Commit Graph

27005 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Peter Eisentraut
a930226c61 Translation updates 2012-02-23 20:28:42 +02:00
Tom Lane
c06598ce18 Draft release notes for 9.1.3, 9.0.7, 8.4.11, 8.3.18. 2012-02-22 18:12:05 -05:00
Tom Lane
2c293f2549 Don't clear btpo_cycleid during _bt_vacuum_one_page.
When "vacuuming" a single btree page by removing LP_DEAD tuples, we are not
actually within a vacuum operation, but rather in an ordinary insertion
process that could well be running concurrently with a vacuum.  So clearing
the cycleid is incorrect, and could cause the concurrent vacuum to miss
removing tuples that it needs to remove.  This is a longstanding bug
introduced by commit e6284649b9 of
2006-07-25.  I believe it explains Maxim Boguk's recent report of index
corruption, and probably some other previously unexplained reports.

In 9.0 and up this is a one-line fix; before that we need to introduce a
flag to tell _bt_delitems what to do.
2012-02-21 15:04:01 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
f3ad4ca00e Avoid double close of file handle in syslogger on win32
This causes an exception when running under a debugger or in particular
when running on a debug version of Windows.

Patch from MauMau
2012-02-21 17:14:36 +01:00
Tom Lane
246b85a948 Don't reject threaded Python on FreeBSD.
According to Chris Rees, this has worked for awhile, and the current
FreeBSD port is removing the test anyway.
2012-02-20 16:21:52 -05:00
Tom Lane
35ab4284b4 Fix regex back-references that are directly quantified with *.
The syntax "\n*", that is a backref with a * quantifier directly applied
to it, has never worked correctly in Spencer's library.  This has been an
open bug in the Tcl bug tracker since 2005:
https://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php?func=detail&aid=1115587&group_id=10894&atid=110894

The core of the problem is in parseqatom(), which first changes "\n*" to
"\n+|" and then applies repeat() to the NFA representing the backref atom.
repeat() thinks that any arc leading into its "rp" argument is part of the
sub-NFA to be repeated.  Unfortunately, since parseqatom() already created
the arc that was intended to represent the empty bypass around "\n+", this
arc gets moved too, so that it now leads into the state loop created by
repeat().  Thus, what was supposed to be an "empty" bypass gets turned into
something that represents zero or more repetitions of the NFA representing
the backref atom.  In the original example, in place of
	^([bc])\1*$
we now have something that acts like
	^([bc])(\1+|[bc]*)$
At runtime, the branch involving the actual backref fails, as it's supposed
to, but then the other branch succeeds anyway.

We could no doubt fix this by some rearrangement of the operations in
parseqatom(), but that code is plenty ugly already, and what's more the
whole business of converting "x*" to "x+|" probably needs to go away to fix
another problem I'll mention in a moment.  Instead, this patch suppresses
the *-conversion when the target is a simple backref atom, leaving the case
of m == 0 to be handled at runtime.  This makes the patch in regcomp.c a
one-liner, at the cost of having to tweak cbrdissect() a little.  In the
event I went a bit further than that and rewrote cbrdissect() to check all
the string-length-related conditions before it starts comparing characters.
It seems a bit stupid to possibly iterate through many copies of an
n-character backreference, only to fail at the end because the target
string's length isn't a multiple of n --- we could have found that out
before starting.  The existing coding could only be a win if integer
division is hugely expensive compared to character comparison, but I don't
know of any modern machine where that might be true.

