Commit Graph

35540 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Dunstan
d7b5a31ce9 fix whitespace 2014-02-01 16:30:22 -05:00
Tom Lane
6f1a407731 Fix some more bugs in signal handlers and process shutdown logic.
WalSndKill was doing things exactly backwards: it should first clear
MyWalSnd (to stop signal handlers from touching MyWalSnd->latch),
then disown the latch, and only then mark the WalSnd struct unused by
clearing its pid field.

Also, WalRcvSigUsr1Handler and worker_spi_sighup failed to preserve
errno, which is surely a requirement for any signal handler.

Per discussion of recent buildfarm failures.  Back-patch as far
as the relevant code exists.
2014-02-01 16:21:30 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
27942baf49 Don't use deprecated dllwrap on Cygwin.
The preferred method is to use "cc -shared", and this allows binaries
to be rebased if required, unlike dllwrap.

Backpatch to 9.0 where we have buildfarm coverage.

There are still some issues with Cygwin, especially modern Cygwin, but
this helps us get closer to good support.

Marco Atzeri.
2014-02-01 16:13:32 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
1e9876c3b6 Copy the libpq DLL to the bin directory on Mingw and Cygwin.
This has long been done by the MSVC build system, and has caused
confusion in the past when programs like psql have failed to start
because they can't find the DLL. If it's in the same directory as it now
will be they will find it.

Backpatch to all live branches.
2014-02-01 15:16:06 -05:00
Robert Haas
5d807a74bf Clear MyProc and MyProcSignalState before they become invalid.
Evidence from buildfarm member crake suggests that the new test_shm_mq
module is routinely crashing the server due to the arrival of a SIGUSR1
after the shared memory segment has been unmapped.  Although processes
using the new dynamic background worker facilities are more likely to
receive a SIGUSR1 around this time, the problem is also possible on older
branches, so I'm back-patching the parts of this change that apply to
older branches as far as they apply.

It's already generally the case that code checks whether these pointers
are NULL before deferencing them, so the important thing is mostly to
make sure that they do get set to NULL before they become invalid.  But
in master, there's one case in procsignal_sigusr1_handler that lacks a
NULL guard, so add that.

Patch by me; review by Tom Lane.
2014-01-31 21:34:44 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
5dc6cab2d2 doc: mention data page checksums in WAL section
Backpatch to 9.3

Adjusted patch from Ian Lawrence Barwick
2014-01-31 19:06:24 -05:00
Tom Lane
c1b242b164 Fix potential coredump on bad locale value in pg_upgrade.
Thinko in error report (and a typo in the message text, too).  We're
failing anyway, but it would be good to print something useful first.
Noted while reviewing a patch to make pg_upgrade's locale code laxer.
2014-01-30 18:10:04 -05:00
Tom Lane
a4aa854cad Fix bogus handling of "postponed" lateral quals.
When pulling a "postponed" qual from a LATERAL subquery up into the quals
of an outer join, we must make sure that the postponed qual is included
in those seen by make_outerjoininfo().  Otherwise we might compute a
too-small min_lefthand or min_righthand for the outer join, leading to
"JOIN qualification cannot refer to other relations" failures from
distribute_qual_to_rels.  Subtler errors in the created plan seem possible,
too, if the extra qual would only affect join ordering constraints.

Per bug #9041 from David Leverton.  Back-patch to 9.3.
2014-01-30 14:51:19 -05:00
Bruce Momjian
e3ec8015d0 docs: add mention of index swapping
Backpatch to 9.3

Greg Smith
2014-01-30 12:48:21 -05:00
Tom Lane
bf8ee6f157 Fix unsafe references to errno within error messaging logic.
Various places were supposing that errno could be expected to hold still
within an ereport() nest or similar contexts.  This isn't true necessarily,
though in some cases it accidentally failed to fail depending on how the
compiler chanced to order the subexpressions.  This class of thinko
explains recent reports of odd failures on clang-built versions, typically
missing or inappropriate HINT fields in messages.

