This concludes my changes that restructured the code to support JDBC3.
The jdbc unit tests were also resturctured to allow different tests between
jdbc2 and jdbc3, although currently make check (aka ant test) for JDBC3 just
runs the JDBC2 tests. Of special note the largeobject/PGblob and PGclob
classes have been moved under the jdbc2/jdbc3 specific directories as they
now differ by jdbc version. Also note that this checkin removes the
PostgresqlDataSource and files in the xa directory. A recent checkin has
added new datasource support that replaces the functionality provided by these
classes.
Modified Files:
jdbc/build.xml
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1DatabaseMetaData.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1ResultSet.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1ResultSetMetaData.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1Statement.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/AbstractJdbc2Connection.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/AbstractJdbc2DatabaseMetaData.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/AbstractJdbc2ResultSet.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/AbstractJdbc2ResultSetMetaData.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/AbstractJdbc2Statement.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Array.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Jdbc2CallableStatement.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Jdbc2Connection.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Jdbc2DatabaseMetaData.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Jdbc2PreparedStatement.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Jdbc2ResultSet.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Jdbc2ResultSetMetaData.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Jdbc2Statement.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/BatchExecuteTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/BlobTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/CallableStmtTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/ConnectionTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/DatabaseMetaDataTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/DateTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/DriverTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/JBuilderTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/MiscTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/ResultSetTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/TimeTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/TimestampTest.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/UpdateableResultTest.java
Added Files:
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/AbstractJdbc2Blob.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/AbstractJdbc2Clob.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Jdbc2Blob.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Jdbc2Clob.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/AbstractJdbc3Blob.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/AbstractJdbc3Clob.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/AbstractJdbc3Connection.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/AbstractJdbc3DatabaseMetaData.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/AbstractJdbc3ResultSet.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/AbstractJdbc3Statement.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/Jdbc3Blob.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/Jdbc3CallableStatement.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/Jdbc3Clob.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/Jdbc3Connection.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/Jdbc3DatabaseMetaData.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/Jdbc3PreparedStatement.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/Jdbc3ResultSet.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/Jdbc3ResultSetMetaData.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc3/Jdbc3Statement.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/TestUtil.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc2/Jdbc2TestSuite.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/jdbc3/Jdbc3TestSuite.java
Removed Files:
jdbc/org/postgresql/PostgresqlDataSource.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/largeobject/PGblob.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/largeobject/PGclob.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/test/JDBC2Tests.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/xa/ClientConnection.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/xa/TwoPhaseConnection.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/xa/TxConnection.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/xa/XAConnectionImpl.java
jdbc/org/postgresql/xa/XADataSourceImpl.java
sys = malloc(strlen(editorName) + strlen(fname) + 10 + 1);
if (!sys)
return false;
sprintf(sys, "exec '%s' '%s'", editorName, fname);
(note the added quotes to provide a little protection against spaces
and such). Then it's perfectly obvious what the calculation is doing.
I don't care about wasting 20-some bytes, but confusing readers of the
code is worth avoiding.
regards, tom lane
< * Allow temporary views
< * Require view using temporary tables to be temporary views
> * -Have views on temporary tables exist in the temporary namespace
<
> o Improve PL/PgSQL exception handling
> o Allow PL/PgSQL parameters to be specified by name and type during
> definition
> o Allow PL/PgSQL function parameters to be passed by name,
> get_employee_salary(emp_id => 12345, tax_year => 2001)
> o Add PL/PgSQL packages
> o Allow array declarations and other data types in PL/PgSQl DECLARE
> o Add PL/PgSQL PROCEDURES that can return multiple values
(they are not part of a chain). When failing to find a parent tuple in
an update chain, emit a warning and abandon repair_frag, but do not give
an error as before. This should eliminate the infamous 'No one parent tuple
was found' failure, which we now realize is not a can't-happen condition
but a perfectly valid database state. Per recent pghackers discussion.
heap_mark4update; this avoids situations where a deleted tuple might
look like it is chained to something else. Also, cause all the WAL
redo routines to set t_ctid to equal t_self, rather than leaving it
undefined as before. Make heap_xlog_clean set the page's LSN and SUI
correctly. All per past discussions in pghackers, ranging back to
last December.
to make a reasonable attempt at accounting for palloc overhead, not just
the requested size of each memory chunk. Since in many scenarios this
will make for a significant reduction in the amount of space acquired,
partially compensate by doubling the default value of SORT_MEM to 1Mb.