This does not fix all the problems with quantified back-references.  In
particular, the code is still broken for back-references that appear within
a larger expression that is quantified (so that direct insertion of the
quantification limits into the BACKREF node doesn't apply).  I think fixing
that will take some major surgery on the NFA code, specifically introducing
an explicit iteration node type instead of trying to transform iteration
into concatenation of modified regexps.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  In HEAD, also add a regression test
case for this.  (It may seem a bit silly to create a regression test file
for just one test case; but I'm expecting that we will soon import a whole
bunch of regex regression tests from Tcl, so might as well create the
infrastructure now.)
2012-02-20 00:52:59 -05:00
Tom Lane
b0e1a4bd5e Fix longstanding error in contrib/intarray's int[] & int[] operator.
The array intersection code would give wrong results if the first entry of
the correct output array would be "1".  (I think only this value could be
at risk, since the previous word would always be a lower-bound entry with
that fixed value.)

Problem spotted by Julien Rouhaud, initial patch by Guillaume Lelarge,
cosmetic improvements by me.
2012-02-16 20:00:34 -05:00
Tom Lane
3eb2ff16db Fix I/O-conversion-related memory leaks in plpgsql.
Datatype I/O functions are allowed to leak memory in CurrentMemoryContext,
since they are generally called in short-lived contexts.  However, plpgsql
calls such functions for purposes of type conversion, and was calling them
in its procedure context.  Therefore, any leaked memory would not be
recovered until the end of the plpgsql function.  If such a conversion
was done within a loop, quite a bit of memory could get consumed.  Fix by
calling such functions in the transient "eval_econtext", and adjust other
logic to match.  Back-patch to all supported versions.

Andres Freund, Jan Urbański, Tom Lane
2012-02-11 18:06:46 -05:00
Tom Lane
01f99e2d20 Fix brain fade in previous pg_dump patch.
In pre-7.3 databases, pg_attribute.attislocal doesn't exist.  The easiest
way to make sure the new inheritance logic behaves sanely is to assume it's
TRUE, not FALSE.  This will result in printing child columns even when
they're not really needed.  We could work harder at trying to reconstruct a
value for attislocal, but there is little evidence that anyone still cares
about dumping from such old versions, so just do the minimum necessary to
have a valid dump.

I had this correct in the original draft of the patch, but for some
unaccountable reason decided it wasn't necessary to change the value.
Testing against an old server shows otherwise...
2012-02-10 14:09:42 -05:00
Tom Lane
02e6418181 Fix pg_dump for better handling of inherited columns.
Revise pg_dump's handling of inherited columns, which was last looked at
seriously in 2001, to eliminate several misbehaviors associated with
inherited default expressions and NOT NULL flags.  In particular make sure
that a column is printed in a child table's CREATE TABLE command if and
only if it has attislocal = true; the former behavior would sometimes cause
a column to become marked attislocal when it was not so marked in the
source database.  Also, stop relying on textual comparison of default
expressions to decide if they're inherited; instead, don't use
default-expression inheritance at all, but just install the default
explicitly at each level of the hierarchy.  This fixes the
search-path-related misbehavior recently exhibited by Chester Young, and
also removes some dubious assumptions about the order in which ALTER TABLE
SET DEFAULT commands would be executed.

Back-patch to all supported branches.
2012-02-10 13:28:31 -05:00
Tom Lane
0f5d208253 Avoid problems with OID wraparound during WAL replay.
Fix a longstanding thinko in replay of NEXTOID and checkpoint records: we
tried to advance nextOid only if it was behind the value in the WAL record,
but the comparison would draw the wrong conclusion if OID wraparound had
occurred since the previous value.  Better to just unconditionally assign
the new value, since OID assignment shouldn't be happening during replay
anyway.

The consequences of a failure to update nextOid would be pretty minimal,
since we have long had the code set up to obtain another OID and try again
if the generated value is already in use.  But in the worst case there
could be significant performance glitches while such loops iterate through
many already-used OIDs before finding a free one.

The odds of a wraparound happening during WAL replay would be small in a
crash-recovery scenario, and the length of any ensuing OID-assignment stall
quite limited anyway.  But neither of these statements hold true for a
replication slave that follows a WAL stream for a long period; its behavior
upon going live could be almost unboundedly bad.  Hence it seems worth
back-patching this fix into all supported branches.

