Commit Graph

30532 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
67dbe720f6 Don't include <asm/ia64regs.h> unnecessarily.
We only need that header when compiling with icc, since the gcc variant of
ia64_get_bsp() uses in-line assembly code.  Per report from Frank Brendel,
the header doesn't exist on all IA64 platforms; so don't include it unless
we need it.
2011-01-27 16:29:44 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
7f2d75408b Translation updates for release 9.0.3 2011-01-27 23:13:33 +02:00
Tom Lane
af9e2ed29b Update release notes for releases 9.0.3, 8.4.7, 8.3.14, and 8.2.20. 2011-01-27 16:09:51 -05:00
Robert Haas
2c3e292998 Correct ALTER TYPE -> SET DATA TYPE in ALTER TABLE documentation.
The latter is the correct name of the operation to change the data type
of a column.

Noah Misch
2011-01-25 18:52:03 -05:00
Robert Haas
39b5e5f337 Make ALTER TABLE revalidate uniqueness and exclusion constraints.
Failure to do so can lead to constraint violations.  This was broken by
commit 1ddc2703a9 on 2010-02-07, so
back-patch to 9.0.

Noah Misch.  Regression test by me.
2011-01-20 22:48:29 -05:00
Robert Haas
ba3afc88d2 Document that WITH queries are also called Common Table Expressions.
Peter Geoghegan, reviewed by Stephen Frost
2011-01-19 21:21:33 -05:00
Tom Lane
d8b0495f96 Fix miscalculation of itemsafter in array_set_slice().
If the slice to be assigned to was before the existing array lower bound
(requiring at least one null element to spring into existence to fill the
gap), the code miscalculated how many entries needed to be copied from
the old array's null bitmap.  This could result in trashing the array's
data area (as seen in bug #5840 from Karsten Loesing), or worse.

This has been broken since we first allowed the behavior of assigning to
non-adjacent slices, in 8.2.  Back-patch to all affected versions.
2011-01-17 12:40:13 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
051096d06e Increment Py_None refcount for NULL array elements
Per bug #5835 by Julien Demoor
Author: Alex Hunsaker
2011-01-17 13:01:04 -03:00
Heikki Linnakangas
1435a8554c Before exiting walreceiver, fsync() all the WAL received.
Otherwise WAL recovery will replay the un-flushed WAL after walreceiver has
exited, which can lead to a non-recoverable standby if the system crashes hard
at that point.
2011-01-17 12:29:15 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
a08363d70c Fix the logic in libpqrcv_receive() to determine if there's any incoming data
that can be read without blocking. It used to conclude that there isn't, even
though there was data in the socket receive buffer. That lead walreceiver to
flush the WAL after every received chunk, potentially causing big performance
issues.

Backpatch to 9.0, because the performance impact can be very significant.
2011-01-13 18:00:37 +02:00
Tom Lane
fed8dcdb84 Fix PlanRowMark/ExecRowMark structures to handle inheritance correctly.
In an inherited UPDATE/DELETE, each target table has its own subplan,
because it might have a column set different from other targets.  This
means that the resjunk columns we add to support EvalPlanQual might be
at different physical column numbers in each subplan.  The EvalPlanQual
rewrite I did for 9.0 failed to account for this, resulting in possible
misbehavior or even crashes during concurrent updates to the same row,
as seen in a recent report from Gordon Shannon.  Revise the data structure
so that we track resjunk column numbers separately for each subplan.