Problem identified by Christian Kruse, who also submitted the patch this
commit is based on.  (I fixed a few issues in his patch and found a couple
of additional places with the same disease.)

Back-patch as appropriate to all supported branches.
2014-01-29 20:04:01 -05:00
Andrew Dunstan
56c08df55b Enable building with Visual Studion 2013.
Backpatch to 9.3.

Brar Piening.
2014-01-26 09:45:43 -05:00
Stephen Frost
8cb90b21af Avoid minor leak in parallel pg_dump
During parallel pg_dump, a worker process closing the connection caused
a minor memory leak (particularly minor as we are likely about to exit
anyway).  Instead, free the memory in this case prior to returning NULL
to indicate connection closed.

Spotting by the Coverity scanner.

Back patch to 9.3 where this was introduced.
2014-01-24 15:12:54 -05:00
Fujii Masao
be5d499743 Fix bugs in PQhost().
In the platform that doesn't support Unix-domain socket, when
neither host nor hostaddr are specified, the default host
'localhost' is used to connect to the server and PQhost() must
return that, but it didn't. This patch fixes PQhost() so that
it returns the default host in that case.

Also this patch fixes PQhost() so that it doesn't return
Unix-domain socket directory path in the platform that doesn't
support Unix-domain socket.

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2014-01-23 23:00:30 +09:00
Stephen Frost
d1e3070f04 Allow type_func_name_keywords in even more places
A while back, 2c92edad48 allowed
type_func_name_keywords to be used in more places, including role
identifiers.  Unfortunately, that commit missed out on cases where
name_list was used for lists-of-roles, eg: for DROP ROLE.  This
resulted in the unfortunate situation that you could CREATE a role
with a type_func_name_keywords-allowed identifier, but not DROP it
(directly- ALTER could be used to rename it to something which
could be DROP'd).

This extends allowing type_func_name_keywords to places where role
lists can be used.

Back-patch to 9.0, as 2c92edad48 was.
2014-01-21 22:56:30 -05:00
Tom Lane
0950d67ee5 Tweak parse location assignment for CURRENT_DATE and related constructs.
All these constructs generate parse trees consisting of a Const and
a run-time type coercion (perhaps a FuncExpr or a CoerceViaIO).  Modify
the raw parse output so that we end up with the original token's location
attached to the type coercion node while the Const has location -1;
before, it was the other way around.  This makes no difference in terms
of what exprLocation() will say about the parse tree as a whole, so it
should not have any user-visible impact.  The point of changing it is that
we do not want contrib/pg_stat_statements to treat these constructs as
replaceable constants.  It will do the right thing if the Const has
location -1 rather than a valid location.

This is a pretty ugly hack, but then this code is ugly already; we should
someday replace this translation with special-purpose parse node(s) that
would allow ruleutils.c to reconstruct the original query text.

(See also commit 5d3fcc4c2e, which also
hacked location assignment rules for the benefit of pg_stat_statements.)

Back-patch to 9.2 where pg_stat_statements grew the ability to recognize
replaceable constants.

Kyotaro Horiguchi
2014-01-21 16:34:31 -05:00
Robert Haas
3888b73f9a Fix inadvertent semantics change in last patch to plug memory leaks.
Commit a5bca4ef03 accidentally changed
the semantics when the "skipping missing configuration file" is
emitted, because it forced OK to true instead of leaving the value
untouched.

Spotted by Tom Lane.
2014-01-21 11:49:13 -05:00
Robert Haas
efcdb625b3 Plug more memory leaks when reloading config file.
Commit 138184adc5 plugged some but not
all of the leaks from commit 2a0c81a12c.
This tightens things up some more.

Amit Kapila, per an observation by Tom Lane
2014-01-21 09:48:14 -05:00
Stephen Frost
86e58ae023 Allow SET TABLESPACE to database default
We've always allowed CREATE TABLE to create tables in the database's default
tablespace without checking for CREATE permissions on that tablespace.
Unfortunately, the original implementation of ALTER TABLE ... SET TABLESPACE
didn't pick up on that exception.