Per discussion in pgsql-general around 9-Jun-2002..
it takes could be held for quite awhile after the analyze step completes.
Rethink locking of pg_statistic in light of this fact. The original
scheme took an exclusive lock on pg_statistic, which was okay when the
lock could be expected to be released shortly, but that doesn't hold
anymore. Back off to a normal writer's lock (RowExclusiveLock). This
allows concurrent ANALYZE of nonoverlapping sets of tables, at the price
that concurrent ANALYZEs of the same table may fail with 'tuple
concurrently updated'.
> Looks like Alvaro got sideswiped by the system catalog indexing changes
> I made over the weekend. It's a simple change, just reduce the whole
> mess to a "CatalogUpdateIndexes()" call.
I update two tuples, so I manually CatalogOpenIndexes() and
CatalogIndexInsert() two times, as per comments in
CatalogUpdateIndexes().
I also removed a couple of useless CommandCounterIncrement(), some
useless definitions in src/include/commands/cluster.h and useless
includes in src/backend/commands/cluster.c. This version passes the
regression test I had made for previous versions.
Alvaro Herrera
Christopher Kings-Lynne wrote:
> I'm still getting ltree failures on 64bit freebsd:
>
> sed 's,MODULE_PATHNAME,$libdir/ltree,g' ltree.sql.in >ltree.sql
> gcc -pipe -O -g -Wall -Wmissing-prototypes -Wmissing-declarations -fpic -DPI
> C -DLOWER_NODE -I. -I../../src/include -c -o ltree_io.o ltree_io.c -MMD
> ltree_io.c: In function `ltree_in':
> ltree_io.c:57: warning: int format, different type arg (arg 3)
> ltree_io.c:63: warning: int format, different type arg (arg 4)
> ltree_io.c:68: warning: int format, different type arg (arg 3)
Teodor Sigaev
> l.mode, l.isgranted from pg_lock_info() as l(relation oid, database oid,
> backendpid int4, mode text, isgranted bool);
> ERROR: badly formatted planstring "COLUMNDEF "...
>
Reported by Neil Conway -- I never implemented readfuncs.c support for
ColumnDef or TypeName, which is needed so that views can be created on
functions returning type RECORD. Here's a patch.
Joe Conway
relfilenode.
I sent the CLUSTER patch a few days ago and I think it was missed. I
append it again, this time including the regression test files. For the
committer, please note that you have to cvs add the files as they don't
exist. Maybe add to the parallel and serial schedules also, but I don't
know such stuff.
Alvaro Herrera (<alvherre[a]atentus.com>)
1. Reworked patch from Andrey Oktyabrski (ano@spider.ru) with
functions: icount, sort, sort_asc, uniq, idx, subarray
operations: #, +, -, |, &
FUNCTIONS:
int icount(int[]) - the number of elements in intarray
int[] sort(int[], 'asc' | 'desc') - sort intarray
int[] sort(int[]) - sort in ascending order
int[] sort_asc(int[]),sort_desc(int[]) - shortcuts for sort
int[] uniq(int[]) - returns unique elements
int idx(int[], int item) - returns index of first intarray matching element
to item, or '0' if matching failed.
int[] subarray(int[],int START [, int LEN]) - returns part of intarray
starting from element number START (from 1)
and length LEN.
OPERATIONS:
int[] && int[] - overlap - returns TRUE if arrays has at least one common elements.
int[] @ int[] - contains - returns TRUE if left array contains right array
int[] ~ int[] - contained - returns TRUE if left array is contained in right array
# int[] - return the number of elements in array
int[] + int - push element to array ( add to end of array)
int[] + int[] - merge of arrays (right array added to the end of left one)
int[] - int - remove entries matched by right argument from array
int[] - int[] - remove left array from right
int[] | int - returns intarray - union of arguments
int[] | int[] - returns intarray as a union of two arrays
int[] & int[] - returns intersection of arrays
Oleg Bartunov
error handling, and simplifies the code that remains. Apparently,
the code that left Berkeley had a whole "error handling subsystem",
which exceptions and whatnot. Since we don't use that anymore,
there's no reason to keep it around.
The regression tests pass with the patch applied. Unless anyone
sees a problem, please apply.
Neil Conway