Commit Graph

36663 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
de521989a2 Fix latent crash in do_text_output_multiline().
do_text_output_multiline() would fail (typically with a null pointer
dereference crash) if its input string did not end with a newline.  Such
cases do not arise in our current sources; but it certainly could happen
in future, or in extension code's usage of the function, so we should fix
it.  To fix, replace "eol += len" with "eol = text + len".

While at it, make two cosmetic improvements: mark the input string const,
and rename the argument from "text" to "txt" to dodge pgindent strangeness
(since "text" is a typedef name).

Even though this problem is only latent at present, it seems like a good
idea to back-patch the fix, since it's a very simple/safe patch and it's
not out of the realm of possibility that we might in future back-patch
something that expects sane behavior from do_text_output_multiline().

Per report from Hao Lee.

Report: <CAGoxFiFPAGyPAJLcFxTB5cGhTW2yOVBDYeqDugYwV4dEd1L_Ag@mail.gmail.com>
2016-05-23 14:16:41 -04:00
Tom Lane
7ac0342941 Further improve documentation about --quote-all-identifiers switch.
Mention it in the Notes section too, per suggestion from David Johnston.

Discussion: <20160520165824.22598.31426@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-05-20 15:52:16 -04:00
Tom Lane
f2727f542f Improve documentation about pg_dump's --quote-all-identifiers switch.
Per bug #14152 from Alejandro Martínez.  Back-patch to all supported
branches.

Discussion: <20160520165824.22598.31426@wrigleys.postgresql.org>
2016-05-20 14:59:48 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
405b9baf1b doc: Fix typo
From: Alexander Law <exclusion@gmail.com>
2016-05-13 21:25:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
a2c1bc36da Ensure plan stability in contrib/btree_gist regression test.
Buildfarm member skink failed with symptoms suggesting that an
auto-analyze had happened and changed the plan displayed for a
test query.  Although this is evidently of low probability,
regression tests that sometimes fail are no fun, so add commands
to force a bitmap scan to be chosen.
2016-05-12 20:04:41 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
6e6e4f1659 Fix obsolete comment 2016-05-12 15:36:51 -03:00
Alvaro Herrera
92ebe509e3 Fix autovacuum for shared relations
The table-skipping logic in autovacuum would fail to consider that
multiple workers could be processing the same shared catalog in
different databases.  This normally wouldn't be a problem: firstly
because autovacuum workers not for wraparound would simply ignore tables
in which they cannot acquire lock, and secondly because most of the time
these tables are small enough that even if multiple for-wraparound
workers are stuck in the same catalog, they would be over pretty
quickly.  But in cases where the catalogs are severely bloated it could
become a problem.

Backpatch all the way back, because the problem has been there since the
beginning.

Reported by Ondřej Světlík

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/572B63B1.3030603%40flexibee.eu
	https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/572A1072.5080308%40flexibee.eu
2016-05-10 16:23:54 -03:00
Tom Lane
cd5a6521fa Stamp 9.3.13. 2016-05-09 16:53:56 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
b81b97794c Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: e5be28ef3e1f11df901bb62f6228f32f156307e3
2016-05-09 10:08:57 -04:00
Tom Lane
3f13193dd1 Release notes for 9.5.3, 9.4.8, 9.3.13, 9.2.17, 9.1.22. 2016-05-07 17:26:24 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
a9d8644de0 Distrust external OpenSSL clients; clear err queue
OpenSSL has an unfortunate tendency to mix per-session state error
handling with per-thread error handling.  This can cause problems when
programs that link to libpq with OpenSSL enabled have some other use of
OpenSSL; without care, one caller of OpenSSL may cause problems for the
other caller.  Backend code might similarly be affected, for example
when a third party extension independently uses OpenSSL without taking
the appropriate precautions.

To fix, don't trust other users of OpenSSL to clear the per-thread error
queue.  Instead, clear the entire per-thread queue ahead of certain I/O
operations when it appears that there might be trouble (these I/O
operations mostly need to call SSL_get_error() to check for success,
which relies on the queue being empty).  This is slightly aggressive,
but it's pretty clear that the other callers have a very dubious claim
to ownership of the per-thread queue.  Do this is both frontend and
backend code.