This changes ALTER TABLE ... SET TABLESPACE to allow the database's default
tablespace without checking for CREATE rights on that tablespace, just as
CREATE TABLE works today.  Users could always do this through a series of
commands (CREATE TABLE ... AS SELECT * FROM ...; DROP TABLE ...; etc), so
let's fix the oversight in SET TABLESPACE's original implementation.
2014-01-18 18:49:08 -05:00
Peter Eisentraut
586bea6124 Fix client-only installation
The psql Makefile was not creating $(datadir) before installing
psqlrc.sample there.

In most cases, the directory would be created in some other way, but for
the documented from-source client-only installation procedure, it could
fail.

Reported-by: Mike Blackwell <mike.blackwell@rrd.com>
2014-01-17 23:11:02 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
e34acac62e Fix Hot Standby feedback sending when streaming busily.
Commit 6f60fdd701 accidentally removed a
call to XLogWalRcvSendHSFeedback() after flushing received WAL to disk.
The consequence is that when walsender is busy streaming WAL, it doesn't
send HS feedback messages. One is sent if nothing is received from the
master for 100ms, but if there's a steady stream of WAL, it never happens.

Backpatch to 9.3.

Andres Freund and Amit Kapila
2014-01-16 23:14:57 +02:00
Tom Lane
74c32f3455 Improve FILES section of psql reference page.
Primarily, explain where to find the system-wide psqlrc file, per recent
gripe from John Sutton.  Do some general wordsmithing and improve the
markup, too.

Also adjust psqlrc.sample so its comments about file location are somewhat
trustworthy.  (Not sure why we bother with this file when it's empty,
but whatever.)

Back-patch to 9.2 where the startup file naming scheme was last changed.
2014-01-14 19:28:06 -05:00
Tom Lane
ebde6c4014 Fix multiple bugs in index page locking during hot-standby WAL replay.
In ordinary operation, VACUUM must be careful to take a cleanup lock on
each leaf page of a btree index; this ensures that no indexscans could
still be "in flight" to heap tuples due to be deleted.  (Because of
possible index-tuple motion due to concurrent page splits, it's not enough
to lock only the pages we're deleting index tuples from.)  In Hot Standby,
the WAL replay process must likewise lock every leaf page.  There were
several bugs in the code for that:

* The replay scan might come across unused, all-zero pages in the index.
While btree_xlog_vacuum itself did the right thing (ie, nothing) with
such pages, xlogutils.c supposed that such pages must be corrupt and
would throw an error.  This accounts for various reports of replication
failures with "PANIC: WAL contains references to invalid pages".  To
fix, add a ReadBufferMode value that instructs XLogReadBufferExtended
not to complain when we're doing this.

* btree_xlog_vacuum performed the extra locking if standbyState ==
STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_READY, but that's not the correct test: we won't open up
for hot standby queries until the database has reached consistency, and
we don't want to do the extra locking till then either, for fear of reading
corrupted pages (which bufmgr.c would complain about).  Fix by exporting a
new function from xlog.c that will report whether we're actually in hot
standby replay mode.

* To ensure full coverage of the index in the replay scan, btvacuumscan
would emit a dummy WAL record for the last page of the index, if no
vacuuming work had been done on that page.  However, if the last page
of the index is all-zero, that would result in corruption of said page,
since the functions called on it weren't prepared to handle that case.
There's no need to lock any such pages, so change the logic to target
the last normal leaf page instead.

The first two of these bugs were diagnosed by Andres Freund, the other one
by me.  Fixes based on ideas from Heikki Linnakangas and myself.

This has been wrong since Hot Standby was introduced, so back-patch to 9.0.
2014-01-14 17:34:51 -05:00
Tom Lane
2b70588571 Fix possible buffer overrun in contrib/pg_trgm.
Allow for the possibility that folding a string to lower case makes it
longer (due to replacing a character with a longer multibyte character).
This doesn't change the number of trigrams that will be extracted, but
it does affect the required size of an intermediate buffer in
generate_trgm().  Per bug #8821 from Ufuk Kayserilioglu.

Also install some checks that the input string length is not so large
as to cause overflow in the calculations of palloc request sizes.

