Commit Graph

31004 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
2b196f01ef Fix transient clobbering of shared buffers during WAL replay.
RestoreBkpBlocks was in the habit of zeroing and refilling the target
buffer; which was perfectly safe when the code was written, but is unsafe
during Hot Standby operation.  The reason is that we have coding rules
that allow backends to continue accessing a tuple in a heap relation while
holding only a pin on its buffer.  Such a backend could see transiently
zeroed data, if WAL replay had occasion to change other data on the page.
This has been shown to be the cause of bug #6425 from Duncan Rance (who
deserves kudos for developing a sufficiently-reproducible test case) as
well as Bridget Frey's re-report of bug #6200.  It most likely explains the
original report as well, though we don't yet have confirmation of that.

To fix, change the code so that only bytes that are supposed to change will
change, even transiently.  This actually saves cycles in RestoreBkpBlocks,
since it's not writing the same bytes twice.

Also fix seq_redo, which has the same disease, though it has to work a bit
harder to meet the requirement.

So far as I can tell, no other WAL replay routines have this type of bug.
In particular, the index-related replay routines, which would certainly be
broken if they had to meet the same standard, are not at risk because we
do not have coding rules that allow access to an index page when not
holding a buffer lock on it.

Back-patch to 9.0 where Hot Standby was added.
2012-02-05 15:49:46 -05:00
Simon Riggs
a286b6f6c7 Resolve timing issue with logging locks for Hot Standby.
We log AccessExclusiveLocks for replay onto standby nodes,
but because of timing issues on ProcArray it is possible to
log a lock that is still held by a just committed transaction
that is very soon to be removed. To avoid any timing issue we
avoid applying locks made by transactions with InvalidXid.

Simon Riggs, bug report Tom Lane, diagnosis Pavan Deolasee
2012-02-01 09:33:16 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
8bff6407ba Accept a non-existent value in "ALTER USER/DATABASE SET ..." command.
When default_text_search_config, default_tablespace, or temp_tablespaces
setting is set per-user or per-database, with an "ALTER USER/DATABASE SET
..." statement, don't throw an error if the text search configuration or
tablespace does not exist. In case of text search configuration, even if
it doesn't exist in the current database, it might exist in another
database, where the setting is intended to have its effect. This behavior
is now the same as search_path's.

Tablespaces are cluster-wide, so the same argument doesn't hold for
tablespaces, but there's a problem with pg_dumpall: it dumps "ALTER USER
SET ..." statements before the "CREATE TABLESPACE" statements. Arguably
that's pg_dumpall's fault - it should dump the statements in such an order
that the tablespace is created first and then the "ALTER USER SET
default_tablespace ..." statements after that - but it seems better to be
consistent with search_path and default_text_search_config anyway. Besides,
you could still create a dump that throws an error, by creating the
tablespace, running "ALTER USER SET default_tablespace", then dropping the
tablespace and running pg_dumpall on that.

Backpatch to all supported versions.
2012-01-30 11:39:26 +02:00
Tom Lane
a752952d26 Fix error detection in contrib/pgcrypto's encrypt_iv() and decrypt_iv().
Due to oversights, the encrypt_iv() and decrypt_iv() functions failed to
report certain types of invalid-input errors, and would instead return
random garbage values.

Marko Kreen, per report from Stefan Kaltenbrunner
2012-01-27 23:09:44 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
2f66c1a2ff Fix wording, per Peter Geoghegan 2012-01-27 10:37:23 +01:00
Tom Lane
e5f97c5f81 Fix CLUSTER/VACUUM FULL for toast values owned by recently-updated rows.
In commit 7b0d0e9356, I made CLUSTER and
VACUUM FULL try to preserve toast value OIDs from the original toast table
to the new one.  However, if we have to copy both live and recently-dead
versions of a row that has a toasted column, those versions may well
reference the same toast value with the same OID.  The patch then led to
duplicate-key failures as we tried to insert the toast value twice with the
same OID.  (The previous behavior was not very desirable either, since it
would have silently inserted the same value twice with different OIDs.
That wastes space, but what's worse is that the toast values inserted for
already-dead heap rows would not be reclaimed by subsequent ordinary
VACUUMs, since they go into the new toast table marked live not deleted.)