Finally, be more careful about clearing our own error queue, so as to
not cause these problems ourself.  It's possibly that control previously
did not always reach SSLerrmessage(), where ERR_get_error() was supposed
to be called to clear the queue's earliest code.  Make sure
ERR_get_error() is always called, so as to spare other users of OpenSSL
the possibility of similar problems caused by libpq (as opposed to
problems caused by a third party OpenSSL library like PHP's OpenSSL
extension).  Again, do this is both frontend and backend code.

See bug #12799 and https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=68276

Based on patches by Dave Vitek and Peter Eisentraut.

From: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>
2016-05-07 00:10:17 -04:00
Tom Lane
e1d88f983e Fix pg_upgrade to not fail when new-cluster TOAST rules differ from old.
This patch essentially reverts commit 4c6780fd17, in favor of a much
simpler solution for the case where the new cluster would choose to create
a TOAST table but the old cluster doesn't have one: just don't create a
TOAST table.

The existing code failed in at least two different ways if the situation
arose: (1) ALTER TABLE RESET didn't grab an exclusive lock, so that the
lock sanity check in create_toast_table failed; (2) pg_upgrade did not
provide a pg_type OID for the new toast table, so that the crosscheck in
TypeCreate failed.  While both these problems were introduced by later
patches, they show that the hack being used to cause TOAST table creation
is overwhelmingly fragile (and untested).  I also note that before the
TypeCreate crosscheck was added, the code would have resulted in assigning
an indeterminate pg_type OID to the toast table, possibly causing a later
OID conflict in that catalog; so that it didn't really work even when
committed.

If we simply don't create a TOAST table, there will only be a problem if
the code tries to store a tuple that's wider than a page, and field
compression isn't sufficient to get it under a page.  Given that the TOAST
creation threshold is intended to be about a quarter of a page, it's very
hard to believe that cross-version differences in the do-we-need-a-toast-
table heuristic could result in an observable problem.  So let's just
follow the old version's conclusion about whether a TOAST table is needed.

(If we ever do change needs_toast_table() so much that this conclusion
doesn't apply, we can devise a solution at that time, and hopefully do
it in a less klugy way than 4c6780fd17 did.)

Back-patch to 9.3, like the previous patch.

Discussion: <8110.1462291671@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-05-06 22:05:51 -04:00
Tom Lane
462456d8d0 Fix possible read past end of string in to_timestamp().
to_timestamp() handles the TH/th format codes by advancing over two input
characters, whatever those are.  It failed to notice whether there were
two characters available to be skipped, making it possible to advance
the pointer past the end of the input string and keep on parsing.
A similar risk existed in the handling of "Y,YYY" format: it would advance
over three characters after the "," whether or not three characters were
available.

In principle this might be exploitable to disclose contents of server
memory.  But the security team concluded that it would be very hard to use
that way, because the parsing loop would stop upon hitting any zero byte,
and TH/th format codes can't be consecutive --- they have to follow some
other format code, which would have to match whatever data is there.
So it seems impractical to examine memory very much beyond the end of the
input string via this bug; and the input string will always be in local
memory not in disk buffers, making it unlikely that anything very
interesting is close to it in a predictable way.  So this doesn't quite
rise to the level of needing a CVE.

Thanks to Wolf Roediger for reporting this bug.
2016-05-06 12:09:20 -04:00
Tom Lane
d30c67af80 Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2016d.
DST law changes in Russia (Magadan, Tomsk regions) and Venezuela.
Historical corrections for Russia.  There are new zone names Europe/Kirov
and Asia/Tomsk reflecting the fact that these regions now have different
time zone histories from adjacent regions.
2016-05-05 20:09:22 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
74324092a4 doc: Fix more typos
From: Alexander Law <exclusion@gmail.com>
2016-05-04 14:07:24 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
e0e023b2e7 doc: Fix typos
From: Alexander Law <exclusion@gmail.com>
2016-05-03 21:07:48 -04:00
Tom Lane
6c2e2b341a Fix configure's incorrect version tests for flex and perl.
awk's equality-comparison operator is "==" not "=".  We got this right
in many places, but not in configure's checks for supported version
numbers of flex and perl.  It hadn't been noticed because unsupported
versions are so old as to be basically extinct in the wild, and because
the only consequence is whether or not a WARNING flies by during
configure.