Back-patch to all supported versions.
2014-01-13 13:07:13 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
50c5770ecd Fix calculation of ISMN check digit.
This has always been broken, so back-patch to all supported versions.

Fabien COELHO
2014-01-13 15:43:59 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
370178172f Add OVERLAPS to index in the docs.
Per report from Adam Mackler and Jonathan Katz
2014-01-13 15:19:24 +02:00
Bruce Momjian
efb41ba33a Fix pg_dumpall on pre-8.1 servers
rolname did not exist in pg_shadow.

Backpatch to 9.3

Report by Andrew Gierth via IRC
2014-01-12 22:26:00 -05:00
Tom Lane
27ff4cfe76 Disallow LATERAL references to the target table of an UPDATE/DELETE.
On second thought, commit 0c051c9008 was
over-hasty: rather than allowing this case, we ought to reject it for now.
That leaves the field clear for a future feature that allows the target
table to be re-specified in the FROM (or USING) clause, which will enable
left-joining the target table to something else.  We can then also allow
LATERAL references to such an explicitly re-specified target table.
But allowing them right now will create ambiguities or worse for such a
feature, and it isn't something we documented 9.3 as supporting.

While at it, add a convenience subroutine to avoid having several copies
of the ereport for disalllowed-LATERAL-reference cases.
2014-01-11 19:03:15 -05:00
Tom Lane
5bfcc9ec5e Fix possible crashes due to using elog/ereport too early in startup.
Per reports from Andres Freund and Luke Campbell, a server failure during
set_pglocale_pgservice results in a segfault rather than a useful error
message, because the infrastructure needed to use ereport hasn't been
initialized; specifically, MemoryContextInit hasn't been called.
One known cause of this is starting the server in a directory it
doesn't have permission to read.

We could try to prevent set_pglocale_pgservice from using anything that
depends on palloc or elog, but that would be messy, and the odds of future
breakage seem high.  Moreover there are other things being called in main.c
that look likely to use palloc or elog too --- perhaps those things
shouldn't be there, but they are there today.  The best solution seems to
be to move the call of MemoryContextInit to very early in the backend's
real main() function.  I've verified that an elog or ereport occurring
immediately after that is now capable of sending something useful to
stderr.

I also added code to elog.c to print something intelligible rather than
just crashing if MemoryContextInit hasn't created the ErrorContext.
This could happen if MemoryContextInit itself fails (due to malloc
failure), and provides some future-proofing against someone trying to
sneak in new code even earlier in server startup.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  Since we've only heard reports of
this type of failure recently, it may be that some recent change has made
it more likely to see a crash of this kind; but it sure looks like it's
broken all the way back.
2014-01-11 16:35:30 -05:00
Tom Lane
36785a21ba Fix compute_scalar_stats() for case that all values exceed WIDTH_THRESHOLD.
The standard typanalyze functions skip over values whose detoasted size
exceeds WIDTH_THRESHOLD (1024 bytes), so as to limit memory bloat during
ANALYZE.  However, we (I think I, actually :-() failed to consider the
possibility that *every* non-null value in a column is too wide.  While
compute_minimal_stats() seems to behave reasonably anyway in such a case,
compute_scalar_stats() just fell through and generated no pg_statistic
entry at all.  That's unnecessarily pessimistic: we can still produce
valid stanullfrac and stawidth values in such cases, since we do include
too-wide values in the average-width calculation.  Furthermore, since the
general assumption in this code is that too-wide values are probably all
distinct from each other, it seems reasonable to set stadistinct to -1
("all distinct").

Per complaint from Kadri Raudsepp.  This has been like this since roughly
neolithic times, so back-patch to all supported branches.
2014-01-11 13:41:51 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
a25c2b7c4d Accept pg_upgraded tuples during multixact freezing
The new MultiXact freezing routines introduced by commit 8e9a16ab8f
neglected to consider tuples that came from a pg_upgrade'd database; a
vacuum run that tried to freeze such tuples would die with an error such
as
ERROR: MultiXactId 11415437 does no longer exist -- apparent wraparound

To fix, ensure that GetMultiXactIdMembers is allowed to return empty
multis when the infomask bits are right, as is done in other callsites.