To fix, check if the copied OID already exists in the new toast table, and
if so, assume that it stores the desired value.  This is reasonably safe
since the only case where we will copy an OID from a previous toast pointer
is when toast_insert_or_update was given that toast pointer and so we just
pulled the data from the old table; if we got two different values that way
then we have big problems anyway.  We do have to assume that no other
backend is inserting items into the new toast table concurrently, but
that's surely safe for CLUSTER and VACUUM FULL.

Per bug #6393 from Maxim Boguk.  Back-patch to 9.0, same as the previous
patch.
2012-01-12 16:40:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
e3fce282b5 Fix one-byte buffer overrun in contrib/test_parser.
The original coding examined the next character before verifying that
there *is* a next character.  In the worst case with the input buffer
right up against the end of memory, this would result in a segfault.

Problem spotted by Paul Guyot; this commit extends his patch to fix an
additional case.  In addition, make the code a tad more readable by not
overloading the usage of *tlen.
2012-01-09 19:57:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
bb65cb8cdf Use __sync_lock_test_and_set() for spinlocks on ARM, if available.
Historically we've used the SWPB instruction for TAS() on ARM, but this
is deprecated and not available on ARMv6 and later.  Instead, make use
of a GCC builtin if available.  We'll still fall back to SWPB if not,
so as not to break existing ports using older GCC versions.

Eventually we might want to try using __sync_lock_test_and_set() on some
other architectures too, but for now that seems to present only risk and
not reward.

Back-patch to all supported versions, since people might want to use any
of them on more recent ARM chips.

Martin Pitt
2012-01-07 15:39:05 -05:00
Tom Lane
1f996adab3 Fix pg_restore's direct-to-database mode for INSERT-style table data.
In commit 6545a901aa, I removed the mini SQL
lexer that was in pg_backup_db.c, thinking that it had no real purpose
beyond separating COPY data from SQL commands, which purpose had been
obsoleted by long-ago fixes in pg_dump's archive file format.
Unfortunately this was in error: that code was also used to identify
command boundaries in INSERT-style table data, which is run together as a
single string in the archive file for better compressibility.  As a result,
direct-to-database restores from archive files made with --inserts or
--column-inserts fail in our latest releases, as reported by Dick Visser.

To fix, restore the mini SQL lexer, but simplify it by adjusting the
calling logic so that it's only required to cope with INSERT-style table
data, not arbitrary SQL commands.  This allows us to not have to deal with
SQL comments, E'' strings, or dollar-quoted strings, none of which have
ever been emitted by dumpTableData_insert.

Also, fix the lexer to cope with standard-conforming strings, which was the
actual bug that the previous patch was meant to solve.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  The previous patch went back to 8.2,
which unfortunately means that the EOL release of 8.2 contains this bug,
but I don't think we're doing another 8.2 release just because of that.
2012-01-06 13:04:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
c024a3b3be Make executor's SELECT INTO code save and restore original tuple receiver.
As previously coded, the QueryDesc's dest pointer was left dangling
(pointing at an already-freed receiver object) after ExecutorEnd.  It's a
bit astonishing that it took us this long to notice, and I'm not sure that
the known problem case with SQL functions is the only one.  Fix it by
saving and restoring the original receiver pointer, which seems the most
bulletproof way of ensuring any related bugs are also covered.

Per bug #6379 from Paul Ramsey.  Back-patch to 8.4 where the current
handling of SELECT INTO was introduced.
2012-01-04 18:31:08 -05:00
Tom Lane
7443ab2b34 Update per-column ACLs, not only per-table ACL, when changing table owner.
We forgot to modify column ACLs, so privileges were still shown as having
been granted by the old owner.  This meant that neither the new owner nor
a superuser could revoke the now-untraceable-to-table-owner permissions.
Per bug #6350 from Marc Balmer.

