Smith, with various changes by Euler Taveira de Oliveira, Gurjeet
Singh and Satoshi Nagayasu.
2013-01-29 12:05:55 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
c9d7dbacd3 Skip truncating ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS temp tables, if the transaction hasn't
touched any temporary tables.

We could try harder, and keep track of whether we've inserted to any temp
tables, rather than accessed them, and which temp tables have been inserted
to. But this is dead simple, and already covers many interesting scenarios.
2013-01-29 10:43:33 +02:00
Simon Riggs
fd4ced5230 Fast promote mode skips checkpoint at end of recovery.
pg_ctl promote -m fast will skip the checkpoint at end of recovery so that we
can achieve very fast failover when the apply delay is low. Write new WAL record
XLOG_END_OF_RECOVERY to allow us to switch timeline correctly for downstream log
readers. If we skip synchronous end of recovery checkpoint we request a normal
spread checkpoint so that the window of re-recovery is low.

Simon Riggs and Kyotaro Horiguchi, with input from Fujii Masao.
Review by Heikki Linnakangas
2013-01-29 00:06:15 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
ee22c55f5a REASSIGN OWNED: handle shared objects, too
Give away ownership of shared objects (databases, tablespaces) along
with local objects, per original code intention.  Try to make the
documentation clearer, too.

Per discussion about DROP OWNED's brokenness, in bug #7748.

This is not backpatched because it'd require some refactoring of the
ALTER/SET OWNER code for databases and tablespaces.
2013-01-28 18:45:50 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
ec41b8edc1 DROP OWNED: don't try to drop tablespaces/databases
My "fix" for bugs #7578 and #6116 on DROP OWNED at fe3b5eb08a not only
misstated that it applied to REASSIGN OWNED (which it did not affect),
but it also failed to fix the problems fully, because I didn't test the
case of owned shared objects.  Thus I created a new bug, reported by
Thomas Kellerer as #7748, which would cause DROP OWNED to fail with a
not-for-user-consumption error message.  The code would attempt to drop
the database, which not only fails to work because the underlying code
does not support that, but is a pretty dangerous and undesirable thing
to be doing as well.

This patch fixes that bug by having DROP OWNED only attempt to process
shared objects when grants on them are found, ignoring ownership.

Backpatch to 8.3, which is as far as the previous bug was backpatched.
2013-01-28 18:40:51 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
316186f289 Handle SPIErrors raised directly in PL/Python code.
If a PL/Python function raises an SPIError (or one if its subclasses)
directly with python's raise statement, treat it the same as an SPIError
generated internally. In particular, if the user sets the sqlstate
attribute, preserve that.

Oskari Saarenmaa and Jan Urbański, reviewed by Karl O. Pinc.
2013-01-28 09:46:23 +02:00
Michael Meskes
96bb29dc44 Made ecpglib use translated messages.
Bug reported and fixed by Chen Huajun <chenhj@cn.fujitsu.com>.
2013-01-27 13:48:12 +01:00
Tom Lane
2378d79ab2 Make LATERAL implicit for functions in FROM.
The SQL standard does not have general functions-in-FROM, but it does
allow UNNEST() there (see the <collection derived table> production),
and the semantics of that are defined to include lateral references.
So spec compliance requires allowing lateral references within UNNEST()
even without an explicit LATERAL keyword.  Rather than making UNNEST()
a special case, it seems best to extend this flexibility to any
function-in-FROM.  We'll still allow LATERAL to be written explicitly
for clarity's sake, but it's now a noise word in this context.

In theory this change could result in a change in behavior of existing
queries, by allowing what had been an outer reference in a function-in-FROM
to be captured by an earlier FROM-item at the same level.  However, all
pre-9.3 PG releases have a bug that causes them to match variable
references to earlier FROM-items in preference to outer references (and
then throw an error).  So no previously-working query could contain the
type of ambiguity that would risk a change of behavior.

Per a suggestion from Andrew Gierth, though I didn't use his patch.
2013-01-26 16:18:42 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
8865fe0ad3 Update comments in new DROP IF EXISTS code; commit message update
DROP IF EXISTS with a missing schema in commit
7e2322dff3 applies not only to tables, but
to DROP IF EXISTS with missing schemas for indexes, views, sequences,
and foreign tables.  Yeah!
2013-01-26 14:51:59 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
51cfb87ae2 Update LookupExplicitNamespace() comments; commit message update
Also, commit 7e2322dff3 affected DROP
TABLE IF EXISTS, not CREATE TABLE IF EXISTS.
2013-01-26 13:47:50 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
4deb57de7d Issue ERROR if FREEZE mode can't be honored by COPY
Previously non-honored FREEZE mode was ignored.  This also issues an
appropriate error message based on the cause of the failure, per
suggestion from Tom.  Additional regression test case added.
2013-01-26 13:33:24 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
7e2322dff3 Allow CREATE TABLE IF EXIST so succeed if the schema is nonexistent
Previously, CREATE TABLE IF EXIST threw an error if the schema was
nonexistent.  This was done by passing 'missing_ok' to the function that
looks up the schema oid.
2013-01-26 13:24:50 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
7c83619b50 doc: revert 80c20fcf3d and
0e93959a70