Per trouble report from F-Secure.

In passing, fix a copy&paste bug reported by Andrey Karpov from VIVA64
from their PVS-Studio static checked, that instead of setting relminmxid
to Invalid, we were setting relfrozenxid twice.  Not an important
mistake because that code branch is about relations for which we don't
use the frozenxid/minmxid values at all in the first place, but seems to
warrants a fix nonetheless.
2014-01-10 18:03:18 -03:00
Michael Meskes
28fff0ef8b Fix descriptor output in ECPG.
While working on most platforms the old way sometimes created alignment
problems. This should fix it. Also the regresion tests were updated to test for
the reported case.

Report and fix by MauMau <maumau307@gmail.com>
2014-01-09 15:41:51 +01:00
Tom Lane
47ac4473ac Fix "cannot accept a set" error when only some arms of a CASE return a set.
In commit c1352052ef, I implemented an
optimization that assumed that a function's argument expressions would
either always return a set (ie multiple rows), or always not.  This is
wrong however: we allow CASE expressions in which some arms return a set
of some type and others just return a scalar of that type.  There may be
other examples as well.  To fix, replace the run-time test of whether an
argument returned a set with a static precheck (expression_returns_set).
This adds a little bit of query startup overhead, but it seems barely
measurable.

Per bug #8228 from David Johnston.  This has been broken since 8.0,
so patch all supported branches.
2014-01-08 20:18:10 -05:00
Heikki Linnakangas
3aefff422a Fix pause_at_recovery_target + recovery_target_inclusive combination.
If pause_at_recovery_target is set, recovery pauses *before* applying the
target record, even if recovery_target_inclusive is set. If you then
continue with pg_xlog_replay_resume(), it will apply the target record
before ending recovery. In other words, if you log in while it's paused
and verify that the database looks OK, ending recovery changes its state
again, possibly destroying data that you were tring to salvage with PITR.

Backpatch to 9.1, this has been broken since pause_at_recovery_target was
added.
2014-01-08 23:30:46 +02:00
Heikki Linnakangas
425bef6ee7 Fix bug in determining when recovery has reached consistency.
When starting WAL replay from an online checkpoint, the last replayed WAL
record variable was initialized using the checkpoint record's location, even
though the records between the REDO location and the checkpoint record had
not been replayed yet. That was noted as "slightly confusing" but harmless
in the comment, but in some cases, it fooled CheckRecoveryConsistency to
incorrectly conclude that we had already reached a consistent state
immediately at the beginning of WAL replay. That caused the system to accept
read-only connections in hot standby mode too early, and also PANICs with
message "WAL contains references to invalid pages".

Fix by initializing the variables to the REDO location instead.

In 9.2 and above, change CheckRecoveryConsistency() to use
lastReplayedEndRecPtr variable when checking if backup end location has
been reached. It was inconsistently using EndRecPtr for that check, but
lastReplayedEndRecPtr when checking min recovery point. It made no
difference before this patch, because in all the places where
CheckRecoveryConsistency was called the two variables were the same, but
it was always an accident waiting to happen, and would have been wrong
after this patch anyway.

Report and analysis by Tomonari Katsumata, bug #8686. Backpatch to 9.0,
where hot standby was introduced.
2014-01-08 14:32:22 +02:00
Bruce Momjian
a826773bf6 Update copyright for 2014
Update all files in head, and files COPYRIGHT and legal.sgml in all back
branches.
2014-01-07 16:05:29 -05:00
Tom Lane
0a43e5466c Fix LATERAL references to target table of UPDATE/DELETE.
I failed to think much about UPDATE/DELETE when implementing LATERAL :-(.
The implemented behavior ended up being that subqueries in the FROM or
USING clause (respectively) could access the update/delete target table as
though it were a lateral reference; which seems fine if they said LATERAL,
but certainly ought to draw an error if they didn't.  Fix it so you get a
suitable error when you omit LATERAL.  Per report from Emre Hasegeli.
2014-01-07 15:25:19 -05:00
Magnus Hagander
91c2755fcb Move permissions check from do_pg_start_backup to pg_start_backup
And the same for do_pg_stop_backup. The code in do_pg_* is not allowed
to access the catalogs. For manual base backups, the permissions
check can be handled in the calling function, and for streaming
base backups only users with the required permissions can get past
the authentication step in the first place.