This has been wrong since column ACLs were added, so back-patch to 8.4.
2011-12-21 18:23:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
61dd2ffaff Avoid crashing when we have problems unlinking files post-commit.
smgrdounlink takes care to not throw an ERROR if it fails to unlink
something, but that caution was rendered useless by commit
3396000684, which put an smgrexists call in
front of it; smgrexists *does* throw error if anything looks funny, such
as getting a permissions error from trying to open the file.  If that
happens post-commit, you get a PANIC, and what's worse the same logic
appears in the WAL replay code, so the database even fails to restart.

Restore the intended behavior by removing the smgrexists call --- it isn't
accomplishing anything that we can't do better by adjusting mdunlink's
ideas of whether it ought to warn about ENOENT or not.

Per report from Joseph Shraibman of unrecoverable crash after trying to
drop a table whose FSM fork had somehow gotten chmod'd to 000 permissions.
Backpatch to 8.4, where the bogus coding was introduced.
2011-12-20 15:00:47 -05:00
Michael Meskes
458a83a526 In ecpg removed old leftover check for given connection name.
Ever since we introduced real prepared statements this should work for
different connections. The old solution just emulating prepared statements,
though, wasn't able to handle this.

Closes: #6309
2011-12-18 18:46:00 +01:00
Heikki Linnakangas
faa695580b Fix reference to "verify-ca" and "verify-full" in a note in the docs. 2011-12-16 15:07:02 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan
517462faf0 Disable excessive FP optimization by recent versions of gcc.
Suggested solution from Tom Lane. Problem discovered, probably not
for the first time, while testing the mingw-w64 32 bit compiler.

Backpatched to all live branches.
2011-12-14 17:13:01 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
6c0a375adf Revert the behavior of inet/cidr functions to not unpack the arguments.
I forgot to change the functions to use the PG_GETARG_INET_PP() macro,
when I changed DatumGetInetP() to unpack the datum, like Datum*P macros
usually do. Also, I screwed up the definition of the PG_GETARG_INET_PP()
macro, and didn't notice because it wasn't used.

This fixes the memory leak when sorting inet values, as reported
by Jochen Erwied and debugged by Andres Freund. Backpatch to 8.3, like
the previous patch that broke it.
2011-12-12 10:05:24 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
94b18c60c7 Don't set reachedMinRecoveryPoint during crash recovery. In crash recovery,
we don't reach consistency before replaying all of the WAL. Rename the
variable to reachedConsistency, to make its intention clearer.

In master, that was an active bug because of the recent patch to
immediately PANIC if a reference to a missing page is found in WAL after
reaching consistency, as Tom Lane's test case demonstrated. In 9.1 and 9.0,
the only consequence was a misleading "consistent recovery state reached at
%X/%X" message in the log at the beginning of crash recovery (the database
is not consistent at that point yet). In 8.4, the log message was not
printed in crash recovery, even though there was a similar
reachedMinRecoveryPoint local variable that was also set early. So,
backpatch to 9.1 and 9.0.
2011-12-09 15:50:19 +02:00
Bruce Momjian
ec218056fe In pg_upgrade, allow tables using regclass to be upgraded because we
preserve pg_class oids since PG 9.0.
2011-12-05 16:45:01 -05:00
Michael Meskes
621fd4d4c0 Applied another patch by Zoltan to fix memory alignement issues in ecpg's sqlda
code.
2011-12-04 04:43:33 +01:00
Magnus Hagander
f3bbd7d814 Treat ENOTDIR as ENOENT when looking for client certificate file
This makes it possible to use a libpq app with home directory set
to /dev/null, for example - treating it the same as if the file
doesn't exist (which it doesn't).