Already fixed in HEAD in commit c6d76d7c82.
2012-02-06 13:15:04 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
483c8ce2a4 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 11:43:51 +02:00
Tom Lane
b882ffc24e 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 23:10:02 -05:00
Tom Lane
3852cfaf60 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 19:57:55 -05:00
Tom Lane
aa31c350fe 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 15:39:16 -05:00
Tom Lane
a86448e868 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 13:04:37 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
6f630af876 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 17:10:21 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
c1a03230b7 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 10:07:23 +02:00
Tom Lane
8ec76895b7 Stamp 8.3.17. 2011-12-01 16:55:48 -05:00
Tom Lane
50be28d2ac Update information about configuring SysV IPC parameters on NetBSD.
Per Emmanuel Kasper, sysctl works fine as of NetBSD 5.0.
2011-11-30 20:55:18 -05:00
Tom Lane
b06231a974 Draft release notes for 9.1.2, 9.0.6, 8.4.10, 8.3.17, 8.2.23. 2011-11-30 19:35:05 -05:00
Tom Lane
48e6495e13 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 11:49:11 -05:00
Tom Lane
ed30dff211 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 00:37:33 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
74f02254c5 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.
2011-11-30 06:46:52 +02:00
Andrew Dunstan
322fc5cf56 Backpatch "Use the preferred version of xsubpp."
As requested this is backpatched all the way to release 8.2.
2011-11-28 07:46:15 -05:00
Tom Lane
fdaff0ba1e 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 00:36:59 -05:00
Robert Haas
692ca693b9 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 20:36:28 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
e7c8efa064 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 21:43:05 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
3944238aab 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 22:45:36 +02:00
Tom Lane
c34088fdeb 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 23:23:33 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
60817575f1 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 22:04:08 +02:00
Tom Lane
0dddbbcd31 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 19:18:10 -04:00
Tom Lane
a0bd4f7c2a Revert "Stop btree indexscans upon reaching nulls in either direction."
This reverts commit ff41611ddc.
As pointed out by Naoya Anzai, we need to do more work to make that
idea handle end-of-index cases, and it is looking like too much risk
for a back-patch.  So bug #6278 is only going to be fixed in HEAD.
2011-11-02 13:38:21 -04:00
Tom Lane
7e03d28490 Fix race condition with toast table access from a stale syscache entry.
If a tuple in a syscache contains an out-of-line toasted field, and we
try to fetch that field shortly after some other transaction has committed
an update or deletion of the tuple, there is a race condition: vacuum
could come along and remove the toast tuples before we can fetch them.
This leads to transient failures like "missing chunk number 0 for toast
value NNNNN in pg_toast_2619", as seen in recent reports from Andrew
Hammond and Tim Uckun.

The design idea of syscache is that access to stale syscache entries
should be prevented by relation-level locks, but that fails for at least
two cases where toasted fields are possible: ANALYZE updates pg_statistic
rows without locking out sessions that might want to plan queries on the
same table, and CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION updates pg_proc rows without
any meaningful lock at all.

The least risky fix seems to be an idea that Heikki suggested when we
were dealing with a related problem back in August: forcibly detoast any
out-of-line fields before putting a tuple into syscache in the first place.
This avoids the problem because at the time we fetch the parent tuple from
the catalog, we should be holding an MVCC snapshot that will prevent
removal of the toast tuples, even if the parent tuple is outdated
immediately after we fetch it.  (Note: I'm not convinced that this
statement holds true at every instant where we could be fetching a syscache
entry at all, but it does appear to hold true at the times where we could
fetch an entry that could have a toasted field.  We will need to be a bit
wary of adding toast tables to low-level catalogs that don't have them
already.)  An additional benefit is that subsequent uses of the syscache
entry should be faster, since they won't have to detoast the field.