Reported by Antonin Houska, diagnosed by Andres Freund
2014-01-07 17:51:02 +01:00
Magnus Hagander
0463b9419b Avoid including tablespaces inside PGDATA twice in base backups
If a tablespace was crated inside PGDATA it was backed up both as part
of the PGDATA backup and as the backup of the tablespace. Avoid this
by skipping any directory inside PGDATA that contains one of the active
tablespaces.

Dimitri Fontaine and Magnus Hagander
2014-01-07 17:11:51 +01:00
Heikki Linnakangas
8660f4b759 Remove bogus -K option from pg_dump.
I added it to the getopt call by accident in commit
691e595dd9.

Amit Kapila
2014-01-06 12:33:05 +02:00
Tom Lane
341f0bc495 Fix translatability markings in psql, and add defenses against future bugs.
Several previous commits have added columns to various \d queries without
updating their translate_columns[] arrays, leading to potentially incorrect
translations in NLS-enabled builds.  Offenders include commit 893686762
(added prosecdef to \df+), c9ac00e6e (added description to \dc+) and
3b17efdfd (added description to \dC+).  Fix those cases back to 9.3 or
9.2 as appropriate.

Since this is evidently more easily missed than one would like, in HEAD
also add an Assert that the supplied array is long enough.  This requires
an API change for printQuery(), so it seems inappropriate for back
branches, but presumably all future changes will be tested in HEAD anyway.

In HEAD and 9.3, also clean up a whole lot of sloppiness in the emitted
SQL for \dy (event triggers): lack of translatability due to failing to
pass words-to-be-translated through gettext_noop(), inadequate schema
qualification, and sloppy formatting resulting in unnecessarily ugly
-E output.

Peter Eisentraut and Tom Lane, per bug #8702 from Sergey Burladyan
2014-01-04 16:05:20 -05:00
Alvaro Herrera
948a3dfbb7 Handle 5-char filenames in SlruScanDirectory
Original users of slru.c were all producing 4-digit filenames, so that
was all that that code was prepared to handle.  Changes to multixact.c
in the course of commit 0ac5ad5134 made pg_multixact/members create
5-digit filenames once a certain threshold was reached, which
SlruScanDirectory wasn't prepared to deal with; in particular,
5-digit-name files were not removed during truncation.  Change that
routine to make it aware of those files, and have it process them just
like any others.

Right now, some pg_multixact/members directories will contain a mixture
of 4-char and 5-char filenames.  A future commit is expected fix things
so that each slru.c user declares the correct maximum width for the
files it produces, to avoid such unsightly mixtures.

Noticed while investigating bug #8673 reported by Serge Negodyuck.
2014-01-02 18:17:29 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
03db794596 Wrap multixact/members correctly during extension
In the 9.2 code for extending multixact/members, the logic was very
simple because the number of entries in a members page was a proper
divisor of 2^32, and thus at 2^32 wraparound the logic for page switch
was identical than at any other page boundary.  In commit 0ac5ad5134 I
failed to realize this and introduced code that was not able to go over
the 2^32 boundary.  Fix that by ensuring that when we reach the last
page of the last segment we correctly zero the initial page of the
initial segment, using correct uint32-wraparound-safe arithmetic.

Noticed while investigating bug #8673 reported by Serge Negodyuck, as
diagnosed by Andres Freund.
2014-01-02 18:17:07 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
f40e79173a Handle wraparound during truncation in multixact/members
In pg_multixact/members, relying on modulo-2^32 arithmetic for
wraparound handling doesn't work all that well.  Because we don't
explicitely track wraparound of the allocation counter for members, it
is possible that the "live" area exceeds 2^31 entries; trying to remove
SLRU segments that are "old" according to the original logic might lead
to removal of segments still in use.  To fix, have the truncation
routine use a tailored SlruScanDirectory callback that keeps track of
the live area in actual use; that way, when the live range exceeds 2^31
entries, the oldest segments still live will not get removed untimely.