Per bug #6302, reported by Diego Elio Petteno
2011-12-03 15:05:50 +01:00
Tom Lane
8af71fc56d Add some weasel wording about threaded usage of PGresults.
PGresults used to be read-only from the application's viewpoint, but now
that we've exposed various functions that allow modification of a PGresult,
that sweeping statement is no longer accurate.  Noted by Dmitriy Igrishin.
2011-12-02 11:34:20 -05:00
Tom Lane
1c635b03c1 Stamp 9.0.6. 2011-12-01 16:49:59 -05:00
Tom Lane
da1eacb8d2 Clarify documentation about SQL:2008 variant of LIMIT/OFFSET syntax.
The point that you need parentheses for non-constant expressions apparently
needs to be brought out a bit more clearly, per bug #6315.
2011-12-01 16:39:07 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
698bb4ec4f Translation updates 2011-12-01 22:59:40 +02:00
Tom Lane
efb7423793 Fix getTypeIOParam to support type record[].
Since record[] uses array_in, it needs to have its element type passed
as typioparam.  In HEAD and 9.1, this fix essentially reverts commit
9bc933b212, which was a hack that is no
longer needed since domains don't set their typelem anymore.  Before
that, adjust the logic so that only domains are excluded from being
treated like arrays, rather than assuming that only base types should
be included.  Add a regression test to demonstrate the need for this.
Per report from Maxim Boguk.

Back-patch to 8.4, where type record[] was added.
2011-12-01 12:44:28 -05:00
Tom Lane
83c461e8fa Update information about configuring SysV IPC parameters on NetBSD.
Per Emmanuel Kasper, sysctl works fine as of NetBSD 5.0.
2011-11-30 20:55:10 -05:00
Tom Lane
33dcc3e09a Draft release notes for 9.1.2, 9.0.6, 8.4.10, 8.3.17, 8.2.23. 2011-11-30 19:34:57 -05:00
Tom Lane
11fa0830d1 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2011n.
DST law changes in Brazil, Cuba, Fiji, Palestine, Russia, Samoa.
Historical corrections for Alaska and British East Africa.
2011-11-30 11:48:36 -05:00
Tom Lane
b06c6f52d0 Tweak previous patch to ensure edata->filename always gets initialized.
On a platform that isn't supplying __FILE__, previous coding would either
crash or give a stale result for the filename string.  Not sure how likely
that is, but the original code catered for it, so let's keep doing so.
2011-11-30 00:37:20 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
75b6183694 Strip file names reported in error messages in vpath builds
In vpath builds, the __FILE__ macro that is used in verbose error
reports contains the full absolute file name, which makes the error
messages excessively verbose.  So keep only the base name, thus
matching the behavior of non-vpath builds.
2011-11-29 23:51:28 +02:00
Tom Lane
d16ebde582 Remove erroneous claim about use of pg_locks.objid for advisory locks.
The correct information appears in the text, so just remove the statement
in the table, where it did not fit nicely anyway.  (Curiously, the correct
info has been there much longer than the erroneous table entry.)
Resolves problem noted by Daniele Varrazzo.

In HEAD and 9.1, also do a bit of wordsmithing on other text on the page.
2011-11-28 13:52:09 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
62fa8562ec Backpatch "Use the preferred version of xsubpp."
As requested this is backpatched all the way to release 8.2.
2011-11-28 07:54:03 -05:00
Tom Lane
b09fc7c39d Ensure that whole-row junk Vars are always of composite type.
The EvalPlanQual machinery assumes that whole-row Vars generated for the
outputs of non-table RTEs will be of composite types.  However, for the
case where the RTE is a function call returning a scalar type, we were
doing the wrong thing, as a result of sharing code with a parser case
where the function's scalar output is wanted.  (Or at least, that's what
that case has done historically; it does seem a bit inconsistent.)

