functions as STRICT, and all functions except gen_salt() as IMMUTABLE.
gen_salt() is VOLATILE.
Although the functions are now STRICT, I left their PG_ARGISNULL()
checks in place as a protective measure for users who install the
new code but use old (non-STRICT) catalog entries (e.g., restored
from a dump). Per recent discussion in pgsql-hackers.
Patch from Michael Fuhr.
XLOG_DBASE_DROP_OLD WAL records -- these records are no longer created in
current sources. Adjust numbering of XLOG_DBASE_CREATE and XLOG_DBASE_DROP
and bump the catversion. Patch from Gavin Sherry, adjusted by Neil Conway.
have adequate mechanisms for tracking the contents of databases and
tablespaces). This solves the longstanding problem that you can drop a
user who still owns objects and/or has access permissions.
Alvaro Herrera, with some kibitzing from Tom Lane.
< writer.
> writer. It might cause problems for applying WAL on recovery
> into a partially-written page, but later the full page will be
> replaced from WAL.
>
> o -Add ability to turn off full page writes
> o When off, write CRC to WAL and check file system blocks
> on recovery
> o Write full pages during file system write and not when
> the page is modified in the buffer cache
>
> This allows most full page writes to happen in the background
> writer.
plperl - the attached small patch remedies that omission, and adds a
small regression test for error and warning output - the new regression
input and expected output are in separate attached files.
Andrew Dunstan
problems:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support cross compilation by compiling "zic" with a native compiler.
This relies on the output of zic being platform independent, but that is
currently the case.
could not be reached before, but now that there is a plpgsql validator
function, it can be. Check is needed to prevent core dump reported by
Satoshi Nagayasu. Besides, this gives a more specific and useful
error message for a fairly common novice error.
find myself typing a command and then wanting to get the syntax for it.
So I do a ctrl-a and add a \h: but psql does not recognize the command,
because I have stuff attached to it (e.g. "alter table foobar"), so I
have to scroll over and delete everything except the name of the command
itself. This patch gives \h three chances to match: if nothing matches
the complete string (current behavior), it tries to match the first two
words (e.g. "ALTER TABLE"). If that fails, it tries to match the first
word (e.g. "DELETE").
Greg Sabino Mullane
to make. We ship the table file in the tarball and so this dependency
just opens file timestamp skew problems without doing anything useful.
(Not that it should hurt, either ... except for cross-compile builds.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This patch allows the PL/Python module to do (SRF) functions.
The patch was taken from the CVS version.
I have modified the plpython.c file and have added a test sql script for
testing the functionality. It was actually the script that was in the
8.0.3 version but have since been removed.
In order to signal the end of a set, the called python function must
simply return plpy.EndOfSet and the set would be returned.
Gerrit van Dyk
The patch was taken from the CVS version.
I have modified the plpython.c file and have added a test sql script for
testing the functionality. It was actually the script that was in the
8.0.3 version but have since been removed.
In order to signal the end of a set, the called python function must
simply return plpy.EndOfSet and the set would be returned.
Gerrit van Dyk
The content of the patch is as follows:
(1)Create shortcut when subtext was not found.
(2)Stop using LEFT and RIGHT macro.
In LEFT and RIGHT macro, TEXTPOS is executed by the same content as
execution immediately before. The execution frequency of TEXTPOS can be
reduced by using text_substring instead of LEFT and RIGHT macro.
(3)Add appendStringInfoText, and use it instead of
appendStringInfoString.
There is an overhead of PG_TEXT_GET_STR when appendStringInfoString is
executed by text type. This can be reduced by appendStringInfoText.
(4)Reduce execution of TEXTDUP.
The effect of the patch that I measured is as follows:
- The Data for test was created by 'pgbench -i'.
- Test SQL:
select replace(aid, '9', 'A') from accounts;
- Test results: Linux(CPU: Pentium III, Compiler option: -O2)
original: 1.515s
patched: 1.250s
Atsushi Ogawa
chdir into PGDATA and subsequently use relative paths instead of absolute
paths to access all files under PGDATA. This seems to give a small
performance improvement, and it should make the system more robust
against naive DBAs doing things like moving a database directory that
has a live postmaster in it. Per recent discussion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
> A quick look shows that when you use --with-libraries=/foo/bar the
> generated link line for libraries says
>
> -L/foo/bar -lpq
>
> and it should probably be the other way around (as it is for the
> executables).
>
> So I suspect we need some makefile tuning.
You were correct. This patch fixes it.
Jim C. Nasby
< Currently, to protect against partial disk page writes, we write the
> Currently, to protect against partial disk page writes, we write
877c877
< * Turn off after-change writes if fsync is disabled
> * Turn off full page writes if fsync is disabled
able to do this before, but I had tried to make an exception for functions
with OUT parameters. Michael Fuhr found one problem with it already, and
I found another, which was it didn't work for strict functions with a
NULL input. While both of these could be worked around, the probability
that there are more gotchas seems high; I think prudence dictates just
reverting to the former behavior for now. Accordingly, remove the kluge
added to get_expr_result_type() for Michael's case.
(currently in beta) when cryptolib = openssl. According to the
following checkin message from several years ago, OpenSSL application
developers should no longer rely on <openssl/evp.h> to include
everything they need:
http://cvs.openssl.org/chngview?cn=9888
This patch adds the necessary header files. It doesn't appear to
break anything when building against OpenSSL 0.9.7.
BTW, core appears to build and work fine with OpenSSL 0.9.8. I've
built 7.3 through HEAD against 0.9.8-beta6 without noticing any
problems.
Michael Fuhr
> generated link line for libraries says
>
> -L/foo/bar -lpq
>
> and it should probably be the other way around (as it is for the
> executables).
>
> So I suspect we need some makefile tuning.
You were correct. This patch fixes it.
Jim C. Nasby
propagated inside an outer join. In particular, given
LEFT JOIN ON (A = B) WHERE A = constant, we cannot conclude that
B = constant at the top level (B might be null instead), but we
can nonetheless put a restriction B = constant into the quals for
B's relation, since no inner-side rows not meeting that condition
can contribute to the final result. Similarly, given
FULL JOIN USING (J) WHERE J = constant, we can't directly conclude
that either input J variable = constant, but it's OK to push such
quals into each input rel. Per recent gripe from Kim Bisgaard.
Along the way, remove 'valid_everywhere' flag from RestrictInfo,
as on closer analysis it was not being used for anything, and was
defined backwards anyway.