I also chose to move responsibility for identifying the physical column
numbers back to executor startup, instead of assuming that numbers derived
during preprocess_targetlist would stay valid throughout subsequent
massaging of the plan.  That's a bit slower, so we might want to consider
undoing it someday; but it would complicate the patch considerably and
didn't seem justifiable in a bug fix that has to be back-patched to 9.0.
2011-01-12 20:47:09 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
a1ed4cf6ca Typo fix
Josh Kupershmidt
2011-01-11 10:46:08 +01:00
Magnus Hagander
628a6b7564 Ensure the directory for gram.h is created on win32
Result of bad testing of my last commit.
2011-01-09 17:02:03 +01:00
Magnus Hagander
763072ba8f 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 15:33:42 +01:00
Michael Meskes
1b2b96c423 In ecpg's parser removed a fixed length limit for constants defining an array dimension. 2011-01-08 23:02:23 +01:00
Robert Haas
e445f9f8b5 Remove bogus claims regarding createuser defaults.
Josh Kupershmidt
2011-01-08 06:13:53 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
8b3790916d Update documentation to say that \lo_import sets :LASTOID, not
lo_insert.
2011-01-05 21:32:13 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
9a22ea242b In pg_upgrade, copy pg_largeobject_metadata and its index for 9.0+
servers because, like pg_largeobject, it is a system table whose
contents are not dumped by pg_dump --schema-only.
2011-01-04 23:35:52 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
845626f506 In pg_upgrade, fix backward logging display of link operations. 2011-01-04 21:33:37 -05:00
Tom Lane
ee718c2310 Improve pg_upgrade's checks for required executables.
Don't insist on pg_dumpall and psql being present in the old cluster,
since they are not needed.  Do insist on pg_resetxlog being present
(in both old and new), since we need it.  Also check for pg_config,
but only in the new cluster.  Remove the useless attempt to call
pg_config in the old cluster; we don't need to know the old value of
--pkglibdir.  (In the case of a stripped-down migration installation
there might be nothing there to look at anyway, so any future change
that might reintroduce that need would have to be considered carefully.)

Per my attempts to build a minimal previous-version installation to support
pg_upgrade.
2010-12-29 13:43:58 -05:00
Tom Lane
0fdf735d97 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 22:50:19 -05:00
Robert Haas
a45e2e141d Correct spelling: longjump() -> longjmp(). 2010-12-24 22:23:13 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
3bb1800b55 Fix grammar 2010-12-24 22:08:15 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan
66b133d2b8 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 13:31:48 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
c474585295 Backpatch to 9.0 a doc mention that a BBU does not prevent partial page
writes.
2010-12-24 11:32:52 -05:00
Tom Lane
554b00cdab 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
514ce7a331 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 15:31:51 -05:00
Tom Lane
aebddf00d2 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 12:48:41 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
8b4d3d44dc 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 16:30:00 +01:00
Tom Lane
77451164e9 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 16:22:12 -05:00
Tom Lane
770bddc1b4 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 23:50:49 -05:00
Tom Lane
d45f163251 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 21:22:38 -05:00
Marc G. Fournier
178ca03f1c Tag 9.0.2. 2010-12-13 22:55:50 -04:00
Tom Lane
7fa690f8b9 Update release notes for releases 9.0.2, 8.4.6, 8.3.13, 8.2.19, and 8.1.23. 2010-12-13 20:23:08 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
c8a154e3f8 Translation updates for release 9.0.2 2010-12-13 23:20:00 +02:00
Tom Lane
dc124a5410 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2010o: DST law changes in
Fiji and Samoa.  Historical corrections for Hong Kong.
2010-12-13 12:42:25 -05:00
Tom Lane
14a58a1c95 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 11:35:14 -05:00
Simon Riggs
a804a23e7a Reduce spurious Hot Standby conflicts from never-visible records.
Hot Standby conflicts only with tuples that were visible at
some point. So ignore tuples from aborted transactions or for
tuples updated/deleted during the inserting transaction when
generating the conflict transaction ids.

Following detailed analysis and test case by Noah Misch.
Original report covered btree delete records, correctly observed
by Heikki Linnakangas that this applies to other cases also.
Fix covers all sources of cleanup records via common code.
Includes additional fix compared to commit on HEAD
2010-12-10 06:59:33 +00:00
Tom Lane
2ffcb0cb6a Eliminate O(N^2) behavior in parallel restore with many blobs.
With hundreds of thousands of TOC entries, the repeated searches in
reduce_dependencies() become the dominant cost.  Get rid of that searching
by constructing reverse-dependency lists, which we can do in O(N) time
during the fix_dependencies() preprocessing.  I chose to store the reverse
dependencies as DumpId arrays for consistency with the forward-dependency
representation, and keep the previously-transient tocsByDumpId[] array
around to locate actual TOC entry structs quickly from dump IDs.