To fix, extend makeWholeRowVar's API so that it can support both use-cases.
This fixes Belinda Cussen's report of crashes during concurrent execution
of UPDATEs involving joins to the result of UNNEST() --- in READ COMMITTED
mode, we'd run the EvalPlanQual machinery after a conflicting row update
commits, and it was expecting to get a HeapTuple not a scalar datum from
the "wholerowN" variable referencing the function RTE.

Back-patch to 9.0 where the current EvalPlanQual implementation appeared.

In 9.1 and up, this patch also fixes failure to attach the correct
collation to the Var generated for a scalar-result case.  An example:
regression=# select upper(x.*) from textcat('ab', 'cd') x;
ERROR:  could not determine which collation to use for upper() function
2011-11-27 22:27:39 -05:00
Tom Lane
87b0dcf490 Fix overly-aggressive and inconsistent quoting in OS X start script.
Sidar Lopez, per bug #6310, with some additional improvements by me.
Back-patch to 9.0, where the issue was introduced.
2011-11-26 13:01:32 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
d1644d9c31 Allow pg_upgrade to upgrade clusters that use exclusion contraints by
fixing pg_dump to properly preserve such indexes.

Backpatch to 9.1 and 9.0 (where the bug was introduced).
2011-11-25 14:39:18 -05:00
Tom Lane
80cbf3401c Fix erroneous replay of GIN_UPDATE_META_PAGE WAL records.
A simple thinko in ginRedoUpdateMetapage, namely failing to increment a
loop counter, led to inserting records into the last pending-list page in
the wrong order (the opposite of that intended).  So far as I can tell,
this would not upset the code that eventually flushes pending items into
the main part of the GIN index.  But it did break the code that searched
the pending list for matches, resulting in transient failure to find
matching entries during index lookups, as illustrated in bug #6307 from
Maksym Boguk.

Back-patch to 8.4 where the incorrect code was introduced.
2011-11-25 13:59:22 -05:00
Tom Lane
3c4f293dd5 Avoid floating-point underflow while tracking buffer allocation rate.
When the system is idle for awhile after activity, the "smoothed_alloc"
state variable in BgBufferSync converges slowly to zero.  With standard
IEEE float arithmetic this results in several iterations with denormalized
values, which causes kernel traps and annoying log messages on some
poorly-designed platforms.  There's no real need to track such small values
of smoothed_alloc, so we can prevent the kernel traps by forcing it to zero
as soon as it's too small to be interesting for our purposes.  This issue
is purely cosmetic, since the iterations don't happen fast enough for the
kernel traps to pose any meaningful performance problem, but still it seems
worth shutting up the log messages.

The kernel log messages were previously reported by a number of people,
but kudos to Greg Matthews for tracking down exactly where they were coming
from.
2011-11-19 00:36:16 -05:00
Michael Meskes
acbddf45a4 Applied Zoltan's patch to correctly align interval and timestamp data in ecpg's sqlda. 2011-11-17 14:43:49 +01:00
Robert Haas
90bbeb195d Don't elide blank lines when accumulating psql command history.
This can change the meaning of queries, if the blank line happens to
occur in the middle of a quoted literal, as per complaint from Tomas Vondra.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2011-11-15 20:36:20 -05:00
Michael Meskes
f72baf7e61 Applied patch by Zoltan to fix copy&paste bug in ecpg's sqlda handling. 2011-11-13 13:48:19 +01:00
Tom Lane
c49130ade4 Throw nice error if server is too old to support psql's \ef or \sf command.
Previously, you'd get "function pg_catalog.pg_get_functiondef(integer) does
not exist", which is at best rather unprofessional-looking.  Back-patch
to 8.4 where \ef was introduced.

Josh Kupershmidt
2011-11-10 18:37:00 -05:00
Robert Haas
019d45e139 Correct documentation for trace_userlocks. 2011-11-10 18:01:10 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
1d9d7a91bf Fix server header file installation with vpath builds
Several server header files would not be installed in vpath builds
because they live in the build directory.
2011-11-10 20:55:39 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
a062ee4257 Make DatumGetInetP() unpack inet datums with a 1-byte header, and add
a new macro, DatumGetInetPP(), that does not. This brings these macros
in line with other DatumGet*P() macros.