This new SlruScanDir callback needs to take care not to remove segments
that are "in the future": if new SLRU segments appear while the
truncation is ongoing, make sure we don't remove them.  This requires
examination of shared memory state to recheck for false positives, but
testing suggests that this doesn't cause a problem.  The original coding
didn't suffer from this pitfall because segments created when truncation
is running are never considered to be removable.

Per Andres Freund's investigation of bug #8673 reported by Serge
Negodyuck.
2014-01-02 18:16:54 -03:00
Michael Meskes
8404037d89 Do not use an empty hostname.
When trying to connect to a given database libecpg should not try using an
empty hostname if no hostname was given.
2014-01-01 12:40:28 +01:00
Tom Lane
9a6e2b150f Fix broken support for event triggers as extension members.
CREATE EVENT TRIGGER forgot to mark the event trigger as a member of its
extension, and pg_dump didn't pay any attention anyway when deciding
whether to dump the event trigger.  Per report from Moshe Jacobson.

Given the obvious lack of testing here, it's rather astonishing that
ALTER EXTENSION ADD/DROP EVENT TRIGGER work, but they seem to.
2013-12-30 14:00:05 -05:00
Tom Lane
140b0626e8 Fix alphabetization in catalogs.sgml.
Some recent patches seem not to have grasped the concept that the catalogs
are described in alphabetical order.
2013-12-30 13:27:54 -05:00
Kevin Grittner
30c36d8cc0 Don't attempt to limit target database for pg_restore.
There was an apparent attempt to limit the target database for
pg_restore to version 7.1.0 or later.  Due to a leading zero this
was interpreted as an octal number, which allowed targets with
version numbers down to 2.87.36.  The lowest actual release above
that was 6.0.0, so that was effectively the limit.

Since the success of the restore attempt will depend primarily on
on what statements were generated by the dump run, we don't want
pg_restore trying to guess whether a given target should be allowed
based on version number.  Allow a connection to any version.  Since
it is very unlikely that anyone would be using a recent version of
pg_restore to restore to a pre-6.0 database, this has little to no
practical impact, but it makes the code less confusing to read.

Issue reported and initial patch suggestion from Joel Jacobson
based on an article by Andrey Karpov reporting on issues found by
PVS-Studio static code analyzer.  Final patch based on analysis by
Tom Lane.  Back-patch to all supported branches.
2013-12-29 15:18:22 -06:00
Andrew Dunstan
7dfd9f6f54 Properly detect invalid JSON numbers when generating JSON.
Instead of looking for characters that aren't valid in JSON numbers, we
simply pass the output string through the JSON number parser, and if it
fails the string is quoted. This means among other things that money and
domains over money will be quoted correctly and generate valid JSON.

Fixes bug #8676 reported by Anderson Cristian da Silva.

Backpatched to 9.2 where JSON generation was introduced.
2013-12-27 17:21:04 -05:00
Kevin Grittner
28b60aa231 Fix misplaced right paren bugs in pgstatfuncs.c.
The bug would only show up if the C sockaddr structure contained
zero in the first byte for a valid address; otherwise it would
fail to fail, which is probably why it went unnoticed for so long.

Patch submitted by Joel Jacobson after seeing an article by Andrey
Karpov in which he reports finding this through static code
analysis using PVS-Studio.  While I was at it I moved a definition
of a local variable referenced in the buggy code to a more local
context.

Backpatch to all supported branches.
2013-12-27 15:40:51 -06:00
Tom Lane
663f8419b6 Fix ANALYZE failure on a column that's a domain over a range.
Most other range operations seem to work all right on domains,
but this one not so much, at least not since commit 918eee0c.
Per bug #8684 from Brett Neumeier.
2013-12-23 22:18:23 -05:00