While this fixes the slow case reported by Vlad Arkhipov, there is still
a potential for O(N^2) behavior with sufficiently many tables:
fix_dependencies itself, as well as mark_create_done and
inhibit_data_for_failed_table, are doing repeated searches to deal with
table-to-table-data dependencies.  Possibly this work could be extended
to deal with that, although the latter two functions are also used in
non-parallel restore where we currently don't run fix_dependencies.

Another TODO is that we fail to parallelize restore of multiple blobs
at all.  This appears to require changes in the archive format to fix.

Back-patch to 9.0 where the problem was reported.  8.4 has potential issues
as well; but since it doesn't create a separate TOC entry for each blob,
it's at much less risk of having enough TOC entries to cause real problems.
2010-12-09 13:03:42 -05:00
Tom Lane
87eadd7e3d 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 20:01:14 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
799d0b4b9e Fix bugs in the hot standby known-assigned-xids tracking logic. If there's
an old transaction running in the master, and a lot of transactions have
started and finished since, and a WAL-record is written in the gap between
the creating the running-xacts snapshot and WAL-logging it, recovery will fail
with "too many KnownAssignedXids" error. This bug was reported by
Joachim Wieland on Nov 19th.

In the same scenario, when fewer transactions have started so that all the
xids fit in KnownAssignedXids despite the first bug, a more serious bug
arises. We incorrectly initialize the clog code with the oldest still running
transaction, and when we see the WAL record belonging to a transaction with
an XID larger than one that committed already before the checkpoint we're
recovering from, we zero the clog page containing the already committed
transaction, leading to data loss.

In hindsight, trying to track xids in the known-assigned-xids array before
seeing the running-xacts record was too complicated. To fix that, hold
XidGenLock while the running-xacts snapshot is taken and WAL-logged. That
ensures that no transaction can begin or end in that gap, so that in recvoery
we know that the snapshot contains all transactions running at that point in
WAL.
2010-12-07 09:35:14 +01:00
Tom Lane
a65b29794a 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 22:55:51 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
e116bcf290 Fix two typos, by Fujii Masao. 2010-12-06 12:37:59 +01:00
Tom Lane
0a85bb237e 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 00:53:23 -05:00
Simon Riggs
09425f89e7 Move call to GetTopTransactionId() earlier in LockAcquire(),
removing an infrequently occurring race condition in Hot Standby.
An xid must be assigned before a lock appears in shared memory,
rather than immediately after, else GetRunningTransactionLocks()
may see InvalidTransactionId, causing assertion failures during
lock processing on standby.

Bug report and diagnosis by Fujii Masao, fix by me.
2010-11-29 01:10:56 +00:00
Tom Lane
e6fa73e87a 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 15:20:55 -05:00
Itagaki Takahiro
317a568c88 Don't raise "identifier will be truncated" messages in dblink
except creating new connections.
2010-11-25 19:58:29 +09:00
Tom Lane
b5efc09404 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 22:28:25 -05:00
Tom Lane
b11accc9a9 Improve plpgsql's error reporting for no-such-column cases.
Given a column reference foo.bar, where there is a composite plpgsql
variable foo but it doesn't contain a column bar, the pre-9.0 coding would
immediately throw a "record foo has no field bar" error.  In 9.0 the parser
hook instead falls through to let the core parser see if it can resolve the
reference.  If not, you get a complaint about "missing FROM-clause entry
for table foo", which while in some sense correct isn't terribly helpful.
Complicate things a bit so that we can throw the old error message if
neither the core parser nor the hook are able to resolve the column
reference, while not changing the behavior in any other case.
Per bug #5757 from Andrey Galkin.
2010-11-18 17:07:56 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
d3f62f232f Send paramHandle to subprocesses as 64-bit on Win64
The handle to the shared memory segment containing startup
parameters was sent as 32-bit even on 64-bit systems. Since
HANDLEs appear to be allocated sequentially this shouldn't
be a problem until we reach 2^32 open handles in the postmaster,
but a 64-bit value should be sent across as 64-bit, and not
zero out the top 32 bits.

Noted by Tom Lane.
2010-11-16 12:44:19 +01:00
Heikki Linnakangas
821bb17722 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 11:32:02 +02:00