Daniel Gustafsson noted the problem with respect to the test for flex,
I found the other by reviewing other awk calls.
2016-05-02 11:18:11 -04:00
Heikki Linnakangas
586d75ace4 Remove unused macros.
CHECK_PAGE_OFFSET_RANGE() has been unused forever.
CHECK_RELATION_BLOCK_RANGE() has been unused in pgstatindex.c ever since
bt_page_stats() and bt_page_items() functions were moved from pgstattuple
to pageinspect module. It still exists in pageinspect/btreefuncs.c.

Daniel Gustafsson
2016-05-02 10:09:03 +03:00
Tom Lane
67349e5a84 Fix mishandling of equivalence-class tests in parameterized plans.
Given a three-or-more-way equivalence class, such as X.Y = Y.Y = Z.Z,
it was possible for the planner to omit one of the quals needed to
enforce that all members of the equivalence class are actually equal.
This only happened in the case of a parameterized join node for two
of the relations, that is a plan tree like

	Nested Loop
	  ->  Scan X
	  ->  Nested Loop
	    ->  Scan Y
	    ->  Scan Z
	          Filter: Z.Z = X.X

The eclass machinery normally expects to apply X.X = Y.Y when those
two relations are joined, but in this shape of plan tree they aren't
joined until the top node --- and, if the lower nested loop is marked
as parameterized by X, the top node will assume that the relevant eclass
condition(s) got pushed down into the lower node.  On the other hand,
the scan of Z assumes that it's only responsible for constraining Z.Z
to match any one of the other eclass members.  So one or another of
the required quals sometimes fell between the cracks, depending on
whether consideration of the eclass in get_joinrel_parampathinfo()
for the lower nested loop chanced to generate X.X = Y.Y or X.X = Z.Z
as the appropriate constraint there.  If it generated the latter,
it'd erroneously suppose that the Z scan would take care of matters.
To fix, force X.X = Y.Y to be generated and applied at that join node
when this case occurs.

This is *extremely* hard to hit in practice, because various planner
behaviors conspire to mask the problem; starting with the fact that the
planner doesn't really like to generate a parameterized plan of the
above shape.  (It might have been impossible to hit it before we
tweaked things to allow this plan shape for star-schema cases.)  Many
thanks to Alexander Kirkouski for submitting a reproducible test case.

The bug can be demonstrated in all branches back to 9.2 where parameterized
paths were introduced, so back-patch that far.
2016-04-29 20:19:38 -04:00
Tom Lane
707c44fe25 Adjust DatumGetBool macro, this time for sure.
Commit 23a41573c attempted to fix the DatumGetBool macro to ignore bits
in a Datum that are to the left of the actual bool value.  But it did that
by casting the Datum to bool; and on compilers that use C99 semantics for
bool, that ends up being a whole-word test, not a 1-byte test.  This seems
to be the true explanation for contrib/seg failing in VS2015.  To fix, use
GET_1_BYTE() explicitly.  I think in the previous patch, I'd had some idea
of not having to commit to bool being exactly 1 byte wide, but regardless
of what the compiler's bool is, boolean columns and Datums are certainly
1 byte wide.

The previous fix was (eventually) back-patched into all active versions,
so do likewise with this one.
2016-04-28 11:51:17 -04:00
Bruce Momjian
4f29edbb16 pg_upgrade: Fix indentation of if() block
Incorrect indentation introduced in commit
3d2e185109.

Reported-by: Andres Freund

Backpatch-through: 9.3 and 9.4 only
2016-04-28 08:29:02 -04:00
Tom Lane
252c358953 Rename strtoi() to strtoint().
NetBSD has seen fit to invent a libc function named strtoi(), which
conflicts with the long-established static functions of the same name in
datetime.c and ecpg's interval.c.  While muttering darkly about intrusions
on application namespace, we'll rename our functions to avoid the conflict.

