> http://developer.postgresql.org/cvsweb.cgi/pgsql-server/src/include/libpq/pqcomm.h.diff?r1=1.85&r2=1.86
>
> modified SockAddr, but no corresponding change was made here
> (fe-auth.c:612):
>
> case AUTH_REQ_KRB5:
> #ifdef KRB5
> if (pg_krb5_sendauth(PQerrormsg, conn->sock, &conn->laddr.in,
> &conn->raddr.in,
> hostname) != STATUS_OK)
>
> It's not obvious to me what the change ought to be though.
This patch should hopefully fix both kerberos 4 and 5.
Kurt Roeckx
> rexec and making it an untrusted language. Last time I looked, it didn't
> look particularly difficult. I've set aside some time next week, so stay
> tuned.
Attached is a patch that removes all of the RExec code from plpython from
the current PostgreSQL CVS. In addition, plpython needs to be changed to an
untrusted language in createlang. Please let me know if there are any
problems.
Kevin Jacobs
slave
servers. I haven't tested it very well, so use at your own risk (and I
recommend against using it in production).
Basically, I have a central database server that has 4 summary tables
inside
it replicated to a remote slave (these database tables are for my mail
server
authentication, so these are replicated to another server tuned for many
connections, and so I don't have postgres connections opened straight to
my
back-end database server).
Unfortunately, I also wanted to implement a replication database server
for
hot-backups. I realized, too late, that the replication process is
pretty
greedy and will try to replicate all tables marked as a
"MasterAddTable".
To make a long story, I made a patch to RServ.pm and Replicate that
allows you
to specify, on the command line, a list of tables that you want to
replicate...it'll ignore all others.
I haven't finished, since this has to be integrated with CleanLog for
instance, but this should (and does) suffice for the moment.
I have yet to test it with two slaves, but at least my mail server
replication
database now works (it was failing every time it tried to replicate, for
a
variety of reasons).
Anyone have any suggestions on how to improve on this? (or, if someone
more
familiar with this code wants to take the ball and run with it, you're
welcome to).
--
Michael A Nachbaur <mike@nachbaur.com>
- Don't attempt to convert partial or expressional unique indexes
- Don't attempt to convert unique indexes based on a non-default
opclasses
- Untested prevention of conversion of non-btree indexes unique
indexes. Untested as postgresql doesn't allow hash, gist, or rtree
based indexes to be unique.
rbt=# create unique index t on a using hash (col);
ERROR: DefineIndex: access method "hash" does not support UNIQUE
indexes
rbt=# create unique index t on a using gist (col);
ERROR: DefineIndex: access method "gist" does not support UNIQUE
indexes
rbt=# select version();
version
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PostgreSQL 7.4devel on i386-unknown-freebsd4.8, compiled by GCC 2.95.4
Rod Taylor
postgresql-7.3.3/src/interfaces/python/pg.py.
_quote() function fails due to integer overflow if input d is larger
than max integer.
In the case where the column type is "BIGINT", the input d may very well
be larger than max integer while its type, t, is labeled 'int'.
The conversion on line 19, return "%d" % int(d), will fail due to
"OverflowError: long int too large to convert to int".
Please describe a way to repeat the problem. Please try to provide a
concise reproducible example, if at all possible:
----------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] create a table with a column type 'BIGINT'.
[2] use pg.DB.insert() to insert a value that is larger than max integer
If you know how this problem might be fixed, list the solution below:
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Just changing the conversion at line 19 of pg.py to long(d) instead of
int(d) should fix it. The following is a patch:
Chih-Hao Huang
>> actually having updated the tuple, [...] can we simply
>> set the HEAP_XMAX_INVALID hint bit of the tuple?
>
>AFAICS this is a reasonable thing to do.
Thanks for the confirmation. Here's a patch which also contains some
more noncritical changes to tqual.c:
. make code more readable by introducing local variables for xvac
. no longer two separate branches for aborted and crashed.
The actions were the same in all cases.
Manfred Koizar
identifier, while some areas do not.
The attached converts be below to "name":
conversion_name
index_name
The below have an existing, initdb supplied, entity named "name". As
such, it could be confusing for the reader to see that identifier used
in the example.
domainname
typename
Rod Taylor
with advocacy and 'portal' websites.
Link to createdb / dropdb from the tutorial page about create / dropdb.
A pair of notes were asking about more info...
Rod Taylor
restructures the deferred trigger queue. The fundamental change is to
put all the static variables to hold the deferred triggers in a single
structure.
Alvaro Herrera
> Second argument to metaphone is suposed to set the limit on the
> number of characters to return, but it breaks on some phrases:
>
> usps=# select metaphone(a,3),metaphone(a,4),metaphone(a,20) from
> (select 'Hello world'::varchar AS a) a;
> HLW | HLWR | HLWRLT
>
> usps=# select metaphone(a,3),metaphone(a,4),metaphone(a,20) from
> (select 'A A COMEAUX MEMORIAL'::varchar AS a) a;
> AKM | AKMKS | AKMKSMMRL
>
> In every case I've found that does this, the 4th and 5th letters are
> always 'KS'.
Nice catch.
There was a bug in the original metaphone algorithm from CPAN. Patch
attached (while I was at it I updated my email address, changed the
copyright to PGDG, and removed an unnecessary palloc). Here's how it
looks now:
regression=# select metaphone(a,4) from (select 'A A COMEAUX
MEMORIAL'::varchar AS a) a;
metaphone
-----------
AKMK
(1 row)
regression=# select metaphone(a,5) from (select 'A A COMEAUX
MEMORIAL'::varchar AS a) a;
metaphone
-----------
AKMKS
(1 row)
Joe Conway
Regression tests for IPv6 operations added.
Documentation updated to document IPv6 bits.
Stop treating IPv4 as an "unsigned int" and IPv6 as an array of
characters. Instead, always use the array of characters so we
can have one function fits all. This makes bitncmp(), addressOK(),
and several other functions "just work" on both address families.
add family() function which returns integer 4 or 6 for IPv4 or
IPv6. (See examples below) Note that to add this new function
you will need to dump/initdb/reload or find the correct magic
to add the function to the postgresql function catalogs.
IPv4 addresses always sort before IPv6.
On disk we use AF_INET for IPv4, and AF_INET+1 for IPv6 addresses.
This prevents the need for a dump and reload, but lets IPv6 parsing
work on machines without AF_INET6.
To select all IPv4 addresses from a table:
select * from foo where family(addr) = 4 ...
Order by and other bits should all work.
Michael Graff
specific hash functions used by hash indexes, rather than the old
not-datatype-aware ComputeHashFunc routine. This makes it safe to do
hash joining on several datatypes that previously couldn't use hashing.
The sets of datatypes that are hash indexable and hash joinable are now
exactly the same, whereas before each had some that weren't in the other.