failures. Fix some outright bugs too, including a reference to
uninitialized memory that would cause failures like this one:
select -('1234567890.1234567'::text);
ERROR: Unable to locate type oid 2139062143 in catalog
such as bpchar(char_expression, N), and pull out the attrtypmod that
the function is coercing to. This allows correct deduction of the
column type in examples such as
CREATE VIEW v AS SELECT f1::char(8) FROM tbl;
Formerly we labeled v's column as char-of-unknown-length not char(8).
Also, this change causes the parser not to insert a redundant length
coercion function if the user has explicitly casted an INSERT or UPDATE
expression to the right length.
fields, nor with bpchar and varchar fields that have typmod -1. The
latter effectively have an unspecified length, so I made them display
as char() and varchar() rather than falsely equating them to char(1)
and varchar(1).
it's a good idea to choose the directory size based on the expected
number of entries. But ShmemInitHash was using a hard-wired constant.
Boo hiss. This accounts for recent report of postmaster failure when
asking for 64K or more buffers.
platform (psql and libpq):
The file "config.h.win32" in the include\ directory (from my patch from
2000-01-18) is missing from the tree. It needs to be put back :-)
The following patch has to be applied in the interfaces\libpq directory.
//Magnus
thinks the connection is idle, the error message is displayed as if
it were a NOTICE. This seems better than dropping the message on
the floor ... particularly if the message is the backend telling us
why it's about to close the connection. The previous behavior was
Backend message type 0x45 arrived while idle
pqReadData() -- backend closed the channel unexpectedly.
which is not real helpful.
as a unary minus operator for numeric. Now that long numeric constants
will get converted to NUMERIC in early parsing, it's essential to have
numeric->int8 conversion to avoid 'can't convert' errors on undecorated
int8 constants. Threw in the rest for completeness while I was in the
area.
I did not force an initdb for this, since the system will still run
without the new pg_proc/pg_operator entries. Possibly I should've.
and produce either FLOAT8 or NUMERIC output depending on whether the
value fits in a float8 or not. This is almost back to the way the
code was before I changed T_Float, but there is a critical difference:
now, when a numeric constant doesn't fit in float8, it will be treated
as type NUMERIC instead of type UNKNOWN.