Back-patch to all supported branches, since this would affect attempts
to build any of them on recent NetBSD.

Thomas Munro
2016-04-23 16:53:15 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
23da66f000 doc: Fix typos
From: Erik Rijkers <er@xs4all.nl>
2016-04-23 14:53:47 -04:00
Magnus Hagander
ab5c6d01f6 Add putenv support for msvcrt from Visual Studio 2013
This was missed when VS 2013 support was added.

Michael Paquier
2016-04-22 05:20:18 -04:00
Tom Lane
d9742ac463 Fix planner failure with full join in RHS of left join.
Given a left join containing a full join in its righthand side, with
the left join's joinclause referencing only one side of the full join
(in a non-strict fashion, so that the full join doesn't get simplified),
the planner could fail with "failed to build any N-way joins" or related
errors.  This happened because the full join was seen as overlapping the
left join's RHS, and then recent changes within join_is_legal() caused
that function to conclude that the full join couldn't validly be formed.
Rather than try to rejigger join_is_legal() yet more to allow this,
I think it's better to fix initsplan.c so that the required join order
is explicit in the SpecialJoinInfo data structure.  The previous coding
there essentially ignored full joins, relying on the fact that we don't
flatten them in the joinlist data structure to preserve their ordering.
That's sufficient to prevent a wrong plan from being formed, but as this
example shows, it's not sufficient to ensure that the right plan will
be formed.  We need to work a bit harder to ensure that the right plan
looks sane according to the SpecialJoinInfos.

Per bug #14105 from Vojtech Rylko.  This was apparently induced by
commit 8703059c6 (though now that I've seen it, I wonder whether there
are related cases that could have failed before that); so back-patch
to all active branches.  Unfortunately, that patch also went into 9.0,
so this bug is a regression that won't be fixed in that branch.
2016-04-21 20:05:58 -04:00
Tom Lane
82bf369ed6 Improve TranslateSocketError() to handle more Windows error codes.
The coverage was rather lean for cases that bind() or listen() might
return.  Add entries for everything that there's a direct equivalent
for in the set of Unix errnos that elog.c has heard of.
2016-04-21 16:59:08 -04:00
Tom Lane
87351503a0 Remove dead code in win32.h.
There's no longer a need for the MSVC-version-specific code stanza that
forcibly redefines errno code symbols, because since commit 73838b52 we're
unconditionally redefining them in the stanza before this one anyway.
Now it's merely confusing and ugly, so get rid of it; and improve the
comment that explains what's going on here.

Although this is just cosmetic, back-patch anyway since I'm intending
to back-patch some less-cosmetic changes in this same hunk of code.
2016-04-21 16:16:19 -04:00
Tom Lane
8f9518414b Provide errno-translation wrappers around bind() and listen() on Windows.
Fix Windows builds to report something useful rather than "could not bind
IPv4 socket: No error" when bind() fails.

Back-patch of commits d1b7d4877b and 22989a8e34.

Discussion: <4065.1452450340@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-04-21 15:44:18 -04:00
Tom Lane
e5882f26b3 Fix ruleutils.c's dumping of ScalarArrayOpExpr containing an EXPR_SUBLINK.
When we shoehorned "x op ANY (array)" into the SQL syntax, we created a
fundamental ambiguity as to the proper treatment of a sub-SELECT on the
righthand side: perhaps what's meant is to compare x against each row of
the sub-SELECT's result, or perhaps the sub-SELECT is meant as a scalar
sub-SELECT that delivers a single array value whose members should be
compared against x.  The grammar resolves it as the former case whenever
the RHS is a select_with_parens, making the latter case hard to reach ---
but you can get at it, with tricks such as attaching a no-op cast to the
sub-SELECT.  Parse analysis would throw away the no-op cast, leaving a
parsetree with an EXPR_SUBLINK SubLink directly under a ScalarArrayOpExpr.
ruleutils.c was not clued in on this fine point, and would naively emit
"x op ANY ((SELECT ...))", which would be parsed as the first alternative,
typically leading to errors like "operator does not exist: text = text[]"
during dump/reload of a view or rule containing such a construct.  To fix,
emit a no-op cast when dumping such a parsetree.  This might well be
exactly what the user wrote to get the construct accepted in the first
place; and even if she got there with some other dodge, it is a valid
representation of the parsetree.