Back-patch to all supported versions.  The problem is significantly harder
to reproduce in pre-9.0 releases, because of their willingness to flush
every entry in a syscache whenever the underlying catalog is vacuumed
(cf CatalogCacheFlushRelation); but there is still a window for trouble.
2011-11-01 19:49:01 -04:00
Tom Lane
ff41611ddc Stop btree indexscans upon reaching nulls in either direction.
The existing scan-direction-sensitive tests were overly complex, and
failed to stop the scan in cases where it's perfectly legitimate to do so.
Per bug #6278 from Maksym Boguk.

Back-patch to 8.3, which is as far back as the patch applies easily.
Doesn't seem worth sweating over a relatively minor performance issue in
8.2 at this late date.  (But note that this was a performance regression
from 8.1 and before, so 8.2 is being left as an outlier.)
2011-10-31 16:40:27 -04:00
Tom Lane
b52ca458e9 Fix assorted bogosities in cash_in() and cash_out().
cash_out failed to handle multiple-byte thousands separators, as per bug
#6277 from Alexander Law.  In addition, cash_in didn't handle that either,
nor could it handle multiple-byte positive_sign.  Both routines failed to
support multiple-byte mon_decimal_point, which I did not think was worth
changing, but at least now they check for the possibility and fall back to
using '.' rather than emitting invalid output.  Also, make cash_in handle
trailing negative signs, which formerly it would reject.  Since cash_out
generates trailing negative signs whenever the locale tells it to, this
last omission represents a fail-to-reload-dumped-data bug.  IMO that
justifies patching this all the way back.
2011-10-29 14:31:12 -04:00
Tom Lane
05c3b9a3fe Update docs to point to the timezone library's new home at IANA.
The recent unpleasantness with copyrights has accelerated a move that
was already in planning.
2011-10-27 23:09:26 -04:00
Tom Lane
c401a7c527 Change FK trigger creation order to better support self-referential FKs.
When a foreign-key constraint references another column of the same table,
row updates will queue both the PK's ON UPDATE action and the FK's CHECK
action in the same event.  The ON UPDATE action must execute first, else
the CHECK will check a non-final state of the row and possibly throw an
inappropriate error, as seen in bug #6268 from Roman Lytovchenko.

Now, the firing order of multiple triggers for the same event is determined
by the sort order of their pg_trigger.tgnames, and the auto-generated names
we use for FK triggers are "RI_ConstraintTrigger_NNNN" where NNNN is the
trigger OID.  So most of the time the firing order is the same as creation
order, and so rearranging the creation order fixes it.

This patch will fail to fix the problem if the OID counter wraps around or
adds a decimal digit (eg, from 99999 to 100000) while we are creating the
triggers for an FK constraint.  Given the small odds of that, and the low
usage of self-referential FKs, we'll live with that solution in the back
branches.  A better fix is to change the auto-generated names for FK
triggers, but it seems unwise to do that in stable branches because there
may be client code that depends on the naming convention.  We'll fix it
that way in HEAD in a separate patch.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since this bug has existed for a long
time.
2011-10-26 13:02:53 -04:00
Tom Lane
b4cecb519b Fix pg_dump to dump casts between auto-generated types.
The heuristic for when to dump a cast failed for a cast between table
rowtypes, as reported by Frédéric Rejol.  Fix it by setting
the "dump" flag for such a type the same way as the flag is set for the
underlying table or base type.  This won't result in the auto-generated
type appearing in the output, since setting its objType to DO_DUMMY_TYPE
unconditionally suppresses that.  But it will result in dumpCast doing what
was intended.

Back-patch to 8.3.  The 8.2 code is rather different in this area, and it
doesn't seem worth any risk to fix a corner case that nobody has stumbled
on before.
2011-10-18 17:11:18 -04:00
Tom Lane
0a6209f464 Fix bugs in information_schema.referential_constraints view.
This view was being insufficiently careful about matching the FK constraint
to the depended-on primary or unique key constraint.  That could result in
failure to show an FK constraint at all, or showing it multiple times, or
claiming that it depended on a different constraint than the one it really
does.  Fix by joining via pg_depend to ensure that we find only the correct
dependency.