Revert patch that modified doc index mentions of search_path

Per Peter E.
2013-01-25 21:01:17 -05:00
Tom Lane
08be00fabe Fix plpython's handling of functions used as triggers on multiple tables.
plpython tried to use a single cache entry for a trigger function, but it
needs a separate cache entry for each table the trigger is applied to,
because there is table-dependent data in there.  This was done correctly
before 9.1, but commit 46211da1b8 broke it
by simplifying the lookup key from "function OID and triggered table OID"
to "function OID and is-trigger boolean".  Go back to using both OIDs
as the lookup key.  Per bug report from Sandro Santilli.

Andres Freund
2013-01-25 16:59:36 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
bb1e504951 doc: mention commit_delay is only honored if fsync is enabled
per Tianyin Xu
2013-01-25 15:54:28 -05:00
Tom Lane
0d5fbdc157 Change plan caching to honor, not resist, changes in search_path.
In the initial implementation of plan caching, we saved the active
search_path when a plan was first cached, then reinstalled that path
anytime we needed to reparse or replan.  The idea of that was to try to
reselect the same referenced objects, in somewhat the same way that views
continue to refer to the same objects in the face of schema or name
changes.  Of course, that analogy doesn't bear close inspection, since
holding the search_path fixed doesn't cope with object drops or renames.
Moreover sticking with the old path seems to create more surprises than
it avoids.  So instead of doing that, consider that the cached plan depends
on search_path, and force reparse/replan if the active search_path is
different than it was when we last saved the plan.

This gets us fairly close to having "transparency" of plan caching, in the
sense that the cached statement acts the same as if you'd just resubmitted
the original query text for another execution.  There are still some corner
cases where this fails though: a new object added in the search path
schema(s) might capture a reference in the query text, but we'd not realize
that and force a reparse.  We might try to fix that in the future, but for
the moment it looks too expensive and complicated.
2013-01-25 14:14:41 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
d309be0fb7 doc: merge ecpg username/password example into C comment
Backpatch to 9.2

per Tom Lane
2013-01-25 13:46:38 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
0e93959a70 doc: adjust search_path secondary index mention
per Tom Lane
2013-01-25 13:45:09 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
80c20fcf3d doc: split search_path index entries into separate secondaries
Karl O. Pinc
2013-01-25 12:49:29 -05:00
Robert Haas
a37e83c0a9 Make it easy to time out pg_isready, and make the default 3 seconds.
Along the way, add a missing line to the help message.

Phil Sorber, reviewed by Fujii Masao
2013-01-25 12:03:37 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
88886c79cc docs: In ecpg, clarify how username/password colon parameters are used
Backpatch to 9.2.

Patch from Alan B
2013-01-25 11:18:57 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
8936867627 Add prosecdef to \df+ output.
Jon Erdman, reviewed by Phil Sorber and Stephen Frost.
2013-01-25 17:22:26 +02:00
Bruce Momjian
7441b49d19 doc: improve wording of "foreign data server" in file-fdw docs
Backpatch to 9.2

Shigeru HANADA
2013-01-25 10:14:03 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
ba1cc6501e Add some randomness to the choice of which GiST page to insert to.
When descending the tree for an insert, and there are multiple equally good
pages we could insert to, make the choice in random. Previously, we would
always choose the tuple with lowest offset number. That meant that when two
non-leaf pages overlap - in the extreme case they might have exactly the same
key - all but the first such page went unused. That wasn't optimal for space
usage; if you deleted some tuples from the non-first pages, the space would
never be reused.

With this patch, the other pages are sometimes chosen too, although there's
still a heavy bias towards low-offset tuples, so that we don't lose cache
locality when doing a lot of inserts with similar keys.

Original idea by Alexander Korotkov, although this patch version was written
by me and copy-edited by Tom Lane.
2013-01-25 16:58:38 +02:00
Magnus Hagander
be926474be Make pg_dump exclude unlogged table data on hot standby slaves
Noted by Joe Van Dyk
2013-01-25 09:46:07 +01:00
Tom Lane
760f3c043a Fix concat() and format() to handle VARIADIC-labeled arguments correctly.
Previously, the VARIADIC labeling was effectively ignored, but now these
functions act as though the array elements had all been given as separate
arguments.

Pavel Stehule
2013-01-25 00:19:56 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
56a6317bf5 doc: add mention of ssi read anomolies to mvcc docs
From Jeff Davis, modified by Kevin Grittner
2013-01-24 21:44:54 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
9971f6f517 doc: correct sepgsql doc about permission checking of CASCADE
Backpatch to 9.2.

Patch from Kohei KaiGai
2013-01-24 21:21:50 -05:00