Per report from Karl Czajkowski.  He mentioned only a case involving
RLS policies, but actually the problem is very old, so back-patch to
all supported branches.

Report: <20160421001832.GB7976@moraine.isi.edu>
2016-04-21 14:20:18 -04:00
Tom Lane
691073bd8d Honor PGCTLTIMEOUT environment variable for pg_regress' startup wait.
In commit 2ffa869620 we made pg_ctl recognize an environment variable
PGCTLTIMEOUT to set the default timeout for starting and stopping the
postmaster.  However, pg_regress uses pg_ctl only for the "stop" end of
that; it has bespoke code for starting the postmaster, and that code has
historically had a hard-wired 60-second timeout.  Further buildfarm
experience says it'd be a good idea if that timeout were also controlled
by PGCTLTIMEOUT, so let's make it so.  Like the previous patch, back-patch
to all active branches.

Discussion: <13969.1461191936@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-04-20 23:48:13 -04:00
Tom Lane
6ec1ff852f Further reduce the number of semaphores used under --disable-spinlocks.
Per discussion, there doesn't seem to be much value in having
NUM_SPINLOCK_SEMAPHORES set to 1024: under any scenario where you are
running more than a few backends concurrently, you really had better have a
real spinlock implementation if you want tolerable performance.  And 1024
semaphores is a sizable fraction of the system-wide SysV semaphore limit
on many platforms.  Therefore, reduce this setting's default value to 128
to make it less likely to cause out-of-semaphores problems.
2016-04-18 13:33:07 -04:00
Tom Lane
35166fd761 Fix --disable-spinlocks in 9.2 and 9.3 branches.
My back-patch of the 9.4-era commit 44cd47c1d4 into 9.2 and 9.3 fixed
HPPA builds as expected, but it broke --disable-spinlocks builds, because
the dummy spinlock is initialized before the underlying semaphore
infrastructure is alive.  In 9.4 and up this works because of commit
daa7527afc, which decoupled initialization of an slock_t variable
from access to the actual system semaphore object.  The best solution
seems to be to back-port that patch, which should be a net win anyway
because it improves the usability of --disable-spinlocks builds in the
older branches; and it's been out long enough now to not be worrisome
from a stability perspective.
2016-04-18 13:19:52 -04:00
Tom Lane
0a32768c10 Fix missing "static".
Per buildfarm member pademelon.
2016-04-16 14:50:54 -04:00
Tom Lane
992df96580 Make fallback implementation of pg_memory_barrier() work in 9.2 and 9.3.
Back-patch 9.4-era commit 44cd47c1d4 into 9.2 and 9.3.  As with
my back-patches of yesterday, this was not seen as necessary at the time
because we didn't expect barrier.h to need to work before 9.4, but
commit 37de8de9e3 invalidated that theory.

Per an attempt to run gaur and pademelon over old branches they've
not been run on since ~2013.
2016-04-16 10:42:07 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
9b2dc0884d doc: Add missing parentheses
From: Alexander Law <exclusion@gmail.com>
2016-04-15 20:54:23 -04:00
Tom Lane
f4f4f6990e Sync 9.2 and 9.3 versions of barrier.h with 9.4's version.
We weren't particularly maintaining barrier.h before 9.4, because nothing
was using it in those branches.  Well, nothing until commit 37de8de9e got
back-patched.  That broke 9.2 and 9.3 for some non-mainstream platforms
that we haven't been testing in the buildfarm, including icc on ia64,
HPPA, and Alpha.

This commit effectively back-patches commits e5592c61a, 89779bf2c,
and 747ca6697, though I did it just by copying the file (less copyright
date updates) rather than by cherry-picking those commits.