Back-patch, but don't bump catversion because we can't force initdb in back
branches.  The next minor-version release notes should explain that if you
need to fix this in an existing installation, you can drop the
information_schema schema then re-create it by sourcing
$SHAREDIR/information_schema.sql in each database (as a superuser of
course).
2011-10-14 20:24:50 -04:00
Tom Lane
f655c3f023 Improve documentation of psql's \q command.
The documentation neglected to explain its behavior in a script file
(it only ends execution of the script, not psql as a whole), and failed
to mention the long form \quit either.
2011-10-12 14:00:20 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
3a2f6b570f Don't let transform_null_equals=on affect CASE foo WHEN NULL ... constructs.
transform_null_equals is only supposed to affect "foo = NULL" expressions
given directly by the user, not the internal "foo = NULL" expression
generated from CASE-WHEN.

This fixes bug #6242, reported by Sergey. Backpatch to all supported
branches.
2011-10-08 11:21:14 +03:00
Robert Haas
b0d5469a04 Make pgstatindex respond to cancel interrupts.
A similar problem for pgstattuple() was fixed in April of 2010 by commit
33065ef8bc, but pgstatindex() seems to have
been overlooked.

Back-patch all the way, as with that commit, though not to 7.4 through
8.1, since those are now EOL.
2011-10-06 12:10:35 -04:00
Tom Lane
ee609b8cfb Fix our mapping of Windows timezones for Central America.
We were mapping "Central America Standard Time" to "CST6CDT", which seems
entirely wrong, because according to the Olson timezone database noplace
in Central America observes daylight savings time on any regular basis ---
and certainly not according to the USA DST rules that are implied by
"CST6CDT".  (Mexico is an exception, but they can be disregarded since
they have a separate timezone name in Windows.)  So, map this zone name to
plain "CST6", which will provide a fixed UTC offset.

As written, this patch will also result in mapping "Central America
Daylight Time" to CST6.  I considered hacking things so that would still
map to CST6CDT, but it seems it would confuse win32tzlist.pl to put those
two names in separate entries.  Since there's little evidence that any
such zone name is used in the wild, much less that CST6CDT would be a good
match for it, I'm not too worried about what we do with it.

Per complaint from Pratik Chirania.
2011-09-23 22:14:06 -04:00
Tom Lane
cef46230dc Stamp 8.3.16. 2011-09-22 18:06:36 -04:00
Tom Lane
8c3b884b33 Update release notes for 9.1.1, 9.0.5, 8.4.9, 8.3.16, 8.2.22.
Man, we fixed a lotta bugs since April.
2011-09-22 17:40:35 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
3ffe294373 Translation updates 2011-09-22 22:13:43 +03:00
Tom Lane
0bbbf59215 gistendscan() forgot to free so->giststate.
This oversight led to a massive memory leak --- upwards of 10KB per tuple
--- during creation-time verification of an exclusion constraint based on a
GIST index.  In most other scenarios it'd just be a leak of 10KB that would
be recovered at end of query, so not too significant; though perhaps the
leak would be noticeable in a situation where a GIST index was being used
in a nestloop inner indexscan.  In any case, it's a real leak of long
standing, so patch all supported branches.  Per report from Harald Fuchs.
2011-09-16 04:28:11 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
7f7ed1716d Add missing format argument to ecpg_log() call 2011-09-08 22:13:27 +03:00
Tom Lane
ae423dd187 Fix corner case bug in numeric to_char().
Trailing-zero stripping applied by the FM specifier could strip zeroes
to the left of the decimal point, for a format with no digit positions
after the decimal point (such as "FM999.").

Reported and diagnosed by Marti Raudsepp, though I didn't use his patch.
2011-09-07 17:06:39 -04:00