Backpatch to 8.3, where 1-byte header varlenas were introduced.
2011-11-08 22:45:28 +02:00
Peter Eisentraut
0ff319d20a -DLINUX_OOM_ADJ=0 should be in CPPFLAGS, not CFLAGS 2011-11-08 06:51:01 +02:00
Tom Lane
d747a45b46 Fix assorted bugs in contrib/unaccent's configuration file parsing.
Make it use t_isspace() to identify whitespace, rather than relying on
sscanf which is known to get it wrong on some platform/locale combinations.
Get rid of fixed-size buffers.  Make it actually continue to parse the file
after ignoring a line with untranslatable characters, as was obviously
intended.

The first of these issues is per gripe from J Smith, though not exactly
either of his proposed patches.
2011-11-07 11:49:17 -05:00
Tom Lane
b07b2bdc57 Don't assume that a tuple's header size is unchanged during toasting.
This assumption can be wrong when the toaster is passed a raw on-disk
tuple, because the tuple might pre-date an ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN operation
that added columns without rewriting the table.  In such a case the tuple's
natts value is smaller than what we expect from the tuple descriptor, and
so its t_hoff value could be smaller too.  In fact, the tuple might not
have a null bitmap at all, and yet our current opinion of it is that it
contains some trailing nulls.

In such a situation, toast_insert_or_update did the wrong thing, because
to save a few lines of code it would use the old t_hoff value as the offset
where heap_fill_tuple should start filling data.  This did not leave enough
room for the new nulls bitmap, with the result that the first few bytes of
data could be overwritten with null flag bits, as in a recent report from
Hubert Depesz Lubaczewski.

The particular case reported requires ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN followed by
CREATE TABLE AS SELECT * FROM ... or INSERT ... SELECT * FROM ..., and
further requires that there be some out-of-line toasted fields in one of
the tuples to be copied; else we'll not reach the troublesome code.
The problem can only manifest in this form in 8.4 and later, because
before commit a77eaa6a95, CREATE TABLE AS or
INSERT/SELECT wouldn't result in raw disk tuples getting passed directly
to heap_insert --- there would always have been at least a junkfilter in
between, and that would reconstitute the tuple header with an up-to-date
t_natts and hence t_hoff.  But I'm backpatching the tuptoaster change all
the way anyway, because I'm not convinced there are no older code paths
that present a similar risk.
2011-11-04 23:23:16 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
d8bff79f1e Fix archive_command example
The given archive_command example didn't use %p or %f, which wouldn't
really work in practice.
2011-11-04 22:03:45 +02:00
Tom Lane
3fbfd40b37 Fix bogus code in contrib/ tsearch dictionary examples.
Both dict_int and dict_xsyn were blithely assuming that whatever memory
palloc gives back will be pre-zeroed.  This would typically work for
just about long enough to run their regression tests, and no longer :-(.

The pre-9.0 code in dict_xsyn was even lamer than that, as it would
happily give back a pointer to the result of palloc(0), encouraging
its caller to access off the end of memory.  Again, this would just
barely fail to fail as long as memory contained nothing but zeroes.

Per a report from Rodrigo Hjort that code based on these examples
didn't work reliably.
2011-11-03 19:17:59 -04:00
Tom Lane
9b3c35a9db Fix inline_set_returning_function() to allow multiple OUT parameters.
inline_set_returning_function failed to distinguish functions returning
generic RECORD (which require a column list in the RTE, as well as run-time
type checking) from those with multiple OUT parameters (which do not).
This prevented inlining from happening.  Per complaint from Jay Levitt.
Back-patch to 8.4 where this capability was introduced.
2011-11-03 17:53:26 -04:00