Per an attempt to run gaur and pademelon over old branches they've
not been run on since ~2013.
2016-04-15 16:49:48 -04:00
Andres Freund
6e53bb4fdc Fix non-C89-compliant initialization of array in parallel.c.
In newer branches this was already fixed in 59202fae04. Found using
clang's -Wc99-extensions.
2016-04-14 19:27:49 -07:00
Andres Freund
f1d26d3e0a Remove trailing commas in enums.
These aren't valid C89. Found thanks to gcc's -Wc90-c99-compat. These
exist in differing places in most supported branches.
2016-04-14 19:25:17 -07:00
Tom Lane
34bf6bc56c Fix pg_dump so pg_upgrade'ing an extension with simple opfamilies works.
As reported by Michael Feld, pg_upgrade'ing an installation having
extensions with operator families that contain just a single operator class
failed to reproduce the extension membership of those operator families.
This caused no immediate ill effects, but would create problems when later
trying to do a plain dump and restore, because the seemingly-not-part-of-
the-extension operator families would appear separately in the pg_dump
output, and then would conflict with the families created by loading the
extension.  This has been broken ever since extensions were introduced,
and many of the standard contrib extensions are affected, so it's a bit
astonishing nobody complained before.

The cause of the problem is a perhaps-ill-considered decision to omit
such operator families from pg_dump's output on the grounds that the
CREATE OPERATOR CLASS commands could recreate them, and having explicit
CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY commands would impede loading the dump script into
pre-8.3 servers.  Whatever the merits of that decision when 8.3 was being
written, it looks like a poor tradeoff now.  We can fix the pg_upgrade
problem simply by removing that code, so that the operator families are
dumped explicitly (and then will be properly made to be part of their
extensions).

Although this fixes the behavior of future pg_upgrade runs, it does nothing
to clean up existing installations that may have improperly-linked operator
families.  Given the small number of complaints to date, maybe we don't
need to worry about providing an automated solution for that; anyone who
needs to clean it up can do so with manual "ALTER EXTENSION ADD OPERATOR
FAMILY" commands, or even just ignore the duplicate-opfamily errors they
get during a pg_restore.  In any case we need this fix.

Back-patch to all supported branches.

Discussion: <20228.1460575691@sss.pgh.pa.us>
2016-04-13 18:57:52 -04:00
Tom Lane
f6b81162c5 Fix freshly-introduced PL/Python portability bug.
It turns out that those PyErr_Clear() calls I removed from plpy_elog.c
in 7e3bb08038 et al were not quite as random as they appeared: they
mask a Python 2.3.x bug.  (Specifically, it turns out that PyType_Ready()
can fail if the error indicator is set on entry, and PLy_traceback's fetch
of frame.f_code may be the first operation in a session that requires the
"frame" type to be readied.  Ick.)  Put back the clear call, but in a more
centralized place closer to what it's protecting, and this time with a
comment warning what it's really for.

Per buildfarm member prairiedog.  Although prairiedog was only failing
on HEAD, it seems clearly possible for this to occur in older branches
as well, so back-patch to 9.2 the same as the previous patch.
2016-04-11 18:17:02 -04:00
Tom Lane
8d82e6e28e Fix access-to-already-freed-memory issue in plpython's error handling.
PLy_elog() could attempt to access strings that Python had already freed,
because the strings that PLy_get_spi_error_data() returns are simply
pointers into storage associated with the error "val" PyObject.  That's
fine at the instant PLy_get_spi_error_data() returns them, but just after
that PLy_traceback() intentionally releases the only refcount on that
object, allowing it to be freed --- so that the strings we pass to
ereport() are dangling pointers.

In principle this could result in garbage output or a coredump.  In
practice, I think the risk is pretty low, because there are no Python
operations between where we decrement that refcount and where we use the
strings (and copy them into PG storage), and thus no reason for Python
to recycle the storage.  Still, it's clearly hazardous, and it leads to
Valgrind complaints when running under a Valgrind that hasn't been
lobotomized to ignore Python memory allocations.

The code was a mess anyway: we fetched the error data out of Python
(clearing Python's error indicator) with PyErr_Fetch, examined it, pushed
it back into Python with PyErr_Restore (re-setting the error indicator),
then immediately pulled it back out with another PyErr_Fetch.  Just to
confuse matters even more, there were some gratuitous-and-yet-hazardous
PyErr_Clear calls in the "examine" step, and we didn't get around to doing
PyErr_NormalizeException until after the second PyErr_Fetch, making it even
less clear which object was being manipulated where and whether we still
had a refcount on it.  (If PyErr_NormalizeException did substitute a
different "val" object, it's possible that the problem could manifest for
real, because then we'd be doing assorted Python stuff with no refcount
on the object we have string pointers into.)

So, rearrange all that into some semblance of sanity, and don't decrement
the refcount on the Python error objects until the end of PLy_elog().
In HEAD, I failed to resist the temptation to reformat some messy bits
from 5c3c3cd0a3 along the way.

Back-patch as far as 9.2, because the code is substantially the same
that far back.  I believe that 9.1 has the bug as well; but the code
around it is rather different and I don't want to take a chance on
breaking something for what seems a low-probability problem.
2016-04-10 23:15:55 -04:00
Teodor Sigaev
9d3fb209a0 Fix possible use of uninitialised value in ts_headline()
Found during investigation of failure of skink buildfarm member and its
valgrind report.

Backpatch to all supported branches
2016-04-08 21:25:59 +03:00
Andrew Dunstan
ca5d6edbfe Turn down MSVC compiler verbosity
Most of what is produced by the detailed verbosity level is of no
interest at all, so switch to the normal level for more usable output.

Christian Ullrich

Backpatch to all live branches
2016-04-08 12:29:34 -04:00
Alvaro Herrera
fa4eab862b Fix broken ALTER INDEX documentation
Commit b8a91d9d1c put the description of the new IF EXISTS clause in the
wrong place -- move it where it belongs.

Backpatch to 9.2.
2016-04-05 19:03:42 -03:00
Tom Lane
43b73d1a40 Fix latent portability issue in pgwin32_dispatch_queued_signals().
The first iteration of the signal-checking loop would compute sigmask(0)
which expands to 1<<(-1) which is undefined behavior according to the
C standard.  The lack of field reports of trouble suggest that it
evaluates to 0 on all existing Windows compilers, but that's hardly
something to rely on.  Since signal 0 isn't a queueable signal anyway,
we can just make the loop iterate from 1 instead, and save a few cycles
as well as avoiding the undefined behavior.

In passing, avoid evaluating the volatile expression UNBLOCKED_SIGNAL_QUEUE
twice in a row; there's no reason to waste cycles like that.

Noted by Aleksander Alekseev, though this isn't his proposed fix.
Back-patch to all supported branches.
2016-04-04 11:13:35 -04:00
Tom Lane
cbf4f6bb34 Remove TZ environment-variable entry from postgres reference page.
The server hasn't paid attention to the TZ environment variable since
commit ca4af308c3, but that commit missed removing this documentation
reference, as did commit d883b916a9 which added the reference where
it now belongs (initdb).

Back-patch to 9.2 where the behavior changed.  Also back-patch
d883b916a9 as needed.

Matthew Somerville
2016-03-29 21:38:15 -04:00
Tom Lane
11cc7bb882 Avoid possibly-unsafe use of Windows' FormatMessage() function.
Whenever this function is used with the FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM flag,
it's good practice to include FORMAT_MESSAGE_IGNORE_INSERTS as well.
Otherwise, if the message contains any %n insertion markers, the function
will try to fetch argument strings to substitute --- which we are not
passing, possibly leading to a crash.  This is exactly analogous to the
rule about not giving printf() a format string you're not in control of.

Noted and patched by Christian Ullrich.
Back-patch to all supported branches.
2016-03-29 11:54:57 -04:00
Tom Lane
a3c6439381 Stamp 9.3.12. 2016-03-28 16:12:29 -04:00
Peter Eisentraut
e0f4c9e7c5 Translation updates
Source-Git-URL: git://git.postgresql.org/git/pgtranslation/messages.git
Source-Git-Hash: 4891e88b1972d0091e8e5cefd145600801ba58be
2016-03-28 08:50:07 +02:00
Tom Lane
9d05096996 Release notes for 9.5.2, 9.4.7, 9.3.12, 9.2.16, 9.1.21. 2016-03-27 19:26:26 -04:00